Berossos and Manetho, introduced and translated: native traditions in ancient Mesopotamia and Egypt

by Gerald Verbrugghe

Other authorsJohn M. Wickersham
Paper Book, 1996

Status

Available

Call number

932

Collection

Publication

Ann Arbor : University of Michigan Press, c1996.

Description

Berossos and Manetho begins with a general introduction to the cultural history of ancient Mesopotamia and Egypt. It then presents a translation of the only known native narratives, written in Greek, of the histories of these two civilizations. The priest Berossos chronicled the past of ancient Babylon from the mythical creation of the world down to Alexander the Great's conquest in the fourth century b.c.e. For Egypt, the scribe Manetho's list of rulers from the reigns of the gods down to Alexander's conquest remains the basis for the dynastic arrangement of the pharaohs that is still used today. Berossos and Manetho offers particular emphasis on and discussion of the languages and scripts used to preserve the glorious past of these lands. Each author receives his own special introduction, which describes his life, the sources of his History, the nature and content of his writings, and his goals and accomplishments. There follows a translation of all the surviving ancient information about each author, and of all that can be recovered of his writings. For the first time, Berossos and Manetho--priests and contemporaries who write just when their lands had been pushed into Hellenization--have been translated in one volume. This volume will appeal to all people interested in ancient Israel, Greek history, and ancient history in general. Gerald P. Verbrugghe is Associate Professor of History, Rutgers University. John M. Wickersham is Professor of Classics and Classics Department Chairperson, Ursinus College.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member AndreasJ
Reading the fragments and testimonies of Berossos and Manetho one can hardly avoid a certain melancholy at what has been lost.

It's interesting to note that while the cases of Berossos and Manetho are in many important ways parallel - both were hellenized native priests who used local written
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traditions (largely ignored by Greek writers) to write Greek-style histories of their native countries, and both those histories have come down to us only only in fragments - the historiographical fates of their work are quite different. Berossos' is effectively a curiosity, with little impact on how we understand Babylonian history. Manetho's still provides the framework for Egyptian chronology and it appears we owe the very word "dynasty" to him.
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Language

Original language

Greek (Ancient)

Original publication date

1996

Physical description

ix, 239 p.; 24 cm

ISBN

0472107224 / 9780472107223

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