The Siege of Lachish 701BC: A Bretwalda Battle
Auteur: Andrew May

Samenvatting

Key note: In 701BC Sennacherib of Assyria marched his army to crush a rebellion in Judah. The city of Lachish was one of the cities to be attacked and the siege proved to be a classic action of its time.

The Siege of Lachish is unique among battles of the ancient near east in that we have an account from both sides of the action. The version of the defenders appears in the Bible, while the Assyrian version was unearthed when the royal palace of Nineveh was excavated in the 19th century.

Sennacherib unleashed on the walled city all the most modern techniques of siege warfare that the mighty Assyrian Empire could produce. Archers rained arrows on the defenders while mighty rams smashed at the walls and complex picks prised the stonework apart.

In this fully illustrated book, military analyst Andrew May describes the action, explains the course of the siege and looks at the aftermath of one of the Bible"s great battles.

Contents
Chapter 1 - The Assyrian Empire under Sennacherib
Chapter 2 - The Rebel: King Hezekiah of Judah
Chapter 3 - Sennacherib"s Campaign against Judah
Chapter 4 - The Siege of Lachish
Chapter 5 - Aftermath

About the Author
Andrew May is a former defence scientist with an MA from Cambridge University and a PhD from Manchester University. His thirty year career spanned academia, the civil service and the defence industry. He has worked on advanced technology research in Farnborough, strategic planning in Whitehall and operational analysis for a large defence company. He is now based in the South-West of England where he works as a freelance writer and blogger.

Recensie

Nog geen recensies

Boekinformatie

Titel The Siege of Lachish 701BC: A Bretwalda Battle
Auteur Andrew May
Uitgever Bretwalda Books
Jaar Verschenen 2015
Taal en
Pagina's pp.
ISBN139781909099241
Onderwerp Hizkia (koning v. Juda), Lachish, Sanherib

Bestellen

Klik op het logo om te bestellen!


Commentaar

Zie de huisregels welk commentaar wordt opgenomen!