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    Spatial nalysis and Social Spaces. Interdisciplinary

    Approaches to the Interpretation of Prehistoric and Historic

    Built Environments

    Eleftheria Paliou, Undine Lieberwirth & Silvia Polla ()

    & :Berlin/Boston 2014

    : Walter de Gruyter GmbH

    : Topoi - Berlin Studies of the Ancient World 18

    : , viii & 320 ., /

    ISBN: 978-3-11-026643-6

    :80

    ()

    In recent years a range of formal methods of spatial analysis have been developed for the study of

    human engagement, experience and socialisation within the built environment. Many, although not all, of

    these emanate from the fields of architectural and urban studies, and draw upon social theories of space

    that lay emphasis on the role of visibility, movement, and accessibility in the built environment. These

    approaches are now gaining in popularity among researchers of prehistoric and historic built spaces and are

    given increasingly more weight in the interpretation of past urban environments.

    This volume brings together contributions from a number of specialists in archaeology, social theory,

    architecture, and urban planning, who explore the theoretical and methodological frameworks associated

    with the application of established and novel spatial analysis methods in past built environments. The focusis mainly on more recent computer-based approaches, and techniques such as access analysis, visibility

    graph analysis, isovist analysis, agent-based models of pedestrian movement, and 3D visibility approaches.

    A number of common themes arise from this interdisciplinary approach: How can spatial analysis facilitate

    a better understanding of human engagement, experience and socialization in prehistoric and historic

    spaces? Can methodologies developed for the investigation of contemporary environments be successfully

    applied in archaeological contexts? What are the limitations of these approaches?

    The volume examines the relationship between space and social life from many different perspectives,

    and provides many illuminating examples on the use of computer-based spatial analysis methods in the

    study of past environments. It will be of interest for archaeologists, social theorists, architects, urban

    planners and computer scientists.

    Preface [v]

    Eleftheria Paliou, Introduction [1-18]

    Bill Hillier, Spatial analysis and cultural information:

    the need for theory as well as method in space

    syntax analysis [19-48]

    http://www.degruyter.com/viewbooktoc/product/177443http://www.degruyter.com/viewbooktoc/product/177443http://www.degruyter.com/dg/viewbooktoc.chapterlist.resultlinks.fullcontentlink:pdfeventlink/$002fbooks$002f9783110266436$002f9783110266436.v$002f9783110266436.v.pdf?t:ac=product/177443http://www.degruyter.com/dg/viewbooktoc.chapterlist.resultlinks.fullcontentlink:pdfeventlink/$002fbooks$002f9783110266436$002f9783110266436.v$002f9783110266436.v.pdf?t:ac=product/177443http://www.degruyter.com/dg/viewbooktoc.chapterlist.resultlinks.fullcontentlink:pdfeventlink/$002fbooks$002f9783110266436$002f9783110266436.19$002f9783110266436.19.pdf?t:ac=product/177443http://www.degruyter.com/dg/viewbooktoc.chapterlist.resultlinks.fullcontentlink:pdfeventlink/$002fbooks$002f9783110266436$002f9783110266436.19$002f9783110266436.19.pdf?t:ac=product/177443http://www.degruyter.com/dg/viewbooktoc.chapterlist.resultlinks.fullcontentlink:pdfeventlink/$002fbooks$002f9783110266436$002f9783110266436.19$002f9783110266436.19.pdf?t:ac=product/177443http://www.degruyter.com/dg/viewbooktoc.chapterlist.resultlinks.fullcontentlink:pdfeventlink/$002fbooks$002f9783110266436$002f9783110266436.v$002f9783110266436.v.pdf?t:ac=product/177443http://www.degruyter.com/viewbooktoc/product/177443
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    Quentin Letesson, From building to architecture:

    the rise of configurational thinking in Bronze

    Age Crete [49-90]

    Eleftheria Paliou, Visibility analysis in 3D built

    spaces: a new dimension to the understanding

    of social space [91-114]

    David Wheatley, Connecting landscapes with built

    environments: visibility analysis, scale and the

    senses [115-134]

    Constantinos Papadopoulos & Graeme Earl, Formal

    three-dimensional computational analyses of

    archaeological spaces [135-166]

    Kevin D. Fisher, Investigating monumental socialspace in Late Bronze Age Cyprus: an integrative

    approach [167-202]

    Piraye Hacgzeller & Ulrich Thaler, Three tales oftwo cities? A comparative analysis of

    topological, visual and metric properties of

    archaeological space in Malia and Pylos [203-

    262]

    John Bintliff, Spatial analysis of past builtenvironment: houses and society in the Aegean

    from the Early Iron Age till the impact of Rome

    [263-276]

    Akkelies van Nes, Indicating street vitality in

    excavated towns. Spatial configurative analyses

    applied to Pompeii [277-296]

    Hanna Stger, The spatial signature of an insula

    neighbourhood of Roman Ostia [297-316]

    List of contributors [317]

    About the editors [319]

    : -

    The Phaistos Hills before the Palace: a Contextual Reappraisal

    Simona Todaro

    & :Monza 2013: Polimetrica

    : Praehistorica Mediterranea 5

    : , 353 ., ,, , 21x15 .

    ISN: 978-88-7699-235-3

    :ca. 22

    ( )

    This work represents the first comprehensive account of all the deposits and structures uncovered

    over the past hundred years on the three hills of the Phaistos ridge (in south-central Crete), and also the

    first attempt to clarify the nature of the site in terms of function and status from its foundation at theend of the Neolithic period through the Early Bronze Age. It is suggested that Phaistos stood out in the

    Prepalatial Mesara not only on account of its size, but above all for (1) its continuity of occupation, which

    contrasts with the settlement mobility revealed by the numerous single-phase sites uncovered in the region

    http://www.degruyter.com/dg/viewbooktoc.chapterlist.resultlinks.fullcontentlink:pdfeventlink/$002fbooks$002f9783110266436$002f9783110266436.49$002f9783110266436.49.pdf?t:ac=product/177443http://www.degruyter.com/dg/viewbooktoc.chapterlist.resultlinks.fullcontentlink:pdfeventlink/$002fbooks$002f9783110266436$002f9783110266436.49$002f9783110266436.49.pdf?t:ac=product/177443http://www.degruyter.com/dg/viewbooktoc.chapterlist.resultlinks.fullcontentlink:pdfeventlink/$002fbooks$002f9783110266436$002f9783110266436.91$002f9783110266436.91.pdf?t:ac=product/177443http://www.degruyter.com/dg/viewbooktoc.chapterlist.resultlinks.fullcontentlink:pdfeventlink/$002fbooks$002f9783110266436$002f9783110266436.91$002f9783110266436.91.pdf?t:ac=product/177443http://www.degruyter.com/dg/viewbooktoc.chapterlist.resultlinks.fullcontentlink:pdfeventlink/$002fbooks$002f9783110266436$002f9783110266436.115$002f9783110266436.115.pdf?t:ac=product/177443http://www.degruyter.com/dg/viewbooktoc.chapterlist.resultlinks.fullcontentlink:pdfeventlink/$002fbooks$002f9783110266436$002f9783110266436.115$002f9783110266436.115.pdf?t:ac=product/177443http://www.degruyter.com/dg/viewbooktoc.chapterlist.resultlinks.fullcontentlink:pdfeventlink/$002fbooks$002f9783110266436$002f9783110266436.135$002f9783110266436.135.pdf?t:ac=product/177443http://www.degruyter.com/dg/viewbooktoc.chapterlist.resultlinks.fullcontentlink:pdfeventlink/$002fbooks$002f9783110266436$002f9783110266436.135$002f9783110266436.135.pdf?t:ac=product/177443http://www.degruyter.com/dg/viewbooktoc.chapterlist.resultlinks.fullcontentlink:pdfeventlink/$002fbooks$002f9783110266436$002f9783110266436.167$002f9783110266436.167.pdf?t:ac=product/177443http://www.degruyter.com/dg/viewbooktoc.chapterlist.resultlinks.fullcontentlink:pdfeventlink/$002fbooks$002f9783110266436$002f9783110266436.167$002f9783110266436.167.pdf?t:ac=product/177443http://www.degruyter.com/dg/viewbooktoc.chapterlist.resultlinks.fullcontentlink:pdfeventlink/$002fbooks$002f9783110266436$002f9783110266436.203$002f9783110266436.203.pdf?t:ac=product/177443http://www.degruyter.com/dg/viewbooktoc.chapterlist.resultlinks.fullcontentlink:pdfeventlink/$002fbooks$002f9783110266436$002f9783110266436.203$002f9783110266436.203.pdf?t:ac=product/177443http://www.degruyter.com/dg/viewbooktoc.chapterlist.resultlinks.fullcontentlink:pdfeventlink/$002fbooks$002f9783110266436$002f9783110266436.263$002f9783110266436.263.pdf?t:ac=product/177443http://www.degruyter.com/dg/viewbooktoc.chapterlist.resultlinks.fullcontentlink:pdfeventlink/$002fbooks$002f9783110266436$002f9783110266436.263$002f9783110266436.263.pdf?t:ac=product/177443http://www.degruyter.com/dg/viewbooktoc.chapterlist.resultlinks.fullcontentlink:pdfeventlink/$002fbooks$002f9783110266436$002f9783110266436.277$002f9783110266436.277.pdf?t:ac=product/177443http://www.degruyter.com/dg/viewbooktoc.chapterlist.resultlinks.fullcontentlink:pdfeventlink/$002fbooks$002f9783110266436$002f9783110266436.277$002f9783110266436.277.pdf?t:ac=product/177443http://www.degruyter.com/dg/viewbooktoc.chapterlist.resultlinks.fullcontentlink:pdfeventlink/$002fbooks$002f9783110266436$002f9783110266436.297$002f9783110266436.297.pdf?t:ac=product/177443http://www.degruyter.com/dg/viewbooktoc.chapterlist.resultlinks.fullcontentlink:pdfeventlink/$002fbooks$002f9783110266436$002f9783110266436.297$002f9783110266436.297.pdf?t:ac=product/177443http://www.degruyter.com/dg/viewbooktoc.chapterlist.resultlinks.fullcontentlink:pdfeventlink/$002fbooks$002f9783110266436$002f9783110266436.297$002f9783110266436.297.pdf?t:ac=product/177443http://www.degruyter.com/dg/viewbooktoc.chapterlist.resultlinks.fullcontentlink:pdfeventlink/$002fbooks$002f9783110266436$002f9783110266436.277$002f9783110266436.277.pdf?t:ac=product/177443http://www.degruyter.com/dg/viewbooktoc.chapterlist.resultlinks.fullcontentlink:pdfeventlink/$002fbooks$002f9783110266436$002f9783110266436.263$002f9783110266436.263.pdf?t:ac=product/177443http://www.degruyter.com/dg/viewbooktoc.chapterlist.resultlinks.fullcontentlink:pdfeventlink/$002fbooks$002f9783110266436$002f9783110266436.203$002f9783110266436.203.pdf?t:ac=product/177443http://www.degruyter.com/dg/viewbooktoc.chapterlist.resultlinks.fullcontentlink:pdfeventlink/$002fbooks$002f9783110266436$002f9783110266436.167$002f9783110266436.167.pdf?t:ac=product/177443http://www.degruyter.com/dg/viewbooktoc.chapterlist.resultlinks.fullcontentlink:pdfeventlink/$002fbooks$002f9783110266436$002f9783110266436.135$002f9783110266436.135.pdf?t:ac=product/177443http://www.degruyter.com/dg/viewbooktoc.chapterlist.resultlinks.fullcontentlink:pdfeventlink/$002fbooks$002f9783110266436$002f9783110266436.115$002f9783110266436.115.pdf?t:ac=product/177443http://www.degruyter.com/dg/viewbooktoc.chapterlist.resultlinks.fullcontentlink:pdfeventlink/$002fbooks$002f9783110266436$002f9783110266436.91$002f9783110266436.91.pdf?t:ac=product/177443http://www.degruyter.com/dg/viewbooktoc.chapterlist.resultlinks.fullcontentlink:pdfeventlink/$00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    (2) the large-scale building projects that took place at the core of the site between EM II and EM III and (3)

    the specificity of some of the communal activities that took place in certain locations, which might have

    involved the periodic re-visiting of the hill by other Mesara groups.

    Note on abbreviations, transliteration and

    terminology [11]

    Preface by Vincenzo LaRosa [11]Acknowledgements [19]

    1. Research issues, approaches and methods [21]

    1.1. Prepalatial: the foundation of palatial

    Crete?

    1.2. Phaistos and the western Mesara before

    the rise of the Palace: contrasting views [28]

    1.3. Re-assessing Prepalatial Phaistos in a

    synchronic and diachronic perspective: a

    contextual approach [40]

    1.4. The structure of the book [44]2. Prepalatial Phaistos: the archaeological data [47]

    2.1. The history of excavations: Phaistos 1900-

    2004 [47]

    2.2. The Prepalatial stratigraphies, deposits and

    structures uncovered over time at Phaistos

    [63]

    2.3. Potential and problems of the available

    evidence: towards a chronological and

    functional re-assessment [157]

    3. The stratigraphic sequence of PrepalatialPhaistos: a chronological re-assessment [161]

    3.1. Methodological issues: working with

    palimpsests of strata and walls [161]

    3.2. The stratigraphy of Prepalatial Phaistos

    [164]

    3.3. From stratigraphy to chronology: EM I-MM

    IA pottery groups at Phaistos [167]

    3.4. Phases I-III: the end of the Neolithic and the

    transition to the Early Bronze Age [168]

    3.5. Phases IV-VIII: the EM I-EM IIA late pottery

    groups [175]3.6. Phases VIII-IX: The post-EM IIB ceramic

    development at Phaistos [188]

    3.7. Phase X: MM IA and the end of the

    Prepalatial period at Phaistos [203]

    3.8. The Prepalatial pottery sequence at

    Phaistos: potential and limits of the available

    evidence [212]

    4. Re evaluating Prepalatial Phaistos:

    Archaeological data in context [215]4.1. Formation processes and contextual

    analysis: the Phaistos hills from a synchronic

    and diachronic perspective [215]

    4.2. Phaistos I and II: the birth and development

    of a Final Neolithic community [217]

    4.3. Phaistos III and IV: the transition to the

    Early Bronze Age [231]

    4.4. Phaistos V-VII: the early Prepalatial period

    between construction, production and

    consumption [237]

    4.5. PhaistosVIII-X: the late Prepalatial periodbetween construction, production and

    consumption [248]

    4.6. Concluding remarks: communal vs.

    domestic activities at prepalatial Phaistos

    [260]

    5. Prepalatial Phaistos: the development of a

    ceremonial centre [267]

    5.1. Present achievements and potential for

    further research [267]

    5.2. The western Mesara in the Prepalatial

    period: a preliminary account [269]5.3. A settlement history of Phaistos in the

    Prepalatial period: between in situ rebuilding

    and horizontal drifting [277]

    5.4. The status of the Phaistos hills from the

    Pre- to Protopalatial periods [281]

    5.5. Concluding remarks: the growth of a

    settlement or the development of a regional

    ceremonial centre? [295]

    Appendix I. The Prepalatial buildings on the

    western slope of the Palace hill [299]Tables [303]

    Bibliography [319]

    Index of plans and figures [335]

    Index of names, places and notable things [343]

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    A: -

    Chalcolithic and Bronze Age Pottery from the Field Survey in

    Northwestern Cyprus, 1992-1999

    Dariusz Maliszewski

    & :Oxford 2013

    :Archaeopress

    : BAR International Series 2547 [Polis-Pyrgos Archaeological

    Project I]

    : , 184 ., / , , , 29.7x21 .

    ISBN: 978-1-4073-1167-8

    :33 (ca. 40)

    ( )

    The material presented here is derived from an extensive survey conducted by the Polis-Pyrgos

    Archaeological Project (PAP) in 19921994, 19961997, and 1999 in the area between the western bank ofthe Chrysochou River and Kato Pyrgos in northwestern Cyprus. This is the first comprehensive publication

    of ceramics and ground stone artefacts from the neighbouring area of Polis tis Chrysochous (Polis), formerly

    ancient Marion and Arsinoe. The pottery constitutes the bulk of the material. Because of the number of

    artefacts the material will be presented in two volumes. The main task of each contribution is to present

    the artefacts recorded in its local, regional and whole island context, as far as possible. The second volume

    will contain post-prehistoric ceramics, Chalcolithic to Iron Age ground stone artefacts, as well as

    contribution on the environment and resources.

    INTRODUCTION [1]

    I. DATA AND SURVEY METHOD [5]

    II. CHALCOLITHIC [9]

    1. Early ChalcolithicMiddle Chalcolithic [11]2. Early ChalcolithicLate Chalcolithic [15]3. Middle ChalcolithicLate Chalcolithic [23]4. Late Chalcolithic [28]

    III. BRONZE AGE [35]

    1. Early CypriotMiddle Cypriot [37]2. Early CypriotLate Cypriot [45]3. Late Cypriot [63]

    4. Bronze Age? [69]

    IV. PREHISTORIC OCCUPATION IN LIGHT OF THE

    SURVEY POTTERY [75]

    1. Chronological and Spatial Distribution [75]

    2. Concluding Remarks, Problems and Prospects

    [76]

    REFERENCES [79]

    ABBREVIATIONS [87]

    TABLE [89]

    DIAGRAMS [93]MAPS [95]

    DRAWINGS [101]

    PHOTOGRAPHS [143]

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    Identit culturale, ethnicit, processi di transformazione a

    Creta fra Dark Age e Archaismo

    Giovanni Rizza ()

    & :Catania 2011

    : Consiglio Nazionale delle Recerche I.B.A.M.

    : Studi e Materiali di Archeologia Greca 10

    : , , 31x23 .

    ISBN: 978-88-89375-09-9

    : 100

    ( )Sono passati fino ad oggi 105 anni da quando, nel 1906, "per la prima volta il trico-lore italiano e stato

    alzato sulla Patela di Prinis", come annotava sul suo taccuino Luigi Pernier non senza un fondo di facilenazionalismo, che allora per, in un momento nel quale l'Italia cercava di guadagnare un suo posto nelcontesto internazionale, era storicamente giustificabile.

    Si tratta indubbiamente di un tempo lungo per quello che riguarda la vita umana, ma gli anni trascorsi

    non sono pochi nemmeno rispetto allo sviluppo della scienza archeologica, che da allora profondamentemutata rispetto ai fini e ai metodi che sostanziavano l'azione dello scavatore di Fests, giunto su quell'aspracollina battuta dalmehem su consiglio e indicazione precisa del patriarca italiano dell'archeologia creteseFederico Halbherr.

    Presentazione

    E. Greco,L'archeologia italiana a Prinis[9-10]Relazione introduttiva

    E. Greco, Prinis nel quadro degli studisull'urbanistica greca arcaica[11-19]

    Prinis

    G. Rizza, Identit culturale, etnicit, processi ditrasformazione a Prinis [21-56]

    K. Perna, Prinis all'alba della Dark Age: l'evidenza

    ceramic [57-72]R. Gigli Patane, Brindare con gli antenati. Un

    deposito di fondazione dall'area a Sud del

    tempio B di Prinis [73-84]D. Palermo, Edifici pubblici e residenze private sulla

    Patela di Prinis [85-96]A. Pautasso, Immagini e identit. Osservazioni sulla

    scultura di Prinis [97-107]Temi generali e iconografia

    H. Matthus, The Idaean Cave of Zeus: the mostimportant Pan-Cretan Sanctuary. Evidence of

    metalwork [109-132]

    A. Kotsonas, Foreign Identity and Ceramic

    Production in Early Iron Age Crete[133-155]

    I. Kaiser, Octopuses and Cretan Geometric Identity

    [157-163]

    N. Kourou, Following the Sphinx. Tradition and

    innovation in Early Iron Age Crete [165-177]

    V. La Rosa, Un hippodamos a Creta nel TM IIIC

    [179-192]E. Pappalardo, Tra Cnosso e l'Antro Ideo:

    iconografie e rapporti con l'Oriente[193-207]

    E Caruso, Perchance to dream. Una lettura della

    coppa a figure incise C2396 di Komms [209-221]

    http://opar.unior.it/1383/1/Greco_Prinias.pdfhttp://opar.unior.it/1383/1/Greco_Prinias.pdfhttp://opar.unior.it/1383/1/Greco_Prinias.pdfhttp://opar.unior.it/1383/1/Greco_Prinias.pdfhttp://opar.unior.it/1383/1/Greco_Prinias.pdfhttp://opar.unior.it/1383/1/Greco_Prinias.pdfhttp://www.academia.edu/1013302/_Foreign_Identity_and_Ceramic_Production_in_Early_Iron_Age_Crete_._In_Convegno_di_Studi_Identita_culturale_etnicita_processi_diformazione_a_Creta_fra_Dark_Age_e_Arcaismo_Rizza_G._ed._http://www.academia.edu/1013302/_Foreign_Identity_and_Ceramic_Production_in_Early_Iron_Age_Crete_._In_Convegno_di_Studi_Identita_culturale_etnicita_processi_diformazione_a_Creta_fra_Dark_Age_e_Arcaismo_Rizza_G._ed._http://www.academia.edu/1013302/_Foreign_Identity_and_Ceramic_Production_in_Early_Iron_Age_Crete_._In_Convegno_di_Studi_Identita_culturale_etnicita_processi_diformazione_a_Creta_fra_Dark_Age_e_Arcaismo_Rizza_G._ed._http://www.academia.edu/978366/Tra_Cnosso_e_lAntro_Ideo_Iconografie_e_rapporti_con_lOrientehttp://www.academia.edu/978366/Tra_Cnosso_e_lAntro_Ideo_Iconografie_e_rapporti_con_lOrientehttp://www.academia.edu/978366/Tra_Cnosso_e_lAntro_Ideo_Iconografie_e_rapporti_con_lOrientehttp://www.academia.edu/978366/Tra_Cnosso_e_lAntro_Ideo_Iconografie_e_rapporti_con_lOrientehttp://www.academia.edu/978366/Tra_Cnosso_e_lAntro_Ideo_Iconografie_e_rapporti_con_lOrientehttp://www.academia.edu/1013302/_Foreign_Identity_and_Ceramic_Production_in_Early_Iron_Age_Crete_._In_Convegno_di_Studi_Identita_culturale_etnicita_processi_diformazione_a_Creta_fra_Dark_Age_e_Arcaismo_Rizza_G._ed._http://www.academia.edu/1013302/_Foreign_Identity_and_Ceramic_Production_in_Early_Iron_Age_Crete_._In_Convegno_di_Studi_Identita_culturale_etnicita_processi_diformazione_a_Creta_fra_Dark_Age_e_Arcaismo_Rizza_G._ed._http://opar.unior.it/1383/1/Greco_Prinias.pdfhttp://opar.unior.it/1383/1/Greco_Prinias.pdfhttp://opar.unior.it/1383/1/Greco_Prinias.pdf
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    Creta e la Sicilia

    R. Sammartano, I Cretesi in Sicilia: la proiezione

    culturale [223-253]

    D. Palermo, I Cretesi in Sicilia: identit e processi ditrasformazione [255-262]

    G. Biondi, Ricostruire un legame perduto. Elementi

    di tradizione cretese nella cultura funeraria

    siceliota [263-270]V. La Rosa, Elites sicane ed antroponimi micenei:

    identit culturale o etnicit cretese fuori diCreta? [273-279]

    Citt, santuari e necropoli

    M. Englezou, [281-308]

    N. Allegro & E. Santaniello, Gortina. Labitato diProfitis Ilias e la storia pi antica della citt [309-

    322]O. Pilz & M. Krumme, Il deposito votivo di

    sull'Anavlochos: risultati preliminari dellostudio dei materiali [323-332]

    M. Cultraro, Il rituale funerario dell'incinerazione a

    Creta tra l'et del Bronzo Tardo e la prima etdel Ferro [333-358]

    N. Cucuzza,Tombe e costumi funerari nella Festsdelle Dark Ages: qualche considerazione [359-

    371]

    A. Kanta, Tylissos towards the end of the Bronze

    Age, during the Dark Ages and beyond. A re-evaluation of a Minoan and Greek civic and

    religious centre from the archaeological

    evidence [373-394]

    N. Chr. Stampolidis, Eleutherna and the Idaean

    Cave. An attempt to reconstruct interactions

    and rituals [395-420]

    Conclusioni

    A. Chaniotis, Cultural identity, ethnicity, and

    cultural transformation in Crete from the Dark Ages

    to the Archaic Periods [421-432]

    A: -

    Ancient Corinthia. From Prehistoric Times to the End of

    Antiquity

    Konstantinos Kissas ()

    & : A2013: E : , 173 .,

    / , 27x21.2 ISBN: 978-960-6849-36-7

    :25

    ()

    The idea of publishing a collective volume on the archaeological sites and monuments of Corinthia wasborn of the need to fill the gap existing in the relevant bibliography. However, our concern was not to write

    a run-of-the-mill tourist guidebook, like those on sale to visitors in the museums, but to present the

    monuments and their history in such a way as to enhance Corinthia's outstanding place in the ancient

    world. From the outset, our goal was to produce a monumental possession for all time, as well as a tool for

    all those who struggle for the development of Corinthia today, by promoting its treasures.

    The present volume endeavours to present the archaeological wealth of Corinthia in a comprehensive

    and comprehensible manner, thus making this wealth accessible to the layman. The antiquities are

    https://www.academia.edu/1066936/Tombe_e_costumi_funerari_nella_Festos_delle_Dark_Ages_qualche_considerazionehttps://www.academia.edu/1066936/Tombe_e_costumi_funerari_nella_Festos_delle_Dark_Ages_qualche_considerazionehttps://www.academia.edu/1066936/Tombe_e_costumi_funerari_nella_Festos_delle_Dark_Ages_qualche_considerazionehttps://www.academia.edu/1066936/Tombe_e_costumi_funerari_nella_Festos_delle_Dark_Ages_qualche_considerazionehttps://www.academia.edu/1066936/Tombe_e_costumi_funerari_nella_Festos_delle_Dark_Ages_qualche_considerazionehttps://www.academia.edu/1066936/Tombe_e_costumi_funerari_nella_Festos_delle_Dark_Ages_qualche_considerazionehttps://www.academia.edu/1066936/Tombe_e_costumi_funerari_nella_Festos_delle_Dark_Ages_qualche_considerazione
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    discussed in twenty chapters, which include many more archaeological sites. We have tried to keep to a

    specific geographical course, which starts from the north border of Corinthia, continues northeast, after the

    capital, then moves southwards from the east and returns north to the centre of the prefecture, where

    Sikyon is located. Mountainous Corinthia follows and the tour ends at the western boundaries of the

    prefecture, at Eurostine with the outport of the Achaean city of Aigeira at Mavra Litharia, which today lies

    within the boundaries of the prefecture of Corinthia.

    Konstantinos Kissas, Preface [ix]

    Vassiliki Pliatsika, The Heraion of Perachora [1]

    Maria Gkioni, Krommyon [10]

    Vassilios Tasinos, Isthmia [13]

    The Sanctuary of Poseidon [14]

    The fortifications [24]

    The settlements [25]

    The cemeteries [27]

    The quarries [28]

    The Diolkos [29]

    Paraskevi Evangeloglou, Kenchreai [31]Socrates S. Koursoumis, Corinth [39]

    Socrates S. Koursoumis, Lechaion [61]

    Kyriaki Tsirtsi, Acrocorinth [62]

    Vassilios Tasinos, Recent evidence from

    excavations [62]

    Paraskevi Evangeloglou, Dorati [72]

    Giorgos Giannakopoulos & Konstantinos Kissas

    Tenea [75]

    Kyriaki Tsirtsi, Klenia Cave [84]

    Vassilios Tasinos, Eastern Corinthia [85]

    Solygeia [85]Almyri (Bechris hill) [86]

    Korphos (Kalamianos) [87]

    Giorgos Giannakopoulos, Kleonai [89]

    Christina Pipilou, Nemea [99]

    Ancient Nemea (The Sanctuary of Zeus, the

    Stadium) [99]

    Prehistoric Nemea (Tsoungiza, Agia Eirini,

    Aidonia, Petri) [104]

    Demetra Sarri, Phlious [109]

    Recent evidence from excavations [111]

    Vassilios Papathanasiou, Sikyon [113]

    Settlements [115]

    The fortification works [118]

    The city and its monuments [119]

    The quarries [125]

    The arts [125]

    Elena Maragoudaki, Recent evidence from

    excavations [127]

    Vassilios Papathanasiou, Lechova Cave [130]Vassilios Papathanasiou, Titane [132]

    Athanasios Tsiogas, Stymphalia [135]

    Konstantinos Kissas, Pheneos [139]

    Vassilios Papathanasiou, Pellene [147]

    Athanasios Tsiogas, Pitsa Cave [150]

    Demetra Sarri & Vassilios Papathanasiou, Eurostine

    [152]

    Recent evidence from excavations [152]

    Derveni [152]

    Demetra Sarri, Roman bathhouse [152]

    Demetra Sarri, Early Helladic settlement [153]Mavra Litharia [154]

    Demetra Sarri, Hellenistic-Roman cemetery

    [154]

    Vassilios Papathanasiou, Roman harbour [155]

    Bibliography [169]

    Illustrations credits [173]

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    A: -

    A Linguistic History of Ancient Cyprus. The Non-Greek

    Languages and their Relations with Greek, c.1600300 BC

    Philippa M. Steele

    & :Cambridge/New York 2013

    :Cambridge University Press

    : Cambridge Classical Studies

    : , 296 ., 1 / , 3 , 9, 22.4x14.7 .

    ISBN: 9781107042865

    : 65 (ca. 79)

    ()

    This pioneering volume approaches the languages and scripts of ancient Cyprus from an

    interdisciplinary point of view, with a primarily linguistic and epigraphic approach supplemented by a

    consideration of their historical and cultural context. The focus is on furthering our knowledge of the non-

    Greek languages/scripts, as well as appreciating their place in relation to the much better understood

    Greek language on the island. Following on from recent advances in Cypro-Minoan studies, these difficult,

    mostly Late Bronze Age inscriptions are reassessed from first principles. The same approach is taken for

    non-Greek languages written in the Cypriot Syllabic script during the first millennium BC, chiefly the one

    usually referred to as Eteocypriot. The final section is then dedicated to the Phoenician language, which

    was in use on Cyprus for some hundreds of years. The result is a careful reappraisal of these

    languages/scripts after more than a century of sometimes controversial scholarship.

    List of illustrations [xi]

    List of tables [xii]

    Acknowledgements [xiii]

    Concordance of Eteocypriot and Cypriot Phoenician

    inscriptions cited [xv]

    List of abbreviations [xix]

    Introduction [1]

    I. Cypro-Minoan [9]

    I.1 The Cypro-Minoan corpus [9]

    I.2 The language(s) of the Cypro-Minoaninscriptions [60]

    I.3 Cypro-Minoan in context [80]

    I.4 Cypro-Minoan case study: the Opheltau

    inscription [90]

    II. Eteocypriot [99]

    II.1 The Eteocypriot corpus [101]

    II.2 The Eteocypriot language [122]

    II.3 Eteocypriot in context: Eteocypriot at

    Amathus [160]

    II.4 Eteocypriot case study: The Amathus

    bilingual [167]

    III. Phoenician [173]

    III.1 The Cypriot Phoenician corpus [173]

    III.2 Phoenician in contact [201]

    III.3 Phoenician in context: Phoenician at Kition

    [225]

    III.4 Phoenician case study: Baal of Lebanonbronze bowl inscriptions [231]

    Conclusion [235]

    Bibliography [251]

    Index of inscriptions cited [269]

    Index of syllabic signs discussed [272]

    General index [274]

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    A E A

    A : -

    Minos et les grecs. La cit revisite

    Henri Van Effenterre

    & : Paris 2013

    : Publications de la Sorbonne

    : Les Classiques de la Sorbonne 7

    : , 1047 ., / , 19x13 .

    ISBN:978-2-85944-765-5

    :19

    ()

    Dans sa recherche sur lhistoire des hommes, il combinait les donnes de larchologie et du droit :pour comprendre une socit et ses rgles, ny a-t-il pas ncessit de connatre les contraintes techniquesqui simposaient elle autant que la nature des rapports entre ses membres et des lois qui lesrglementaient?.

    Henri van Effenterre (1912-2007), historien et archologue de la Crte minoenne et de la Grcearchaque, enseigna longtemps luniversit de Caen avant dtre nomm professeur honoraire luniversit Paris 1 (1981). Ses fouilles du palais de Mallia, mais aussi ses trs nombreux travaux savants enpigraphie, en histoire du droit et en archologie, imposrent sa grande rputation dhellniste.

    Introduction (Franoise Ruz) [5]

    Bibliographie d'Henri van Effenterre [9]

    LA DCOUVERTE DU QUARTIER K- MALLIA ET

    LES VUES NOUVELLES SUR LE FONCTIONNEMENT

    POLITIQUE, SOCIAL ET CONOMIQUE DE LA CRTEPALATIALE [27]

    STRUCTURES JURIDIQUES ET SOCIALES DU MONDE

    MINOEN LA GRCE ARCHAQUE[161]

    CITS CRTOISES ET PIGRAPHIE ARCHAQUE[333]

    MONDE GREC ARCHAQUE ET CLASSIQUE[589]

    PIGRAPHIE ET ARCHOLOGIE DE LA CRTEHELLNISTIQUE ET ROMAINE : GOGRAPHIE DE LACRTE[803]

    EN GUISE DE CONCLUSION [1021]

    http://www.aegeussociety.org/gr/index.php/new-books/minos-et-le-grecs/http://www.aegeussociety.org/gr/index.php/new-books/minos-et-le-grecs/http://www.aegeussociety.org/gr/index.php/new-books/minos-et-le-grecs/
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    A: -

    Dressing for Dinner: Butchery and Bone Deposition at Late

    Neolithic Toumba Kremastis-Koiladas, Northern Greece

    Vasiliki Tzevelekidi

    & : Oxford 2013

    : Archaeopress

    : BAR International Series 2451

    : , x &142 ., 63 , 59 ,29.7x21 .

    ISBN: 9781407310558

    :$30 (ca. 36)

    ( )

    Excavations at Late Neolithic Toumba Kremastis Koiladas, near the modern town of Kozani in north-

    western Greece, have yielded one of the largest faunal assemblages of this period from Greece (and

    probably also from Europe). This assemblage is important not only because of its large size, but also

    because of the character of the site and the apparently distinctive nature of bone deposition. Although

    near to a settlement mound or tell, the excavated area from which the assemblage is drawn appears to be

    of the flat/extended type of site. As such, much of the bone assemblage is derived from clearly definedpits and ditches cut into the bedrock, offering much greater opportunities for contextual analysis than is

    usually possible on tell sites with complex vertical stratigraphy. Furthermore, the excavators observation ofcomplete animal skeletons in some pits suggested the possibility of structured deposition of a sort that,

    though well known from the Aegean Bronze Age, is as yet rare in the Neolithic of Greece. The assemblage

    studied here thus offers unusually high potential for investigation of patterns of bone deposition and

    animal consumption and also for exploration of the extent to which these processes may have obscured or

    distorted the evidence commonly used to infer patterns of animal management and land use. The

    questions addressed in this book are centred within four main contexts: Types of Neolithic settlements

    (tells vs. flat/extended sites); The Neolithic household in Greece; Neolithic husbandry regimes in Greece;Scales and contexts of consumption during the Greek Neolithic.

    Acknowledgements

    List of contents [ii]

    List of tables [v]

    List of figures [vii]

    Abbreviations [x]

    Chapter 1. TKK in Context: settlement, society and

    subsistence in the Greek Neolithic [1]

    1.1. Introduction [1]

    1.2. The Greek Neolithic: recent research and

    current questions [1]

    1.3. Toumba Kremastis-Koiladas: the site [6]

    1.4. From research context to research

    questions [13]

    1.5. The structure of this book [14]

    Chapter 2. Methodology [15]2.1. Introduction [15]

    2.2. Theory behind methodology [15]

    2.3. From theory to practice [18]

    2.4. The faunal assemblage from TKK [25]

    Chapter 3. Exploring taphonomic processes [27]

    3.1. Introduction [27]

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    3.2. Pick up a bone. Exploring recovery bias[27]

    3.3. Evaluating attrition [32]

    3.4. Conclusions: taphonomy or nottaphonomy? [42]

    Chapter 4. Patterns of consumption and discard

    [44]4.1. Introduction [44]

    4.2. Representation of anatomical units [44]

    4.3. Evidence for butchery practices [51]

    4.4. Fragmentation patterns and marrow

    exploitation [62]

    4.5. Species composition [63]

    4.6. Structured deposition (Appendices 1-3) [66]

    4.7. Patterns of consumption and discard in TKK

    conclusion [75]

    Chapter 5. Understanding management strategies

    [77]

    5.1. Introduction [77]

    5.2. Animal management in TKK [77]

    5.3. Management regimes in TKK: conclusionsand implications [112]

    Chapter 6. Conclusions [114]

    6.1. Summary of analysis [114]

    6.2. TKK in the context of the Greek Neolithic

    [115]

    Appendices [121]

    List of references [134]

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    2.

    2.1. A Proposed Chronology for a Rock Art Complex in Northern Greece

    Stella Pilavaki

    Time and Mind7:1 (2014): 71-87.

    A :Pilavaki-2014

    ( )

    This paper adopts an innovative integrated approach to explore the chronology of a rock art

    tradition in Northern Greece. It relationally analyses different strands of evidence, which include

    iconography, style, the data sets derived from the structural and phenomenological investigation of

    the source material, and literature research. These various indicators point towards a Thracian

    authorship for the main corpus of the art, which together with the depiction of datable objects and

    practices anchors the chronology to a limited period of time. This paper has been abstracted and

    modified from the authors more extensive doctoral thesis.

    50 :www.tandfonline.com/eprint/DA2x9bi9cDVcFCGQbPKC/full#.Uz26K_l_vTo

    2.2. Household and community behavior at Bronze Age Politiko-Troullia, Cyprus

    Steven E. Falconer & Patricia L. Fall

    Journal of Field Archaeology38:2 (May 2013): 101-119.

    ()

    We investigate intrasite patterns of artifacts and floral and faunal data to interpret household and

    community behavior at the Middle Cypriot (Bronze Age) village of Politiko-Troullia in the foothills of

    the Troodos Mountains, Cyprus. Floral evidence indicates cultivation of orchard crops (e.g., olive and

    grape), as well as the persistence of woodlands that provided wood for fuel. Animal management

    combined herding of domesticated sheep, goat, pig, and cattle with the hunting of Mesopotamian

    fallow deer. Metallurgical evidence points to the production of utilitarian copper tools in householdworkshops. Group activities are reflected by the deposition of anthropomorphic figurines, spinning

    and weaving equipment, and deer bones in an open courtyard setting. In sum, Politiko-Troullia

    exemplifies a diversified agrarian economy on a distinctly anthropogenic landscape that fostered the

    development of household and supra-household social differentiation in pre-urban Bronze Age Cyprus.

    2.3. 14C Dating of Humic Acids from Bronze and Iron Age Plant Remains from the Eastern Mediterranean

    E.M. Wild, P. Steier, P. Fischer & F. Hflmayer

    Radiocarbon55:2-3 (2013): 599-607.

    ()

    Radiocarbon dating of plant remains is often difficult due to the complete dissolution of the samples in

    the alkaline step of the ABA pretreatment. At the VERA laboratory, this problem was encountered

    frequently when numerous Bronze and Early Iron Age samples from the eastern Mediterranean were dated

    in the course of the special research program SCIEM2000 and in other collaborations with archaeologists

    focused on that area and time period. For these samples, only a 14C age determination of the humic acid

    fraction was possible. Humic acids from archaeological samples are always assessed as a second-choice

    material for 14C dating. It is assumed that the 14C ages may be affected by the presence of humic acids

    originating from other (younger) organic material, e.g. from soil horizons located above a sample.

    Therefore, when humic acids are dated a verification of the dates is crucial. To address this basic

    http://www.tandfonline.com/eprint/DA2x9bi9cDVcFCGQbPKC/full#.Uz26K_l_vTohttp://www.tandfonline.com/eprint/DA2x9bi9cDVcFCGQbPKC/full#.Uz26K_l_vTo
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    requirement, we started some time ago to date both fractions of charred seeds, wood, and charcoal

    samples whenever available, i.e. the residue after the ABA treatment and the humic acids extracted from

    the samples in the alkaline step. The results of this comparison showed that for the investigated eastern

    Mediterranean archaeological sites, 50 (out of 52) humic acid dates were in agreement with the 14C dates

    of the respective ABA-treated samples. Statistical analysis of the age differences leads to the conclusion

    that the extracted humic acids originated from the samples themselves or from contemporaneous material

    and were not appreciably contaminated by extraneous material of different age.

    2.4. Interpreting Radiocarbon Dates from the Paleolithic Layers of Theopetra Cave in Thessaly, Greece

    Yorgos Facorellis, Panagiotis Karkanas, Thomas Higham, Fiona Brock, Maria Ntinou & Nina Kyparissi-

    Apostolika

    Radiocarbon55:2-3 (2013): 1432-1442.

    ()

    Theopetra Cave is a unique prehistoric site for Greece, as the Middle and Upper Paleolithic, Mesolithic,

    and Neolithic periods are present here, bridging the Pleistocene with the Holocene. During the more

    than 20 yr of excavation campaigns, charcoal samples from hearths suitable for 14C dating were

    collected from all anthropogenic layers, including the Paleolithic ones. Most of the samples wereinitially dated using the ABA chemical pretreatment protocol in the Laboratory of Archaeometry of

    NCSR Demokritos, Greece, and the Radiocarbon Dating and Cosmogenic Isotopes Laboratory of the

    Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel. The 14C results, which were not always consistent versus depth,

    showed that the earliest limit of human presence is ~50,000 yr BP, thus reaching the age limits of the

    14C dating method. However, 10 TL-dated burnt flint specimens unearthed from the lower part of the

    Middle Paleolithic sequence of the cave gave ages ranging between ~110 and 135 kyr ago. These

    results are in disagreement with the 14C dates, as they support a much later date for these layers. In

    order to clarify the situation further, charcoal samples originating from hearths were conventionally

    dated in the Laboratory of Archaeometry of NCSR Demokritos using the ABA pretreatment.

    Additionally, hand-picked charcoal fragments also underwent 14C dating by AMS in the Oxford

    Radiocarbon Accelerator Unit using the acid-base wet oxidation (ABOX-SC) pretreatment protocol. The14C dates from the caves Paleolithic layers obtained by both pretreatment protocols suggest aprobable charcoal diagenesis affecting the 14C results of these very old samples. However, the dates

    obtained with ABOX-SC pretreatment are considered more reliable and in the younger stratigraphic

    part produced consistent results with the TL dating.

    2.5. Leska. A new peak sanctuary on the island of Kythera

    Mercourios Georgiadis

    Journal of Prehistoric ReligionXXIII (2012): 7-24.

    ()The evidence for the existence of a peak sanctuary at Leska in the western part of the island of

    Kythera is presented. In order to assess the correctness of this identification, the site is compared and

    contrasted with peak sanctuaries that have been identified on Kythera, at Ayios Yeoryios sto Vouno,

    and on Crete. Both the topography and the finds indicate the cultic character of the site at Leska.

    Moreover, the broader landscape context provides a deeper understanding of the cultic environment

    in this part of the island. Leska offers new and significant evidence for our understanding of peak

    sanctuaries on both Kythera and Crete.

    https://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/radiocarbon/article/view/16450/pdfhttps://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/radiocarbon/article/view/16450/pdfhttps://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/radiocarbon/article/view/16450/pdfhttps://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/radiocarbon/article/view/16450/pdfhttps://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/radiocarbon/article/view/16450/pdfhttps://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/radiocarbon/article/view/16450/pdfhttps://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/radiocarbon/article/view/16316/pdfhttps://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/radiocarbon/article/view/16316/pdfhttps://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/radiocarbon/article/view/16316/pdfhttps://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/radiocarbon/article/view/16316/pdfhttps://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/radiocarbon/article/view/16316/pdfhttps://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/radiocarbon/article/view/16316/pdfhttps://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/radiocarbon/article/view/16316/pdfhttps://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/radiocarbon/article/view/16450/pdf
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    2.6. Early seventh-millennium AMS dates from domestic seeds in the Initial Neolithic at Franchthi Cave

    (Argolid, Greece)

    Catherine Perls, Anita Quiles & Hlne Valladas

    Antiquity87:338 (December 2013): 1001-1015.

    ()

    When, and by what route, did farming first reach Europe? A terrestrial model might envisage agradual advance around the northern fringes of the Aegean, reaching Thrace and Macedonia before

    continuing southwards to Thessaly and the Peloponnese. New dates from Franchthi Cave in southern

    Greece, reported here, cast doubt on such a model, indicating that cereal cultivation, involving newly

    introduced crop species, began during the first half of the seventh millennium BC. This is earlier than in

    northern Greece and several centuries earlier than in Bulgaria, and suggests that farming spread to

    south-eastern Europe by a number of different routes, including potentially a maritime, island-hopping

    connection across the Aegean Sea. The results also illustrate the continuing importance of key sites

    such as Franchthi to our understanding of the European Neolithic transition, and the additional

    insights that can emerge from the application of new dating projects to these sites.

    2.7. Cult Stones of Ancient CyprusSam Crooks

    Journal of Prehistoric ReligionXXIII (2012): 25-44.

    ()

    This study presents evidence for the cultic significance of aniconic stones in ancient Cyprus from

    the Ceramic Neolithic through Roman eras. Interpretive models of the Near East and Aegean, which

    frame such stones as territory or liminal markers, mnemonic devices and aniconic cult objects, are

    tested against the Cypriot evidence. It is argued that while intrusions from the Aegean and Levant

    influence the use of stones in Cypriot cult, particularly from the Iron Age, the use of aniconic stones in

    cultic contexts originates as an autochthonous phenomenon from as early as the Ceramic Neolithic in

    Cyprus.

    2.8. Overseers of an Entangled Island: Hybrid Cultural Identities of Early Iron Age Cyprus

    David Ian Lightbody

    Journal of Ancient Egyptian Interconnections5:3 (September 2013): 61-73.

    ()

    Archaeologists studying Late Bronze and Iron Age Cyprus have produced diverse theories

    regarding the origins of the Cypriot Iron Age city kingdoms, but it has proved difficult to integrate

    Cyprus within larger models designed to evaluate relationships between communities of the East

    Mediterranean. In this article I use cultural hybridization theory to investigate material from Iron Age

    Cyprus and uncover underlying cultural meanings. Based on this new understanding I argue that

    Cyprus does not sit easily within broader historical trajectories because it embraced its own insularity

    and employed ambiguity as cultural strategy. Case studies are presented which show that Cyprus was

    adept at hybridizing external influences within its own cultural systems. Its city kingdoms developed

    their own cultic topographies focused on acropolises and sanctuaries. During the Iron Age the island

    experienced fluctuating entanglements and disentanglements on the peripheries of several different

    and powerful imperial cores, but the evidence suggests that the settlements maintained their

    independence, always negotiated their relationships and selectively adopted imported material

    culture and symbols. Despite limited populations, the Iron Age city kingdoms managed to assert their

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    own identities and eventually created a distinctive Archaic culture which blossomed during a two

    century long belle poque. World systems theory can be utilized to some extents to describe theislands society, but Iron Age Cyprus can only be fully understood through a more nuanced theoreticalapproach that invokes hybridity as a concept and contextualizes the material within its cultural

    systems and landscapes.

    2.9.Accumulations: Updating the Role of Cypriot Bichrome Ware in Egypt

    Irmgard Hein & Ragna Stidsing

    Journal of Ancient Egyptian Interconnections5:3 (September 2013): 44-60.

    ()

    Cypriot Bichrome Wheel-made Ware is an important index for the study of interrelations in the

    Ancient Eastern Mediterranean World. The ware is a chronological marker for the beginning of the

    Late Cypriot Bronze Age and was the subject of a research project during the last decade within the

    Cyprus project of SCIEM 2000 (FWF, F1412). The aim of the project was to investigate the appearance

    of the ware at various sites in the Eastern Mediterranean, and to correlate contexts and finds. This

    paper presents an overview of the regional distribution of the ware, and a detailed look at its

    appearance in Egypt. Based on those distributions, we develop ideas about the social role of Bichrome

    Wheel-made Ware.

    2.10. From Egyptian to Egyptianizing in Cypriot Glyptic of the Late Bronze Age

    Joanna S. Smith

    Journal of Ancient Egyptian Interconnections5:3 (September 2013): 10-43.

    ()

    The 228 contextualized seals at Enkomi allow for detailed views into how Egyptian seal types were

    used in the Late Bronze Age(ca. 16501050 BCE) in one settlement on Cyprus. Over time the emphasisshifted from Egyptian seal rings and uncarved scarabs and scaraboids in tombs to Egyptianizing designs

    on Cypriot cylinder and conoid stamp seals that recalled the carved details on the bottoms of scarabs.

    On Cyprus, the most common seal shape was the cylinder, valued there and in the Near East for itsinherent longevity of authority. The scarab, which as an amulet referencing regeneration, was similarly

    valued for its promise of long-term, continual renewal. People at Enkomi and elsewhere on Cyprus

    who sought changes in the authority represented by the cylinder seal experimented with the scarab as

    an acceptable and effective alternative model for crafting new tools of control at the end of the Bronze

    Age.

    2.11. Cyprus and Egypt in the Late Bronze Age

    A. Bernard Knapp

    Journal of Ancient Egyptian Interconnections5:3 (September 2013): 1-9.

    ()

    The socioeconomic and ideological transformations that characterize Late Bronze Age Cyprushave been linked to a major expansion in interconnections with the older cultures of ancient western

    Asia and Egypt. This study considers the likely impact of Egyptian symbolism and royal ideology on

    Cyprus, explicitly from a perspective that sees distance and access to 'exotic' goods as possible sources

    of elite power. Several gold, metal, faience, ivory and glyptic items decorated with sphinxes,hieroglyphic signs, and other imagessuggest a sophisticated manipulation of 'Oriental' ideologies ofkingship and royal power.

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    2.12. Homer's Entangled Objects: Narrative, Agency and Personhood In and Out of Iron Age Texts

    James Whitley

    Cambridge Archaeological Journal23:3 (October 2013): 395-416.

    ()

    In recent years, material culture studies have come to embrace contemporary Melanesia and

    European prehistory, but not classical archaeology and art. Prehistory is still thought, in manyquarters, to be intrinsically more ethnographic than historical periods; in this discourse, the Greeks(by default) become proto-modern individuals, necessarily opposed to Melanesian dividuals.Developments in the study of the Iron Age Mediterranean and the world of Homer should undermine

    such stark polarities. Historic and proto-historic archaeologies have rich potential for refining our

    notions both of agency and of personhood. This article argues that the forms of material

    entanglements we find in the Homeric poems, and the forms of agency that we can observe in the

    archaeological record for the Early Iron Age of Greece (broadly 1000500 BC) are of the same kind. Theagency of objects structures Homeric narrative, and Homeric descriptions allow us precisely to define

    Homeric humanthing entanglement. This form of material entanglement does not appear in theAegean world before 1100 BC.

    2.13. The Archaeology of Mind: It's Not What You Think

    John C. Barrett

    Cambridge Archaeological Journal23:1 (February 2013): 1-17.

    ()

    Narratives of human evolution place considerable emphasis upon human cognitive development

    resulting from the evolution of brain architecture and witnessed by the production of symbolicmaterial culture. Recent work has modified the narrative to the extent that cognitive development is

    treated as the product of humanity's ability to download certain aspects of brain functionality, such as

    the storage of information, into external media. This article questions the centrality given to the

    history of brain architecture as determinate of human cognition by rejecting the widespread

    assumption that cognition trades in representations, either stored internally in the brain or

    downloaded externally into cultural media. The alternative, offered here, is that human cognitive

    development was constructed through the development of joint attention made possible by the

    anatomical development of hominins and that this sustained a shared empathy between social agents

    in their practical understanding of the qualities of materiality.

    2.14. Scientific investigation of faience fragments attributed to the town mosaic at Knossos

    M. Spataro, N. Meeks, A.S. Meek & A.J. Shapland

    Archaeometry55:5 (October 2013): 910-922.

    ()

    We analysed a faience fragment from Bristol Museum and Art Gallery, to determine whether itbelonged to the Town Mosaic, excavated at Knossos. Three Town Mosaic fragments from the

    Ashmolean Museum, Oxford were also examined. The objects were analysed using non-destructive

    variable-pressure scanning electron microscopy with energy-dispersive X-ray spectrometry. The Bristol

    object's composition and microstructures are similar to those of the Town Mosaic samples. Our results

    are also comparable to those from polished samples of Minoan faience, showing that VP SEMEDXgives reliable results without invasive sampling. Silicaceous, copper-rich microspheres were identified

    for the first time in two of the Ashmolean objects.

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    2.15. Measuring chronological uncertainty in intensive survey finds: a case study from Antikythera,

    Greece

    A. Bevan, J. Conolly, C. Hennig, A. Johnston, A. Quercia, l. Spencer & J. Vroom

    Archaeometry55:2 (April 2013): 312-328.

    ( )

    This paper considers how to make the most out of the rather imprecise chronological knowledgethat we often have about the past. We focus here on the relative dating of artefacts during

    archaeological fieldwork, with particular emphasis on new ways to express and analyse chronological

    uncertainty. A probabilistic method for assigning artefacts to particular chronological periods is

    advocated and implemented for a large pottery data set from an intensive survey of the Greek island

    of Antikythera. We also highlight several statistical methods for exploring how uncertainty is shared

    amongst different periods in this data set and how these observed associations can prompt more

    sensitive interpretations of landscape-scale patterns.

    2.16. An integrated stable isotope study of plants and animals from Kouphovouno, southern Greece: a

    new look at Neolithic farming

    Petra Vaiglova, Amy Bogaard, Matthew Collins, William Cavanagh, Christopher Mee, Josette Renard,

    Angela Lamb, Armelle Gardeisen & Rebecca Fraser

    Journal of Archaeological Science42 (February 2014): 201-215.

    Abstract

    This paper presents the first study that combines the use of ancient crop and animal stable isotopes

    (carbon and nitrogen) and Zooarchaeology Mass Spectrometry species identification (ZooMS) for

    reconstructing early farming practices at Kouphovouno, a MiddleLate Neolithic village in southern Greece(c. 59504500 cal. BC). Debate surrounding the nature of early farming predominantly revolves around theintensity of crop cultivation: did early farmers move around the landscape while practicing temporary

    farming methods such as slash and burn agriculture or did they create more permanent fields by investing

    high labor inputs into smaller pieces of land that produced higher crop yields? The need to address these

    questions using a direct assessment of the intensity and scale of cultivation is apparent, and an integratedstable isotope approach provides such an opportunity. The results of this study support the model of small-

    scale mixed farming, where crop cultivation and animal husbandry are closely integrated. The farmers

    directed their intensive management towards crops grown for human consumption (free-threshing wheat),

    while growing fodder crop (hulled barley) more extensively. Pulses were cultivated under a high-

    manuring/high-watering regime, likely in garden plots in rotation with free-threshing wheat. The diets of

    the livestock enable us to investigate which parts of the landscape were used for browsing and grazing and

    indicate that animal management changed in the Late Neolithic. The sheep and goats were now kept in

    smaller numbers and grazed together and new pasture grasses may have been sought for the grazing of

    cattle. This study demonstrates that beyond its applicability for palaeodietary reconstruction, analysis of

    stable isotopes of archaeological crop and animal remains has important implications for understanding the

    relationship between humans, plants and animals in an archaeological context.

    2.17. Was the Piraeus peninsula (Greece) a rocky island? Detection of pre-Holocene rocky relief with

    borehole data and resistivity tomography analysis

    G. Apostolopoulos, K. Pavlopoulos, J.-P. Goiran & E. Fouache

    Journal of Archaeological Science42 (February 2014): 412-421.

    ()

    According to historical documents, Piraeus was a rocky island consisting of the steep hill of

    Munichia, known as modern-day Kastella. It was connected to the mainland by a low-lying stretch of

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    land (Halipedon) that would flood with sea water most of the year and was used as a salt fieldwhenever it dried up. Apart from being an area of archaeological interest, the extended area of

    Halipedon is densely populated, thus being of geotechnical interest and is currently beinginvestigated through borehole and geophysical data analysis. 52 boreholes were lithologically-

    geomorphologically analyzed and results from 11 resistivity tomography profiles were considered.

    Lithostratigraphy of the borehole data was classified into three lithostratigraphic units: Cultural

    deposits, PleistoceneHolocene deposits, pre-Holocene bedrock (Marls of Piraeus). The deeper unit

    shows a big depression in the southeastern part of the survey area and a circular sinking (channel) inits north part. These depressions were probably covered by the sea at a time when the southern part

    of the Piraeus peninsula was an island. This is confirmed by stratigraphical and geophysical

    investigation in the area where resistivity tomography profiles could be performed. The big

    southeastern depression is covered by the river sediments implying a high sedimentation rate.

    2.18. Provenance and proximity: a technological analysis of Late and Final Neolithic ceramics from

    Euripides Cave, Salamis, Greece

    Ian Whitbread & Alexandra Mari

    Journal of Archaeological Science41 (January 2014): 79-88.

    ()This paper examines application of the provenance hypothesis in areas of complex regional

    geology, where all potential sources of raw materials cannot be isolated or taken into account. With a

    few notable exceptions most pottery of the Late and Final Neolithic in Central and Southern Mainland

    Greece is considered to be locally produced by non-specialist household potters. Nevertheless small

    quantities of pottery with fresh volcanic fabrics have been found in largely non-volcanic areas and

    interpreted as imports. This interpretation has been questioned and alternative local sources proposed

    either in isolated palaeovolcanic units amongst otherwise non-volcanic rocks or through reuse of

    imported artefacts such as millstones made from fresh volcanic rock. In this study we examine

    evidence for pottery exchange at the Cave of Euripides, located opposite the island of Aegina, a

    potential source of imported volcanic materials in the region. The analysis uses petrography to identify

    raw materials, production technologies and provenance of the pottery. Results show that most potteryat the cave was produced locally. It is argued that grog and sparry calcite tempered fabrics are

    indicative of shared technological knowledge amongst potters in different communities. Pottery

    imports are identified based on their fresh volcanic inclusions. They are consistent with pottery fabrics

    from Aegina and distinguished from the local palaeovolcanic rocks that occur in close proximity to the

    cave.

    2.19. Sedimentary processes involved in mud brick degradation in temperate environments: a

    micromorphological approach in an ethnoarchaeological context in northern Greece

    David E. Friesem, Panagiotis Karkanas, Georgia Tsartsidou & Ruth Shahack-Gross

    Journal of Archaeological Science41 (January 2014): 556-567.

    ()

    Sun dried mud bricks are a common building material across the globe, found in many

    archaeological sites in the Old World since ca. 11,000 years ago. This material is known to disintegrate

    due to exposure to the elements, mostly affected by rain. Yet, the geomorphic and sedimentological

    characteristics of this disintegration process have never been studied in detail until recently. Here we

    report on mud brick degradation processes observed in an abandoned mud brick village in northern

    Greece. We demonstrate that mud bricks have unique micromorphological characteristics that

    differentiate them from natural soils. Upon degradation some of these characteristics are lost (e.g.,

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    planar voids after fibrous vegetal temper). Rain initiates brick degradation at the upper parts of walls

    where from brick material is washed down walls and deposited at their feet, forming a conical talus.

    The talus deposits show micromorphological features indicative of a variety of flows, including wet and

    dry grain flows, debris, hyperconcentrated and water flows.

    2.20. Performance evaluation of a multi-image 3D reconstruction software on a low-feature artefact

    Anestis Koutsoudis, Bla Vidmar & Fotis Arnaoutoglou

    Journal of Archaeological Science40:12 (December 2013): 4450-4456.

    ()|

    Nowadays, multi-image 3D reconstruction is an active research field and a number of commercial

    and free software tools have been already made available to the public. These provide methods for

    the 3D reconstruction of real world objects by matching feature points and retrieving depth

    information from a set of unordered digital images. This is achieved by exploiting computer vision

    algorithms such as Structure-From-Motion (SFM) and Dense Multi-View 3D Reconstruction (DMVR). In

    this work, we evaluate the performance of a low-cost commercial SFMDMVR software by digitising aCycladic woman figurine. Although the surface properties of the specific artefact are considered 3D

    laser scanner friendly, its almost featureless white-grey surface composes a challenging digitisation

    candidate for image based methodologies as no strong feature points are available. We quantify thequality of the 3D data produced by the SFMDMVR software in relation to the data produced by a highaccuracy 3D laser scanner in terms of surface deviation and topological errors. We question the

    applicability and efficiency of two digitisation pipelines (SFMDMVR and laser scanner) in relation tohardware requirements, background knowledge and man-hours. This is achieved by producing a

    complete 3D digital replica of the Cycladic artefact by following both pipelines.

    2.21. Shades of blue cobalt-copper coloured blue glass from New Kingdom Egypt and the Mycenaean

    world: a matter of production or colourant source?

    M. Smirniou & Th. Rehren

    Journal of Archaeological Science40:12 (December 2013): 4731-4743.

    ()

    Cobalt blue glass has long now been recognised as characterised by a distinct compositional

    signature within the typical compositional range of Late Bronze Age glass. More recently, a copper-rich

    variation of cobalt blue glass has been seen throughout Egypt and the Mycenaean world. This paper

    discusses and defines this glass type based on trace elemental data, examines whether this lighter-

    shaded cobalt blue glass is a natural or an anthropogenic variant of cobalt blue glass, and identifies its

    likely production in Egypt. It investigates the role of this type of glass, particularly with regard to the

    distribution pattern and the significance of its prevalence in the Mycenaean mainland and the Aegean.

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    3.

    3.1.Knappett, C., 2013. Review of Marc A. Abramiuk,

    The Foundations of Cognitive Archaeology

    (Cambridge 2012), Cambridge Archaeological

    Journal23:2 (June 2013): 339-340.

    3.2. Brown, ., 2013. Review of Elizabeth Matisoo-Smith & K. Ann Horsburgh, DNA for

    Archaeologists (Walnut Creek 2012), Cambridge

    Archaeological Journal 23:2 (June 2013): 336-

    337.

    3.3. Hulin, L., 2013. Review of Louise Steel,

    Materiality and Consumption in the Bronze Age

    Mediterranean (New York 2013), Journal of

    Ancient Egyptian Interconnections 5:3

    (September 2013): 83-85.

    3.4. Schallin, A.-L., 2013. Review of W. Gauss & E.

    Kiriatzi, Pottery Production and Supply at Bronze

    Age Kolonna, Aegina. An Integrated

    Archaeological and Scientific Study of a Ceramic

    Landscape (Vienna 2011), Journal of Hellenic

    Studies133 (2013): 255-256.

    4.

    Younger, J.G., 1998. Music in the Aegean Bronze Age,

    Jonsered: Paul strms Frlag.

    , ., 1912.

    , : "".

    5.

    Bass, G.F., 1959. Neolithic Figurines from Thespiai,

    Hesperia28:4, 344-349.

    Caskey, J.L., 1959. Activities at Lerna, 1958-1959,

    Hesperia28:3, 202-207.

    Heath, M.C., 1958. Early Helladic Clay Sealings from

    the House of Tiles at Lerna, Hesperia27:2, 81-121.

    Caskey, J.L., 1958. Excavations at Lerna, 1957,

    Hesperia27:2, 125-144.

    Caskey, J.L., 1957. Excavations at Lerna, 1956,

    Hesperia26:2, 142-162.

    Caskey, J.L. & Eliot, M., 1956. A Neolithic Figurine

    from Lerna, Hesperia25:3, 175-178.

    Caskey, J.L., 1956. Excavations at Lerna, 1955,

    Hesperia25:2, 147-173.

    Vavouranakis, G., 2006. :

    http://hdl.handle.net/1808/5477http://hdl.handle.net/1808/5477http://anemi.lib.uoc.gr/metadata/2/e/f/metadata-ledeg0t3vr77j4ivc56nj1mi33_1304944859.tklhttp://anemi.lib.uoc.gr/metadata/2/e/f/metadata-ledeg0t3vr77j4ivc56nj1mi33_1304944859.tklhttp://www.ascsa.edu.gr/pdf/uploads/hesperia/147251.pdfhttp://www.ascsa.edu.gr/pdf/uploads/hesperia/147251.pdfhttp://www.ascsa.edu.gr/pdf/uploads/hesperia/147225.pdfhttp://www.ascsa.edu.gr/pdf/uploads/hesperia/147225.pdfhttp://www.ascsa.edu.gr/pdf/uploads/hesperia/147054.pdfhttp://www.ascsa.edu.gr/pdf/uploads/hesperia/147054.pdfhttp://www.ascsa.edu.gr/pdf/uploads/hesperia/147056.pdfhttp://www.ascsa.edu.gr/pdf/uploads/hesperia/147056.pdfhttp://www.ascsa.edu.gr/pdf/uploads/hesperia/147347.pdfhttp://www.ascsa.edu.gr/pdf/uploads/hesperia/147347.pdfhttp://www.ascsa.edu.gr/pdf/uploads/hesperia/147036.pdfhttp://www.ascsa.edu.gr/pdf/uploads/hesperia/147036.pdfhttp://www.ascsa.edu.gr/pdf/uploads/hesperia/147051.pdfhttp://www.ascsa.edu.gr/pdf/uploads/hesperia/147051.pdfhttp://www.ascsa.edu.gr/pdf/uploads/hesperia/147051.pdfhttp://www.ascsa.edu.gr/pdf/uploads/hesperia/147036.pdfhttp://www.ascsa.edu.gr/pdf/uploads/hesperia/147347.pdfhttp://www.ascsa.edu.gr/pdf/uploads/hesperia/147056.pdfhttp://www.ascsa.edu.gr/pdf/uploads/hesperia/147054.pdfhttp://www.ascsa.edu.gr/pdf/uploads/hesperia/147225.pdfhttp://www.ascsa.edu.gr/pdf/uploads/hesperia/147251.pdfhttp://anemi.lib.uoc.gr/metadata/2/e/f/metadata-ledeg0t3vr77j4ivc56nj1mi33_1304944859.tklhttp://hdl.handle.net/1808/5477
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    ,12, 11-34.

    ( 12)

    Vavouranakis, G., 2005.

    ,11, 39-64.

    ( 11)

    Kopaka, K., 2005. , 11, 9-37.

    ( 11)

    6.

    , ., 2009.

    , , .

    , ., 2005.

    , , .

    7 .

    URL:http://www.amth.gr/

    . , 1912,

    .

    URL:http://www.igoumenitsamuseum.gr/home

    ,, , (100.000

    ) (19 . ..)

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    8.

    5 !

    1) : , Shifting boundaries: The transition from the Middle to the Late Bronze Age inthe Aegean under a new light.

    http://www.aegeussociety.org/gr/index.php/aegean-studies/mathioudaki-shifting-boundaries

    (html), .

    . , 5-6 . .

    http://www.aegeussociety.org/gr/index.php/aegean-studies/

    , The Sea Peoples, Egypt, and theAegean: Transference of Maritime Technology in the Late Bronze-Early Iron Transition (LH IIIBC) Jeffrey P. Emanuel, Harvard.

    2) . .

    3) .

    o o . , .

    . ! .

    http://www.aegeussociety.org/gr/index.php/aegean-studies/mathioudaki-shifting-boundarieshttp://www.aegeussociety.org/gr/index.php/aegean-studies/mathioudaki-shifting-boundarieshttp://www.aegeussociety.org/gr/index.php/aegean-studies/http://www.aegeussociety.org/gr/index.php/aegean-studies/http://aegeussociety.org/gr/index.php/aegeus-news/bourogiannis-lecture-2014/http://aegeussociety.org/gr/index.php/aegeus-news/bourogiannis-lecture-2014/http://aegeussociety.org/gr/index.php/aegeus-news/papathanasious-lecture-2014/http://aegeussociety.org/gr/index.php/aegeus-news/papathanasious-lecture-2014/http://aegeussociety.org/gr/index.php/aegeus-news/papathanasious-lecture-2014/http://aegeussociety.org/gr/index.php/aegeus-news/bourogiannis-lecture-2014/http://www.aegeussociety.org/gr/index.php/aegean-studies/http://www.aegeussociety.org/gr/index.php/aegean-studies/mathioudaki-shifting-boundaries
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    9.

    E :

    , 22-25

    Austrian Academy of Sciences & he Institute of Classical Archaeology of the University of Vienna

    METAPHYSIS. Ritual, Myth and Symbolism in the Aegean Bronze Age. 15th International Aegean Conference

    , , 24 16:30

    , , 421

    ( , Tbingen) PaGE Project:

    , Louvain-la-Neuve, 25 14:00Salle du Conseil ISP

    ( )Cultural homogeneity and diversity in Prepalatial Crete

    , Louvain-la-Neuve, 29 14:00

    Salle du Conseil ISP

    Andrew Bevan (UCL-London)

    Models of Mediterranean landscapes

    , , 29 19:00

    , Cotsen Hall, 9

    ( , )Reconsidering the Largest EBA Cycladic Cemetery: The Recent Excavations at Chalandriani on Syros

    , , 30 19:00 ( ), 30

    Michael Boyd

    O

    http://metaphysis-aegaeum-15.univie.ac.at/home/http://metaphysis-aegaeum-15.univie.ac.at/home/http://metaphysis-aegaeum-15.univie.ac.at/fileadmin/user_upload/p_aegaeum15_metaphysis/Provisional_program.pdfhttp://metaphysis-aegaeum-15.univie.ac.at/fileadmin/user_upload/p_aegaeum15_metaphysis/Provisional_program.pdfhttp://www.aegeussociety.org/images/uploads/lectures/2014/tourloukis-24-04-2014.pdfhttp://www.aegeussociety.org/images/uploads/lectures/2014/tourloukis-24-04-2014.pdfhttp://sites.uclouvain.be/arc-crisis/?p=7483http://sites.uclouvain.be/arc-crisis/?p=7483http://sites.uclouvain.be/arc-crisis/?p=7593http://sites.uclouvain.be/arc-crisis/?p=7593http://sites.uclouvain.be/arc-crisis/?p=7593http://sites.uclouvain.be/arc-crisis/?p=7593http://www.ascsa.edu.gr/index.php/about/livestreamhttp://www.ascsa.edu.gr/index.php/about/livestreamhttp://www.ascsa.edu.gr/index.php/news/eventDetails/reconsidering-the-largest-eba-cycladic-cemetery-the-recent-excavations-at-chttp://www.ascsa.edu.gr/index.php/news/eventDetails/reconsidering-the-largest-eba-cycladic-cemetery-the-recent-excavations-at-chttp://www.ascsa.edu.gr/index.php/news/eventDetails/reconsidering-the-largest-eba-cycladic-cemetery-the-recent-excavations-at-chttp://www.ascsa.edu.gr/index.php/about/livestreamhttp://sites.uclouvain.be/arc-crisis/?p=7593http://sites.uclouvain.be/arc-crisis/?p=7483http://www.aegeussociety.org/images/uploads/lectures/2014/tourloukis-24-04-2014.pdfhttp://metaphysis-aegaeum-15.univie.ac.at/fileadmin/user_upload/p_aegaeum15_metaphysis/Provisional_program.pdfhttp://metaphysis-aegaeum-15.univie.ac.at/home/
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    , , 30 19:00

    , 14 ()

    Malgozata Siennicka-Rahmstorf & Kalliopi Sarri

    Textile production in the Aegean Neolithic and Early Bronze Age

    , , 30 19:00

    , 5

    Nicholas Blackwell (American School of Classical Studies at Athens)

    Hoarding Metal in the Aegean and Cypriot Late Bronze Age

    , Heidelberg, 2-3

    IWH Lecture Hall, Hauptstrasse 242

    Balkan Dialogues. Spatial Boundaries and Cultural Identities in the Prehistoric Balkans

    , , 5 19:00 , Doro Levi, 14

    ( )O

    , , 7 & 9 17:00

    All Souls College

    Evans-Pritchard Lectures 2014

    Philippa Steele (British Academy Postdoctoral Fellow)

    The Advent of Literacy on Cyprus & Understanding Undeciphered Scripts and Unidentified Languages

    , , 11 11:00

    " ", 8

    Klaus Valtin von Eickstedt

    , , 14 15:30

    Senate House, South Block G 22 / 26

    Mycenaean Seminar

    Barry Molloy (Sheffield)O

    , .

    .

    http://www.ufg-va.uni-hd.de/Balkan2014/index.htmlhttp://www.ufg-va.uni-hd.de/Balkan2014/index.htmlhttps://www.google.com/maps/place/%CE%93%CE%BA%CE%AC%CE%BB%CE%B7+8/@35.3308289,25.1374438,17z/data=%213m1%214b1%214m2%213m1%211s0x149a5980e6f6faeb:0x2aee8f00b7d5ea3ehttps://www.google.com/maps/place/%CE%93%CE%BA%CE%AC%CE%BB%CE%B7+8/@35.3308289,25.1374438,17z/data=%213m1%214b1%214m2%213m1%211s0x149a5980e6f6faeb:0x2aee8f00b7d5ea3ehttp://maps.google.com/maps?q=Senate+House+South+Block+London&hl=el&cd=1&ei=yUe8TNvBFNmQjAer_viLDQ&sll=51.499171,-0.082267&sspn=0.060065,0.112478&ie=UTF8&view=map&cid=16247999387469059522&ved=0CEAQpQY&hq=Senate+House+South+Block+London&hnear=&ll=51.522309,-0.129025&spn=0.006382,0.021136&z=16&iwloc=Ahttp://maps.google.com/maps?q=Senate+House+South+Block+London&hl=el&cd=1&ei=yUe8TNvBFNmQjAer_viLDQ&sll=51.499171,-0.082267&sspn=0.060065,0.112478&ie=UTF8&view=map&cid=16247999387469059522&ved=0CEAQpQY&hq=Senate+House+South+Block+London&hnear=&ll=51.522309,-0.129025&spn=0.006382,0.021136&z=16&iwloc=Ahttp://www.aegeussociety.org/gr/index.php/lectures/http://www.aegeussociety.org/gr/index.php/lectures/http://www.aegeussociety.org/gr/index.php/lectures/http://www.aegeussociety.org/gr/index.php/lectures/http://maps.google.com/maps?q=Senate+House+South+Block+London&hl=el&cd=1&ei=yUe8TNvBFNmQjAer_viLDQ&sll=51.499171,-0.082267&sspn=0.060065,0.112478&ie=UTF8&view=map&cid=16247999387469059522&ved=0CEAQpQY&hq=Senate+House+South+Block+London&hnear=&ll=51.522309,-0.129025&spn=0.006382,0.021136&z=16&iwloc=Ahttps://www.google.com/maps/place/%CE%93%CE%BA%CE%AC%CE%BB%CE%B7+8/@35.3308289,25.1374438,17z/data=%213m1%214b1%214m2%213m1%211s0x149a5980e6f6faeb:0x2aee8f00b7d5ea3ehttp://www.ufg-va.uni-hd.de/Balkan2014/index.html
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    10. CALL FOR PAPERS

    , 27-31 2015

    :20 2014

    . -, , . ,

    .

    MESO 2015. The Ninth International Conference

    on the Mesolithic in Europe

    , , 14-18 2015

    :01 2014

    The MESO2015 Committee invite speakers to

    submit abstracts for 10 minute papers and poster

    presentations on any subject related to

    Mesolithic archaeology.

    Geomedislands 2015 call for papers/registration

    , , 30 -2 2015

    : 31 2014

    The GEOMEDISLANDS 2015: International

    colloquium on Geoarchaeology of the

    Mediterranean islands will be taking place next

    year in Corsica.

    11. &

    CP Assistant at the Stratigraphic Museum,

    Knossos

    :18 2014

    The British School's Stratigraphic Museum at

    Knossos seeks to appoint an individual to take a

    leading role in the curation and documentation of

    its holdings. The successful applicant will join an

    established project, completion of which will take a

    further six years.

    BSA grants

    :30 2014

    During the whole academic year the BSA offers a

    series of awards, studentships, and fellowships to

    support research of all types and at all stages of

    your academic career.

    The British Institute at Ankara grants

    :30 2014

    During the whole year the British Institute at

    Ankara provides a number of different grants and

    awards.

    http://www.aegeussociety.org/en/index.php/call-for-papers/http://aegeussociety.org/gr/index.php/call-for-papers/cgp-athens-and-attica-in-prehistory/http://aegeussociety.org/gr/index.php/call-for-papers/cgp-athens-and-attica-in-prehistory/http://www.aegeussociety.org/gr/index.php/call-for-papers/meso-2015-cfp/http://www.aegeussociety.org/gr/index.php/call-for-papers/meso-2015-cfp/http://www.aegeussociety.org/gr/index.php/call-for-papers/geomedislands-cfp-2015/http://www.aegeussociety.org/gr/index.php/call-for-papers/geomedislands-cfp-2015/http://www.aegeussociety.org/en/index.php/grants-bursaries/http://www.aegeussociety.org/en/index.php/grants-bursaries/http://www.aegeussociety.org/en/index.php/grants-bursaries/http://www.aegeussociety.org/en/index.php/grants-bursaries/http://www.aegeussociety.org/en/index.php/grants-bursaries/http://www.aegeussociety.org/en/index.php/grants-bursaries/http://aegeussociety.org/gr/index.php/grants-jobs/cp-assistant-at-knossos-2014/http://aegeussociety.org/gr/index.php/grants-jobs/cp-assistant-at-knossos-2014/http://www.aegeussociety.org/gr/index.php/grants-jobs/bsa-grants/http://www.aegeussociety.org/gr/index.php/grants-jobs/bsa-grants/http://www.aegeussociety.org/gr/index.php/grants-jobs/biaa-grants/http://www.aegeussociety.org/gr/index.php/grants-jobs/biaa-grants/http://www.aegeussociety.org/gr/index.php/grants-jobs/biaa-grants/http://www.aegeussociety.org/gr/index.php/grants-jobs/bsa-grants/http://aegeussociety.org/gr/index.php/grants-jobs/cp-assistant-at-knossos-2014/http://www.aegeussociety.org/en/index.php/grants-bursaries/http://www.aegeussociety.org/gr/index.php/call-for-papers/geomedislands-cfp-2015/http://www.aegeussociety.org/gr/index.php/call-for-papers/meso-2015-cfp/http://aegeussociety.org/gr/index.php/call-for-papers/cgp-athens-and-attica-in-prehistory/http://www.aegeussociety.org/en/index.php/call-for-papers/
  • 5/24/2018 NAP50-15April2014-GR

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    12.

    .

    3.500

    . , , 04-01-2014

    3.500 . , 1,8 ., 40 , , .

    :http://tanea.gr

    :http://news.uchicago.edu

    15-17 2014

    , bazaar . , , . , , 15, 16 17 2014, , 22.

    .

    : , , 10 .. 6 .. 10 .. 3 ..

    :

    8

    29-. 30/3/2014

    . -, , 07-04-

    2014

    4 (2000-1650 ..) , ,

    , . .

    :http://enet.gr

    http://www.tanea.gr/news/culture/article/5105236/to-arxaiotero-reportaz-gia-th-thhra/http://www.tanea.gr/news/culture/article/5105236/to-arxaiotero-reportaz-gia-th-thhra/http://www.tanea.gr/news/culture/article/5105236/to-arxaiotero-reportaz-gia-th-thhra/http://news.uchicago.edu/article/2014/04/01/world-s-oldest-weather-report-could-revise-bronze-age-chronologyhttp://news.uchicago.edu/article/2014/04/01/world-s-oldest-weather-report-could-revise-bronze-age-chronologyhttp://www.archetai.gr/media/PDF/A/654.pdfhttp://www.archetai.gr/media/PDF/A/654.pdfhttp://www.archetai.gr/media/PDF/A/654.pdfhttp://aegeussociety.org/gr/index.php/news/perivallon-kai-politismos-apologismos/http://aegeussociety.org/gr/index.php/news/perivallon-kai-politismos-apologismos/http://www.enet.gr/?i=news.el.texnes--politismos&id=424771http://www.enet.gr/?i=news.el.texnes--politismos&id=424771http://www.enet.gr/?i=news.el.texnes--politismos&id=424771http://www.enet.gr/?i=news.el.texnes--politismos&id=424771http://aegeussociety.org/gr/index.php/news/perivallon-kai-politismos-apologismos/http://www.archetai.gr/media/PDF/A/654.pdfhttp://www.archetai.gr/media/PDF/A/654.pdfhttp://news.uchicago.edu/article/2014/04/01/world-s-oldest-weather-report-could-revise-bronze-age-chronologyhttp://www.tanea.gr/news/culture/article/5105236/to-arxaiotero-reportaz-gia-th-thhra/
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    atalhyk Research Project Announces

    Latest Conferences and DiscoveriesPopular Archaeology, 01-04-2014

    The atalhyk Research Project, an effort thatconsists of an international team of archaeologists

    and other experts from a consortium of universities

    and research institutions, has announced

    upcoming conferences to showcase and discuss the

    latest thinking about the excavation results at the

    iconic Neolithic and Chalcolithic proto-city

    settlement in southern Anatolia, in present-day

    Turkey.

    :http://popular-archaeology.com

    A. ,, 19-03-2014

    . 90% . , , .

    :http://ethnos.gr

    3,300-Year-Old Tomb with Pyramid Entrance

    Discovered in EgyptOwen Jarus, Live Science, 30-03-2014

    A tomb newly excavated at an ancient cemetery inEgypt would have boasted a pyramid 7 meters (23

    feet) high at its entrance, archaeologists say. The