RT Book T1 Gods, kings, and merchants in old Babylonian Mesopotamia T2 Publications de l'Institut du Proche-Orient Ancien du Collège de France JF Publications de l'Institut du Proche-Orient Ancien du Collège de France A1 Charpin, Dominique 1954- LA English PP Paris Leuven Bristol PB Peeters YR 2015 UL https://www.ixtheo.de/Record/1615137211 AB Gods, kings and merchants, a way of designating religion, politics and the economy: three spheres which in thre modern world are quite distinct, even if they do interact constantly. The aim of this book is to show that their boundaries were far more fluid in the Mesopotamian civilisation: gods could act as money lenders, kings could invoke divine will to refuse extradiction, the dead could serve as a reference for how the living should behave, and wealthy merchants could live in residences modelled on those of kings...This civilisation preceded the "Greek miracle" which Jean-Pierre Vernant has quite correctly defined as a "process of change which led to the emergence, as distinct areas, of the blueprints for the economy, politics, law, art, science, ethics, and philosophy". In a direct continuation of his earlier book published in 2010, Writing, Law, and Kingship in Old Babylonian Mesopotamia, D. Charpin here examines in greater depth the situation which existed in Mesopotamia in the first half of the second millennium BC, using texts discovered in numerous archives throughout the entire Near East, especially those found at Mari eighty years ago NO Notes bibliogr CN DS73.25 SN 9789042932753 SN 9042932759 K1 Commerce : Mésopotamie K1 Dieux assyro-babyloniens : Histoire : Sources : Mésopotamie : Rois et souverains : Proche-Orient : Civilisation : Jusqu'à 622 K1 Law : Iraq : Babylonia K1 Babylonia : Civilization K1 Babylonia : History