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ARCH 0351 / AWAS 0800 Introduction to the Ancient Near East Brown University ~ Fall 2009 Colonialism, mapmaking and the Middle East September 22, 2009.

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Presentation on theme: "ARCH 0351 / AWAS 0800 Introduction to the Ancient Near East Brown University ~ Fall 2009 Colonialism, mapmaking and the Middle East September 22, 2009."— Presentation transcript:

1 ARCH 0351 / AWAS 0800 Introduction to the Ancient Near East Brown University ~ Fall 2009 Colonialism, mapmaking and the Middle East September 22, 2009

2 The torch of civilization Tympanum over the entrance to the Oriental Institute at the University of Chicago

3 what is colonialism, imperialism, empire? (and what does it have to do with mapmaking?)

4 Destruction Savage State The Arcadian or Pastoral State The Consummation of Empire The Course of Empire – (Thomas Cole, 1836, Oil)

5 The Course of Empire – Desolation (Thomas Cole, 1836, Oil)

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8 The Achaemenid Persian Empire (ca 560-330 BC).

9 British Empire 1897

10 Ottoman Empire 1683 Mehmet II enters Constantinople Fausto Zonaro, (1854-1929)

11 what is colonialism, imperialism, empire? (and what does it have to do with mapmaking?) J.L. Borges, Exactitude in ScienceExactitude in Science (tragic uselessness of the perfectly accurate map) or: “Map is Not the Territory” (Alfred Korzybski)

12 Pietro della Valle Italian traveller in Asia, 1586-1652. Pietro della Valle’s diary (Vatican) Map of the Middle East 1607. Mercator, Gerhard (1512-1594)- Jodocus Hondius (1563-1612)

13 Carsten Niebuhr German Traveller, surveyer, geographer 1733-1815. “the scientific exploration of Egypt, Arabia and Syria” sponsored by Frederick V of Denmark. Travels through ArabiaTravels through Arabia (google book)

14 Description de l’Egypt Napoleon Bonaparte’s “scientific” expedition.

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18 ARCH 0351 / AWAS 0800 Introduction to the Ancient Near East Brown University ~ Fall 2009 Colonialism, mapmaking and the Middle East II September 24, 2009

19 Pietro della Valle - Italian traveller in Asia, 1586-1652. The first to identify the site of Babylon. Picked up some tablets at Ur (Tell al Muqayyar) Pietro della Valle’s diary (Vatican) Map of the Middle East 1607. Mercator, Gerhard (1512-1594)- Jodocus Hondius (1563-1612)

20 Carsten Niebuhr German Traveller, surveyer, geographer 1733-1815. “the scientific exploration of Egypt, Arabia and Syria” sponsored by Frederick V of Denmark. Travels through ArabiaTravels through Arabia (google book)

21 Description de l’Egypt Napoleon Bonaparte’s “scientific” expedition to Egypt (1798-1801). Recording of natural history, flora and fauna, archaeology, physical geography, technology, weights and measures, hydrography, meteorology, medicine,

22 Orientalism an episode in Western humanitistic thought representations of the East in the literary and pictorial works of mainly Western or Western educated authors- work of art, architecture, novels and travel writing, antiquarianism... idea of the travel to the East, and meeting with the stereotypical “other”. Associated with romanticism and classicism East appears in these narratives (literary and pictorial) as exotic, sensual, colorful, decaying, often violent, place of inertia: people are lazy, a ridiculous excess of sexuality and eroticism, despotism as the main political tendency among the eastern monarchs an aspect of European imperialist project

23 Automatic Turk the chess playing automaton built by the miraculous Hungarian Baron Wolfgang von Kempelen in 1769 to impress the Empress Maria Theresa

24 Jean-Léon Gérôme (1824 – 1904) Snake Charmer (1870) Oil on canvas

25 Jean-Léon Gérôme (1824 – 1904) Moorish Bath (1870) Oil on canvas

26 Death of Sardanapalus (1827), Eugène Delacroix.

27 Pieter Bruegel the Elder (c. 1525 - 1569) Tower of Babel (1563), Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna

28 Other orientalisms Photographs of an Armenian–Iranian photographer: Antoin Sevruguin (1840-1933)

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35 Birth of Near Eastern archaeology Rediscovery (early travellers, antiquarians) Early archaeological work (mid 19 th c. excavations) International phase Large scale excavations Scientific archaeology.

36 Deciphering cuneiform writing Henry Rawlinson (1810-1895): cadet in British East India Company Many languages Persian king Darius I’s monumental tri-lingual inscription at the site of Bisutun, Iran in Old Persian, Elamite, Akkadian

37 The most famous cuneiform tablet from Mesopotamia The so-called ”Flood Tablet”, relating part of the Epic of Gilgamesh This Assyrian version of the Old Testament flood story identified in 1872 by George Smith, an assistant in The British Museum. On reading the text he... jumped up and rushed about the room in a great state of excitement, and, to the astonishment of those present, began to undress himself.'

38 Austin Henry Layard (1817-1894) Excavations at the site of Nimrud (ancient Kalhu), in Northern Iraq.

39 Austin Henry Layard’s travels (1839-41)

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41 Paul Emile Botta appointed as French consul in Mosul (1842) Excavations on the mound of Khorsabad (1843-1845) on the behalf of the Louvre museum a former botanist

42 Drawings of E. Flandin

43 Hormuzd Rassam (1826-1910), a Chaldean catholic Excavations at Nineveh, Nimrud, Balawat, Toprakkale, Tell Sheikh Hamad, and others...

44 A 19 th century bestseller

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50 From Assyrian Nimrud to British Crystal Palace: whose architecture? Layard’s architect Ferguson’s reconstruction of Nimrud citadel (Publ. 1849) + Crystal palace of the Great exhibition of 1851, at Hyde Park, London.

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53 The first encounters: the arrival of Assyrian sculpture in European museums

54 German excavations at Babylon (new archaeological field techniques) Director architect/archaeologist Robert Koldewey feeds cats 1899-1917.


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