
      Mesopotamian society and its economy were basically agrarian, exhibiting 
      cyclical long-term developments, as well as an unmistakable growth in 
      political size. The combination contributed to severe strains in urban 
      Mesopotamian society. Increasing political importance both complicated 
      and concentrated government, which was compelled to change those massive 
      quantities of agricultural bulk products, generated by its own 
      agricultural activities and received as tax, into the more useful, 
      liquid silver, which, however, was not produced in Mesopotamia itself. 
      
The first study presented establishes that already by 2000 
      B.C. silver was to some extent current in Mesopotamia and could be 
      exchanged internally for agricultural produce. The second study, dealing 
      mainly with the remuneration of the Mesopotamian clergy, concludes that 
      local elites, which played an essential role in maintaining the urban 
      character of settled Mesopotamian society, possessed a stable economic 
      basis, for which neither silver nor the functioning of a market played a 
      decisive role. A third study deals with Neo-Babylonian-Achaemenid 
      taxation, a topic which cannot be isolated from the exploitation of the 
      land in general. It is evident that Mesopotamia made a considerable 
      contribution to the Persian monarchy, both in silver and in human 
      labour. Agricultural products could be marketed and exchanged within 
      Mesopotamia but how the silver required was earned in the outside world, 
      remains elusive.
    
	  	
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