Archaeology Odyssey, January/February 2001

Volume4Number1

Special Section

Digs 2001

A Subterranean Odyssey

Do you detest sparkling sunlight and fresh air? Would it be too onerous to visit beautiful, exotic lands? Would it bore you to tears to travel through time or touch a piece of history? If the answer to any (or all) of these questions is no, then...Read more ›

Features

The Birth of Kingship

From Democracy to Monarchy in Sumer

By Jacob Klein

If you read later Sumerian literature, you will think that Sumer was always a monarchy ruled by a king. That is what these later kings wanted you to believe. But this is not necessarily so. How monarchy came to Sumer is in fact a fascinating, if somewhat...Read more ›

Europe Confronts Assyrian Art

One civilization comes in contact with another

By Mogens Trolle Larsen

One morning in February 1846, a little over 150 years ago, the young Englishman Austen Henry Layard was returning to work after visiting his friend Sheikh Abd-ur-rahman, the head of a local Arab tribe. Layard had been in northern Mesopotamia for only three months, where he had...Read more ›

Vestal Virgins

Chaste keepers of the flame

By Melissa Barden Dowling

In the waning years of the first century A.D., one of the six Vestal virgins who guarded Rome’s sacred flame was accused of breaking her vow of chastity. Sentenced to death by the emperor Domitian (81–96 A.D.), she was dragged to an underground chamber just inside the...Read more ›

Departments