1st Edition

New Light on the Most Ancient East

By V. Gordon Childe Copyright 2015
    280 Pages
    by Routledge

    280 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book offers a detailed survey on major archaeological discoveries in the Near and Middle East. This classic account focuses on the findings in three great centers of ancient civilization: Egypt, Sumer, and the Indus valley.

    Professor Childe discusses the excavation of the three cities of Mohenjo-daro and Chanhu-daro on the Indus and Harappa on the Ravi, and what these sites have revealed about Indian civilization in the third millennium B.C. He describes the findings at the numerous tells between Mesopotamia and the Indus basin, and in the three provinces of the Fertile Crescent; the succession of cultures in pre-dynastic Egypt and the rise of the Pharaohs; the findings at Ur and Kish and the development of an urban civilization in Mesopotamia. Throughout the text, the author sets forth the step-by-step gathering of precise archaeological evidence, relating these findings both to the context of their particular culture and to the larger context of the origins of European history.

    Preface  1. From History to Prehistory  2. The Setting of the Stage  3. The Oldest Egyptian Farmers  4. Africans and Asiatics on the Nile  5. The Rise of the Pharaohs  6. The Colonization of Mesopotamia  7. The Urban Revolution in Mesopotamia  8. The Early Dynastic Period  9. Indian Civilization in the Third Millennium B.C.  10. From the Tigris to the Indus  11. Between the Horns of the Fertile Crescent  12. Proofs of Diffusion

    Biography

    Childe, V. Gordon