Scholarly Publications - Archaeology
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11693/115645
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Item Open Access A catalogue of the glass finds: Sagalassos 1990(Leuven University Press, 1993) Lightfoot, Chris S.; Waelkens, M.Item Open Access Some examples of ancient cast and ribbed bowls in Turkey(Corning Museum of Glass, 1993) Lightfoot, C. S.Item Open Access Some new thoughts on Herodes Atticus's tomb, his stadium of 143/4, and Philostratus VS 2.550(Archaeological Institute of America (Boston), 1993-01) Tobin, J.In the early 140s Herodes Atticus rebuilt the Panath- enaic stadium and constructed a temple to Tyche on the hill above. So closely was Herodes associated with this area that when he died in A.D. 179 the people of Athens buried him there. Across the stadium from the Tyche temple a sarcophagus, an inscription, and the ruins of a long nar- row building have been thought to represent the remains of Herodes' tomb. The date and the unfinished state of the sarcophagus, however, make it unsuitable for Her- odes, and the inscription cannot be used in identifying the site of burial. The long building itself is not a tomb, but a monument built to house the Panathenaic ship that Herodes provided for the Panathenaic procession of 143/4. Herodes' actual resting place may be in the running track, as would befit his elevated status.Item Open Access Unearthing a Byzantine City: excavations at Amorium, Turkey(Aurora Publications, 1994) Lightfoot, C.Item Open Access Sadana Island shipwreck excavation 1995(Institute of Nautical Archaeology, 1995) Haldane, C. W.Item Open Access Christian cremna(Classical Press of Wales, 1995) Öztürk, J.; Mitchell, S.Item Open Access Defining boundaries of a state: The Mycenaeans and their Anatolian Frontier(Peeters Publishers, 1995) Gates, C.Item Open Access Egyptian obelisk barge experiment(Institute of Nautical Archaeology, 1995) Haldane, C.Item Open Access Archaeology in Turkey(Archaeological Institute of America, 1995-04) Gates, M. -H.Item Open Access Some remarks about hunting scenes on the seal impressions of Daskyleion(1996) Kaptan, D.Item Open Access An Ottoman period shipwreck in the Red Sea(1996) Haldane, Cheryl W.Item Open Access Archaeology in Turkey(Archaeological Institute of America, 1996-04) Gates, M. -H.Item Open Access Two seasons at Gavurkalesi(Archaeological Institute of America, 1996-04) Lumsden, S.Item Open Access Survey and preliminary excavations at Hacı-Musalar (ancient choma) near Elmalı in Northern Lycia(Archaeological Institute of America, 1996-04) Özgen, İ.Item Open Access Sadana Island shipwreck, Egypt: preliminary report(Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Ltd., 1996-05) Haldane, C.Item Open Access Archaeology in Turkey(Archaeological Institute of America, 1997-04) Gates, M. -H.Item Open Access The Roman frontier from Wallsend to rudchester burn reviewed(Society of Antiquaries of Newcastle upon Tyne, 1998) Bennett, JulianItem Open Access Oylum Höyük 1997-1998 die spätchalkolithische siedlung auf der westterrass(Institut Francais d'Etudes Anatoliennes, 1999) Özgen E.; Helwing, B.; Engin, A.; Niewenhuys, O.; Spoor, R.Item Open Access Cultural interaction at Hassek Höyük, Turkey. New evidence from pottery analysis(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, 1999) Helwing, B.Pottery analysis at Hassek Höyük revealed inconsistencies in the material record, where it is possible to identify a group of hybrid pottery combining stylistic and technological features of both the Uruk and the Syro-Anatolian Late Chalcolithic cultures. This hybrid pottery at Hassek Höyük is interpreted as the work of local craftsmen who, during a period of intensive contact with the Uruk culture, integrated some features of the Uruk pottery into their own production mode. The continuous use of chaff tempered clay shows a strong conservative tendency and argues for a local continuity of craftsmanship. Thus, the pottery production at Hassek is deeply rooted within the local cultural tradition of the Syro-Anatolian Late Chalcolithic. This is a strong argument against the interpretation of the site as being a wellplanned colony erected on virgin soil by a group of foreign Uruk traders.Item Open Access Map 55 Thessalia-Boeotia(Princeton University Press, 2000) Morin, Jacques; Talbert, R. J. A.