Recently Published at Archaeopress: Open Access
Recently Published at Archaeopress: Open Access
Ostentazione di rango e manifestazione del potere agli albori della società micenea by Federica Gonzato. 262 pages; black & white illustrations. Italian text. 4 2012. ISBN 9788876992278.
Le manifestazioni materiali del potere sono una
caratteristica fondamentale delle società umane e costituiscono
pertanto, per lo studioso delle culture antiche, una delle chiavi di
lettura più ricche e promettenti. In questo volume, l’autrice propone
una interpretazione delle prime fasi di formazione (XVII-XV secolo a.C.)
dell’organizzazione sociale della cultura micenea attraverso l’esame
degli attributi di potere (insignia dignitatis) trovati nelle sepolture
di questo periodo in Argolide, culla della civiltà micenea in Grecia. Lo
sviluppo della realtà micenea precedente la grande fase palaziale del
XIV-XIII secolo a.C. viene analizzato da un punto di vista
etnoantropologico e storico, introducendo una fondamentale distinzione
fra beni di prestigio ed attributi di potere (spesso effimeri e
polisemantici, in quanto soggetti ad una continua variazione della
nozione di valore), ma ponendo anche attenzione alle storia delle
dinamiche sociali e alle strategie per il mantenimento della leadership
attraverso la manipolazione di una ideologia di cui gliinsignia
dignitatis rappresentano la materializzazione.
Site, Artefacts and Landscape Prehistoric Borġ in-Nadur, Malta by Davide Tanasi and Nicholas C. Vella. 450 pages; illustrated throughout in black & white. 3 450. ISBN 9788876992230.
The Bronze Age of the Maltese archipelago has long been
overlooked by archaeologists whose attention has mostly been focused on
the Late Neolithic temples. This book attempts to understand the
islands’ Bronze Age society in the course of the second millennium BC by
exploring the history of Borg in-Nadur in south-east Malta. The site of
a megalithic temple and re-used in later periods when a fortified
settlement was built on the plateau, Borg in-Nadur was visited by
travellers and antiquarians in the course of the Early Modern period,
and was investigated by archaeologists in the late nineteenth and early
twentieth century. This collection of essays discusses the early
attempts to understand the site, and presents a comprehensive catalogue
of the finds that have never been properly published. It also considers
the site in its local landscape setting and in its regional
south-central Mediterranean context, and explores issues related to past
and present public outreach and site management.
La necropoli protostorica di Montagna di Caltagirone by Davide Tanasi. 451 pages; illustrated throughout in black & white. 1 2008. ISBN 9788876991158.
Il sito della Montagna di Caltagirone (CT), indagato per
la prima volta in modo sistematico da Paolo Orsi nel 1903, rappresenta
un importante caso studio per la pre e protostoria siciliana e
costituisce un osservatorio privilegiato per un’analisi delle
problematiche legate all’interrelazione tra popolazioni autoctone e
straniere. Dalla metà del II millennio a.C. fino alla colonizzazione
greca, infatti, la Montagna ha svolto un ruolo fondamentale nei fenomeni
d’aggregazione della popolazione del territorio calatino. Nell’età del
Bronzo Tardo (XIII-XI secolo a.C.), il suo insediamento ha raggiunto il
momento di maggiore splendore, con l’impianto della grande necropoli,
ponendosi, insieme a Pantalica, come principale centro produttore di
cultura della Sicilia Orientale.
Found: the Palaeolithic of Qatar Taken from Proceedings of the Seminar for Arabian Studies 45 (2015)
by Julie E. Scott-Jackson, Jeffrey I. Rose, William Scott-Jackson &
Faisal al-Naimi. Pages 329–336; colour and black & white
illustrations. PSAS.
The seeming lack of evidence for a Palaeolithic presence
in Qatar has been enigmatic. This has now changed. Here we report on
discoveries made by the PADMAC Unit during 2013/2014 and the
far-reaching implications of these findings. Our preliminary analysis of
the Qatar lithic assemblages — QSS25, QSS29 (PADMAC Unit collection)
and A-group Site I and A-group Site III (Kapel collection) — revealed
the presence of large chopping tools and crude ‘Abbevillian’ cores, both
indicative of an early stage within the lower Palaeolithic period,
while the absence of classic Acheulean hand axes might even suggest a
date exceeding one million years. Furthermore, the particular suite of
technological traits we identified in Umm Taqa ‘B-group’ Site XXXIV
(Kapel collection) lithic assemblage, are characteristic of middle–upper
Palaeolithic transitional industries found in the Levant, Nile Valley,
and southern Arabia. Hence, we tentatively assign the ‘Taqan’ industry
to the upper Palaeolithic. Specific lithics from the QSS32 (PADMAC Unit
collection) assemblage, allude to further ‘Taqan’ sites in southern
Qatar.
Generosity, gift giving, and gift avoiding in southern Oman Taken from Proceedings of the Seminar for Arabian Studies 45 (2015) by Marielle Risse. Pages 289–296. PSAS.
Gibali (Jibbali/Shahri) is a Modern South Arabian
language spoken in the coastal plain and mountains of the Dhofar region
of southern Oman. Although there are researchers actively documenting
Gibali, there has been little anthropological work on the speakers of
this non-written language. Building on nine years of research about, and
interactions with, Gibali speakers the author describes the concept of
the gift in the Arab, Muslim, tribal culture of Gibali speakers. This
article tries to form an appreciation of Gibalis by explaining their
understanding of the definition of gifts as well as gift giving,
receiving, reciprocating, and avoiding. From the field of gift theory,
the author draws on Mauss, Godelier, Bourdieu, Appadurai, and Godbout
and Caillé, to create a framework for the ‘what’, ‘when’, ‘why’, and
‘how’ of gifts. From the fields of travel writing and history, examples
from Wilfred Thesiger and the memoirs of soldiers from the Dhofar War
(1965–1975) are used to provide a historical perspective. The result is
an insight into a culture in which gifts are, for the most part, not
necessary as there are many limits placed on who can give/receive, the
time to give/receive, and the kind of object that is considered a gift.
To See the Invisible Karelian Rock Art by Arsen Faradzhev. iv+19 pages; illustrated throughout in colour and black & white.ISBN 9781784911249.
This contribution considers 25 years of discovery of the
possible origins and development of the Rock Art Tradition to create
Karelian Rock Art images under the open sky through the analysis of
different types of intercessions into the horizontal surface of granite
rocks.
Karelian petroglyphs are located-at the eastern bank of the Onega Lake
and 300 km to the north, close to the southern bank of the White Sea.
One of them, the “New Zalavruga,” was discovered by the expedition of
U.Savvateev under the Neolithic cultural layer and sterile sand layer in
1963-1968. This is a great and very rare opportunity to obtain direct
dating of the end of the tradition to create Karelian Rock Art images
around 5-6 ka ago. Therefore, the task was to find the “Invisible”
evidences of the tradition’s origins and development similar to both
regions via the different use of context.
No comments:
Post a Comment