Empire Adrift: The Portuguese Court in Rio de Janeiro, 1808–1821. London. Winius, G. D. 1971. The Fatal History of Portuguese Ceylon: Transition to Dutch Rule. Cambridge, MA. Yun- Casalilla, B. 2018. Iberian World Empires and the ...
“The Seleucids Imprisoned: Arsacid- Roman Hostage Submission and Its Hellenistic Precedents.” In J. Schlude and B. Rubin, Arsacids, Romans, and Local Elites: CrossCultural Interactions of the Parthian Empire, 25-50.
This is the first world history of empire, reaching from the third millennium BCE to the present.
This book traces its various manifestations in classical antiquity, the Islamic world, Asia and Central America as well as considering seventeenth- and eighteenth-century European discussions of international order.
... like maps, by no means unique to the early modern and modern periods, but nonetheless they often followed in the wake of imperial cartography and were dictated by similar logics. Modern European imperialism is in many ways about the ...
Tracing the evolution of the state from its beginnings to the early Middle Ages, this comprehensive handbook focuses on key institutions and dynamics while providing accessible accounts of states and empires in the ancient Near East and ...
The territories of empires often covered different climatic and economic zones, for example, agricultural savannahs and herding steppe zones. However, none of the African empires covered with its reach a whole world-economy.
In R. Rollinger and C. Ulf, eds., Commerce and Monetary Systems in the Ancient World: Means of Transmission and Cultural ... In K. Radner, ed., State Correspondence in the Ancient World: From the New Kingdom to the Roman Empire, ...
5 M. T. Larsen, Commercial Networks in the Ancient Near East, in M. Rowlands, M. T. Larsen and K. Kristiansen, Centre and Periphery in the Ancient World, Cambridge 1987, 56. 6 G. Algaze, The Uruk Expansion: Cross-Cultural Exchange in ...
This is the first world history of empire, reaching from the third millennium BCE to the present.
This is the first world history of empire, reaching from the third millennium BCE to the present.
The Oxford Handbook of the State in the Ancient Near East and Mediterranean offers a comprehensive survey of ancient state formation in western Eurasia and North Africa.