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Authors:poj@peeters-leuven.be PubDate: Fri, 17 Nov 2023 09:15:38 +000
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Authors:poj@peeters-leuven.be Abstract: Book reviews PubDate: Fri, 17 Nov 2023 09:15:24 +000
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Authors:poj@peeters-leuven.be Abstract: In this contribution, two Egyptian text passages are treated. In the first case, a new interpretation for pHarris 500 recto 1, 10 is developed. The passage is compared with a love poem of the Arabian poet Ibn Sahl from the 13th century AD. The falcon pouncing on prey is chosen in both cases as a symbol for speed. In the second case, a new detail of oDem 1675 vs 13/14 is highlighted. A Qasida of the early Arabian poet 'Almaqa is used for comparison. In both texts, a typical behaviour of the ostrich is illuminated. PubDate: Fri, 17 Nov 2023 09:13:42 +000
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Authors:poj@peeters-leuven.be Abstract: not available PubDate: Fri, 17 Nov 2023 09:12:57 +000
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Authors:poj@peeters-leuven.be Abstract: not available PubDate: Fri, 17 Nov 2023 09:12:49 +000
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Authors:poj@peeters-leuven.be Abstract: not available PubDate: Fri, 17 Nov 2023 09:12:39 +000
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Authors:poj@peeters-leuven.be Abstract: not available PubDate: Fri, 17 Nov 2023 09:12:34 +000
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Authors:poj@peeters-leuven.be Abstract: not available PubDate: Fri, 17 Nov 2023 09:12:29 +000
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Authors:poj@peeters-leuven.be PubDate: Fri, 17 Nov 2023 09:10:33 +000
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Authors:poj@peeters-leuven.be Abstract: Studies of ancient Graeco-Roman activity in and around the Red Sea have, due to the quantity of surviving evidence, tended to focus on the imperial Roman period. However, by examining how the Ptolemaic state organised the hunting of elephants around the southern coast of the Red Sea, this article argues that the Ptolemies were also heavily involved in the economic exploitation of the Red Sea region. Such a conclusion further supports arguments in favour of the importance of Ptolemaic precedents for facilitating activity in and around the Red Sea and the western Indian Ocean. PubDate: Fri, 17 Nov 2023 09:08:56 +000
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Authors:poj@peeters-leuven.be PubDate: Fri, 17 Nov 2023 09:08:02 +000
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Authors:poj@peeters-leuven.be PubDate: Fri, 17 Nov 2023 09:06:35 +000
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Authors:poj@peeters-leuven.be Abstract: Recent excavations at Hrisosotira, on the western Black Sea coast, have yielded an abundance of archaeological material dating from late antiquity. The most spectacular find is a closed complex labelled Building 18, where three coin hoards have been found, one gold and two copper, as well as a rich inventory including scales, weights, a bronze lamp and a diversity of ceramic containers. The coin finds indicate that wealth could still be found in small fortresses of the Black Sea coast even as late as AD 615. The destruction recorded in the southern part of the fortress was a tragic event, but one which cannot be connected with a particular invasion or any other event known from written accounts. PubDate: Fri, 17 Nov 2023 09:05:16 +000
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Authors:poj@peeters-leuven.be Abstract: This contribution is the last of three analysing processes concerning militarisation of the territories located around the Van, Sevan and Orumiyeh basins. The first paper was of a more methodological perspective, while the second examined the long protohistoric period up to the advent in the region of the state of Urartu. The present work aims to investigate the development of militarisation processes that occurred when these territories gradually became part of supra-regional dynamics as part of great empires such as the Achaemenid and Sasanian. The study identifies that the dynamics related to militarisation changed modality but remained substantially present in these regions, which in this period underwent the construction of large fortification systems over wide portions of territory. PubDate: Fri, 17 Nov 2023 09:04:12 +000
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Authors:poj@peeters-leuven.be Abstract: The present study discusses 14 blue glass tabloids from Nastagisi necropolis in Eastern Georgia, as well as a few such tabloids discovered during the last few years in Georgia. Approximately 70 pieces of blue glass tabloid have been discovered in Georgia. 15 pieces come from Azerbaijan and Armenia, and one from Kerch. The blue glass tabloids kept in the museums of Adana, California and Geneva, as well as the impressions from the London art market (16 pieces), are of unidentified provenance. Glass tabloids were cast in an open mould. A stamp was used for pressing the device into the flat side. The main function of the tabloids was amulets. Burials containing them are mostly dated to the 2nd-1st centuries BC. PubDate: Fri, 17 Nov 2023 09:02:57 +000
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Authors:poj@peeters-leuven.be Abstract: The History Museum of Armenia contains a large collection of architectural and sculptural fragments of white Dokimeian and Aphrodisian marble. Several fragments are kept in the Department of Ancient Archeology of the Institute of Archaeology and Ethnography of the National Academy of Sciences of Armenia. They were discovered during archaeological excavations around the ancient temple in the fortress of Garni. These are fragments of Asia Minor columnar sarcophagi from the 3rd-4th centuries AD, which did not receive proper coverage in the scientific literature at the time. This article provides typological, artistic and stylistic analysis of the fragments in their historical context. The results of the archaeometric analysis of one fragment are presented. PubDate: Fri, 17 Nov 2023 09:01:36 +000
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Authors:poj@peeters-leuven.be Abstract: This paper deals with the Archaic-period fortifications discovered in Phanagoria in the course of archaeological excavations in the historical centre of the settlement. The city walls were built soon after the foundation of the <i>apoikia</i>. At some later time, in the 6th century BC, these walls were destroyed, possibly by enemy attack. New fortifications were erected and again demolished between the first and the second quarters of the 5th century BC. This event was connected with Persian aggression, which is testified by a fragment of a Persian cuneiform royal inscription found within a structure erected over the demolished walls. PubDate: Fri, 17 Nov 2023 09:00:17 +000
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Authors:poj@peeters-leuven.be Abstract: The Phoenician westward expeditions of the 10th century BC mentioned in the written records were not provable by archaeologists for a long time. In the meantime extensive ensembles of phoenician ceramics from Iberian sites shed light on a developed pre-colonial trade down from the late 9th century BC. Only single finds of the 10th and early 9th century BC are to be consulted for the precedent stage without any permanent presence of the eastmediterranean seafarers. For these items various structures of maritime contacts on stages of the Mediterraneum that existed in the background at that time are to be considered as well as agents. But the reception of a special fibula costume in the central and western Mediterraneum, for which an eastern model is beyond all doubt, is not explicable without the assumption of Cypriote and/or Phoenician seafarers. In this context the low amount of eastern mediterranean archaeological reports will be explained as a result of the one-sided orientation to metallurgical needs. PubDate: Fri, 17 Nov 2023 08:58:51 +000