Egypt and the Levant
Networks and Negotiations in the Bronze Age
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Publishing:31st Jul '26
£18.00
This title is due to be published on 31st July, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

The Element focuses on transforming networks connecting Egypt and the Levant in the Bronze Age, and the emergence of globalisation.
Beyond the rise and collapse of powerful cities and states were the long-distance connectivities that enabled the movements of people and animals, and the interlinked exchanges of commodities and ideas. These connectivities exhibited markers of globalisation. This Element considers how such markers emerged and developed in the preceding centuries.Egypt and the Levant witnessed complex transformations across the Bronze Age. Beyond the rise and collapse of powerful cities and states were the long-distance connectivities that enabled the movements of people and animals, and the interlinked exchanges of commodities and ideas. By the Late Bronze Age, these connectivities exhibited markers of globalisation. This Element considers how such markers emerged and developed in the preceding centuries. Focusing on the third to mid-second millennium BCE, it brings together recent research on socio-political developments and cross-cultural interactions to give an overview of the transforming networks linking Old to early New Kingdom Egypt and EB III to LB I Levantine communities. In doing so, the Element incorporates approaches that move away from imperialist structures of exchange to consider how dynamic networks were negotiated and maintained across periods of socio-political change.
ISBN: 9781009419932
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
75 pages