IMHICIHU   13380
INSTITUTO MULTIDISCIPLINARIO DE HISTORIA Y CIENCIAS HUMANAS
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Loyal Servants of the King: A Political Anthropology of Subordination in Syria-Palestine (ca. 1600-600 BCE)
Autor/es:
EMANUEL PFOH
Revista:
Palamedes: A Journal of Ancient History
Editorial:
University of Warsaw
Referencias:
Lugar: Varsovia; Año: 2013 vol. 8 p. 1 - 17
ISSN:
1896-8244
Resumen:
Syria-Palestine was occupied and ruled by foreign powers during most of the Late Bronze and Iron Ages (ca. 1600-600 BCE) due mainly to the strategic role this region played in geopolitical and commercial terms. In this paper, an attempt to draft a general scheme for the working of local socio-political subordination to foreign masters (Egypt and Ḫatti during the Late Bronze Age; Assyria in the Iron Age II) is offered, comparing particularities and noting similarities between the different stages of foreign domination. The critical use of perspectives and models belonging to political anthropology?especially the concept of patronage or patron-client relationships?is seen as most appropriate to enhance the interpretation of diplomatic epistolography and asymmetrical treaties, exchanged and established respectively, documenting political alliance and subordination between polities of different status and power.