Description

Book Synopsis
Wonders Lost and Found: A celebration of the archaeological work of Professor Michael Vickers comprises, in all, twenty-one contributions, all on archaeological themes, written by friends and colleagues of Professor Michael Vickers, commemorating his contribution to archaeology. The contributions, reflecting the wide interests of Professor Vickers, range chronologically from the Aegean Bronze Age, to the use made of archaeology by dictators of the 19th and 20th centuries. Seven contributions are related to the archaeology of Georgia, where the Professor has worked most recently, and has made his home.

Table of Contents
Early Cycladic? Lead model boats in the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford – Susan Sherratt ;
Two Cushions, a Bes, a boar and a bead. New ‘discoveries’ in the Aegean collection at the Ashmolean – Helen Hughes-Brock ;
Ancient Colchis and the origins of iron: interim results from recent field survey work in Guria, Western Georgia – Brian Gilmour, Marc Cox, Nathaniel Erb-Satullo, Nana Khakhutaishvili and Mark Pollard ;
The structure and function of ancient metrology – John Neal ;
The second stage of the Grakliani Culture – Vakhtang Licheli ;
Owl skyphoi around the Adriatic – Branko Kirigin ;
Gyenus on stage: civic foundation and the comedy of Aristophanes’ Birds – David Braund ;
New archaeological finds at Pichvnari (November-December 2010) – Amiran Kakhidze ;
A double-sided glass relief pinhead from ancient Colchis – the Pichvnari ‘Heracles – Sujatha Chandrasekaran ;
Gold jewellery from Kavtiskhevi – Darejan Kacharava ;
Palynological analysis of organic materials from Pichvnari (including the earliest silk in Georgia) – Eliso Kvavadze and Maia Chichinadze ;
Mercurial metrics – Kenneth Lapatin ;
The Erechtheion glass gems: classical innovation or Roman addition? – Despina Ignatiadou ;
Carp from the Danube delta? Notes on an unusual gold-glass in the Wilshere Collection – Susan Walker ;
Mediterranean drinking habits in Roman Britain: celery-flavoured wine prepared in an Iron Age bronze strainer – Eberhard W. Sauer, Mark Robinson and Graham Morgan ;
From an offshore island: classical art and the Britons in Late Antiquity – Martin Henig ;
The siege-drill (trypanon): new archaeological evidence from Georgia – Nicholas Sekunda ;
An emphatic statement: the Undley-A gold bracteate and its message in fifth-century East Anglia – Daphne Nash Briggs ;
The Levant Company and British collecting – Arthur MacGregor ;
Cryptography and vasology: J.D. Beazley and Winifred Lamb in Room 40 – David W.J. Gill ;
Dictators and Antiquity – Clive Foss

Wonders Lost and Found: A Celebration of the

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    A Paperback / softback by Nicholas Sekunda

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      Publisher: Archaeopress
      Publication Date: 13/02/2020
      ISBN13: 9781789693812, 978-1789693812
      ISBN10: 1789693810
      Also in:
      Archaeology

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Wonders Lost and Found: A celebration of the archaeological work of Professor Michael Vickers comprises, in all, twenty-one contributions, all on archaeological themes, written by friends and colleagues of Professor Michael Vickers, commemorating his contribution to archaeology. The contributions, reflecting the wide interests of Professor Vickers, range chronologically from the Aegean Bronze Age, to the use made of archaeology by dictators of the 19th and 20th centuries. Seven contributions are related to the archaeology of Georgia, where the Professor has worked most recently, and has made his home.

      Table of Contents
      Early Cycladic? Lead model boats in the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford – Susan Sherratt ;
      Two Cushions, a Bes, a boar and a bead. New ‘discoveries’ in the Aegean collection at the Ashmolean – Helen Hughes-Brock ;
      Ancient Colchis and the origins of iron: interim results from recent field survey work in Guria, Western Georgia – Brian Gilmour, Marc Cox, Nathaniel Erb-Satullo, Nana Khakhutaishvili and Mark Pollard ;
      The structure and function of ancient metrology – John Neal ;
      The second stage of the Grakliani Culture – Vakhtang Licheli ;
      Owl skyphoi around the Adriatic – Branko Kirigin ;
      Gyenus on stage: civic foundation and the comedy of Aristophanes’ Birds – David Braund ;
      New archaeological finds at Pichvnari (November-December 2010) – Amiran Kakhidze ;
      A double-sided glass relief pinhead from ancient Colchis – the Pichvnari ‘Heracles – Sujatha Chandrasekaran ;
      Gold jewellery from Kavtiskhevi – Darejan Kacharava ;
      Palynological analysis of organic materials from Pichvnari (including the earliest silk in Georgia) – Eliso Kvavadze and Maia Chichinadze ;
      Mercurial metrics – Kenneth Lapatin ;
      The Erechtheion glass gems: classical innovation or Roman addition? – Despina Ignatiadou ;
      Carp from the Danube delta? Notes on an unusual gold-glass in the Wilshere Collection – Susan Walker ;
      Mediterranean drinking habits in Roman Britain: celery-flavoured wine prepared in an Iron Age bronze strainer – Eberhard W. Sauer, Mark Robinson and Graham Morgan ;
      From an offshore island: classical art and the Britons in Late Antiquity – Martin Henig ;
      The siege-drill (trypanon): new archaeological evidence from Georgia – Nicholas Sekunda ;
      An emphatic statement: the Undley-A gold bracteate and its message in fifth-century East Anglia – Daphne Nash Briggs ;
      The Levant Company and British collecting – Arthur MacGregor ;
      Cryptography and vasology: J.D. Beazley and Winifred Lamb in Room 40 – David W.J. Gill ;
      Dictators and Antiquity – Clive Foss

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