Taxation in the Achaemenid Empire

La 4e de couv. indique : Achaemenid Studies fall between the academic divisions of Ancient Near Eastern Studies and Archeology, Ancient History, Classical Philology, Egyptology and Semitic Languages. No single scholar can cover the many cultures that were united under the umbrella of this huge empir...

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Auteurs principaux : Kleber Kristin (Directeur de publication), Agut-Labordère Damien (Auteur), Boivin Odette (Auteur), Descat Raymond (Auteur), Dromard Benjamin (Auteur), Folmer Margaretha Louise (Auteur), Lemaire André (Auteur), Popova Olga (Auteur), Schütze Alexander (Auteur), Silverman Jason M. (Auteur), Tuplin Christopher J. (Auteur)
Format : Livre
Langue : anglais
Titre complet : Taxation in the Achaemenid Empire / edited by Kristin Kleber
Publié : Wiesbaden : Harrassowitz Verlag , 2021
Description matérielle : 1 vol. (VI-434 p.)
Collection : Classica et orientalia ; 26
Sujets :
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Résumé : La 4e de couv. indique : Achaemenid Studies fall between the academic divisions of Ancient Near Eastern Studies and Archeology, Ancient History, Classical Philology, Egyptology and Semitic Languages. No single scholar can cover the many cultures that were united under the umbrella of this huge empire alone and in-depth. Interdisciplinary approaches are a necessity in order to tackle the challenges that the diverse textual records in Akkadian, Demotic Egyptian, Elamite, Aramaic and Greek present us with. This volume, the proceedings of a conference on taxation and fiscal administration in the Achaemenid Empire held in Amsterdam in 2018, contains contributions on Babylonia, Egypt, the Levant, Asia Minor and Arachosia, written by specialists in the respective languages and cultures. The question that lies at the basis of this volume is how the empire collected revenue from the satrapies, whether and how local institutions were harnessed to make imperial rule successful. The contributions investigate what kind of taxes were imposed in what area and how tax collection was organized and administered. Since we lack imperial state archives, local records are the more important, as they are our only reliable source that allows us to move beyond the famous but unverifiable statement on Achaemenid state finances in Herodotus, Histories 3, 89-97
Bibliographie : Notes bibliogr. Index
ISBN : 978-3-447-11597-1
3-447-11597-1