Thin End of the Wedge

Een podcast door Jon Taylor

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72 Afleveringen

  1. 70. Simo Parpola and the State Archives of Assyria project

    Gepubliceerd: 11-10-2024
  2. 69. Carolyne Douché: Carpology in the archaeology of ancient western Asia

    Gepubliceerd: 11-9-2024
  3. 68. Witold Tyborowski: Finding a job during Hammurabi's reign

    Gepubliceerd: 2-8-2024
  4. 67. Amy Gansell: Dressing Assyria's queens

    Gepubliceerd: 5-6-2024
  5. 66. Rune Rattenborg, Seraina Nett, Gustav Ryberg Smidt: Geomapping Cuneiform

    Gepubliceerd: 10-5-2024
  6. 65. Omar N'Shea: Masculinities in Mesopotamia

    Gepubliceerd: 3-4-2024
  7. 64. Ali Kadhem Ghanem: Managing the site of Ur

    Gepubliceerd: 6-3-2024
  8. 63: Enrique Jiménez: the electronic Babylonian Library

    Gepubliceerd: 3-2-2024
  9. 62. Prize-winning assyriology

    Gepubliceerd: 19-12-2023
  10. 61. Shigeo Yamada: Yasin Tepe: on the margins of empire

    Gepubliceerd: 17-11-2023
  11. 60. Susanne Paulus: Back to School in Babylonia

    Gepubliceerd: 13-10-2023
  12. 59. Louise Pryke: Ishtar then and now

    Gepubliceerd: 7-9-2023
  13. 58. Looking back at RAI Leiden: on conferences, and catching up with guests

    Gepubliceerd: 10-8-2023
  14. 57. Looking forward to Leiden

    Gepubliceerd: 15-7-2023
  15. 56. Nicholas Reid: The Big House

    Gepubliceerd: 29-6-2023
  16. 55. Agnès Garcia-Ventura: The historiography of assyriology

    Gepubliceerd: 29-5-2023
  17. 54. Eckart Frahm: A new history of Assyria, the world's first empire

    Gepubliceerd: 26-4-2023
  18. 53. Parsa Daneshmand: Consensus decision-making in divination

    Gepubliceerd: 30-3-2023
  19. 52. Birgül Öğüt: phytoliths in west Asian archaeology

    Gepubliceerd: 1-3-2023
  20. 51. Ali al-Juboori: Reflections

    Gepubliceerd: 2-2-2023

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Thin End of the Wedge explores life in the ancient Middle East. There are many wonderful stories we can tell about those people, their communities, the gritty reality of their lives, their hopes, fears and beliefs. We can do that through the objects they left behind and the cities where they once lived. Our focus is on the cultures that used cuneiform (“wedge-shaped”) writing, so mostly on ancient Iraq and nearby regions from about 3000 BC to about 100 AD. Thin End of the Wedge brings you expert insights and the latest research in clear and simple language. What do we know? How do we know anything? And why is what we know always changing? Why is any of this important today? We won’t talk to you like you’re stupid. But you won’t need any special training to understand what we’re talking about. This is an independent production by me as an individual. It is not supported by my employer or any other organisation I am involved with, and the views expressed here do not necessarily reflect theirs.

Visit the podcast's native language site