Strangers par excellence. Arabs in the Neo-Assyrian Royal Inscriptions
Ładowanie...
Data
2024
Autorzy
Tytuł czasopisma
ISSN czasopisma
Tytuł tomu
Wydawca
Katolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana Pawła II
Abstrakt
The basic questions posed in the article were: what characteristics caused Arabs to be perceived by the elites of the Neo-Assyrian Empire as strangers, and whether such classification resulted in their treatment differently from other peoples? Neo-Assyrian royal inscriptions and correspondence with the court were analysed to answer these questions. On this basis, three features that together are unique only to Arabs were distinguished: nomadism, camel farming and the presence of queens. These traits are unique to Arabs, so they are strangers par excellence from Assyria’s perspective. Interestingly, these features generally do not result in exceptional treatment. Only in asituation of conflict and defeat of the Arabs can one perceive their specific treatment, marked by exceptional cruelty even for Assyrians. For example, mainly Arab rulers were chained along with wild animals to the gates of the Assyrian capital. Moreover, only Arab women were subjected to tearing unborn children out of their wombs. This shows that Arabs were treated as half-humans against whom the most heinous crimes could be committed because Assyrians were not bound by the standards applicable to other peoples.
Opis
Artykuł w języku angielskim.
Słowa kluczowe
Assyria, Arabs, nomadism, camel, queen, cruelty, strangers, foreigners, neo-Assyrian royal inscriptions, history, Asyria, Arabowie, neoasyryjskie inskrypcje królewskie, koczownictwo, nomadyzm, wielbłąd, królowa, okrucieństwo, obcy, cudzoziemcy, historia
Cytowanie
The Biblical Annals, 2024, T. 14, nr 2, s. 291-310.
Licencja
CC-BY - Uznanie autorstwa