Home > Authors > Deborah L. Nichols > The archaeology of city-states
The archaeology of city-states
Contending that the city-state was a significant cross-cultural regularity that developed among geographically and historically separated civilizations, fifteen prominent archaeologists and historians explore the emergence, structure, and function of city-states in Mesopotamia, Egypt, the Indus Valley, China, Greece, Okinawa, the Maya Lowlands, central Mexico, the coast of Peru, and the Andes. The contributors discuss area and population size, settlement patterns, economic organization, political systems, and duration.
See on goodreads | librarything
Recent activity
Rate this book to see your activity here.
5 Books Similar to The archaeology of city-states by Deborah L. Nichols
Bookscovery readers who liked The archaeology of city-states also like
Social violence in the prehispanic American Southwest, Arqueología y complejidad social and Post-conquest developments in the Teotihuacán Valley, Mexico.
How many of these have you read?
Comments and reviews of The archaeology of city-states
Please sign in to leave a comment