Archaeology by period / region Books

3933 products


  • Imperial Horizons of the Silk Roads:

    Archaeopress Imperial Horizons of the Silk Roads:

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe enduring legacy of the Silk Roads are the goods and ideas that they facilitated and the technology that they disseminated. However, these trade routes also encompassed a web of communication, crucial for our understanding of the development of cultures, yet obscured by lack of research. This volume centres on how the exchange routes transformed the frontier regions of the Silk Road. In doing so, it utilises a range of methods to reach an archaeological interpretation of the factors that linked people with the environment; movements, settlements, and beliefs. In contrast to historical perspectives that have dominated the field to date, the volume incorporates physical records that offer a more reliable and objective understanding of the past. Taken as a whole, the case studies provide an overview of current developments where multiple lines of evidence are employed to integrate and resolve different data sets. Because trade connected a diversity of cultures, interdisciplinary collaboration is fundamental to reach the full research potential. The papers demonstrate precisely this significance by stretching across Europe, Asia, and Africa from the 4th millennium BC to the 10th century AD. The book is particularly timely given the scope of the Belt and Road Initiative, which threatens numerous archaeological sites across the Silk Roads.Table of ContentsIntroduction – Branka Franicevic and Marie N. Pareja Part One: Human Mobility and Migration Chapter 1: Global Interfaces and the Earliest Evidence for Afro-Eurasian Exchange – Marie N. Pareja Chapter 2: Genomic Landscape of the Silk Roads: Have Animals Transformed the Trade Routes? – Branka Franicevic Chapter 3: Changing Peoples and Practices: Exploring the Role of Cross-Cultural Contact in the British Neolithic-Bronze Age Transition – Anna Bloxam Chapter 4: The Role of Religion in Urban Form During the 7th and 8th Centuries AD at the Extremities of the Silk Roads – Andy Hutcheson and Simon Kaner Chapter 5: The Period Stigma in Archaeological Studies: A Consideration of Beliefs, Customs, and the Silk Roads – Dulcie Sidney Daffodil Newbury and Karina Croucher Part Two: Iconographic and Object-Based Inquiries Chapter 6: Polyvalent Goddesses from the Silk Roads – Marie N. Pareja Chapter 7: Interactions of Change: Pursuing Agentive Materials and Intangible Movements along the Silk Road Network – Sara Ann Knutson Chapter 8: Sopara Port Site Typology and the Link with Maritime Trade – Emilia Smagur, Riza Abbas, Sitaram Toraskar and Andrzej Romanowski Chapter 9: Wings Across the Silk Roads: The Art of the Flying Horse in Early China and Beyond – Robert A. Jones Chapter 10: Chinese Ceramic Exchange in the Maldives and the Indian Ocean, AD 900-1900 – Ran Zhang Chapter 11: Mycenaean Pottery and Pottery Technology as a Tool to Understand Social and Cultural Changes in the Ancient World – Iro’ B. Camici

    2 in stock

    £62.58

  • Journal of Greek Archaeology Volume 7 2022

    Archaeopress Journal of Greek Archaeology Volume 7 2022

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisIn this rich volume our articles range across all the main phases of Greek Archaeology from Prehistory to the Postmedieval era, and cover a wonderful range of topics. Studies of individual sites begin with an overview by Michael Boyd of Colin Renfrew’s research project on the Cycladic island of Keros at the truly remarkable prehistoric sanctuary centre of Dhaskaleio, but we also have an update by Corien Wiersma on the exciting new survey and excavations at the Mycenaean palace of Agios Vassilios near Sparta. Welcome news appears from Northern Greece, till not so long ago rather neglected by scholarship, with Bronze to Iron Age house and household cooking research papers from the Toumba mound and sites around Mount Olympus, by Kalliopi Efkleidou and Anastasia Dimoula. Landscape studies begin at the grandest scale with Bernard Knapp’s article on the interconnections of Bronze Age Cyprus and Kostas Sbonias’ article on the coastal economy of Corfu, then scale down geographically to Nadia Coutsinas’ analysis of long-term settlement dynamics in Eastern Crete and Natasha Dakouri-Hild’s high-tech survey project at Aphidna in Attica. Michalis Karambinis follows up his earlier study of the Roman cities of the province of Achaia (JGA 3, 2018), with a survey of the cities of Roman Crete. In a related topic, Anastasia Yangaki offers us an authoritative study of the archaeology of beekeeping on Late Antique Crete. We try hard never to neglect Greek art and architecture in our Journal, and are delighted to have a redating of the architectural history of the famous Archaic to Classical Athena Aphaia temple on Aegina by Hansgeorg Bankel, partnered by a study of the significance of its terracotta votive figurines by Maria Spathi. Andrew Stewart exhibits his immense learning in the field of Greek and Roman sculpture with an in-depth investigation of the statues of the Homeric hero Protesilaos. Always enthusiastic to keep up our coverage of the Medieval and Post-Medieval archaeology of Greece, we welcome two articles on Byzantine and Frankish ceramics from Nauplia and Crete, by Anastasia Vassiliou and Matteo Randazzo. Finally Michael Fotiadis dissects debates concerning the origins and nature of ‘Aegean prehistoric civilisation’ during the 19th century’s discovery and subsequent evaluation of Bronze Age Greece, a theme which has continued to be central to later and current approaches to ethnic and cultural continuity on the Greek homeland. - From the foreword by John Bintliff, General EditorTable of ContentsJournal of Greek Archaeology Volume 7: Editorial ; Prehistory and Protohistory ; The sanctuary at Keros in the Aegean Early Bronze Age: from centre of congregation to centre of power – Colin Renfrew, Michael J. Boyd, Demetris Athanasoulis, Neil Brodie, Tristan Carter, Katerina Dellaporta, Marie Floquet, Giorgos Gavalas, Myrto Georgakopoulou, Myrsini Gkouma, Jill Hilditch, Irini Legaki, Evi Margaritis, Marisa Marthari, Ioanna Moutafi, Olga Philaniotou, Peggy Sotirakopoulou and Joshua Wright ; Fusion cuisine in the shadow of Mount Olympus: an integrated study of Middle and Late Bronze Age cooking pots – Anastasia Dimoula, Sophia Koulidou, Zoi Tsirtsoni, Edward Standall, Oliver E. Craig and Soultana Maria Valamoti ; Bronze Age Cyprus and the Aegean: ‘exotic currency’ and objects of connectivity – A. Bernard Knapp ; Unlocking building biographies during the Late Bronze Age in Central Macedonia: the case of the Thessaloniki Toumba mound settlement – Kalliopi Efkleidou Maria Karantoni, Sevasti Triantaphyllou and Stelios Andreou ; The site of Ayios Vasileios in Laconia from the prehistoric to the early modern period. Results of the pedestrian field survey – Corien Wiersma, Philip Bes, Mink W. van IJzendoorn, Adam Wiznura and Sofia Voutsaki ; Archaic to Classical ; New observations on the pediments of the early Classical temple of Aphaia on Aegina and on other works by the ‘Aphaia architect’ – Hansgeorg Bankel ; What do terracotta figurines in a sacral context reveal? The case of the Aphaia sanctuary on the island of Aegina – Maria G. Spathi ; Roman and Late Roman ; The cities of Crete under Roman rule (1st–3rd centuries AD) – Michalis Karambinis ; Protesilaos, two ways – Andrew Stewart ; A beekeeper’s kit of the First Byzantine period in Eleutherna (Crete) – Anastasia G. Yangaki ; Medieval and Post-Medieval ; A note on Medieval Mediterranean trade networks: first observations on the possible evidence of Sicilian amphorae of the 8th-9th century in Crete and the Aegean – Matteo G Randazzo ; Middle Byzantine glazed pottery from Nauplio: an overview – Anastasia Vassiliou ; Multiperiod ; The settlement patterns of the Ierapetra Isthmus (East Crete) from the Archaic to the Venetian periods, as revealed through the SettleInEastCrete Program – Nadia Coutsinas, Marianna Katifori, Konstantinos Roussos and Athanasios Argyriou ; The Kotroni Archaeological Research Project (KASP): evaluating ancient Aphidna using multimodal landscape analysis – Athos Agapiou, Anastasia Dakouri-Hild, Stephen Davis, EleniAndrikou and William Rourk ; Coastal environments and long-term human practices in Corfu: a seascape perspective – Kostas Sbonias ; Historicising the emergence of the Aegean culture (1890s) – Michael Fotiadis ; Book reviews

    1 in stock

    £108.47

  • Sasanian Archaeology: Settlements, Environment

    Archaeopress Sasanian Archaeology: Settlements, Environment

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe Sasanian empire was one of the great powers of Late Antiquity, and for four centuries ruled the vast region stretching from Syria and the Caucasus to Central Asia. Classical, Armenian, Jewish and Arab written sources throw light on its history, and studies of its rock reliefs, stuccoes, silver, silks, coins and glyptic have created a picture of a rich courtly culture with a strong Iranian character. However, the everyday material culture is much less understood, as is the economy which sustained and supported the Sasanian empire and underpinned its consistent military superiority over its western rivals. This collection of essays looks at these aspects and offers an approach based almost entirely on archaeological and scientific research, much presented here for the first time. This book is divided into three parts which in turn examine evidence for Sasanian sites, settlements and landscapes, their complex agricultural resources, and their crafts and industries. Each section is preceded by an essay setting out the wider research questions and current state of knowledge. The book begins and ends with a general introduction and conclusion setting out why this new approach is necessary, and how it helps change our perceptions of the complexity and power of the Sasanian empire.Table of ContentsGeneral Introduction – St John Simpson ; PART ONE: Sites, Settlements and Landscapes ; Part One: Sites, Settlements and Landscapes - Introduction – St John Simpson ; Parthian and Sasanian Site and Settlement Patterns on the Deh Luran Plain, Khuzistan Province, South-West Iran – J.A. Neely ; The Sasanian Colonisation of the Mughan Steppe, Ardebil Province, North-West Iran – Jason Ur and Karim Alizadeh ; The Army and Urbanism at the Sasanian Empire’s Northern Frontiers:Fieldwork on the Linear Barriers, Fortresses and Cities at the Margins of the Gorgan Plain (Results of a Joint Project Between the Iranian Cultural Heritage, Handicraft and Tourism Organisation and the Universities of Edinburgh and Durham) – Hamid Omrani Rekavandi (HO), Eberhard W. Sauer (EWS), Tony J. Wilkinson (TW),† Ghorban Ali Abbasi (GA), Roger Ainslie (RA), Francesco Caputo (FC), Mohammad Ershadi (ME), Morteza Fattahi (MF), Nikolaus Galiatsatos (NG), Kristen Hopper (KH), Julian Jansen Van Rensburg (JJ), Eve Macdonald (EM), Majid Mahmoudi (MM), Amin Nazifi (AN), Jebrael Nokandeh (JN), Chris Oatley (CO), Seth Priestman (SP), James Ratcliffe (JR), Kourosh Roustaei (KR), Esmail Safari Tamak (EST), Bardia Shabani (BS) and Lucian Steven Usher-WilsoN (SU) ; A Temple Among the Fields: Preliminary Reconstruction of an Agricultural Landscape in the Serakhs Oasis, Southern Turkmenistan – Barbara Kaim ; Excavations at Kirpichli depe in Dehistan – A.E. Atagarryev ; The First Season of Excavations at the Sasanian Site of Tole Qaleh Seyfabad (TQS), South-west Iran: Preliminary Report – Parsa Ghasemi, Reza Noruzi and Azizallah Rezaei ; Sasanian and Early Islamic Settlement Patterns North of the Persian Gulf – Ahmadali Asadi, Seyed Mehdi Mousavi Kouhpar, Javad Neyestani and Alireza Hojabri Nobari ; Bushehr, Dashtestan and Siraf: the Transformation of the Maritime Trade Network in the Middle Persian Gulf – Seth M. N. Priestman ; PART TWO: Environment and Resources ; Charcoal and Wood in Fuel Residues in Sasanian and Early Islamic Merv: Wood Resources and Environmental Implications – Rowena Gale ; Exploitation of Wood at Kush (Ras Al-Khaimah, UAE) in Sasanian Times: Results of the Charcoal Analysis – Margareta Tengberg ; Two Sasanian Archaeofaunas from the Hamrin Basin, Eastern Iraq – F.G. Fedele ; Fracture Patterns Amongst Sasanian Bones at Merv – Ian Smith ; PART THREE: Material Culture ; Part Three: Material Culture - Introduction – St John Simpson ; Sasanian Pottery: Archaeological Evidence for Production, Circulation and Diachronic Change – St John Simpson ; Imitations and Innovations in Kushano-Sasanian Pottery – V.A. Zavyalov† ; Parthian, Sasanian and Islamic Pottery and Occupation of the Deh Luran Plain, South-west Iran – David V. Hill ; Magic and Inter-Communal Relations in Sasanian Iraq: the Case of the Incantation Bowls – Ali G. Scotten ; The Dating of Sasanian Glass in the Light of Excavated Finds from Bahrain – S.F. Andersen ; Reconstruction of the Process of Cutting of Two Sasanian Glass Bowls in the Okayama Orient Museum and the British Museum – Tami Ishida ; Sasanian Swords and Scabbards in the British Museum: A Scientific Analysis – J. Lang and St J. Simpson ; General Conclusion – St John Simpson ; Bibliography ; Index

    2 in stock

    £106.95

  • The Assyrian Rock Relief at Yaǧmur (Evrihan) in

    Archaeopress The Assyrian Rock Relief at Yaǧmur (Evrihan) in

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe Assyrian Rock Relief at Yaǧmur in the Tur Abdin publishes a newly discovered rock relief in the Mazıdağı Plain, at the western end of the Tur Abdin in southeastern Turkey. The preserved remains include an image of an Assyrian king, divine symbols and traces of three panels of cuneiform inscription. Both the image and the panel preserving the most coherent section of legible text can be dated to the time of Tiglath-pileser I. The sequences which can be deciphered relate to the king’s penetration into the northwest undertaken in the course of his third campaign against the Nairi lands. The monument is studied in the context of our understanding of the Assyrian expansion in this sector, together with a review of the settlement pattern and political organisation of the Tur Abdin as presented in Assyrian sources.Table of ContentsPreface ; The Assyrian Rock Relief at Yaǧmur in the Tur Abdin ; The Mazıdağı Plain ; Yağmur ; The Assyrian relief at Yağmur ; Geographical names ; Dating ; Assyrian reliefs with images of multiple kings ; Tiglath-pileser I’s campaigns in the Nairi lands ; Settlement geography of the Kašiari in Assyrian sources ; Conclusion ; Bibliography

    1 in stock

    £30.03

  • Australasian Egyptology Conference 4: Papers from

    Archaeopress Australasian Egyptology Conference 4: Papers from

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis volume presents papers from the Fourth Australasian Egyptology Conference held at Monash University, Melbourne 16–18 September 2016. Both the conference and the papers in this volume are dedicated to Gillian E. Bowen who retired from Monash that year, and a brief tribute to her is presented at the opening of the volume. The contributions include several on Egypt’s Western Desert where Monash has been engaged in fieldwork for many years in the the Dakhleh Oasis. Relating to the Roman-period village of Kellis, Bassett discusses economic policy in the settlement of the region and Rindi the elaborately decorated funerary cartonnage from one of its cemeteries. Long explores ceramic traditions of the Third Intermediate Period in Dakhleh while Warfe discusses aspects of the proscription of Seth, who was venerated at the ancient capital of Dakhleh, based on data from Luxor Temple in the valley. Livingstone presents textiles of the late Roman Period from Christian burials and Kucera examines a Roman military campaign in the northern Western Desert. The other papers reflect the wide range of research being undertaken by other Australasian scholars. These range from studies of early ceramics from Hamamieh by Pilgrim and the breakage of Predynastic figurines by Ordynat, to a study of a Fifth-century icon of the Virgin Mary by Marsh-Letts. From periods in between come studies of women in the family of high officials at Beni Hassan and in religious practices of the New Kingdom by Paull and Lisle respectively; aspects of the iconography of the Book of the Dead and a new representation of a sailing vessel by Volk and Stephens; the interface between text and visual image by Thorpe and finally mummification practices of children by Davey.Table of ContentsGillian E. Bowen: A Brief Tribute – Colin A. Hope ; Publications by Gillian E. Bowen ; A Note on the Cultural Status of Rural Settlements in Roman Egypt – Ben Bassett ; Interpretation of Mummification Practices in Child Mummies of the Graeco/Roman Period – Janet Davey ; A Roman-Egyptian Military Campaign of the Third Century CE in the Northern Region of the Western Desert – Paul Kucera ; Preliminary Discussions on a Prosopographic Study of the Involvement of Non-Royal Women in New Kingdom Religious Practices – Meg Lisle ; Three Funerary Textiles from Dayr Abu Matta, Dakhleh Oasis – Rosanne Livingstone ; Oasis Ceramics of the Third Intermediate Period: Identifying Regional Traditions – Richard J. Long ; A Fifth Century Virgin Mary: Enthroned as the Queen of Heaven? – Glennda Susan Marsh-Letts ; Intention or Accident? Discussion of Deliberate Breakage of Human Figurines in Predynastic Burials – Ryna Ordynat ; The Mothers, Wives and Daughters of the High Officials at Beni Hassan – Aymie Paull ; A Technological Study of Badarian Pottery from Hemamieh – Tracey Pilgrim ; Cartonnage Mummy Masks from Kellis (Ismant al-Kharab, Dakhleh Oasis) Featuring the Jackal Motif: New Insights on Regionalism after the 2017 Study Season – Carlo Rindi Nuzzolo ; Can a Menesh Vessel be Identified at Gebel el-Silsila? – Michael A. Stephens ; An Extra Dimension: The Important Personal Insight Ancient Egyptian Private Letters Provide to Augment Visual Evidence – Sue Thorpe ; Where are the Funerary Figurine Depictions (or The Nature of Work) in Book of the Dead Spell 110 Vignettes? – Sharyn Volk ; Iconoclasm in Degrees: On the Proscription of Seth (again) – Ashten Warfe

    2 in stock

    £43.33

  • Etudes Mesopotamiennes - Mesopotamian Studies N3

    Archaeopress Etudes Mesopotamiennes - Mesopotamian Studies N3

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisÀ travers L'empreinte des empires au Proche-Orient ancien, les collègues, élèves et amis de Francis Joannès ont voulu lui témoigner leur attachement. Ce livre hommage rassemble des articles autour d'une vaste thématique constituant l'un des fils directeurs des travaux de Francis Joannès qui a travaillé, et travaille toujours, sur les empires assyrien, babylonien, perse et gréco-macédoniens. Il a, en particulier, été un pionnier dans l'étude des empires achéménide et gréco-macédoniens à travers les sources cunéiformes. Il a été l'un des premiers à considérer que la fin de l'indépendance de la Babylonie ne marquait en rien la fin de son histoire tant économique, culturelle que politique, histoire qu'il a consacré sa carrière à faire revivre. Cependant, la richesse de ses travaux est bien loin d'être circonscrite à cette thématique ou à cette période et la variété des articles de ce volume est là pour en témoigner.L'empreinte des empires au Proche-Orient ancien se veut donc le reflet du parcours exceptionnel de Francis Joannès et comme le symbole que le futur ne se fera pas sans que demeure son empreinte scientifique et humaine.

    1 in stock

    £80.75

  • Agrarian Archaeology in Northwestern Iberia:

    Archaeopress Agrarian Archaeology in Northwestern Iberia:

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisAgrarian Archaeology in Northwestern Iberia is devoted to the archaeological study of the societies and agrarian landscapes of Northwestern Iberia in the longue durée. The book brings together, for the first time, the results of some of the main projects carried out in recent decades from off-site records providing a fresh perspective for the understanding of historical landscapes. The papers evaluate the ‘manure hypothesis’ and other variables that have influenced the formation of pottery carpets in several territories of the Ebro and Douro basins. The record is interpreted through critical integration with other historical, ethnographic and archaeological evidence. In thematic terms, the processes of early medieval colonization, the transformation of rural societies between the Roman and medieval periods, the agency of subaltern groups, the transformations of agrarian practices from a social perspective, and the morphology of agrarian landscapes from prehistory to the contemporary age are analysed. In addition, singularities in off-site records in non-Mediterranean spaces are considered. In summary, this volume introduces new topics, concepts and case studies useful for developing a multiproxy agrarian archaeology.Table of ContentsPreface – Juan Antonio Quirós Castillo ; The Archaeology of the ‘off-sites’ in North-western Iberia – Juan Antonio Quirós Castillo ; The colonization of agricultural space in the territory of medieval Astorga: the agricultural space of Brimeda (Villaobispo de Otero, León, Spain) as attested by off-site ceramic material – Pilar Diarte-Blasco; Enrique Ariño Gil; Marta Pérez-Polo ; El registro offsite como fuente para la reconstrucción del paisaje antiguo. Dos ejemplos del entorno de la ciudad de Cabeza Ladrero (Sos del Rey Católico/Sofuentes, Zaragoza) – Ángel A. Jordán ; Intensive survey on the Valpierre plain (La Rioja, Spain): dynamics of an agrarian landscape from prehistoric times to the present – Enrique Ariño Gil; Javier González-Tablas Sastre; Rodrigo Portero Hernández; María de los Reyes de Soto García ; Roman rural landscapes in the north-eastern sector of the Duero basin. Field survey and aerial archaeology in the Pisuerga-Arlanzón basin – Jesús García Sánchez ; Pottery, settlement patterns and agrarian practices between Roman and medieval times in the Eresma and Voltoya valleys (Segovia, Spain) – Juan Antonio Quirós Castillo, Lorena Elorza González de Alaiza, Maite I. García-Collado ; The manure hypothesis, off-site records and the archaeology of agricultural practices in the Alava plain – Juan Antonio Quirós Castillo, Lorena Elorza González de Alaiza, Maite I. García-Collado

    2 in stock

    £49.52

  • People and Agrarian Landscapes: An Archaeology of

    Archaeopress People and Agrarian Landscapes: An Archaeology of

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisPeople and Agrarian Landscapes aims to offer the reader a series of keys to understand why agrarian archaeology has become one of the most dynamic, experimental, and innovative sectors of the discipline in southern Europe, providing an overview of the driving theories, methodologies and main topics that have been addressed to date. In this way, the text is presented as an introduction for students, a critical reading guide for other scholars, and an informative instrument aimed at a wide audience. Most of the results of agrarian archaeology are to be found in highly specialized journals and venues that are not always easily accessible, and thus the volume presents the works, tools, and conceptual frameworks that have been developed by some of the main research groups active in the south of Western Europe to study rural societies throughout history, considering the materiality of agricultural activities.Table of ContentsSunflowers, Agrarian Capitalism and Traditional Landscapes. Agrarian Archaeology in the postclassical age – Juan Antonio Quirós Castillo ; Medieval Agrarian Landscapes seen by French School of Archaeogeography – Magali Watteaux ; Defying limits. Archaeology of social landscapes in high mountain areas of the Central Pyrenees – Ermengol Gassiot Ballbè ; A historical context for rural landscapes: the contribution of Environmental Resources Archaeology (ERA) (NW Italy) – Roberta Cevasco, Carlo Montanari, Diego Moreno, Alessandro Panetta, Valentina Pescini, Anna Maria Stagno ; Archaeology of the agrarian landscapes in al-Andalus: new paths towards integrated interpretation – Jorge A. Eiroa ; Archaeology of forest and mountainous areas: The Zigoitia Research Project (Basque Country) – Jose Rodríguez Fernández, Ángel Martínez Montecelo ; Agrarian Archaeologies in the Basque Country. Long-term agrarian landscapes and practices in a social context – Juan Antonio Quirós-Castillo, Josu Narbarte Hernández, Eneko Iriarte ; The archaeological study of agricultural sustainability: the cases of Konso (S Ethiopia) and Engaruka (N Tanzania) – Cruz Ferro-Vázquez; Daryl Stump

    1 in stock

    £54.60

  • La cerámica ibérica gris: ensayo de tipología

    Archaeopress La cerámica ibérica gris: ensayo de tipología

    1 in stock

    Book Synopsis2022 marked the thirtieth anniversary of the publication of one of the crucial studies in the definition of the pottery of the Iberian culture (7th to 1st centuries BC). The work of C. Mata and H. Bonet (1992) La cerámica ibérica: Ensayo de tipología both synthesized and at the same time brought to fruition a long trajectory of studies related to the material culture of this paradigmatic pre-Roman culture of the Iberian Peninsula, bequeathing to future generations a typological guide that remains valid. However, one of the ceramic types that this culture produced, Iberian grey ware, was not studied individually in the aforementioned research. With this work and through the characterization of more than 6000 ceramics from 55 Iberian sites, our typological knowledge of the pottery productions of these protohistoric populations is completed. It is intended not only to expose the typological, but also the technological characteristics of Iberian grey ware, its functionality and even its origin and symbolism for the people who made it.Table of ContentsResumen ; English Abstract ; Capítulo 1. Introducción ; La cerámica ibérica gris: la necesidad de un ensayo tipológico ; Principales objetivos del presente trabajo ; Capítulo 2. Aparato teórico y metodológico ; Bases teóricas de partida para la definición del objeto de estudio: La relación cultura y cultura material ; La cerámica como objeto y el productor como objetivo ; Aparato teórico-metodológico ; Capítulo 3. Definición del objeto de estudio ; Producciones cerámicas ibéricas. Introducción historiográfica y estado de la cuestión de la cerámica ibérica. Desde los orígenes hasta los inicios del siglo XXI ; Un caso particular. Historiografía de las producciones a torno reductoras de la Península Ibérica ; Once definciones de la cerámica reductora a torno ; Capítulo 4. Caracterización del ámbito espacial y social ; El ámbito espacial ; El ámbito social: los protagonistas ; Capítulo 5. Las fuentes. Realidad histórica y contextos para la configuración de un repertorio tipológico ; Realidad histórica y contextos: los yacimientos estudiados ; Tipología de las cerámicas IBG en el ámbito de estudio: repertorio tipológico ; Capítulo 6. Las cerámicas iberas grises en su contexto ; Las IBG en los espacios domésticos ; Las IBG en los espacios económicos ; Las IBG en las necrópolis ; Las IBG en los espacios de culto y santuarios ; Análisis tecnológico y funcional ; Estudio de las cerámicas IBG decoradas ; Capítulo 7. Contexto general, evolución y cronología ; Las cerámicas IBG dentro del contexto del poblamiento íbero ; Capítulo 8. Conclusiones: caracterización de la cerámica ibérica gris a torno de la oretania septentrional y sus zonas de contacto ; Caracterización de la cerámica ibérica gris a torno de la oretania septentrional y sus zonas de contacto ; Bibliografía

    1 in stock

    £45.60

  • ‘To See a World in a Grain of Sand’: Glass from

    Archaeopress ‘To See a World in a Grain of Sand’: Glass from

    1 in stock

    Book Synopsis‘To See a World in a Grain of Sand’ uses modern scientific methods to examine glass beads and vessel fragments dating from the Meroitic (c. 350 BC-AD 350) and Early Nobadia (c. AD 350-600) periods to provide a new assessment of glass from Nubia (ancient Sudan), a subject hitherto little-studied. The resulting identification of their chemical makeup is not simply about artefact reclassification but permits the tracking of similar compositions and—by extension—the raw materials for glass production that were used throughout Nubia, Egypt, and the Mediterranean. The results reveal interrelationships between trade, technological understanding, and manufacturing choices made across these cultures. Comparing glasses from Nubia with those from Egyptian and Mediterranean contexts has also shown how the same primary production centres were providing glass to sites in Turkey, Albania, Egypt, and Nubia. The identification of different glass groups and rare types of glass within Nubia shows the extent and variation to be found in a material that is present not only at a single site but also across the whole region, while the data presented reveals the diverse and complex nature of glass objects discovered there. That multiple interactions were being employed in glass manufacture shows how the examination of artefacts and their component materials must include consideration of both international trade and ‘home-based’ practices.Table of ContentsChemical Oxides (Symbols and Meaning) ; Timeline of Ancient Egypt and Nubia ; Acknowledgements ; Chapter 1: Nubian History, Glass, and Mediterranean Trade ; Aim and Scope ; The Nubian Historical Context ; Ancient Glassmaking ; The Movement of Goods in Roman Egypt ; Chapter 2: Chemical Analysis and Archaeological Context ; Scientific Methodology and Practice ; The Datasets ; Concluding Remarks ; Chapter 3: Results of Chemical Analyses ; Results: Faras ; Results: Gabati ; Results: Meroe ; Results: Qasr Ibrim ; Lead Oxide (PbO) and Colourants (Iron (II) Oxide (Fe2O3), Copper Oxide (CuO)) ; Concluding Remarks ; Chapter 4: Nubia and the Mediterranean: International Connections through Glass ; Chemical Components of Glass ; Low-Lead Glasses ; Identification of Glass Groups for Nubian Low-Lead Glass Samples 63 ; Comparisons with Published Analyses of Glasses from the Mediterranean and Near East ; Comparisons that Showed Strong Similarities ; Comparison of Pergamon, Bubastis, and Butrint Glasses 69 ; Comparisons that Showed Strong Similarity to a Single Nubian Site ; Comparisons that Showed a Degree of Similarity ; Comparison that Showed a Degree of Similarity to a Single Nubian Site ; Glass Comparison Results in Context: Primary Production Centres, Material Culture, and the Movement of Goods and Ideas ; Concluding Remarks ; Chapter 5: High Lead Glasses and Other Vitreous Materials ; High-Lead Glasses in Nubia ; Comparison of Nubian High-Lead Glasses ; High-Silica Vitreous Material ; Gabati: Local Industry and Imitation? ; Concluding Remarks ; Chapter 6: Conclusions ; Primary Production Centre(s) (PPCs) ; Glass Trade: Nubia and the Mediterranean ; Local Glass Production and Imitation ; Final Remarks ; Appendices ; Appendix I: Egyptian Glass Results ; Appendix II: Nubian Low-Lead Glass Comparisons to Published Material: Scatterplots ; Appendix III: Published Material Comparison to Pergamon, Bubastis, and Butrint: Scatterplots ; Bibliography

    1 in stock

    £53.61

  • Religion and Cult in the Dodecanese During the

    1 in stock

    £75.71

  • Persistent Pastoralism: Monuments and Settlements

    Archaeopress Persistent Pastoralism: Monuments and Settlements

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisA summary of archaeological teamwork along the Dhofar plateau and its backslope into the Nejd of Southern Oman, this book documents survey and excavation of small-scale stone monuments and pastoral settlements. Whether used as burial places, as landmarks, as mnemonic devices, or for other purposes, monuments are the enduring and prominent traces of desert pastoralists. In Dhofar, pastoralists constructed monuments in discrete pulses over 7500 years. Recognizing the dynamic ecosystems and climate regimes of Arabian prehistory, the author suggests that mobile pastoralists used monuments to link dispersed households into broader social communities. Furthermore, the range of practical adjustments to monuments as a consistent means of messaging among mobile people showcases the adaptive strength of Dhofar’s prehistoric inhabitants over time. A singular episode of settlement during a particularly arid period highlights the longer tradition of pastoral people on the move. With fictional vignettes to imagine the people who used these monuments, the chapters introduce archaeological analysis of the social identities, patterns of resource access, contacts, aversions, and exchanges with neighboring groups. Finally, the book underscores the rich heritage of persistent pastoralism within contemporary Oman.Table of ContentsList of illustrations and tables ; Acknowledgments ; Glossary notes ; 1. A Story and Its Meaning ; 2. Dhofar’s Pastoral Landscape ; 3. Archaeology in Dhofar: The Arabian Human Social Dynamics (AHSD) Project ; 4. Cultural Inheritance of the Dhofar Pastoralists ; 5. Building Pastoral Communities in the Neolithic (5000–4500 BCE) ; 6. Tribes in the Bronze Age (3200–1500 BCE) ; 7. Cultivating Pastoralism in the Late Iron Age (400 BCE–400 CE) ; 8. Mobility and Community in the Late Iron Age (300 BCE–500 CE) ; 9. Patterns of Monuments and Settlement Shaped Dhofar ; Bibliography ; Index

    1 in stock

    £59.15

  • Mesopotamia, Syria and Transjordan in the

    Archaeopress Mesopotamia, Syria and Transjordan in the

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisKeppel Archibald Cameron Creswell (1879-1974) developed an early interest in Islamic architecture, which became his main area of research at the time of his military posting in Egypt, in 1916. His publications are still fundamental research tools for scholars in the field. Creswell considered photography as an essential tool for recording architectural artefacts, and this volume deals with the photographs that concern Mesopotamia, Syria and Jordan, kept today at the Biblioteca Berenson, of the Villa I Tatti, Harvard University Center for Italian Renaissance Studies, in Florence. On the whole, they can be dated between 1919 and 1930. Many of the sites and monuments photographed by Creswell are still standing, but there are many others that no longer exist, or have been significantly modified. Geolocations for all the photographed monuments can also be viewed on Google My Maps. For this reason, the Creswell photo collection is an exceptional resource for the study of ancient monuments, especially for any conservation and restoration project.Table of ContentsA martyr for Islamic architectural history, by Spyros Koulouris ; Processing the photo archive ; Archival descriptions ; Studying the past – working for the future ; Introduction ; Creswell and the Berenson Collection ; Biographical sketch ; Creswell photographer: the working method ; Creswell’s legacy of photographs ; Creswell’s collection at the Biblioteca Berenson ; Mesopotamia, Syria and Transjordan in Creswell’s photographs ; Mesopotamia, Syria and Transjordan at the end of World War I ; Photographers in Mesopotamia, Syria and Transjordan prior to Creswell’s work ; The sites and the monuments ; Mesopotamia ; Birecik ; Harran ; Samarra ; Qantarat Harba ; Baghdad ; Al-Madain – Taq Kisra ; Al-Ukhaidir ; Syria ; Ancient churches of Northern Syria: Qalat Siman, Qalb Lawzah and Ruweiha ; Aleppo ; Masyaf ; Hama ; Homs ; Damascus ; Transjordan ; Amman ; Iraq al-Amir ; Qusayr Amra ; Conclusions ; Appendixes ; 1. Register of photographers in Mesopotamia, Syria and Transjordan between the 1840s and the 1930s ; 2. Register of Creswell’s photographs of the Biblioteca Berenson ; 3. Synopsis of Creswell’s photographs in the different archives ; 4. Sites and monuments geolocation, by Francesco Saliola (Free online resource ) ; Bibliographic references ; Arabic Summary

    1 in stock

    £52.25

  • ‘To Aleppo gone …’: Essays in honour of Jonathan

    Archaeopress ‘To Aleppo gone …’: Essays in honour of Jonathan

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisTo Aleppo Gone ... is a festschrift offered in honour of Jonathan Tubb, former Levant curator and Keeper of the Department of the Middle East at the British Museum. It includes 44 contributions invited from Jonathan’s friends and colleagues from across the world, with each short essay exploring a single idea and its wider ramifications. The assembled volume also reflects the development of Jonathan’s own career and professional interests, with a focus on the Jordan Valley and southern Levant, but also extending to north Syria, Mesopotamia, the protection of endangered cultural heritage, and the lives of early archaeological pioneers. The editors are all former colleagues of Jonathan, and curators in the Department of the Middle East in the British Museum.Table of ContentsPreface ; J.N. Tubb: a bibliography of works ; PART ONE: Along the Jordan Valley ; Notes on the figurines from Tell es-Sa’idiyeh – Josef Mario BRIFFA SJ ; Early Bronze Age capers at Tell es-Sa’idiyeh in Jordan – Caroline R. CARTWRIGHT ; On the naming of Tell es-Sa’idiyeh – Rupert L. CHAPMAN III ; The Shaft Grave with loculus at Tell es-Sa’idiyeh – Jack GREEN ; Tell Um Hammad in the Early Bronze IV period – Svend HELMS†, Melissa KENNEDY and Alison BETTS ; A stamp seal impression from Kataret es-Samra – Albert LEONARD, Jr. ; A view from a tell redux – Suzanne RICHARD ; Tell es-Sa’idiyeh and the Egyptian trade – Eveline J. VAN DER STEEN ; PART TWO: Beyond the Jordan ; A playing scene on an ivory panel from Megiddo – Anne DUNN-VATURI ; Rural cult in urban Canaan: an MB/LB ‘temple’ at el-Khawarij in the Jordan Valley escarpment – James A. FRASER, Jaimie L. LOVELL, Paul DONNELLY ; An elephant in the Sīq? – Sam MOORHEAD ; ‘Canaanites’ at Bethlehem – Lorenzo NIGRO ; A possible sundial from Zoara in the Ghor as-Safi – Konstantinos D. POLITIS ; An Ammonite god in the British Museum – Katharina SCHMIDT ; An Egyptian figurine mould from Tell Halif – Joe D. SEGER ; A human-headed chariot linchpin from Tell Fara – Rachael Thyrza SPARKS ; An enigmatic scarab from Rishon le-Zion – James M. WEINSTEIN ; PART THREE: From Syria to southern Iraq ; The tip of the spear: fortification at Tell Nebi Mend – Stephen BOURKE ; Facing the sunrise: the orientation of certain Levantine Bronze Age temples – Christopher J. DAVEY ; Out of the stores: further obsidian objects from Tell Chagar Bazar – Elizabeth HEALEY ; Peering behind the pictographs – Irving FINKEL ; Found in Assyria, made in Phoenicia, copied in Syria, exported to Iberia: a well-travelled motif of the early 1st millennium BC – Eric GUBEL ; Making a mark: evidence for cattle branding on the Nimrud ivories – Hannah GWYTHER ; The Loftus ladies – Georgina HERRMANN ; ‘Keeper of the inhabited world’ – John MacGINNIS ; Idols for the household: two bronze figurines from Late Bronze I Taşlı Geçit Höyük – Nicolò MARCHETTI ; Sun, hero and hair – Astrid NUNN ; The bitumen trade of Hīt from antiquity to Ottoman times – Andrew D. PETERSEN ; Sumerian harmonics – Sébastien REY ; Griffins in paradise: Canaanite to Phoenician in a Nimrud ivory – Michael SEYMOUR ; Smoking and drinking: from Tell es-Sa’idiyeh to Ur – St John SIMPSON ; PART FOUR: Cultural heritage ; Protecting cultural heritage in museums during crises and wars 165 – Maamoun ABDULKARIM ; The Cyrus Cylinder: anatomy of the Tehran 2010 loan – Dean BAYLIS ; ‘Standing Caliph’ coins from Syria: probably looted and on the market – Neil BRODIE ; The Palestine Archaeological Museum in Jerusalem, 1926–1938 – Mahmoud HAWARI ; PART FIVE: Personal stories ; John Garstang in retrospect – Piotr BIENKOWSKI ; The Palestine Exploration Fund, Charles Clermont-Ganneau and the Mesha stela – Felicity COBBING ; Reasoning in archaeological discourse – Anthony J. FRENDO ; The Megiddo water system: a letter from R.S. Lamon to J.L. Starkey – Yosef GARFINKEL ; Memories of Tell es-Sa’idiyeh – Loretta HOGAN and Sandra SMITH ; A Confluence of Stories: a personal journey – Imran JAVED ; An unexpected find: a letter from Flinders Petrie to Leonard Woolley – Carlo LIPPOLIS ; ‘I am the Bull of Nineveh’: a monument on the move – Henrietta McCALL† ; Family Bibles: an early 18th-century case and beyond – Gerrit van der KOOIJ ; AFTERWORD ; From Palestine Room to Levant Gallery at the British Museum – Jonathan N. TUBB ; Indices

    2 in stock

    £63.47

  • Gandharan Art in Its Buddhist Context:

    Archaeopress Gandharan Art in Its Buddhist Context:

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisGandharan Art in its Buddhist Context is the fifth set of papers from the workshops of the Classical Art Research Centre's Gandhara Connections project. These selected studies revolve around perhaps the most fundamental topic of all for understanding Gandharan art: its religious contexts and meanings within ancient Buddhism.Addressing the responses of patrons and worshippers at the monasteries and shrines of Gandhara, these papers seek to understand more about why Gandharan art was made and what its iconographical repertoire meant to ancient viewers. The contributions from an array of international experts consider dedicatory practices in monasteries, the representation of Buddhas, and the lessons to be learned from some of the latest excavations and survey work in the region.

    1 in stock

    £28.50

  • Sit tibi terra gravis: Sepolture anomale tra età

    Archaeopress Sit tibi terra gravis: Sepolture anomale tra età

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisBetween 2014 and 2015 in the excavations of the church of San Calocero in Albenga (Savona - Italy) two burials of young post-medieval women with particular and anomalous characteristics were brought to light. The first inhumation was prone and placed in a deep grave isolated from the cemetery; the second had partially burnt bone remains and was covered by an accumulation of large stones. The find immediately had a vast international echo, which already during the excavation led to the organization of a first in-depth scientific meeting. Sit tibi terra gravis - Anomalous burials between the medieval and modern ages publishes the proceedings of a 2016 international conference of the same name. The contributions explore the phenomenon of anomalous burials on a European scale, with an interdisciplinary reading between archaeology, history, physical and cultural anthropology. Thirty-three contributions by sixty-two scholars are divided into four sessions: “Deviant burials”: case studies from the Italian territory; “Deviant burials” from European contexts; Anthropology and Archaeology compared; The indicators in the tombs, allowing to develop a broad and articulated study path on this phenomenon.Table of ContentsPresentazioni ; Introduzione alle tematiche del Convegno ; Le ragioni di un convegno anomalo sulle sepolture anomale – Philippe Pergola, Giuseppina Spadea, Stefano Roascio, Elena Dellù ; Dallo studio delle ossa umane ai comportamenti funerari: anomalo vs. normale – Maria Giovanna Belcastro, Valentina Mariotti ; Il rito, la morte, le sepolture: la dimensione sociale e culturale – Carmen Bilotta ; Prima Sessione - Le “Deviant burials”: casi di studio dal territorio italiano ; Duri a morire: comportamenti persistenti intorno al defunto. Sepolture “anomale” di epoca romana e medievale dell'Emilia Romagna – Valentina Mariotti, Marco Milella, Maria Giovanna Belcastro ; La tomba della “donna dei gioielli” nella basilica di papa Marco sulla via Ardeatina a Roma. Analisi archeologica e antropologica – Vincenzo Fiocchi Nicolai, Romina Ciaffi ; San Calocero al monte di Albenga: tra ricerche passate e ripresa degli scavi – Philippe Pergola, Stefano Roascio, Elena Dellù, Gabriele Castiglia ; Le sepolture anomale di Albenga tra Antropologia Fisica e Culturale – Elena Dellù, Stefano Roascio, Viola Tanganelli, Maria Giovanna Belcastro ; Rilievo digitale applicato all’archeoantropologia: la documentazione delle sepolture di S. Calocero ad Albenga – Riccardo Valente ; Una sepoltura anomala da Quiliano (SV), San Pietro in Carpignano e altri casi dal Savonese – Francesca Bulgarelli, Silvana Gavagnin ; Isola del Cantone (GE): sepoltura prona nel contesto cimiteriale della chiesa di S. Stefano – Paolo de Vingo, Gian Battista Parodi, Ilaria Sanmartino, Valeria Fravega, Andrea Bruna, Alessandra Cinti ; Due sepolture anomale dagli scavi della necropoli longobarda "della ferrovia" a Cividale del Friuli – Angela Borzacconi, Paola Saccheri, Luciana Travan ; Sepolture anomale nel cimitero medievale di Villamagna (FR) – Caroline Goodson ; L'inumata prona del battistero San Giovanni Battista di Settimo Vittone (TO) e le sepolture anomale in Piemonte fra medioevo ed età moderna – Francesca Garanzini, Alessandra Cinti, Giovanna Viano, Rosa Boano ; Una sepoltura privilegiata e una sepoltura anomala nel cimitero della Pieve di Pava in Val d’Asso (Siena) – Stefano Campana, Cristina Felici, Valeria Mongelli, Gino Fornaciari ; Corpi santi e sepolture anomale in Sardegna attraverso i dati d’archivio – Mauro Dadea ; Sepolture anomale nel cimitero medievale e postmedievale di Bisarcio (Ozieri - Sassari) – Marco Milanese, Anna Bini ; Un antico omicidio ad Albenga? La sepoltura anomala presso il Pontelungo alla luce delle analisi antropologiche e geoarcheologiche – Marta Conventi, Michela Tornatore ; Ancora una sepoltura anomala dal Palazzo Vescovile di Albenga? – Giuseppina Spadea, Stefano Roascio, Elena Dellù, Elisa Grassi ; Sepolture eccezionali dalla Sicilia occidentale – Giuseppe Falzone ; Deviant burials nel sepolcreto medievale di S. Michele in Sallianense a Trezzo sull'Adda (MI) – Elena Dellù, Silvia Lusuardi Siena ; Il cimitero medievale di San Lorenzo di Nonantola (MO): il caso di una tomba inusuale di infante – Francesca Bertoldi, Fiorella Bestetti, Alessandra Cianciosi ; I putridaria: memento homo qui pulveres es et in pulverem reverteris. Un approccio archeologico alla pratica sepolcrale dei sedili scolatoio dell'Italia Meridionale – Isabella Marchetta ; Seconda Sessione - “Deviant burials” da contesti europei ; Sepolture anomale oltreconfine: uno sguardo internazionale – Angela Sciatti, Elena Dellù, Stefano Roascio ; Making a Deviant: Intentional Skeletal Dislocations in Reopened Graves from the Medieval Balkans – Petar Parvanov ; Sepolture anomale: un censimento tra Italia, Francia, Svizzera ed Isole Britanniche – Letizia Cavallini, Francesco Coschino, Antonio Fornaciari ; Elaborazione di un database multimediale ad accesso libero per il censimento delle sepolture anomale – Francesco Coschino, Letizia Cavallini, Antonio Fornaciari, Valentina Giuffra ; Terza Sessione - Antropologia e Archeologia a confronto ; La suggestione ed il maleficio in Albenga: realtà o credenza moderna? Documenti di vita civile ed ecclesiastica nel Trecento – Giovanni Puerari, Francesca Giraldi ; Streghe ad Albenga? Le sepolture anomale di San Calocero e la lunga durata della stregofobia nel Ponente ligure – Paolo Portone ; Considerazioni conclusive sulle ultime linee di tendenza nel dialogo tra Antropologia e Archeologi – Valentino Nizzo ; Quarta Sessione - Gli indicatori nelle tombe ; Subadulti con rituali deposizionali inconsueti: il caso di Nocetum (MI) – Silvia Lusuardi Siena, Federica Matteoni, Elena Dellù ; Le monete in sepoltura: oltre "l'obolo di Caronte" (nel tempo e nello spazio) – Claudia Perassi ; Un fabbro del XII secolo? La sepoltura anomala degli Ex Laboratori Gentili di Pis – Francesco Marco Paolo Carrera, Francesco Coschino, Letizia Cavallini, Marilina D’Andretta ; Quinta Sessione - Malattie ed emarginazione sociale ; La patocenosi nel Tardo medioevo a partire da una fonte di area genovese – Giuseppe Palmero † ; Seppellire al tempo del colera: casi toscani di “sepolture anomale” del XIX secolo – Antonio Fornaciari, Francesco Coschino, Letizia Cavallini, Giuseppe Vercellotti ; Conclusioni ; Interdisciplinarietà per la complessità – Stefano Roascio, Elena Dellù ; La voce dei morti e il linguaggio dei vivi – Luigi M. Lombardi Satriani †

    1 in stock

    £98.19

  • The Human Brain in Ancient Egypt: A Medical and

    Archaeopress The Human Brain in Ancient Egypt: A Medical and

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe Human Brain in Ancient Egypt provides a medical and historical re-evaluation of the function and importance of the human brain in ancient Egypt. The study evaluates whether treatment of the brain during anthropogenic mummification was linked to medical concepts of the brain. The notion that excerebration was carried out to rid the body of the brain continues to dominate the literature, and the assumption that the functions of the brain were assigned to the heart and therefore the brain was not needed in the afterlife persists. To assess the validity of these claims the study combines three investigations: a radiological survey of 33 subjects using the IMPACT mummy database to determine treatment of the cranium; an examination of the medical papyri for references to the human brain; and an inspection of the palaeopathological records to look for evidence of cranial injuries and ensuing medical treatments. The results refute long held claims regarding the importance of the human brain in ancient Egypt. Many accepted facets of mummification can no longer hold up to scrutiny. Mummification served a religious ideology in which the deceased was transformed and preserved for eternity. Treatment of the brain was not determined to be significantly different from the visceral organs, and the notion that the brain was extracted because it served no purpose in the afterlife was found to be unsubstantiated.Table of ContentsChronology ; Chapter 1: Introduction ; Chapter 2: Literature review ; Chapter 3: A re-evaluation of mummification and treatment of the brain ; Chapter 4: Trauma care and neurosurgery in Ancient Egypt ; Chapter 5: Palaeopathological evidence of cranial surgery ; Chapter 6: Conclusion ; Appendix A ; Appendix B: Book of the Dead: Spell 30b (Faulkner, 2010) ; Appendix C: Book of the Dead: Spell 166: Spell for a headrest (Faulkner, 2010) ; Appendix D ; Bibliography

    1 in stock

    £30.23

  • Roman Funerary Rituals in Mutina (Modena, Italy):

    Archaeopress Roman Funerary Rituals in Mutina (Modena, Italy):

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisRoman Funerary Rituals in Mutina (Modena, Italy) presents the results of a research project undertaken in collaboration with the University of Huddersfield. The project sought to identify and reconstruct the funerary space and rituals of the necropolis in Mutina (now Modena) in the period between the first century BC and second century AD. The research is a key example of integrated analyses, linking the different results in the same interpretative system and supporting traditional strategies (archaeology and archaeobotany) with advanced technology (SAXS, CT-scan). The archaeobotanical remains (seeds and fruit) and the objects involved in the ceremonies constitute an important investigatory lens to reconstruct the mortuary rituals and attendance at the funerary space.Table of ContentsContents ; List of Figures and Tables ; Introduction ; Project ; Religious thought ; Rituals ; Plants ; Gardens ; The Roman funerary ritual ; Cremation and burial ; Epigraphic, literary, and iconographic evidence ; Literary sources ; Epigraphic sources ; Iconographic evidence ; Mutina: The city and the Necropolis ; North of the Via Emilia ; South of the Via Emilia ; The Necropolises ; Site A – Novisad ; Site B – Ferrari ; Site C – Via Cesana ; Site D – Via Pica ; Site F – Fer-Mo-Sa ; Site G – Marzaglia Corpus Domini ; Site I – Spilamberto ; Material and methods ; The Mutina necropolis ; Necropolis of the ager mutinensis ; Archaeobotanical analysis ; Seeds/fruits ; Charcoals ; Results ; Archaeological remains ; Cooking and table ware ; Oil lamps ; Nails ; Decorated bones ; Archaeozoological remains ; Coins ; Archaeobotanical remains ; Charcoals ; CT-scan and Saxs analysis ; SAXS Results ; Discussion ; CT-scan discussion ; Conclusion ; Tombs analysed by funerary ritual aspects ; Site A ; Site B ; Site G ; Conclusion ; Bibliography

    1 in stock

    £42.63

  • Western Mesoamerican Calendars and Writing

    Archaeopress Western Mesoamerican Calendars and Writing

    Out of stock

    Book Synopsis

    Out of stock

    £999.99

  • Growing Up in the Cis-Baikal Region of Siberia,

    Archaeopress Growing Up in the Cis-Baikal Region of Siberia,

    3 in stock

    Book SynopsisGrowing Up in the Cis-Baikal Region of Siberia, Russia analyses the dietary life histories of prehistoric hunter-gatherers from six cemeteries in the Lake Baikal region of Siberia, Russia. The overarching goal was to better understand how they lived by examining what they ate, how they utilized the landscape, and how this changed over time. Recent archaeological advances offer new ways to gain insight into the lives of people who died many years ago. With the application of biochemistry, archaeologists can study an individual’s dietary choices from the time they were born up until the last few months of life, providing a fuller picture of how people lived, the challenges they may have faced, and the choices they made. This study tests the application of a technique known as dentine micro-sampling, in which the inner part of a tooth is sectioned into thin strips, each representing roughly nine months of development. These strips were subjected to stable carbon and nitrogen isotope analysis, unveiling the chemical markers of different foods. The results show that the dietary contribution of terrestrial and aquatic food sources varied within and between cemeteries and cultural periods, which can be viewed as evidence of dietary independence among groups occupying the same area. The results also show that the movement of these individuals around the Lake Baikal region is observable in the chemical markers from their teeth. In conjunction with other methods, dentine micro-sampling helps us understand the interplay of personal choice and ecological constraint that makes up the dietary behaviour of these prehistoric peoples.Table of ContentsList of Figures and Tables ; Preface ; Chapter 1: Introduction ; Chapter 2: Geographic and archaeological background ; Chapter 3: Stable isotope analysis for dietary reconstruction ; Chapter 4: Tooth formation ; Chapter 5: Materials and Methods ; Chapter 6: Dietary life-histories in the Upper Lena ; Chapter 7: Dietary life-histories in the Angara ; Chapter 8: Dietary life-histories in the Little Sea ; Chapter 9: Discussion ; Chapter 10: Conclusions ; Appendix A: Images of the molar occlusal surfaces ; Appendix B: Molar wear assessment of all 49 Cis-Baikal individuals ; Appendix C: Stable carbon and nitrogen isotope values for all micro-samples ; Bibliography

    3 in stock

    £62.68

  • Gallaecia Gothica: From the Conspiracy of Dux

    Archaeopress Gallaecia Gothica: From the Conspiracy of Dux

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisGallaecia Gothica offers a new interpretation of the Argimundus rebellion, one of the most difficult challenges of Reccared’s reign. There are no specific details of how the conspiracy came about, but the throne was seriously threatened. The Chronicle of John of Biclaro underlined the gravity of this menace in his description of the punishment suffered by the rebel and his collaborators. His categorical condemnation of the attempted overthrow of the monarch is unlike that given to any other uprising narrated in the Chronicle, and it shows the importance that the abbot of Biclaro gave it in his narration. The fact that the Chronicle notes that Argimundus was not only a member of the Aula Regia but also a dux prouinciae (duke of a province), combined with the status of Gallaecia as a newly conquered province, suggests that this was not just a palace conspiracy, but a genuine provincial revolt which could have ruined the political settlement established by Leovigild and Reccared. However, it is difficult to prove Argimundus’ ultimate aim: to replace Reccared on the Visigothic throne or, on the contrary, to restore the old Suevic kingdom in Gallaecia. This book uses numismatic and archaeological evidence seems to suggest the latter view.Table of ContentsIntroduction Conspirators and Conspiracies in the Reign of Reccared Interpreting the Plot of Argimundus The Scene of the Rebellion Possible Suevian Origin of Argimundus Argimundus and Paulus: Parallel Lives of Two Usurpers in Visigothic Spain Gallaecia during the Visigothic Kingdom of Toledo: From Submission to Conquest The Rise of the Duchy of Gallaecia: Resurgence of Local Aristocracies and Struggling for Real Power Conclusion: From the Suevic Kingdom to the Duchy of Gallaecia Bibliography

    1 in stock

    £37.49

  • The 10th Century in Western Europe: Change and

    Archaeopress The 10th Century in Western Europe: Change and

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe 10th century in Western Europe includes eleven essays, ranging from Portugal to Iceland, including Spain, England, Ireland, France and Italy, embracing a variety of methodological approaches and scrutinizing numerous and diverse types of sources, including archaeological finds along with textual evidence such as historical narratives, hagiography, and cartularies. The contributions revise, challenge and enhance the existing scholarship on early medieval societies and their political and social complexities, while making readers aware of the wide-ranging and intertwined processes which defined change and continuity in tenth-century Western Europe. Essays from both historians and archaeologists achieve a re-reading of a the tenth century, which has been central to the interpretation of the historical development of Europe over the past decade.

    2 in stock

    £52.26

  • Revealing Trimontium: The Correspondence of James

    Archaeopress Revealing Trimontium: The Correspondence of James

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe Roman fort of Trimontium, near the village of Newstead in the Scottish Borders, is renowned internationally thanks to the work of James Curle (1862–1944), a solicitor in nearby Melrose. He led the excavations of 1905–1910, with their spectacular discoveries, and produced an exemplary publication. This volume brings together key sets of his correspondence which illuminate his intellectual networks and connections. They reveal a web of local, national and international contacts and travels that equipped him with an impressively broad knowledge of Roman provincial archaeology and turned him into a sought-after advisor for his expertise and knowledge of a range of topics, especially Roman pottery. Yet his interests went beyond the Roman military. His early interests in Swedish archaeology were rekindled after the Trimontium excavations, with a series of papers on aspects of Viking brooches, while a long-running interest in finds of Roman material beyond the frontiers of the empire shows his concern to understand the Iron Age societies of Scotland and Scandinavia. The letters are provided with a critical apparatus to explain their context, while introductory chapters consider Curle’s background, his local links, his connections with the great Romano-British archaeologist Francis Haverfield, and his wider antiquarian networks. The letters cast fresh light on the intellectual networks of the early 20th century, when professional archaeology was still in its infancy and gifted amateurs such as James Curle played a key role in laying the foundations on which scholarship still builds today.Table of ContentsForeword Acknowledgments Chapter 1. Introduction Chapter 2. James Curle and his Letters Chapter 3. An Introduction to Trimontium Chapter 4. James Curle and his Archaeological World Chapter 5. Curle and Haverfield Chapter 6. James Curle: A Man of Melrose Chapter 7. Glimpses of the Dramatis Personae Chapter 8. Letters to Hercules Chapter 9. From Greece and Rome Chapter 10. My Dear Haverfield Chapter 11. From Home and Abroad Chapter 12. Miscellanea Appendix. Letters between the British Museum and A.O. Curle Bibliography Index

    2 in stock

    £49.92

  • Archaeopress Landscapes of Death: Early Bronze Age Tombs and

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisThis book provides a comprehensive and detailed review of the evidence for Early Bronze Age mortuary rituals on the Oman Peninsula, describing the research conducted, synthesizing the resulting data, and presenting a complete view of the state of knowledge on the topic. The author demonstrates that the construction, use, and location of mortuary cairns in the ancient landscape is no simple question in the Early Bronze Age archaeology of the region. This book explores the characteristics of ancient funerary monuments and rituals, demonstrating variations in these practices, as well as evidence for continued cairn use during this period and how some communities elaborated mortuary rituals. This book will serve as an invaluable reference volume for scholars working in the region, as an introduction for students to mortuary archaeology and to models that can be used to explore this aspect of prehistoric life on the Oman Peninsula, and as a valuable repository of currently available data. The book features extensive demonstrative illustrations and appendices summarizing the architecture, interments, and material culture found in all published Early Bronze Age mortuary monuments in the region.

    Out of stock

    £999.99

  • Metal Ages / Âges des métaux: Proceedings of the

    Archaeopress Metal Ages / Âges des métaux: Proceedings of the

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis volume presents a selection of papers given at the General Session 5 (Metal Ages / ges des métaux) of the XIX UISPP World Congress, originally planned to take place in early September 2020 in Meknes (Morocco), but postponed due to the outbreak of the worldwide Covid pandemic and eventually held as a virtual on-line event from 2 to 7 September 2021. Despite those challenging circumstances, and very much to the credit of the Meknes organizing committee, the Congress turned out to be a resounding success, with many scholars, particularly from African countries attending who would not previously have had an opportunity to participate in such a forum. The eight papers provide a vivid and representative cross section of the wide range of subjects covered in this session and range from the Chalcolithic in Northwest Africa and Iberia to the Late Bronze Age in Ireland and the Iron Age in Central Europe. They include artefact as well as landscape studies and attempt to shed light on issues as diverse as the principles of chronology building, the role of alleged ‘defensive’ enclosures, pottery studies, use-wear analysis of Iron Age weaponry and the Hallstatt/La Tène transition in the eastern Alps.Table of ContentsForeword to the XIX UISPP Congress Proceedings Introduction Les objets en coquilles d’œufs d’autruche du Chalcolithique en Espagne – Linda Boutoille The painted pottery from the Chalcolithic mega-site of Valencina de la Concepción (Seville, Spain) and its possible relationship with Gar Cahal, northern Morocco – Alfredo Mederos Martín, Thomas X. Schuhmacher, Juan Manuel Vargas Jiménez, Charles Bashore Acero and Lorena Garvin Arcos Dérive chronologique ou changement de paradigme ? Le cas du Bronze ancien en Europe centrale – Mireille David-Elbiali Between defensive and symbolic. ‘Fortified’ hilltop sites in the Irish Late Bronze Age – Dirk Brandherm, Cormac McSparron and Linda Boutoille Analyses chimiques et pétrographiques des céramiques du premier âge du Fer dans le Sud-Ouest de la péninsule Ibérique : bilan et perspectives – Michał Krueger, Dirk Brandherm et Violeta Moreno Megías The emergence of Celtic culture in Styria – Florian Mauthner On the symbolic values of the Iron Age walls in the western Iberian Plateau: an approach to the landscape archaeology of warfare – Luis Berrocal Rangel, Lucía Ruano, Pablo Paniego Díaz, Gabriel Bartolomé and Luis Berrocal Maya Celtic swordplay: the contribution of the use-wear analysis of swords and scabbards from the La Tène site – Guillaume Reich Authors / Auteurs

    1 in stock

    £43.22

  • Archaeopress The Southern Necropolis of Cyrene

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisThis book presents an in-depth analysis of the Southern Necropolis of Cyrene. Numerous tombs surround this ancient Greek city located in Eastern Libya. Many of these monumental structures feature elaborate ornamental patterns and complex architectural elements. Yet, most graves have been plundered in the past, hence they appear as beautifully decorated, but empty spaces that seem to provide little information to archaeologists.This volume aims at overcoming this problem. While the book provides an exploration of the architecture of Cyrenean tombs, it avoids a purely descriptive, art-historical approach. Instead, the analysis focuses on issues of funerary competition, display strategies, spatial organization, and the possible role of lost, unknown rituals in shaping the material record over a period of more than a thousand years, from the Archaic phase to Late Roman times. In so doing, it reconstructs the social history of ancient Cyreneans through the evolution of their ostentatious

    Out of stock

    £999.99

  • Art as Ritual Engagement in the Funerary

    Archaeopress Art as Ritual Engagement in the Funerary

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisArt as Ritual Engagement is examined through a case study of feminised funerary representation in the repertoire of Watetkhethor, an elite woman interred in the mastaba tomb of her spouse, Mereruka, at Saqqara, c.2345-2181 BCE. The focus is centred upon the functionality of a particular form of gendered imagery in a ritualised, funerary context. The spaces and images in which Watetkhethor is featured alone, or in support of her spouse, indicate something of an elite woman’s expectations of the afterlife at this particular time. Contemporaneous examples as detailed as Watetkhethor’s are rare, and her status may have permitted Watetkhethor’s personal involvement in designing the funerary programme. Her. The arrangements would have been ‘state-of-the-art’, meeting the requirements of a woman identified as the eldest daughter of King Teti, c. 2300-2181 BCE. However, to date, the assumptions of twentieth century anachronisms, attitudes and biases have all but dismissed the rich iconographical programme of specifically feminised arrangements within this shared tomb.Table of ContentsPreface Chapter 1: Introduction Aims and Objectives The role of visual culture in ancient Egypt Contextualising the early 6th Dynasty: An Overview Security and harsh men? Archaeological Background: The Tomb of Mereruka The Funerary Chambers of Watetkhethor The Research Focus Rationale: Why this study? Contextualising terms: Art and Ritual The Structure of the Study: Chapter Overview Chapter 2: Literature Review Early Perspectives New Perspectives Chapter 3: Methodology Panofsky’s Iconological System Malafouris’s Material Engagement Theory Chapter 4: Art as Ritual Engagement Watetkhethor as facilitator Watetkhethor’s presence in Mereruka’s chambers Watetkhethor and autonomous funerary cult The Pillared Hall (B1) The staircase in the chambers of Watetkhethor (B2) The Serdab Room, B3, B4 The Burial Chapel, B5 Chapter 5: Study Synthesis Looking forward: Art as Action, Art as Gendered The limitations of this study Directions for future research Conclusion Bibliography

    1 in stock

    £20.90

  • La Arqueologia Urbana de Buenos Aires: Excavando

    Archaeopress La Arqueologia Urbana de Buenos Aires: Excavando

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis book makes a brief history of historical archeology in Latin America and then its shift towards urban archaeology, highlighting the difference between the two. Then it analyzes the process of formation of the urban land of Buenos Aires, its fillings and cuts of the topography in the search for a flat and horizontal surface to satisfy idealized literary desires. The use of garbage and rubbish in large quantities is analyzed, to later divide the land and sell it, generating problems in the future with uncontrolled landfills. Then the three cases are analyzed: that of the town-neighborhood of Belgrano and its garbage dumps, the construction fills with rubble and the areas whose level has been lowered.

    1 in stock

    £63.17

  • La Fabrica del Prestigio En Mesoamerica:

    Archaeopress La Fabrica del Prestigio En Mesoamerica:

    1 in stock

    Book Synopsis1975. Las pinturas murales de Cacaxtla se descubren de manera fortuita. Provocan emoción en la comunidad mesoamericanista por su original estilo, en el cruce de tradiciones del Altiplano Central, de la zona maya y de la costa del Golfo. Vibrantes referencias policromas, también hacen eco a los paneles esculpidos de la Pirámide de la Serpiente Emplumada de Xochicalco (Morelos), conocida desde finales del siglo XVIII. Estos conjuntos visuales híbridos constituyen el punto de partida de una discusión sobre las interacciones culturales y la fabricación del prestigio. Tras la desintegración del sistema Teotihuacán, hacia el 550 d.C. cómo transformaron su cultura material las ciudades-estado del Altiplano Central para construir nuevos discursos políticos que les permitieran asentar su nueva autoridad a nivel local? Gracias a la aportación conjunta de la antropología, la antropología del arte y la arqueología, el propósito de este libro es explorar de manera holística la forma en que estas sociedades mesoamericanas pensaron y crearon su otredad y la expresaron en su universo visual y material.

    1 in stock

    £87.55

  • Goreme and Sahinefendi: La Storia Dentro Le Rocce

    Archaeopress Goreme and Sahinefendi: La Storia Dentro Le Rocce

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisGöreme and Sahinefendi collects the results of surveys conducted by the Team for Underground Studies in Turkey in these two specific areas of Cappadocia, complemented by documentation produced in collaboration with Ukrainian, French and Turkish researchers. The object was the identification and documentation of underground architecture complementary to the best-known and most substantial Byzantine rock-cut churches. This research, conducted through speleological techniques and archaeometric survey, has allowed, in particular, the discovery of numerous defensive structures, previously completely unknown, and of related underground hydraulic systems. A completely new picture of the areas investigated emerges, in which the liturgical and funerary structures carved into the rocks represent only the tip of a stone iceberg', that is, the most evident and closest part to the surface of an underground world that has proved to be much more extensive and diverse than previously imagined.The full text is presented in English and Italian.

    2 in stock

    £167.85

  • Berkeley Castle Tales

    Archaeopress Berkeley Castle Tales

    4 in stock

    Book SynopsisBerkeley Castle Tales presents the outcomes of the 15-year-long University of Bristol excavations and landscape research at the Berkeley Castle estate in South Gloucestershire. The project, which in 2016 won the prestigious Current Archaeology award for the Archaeology Project of the Year, aimed at writing, through material culture and extensive archival and geophysical research, the narrative behind the construction of Berkeley Castle, the corresponding town, and the area of the Severn valley that overlooks the borders with Wales. By combining the results of archaeological fieldwork with information contained in the castle's impressive collection of 20,000 historical documents, the project adds greatly to our knowledge and understanding of the early medieval period and the subsequent changes in landscape and society that occurred with the coming of the Normans, with the erection of a castle on the former minster site. Throughout the publication the advances that the Berkeley Castle project offered to archaeological practice, to excavation and geophysics methodology, and to the community and public archaeology are evident, since the editors intend the volume to be a milestone not only for the study of a castle landscape but also for archaeological method and practice.Table of ContentsForeword by Charles Berkeley Foreword by Professor Graeme Were Chapter 1: Tales from an Excavation: University of Bristol and the Berkeley Castle Project 2005–2019 – Stuart J. Prior Chapter 2: Tales from the Land: An Account of the Landscape and Geophysical Research of the Berkeley Castle Project – Konstantinos P. Trimmis, Gareth Dickinson, and Jennifer Muller Chapter 3: Tales from the Castle: A Biography of the Fortifications and the Castle in Berkeley – Rachel Morgan and Stuart J. Prior Chapter 4: Tales from the Ground: Stratigraphic Narratives from the University of Bristol Research at Berkeley – Stuart J. Prior Chapter 5: Tales from the Clay: Notes on the Pottery Fabrics from Berkeley, Gloucestershire – Paul Blinkhorn and Stuart J. Prior Chapter 6: Tales from the Objects: Small Finds from Berkeley Castle Project – Emma Firth Chapter 7: Tales from the animals: a preliminary account of the zooarchaeological assemblage from Berkeley Castle Project – Sarah Gosling Chapter 8: Tales from the People: Analysis of the Articulated Human Skeletal Remains from Berkeley Castle – Christianne L. Fernée Chapter 9: Berkeley Castle Tales: Narratives from Minster, Manor and Town – Stuart J. Prior and Konstantinos P. Trimmis The Photographic Tales from Berkeley

    4 in stock

    £54.11

  • The Significance of Doorway Positions in English

    Archaeopress The Significance of Doorway Positions in English

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe Significance of Doorway Positions in English Medieval Parochial Churches and Chapels analyses the positions of external church doorways in England to investigate the significance that positioning had for the function and design of these buildings. Until the eleventh century, churches tended to have a single external western nave doorway. This design changed in the next two centuries. New churches tended to have north and south, laterally opposing, nave doorways. From the thirteenth century to the end of the Middle Ages, new churches continued the two-doorway trend but typically added western towers and doorways as well. The book also examines chapels, which differed from churches as they had a different function and status. Non-parochial chapels usually had a single southern doorway whilst parochial chapels often had two opposing nave doorways. This book proposes that liturgical reasons lay behind the changes both at the turn of the eleventh century and again in the later thirteenth. Gender and clerical segregation are considered in relation to the provision of a second nave doorway in churches and parochial chapels. It is also shown that the widespread idea of the ‘Devil’s Door’ was only developed in the nineteenth century though it had roots in late medieval liturgy. The author concludes that there is a link between the design and function of parochial churches and chapels with the number and attributes of their doorways.Table of ContentsList of Figures The Significance of Doorway Positions Acknowledgements Abbreviations Introduction Chapter 1: Doorway Positions in English Churches Chapter 2: Eleventh and Twelfth-Century English Parochial Churches and Chapels Chapter 3: Doorway Positions of Thirteenth to Early Sixteenth-Century Chapter 4: Chapels Chapter 5: Liturgy Chapter 6: Gender and Segregation Chapter 7: The Devil’s Door? Conclusion Appendix 1 Appendix 2 Bibliography Index

    1 in stock

    £65.04

  • Breaking the Dsr.T Vessels: An Ancient Egyptian

    Archaeopress Breaking the Dsr.T Vessels: An Ancient Egyptian

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisIn ancient Egyptian thought, the funerary procedure played a key role in the transition to the afterlife. As early as the Old Kingdom (c. 2700-2200 BCE), the Pyramid Texts and representations and inscriptions in private tombs show a highly developed funerary ritual with a large number of individual rites intended to ensure a safe transition to the realm of the dead and a pleasant afterlife for the deceased. One of these is the so-called breaking the dšr.t-vessels' (Egyptian s? dšr.wt), a rite that involved the intentional damaging of a certain type of ceramic vessel. The aim of this study is to gain a better understanding of the rite through a re-evaluation of the primary sources and previous research and to provide the first study devoted entirely to the rite. While the rite of breaking the dšr.t-vessels' has been associated with several different archaeological contexts and primary sources, this monograph argues that a careful distinction needs to be made between the evidence identified as such. This study aims to demonstrate that there is a significant discrepancy between textual, iconographic, and archaeological sources which calls into question the identification of a large number of sources as s? dšr.wt contexts. A number of different ritual and non-ritual practices in ancient Egypt involve the deliberate fragmentation of pottery, each of which should be addressed in context.

    1 in stock

    £26.60

  • New Perspectives on the Harappan Culture in Light

    Archaeopress New Perspectives on the Harappan Culture in Light

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe site of Rakhigarhi, situated in Hisar District, Haryana, India, is one of the largest metropolises of the Harappan Civilization found so far, to be mentioned alongside the iconic sites of Mohenjo-Daro, Harappa and Dholavira. Between the years 2011 and 2017 extensive explorations and excavations were carried out by teams from the Deccan College P.G.R.I., Deemed University, Pune, Seoul National University and Haryana State Archaeology Department. Mounds 4, 6 and 2 were habitation deposits where cultural sequences of Early and Mature Cultural layers were found. Among the major finds were classical Harappan ceramic assemblages; beads of terracotta, faience, stones and steatite; seals; shell and terracotta bangles; terracotta figurines, etc. Mound 7 was a cemetery, representative of the Mature Harappan period, where systematic excavation was carried out. After chapters introducing the excavations at Rakhigarhi and setting out the objectives of the project, the book focuses on the cemetery, with detailed analysis and inventories of the burials. Data on the physical and pathological traits of the Harappan population are presented in full, with specialist chapters on craniofacial reconstruction, and on parasitological analysis. The volume is completed with analysis of the faunal remains from Rakhigarhi habitation area.

    1 in stock

    £1,555.18

  • de l'Objet a la Societe Romaine: Etudes

    Archaeopress de l'Objet a la Societe Romaine: Etudes

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisDe l'objet à la société romaine brings together some twenty contributions grouped into five parts: - De l''atelier à l''objet: artisanats, productions et instrumentum; - Croyances et cultes; - Iconographie, épigraphie et archéologie funéraire; - Habiter et organiser un territoire; - Décorer un édifice, which reflect many of the research themes of Prof. Jean-Claude Béal, to whom these studies are offered. They are mainly centred on Roman Gaul, and more generally on the western Roman provinces, reflecting the geographical areas in which he works.

    1 in stock

    £61.75

  • Bronze Age, Iron Age, Roman and Saxon Settlements

    1 in stock

    £76.68

  • Frontiers of the Roman Empire: The Danube Limes

    Archaeopress Frontiers of the Roman Empire: The Danube Limes

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe frontiers of the Roman empire together form the largest surviving monument of one of the worlds greatest states. They stretch for some 7,500 km through 20 countries which encircle the Mediterranean Sea. The remains of these frontiers have been studied by visitors and later archaeologists for several centuries. Many of the inscriptions and sculpture, weapons, pottery and artefacts created and used by the soldiers and civilians who lived on the frontier can be seen in museums. Equally evocative of the lost might of Rome are the physical remains of the frontiers themselves. The aim of this series of booklets is not only to inform the interested visitor about the history of the frontiers but to act as a guide-book as well.Austria is particularly fortunate in the survival along the Danube of the remains of many military installations. These include forts and towers, some parts surviving up to two stories high. They are a most remarkable survival and deserve to be better known and more visited. I certainly hope each reader of this book will enjoy learning more about Austria's Roman heritage.From the Foreword by David J. Breeze.

    2 in stock

    £30.53

  • The Roman Municipia of Malta and Gozo: The

    Archaeopress The Roman Municipia of Malta and Gozo: The

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisHow did the Maltese and Gozitans fare under Roman occupation? How were they treated by their new masters? And what did they do to appease them? What changes did the new political situation bring about in their lives? How did they respond and / or adapt? Was their religious identity in any way affected? How did they manoeuvre their loyalties to their own benefits? And how did they manage their own domestic affairs within the new political set-up? Though based essentially on epigraphical evidence, this study seeks to address the above and other questions through an exercise in which epigraphy and the archaeological record supplement each other. The results shed new light on the governing bodies of the Maltese islands in Roman times and the models they followed, those who administered them, the latter’s role and status, and also their relationship with and their significance for the rest of the population.Table of ContentsPreface Chapter 1: The Romanisation of the Maltese islands Chapter 2: The Vallii in Gozo Chapter 3: Quintus Lutatius Longinus and his wife Iunia Chapter 4: Reading CIL, X, 7506. A case of elite friendships? Chapter 5: Publicia Irene and her daughter Publicia Glycera: their social status, religious identity and perceptions of afterlife Chapter 6: Iulia Domna and her maternal ideology in the perception of the Gozitan municipes Chapter 7: Religion in the exercise of power: the religious and political context of a priestly dedication to Iulia Augusta Chapter 8: Sponsoring a temple to Apollo Chapter 9: The initiative of the islands’ procurator to preserve the temple of Proserpina Chapter 10: The Gozo municipium in late Roman times Bibliography General Index

    1 in stock

    £45.60

  • How Pharaohs Became Media Stars: Ancient Egypt

    1 in stock

    £62.68

  • A Tale of Two Collectors: The Lithic Collections

    Archaeopress A Tale of Two Collectors: The Lithic Collections

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisGeoffrey Taylor and David Heys together and separately over a 25 year period amassed a huge amount of prehistoric material (almost 20,000 worked pieces and some 250,000 pieces of waste) in flint, jet, stone, glass and metal, gathered mostly off the North York Moors. The present book aims to introduce the collections to the archaeological world and to give the reader a clear impression of their contents.The book begins with brief biographies of the two collectors and outlines the areas in which they collected, principally the North York Moors, and their method of working, before attempting to set their work into its wider prehistoric context. It then explains how the over 18,000 worked pieces in the combined collections are each individually identified, and presents illustrations of selected groups of pieces, such as arrowheads, knives, axeheads, and so on. This is followed up with a more detailed look at some of the more notable classes of artefacts, such as discoidal knives, Iron Age glass bangles, and jet pieces, including a superb undamaged Early Bronze Age jet wristguard (bracer), of which only one other example is known in Britain. To correct the impression that Taylor and Heys only ever collected casual finds off the surface of the moors and farmland, details of several excavations, most never before published, are given. These included pioneering work on the Early Mesolithic of the North York Moors, and the discovery of an Early Bronze Age grave with cremated human remains complete with a Collared Urn and a perforated battle-axehead. At long last, the hitherto unheralded work of these two remarkable individuals is given the credit it undoubtedly deserves.

    2 in stock

    £41.11

  • Material Worlds: Interdisciplinary Approaches to

    Archaeopress Material Worlds: Interdisciplinary Approaches to

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisCultural contacts and exchange are constituents of human behavior – ancient and modern. Within archaeology, particularly in that of Western Asia, the topic and related phenomena have been intensively studied during the last decades, leading to a re-evaluation of the cultural and economic, as well as physical landscapes throughout the ancient Near East. The eleven contributions in this book were delivered at a workshop held in 2016 at NYU’s Institute for the Study of the Ancient World by renowned experts in their fields. They address the history of contacts and exchanges in the Bronze and Iron Ages using case studies from different regions and based on different types of sources. The contributions illustrate that the geographical dimension of cultural contacts and exchange networks within West Asia extends far beyond the boundaries of the previously defined contact zone of the ‘Ancient Near East’ and that other systems existed in adjacent regions (Egypt, Arabia as well as Iran, Central Asia, Africa, India, and South Asia), suggesting that the West Asian networks were also part of larger ones. At the same time, it has become clear that a closer look at single case studies of specific material culture datasets is important to better understand the dynamics, scale(s), and extent of contacts and exchanges. Contributing authors: Gojko Barjamovic (Harvard University), Celia J. Bergoffen (Fashion Institute of Technology, New York), Lorenzo D’Alfonso (NYU, New York), Nancy A. Highcock (The British Museum, London), Robert W. Homsher (San Francisco), Alice M. W. Hunt (University of Georgia, Athens), Marta Luciani (University of Vienna), Maria Grazia Masetti-Rouault (École Pratique des Hautes Études, Paris), Beate Pongratz-Leisten (NYU, New York), Lisa Saladino Haney (Carnegie Museum of Natural History, Pittsburgh), Jonathan Valk (University of Helsinki).Table of ContentsIntroductory Remarks – Arnulf Hausleiter I. Old Assyrian Trade Introduction to the Old Assyrian Trade Session – Nancy A. Highcock States, Markets and Overland Trade in the Early and Middle Bronze Age – Gojko Barjamovic Dynamism and Scale in Western Asian Bronze Age Trade Networks – Lorenzo D’Alfonso and Nancy A. Highcock II. Cuneiform Knowledge Production in Contact Zones Reflections on the Dynamics of Cuneiform Knowledge Production in the Ancient Near East – Jonathan Valk Production of Knowledge in Contact Zones: Mari and Tigunānum in the Old Babylonian Period – Beate Pongratz-Leisten III. Transitions and Transformations in the Levant and Northern Arabia The MBA/LBA Transition at Tell el-ʿAjjul in the Light of Exchanges between Cyprus and the Eastern Mediterranean – Celia J. Bergoffen Transitions in Material Culture of the 2nd Millennium BCE: the Middle Bronze to Late Bronze Age Shift Seen from Northwest Arabia – Marta Luciani Connections and Transformations in the Southern Levant during the 2nd Millennium with a View from Megiddo – Robert Homsher IV. Egyptian Red Sea Trade Power and Prestige: Egyptian Red Sea Trade during the Old and Middle Kingdoms and its Place within the Royal Redistributive Network – Lisa Saladino Haney V. Middle Grounds, Contact Areas and Social Identity in the Iron Age Middle Grounds, Contact Areas, and the Assyrian Empire: the Case of the Syrian Lower Euphrates Valley, Iron II Period – Maria Grazia Masetti-Rouault Tell Jemmeh: Social Identity at a Cultural Crossroads – Alice M. W. Hunt

    1 in stock

    £43.43

  • London's Waterfront and Its World, 1666-1800

    Archaeopress London's Waterfront and Its World, 1666-1800

    5 in stock

    Book SynopsisLondon's Waterfront and its World, 16661800 presents the results of archaeological excavations of 1974 to 1983 in the central waterfront area of the City of London. The archaeology of the port of London is considered on a wide scale, from the City down the Thames to Deptford. The Great Fire of London in 1666 prompted some changes to the topography of streets and buildings, but there were also many continuities in life and work. The waterfront changed during the 18th century as warehousing replaced houses. This process is illustrated by archaeological excavation, documentary study and the survival of plans of properties surveyed for land-owning institutions. The artefacts and pottery recovered from these sites include many pieces from overseas, and London's waterfront can be compared with those of other port cities in Europe, North America and the Caribbean. Perhaps in late 17th- and 18th-century London we can study urban tastes and consumption from an archaeological viewpoint. During this period London became the hub of the new British empire, but contributed to the exploitation of people from other lands known as slavery. The waterfront on both sides of the Thames was at the centre of the new empire.

    5 in stock

    £79.02

  • Journal of Greek Archaeology Volume 8 2023

    Archaeopress Journal of Greek Archaeology Volume 8 2023

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisOur volume opens on a very sad note, the sudden passing of that great scholar of Greek Art, Andrew Stewart (1948-2023). A scholar of immense knowledge and energy, Andy was also greatly loved and admired by his students as well as innumerable colleagues in international scholarship. He supported this Journal from its creation, peer-reviewed papers, contributed his own pathbreaking articles, and encouraged others to successfully offer their work to us. Over many books and papers he gave us unique insights into Greek artistic culture, a contribution to the field which is irreplaceable. This volume is dedicated to him, while our first article is an appreciation by his close friend and colleague Tonio Hölscher. Later in this volume the article by Maria Panagiotonakou is also dedicated to Andy’s memory. Moving on to the other contents of this volume, as always we have encouraged and succeeded in spanning the millennia of Greek Archaeology in its fullest sense. We begin with Copper Age and Early Bronze Age lithic industries and food economies in Attica and Cyprus respectively, before diving into the complexities of the dating of the immense eruption of Santorini in the early Late Bronze Age. A detailed geographic study of Cretan settlement history over the Late Bronze Age and into Protohistoric times is complemented by an article on the existence or not of a Dorian invasion of the island over the same period. For the Early Iron Age, an innovative exploration of Geometric vase decoration deploys the patterning of chess moves. With Classical-Hellenistic times we learn about houses and group dining in Sicily and a contextual analysis of the construction of the Segesta theatre on the same island. In the absence of Roman-era offerings (readers and prospective authors please note!), we jump to two papers on Medieval ceramics. One focusses on their production in Messenia, the other is a response to a review on architectural ceramics (bacini) in Crete that appeared in Volume 7. Finally we give you a study of physical landscape transformation by geoarchaeologists from the Valley of the Muses in Boeotia, and a very insightful report on public outreach initiatives undertaken by an archaeological project in the Xeros valley on Cyprus. Following on these articles there appears our usual wide-ranging set of book reviews, compiled by our Assistant Editor Damjan Donev. John Bintliff, General EditorTable of ContentsJournal of Greek Archaeology Volume 8: Editorial Encounters with Andrew Stewart – Tonio Hölscher Prehistory and Protohistory Chipped Stone Industries of Attica, Southern Greece: the assemblages of a Bronze Age (Early Helladic II) site at Phaleron Bay – Odysseas Kakavakis Foodways in prehistoric Cyprus: a view from the Kouris valley during the 5th and 4th millennia cal BC – Ioannis Voskos, Dimitris Kloukinas, Anastasios Georgotas, Antonia Marda-Stypsianou, Maria Roumpou, Efrossini Vika and Eleni Mantzourani Minoan eruption chronology: a synthesis for the non-initiated – Tiziano Fantuzzi The history of settlement in Late Bronze Age and Early Iron Age Crete: a review and synthesis – Dominic Pollard Beware of Greeks bearing gifts: Cretan archaeology and the Dorian invasion – Catharine Judson Modelling the decorative patterns of a Geometric oinochoe. An interpretative approach using chess-related terminology and metaphors – Gioulika Christakopoulou Archaic to Hellenistic Houses, convivial meals and tableware at Himera in the 5th century BC – Oscar Belvedere Reassessing evidence: a new proposal for the dating of the theatre of Segesta – Maria Panagiotonakou Medieval Late medieval glazed painted wares from Messenia and the question of local pottery production – Alexandra Konstantinidou Review response: Anastasia G. Yangaki, Ceramics in Plain Sight: The Bacini of the Churches of Crete – Anastasia G. Yangaki Multiperiod Geoarchaeological evidence of landscape degradation in the Valley of the Muses (Boeotia, Greece) during classical antiquity – José Luis Peña-Monné and María Marta Sampietro-Vattuone Landscape archaeology in a contested space: Public engagement and outreach in the Xeros River valley in Cyprus – Athanasios K. Vionis, Giorgos Papantoniou and Niki Savvides Book Reviews Prehistory Natalie Abell, Keos XII. Ayia Irini: Area B – Oliver Dickinson Jack L. Davis (with contributions by Sharon R. Stocker). A Greek State In Formation. The Origins of Civilization in Mycenaean Pylos – Oliver Dickinson Joanne M.A. Murphy and Jerolyn E. Morrison (eds), Kleronomia: Legacy and Inheritance. Studies on the Aegean Bronze Age in Honor of Jeffrey S. Soles – Laura E. Alvarez Yannick Boswinkel, Labouring With Large Stones. A Study into the Investment and Impact of Construction Projects on Mycenaean Communities in Late Bronze Age Greece – Oliver Dickinson Daniel R. Turner, Grave Reminders. Comparing Mycenaean tomb building with labour and memory – Oliver Dickinson Karina Grömer with contributions by R. Hofmann-de Keijzer and H.R. Mautendorfer. The Art of Prehistoric Textile Making. The Development of Craft Traditions and Clothing in Central Europe – Kalliope Sarri Classical Jenifer Neils and Dylan K. Rogers (eds), The Cambridge Companion to Ancient Athens – Roel Konijnendijk A. Konecny and N. Sekunda (eds), The Battle of Plataiai 479 BC – Oliver Dickinson Malcolm Bell iii, The City Plan and Political Agora (Morgantina Studies VII) – Oscar Belvedere Angelika Kellner, Die griechische Archaik. Konstruktion einer Chronologie im Wechselspiel schriftlicher und archäologischer Quellen – Rebecca Klug Roman Scotton, P.D., C.D.G. Vanderpool and C. Roncaglia. The Julian Basilica: Architecture, Sculpture, Epigraphy – Dylan K. Rogers Valentina Di Napoli, Francesco Camia, Vasilis Evangelidis, Dimitris Grigoropoulos, Dylan Rogers, and Stavros Vlizos (eds), What’s New in Roman Greece: Recent Work on the Greek Mainland and the Islands in the Roman Period – Andrew Erskine Multiperiod Nikolas Dimakis and Tamara M. Dijkstra (eds), Mortuary Variability and Social Diversity in Ancient Greece: Studies on ancient Greek death and burial – Robin Osborne John W. Hayes and Kathleen Warner Slane, Late Classical, Hellenistic, and Roman Pottery (Isthmia XI) – Philip Bes Sir John Boardman, James Hargrave, Alexander Avram, Alexander Podossinov, Connecting the Ancient West and East: Studies Presented to Prof. Gocha R. Tsteskhladze – Richard Kendall Stella Demesticha and Lucy Blue with Calliope Baika, Carlo Beltrame, David Blackman, Deborah Cvikel, Helen Farr and Dorit Sivan. Under the Mediterranean I: Studies in Maritime Archaeology ; Elpida Hadjidaki-Marder with contributions by Philip P. Betancourt, Thomas M. Brogan, Joanne E. Cutler, Heidi C. M. Dierckx, Eleni Nodarou and Todd Whitelaw. The Minoan Shipwreck at Pseira, Crete – Saro Wallace Heritage Management Helene Simoni, Geographical Information Systems in Urban Archaeology and Urban Planning. A case study of a modern Greek city, built on top of an ancient city – Kostas Sbonias Historiography Kim Beerden and Timo Epping (eds), Classical Controversies. Reception of Graeco-Roman Antiquity in the Twenty-First Century – Ulrike Roth

    1 in stock

    £106.40

  • Three Forts on the Tay: Excavations at

    Archaeopress Three Forts on the Tay: Excavations at

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisDespite a resurgence in Scottish fort studies, few sites have been investigated, and fewer still at the scale reported in this volume. Over 2014-17, Perth and Kinross Heritage Trust, working with AOC Archaeology Group, excavated three hilltop forts on the Tay estuary to explore both their enclosing works and internal buildings, and uncovered an impressive assemblage of small finds.At Moredun fort on Moncreiffe Hill, a previously unknown monumental roundhouse, a rare La Tène bird-head brooch, and evidence of shale bangle industry were uncovered. At Castle Law, Abernethy, excavated in the 1890s and the type-site of Childe's Abernethy complex', re-excavation prompted reassessment of the artefacts from original excavations to reveal new evidence of the deposition of artefacts and animal bones within its cistern. Excavation of the enclosing works of these sites, and Moncreiffe fort, suggest an evolution of fort defences from simple earth and stone ramparts to massive timber-laced walls the murus Gallicus described by Caesar reflecting high status sites with restricted access for a social elite.Hillforts of The Tay was part of the Tay Landscape Partnership Scheme, a community heritage initiative and the results of this citizen science project make a significant contribution to establishing Tayside as a well-studied area for the site type both within Scotland, and further afield.

    1 in stock

    £61.73

  • Archaeopress Un Insediamento Di Eta Romana Dimenticato Nel

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisThe settlement pattern in the Roman and early medieval periods of the Agno-Guà River Valley, to the northwest of Vicenza, has not yet been the focus of systematic archaeological investigations despite being of the most important socioeconomic areas in the Veneto region with finds of antiquities having been reported since the 16th century. This volume examines all the archaeological evidence from the environs of Tezze di Arzignano, a village to the south of Trissino, where the presence of a Roman settlement was reported as early as 1793, and from the wider valley area. These materials document the existence of a residential villa with high-quality furnishings at località Valbruna, which was occupied from the mid-1st century BCE to the 3rd century CE. Only a minimal portion of this site has been explored. The pottery, coins, inscriptions, tomb finds, and the remains of two stone bridges are indicative of the Roman presence in this territory and its relations with Vicenza, the Veneto, and other regions of the Empire. It may be inferred from this that the valley maintained economic and strategic relevance until the 8th century. A multimethodological analysis of these items, which come largely from stray finds and uncontrolled excavations, is also an attempt to save the past for the future given the problems in the management of archaeological resources and the rapid and still ongoing transformations to the landscape and land use in the valley over the last fifty years.

    Out of stock

    £999.99

  • The Roman Lower Danube Frontier: Innovations in

    Archaeopress The Roman Lower Danube Frontier: Innovations in

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisOver the past few decades, there has been a significant amount of research on the Roman Lower Danube frontier by international teams focusing on individual forts or broader landscape survey work; collectively, this volume represents the best of this collaboration with the aim of elevating the Lower Danube within broader Roman frontier scholarship.The Lower Danube, running between Singidunum (modern Belgrade) and Halmyris in the Danube Delta, was one of the most densely fortified regions of the Roman Empire. The region has long been a border zone, today forming part of the border between Serbia and Romania, and the majority of the border between Romania and Bulgaria. Despite its importance for understanding both Roman frontier policy and the relationship between ancient and modern borderscapes, the region has not yet made its full contribution to international Roman scholarship. Bridging the theoretical divide that exists between different regional research traditions, chapters in this volume focus on sites like Ratiaria, in modern north-western Bulgaria, while other contributors examine the complex landscape from a wider perspective oriented around roads, temporary camps, or early Christian sites. The Roman Lower Danube Frontier emphasises the importance of engaging with Roman frontier landscapes, particularly in regions such as East-Central Europe, where they remain part of a contemporary borderscape.

    2 in stock

    £45.60

  • La industria osea en la Hispania romana

    Archaeopress La industria osea en la Hispania romana

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisLa industria ósea en la Hispania romana considers, for the first time in detail, the work of the bone industry in a specific province of the Roman Empire. Until now, only the material deposited in a museum, or from a specific site, has been analysed in a particular way. It is hoped, therefore, that through this work we may obtain a global and general vision of this industry in a wide territory, Hispania. In this aspect, this book shows the peculiarities found in each territory, as well as the local and regional influences and connections, and with the rest of the Empire.The first part provides an overview of the current state of research, both nationally and internationally. From here, we focus on the Hispanic workshops and their production, and develops a simple and open classification (so that new pieces can be incorporated), offering a detailed analysis of the different objects. Abundant images are provided in which the characteristics described and the

    1 in stock

    £122.30

  • South Asian Goddesses and the Natural Environment

    Archaeopress South Asian Goddesses and the Natural Environment

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisSouth Asian Goddesses and the Natural Environment is a multidisciplinary collection of 11 essays ranging from the pre-Vedic to the modern era and incorporating research on Hindu, Buddhist and tribal cultures. The authors ask whether the worship of goddesses, strongly linked to fertility rituals, might have mitigated the ecological decline of South Asia in the pre-British and post-colonial eras.The manifold powers of the Devi, whether nurturing or destructive, could be constructed as companions to the unstoppable forces of Nature. This binary paradigm, however, is misleading. For millions of South Asian people, the Devi is Nature and Nature is She. Amongst scholars, the connections between the South Asian Goddesses and the natural environment have been debated and contested for centuries. This collection of essays, the last of a trilogy on the Devi or iconic female by Australian scholars and their collaborators, interrogates the paradoxes of worshipping the feminine divine and yet ignoring the natural environment that validates Her existence. Historical and cultural sources, many of them in Sanskrit, point to the Devi-Nature complex but in ignoring the role of human agency, appear to exonerate society from taking responsibility for the ecological devastation manifested throughout the South Asian region. The Devi is omnipotent but in the role of the nurturing Mother she will not intervene if we remain passive. South Asian deities teach us to respect the environment, a necessary but insufficient condition for compelling us to behave in a manner that respects the wonders of the universe.

    2 in stock

    £62.68

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