info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Prestige and Authority in the Southern Levant during the Amarna Age
Fecha
2019Registro en:
Pfoh, Emanuel Oreste; Prestige and Authority in the Southern Levant during the Amarna Age; De Gruyter; 2019; 247-261
978-3-11-062837-1
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Pfoh, Emanuel Oreste
Resumen
During most of the Late Bronze Age, the whole region of Syria-Palestine was under Egyptian and Hittite rule. The political scene of the Syro-Palestinian petty kings, especially reflected in the Amarna correspondence (second half of the fourteenth century BCE), was conditioned by their personal subordination to those foreign powers. The political manoeuvrability of these kings was essentially limited to a context and situations in which personal ability in the ?local game? between peers, but also towards the exterior and the interior of their polities, was their main political capital. As a matter of fact, the small kings of the Southern Levant did not exert an absolute power within society. On the contrary, their political authority seemed to be quite fragile. In this paper, a characterization of the Syro-Palestinian socio-political structure is offered, sketching in particular the nature and the dynamics of political prestige and authority in the Southern Levant.