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To browse Academia. Blandine Besnard. Tiffany Ftaimi. Archaeobotanical research in the Near East contributed significantly to study human societies in different subjects, most notably to subsistence economy and dietary practices. Nonetheless, certain periods and regions were comparatively less investigated. Regarding the fact that economic texts are also absent in this period, archaeobotanical research becomes the only viable way to produce new data on the agricultural economy.
In this manner, Syro-Anatolian city-states present an intriguing case study to understand the connections between palace-centered redistributive economies of the Late Bronze Age and the role of agriculture in imperial statecraft during the Iron Age.
For this reason, this paper aims to present an overview of the changes in agricultural economy from the end of the Late Bronze Age to the Hellenistic Period focusing on the current archaeobotanical research in Syro-Anatolian city-states.
Barbara Bolognani. In academia, the most persistent prejudice about clay figurines concerns their simplistic interpretation as objects for children entertainment. Frequently, their relatively cheap material, as well as the portrayed subject, would have made them worthy of being considered toys. Even inscribed tablets are made of clay but, as far as is known, no one has suggested that they were intended to have a playful purpose. Indeed, those who usually gives this interpretation never ask themselves why clay figurines are, after pottery, the most common artefact in Near Eastern excavations.