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  <dcite:identifier identifierType="DOI">10.17192/meta.2014.3.3146</dcite:identifier>
  <dcite:creators>
    <dcite:creator>
      <dcite:creatorName nameType="Personal">Grassi, Giulia Francesca</dcite:creatorName>
      <dcite:givenName>Giulia Francesca</dcite:givenName>
      <dcite:familyName>Grassi</dcite:familyName>
    </dcite:creator>
  </dcite:creators>
  <dcite:titles>
    <dcite:title xml:lang="en">Nabonidus, King of Babylon</dcite:title>
    <dcite:title>Middle East - Topics + Arguments : Vol 3 (2014)</dcite:title>
  </dcite:titles>
  <dcite:publisher>Philipps-Universität Marburg</dcite:publisher>
  <dcite:publicationYear>2014</dcite:publicationYear>
  <dcite:subjects>
    <dcite:subject>Nabonidus</dcite:subject>
    <dcite:subject>Archaeology</dcite:subject>
    <dcite:subject>Ancient Near East in Modern Culture</dcite:subject>
    <dcite:subject>Biblical and Parabiblical Literature</dcite:subject>
    <dcite:subject>Neo-Babylonian Dynasty</dcite:subject>
    <dcite:subject>Greek Historians</dcite:subject>
  </dcite:subjects>
  <dcite:contributors>
    <dcite:contributor contributorType="ResearchGroup">
      <dcite:contributorName>Center for Near and Middle Eastern Studies (CNMS)</dcite:contributorName>
    </dcite:contributor>
  </dcite:contributors>
  <dcite:dates>
    <dcite:date dateType="Updated">2018-01-31</dcite:date>
    <dcite:date dateType="Issued">2014-12-17</dcite:date>
  </dcite:dates>
  <dcite:language>en</dcite:language>
  <dcite:resourceType resourceTypeGeneral="Text">JournalArticle</dcite:resourceType>
  <dcite:alternateIdentifiers>
    <dcite:alternateIdentifier alternateIdentifierType="URL">https://journals.uni-marburg.de/0003/2014/45/3146</dcite:alternateIdentifier>
    <dcite:alternateIdentifier alternateIdentifierType="URN">urn:nbn:de:hebis:04-0003-2014-45-31463</dcite:alternateIdentifier>
  </dcite:alternateIdentifiers>
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    <dcite:relatedIdentifier relatedIdentifierType="DOI" relationType="IsPartOf">https://doi.org/10.17192/meta.2014.3.45</dcite:relatedIdentifier>
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    <dcite:relatedIdentifier relatedIdentifierType="ISSN" relationType="IsPartOf">2196-629X</dcite:relatedIdentifier>
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    <dcite:format>application/pdf</dcite:format>
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  <dcite:descriptions>
    <dcite:description descriptionType="Abstract">It may seem anomalous to devote this column, which should contain the portrait of someone who contributed to the issue's main topic, to the last Neo-Babylonian king, having at disposal a considerable number of renowned scholars, explorers, philologists, and archaeologists who could well have deserved this attention: Pietro Della Valle, Carsten Niebuhr, Georg Friedrich Grotefend, Paul-Émile Botta, Austen Henry Layard, Robert Koldewey, and Ernest Renan are just some of the many possible illustrious candidates.There is basically one reason for the choice of Nabonidus: he is one of the very few characters involved with cultural heritage as both agent and object. As agent, he has been considered the first archaeologist ever, and—even if his description as "archaeologist" may be extreme—his use of the past for ideological purposes is undeniable; as object, he—or rather his acts, attitudes, and dispositions—were reinterpreted and transmitted to modern times through different literary testimonies.</dcite:description>
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    <dcite:relatedItem relationType="IsPublishedIn" relatedItemType="Journal">
      <dcite:relatedItemIdentifier relatedItemIdentifierType="ISSN">2196-629X</dcite:relatedItemIdentifier>
      <dcite:titles>
        <dcite:title>Middle East - Topics + Arguments</dcite:title>
      </dcite:titles>
      <dcite:issue>Vol 3 (2014)</dcite:issue>
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