This article proposes to read the Babylonian Chronicle as historical literature. It argues that the text was composed in response to Babylonia’s integration in the Persian Empire. The text presents itself as a self-conscious departure from the chronographic tradition by tracing the roots of Babylon’s fate to the mid-eighth century, when a triangle of power is said to have emerged between Assyria, Babylonia and Elam—a configuration that reduced the Babylonian monarch to inaction and incompetence from the very start.
CITATION STYLE
Waerzeggers, C. (2021). Writing History Under Empire: The Babylonian Chronicle Reconsidered. Journal of Ancient Near Eastern History, 8(1–2), 279–317. https://doi.org/10.1515/janeh-2020-0015
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.