Pisidian Antioch

Pisidian Antioch

Author: Stephen Mitchell

Publisher: Classical Press of Wales

Published: 1998-12-31

Total Pages: 270

ISBN-13: 1905125755

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

The city of Pisidian Antioch was founded in the hellenistic period by the Seleucids, in what is now south-west Turkey. Under the emperor Augustus it became the most important Roman colony of the eastern empire. The city flourished until the sixth century AD. It has left dramatic and extensive ruins. This comprehensive and fully-illustrated study, a sequel to Mitchell's Cremna in Pisidia, is based on a new survey of the site. It also includes the results of the most recent Turkish field work as well as detailed information from the important but unpublished 1924 excavation by the University of Michigan.


Vessels and Variety

Vessels and Variety

Author: Annette Rathje

Publisher: Museum Tusculanum Press

Published: 2013-10-01

Total Pages: 338

ISBN-13: 8763537516

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Addressing topics of production and distribution, iconography, regional studies, and museum collections, this volume sheds new and important light on perspectives in the fields of ancient pottery studies. The articles, substantial and well-illustrated, cover a wide span of time from the Geometric period and into the Roman period, including new results and material from excavations as well as new methodological approaches. The range of vessels and their varieties discussed include Campana A pottery from the southern Levant and the Black Sea areas; Oinotrian-Euboian pottery in a sanctuary context in Timpone della Motta near Sybaris in the Middle to Late Geometric periods; Early Proto Corinthian aryballos in the western Mediterranean; Greek imported and local pottery from the earliest times in Crotone’s history; iconographic history of the myth of Iphigenia from Athens to southern Italian vase-painting; small terracotta figurines from Peloponnesian sanctuaries; anthropomorphic and zoomorphic figures on Etruscan impasto vessels; Cypro-Arcaic pottery; and objects – red-gloss relief decorated sherds and Geometric pottery – housed in Danish museum collections. The articles represent recent Danish archaeological research of the Mediterranean and constitute an important contribution to the ongoing international debate on the roles of pottery in ancient societies.


Building Jewish in the Roman East

Building Jewish in the Roman East

Author: Peter Richardson

Publisher: BRILL

Published: 2005-02-01

Total Pages: 468

ISBN-13: 9047406508

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Archaeology has unearthed the glories of ancient Jewish buildings throughout the Mediterranean. But what has remained shrouded is what these buildings meant. "Building Jewish" first surveys the architecture of small rural villages in the Galilee in the early Roman period before examining the development of synagogues as "Jewish associations." Finally, "Building Jewish" explores Jerusalem's flurry of building activity under Herod the Great in the first century BCE. Richardson's careful work not only documents the culture that forms the background to any study of Second Temple Judaism and early Christianity, but he also succeeds in demonstrating how architecture itself, like a text, conveys meaning and thus directly illuminates daily life and religious thought and practice in the ancient world.


Gematon: Living and Dying in a Kushite Town on the Nile, Volume I

Gematon: Living and Dying in a Kushite Town on the Nile, Volume I

Author: Derek A. Welsby

Publisher: Archaeopress Publishing Ltd

Published: 2023-12-14

Total Pages: 470

ISBN-13: 1803276770

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

The first of a set of three volumes publishing the excavations at the site of Kawa, Northern Dongola Reach, between 1997 and 2018 by the Sudan Archaeological Research Society. Volume I contains a detailed study of the excavations carried out in Areas A, B, C, and F, as well as the temenos gateway, Building Z1 and the Kushite cemetery R18.


Author:

Publisher: Brill Archive

Published:

Total Pages: 88

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK