Wednesday, 12 February 2025

Micro Review 10 (2025)

 

Between Two Rivers: Ancient Mesopotamia and the Birth of History by Moudhy Al-Rashid (Hodder and Stoughton)

After reading Elif Shafak's There Are Rivers in the Sky last autumn I realised that while I am very familiar with the Greek and Roman histories/origin stories and somewhat familiar with Ancient Egypt I knew nothing about Ancient Mesopotamia.

From reading the the first two volumes of Sapiens: A Graphic History from Yuval Noah Harari I came across some parts of Ancient Mesopotamian history thanks to his featuring Hammurabi and his laws but I was still in the dark...

Just as I started looking for recommendations by other classicists I saw Between Two Rivers being talked about online and then it appeared on NetGalley - hurrah!

I found this book to be a great introduction to the subject, Al-Rashid takes us right back to the beginning and explains where/who we are talking about and then using archaeological finds talks us through how this part of history has been decoded and the cuneiforms translated to give us our current understanding.

As ever when working with dates BCE it did take me a while to work out the 'when' was - especially when Al-Rashid just says in the 18th century BCE but that it just my poor grasp on time and not a fault with the book! I really liked the little insights into the author's life as they helped bring an unfamiliar world in to a context I could relate to, but there weren't so many of them that you felt it was an autobiography hung around a history book.

The one thing I would really have found useful is a timeline that matched the Mesopotamian events to happenings in the Greek/Egyptian/wider-world and it might be that this is something that is in the physical finished copy and just not reproduced in the electronic proof I read - I've got a copy of the book on order so when it comes out towards the end of the month I can check for this. If it isn't there I shall have to make my own!

Right I'm now off to find a translation of Gilgamesh and some more entry level history books as I'm now fascinated by this new period in history!

Many thanks to Hodder & Stoaghton for the advance copy via NetGalley

No comments:

Post a Comment