流浪的他者:第一千年美索不达米亚的牧羊人、不可治理的空间和帝国权威

Michael Kozuh
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摘要

许多关于牧民和帝国的文献都关注流动的部落,经常关注帝国的重新安置计划,或者部落对国家倡议的阻挠。该意见书认为,在公元前一千年中期的巴比伦,大型官僚寺庙矗立在帝国和巴比伦流动的牧羊人之间。这篇文章进一步探讨了这一动态,将重点放在行政信息的使用上,作为帝国争论的一个点,研究了地方控制和冲突等级的问题,因为牧羊人在美索不达米亚腹地履行了帝国的义务,最后认为,这里呈现的牧区动态与神庙在巴比伦生活中更大的政治作用是一体的——无论是城市的,熟悉的,中心的,同时也是遥远的,其他的。和神秘。
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The Roving Other: Shepherds, Ungovernable Spaces, and Imperial Authority in First-Millennium Mesopotamia
Much of the literature on pastoralists and empire concerns mobile tribes and often focuses on imperial schemes of resettlement, or tribal thwarting of state initiatives.  This submission argues that in mid-first-millennium BCE Babylonia, large bureaucratic temples stood between the imperial state and Babylonia’s mobile class of shepherds. This article then explores this dynamic further, focusing on the use of administrative information as a point of imperial contestation, examining issues of local control and clashing hierarchies as the shepherds served an imperial obligation in the Mesopotamian hinterland, and finally argues that the pastoral dynamic presented here is of a piece with the larger political role of the temple in Babylonian life—both urban, familiar, and central and at the same time distant, other-like, and enigmatic.
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