Footnote 2 - Warriors, Wolves, and Women
See Simo Parpola, “Sons of God: The Ideology of Assyrian Kingship,” AO 02:05.
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See Simo Parpola, “Sons of God: The Ideology of Assyrian Kingship,” AO 02:05.
See Marian Feldman, “The Iconography of Power: Reading Late Bronze Age Symbols,” AO 05:03.
See Hershel Shanks’s review of Oscar White Muscarella’s The Lie Became Great: The Forgery of Ancient Near Eastern Cultures (Groningen, the Netherlands: Styx, 2000), in Reviews, AO 04:06.
For a more detailed discussion of the excavations at el-Ahwat and the connection between biblical Harosheth-ha-goiim and el-Ahwat, see Adam Zertal, “Philistine Kin Found in Early Israel,” BAR 28:03.
See the following articles: William H. Stiebing, Jr., “When Civilization Collapsed: Death of the Bronze Age” AO 04:05; and Amos Nur and Eric H. Cline, “What Triggered the Collapse? Earthquake Storms,” AO 04:05.
See Judith Harris, “Alba Fucens, Italy,” Destinations, AO 01:01.
See William H. Stiebing, Jr., “When Civilization Collapsed: Death of the Bronze Age,” AO 04:05.
Scholars do not know for certain the source of the tin used in Sardinia and the eastern Mediterranean. Although tin deposits in Sardinia have been exploited in modern times, we have no evidence that they were used in antiquity. One possible source is Iberia, from which the Sardinians imported some metal objects.
See Cemal Pulak, “Shipwreck! Recovering 3,000-Year-Old Cargo,” AO 02:04.