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OverviewThe Assyrian Template: Power, Terror, and the Invention of Empire The Assyrian Empire built the world. Between the ninth and seventh centuries BCE, the kings of Nineveh invented the professional army, the provincial administrative state, the intelligence surveillance network, the relay communication system, and the mass deportation program - the structural technologies of empire that every subsequent civilization from Persia to Rome to the modern nation-state has inherited and refined. They also built one of the ancient world's greatest libraries, engineered mountain canal systems that reshaped entire landscapes, and produced palace art of extraordinary sophistication and psychological power. They achieved all of this through systematic terror. The Assyrian Template reconstructs the full complexity of the ancient world's first superpower - its administrative genius and its atrocities, its theological ambitions and its environmental vulnerabilities, its catastrophic fall and its astonishing afterlife. Drawing on the cuneiform archive, cutting-edge paleoclimate science including the landmark Kuna Ba cave speleothem record, and the latest archaeological discoveries including the 2025 Heidelberg find of Ashurbanipal's throne room relief, this is the first comprehensive narrative history of the Neo-Assyrian Empire written for general readers. It ends where history rarely does: with the people who survived, who are still here, still speaking the language of the ancient empire, still carrying its memory into the present. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Pascal DooleyPublisher: Silverback Books Imprint: Silverback Books Dimensions: Width: 14.00cm , Height: 4.50cm , Length: 21.60cm Weight: 0.916kg ISBN: 9798231250646Pages: 806 Publication Date: 26 February 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationPascal Dooley is an Irish scholar, author, and journalist whose work sits at the intersection of ancient history, political analysis, and narrative non-fiction. A graduate of University College Dublin and the holder of a doctorate in ancient Near Eastern history, he has written extensively on the politics of the ancient world and its long reach into the present, contributing to publications including The Irish Times, History Ireland, and several international academic journals. His journalism has taken him across the Middle East, where his reporting on the communities and landscapes of ancient Mesopotamia has informed a body of work that insists on treating the distant past as a live question rather than a settled one. Dooley is particularly drawn to the moments when political systems fail - when the institutions that seemed permanent turn out to have been fragile, and when the people left behind by those failures turn out to be more durable than anything the institutions built. He lives in Dublin. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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