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Academic literature on the topic 'Early second millennium'

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Books on the topic "Early second millennium"

1

A, Carpenter Joel, Gordon A. J. 1836-1895, and Blackstone, W. E. b. 1841., eds. The Premillennial Second Coming: Two early champions. Garland Pub., 1988.

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2

International Congress on the Archaeology of the Ancient Near East (6th : 2008 : Rome, Italy), ed. Looking north: The socioeconomic dynamics of northern Mesopotamian and Anatolian regions during the late third and early second millennium BC. Harrassowitz Verlag, 2012.

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3

Metals from K2 and Mapungubwe, middle Limpopo Valley: A technological study of early second millennium material culture, with an emphasis on conservation. Archaeopress, 2014.

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4

Gadotti, Alhena, and Alexandra Kleinerman. Elementary Education in Early Second Millennium BCE Babylonia. Penn State University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9781646021802.

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5

Forgotten cities on the Indus: Early civilization in Pakistan from the eighth to the second millennium BC. Oxford University Press, 1996.

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6

Hutter-Braunsar, Sylvia, and Manfred Hutter. Economy of Religions in Anatolia and Northern Syria: From the Early Second to the Middle of the First Millennium BCE. Ugarit-Verlag, 2019.

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7

Economy of Religions in Anatolia and Northern Syria: From the Early Second to the Middle of the First Millennium Bce. Ugarit Verlag, 2019.

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8

Steadman, Sharon. The Early Bronze Age on the Plateau. Edited by Gregory McMahon and Sharon Steadman. Oxford University Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780195376142.013.0010.

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This article presents data on the Early Bronze Age (EBA) of the Anatolian plateau. The EBA on the plateau has been identified as a period of “urbanization,” or at least the age in which complex society emerged, including the rise of an extensive trade network, established by the second half of the third millennium BCE. Chalcolithic period interregional trade with regions as far afield as Transcaucasia and possibly southeastern Europe was strengthened by connections ranging across the plateau, stretching into the Aegean, and southeastward to northern Mesopotamia and beyond. Monumental architect
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9

Özbaşaran, Mihriban. The Neolithic on the Plateau. Edited by Gregory McMahon and Sharon Steadman. Oxford University Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780195376142.013.0005.

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This article compiles data on the ninth-to-sixth-millennium-BCE communities of the central Anatolian plateau, underscoring the distinctive features of each of them in chronological order and deliberately avoiding the traditional phase terminology of the Neolithic. The data presently display local adaptations of central Anatolian Neolithic communities to their diverse habitats. In the ninth and early eighth millennia BCE, sedentism and a heavy reliance on naturally occurring resources constituted the way of life on the plateau. Full farming villages developed toward the second half of the eight
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10

Frangipane, Marcella. Arslantepe-Malatya: A Prehistoric and Early Historic Center in Eastern Anatolia. Edited by Gregory McMahon and Sharon Steadman. Oxford University Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780195376142.013.0045.

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This article discusses findings from excavations at Arslantepe–Malatya. Arslantepe is a tell about 4.5 hectares in extension and 30 meters high, at the heart of the fertile Malatya Plain, some 12 kilometers from the right bank of the Euphrates, and surrounded by mountains, which, in the past, were covered by forests. In the earliest phases of its history, in the Chalcolithic period, it had close links with the Syro-Mesopotamian world, with which it shared many cultural features, structural models, and development trajectories. But in the early centuries of the third millennium BCE, far-reachin
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