Balancing Power and Space: a Spatial Analysis of the Akītu Festival in Babylon after 626 BCE | Student Repository Skip to main content Leiden University Student Repository Home Submit About Select Collection All collections This collection Archaeology Governance and Global Affairs Humanities Science Social and Behavioural Sciences Search box Persistent URL of this record https://hdl.handle.net/1887/42888 Download Research master thesis open access In Collections This item can be found in the following collections: Classics and Ancient Civilizations (research) (MA) Deloucas, Andrew (2016) Balancing Power and Space: a Spatial Analysis of the Akītu Festival in Babylon after 626 BCE Research master thesis | Classics and Ancient Civilizations (research) (MA) In this thesis, I analyze the Akītu festival for the purpose of understanding the socio-political landscape of the Neo- and Late-Babylonian periods in Babylon (626 BCE - 100 BCE). The history of the Akītu festival, known as the Mesopotamian New Year’s festival, spans several millennia, but was especially known in its 1st millennium form in Babylon. This analysis focuses on the relationship between kings, gods, and high priests of Babylon and their actions in an historical and social space with relation to this festival. The interaction between cult and state in this shared space is used to compare how each empire utilized the festival and gods in order to exert and subvert power over the other within both an historic context and a wider socio-political history. I show that the Akītu festival was a constantly developing festival that was as dependent on the ruling king as it was a defining factor of kingship in Babylon. Akītu Zizek Smith Babylon Festival Neo-Babylonian Empire Persian Achaemenid Seleucid Hellenistic Mesopotamia Kingship Power Spatial Analysis Chronicles Royal Inscriptions Author Deloucas, Andrew Issue date 2016-08-30 Faculty Faculty of Humanities Specialisation Assyriology Supervisors Waerzeggers, Caroline ECTS Credits 25 Language en ©2020 Leiden University A service provided by Leiden University Libraries