Empire and Village: Imperial Control Strategies and Local Responses in the Babylonian Countryside

Description of the granted funding

The project investigates rural life under imperial rule in Babylonia in the sixth and fifth centuries BCE. Previous research has focused on the ways empires control local elites, but less is known about their impact on the common people. Using clay tablets written in cuneiform script as its sources, the project combines careful study of historical documents with social network analysis, a powerful computational method to map the patterns of human interaction. The key question of the project is: how did the Babylonian and Persian Empires exercise power in the countryside and how is this reflected in rural social structures? The project expects to track changes in imperial policies over time and observe different local responses to imperial control. The project shifts our view from the elite to the common people, leading to a better understanding of people's lifeways in the ancient Near East. The project is located at the University of Helsinki, Faculty of Arts.
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Starting year

2020

End year

2023

Granted funding

Tero Alstola Orcid -palvelun logo
208 465 €

Funder

Research Council of Finland

Funding instrument

Postdoctoral Researcher

Other information

Funding decision number

330727

Fields of science

History and archaeology

Research fields

Historiatieteet

Identified topics

history