REL 228: History and
Culture of the Ancient Near East, Spring 2002. SYLLABUS
RJDKnauth
MWF 10:15-11:20, B309. Office hours MWF 2:30-4:00, D-320, tel: 321-4298(GAYT).
Home telephone: 326-3822, email: knauth@lycoming.edu,
web http://www.lycoming.edu/~knauth
The primary purpose of this course is to explore the history and culture
of the ancient Near East, focusing on Mesopotamia, Egypt, and Syria-Palestine
(the “fertile crescent”), with emphasis on its cultural legacy - both as the
cultural context for the birth of the Judaeo-Christian religious tradition and
as highly influential to modern society more generally.
Considerable attention will be given to primary sources (Kramer and
Pritchard) and archaeological contributions (with slide illustrations).
Most weeks will include a student-led discussion session, beginning in Wk
3. Weekly quizzes and reflection
paragraphs will provide extra incentive to do the reading, so as to be prepared
to participate actively in the discussion sessions.
Texts:
History Begins at Sumer: Thirty-nine Firsts in Recorded History,
S.N. Kramer
The Ancient Near East, Amelie
Kuhrt (in 2 volumes)
Recommended: The Ancient Near East: An Anthology of Texts and Pictures
(Vol. 1), ed. J.B. Pritchard
(on reserve)
Course Requirements:
1)
Attendance and informed participation (readings having been completed) at all
class sessions will be expected (worth 10% of the final grade).
The attendance policy for this course is that there are no excused
absences without a written note from a doctor or parent/guardian regarding a
serious family or medical emergency (e.g. requiring hospitalization). Each set
of 3 absences lowers your grade by 1%.
2)
Weekly
Quizzes on that week’s chapter of Kuhrt (worth 15% of the final grade) will
take place at the beginning of class each Monday as listed in this syllabus, so
be sure to read Kuhrt by Monday of each week.
Of 12 quizzes, the lowest 2 grades will be dropped from the average.
3)
Weekly
Reflection Papers (1 page typed,
worth 10% of the final grade) on the assigned sets of readings from Kramer will
be collected each Friday in class, and will be the basis for class discussion on
that day. If participation is
scanty, then the discussion leader is authorized to call on students at random.
Of the 12 sets, students may opt to skip 2 of their choice, making 10 total.
4)
Students wishing to make up for absences or missed quizzes may submit Outline Summaries of the assigned chapter of Kuhrt for that week
(1-2 pages, typed).
5)
There will be a Midterm
(Fri-2/22, worth 15% of the grade) and Final
(2 hours, 30% of grade).
Review sheets will be handed out in advance.
6)
Students will team up to be responsible for Leading
a Discussion Session on a set of cultural “firsts” from Kramer.
Students will sign up for their week on Monday, Jan. 14th.
Students may structure the class however they wish, and will also turn in
a short Write-up (approx. 6 pgs) of
the relevant issues, background, biblical and modern parallels. Presentation and
write-up will be worth 20% of the grade.
Please note that reflection papers, write-ups and presentations should NOT be primarily a summary of what Kramer has already written. I am looking for deeper reflection, biblical and modern parallels or application, or other relevant historical background. I am looking to see your own thought and engagement with the material. Discussion Sessions should seek to foster wider student participation and engagement with the ideas of the material. This is what will make it both memorable and worthwhile.
Schedule
of Readings:
Wk
1: M (Jan. 7)- Introductions.
Overview
of History, Politics & Ecology of “the fertile crescent,” influence on
Religion.
W (Jan. 9)- Kuhrt Introduction, Mesopotamian Early Dynastic Period.
F (Jan. 11)- Discuss Kramer
Intro, Appendix B, ch. 1-3: Writing and Schools.
Wk 2: M (Jan. 14)- Kuhrt ch. 1: Mesopotamian Early Bronze
(3000–2000). Sargon’s Akkadian Empire. *Q1.
*Sign
up for Leading Discussion!* (sign-up sheet on door of office D-320)
W (Jan. 16)- Abraham and the Ur III Dynasty (Ziggurat - cf Gen. 11).
Slides.
F (Jan. 18)- Discuss Kramer
ch. 4-6: Politics. *1st Reflection Paper (RP) due (typed!).
Wk
3: M (Jan. 21)- Kuhrt
ch. 2:
Middle Bronze Mesopotamia, Old
Babylonian Period (2000–1600). *Quiz
2.
W (Jan. 23)- Biblical origins, patriarchs, and ANE legal tradition (Hammurabi,
Covenant Code).
Read Genesis 1-12, Exodus
20-23, Pritchard pp. 31-74, 80-85, 133-166, 260-262.
Slides.
F (Jan. 25)- Discuss Kramer
ch. 7-9: Law and Justice. *2nd
RP due.
Wk 4: M (Jan. 28)- Kuhrt ch. 3 (to p. 161):
Egyptian Early Dynastic, Old Kingdom, 1st Intermediate (3100–2000)
The
Pyramid Age! A bit of Egyptian
religion. Read Pritchard pp. 1-5. *Quiz 3.
W (Jan. 30)- Filmstrips on Egypt.
F (Feb. 1)- Discuss Kramer
ch. 10-12: Farming and Medicine. *3rd
RP due.
Wk
5: M (Feb. 4)- Kuhrt ch. 3
(cont): Egyptian Middle Kingdom & 2nd Intermediate (2000–1550).
*Q4.
W (Feb. 6)- Israel in Egypt: Joseph & Hyksos. Read Genesis 37, 39-50; Pritchard pp. 5-27,
173-175, 252-257.
F (Feb. 8)- Discuss Kramer
ch. 13-15: Philosophy. *4th RP due.
Wk
6: M (Feb. 11)- Kuhrt ch. 4:
Egyptian New Kingdom (1550-1069). Slides.
*Quiz 5.
W (Feb. 13)- Israelite Exodus in New Kingdom context. Read Exodus 1-15, Pritchard
pp. 85-86, 231.
F (Feb. 15)- Discuss Kramer
ch. 16-18: Wisdom. *5th
RP due.
Wk
7: M (Feb. 18)-
Kuhrt ch. 5: The Hittites. *Quiz 6.
W (Feb. 20)- Review for
Midterm.
F (Feb. 22)-
Midterm Exam (worth 20% of
final grade).
Spring
Break!!!
Feb. 25 – March 1. Enjoy your week!
Wk
8: M (Mar. 4)- Kuhrt ch. 6:
Syria & Levant. Egypt in Canaan.
[Rec. Pritchard pp. 92-132, 262-277].
*Quiz 7.
W (Mar. 6)- Hittite-Egyptian burnout, Sea Peoples & Israelites: end
of LB civilization.
F (Mar. 8)- Discuss Kramer
ch. 19-21 Biblical Parallels: Paradise, Flood, Resurrection. *6th
RP.
Wk
9: M (Mar. 11)- Kuhrt ch. 7:
Mesopotamia (1600-900). *Quiz 8.
W (Mar. 13)- A bit of biblical history: exodus, conquest, Philistines,
tribal league, early monarchy.
Read
Pritchard 185-187, 209-214, Judges, 2Samuel 5; skim 1Kings 1 – 2Kings 14.
Slides.
F (Mar. 15)- Discuss Kramer
ch. 22-24: Heroic Age. *7th
RP due.
Wk
10: M (Mar. 18)- Kuhrt ch. 9: The
Neo-Assyrian Empire (934-610). Skim
2nd Kings. *Quiz 9.
W (Mar. 20)- Israel in the Assyrian Crisis. Read 2Kings 15-21, Pritchard
pp. 188-202.
F (Mar. 22)- Discuss Kramer
ch. 25-27: Golden Age. *8th
RP due.
Wk
11: M (Mar. 25)- Kuhrt ch. 11: Babylonia
(900–539). *Quiz 10.
W (Mar. 27)- Israel’s fall
and exile. Read Pritchard pp.
203-206, 2Kings 22-25, Daniel 1-6. Slides.
F (Mar. 29)- Good Friday –
No Class.
Wk
12: M (Apr. 1)- Kuhrt ch. 12: Egyptian 3rd
Intermediate period (1000–664). *Quiz 11 (on Kuhrt ch. 12).
Piye, “Tirhaqa,” Necho, and the Sudanese Pyramids.
W (Apr. 3)- Kuhrt ch. 12 (cont’d): Egyptian Saite Period (664-525).
F (Apr. 5)- Discuss Kramer
ch. 28-30: Societal Ideals and Failings. *9th RP due.
Wk
13: M (Apr. 8)-
Kuhrt ch. 13: Persian period (539-330). Slides. *Quiz 12.
W (Apr. 10)- Israel in the Persian Period.
Read Ezra 1-7, Esther, Pritchard pp. 206-208.
F (Apr. 12)- Discuss Kramer
ch. 31-33: Literary Imagery and Sex Symbolism.
*10th RP due.
Wk
14: M (Apr. 15)- Discuss Kramer ch. 34-36:
Mothers. *11th RP due Mon! *Hand out review sheets.*
W (Apr. 17)- Discuss Kramer ch. 37-39 + Appendix A: Elegies and Fish +
Mapping. *12th RP due.
F (Apr. 19)- Review for
final exam.
A
two-hour Final Exam, covering the
entire course, will follow during Exam Period (30% of final grade).
A
Note on Workload:
College courses require preparation – on average three hours of
preparation for every one hour in class. At
Lycoming College the standard is 10 hours of preparation time per week per
course, not including class time. This
is more than a full-time job! However,
given the high amount you pay for your education, you will not get out of it
what you deserve unless you put in the time and do the preparation.
A
Note on Academic Dishonesty:
Academic Dishonesty is a serious offense at Lycoming College and in this
class. Academic Dishonesty includes
failing to give credit to sources used (otherwise known as Plagiarism).
This would include copying material from books, articles, web sites or
another student’s work without citing your source, whether on a formal paper
or a short assignment. You are
allowed to discuss assignments together, but when it comes to writing out your
answers, you must do your own work and use your own words.
If I receive two reflection papers, outline summaries or write-ups
containing substantially identical wording, BOTH will receive an “F.” If I
receive assignments containing substantial amounts of material copied from any
source (other students’ papers, books, articles, web sites, etc.) without
proper citation and credit being given, that student will receive an “F” on
the project and will be reported to the Dean.
According to school policy, a second infraction of this type in any
course at Lycoming College may result in expulsion from the school.
If you do not clearly understand what this means or what plagiarism is,
please come and talk to me about it and I will be glad to explain.