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John Nielsen
Department Chair and Associate Professor
爱豆传媒视频 Hall 336D
(309) 677-2401
Education
Ph.D., Ancient Near Eastern History, University of Chicago
M.A., Ancient Near Eastern History, University of Chicago
B.A., History, Augsburg College
Biography
John Nielsen has been at 爱豆传媒视频 since 2014, having previously been on the faculty at Loyola University of New Orleans. At 爱豆传媒视频 he has offered courses on Greek and Roman history, the pre-Islamic and modern Middle East, early and later Western Civilization, African history, pre-modern and modern World History, and Digital Humanities. In 2021 he was Visiting Senior Lecturer in Assyriology at Uppsala University in Sweden.
John鈥檚 research interests focus on the social and economic history of Babylonia in the first millennium B.C. from the Neo-Assyrian to Hellenistic periods. He is the author of three monographs and several peer-reviewed journal articles and book chapters. During his time at 爱豆传媒视频, he has received the Stein-Fuller Notable Publication Award (2018) and the Claire Etaugh Teaching Award (2023) from the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and has received the University鈥檚 Caterpillar Inc. Faculty Achievement Award for Scholarship (2018).
Teaching
- CIV 101 Western Civilization to 1600
- HIS 206 Non-Western Civilization: The Middle East since Muhammad
- HIS 322 Ancient Egypt and the Near East
- HIS 323 Ancient Greece and the Hellenistic World
- HIS 325 Roman Civilization
- HIS 336 Early Non-Western History and Geography
- HIS 209 History of Africa
- HIS 352 Introduction to Digital Humanities
Scholarship
Books:
- The Reign of Nebuchadnezzar I in History and Historical Memory. Studies in the History of the Ancient Near East. London: Routledge, 2018.
- Early Neo-Babylonian Personal Names from Legal and Administrative Documents, 747-626 B.C.E. NISABA 29. Winona Lake, Ind.: Eisenbrauns, 2015.
- Sons and Descendants: A Social History of Kin Groups and Family Names in the Early Neo-Babylonian Period, 747-626 B.C. Culture and History of the Ancient Near East 43. Leiden: Brill, 2010.
Journals Articles:
- with Michael Kozuh, 鈥溾楥heck the writing boards from the time of Nebuchadnezzar鈥: An Inventory of Administrative Writing Boards in the Spurlock Museum of World Cultures, University of Illinois (Spurlock Museum 1913-14-1574).鈥 Revue d鈥橝ssyriologie et d鈥檃rch茅ologie orientale 115 (2021): 143-158.
- 鈥淜ings of Chaldea and Sons of Nobodies: Assyrian Engagement with Chaldea and the Emergence of Chaldean Power in Babylonia.鈥 In The Strange and the Familiar: Identity and Empire in the Ancient Near East, ed. G. Konstantopoulos, Studia Orientalia Electronica 9/2 (2021): 108-121.
- with Liu Changyu, 鈥淐uneiform Tablets in the Collection of the Logan Museum of Anthropology, Beloit College.鈥 Akkadica 140 (2019): 72-102.
- 鈥淭aking Refuge at Borsippa: The Archive of L芒b芒拧i Son of N膩dinu.鈥 Archiv f眉r Orientforschung 53 (2015): 93-109.
with Liu Changyu, 鈥淐uneiform Tablets in the Special Collections of Knox College, Galesburg, IL.鈥 Cuneiform Digital Library Bulletin, 2015: 5. - 鈥淭hree Early Neo-Babylonian Tablets Belonging to B膿l-膾峁璱r of the Mi峁raya Kin Group.鈥 Journal of Cuneiform Studies 62 (2010): 97-106.
- 鈥淭rading on Knowledge: The Iddin-Papsukkal Kin Group in Southern Babylonia in the 7th and 6th Centuries B.C.鈥 Journal of Ancient Near Eastern Religions 9/2 (2009): 171-182.
- 鈥淎dbi鈥檌lu: An Arab at Babylon (BM 78912).鈥 Antiguo Oriente 7 (2009): 199-205.
- 鈥淔our Ur III Administrative Tablets in the Possession of Professor Francis Carroll, University of Manitoba.鈥 Antiguo Oriente 6 (2008): 105-110.
Chapters in Collected Works and Conference Proceedings:
- 鈥淭he Family in the Ancient Near East.鈥 In A Companion to the Ancient Near East, 2d ed. (New York: Wiley-Blackwell, 2020), 111-124.
- 鈥淐ultural Encounters and Identity Formation among the Urban Elite in Early Neo-Babylonian Society.鈥 In Cultural Encounters in Near Eastern History, ed. Thomas Hertel, Mogens T. Larsen, and Kim Ryholt. CNI Publications 44 (Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Forlag, 2018), 91-117.
- with Caroline Waerzeggers, 鈥淚n Search of the Origins of the han拧没 Land Schemes in the Early Neo-Babylonian Period: Interactions between Temple, King and Local Elites.鈥 In The Proceedings of the ESF Exploratory Workshop: Dynamics of Production and Economic Interaction in the Near East in the First Half of the First Millennium BCE, Villeneuve d鈥橝scq, 28-30 June 2011, ed. Juan Carlos Garcia Moreno. (Oxford: Oxbow Press, 2016), 331-344.
- 鈥溾業 Overwhelmed the King of Elam鈥: Remembering Nebuchadnezzar I in Persian Babylonia.鈥 In Political Memory in and after the Persian Empire, ed. Jason Silvermann and Caroline Waerzeggers. SBLANEM 13 (Atlanta: SBL, 2015), 53-73.
- 鈥淢arduk鈥檚 Return: Babylonian Cultural Memory, Assyrian Imperial Ideology, and the ak墨tu Festival of 667 B.C.鈥 In Cultural Memory and Religion in the Ancient City, ed. Martin Bommas, Juliette Harrison, Phoebe Roy and Elena Theodorakopolous. Cultural Memory and History in Antiquity Vol. 2 (London: Bloomsbury Publishing, 2012), 3-32.
- 鈥淣ebuchadnezzar I鈥檚 Eastern Front.鈥 In The Ancient Near East in the 12th-10th Centuries BCE: Culture and History, ed. Gershon Galil. Alter Orient und Altes Testament 392 (M眉nster: Ugarit-Verlag, 2012), 401-411.
- 鈥淏abylonia from Nebuchadnezzar I to Tiglath-pileser III.鈥 In The Oxford History of the Ancient Near East, ed. K. Radner et al., Vol. 4 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2023), 520-587.