Showing posts with label Geography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Geography. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 24, 2021

Proxeny Networks of the Ancient World (a database of proxeny networks of the Greek city-states)

Proxeny Networks of the Ancient World  (a database of proxeny networks of the Greek city-states)

About

PNAW is a database of evidence for a particular kind of social networking between Greek city-states in the Ancient Greek world, known as proxeny (Greek: proxenia). It enables this material to be used to visualise the highly-fragmented political geography of the ancient world during the Archaic, Classical, and Hellenistic periods, and to get a sense of how densely and intensely interconnected were the states which made it up.

Context

Before its unification under a Roman emperor, the ancient Mediterranean world constituted the most fragmented state system in recorded history. More than a thousand distinct Greek city-states (poleis), and many other kinds of actor, such as dynasts, federations, and kings, made up a vibrant and dynamic ecosystem of self-governing states. The interactions of these states were mediated through a highly developed system of institutions. Proxeny is the best attested of these institutions, and was probably the most widely used. It enabled cities to maintain substantial and often widespread networks that connected them with other cities.

Proxeny

Proxeny was an institution of interstate relations in the ancient Greek world. A city-state granted proxeny to the citizen of another community, the status of being their proxenos within that individual's home city. The role of the proxenos was to facilitate interaction between the two political communities, most often by performing services of different kinds for visiting citizens of the first state (termed here the 'granting city'). These services could take various forms - including hospitality, introductions to magistrates, prominent men, or merchants, and help negotiating local legal institutions in the case of contractual disputes. Collectively these services helped to enable citizens of the granting community in question to overcome the political fragmentation of this world and function, whether as official representatives of their own city, or as merchants, tradesmen, or even as tourists, in other communities where they did not have the privileged status of citizen. Proxeny networks, therefore, reflect and allow us to trace patterns of political, economic, and social interactions between city states, and to trace the horizons of different political communities.

PNAW

PNAW presents an overview of our evidence for these relationships of proxeny in the ancient world, including those recorded in the literary sources as well as the more than two thousand texts inscribed on stone. It accompanies the recent study of this institution published by Oxford University Press, Proxeny and Polis and its purpose is to make this material available in an accessible format which can be corrected and updated as new evidence is published. It makes use of GIS mapping to enable the evidence of links between different communities which this data presents to be explored in an intuitive way. In order to make the search function useable, results are presented in a condensed view with further information available in the form of mouseover dialogue boxes. To illustrate the potential of the search and mapping functions of this database, here are some example searches:

Friday, February 19, 2021

Roman Roads and Milestones in Judaea/Palaestina

[First posted in AWOL 17 July 2014, updated 19 February 2021]

Roman Roads and Milestones in Judaea/Palaestina 
https://milestones.kinneret.ac.il/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/header.jpg
In 1970 The Israel Milestone Committee (IMC) was formed by Mordechai Gichon as a branch of the International Curatorium of the Corpus Miliariorum. The aim of the committee was to assemble, study and prepare for publication the milestones inscriptions found in Israel. The IMC also intended to carry out a systematic survey of all the extant remains related to roads, in order to provide a comprehensive picture of the Roman road network in Israel. For almost 40 years the Committee's field and research work was led by Israel Roll and Benjamin Isaac together with other scholars.

Thursday, January 28, 2021

Digital Atlas of the Roman Empire

[First posted in AWOL 17 April 2014, updated 28 January 2022]
 
Digital Atlas of the Roman Empire
Welcome to the new Digital Atlas of the Roman Empire (DARE), hosted and managed by the Centre for Digital Humanities, University of Gothenburg, Sweden.
License
You can use the tiled background map of the Roman Empire in your own web applications. Tiles are available for zoom levels between 4 and 11. Use this link with your Javascript mapping library (Leaflet, OpenLayers, etc.).
https://dh.gu.se/tiles/imperium/{z}/{x}/{y}.png
The map is licenced under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (CC BY 4.0)
Stay tuned on Twitter @johan.ahlfeldt

And on Github

Monday, September 30, 2019

Vici.org: Archaeological Atlas of Antiquity

[First posted in AWOL 29 September 2012, updated 30 September 2019]

Vici.org: Archaeological Atlas of Antiquity
Vici.org
Vici.org is the archaeological atlas of classical antiquity. It is a community driven archaeological map, inspired by and modelled after Wikipedia.
The first version of Vici.org went online in May 2012. It was preceded by a sister website Omnesviae.org, a roman routeplanner based on the Peutinger map. Since its start, Vici.org has grown a lot. At the time to this writing, over 140 contributors have added nearly 20,000 locations, approximately 1,000 line tracings and over 3,000 images.

Open Data

Similar to Wikipedia, all written content is available for reuse using the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike-license. Metadata is available using the CC0 / Public Domain dedication. Images or line tracings may be available under other licenses. Vici.org invites everyone to participate and share his of her knowledge of classical antiquity. Vici.org does provide various services to reuse this shared knowledge, through various dataservices or by using the Vici widget.
 In other languages

And see AWOL's Roundup of Resources on Ancient Geography

Friday, May 10, 2019

TOPOSText

[First posted in AWOL 25 March 2017, updated 10 May 2019]


TOPOSText
logo
ToposText 2.1.5 for Android is out as of May 10, 2019, fixing a crash Android users have been suffering
ToposText is an indexed collection of ancient texts and mapped places relevant the the history and mythology of the ancient Greeks from the Neolithic period up through the 2nd century CE. It was inspired by two decades of exploring Greece by car, foot, or bicycle, and by clumsy efforts to appreciate επί τόπου the relevant information from Pausanias or other primary sources. The development of mobile electronic devices since 2010 has coincided with an increasingly comprehensive assortment of ancient texts available on the internet. The digital texts I collected on an e-reader in 2012 made clear both the pleasure of having a portable Classics library but also the desperate need to organize the information it contained. Discovering the Pleiades Project, with its downloadable database of thousands of ancient place names and coordinates, opened the door to indexing ancient texts geographically, using a map of Greece as the basic interface.
ToposText was designed as an application for mobile devices. Opening it presents a scrolling alphabetical list of 5000+ Greek cities, colonies, sanctuaries, archaeological sites, museums, and other points of interest, side-by-side with a location-aware map showing the nearby places by name, icon (city, sanctuary, theatre, etc), and the number of ancient references in the TT database. The texts and index and a basic map are stored on the device and requires no internet connection.
Selecting a site from either the list or the map opens up a table of two-line snippets from ancient authors, headed where available by a modern description. Selecting from this index list, which can be filtered by date, genre, and relevance, connects one to the full text of 240-odd works in English translation, some with the original Ancient Greek as well. Thus, at a glance and from any location, you can select and read the passages in ancient literature that give a place its historical and cultural meaning. While you are reading, the map alongside shows the location of the ancient places mentioned. In most cases, book and paragraph numbers of texts correspond to those conventionally used in printed texts. Where the online text available had no internal numbering, arbitrary paragraph numbering has been added. A scrolling feature hidden in the right margin allows rapid navigation through the books and chapters of a given text...

Friday, October 26, 2018

Samothracian Networks

Samothracian Networks
Samothracian Networks

Sailing an ancient sea

In Samothrace Mariner, a study of ritual and mobility in the ancient world, we are building bridges between:
  • academic and scientific research, integrating theory and method from anthropology, geography, Classics, religion and ancient history
  • pedagogical needs, supporting instructors in primary and secondary education
  • gaming applications with broad potential for public education in the most informal of settings.
These three approaches– research, pedagogy, and popular culture – are united through shared reliance on a unique database built on ancient sources. The core of the database comes from inscriptions, a form of historical data least accessible to the non-specialist.  These inscriptions have provided the geospatial and chronological parameters for a QGIS platform; to this we bring data from ancient history, poets, geographers and politicians, giving access to ancient voices located in the geospaces they occupied.
Our interest at all three levels is maritime mobility: how did ancient travelers move safely through seas as full of risk as profit?  Highly developed sailing skills were one route; social contracts, often guaranteed by the gods, were another. These contracts, part of the Greek institution of proxenia, bound the parties to non-aggression, information sharing, and mutual support in ports of call. See “how it worked.”  They are recorded on inscriptions which provide dates, places, and the names of otherwise anonymous individuals charged with ensuring their city’s good behavior toward travelers and merchants from other cities around the Mediterranean world.

Tuesday, October 9, 2018

Ancient Locations: Database of Archaeological Sites

 [First posted in AWOL 23 August 2015, updated 9 October 2018]

Ancient Locations: Database of Archaeological Sites
http://www.ancientlocations.net/WebImg/HeaderCaptionBright.png
ANCIENT LOCATIONS is my collection of Placemarks of archaeologically interesting locations of the ancient world.

The list is continuously updated and expanded to give anyone with an interest in archaeology and history the possibility to look up the coordinates of relevant sites.
Locations are included if they existed prior to 476 CE in the Old World (end of the West-Roman Empire) and prior to 1492 CE in the New World (re-discovery of the New World).

There are currently 25307 placemark entries in the database. 4235 are shown on Ancient Locations (16.7 %). There are currently 129 overlay and map entries in the database. 41 are shown on Ancient Locations. (31.8 %) Those entries not shown are either under review or are not assigned to appear on Ancient Locations.
The number of database entries increases when placemarks are imported or manually added, and it decreases when duplicates or invalid enties are removed. Reviewing all the placemarks and ascertaining accurate coordinates is a slow process...


For the task of managing my Placemarks I have implemented a program, a screeshot of which you can see on the right.
This website has had 801036 visitors since June 6, 2008, which was the day it was set up.
Regions Index
Zagros, Elam, and Iran
Mesopotamia
Egypt
Kush and Aethiopia
Levant
Anatolia
Arabia
Aegean
Mediterranean
Pontus
CaucasusAfrica
Asia
AustraliaOceania
Europe
Latin America
North America
Medieval sites
Natural sites
Modern sites


Thursday, September 13, 2018

Dictionnaire des Noms Géographiques Contenus dans les Textes Hiéroglyphiques [DNGCTH]

Dictionnaire des Noms Géographiques Contenus dans les Textes Hiéroglyphiques [DNGCTH]
Links assembled for the  Egyptological Book Series Online of the EEF
-- Vol. 1: Henri Gauthier - Dictionnaire des Noms Géographiques Contenus dans 
les Textes Hiéroglyphiques, [A-w], Le Caire, 1925, viii, 218 pp. - 
pdf-file (48 MB)
URL
-- Vol. 2: Henri Gauthier - Dictionnaire des Noms Géographiques Contenus dans 
les Textes Hiéroglyphiques, [b-f], Le Caire, 1925, 170 pp. - 
pdf-file (66 MB)
URL
-- Vol. 3: Henri Gauthier - Dictionnaire des Noms Géographiques Contenus dans 
les Textes Hiéroglyphiques, [m-n], Le Caire, 1926, 155 pp. - 
pdf-file (34.0 MB)
URL
-- Vol. 4: Henri Gauthier - Dictionnaire des Noms Géographiques Contenus dans 
les Textes Hiéroglyphiques, [h-X], Le Caire, 1927, 226 pp. - 
pdf-file (52.4 MB)
URL
-- Vol. 5: Henri Gauthier - Dictionnaire des Noms Géographiques Contenus dans 
les Textes Hiéroglyphiques, [s-g], Le Caire, 1928, 236 pp. - 
pdf-file (54.4 MB)
URL
-- Vol. 6: Henri Gauthier - Dictionnaire des Noms Géographiques Contenus dans 
les Textes Hiéroglyphiques, [t-D], Le Caire, 1929, 156 pp. - 
pdf-file (37 MB)
URL
-- Vol. 7: Henri Gauthier - Dictionnaire des Noms Géographiques Contenus dans 
les Textes Hiéroglyphiques, Indices et cartes, Le Caire, 1931, 96 pp., 3 pl. - 
pdf-file (19.2 MB)
URL


Thursday, August 16, 2018

Orbis Latinus Online (OLO)

[First posted in AWOL 3 May 2016, updated (new URLs) 16 August 2018]

Orbis Latinus Online (OLO)

Lateinisch-Deutsche Ortsnamen

Der Gazetteer Orbis Latinus Online (OLO) für Lateinisch-Deutsche Ortsnamen basiert auf der dreibändigen Druckausgabe von Orbis Latinus aus dem Jahr 1972. 

Kurzmitteilung: Leider musste die ursprüngliche, aus dem Jahr 2009 stammende OLO-Version 2016 zur gründlichen Überarbeitung vom Netz genommen werden. Die durch Philipp Franck und Nemo Grippa neu entwickelte Version steht seit Juli 2018 zur Verfügung. Orbis Latinus Online ist nun Teil des durch das URZ Heidelberg geleiteten heiMAP-Projekts. Inzwischen sind auch die fortgeschrittenen Funktionen, v.a. das von Philipp Franck seinerzeit im Rahmen seiner Bachelor-Arbeit konzipierte GeoWiki, wieder verfügbar.   
http://olo.geotwain.de oder http://olo.hgis.club

Die Orte können zudem in beide Richtungen über unsere GeoTWAIN-Webseite recherchiert werden: http://geotwain.geog.uni-heidelberg.de/ or http://geotwain.de/




Hittite Monuments

[First posted in AWOL 24 April 1011. Updated 16 August 2018]

Hittite Monuments
http://www.hittitemonuments.com/topbanner.jpg
Hittite Monuments is an experimental site, built with an aim to provide visual references to all major Hittite monuments. The locations listed below are the sites that has monuments belonging to the times of Hittite/Luwian civilization and culture. The text list below divides the sites in two chronological groups. This is definetely not a complete list, nor the listed sites may have complete information. Some pages are still missing information or images. As time permits I continue to update the pages with more information. I would appreciate any comments, feedback, and information. -Tayfun Bilgin

Empire Period
1480 to 1200 BCE


Afyon *+
Akpınar
Alacahöyük
Aleppo
Altınyayla *
Beyköy
Boğazköy
Çağdın *
Delihasanlı *
Eflatunpınar
Emirgazi *
Ermenek +
Fasıllar
Fraktin
Gavurkale
Gezbeli
Hatip
Hemite
İmamkulu
Karabel
Karakız
Karakuyu
Karga *
Kayalıpınar *
Köylütolu *
Malkaya
Ortaköy
Savcılı
Sirkeli
Suratkaya
Taşçı
Tell Açana*
Torbalı *+
Yağrı *
Yalburt
Neo-Hittite Period
1200 to 712 BCE


TABAL
GROUP


Aksaray *
Andaval *
Bahçeköy *
Bor *
Bulgarmaden
Burunkaya +
Çalapverdi*
Çiftlik *
Eğrek *
Eğriköy *
Erkilet *
Gemerek*
Gökbez
Göllüdağ*
Göstesin*
Gözecik*
Hisarcık *
İvriz
Karaburna
Karadağ +
Kayseri *
Keben +
Keşlik Yayla *
Kızıldağ +
Kululu *
Kurubel *
Kültepe *
Niğde *
Porsuk *
Sivasa
Sultanhanı *
Tekirderbent *
Topada
Veliisa *
MALATYA
GROUP


Arslantaş
Arslantepe *
Darende *
Gürün
Havuzköy *
İspekçür *
Izgın *
Karahöyük *
Kötükale
Palanga *
Sevdili *
Şırzı
Tanır


MARAŞ
GROUP


Hacıbebekli *
Karaburçlu *
Kürtül *
K.Maraş *
Söğütlü *


KUMMUH
GROUP


Adıyaman *
Ancoz *
Boybeypınarı *
Gölpınar *
Haçgöz *
Kabahaydar *
Karasu
Malpınarı
SOUTHERN
GROUP


Afrin *
Ain Dara
Akçakale *
Arslantaş *
Arsuz *
Asmacık *
'Azaz *
Birecik *
Cekke *
Çineköy *
Çolaklı *
Domuztepe *
Elbistan Höyük *
Gaziantep *
Gözlühöyük *
Hama *
Islahiye *
Jisr El Hadid *
Karatepe
Karkamış *
Kelekli *
Kırçoğlu *
Körkün *
Meharde *
Örtülü *
Pancarlı *
Qal'at el Mudiq *
Restan *
Sakcagözü *
Samsat *
Sefalı *
Şaraga *
Tall Šṭīb *
Tell Ahmar *
Tell Halaf *
Tell Tayinat *
Tilsevet *
Tuleil *
Tünp *
Yesemek
Zincirli*

    * Monument is no longer at the original site.
    + Period is uncertain.




Monday, May 7, 2018

ROMAQ: The Atlas Project of Roman Aqueducts

[First posted in AWOL 17 April 2014, updated 7 May 2018]

ROMAQ: The Atlas Project of Roman Aqueducts
https://www.romaq.org/images/bg-header-aqueducts1.jpg
Roman aqueducts are amongst the most impressive and interesting structures that have survived from the Ancient World. Although aqueduct bridges such as the Pont du Gard are best known, roman aqueducts are complex water supply line systems that are impressive feats of engineering even by today's standards. Some of the aqueducts are simple water channels, but many contain complex structures such as inverted siphons, tunnels, basins and drop shafts while the channels themselves can be up to 240 km in length. Over 1600 roman aqueducts have been described in the Mediterranean basin and the aim of this website is to present the available corpus of literature on the subject in a systematic way. Besides available literature on each aqueduct, we aim to present summarised data on each aqueduct. However, this is a project in development, and it will take time to add new data and publications, and to update content.

Friday, April 20, 2018

kmz files from Assyrian empire builders

Assyrian empire builders links to a set of useful External Resources. Among these is:
Explore the locations of Assyrian cities using our content for Google Earth. Download all Google Earth content (KMZ files) used in People, Gods & Places (12KB). Follow these instructions to download Google Earth for your computer.
The identification of ancient places with modern sites is not always certain. We have followed the certainty codes 1-4 in Parpola and PorterHelsinki atlas (2001), and coloured the pins in the Google Earth (KMZ) files accordingly:
  1. Yellow: definitely known location (no "probably/perhaps/possibly" in People, Gods & Places).
  2. Green: "probably" known to be a modern location.
  3. Aqua: "perhaps" known to be a modern location.
  4. White: "possibly" known to be a modern location.



 

Thursday, November 2, 2017

Nubian Gazetteer: KML file download

Nubian Gazetteer: KML file download
Salvoldi, Daniele; Geus, Klaus: A Historical Comparative Gazetteer for Nubia. In: Dotawo: A Journal of Nubian Studies 4 (Summer 2017), 59–182 [ISBN-13: 978-1-947447-20-2; free pdf in open access under https://punctumbooks.com/titles/dotawo-a-journal-of-nubian-studies-4/]. With sixteen colour maps.
  
Here is the basic .kml file for download. Please share and let's make it standard!

[Best to download the file and upload it using Google Earth; for reasons I do not know, if you click on the link and use the Google map automatically generated you won't be able to see the labels with the toponyms] 


Saturday, August 26, 2017

Ancient Mediterranean Ports

[First posted in AWOL 25 October 2013, updated 26 August 2017]

Ancient Mediterranean Ports
http://www.ancientmedports.org/images/ship1.jpg
The Union of Ancient Mediterranean Ports was created in 1995 from a network of cities with the common characteristic of having been founded during Greek antiquity. The union was enacted in 1996 with its headquarters in the ancient town of Agatha, current Aged of Southern France.
 
In 2002 the Union’s headquarters were moved to Larnaca, Cyprus. With the passing of time, what remained of the Union is a report in the webpage of KTE (www.eduscience.gr-Activities).The aim of the Union is the strengthening of the relations amongst the cities involved, in the fields of culture, education, economy, technology and the communication of citizens; more specifically that of young people. In 2008 there began a project, A Script on Mediterranean, with the participation of 13-year-old Evdokia Valli from Mitilini, who took the first European reward in the “world competition of children’s painting for the environment”; the competition was organized based on the “Program of Environment” of the United Nations – UNEP (http://archive.enet.gr/online_text/c=112).

During that same time, on 10-13 December, a congress organized by the Network of Cities of Sea and entitled “New Scripts on Mediterranean – For an open sea in the strategy for the growth” took place in Gela, Sicily (www.mondogreco.net/associazione/intex.htm).

Today, there are many initiatives and serious networks throughout the Mediterranean. Nevertheless, the war on immigration, the environmental pollution and that of the sea, as well as the fading of the local culture are still occurring. And the question rising is why is this?

It may be that there are citizens, who love sea as well as history, such as the factors of marine tourism, yachtsmen, visitors, divers, archeologists and others, and wish to preserve clean water, local culture and history. These people, in collaboration, can stimulate the action of Ancient Mediterranean Ports and the Cities of Sea, and contribute in the salvation of the Mediterranean region. 

Based on the ancient harbors and the active cities and citizens of the Mediterranean, the mapping, the recording and the prominence of the local cultural identity may begin. At the same time, the conservation of the sea and the safeguard of peace may be enhanced. The Sea, which divides and unites, is the subject and underlay of climate change. Since the Ancient Ports and Cities of the Mediterranean are the basic factors of the activities performed by the active citizens, the latter, if related and collaborating, may begin the reversion and rebirth now. 

Saturday, June 3, 2017

Open Access Journal: Méditerranée

Méditerranée
eISSN: 1760-8538
thumbnail
Fondée en 1960, la revue Méditerranée est dédiée à l’ensemble des pays des rives méditerranéennes. Elle est également une revue régionale qui publie régulièrement des mises au point sur la région Provence-Alpes-Côte d’Azur. Ouverte aux contributions internationales, elle rassemble des articles en français et en anglais.

1960-1969

1970-1979

1980-1989

1990-1999

2000-2004

Recent issues at Revues.org