Acknowledgements
Preface
Part 1: Assyriology in the Beginning
1. Discovery and Decipherment
2. Languages and Texts
3. Publications and Periodicals
Part 2: Creating a Formal Academic Discipline, 1870–1940
4. Professional Specialization (Austria / France / Switzerland / Belgium / Great Britain / Ireland / The United States / Canada / Centers Elsewhere, 1870-1940)
5. Building a Modern Corpus of Cuneiform Texts
6. Reference and Teaching Works
7. Scientific Excavations and Assyriology
8. Rediscovering Sumerian Literature
Part 3: Agendas in Assyriology, 1850–1970
9. Mesopotamian Political, Social, and Economic History
10. Mesopotamian Religion
11. Cuneiform Culture
Part 4: Assyriology in its Historical Setting to 1970
12. From Colonialism to the First World War and Its Aftermath
13. Tempest-Tost: Assyriologists and the Second World War
14. The Antiquities Trade
15. The Development of National Schools (Russia / The Netherlands / Italy / Czechoslovakia / Slovenia / Hungary / Poland / Denmark / Finland / Norway / Sweden / Spain / Israel /Palestine: The West Bank / Iraq / South Africa / Japan / Korea / China / Other Lands)
Part 5: Assyriologists at Work, 1945–1970
16. Post-War Generations (The United States / Canada / Great Britain / France and Belgium / Germany / Austria)
17. Women in Assyriology
Part 6: Conclusion: Changes and Challenges in Assyriology, 1970 and Beyond
Appendix I: Babylonian Bindings and Cuneiform Covers (Karen Polinger Foster)
Appendix II: Biographies of Assyriologists
Bibliography
Abbreviations
Index