Assyrian Empire presents a capacious history of Mesopotamia's most formidable power, tracing its rise from warrior city-states to the imperial hegemony of Nineveh and its collapse in 612 BCE. Rawlinson synthesizes cuneiform inscriptions, royal annals, and classical testimonies to reconstruct campaigns, siegecraft, provincial administration, deportations, religion, and court art. Attentive to diplomacy with Egypt, Urartu, and Elam, he situates Assyria within a competitive Near Eastern system. The prose is measured and philologically informed, characteristic of Victorian synthesis, with digressions on language and iconography that mirror the early triumphs of Assyriology. A leading Victorian historian and priest, George Rawlinson served as Camden Professor of Ancient History at Oxford and translated Herodotus. Brother to Sir Henry Rawlinson, a pioneer of cuneiform decipherment, he wrote amid the excitement of Layard's and Botta's excavations. That proximity to sources-inscriptions, squeezes, and early photographs-informs his cautious judgments and occasional biblical cross-references. Readers of ancient history, Near Eastern archaeology, and biblical studies will find Assyrian Empire an indispensable, if period-framed, guide. Its synthesis clarifies institutions and ideology that shaped the first true world empire. Use it alongside modern excavation reports for updated data; Rawlinson's arguments and documentation remain a rigorous, rewarding point of departure.
Quickie Classics summarizes timeless works with precision, preserving the author's voice and keeping the prose clear, fast, and readable-distilled, never diluted. Enriched Edition extras: Introduction · Synopsis · Historical Context · Brief Analysis · 4 Reflection Q&As · Editorial Footnotes.