New Books in Military History

Tiffany Earley-Spadoni, "Landscapes of Warfare: Urartu and Assyria in the Ancient Middle East" (UP of Colorado, 2025)

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Sep 4, 2025
Tiffany Earley-Spadoni, an archaeologist and historian specializing in ancient warfare and society, discusses her book on the Urartian and Assyrian empires. She reveals how Urartu's mountain fortresses played a crucial role in their military strategies against Assyria. By using spatial analysis and archaeological evidence, Tiffany emphasizes the generative power of warfare in shaping landscapes and governance. She also evaluates the ideological dimensions of conflict and the significance of her recent archaeological discoveries in Kurd Khaberstan.
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INSIGHT

Highland Fortress Empire

  • Urartu was a major early first-millennium BCE power organized as a non-urban highland empire of mountain fortresses.
  • It formed a twin-imperial rivalry with Assyria and offers a distinct model of ancient imperial power.
INSIGHT

Seasonal, Systematic Warfare

  • By the 9th–7th centuries BCE warfare became systematic and seasonal with Assyrian annual campaigns and Urartian responses.
  • Geography and seasonal access shaped both empires' military rhythms and strategies.
INSIGHT

Landscape As Political Infrastructure

  • 'Landscape' means human-shaped space: fortresses turned passes into controlled political zones.
  • GIS viewshed analyses show deliberate fortress visibility and redundant signaling networks across the terrain.
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