
Godless People and Sunless Skies
Author(s) -
Ben Dewar
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
avar
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2752-3535
pISSN - 2752-3527
DOI - 10.33182/aijls.v1i1.1615
Subject(s) - topos theory , akkadian , sumerian , abandonment (legal) , conquest , space (punctuation) , history , assyria , banquet , literature , linguistics , ancient history , sociology , art , philosophy , political science , law , archaeology
This paper is a study of descriptions of foreign conquest of the Mesopotamian centre in two Sumerian–Akkadian bilingual texts concerning Tukulti-Ninurta I and Nebuchadnezzar I. Both texts present these deviant spaces resulting from these conquests in terms of a peripheralization of the centre. Having established similarities in the presentation of the topoi in the two texts, the paper then analyses the different contexts in which these topoi are placed in the two texts to explore how their significance differs. In the Tukulti-Ninurta Bilingual, the conquest of Assyria by its enemies would create a deviant space at the centre, and the god Ashur must therefore prevent it. In the Nebuchadnezzar Bilingual, Babylonia has already become a deviant space. The abandonment of the land by its gods and its destruction by foreign enemies therefore serves as a necessary transitional stage in the transformation of deviant space into correct space.