000 02409nmm a22003017a 4500
003 SPU
005 20230808153102.0
008 230808s2021 nyu ob 001 0 eng
020 _a9781009279567
040 _aSPU
049 _amain
050 0 0 _aDS 156.P4
_b2021
100 _aKaye, Noah,
_d1981-
_9253303
245 1 4 _aThe Attalids of Pergamon and Anatolia :
_bmoney, culture, and state power /
_cby Noah Kaye
260 _aNew York :
_bCambridge University Press,
_c2021
300 _aonline resource
449 _a140502
504 _aIncludes bibliographical references and index
505 0 _aAcknowledgments -- List of figures, tables, and maps -- List of abbreviations -- Introduction -- Eating with the tax-collectors -- The skeleton of the state -- The king's money -- Cities and other civic organisms -- Hastening to the gymnasium -- Pergamene Panhellenism -- Conclusion -- Appendix of epigraphical documents -- Bibliography -- Index Locorum -- General index
520 _a"In the sunny, austere central hall of the Pergamon Museum in Berlin, wrapping around the room's walls like a serpent, then rising halfway to the ceiling on marble steps, stands a strident, if also fragmentary statement of empire. It is an unfinished wedding cake of a building. Tourists recline languidly on its ascent, like guests with nowhere to sit. The room is just too small; it is overtaken by the object on display ̣- The Great Altar of Pergamon. The Altar, with its two sculptural friezes, the outer, depicting the Battle of Gods and Giants, the inner, the tale of Telephos, son of Herakles and heroic ancestor of the Attalid dynasty, was discovered in 1871, the year in which the Second German Empire was born. The engineer Karl Humann stumbled upon the marble fragments while building infrastructure for Ottoman Turkey, making the Altar as we know it a pure product of German, French and British competition for influence in the Middle East. Today, Turkey has regained confidence, and officials from the Prussian Cultural Heritage Foundation expect Ankara to ask for it back"--
_cProvided by publisher.
650 0 _aMONEY
_zTURKEY
_zBERGAMA
_9253304
651 0 _aPERGAMUM (EXTINCT CITY)
_9253305
850 _aSPU
856 _uhttps://doi.org/10.1017/9781009279567
910 _aLibrary
_bCambridge University Press
_c080823
_pEB000350
942 _2lcc
_cEBK
998 _ajirawan 0823
_bjirawan 0823
999 _c210762