7:26
Ancient Near Eastern Art by Victoria Taylor-Gore
This is a video that I made about Ancient Near Eastern Art for my online art appreciation ...
published: 03 Jul 2009
author: vtg60
Ancient Near Eastern Art by Victoria Taylor-Gore
This is a video that I made about Ancient Near Eastern Art for my online art appreciation course. Music - from album "Without You" by Masters of Persian Music. My website - www.victoriataylorgore.com
12:02
Fertile Crescent 1 Catal Huyuk
Ohlone College Art 103A Professor Kenney Mencher (Art History Stone Age Technology through...
published: 14 Aug 2011
author: kmencher
Fertile Crescent 1 Catal Huyuk
Ohlone College Art 103A Professor Kenney Mencher (Art History Stone Age Technology through the Early Renaissance) www.kenney-mencher.com An analysis of the timelines concerning prehistory, the sculptures created during the early periods of the Near East and Mesopotamia particularly Catal Huyuk.
6:25
Fertile Crescent 2 Cuneiform
Ohlone College Art 103A Professor Kenney Mencher (Art History Stone Age Technology through...
published: 14 Aug 2011
author: kmencher
Fertile Crescent 2 Cuneiform
Ohlone College Art 103A Professor Kenney Mencher (Art History Stone Age Technology through the Early Renaissance) www.kenney-mencher.com An analysis of the timelines concerning prehistory, the sculptures created during the early periods of the Near East and Mesopotamia
9:14
Ancient Near East
Great Lyre from the "King's Grave," c. 2650-2550 BCE, Gold, silver, lapis la...
published: 16 Nov 2010
author: gcuriosidades
Ancient Near East
Great Lyre from the "King's Grave," c. 2650-2550 BCE, Gold, silver, lapis lazuli, shell, bitumen and wood (University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology)
13:01
Fertile Crescent 3 Typical Examples
Ohlone College Art 103A Professor Kenney Mencher (Art History Stone Age Technology through...
published: 14 Aug 2011
author: kmencher
Fertile Crescent 3 Typical Examples
Ohlone College Art 103A Professor Kenney Mencher (Art History Stone Age Technology through the Early Renaissance) www.kenney-mencher.com An analysis of the timelines concerning the history and art created during the early periods of the Near East and Mesopotamia
10:56
[Critique of Farrakan's Speech] Who Are Israelites? (1 of 8) - Segment One
PlayList www.youtube.com The first segment of three in response to the speech of Farrakan&...
published: 19 Jul 2010
author: Leafyboy07
[Critique of Farrakan's Speech] Who Are Israelites? (1 of 8) - Segment One
PlayList www.youtube.com The first segment of three in response to the speech of Farrakan's speech. Enjoy :-) To everyone I apologize for the wait, my page ways canceled. By it's on now. Everyone will Know must know the Truth.
5:35
Fertile Crescent 5 King Sargon
Ohlone College Art 103A Professor Kenney Mencher (Art History Stone Age Technology through...
published: 14 Aug 2011
author: kmencher
Fertile Crescent 5 King Sargon
Ohlone College Art 103A Professor Kenney Mencher (Art History Stone Age Technology through the Early Renaissance) www.kenney-mencher.com An analysis of the timelines concerning the history and art created during the early periods of the Near East and Mesopotamia
4:08
Ancient Near Eastern law
10-4 = part 65 of series Next: 10-5: www.youtube.com Playlist 5: www.youtube.com List of u...
published: 16 Oct 2010
author: heterodoxism4
Ancient Near Eastern law
10-4 = part 65 of series Next: 10-5: www.youtube.com Playlist 5: www.youtube.com List of uploads within playlist: berties-teapot.blogspot.com Main channel: www.youtube.com The multi-author nature of the Hebrew Bible, as well as its influence by Ancient Near Eastern legal traditions shows through in Israelite law. en.wikipedia.org en.wikipedia.org en.wikipedia.org en.wikipedia.org en.wikipedia.org en.wikipedia.org The Bible's Buried Secrets website: www.pbs.org including: Moses and the Exodus www.pbs.org Writers of the Bible: www.pbs.org Archeological Evidence and Timeline: www.pbs.org This is part of a series illustrating a Yale University course on the Hebrew Bible. The full course can be found here: oyc.yale.edu oyc.yale.edu Christine Hayes is Professor of Religious Studies in Classical Judaica. Before joining the Yale faculty in 1996, she was Assistant Professor of Hebrew Studies in the Department of Near Eastern Studies at Princeton University for three years. A specialist in talmudic-midrashic studies, Hayes offers undergraduate courses on the literature and history of the biblical and talmudic periods (including Introduction to the Old Testament/Hebrew Bible and Introduction to Judaism). www.yale.edu academicearth.org en.wikipedia.org en.wikipedia.org Diagrams illustrating the timeline and books of the HB/OT: www.threetwoone.org www.threetwoone.org hodos.org hodos.org hodos.org hodos.org www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org www <b>...</b>
12:18
Psalm 23 In Relation To Ancient Near Eastern Texts
Click here for more details: CC) Creative Commons Music By: Vincent Bernay Album: Etincell...
published: 21 May 2008
author: wayman29
Psalm 23 In Relation To Ancient Near Eastern Texts
Click here for more details: CC) Creative Commons Music By: Vincent Bernay Album: Etincelle (2007) Song 1 Title: Etincelle Song 2 Title: 01 - Around (instrumental) www.free-samples-n-loops.com Psalm 23: www.biblegateway.com Psalm 8: www.biblegateway.com Hymn to Shamash: www.angelfire.com The Baal Epic: www.baal.com Adapa And The Food Of Life: www.sacred-texts.com Essay on the topic: wayman29.wordpress.com
8:50
Steel in the Ancient Near East
Describing steel and the processes and archaeological discoveries of steel in the AncientN...
published: 13 Jun 2008
author: TheBackyardProfessor
Steel in the Ancient Near East
Describing steel and the processes and archaeological discoveries of steel in the AncientNear East as early as 1000 BC
3:02
Faces of Ancient Middle East Part 11
The Hurrians (cuneiform Ḫu-ur-ri ) were a people of the Ancient Near East who lived ...
published: 28 Oct 2011
author: ASHRF1979
Faces of Ancient Middle East Part 11
The Hurrians (cuneiform Ḫu-ur-ri ) were a people of the Ancient Near East who lived in Northern Mesopotamia and adjacent regions during the Bronze Age.The largest and most influential Hurrian nation was the kingdom of Mitanni. The population of the Hittite Empire in Anatolia to a large part consisted of Hurrians, and there is significant Hurrian influence in Hittite mythology. By the Early Iron Age, the Hurrians had been assimilated with other peoples, except perhaps in the kingdom of Urartu. According to IM Diakonoff and S. Starostin, the Hurrian, Hattic, and Urartaean languages are related to the Northeast Caucasian languages. The ethnicity of the people of Mitanni is difficult to ascertain. A treatise on the training of chariot horses contains a number of Indo-Aryan glosses.Kammenhuber (1968) suggested that this vocabulary was derived from the still undivided Indo-Iranian language,but Mayrhofer (1974) has shown that specifically Indo-Aryan features are present. The names of the Mitanni aristocracy frequently are of Indo-Aryan origin, but it is specifically their deities which show Indo-Aryan roots (Mitra, Varuna, Indra, Nasatya), though some think that they are probably more immediately related to the Kassites.The common people's language, the Hurrian language is neither Indo-European nor Semitic.Hurrian, and thus the Hurrians, are therefore believed to be relatives of Urartu, both belonging to the Hurro-Urartian language family. It had been held that nothing more can <b>...</b>
1:14
Near Eastern Roots: Wisdom Literature in the Ancient Near East
One of the most common genres of literature from the ancient Near East that employs poetry...
published: 12 Aug 2010
author: helvis213
Near Eastern Roots: Wisdom Literature in the Ancient Near East
One of the most common genres of literature from the ancient Near East that employs poetry is called wisdom literature. The term includes hymns, fables, disputations and most prominently, proverbs. This shared literary experience is illustrated here with examples from the Egyptian late second millennium BCE text, "The Instruction of Amenemope" and the Old Testament's Proverbs both of which are divided into 30 parts.
6:19
Art Parade III: Art in Ancient Near East
Visual arts from ancient Near East, Ancient civilizations of Sumeria, Assyria, Babylonia a...
published: 11 Aug 2008
author: Alexvatankhah
Art Parade III: Art in Ancient Near East
Visual arts from ancient Near East, Ancient civilizations of Sumeria, Assyria, Babylonia and Persia, 3000 BC- early 7th century AD A Middle Eastern traditional instrument named Oud played by Khalid Kaki art-parade.blogspot.com
3:52
Faces of Ancient Middle East Part 4
In spite of the importance of this region, genetic studies on the Sumerians are limited an...
published: 23 Jul 2011
author: ASHRF1979
Faces of Ancient Middle East Part 4
In spite of the importance of this region, genetic studies on the Sumerians are limited and generally restricted to analysis of classical markers due to Iraq's modern political instability. It has been found that Y-DNA Haplogroup J2 originated in Northern Mesopotamia.The Sumerians were a non-Semitic people, and spoke a "language isolate"; a number of linguists believed they could detect a substrate language beneath Sumerian.[citation needed]However, the archaeological record shows clear uninterrupted cultural continuity from the time of the Early Ubaid period (5300 -- 4700 BC C-14) settlements in southern Mesopotamia. The Sumerian people who settled here farmed the lands in this region that were made fertile by silt deposited by the Tigris and the Euphrates rivers. It is speculated by some archaeologists that Sumerian speakers were farmers who moved down from the north, after perfecting irrigation agriculture there [note there is no consensus among scholars on the origins of the Sumerians]. The Ubaid pottery of southern Mesopotamia has been connected via Choga Mami Transitional ware to the pottery of the Samarra period culture (c. 5700 -- 4900 BC C-14) in the north, who were the first to practice a primitive form of irrigation agriculture along the middle Tigris River and its tributaries. The connection is most clearly seen at Tell Awayli (Oueilli, Oueili) near Larsa, excavated by the French in the 1980s, where 8 levels yielded pre-Ubaid pottery resembling Samarran ware <b>...</b>
9:35
Ancient Near East II
Grave goods from Ur...
published: 07 Jul 2009
author: kueblerwolf
Ancient Near East II
Grave goods from Ur
8:11
Ancient Near East III
The Warka Vase...
published: 07 Jul 2009
author: kueblerwolf
Ancient Near East III
The Warka Vase
1:48
Ancient Middle East [/Near East] Map [/Geography] History
Religion 111 [or for uses in AP] World History Biblical locations... helps w understanding...
published: 19 Jan 2012
author: catherinesteph
Ancient Middle East [/Near East] Map [/Geography] History
Religion 111 [or for uses in AP] World History Biblical locations... helps w understanding the Geography of the Torah /Pentateuch or Tanakh &/ Bible study
7:31
New Review of History of the Ancient Near East
...
published: 05 Feb 2012
author: jamesdenofantiquity
New Review of History of the Ancient Near East
4:15
Heaven and Hell: Funerary Customs (Part 3 of ?)
Throughout the Ancient Near East it was common practice to place household items belonging...
published: 26 Apr 2011
author: ancienthebreworg
Heaven and Hell: Funerary Customs (Part 3 of ?)
Throughout the Ancient Near East it was common practice to place household items belonging to the deceased inside his tomb for his journey to the afterlife. At a minimum, these items included everyday objects such as bowls, combs, amulets, weapons or other trinkets, along with food. Thousands of graves near Aswan Egypt, dating to about 3000 BC, were excavated and inside the graves were pottery, mirrors, incense burners, ornaments and weapons. Graves near the great Pyramid at Giza, dating to about 2500 BC, were discovered containing pots and other goods. As is found in the Valley of the Kings in Egypt, the wealthier Egyptians were buried with jewelry, furniture, and other valuables such as were found in King Tutankhamen's tomb. His tomb also included pottery and other everyday goods, but also a treasure of other valuable objects. The Cemetery of the Ancient Sumerian city of Eridu, dating to about 3000 BC revealed that many goods were left in the graves including; pottery vessels, beads, cuts of meat, figurines and stone tools. The Royal Cemetery in Ur included the graves of Sumeria's Kings and Queens with their valuable grave goods. At Tell es-Sa'idiyeh (Located at Jabbock and Jordan, near Tafas City)These Canaanite bronze and iron weapons were found in graves during the excavation of a cemetery dated to about 1000 BC. Inside ancient Ugarit tombs, dating to about 2000 BC, many artifacts were discovered buried with the dead. The practice of leaving pottery, trinkets and <b>...</b>
10:35
Ancient Empires - Expert Difficulty - Near East - Chamber 3
Chamber 3 of the Near East chambers. Just another example of how the flippiing option for ...
published: 06 Sep 2009
author: Shortmandesigner
Ancient Empires - Expert Difficulty - Near East - Chamber 3
Chamber 3 of the Near East chambers. Just another example of how the flippiing option for the puzzle pieces can make the puzzles so freaking hard to solve... Enjoy! :)
4:17
Ancient Cities of the Middle East (2004)
A photo montage of my trip to Lebanon, Syria and Jordan in April, 2004....
published: 08 Jul 2006
author: CraigPA
Ancient Cities of the Middle East (2004)
A photo montage of my trip to Lebanon, Syria and Jordan in April, 2004.