Thursday, November 12, 2015

Recently Published at Archaeopress: Open Access

Recently Published at Archaeopress: Open Access
Proceedings of the 17th Symposium on Mediterranean Archaeology. SOMA 2013 Moscow, 25-27 April 2013

edited by Sergei Fazlullin, Mazlum Mert Antika. 262 pages.

Papers from the 17th Symposium on Mediterranean Archaeology, SOMA 2013 held in Moscow, 25-27 April 2013.

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The Barracks of the Roman Army from the 1st to 3rd Centuries A.D.

A comparative study of the barracks from fortresses, forts and fortlets with an analysis of building types and construction, stabling and garrisons by David P. Davison. 940 pages.

A comparative study of the barracks from fortresses, forts and fortlets with an analysis of building types and construction, stabling and garrisons. Originally published as BAR S472 in 1989.

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Etudes sur la céramique romaine tardive d’Afrique

Author: Michel Bonifay. viii+525 pages; 269 figures, maps, plans, drawing, photographs; 3 colour plates; 4 tables. Typological Index. French text.

The subject of this work is the pottery (amphorae, vessels, lamps, small objects and architectural ceramic) of Roman Africa from the 2nd to the 7th century. It is based on a large assemblage from several settlements in south of France (Marseilles), in Tunisia (Nabeul, Hammamet/Pupput, Sidi Jdidi, Oudhna, Carthage, Thuburbo Majus, El Jem) and in the Eastern Mediterranean (Alexandria, Beirut). In the first part, the author examines different aspects of production (epigraphy, petrography, workshops, technology). The second part is devoted to the typology and the chronology of amphorae, red slip ware, cooking wares, coarse ware, handmade wares, lamps, figurines and moulds, tiles and vaulting tubes, with some new proposals for classification and dating. Economic patterns are discussed in the third part, including the processes of commercialisation (outside and inside Africa), the contents of amphorae and the historical interpretations of the large diffusion of African pottery.

Originally published in print as British Archaeological Reports International Series 1301. (Archaeopress, Oxford, 2004). Print version available here.


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