
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|

|

|
|
Visual History of the World
(CONTENTS)
|
|
|
First Empires
ca. 7000 B.C. - 200 A.D.
|
The Middle East was the
cradle of mankind's first advanced civilizations. In Egypt and the
Fertile Crescent, which extends in an arc from the north of the
Arabian Peninsula east through Palestine to Mesopotamia, the first
state structures emerged in parallel with the further development of
animal husbandry, agriculture, trade, and writing. The first great
empires, such as those of the Egyptian pharaohs, the Babylonians,
the Assyrians, and the Persians, evolved at the beginning of the
third millennium B.C., out of small communities usually clustered
around a city. Similar development also occurred on the Indian
subcontinent and in China, where quite distinct early advanced
civilizations took shape as well.
|

The golden mask of Tutankhamun, a jewel of ancient
Egyptian artwork,
showing the pharaoh in a ceremonial robe decorated with the heraldic
animals, the vulture and cobra, ca. 1340 B.C.
|
|
|
|
see also text
KING SOLOMON "Song of
Songs"
|
Syria and Palestine
|
3000-332 B.C.
|
|
|
The Early Israelites and the
Kingdoms of David and Solomon
|
|
Bathsheba
|
|

David and Bathsheba, Rafaello, c 1515
|
|

Francesco Hayez
|
|

Bathsheba Receiving David's Letter, Jan Steen, 1659.
|
|

Jan Steen, Bathsheba After the Bath
|
|

Bathsheba with King David's Letter, 1659 by Govert Flinck
|
|

Bathsheba at the Bath, by Carlo Maratta
|
|

Giuseppe Bartolomeo Chiari
|
|

After Luca Giordano, 1705
|
|

Sebastiano Ricci
|
|

Sebastiano Ricci
|
|

Jan van Scorel, Landscape with Bathsheba
|
|

Bathsheba at her Toilet, Jan Gerritsz van Bronckhorst
|
|

David and Bathsheba,
Marc Chagall, 1956
|
|

David and Bathsheba, Gustave
Adolphe Mossa
|
|

David and Bathsheba, by
Fuchs Ernst
|
|

Homage to Rembrandt: Bathsheba, by Patricia Watwood
|
|

Philip Wilson Steer
|
|

"He saw a woman washing herself", (over Ein Karem, Jerusalem)
from "A
Powerful Series of Paintings of King David,"
Schwebel, 1996,
Jewish
Heritage Online Monthly, January 2000.
|
|

He Saw a Woman Washing Herself, (over New York)
from "A Powerful
Series of Paintings of King David,"
Schwebel, 1999, Jewish Heritage
Online Monthly, January 2000.
|
|
|
|

|