the Fortress at Bridge
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18,59 |
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55,99 |
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Beschrijving
Bol
The Fortress at the Bridge: The Rise, Survival, and Fall of the Kingdom of Geshur Long before Bethsaida sheltered the apostles of early Christianity, it served as the fortified capital of a forgotten kingdom that shaped the ancient world in ways history has only recently begun to recover. The Kingdom of Geshur occupied the volcanic plateau of the southern Golan Heights for more than two centuries, maintaining its sovereignty between the great powers of the Iron Age Levant through a combination of basalt fortifications, diplomatic genius, and a religious tradition that fused Mesopotamian, Canaanite, and Aramean theology into something locally irreplaceable.This is the story of how a small state survived. King Talmai of Geshur gave his daughter Maacah to the young David of Israel, an act of marital diplomacy that embedded Geshurite culture into the heart of the Davidic dynasty for four generations. From Absalom's exile at his grandfather's court to the moon-god cult maintained in Jerusalem by Geshurite queen mothers, the kingdom's reach extended far beyond its basalt walls. Yet when the Neo-Assyrian juggernaut of Tiglath-Pileser III swept through the Levant in 732 BCE, even the most intelligently managed small state could not survive.Drawing on the latest archaeology from et-Tell, Tel Hadar, and across the Golan, The Fortress at the Bridge recovers a lost kingdom and restores it to its rightful place at the crossroads of ancient history.
The Fortress at the Bridge: The Rise, Survival, and Fall of the Kingdom of Geshur Long before Bethsaida sheltered the apostles of early Christianity, it served as the fortified capital of a forgotten kingdom that shaped the ancient world in ways history has only recently begun to recover. The Kingdom of Geshur occupied the volcanic plateau of the southern Golan Heights for more than two centuries, maintaining its sovereignty between the great powers of the Iron Age Levant through a combination of basalt fortifications, diplomatic genius, and a religious tradition that fused Mesopotamian, Canaanite, and Aramean theology into something locally irreplaceable.This is the story of how a small state survived. King Talmai of Geshur gave his daughter Maacah to the young David of Israel, an act of marital diplomacy that embedded Geshurite culture into the heart of the Davidic dynasty for four generations. From Absalom's exile at his grandfather's court to the moon-god cult maintained in Jerusalem by Geshurite queen mothers, the kingdom's reach extended far beyond its basalt walls. Yet when the Neo-Assyrian juggernaut of Tiglath-Pileser III swept through the Levant in 732 BCE, even the most intelligently managed small state could not survive.Drawing on the latest archaeology from et-Tell, Tel Hadar, and across the Golan, The Fortress at the Bridge recovers a lost kingdom and restores it to its rightful place at the crossroads of ancient history.
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