Cities and Desire: Uruk.
Urban space as the ceremonial center. Eanna and Kullaba Sacred Precincts, and the structure of the concentric city.
Powerpoint presentation:
Uruk
Bibliography:
- Van de Mieroop 2004: “Origins: The Uruk phenomenon,” in A history of the ancient Near East : ca. 3000-323 BC: 17-38.
- Van de Mieroop, M.; 1997. “The origins and the character of the Mesopotamian city,” The ancient Mesopotamian city. Oxford University Press: Oxford, 23-41.
- Liverani, Mario. Uruk the first city. Edited and Translated by Zainab Bahrani and Marc van de Mieroop. Equinox: London.
- Sievertsen, Uwe; 2002. "Private space, public space and connected architectural developments throughout the early periods of Mesopotamian history," Altorientalische Forschungen 29: 307-329.
- Matthews, Roger; 2003: “States of mind: approaches to complexity,” in The archaeology of Mesopotamia: theories and approaches. London and New York: Routledge, 93-126.
- Boehmer, Rainer Michael; 1991. “Uruk 1980-1990: a progress report,” Antiquity 65: 465-78.
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- Moortgat, Anton; 1969. The Art of Ancient Mesopotamia: The Classical Art of the Near East. Phaidon: London and New York, 1-7.
- Crawford, Harriet; 2004. "Uruk temples" in Sumer and the Sumerians. 2nd edition. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 69-75.