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Art Of The First Cities The Third Millennium Bc From The Mediterranean To The Indus Metropolitan Museum Of Art New York

  • SKU: BELL-6098104
Art Of The First Cities The Third Millennium Bc From The Mediterranean To The Indus Metropolitan Museum Of Art New York
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Art Of The First Cities The Third Millennium Bc From The Mediterranean To The Indus Metropolitan Museum Of Art New York instant download after payment.

Publisher: Metropolitan Museum of Art
File Extension: PDF
File size: 181 MB
Pages: 566
Author: Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York)
ISBN: 9781588390431, 1588390438
Language: English
Year: 2003

Product desciption

Art Of The First Cities The Third Millennium Bc From The Mediterranean To The Indus Metropolitan Museum Of Art New York by Metropolitan Museum Of Art (new York) 9781588390431, 1588390438 instant download after payment.

Catalog of an exhibition being held at the Metropolitan Museum of Art from May 8 to Aug. 17, 2003.

Our civilization is rooted in the forms and innovations of societies that flourished in the distant lands of Western Asia more than six thousand years ago. These earliest societies, established millennia before the Greco-Roman period, extended from Egypt to India. 

The earliest among them was the region known to the ancients as Mesopotamia, located between the Tigris and the Euphrates Rivers and occupying what is today Iraq, northeastern Syria, and southeastern Turkey. 

In Mesopotamia arose the first cities, believed by their inhabitants to be the property of the gods, who granted kings the power to bring prosperity to the people. Here urban institutions were invented and evolved. The need to record and manage the distribution and receipt of goods led to the invention of writing, monumental architecture in the form of temples, and palaces were created, and the visual arts flowered in the service of religion and royalty. 

These extraordinary innovations profoundly affected surrounding areas in Anatolia, Syria-Levant, Iran, and the Gulf, and Mesopotamia was in turn influenced by its neighbors. As Mesopotamia turned to outlying lands for such rare and precious materials as lapis lazuli, carnelian, diorite, gold, silver, and ivory, these regions were linked by networks of trade that encouraged cultural exchange.

This volume, which accompanies a major exhibition at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, explores the artistic achievements of the era of the first cities in both the Mesopotamian heartland and across the expanse of western Asia. More than fifty experts in the field have contributed entries on individual works of art and essays on a wide range of subjects. The first book that encompasses a study of the entire region during a single period, this publication break new ground in particular in its examination of trade and interconnections. In texts that

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