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:
- Athenian proxenoi network of the fifth century BC
- Proxenoi at Athens in the fourth century BC
- The Karthaian catalogue of proxenoi, 360s BC
- Grants of citizenship (politeia) alongside proxenia
Wednesday, February 24, 2021
Proxeny Networks of the Ancient World (a database of proxeny networks of the Greek city-states)
Tuesday, February 23, 2021
Biblingual: Biblical Languages and Linguistics
Hi everyone! My name is Travis. I'm a PhD student and historical linguist at the University of Cambridge studying the Septuagint (Greek translation of the Old Testament), and I'm also the Director of Biblingo Live (Biblingo.org/live). My mission is to revitalise passion and interest in the languages of the Bible by helping you learn them more naturally and effectively.
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And see also AWOL's list of
Open Access Textbooks and Language Primers Relating to the Ancient World
Monday, February 22, 2021
Photos Egypte
Photographies de l'Égypte antique, prises sur place en Égypte et dans les collections égyptiennes des musées.
- Accueil de photosegypte.com
- Nouveautés du site
- Galeries photographiques
- Recherche de photographies par mots-clés
- Plan du site
- Présentation et aide à l'utilisation de ce site web
- Mentions légales et tarification en cas d'usage non autorisé
- Contact et demande d'utilisation de photographies
- Musée du Caire, la salle de l'or
- Musée du Caire, le trésor de Tanis
- Le trésor de Toutankhamon
- Musée du Caire, Youya et Touya
- Autres galeries photographiques du Musée du Caire
- Musée du Caire - Travée nord - Les stèles
- Musée du Caire - salle R48 - L'entrée
- Musée du Caire - salle R43 (principalement prédynastique/protodynastique)
- Musée du Caire - salle R41 - Kaemrehou, Nefermaat, Iynefer, Ounas et Mykerinos
- Musée du Caire - salle R13 - Au dessus de l'atrium - Les stèles d'Israël et de l'an 400
- Musée du Caire - salle R51 - Djeser et le Grand Sphinx
- Musée du Caire - salle P17 - Sennedjem et Maiherperi
- Musée du Caire - salle P48 - La rotonde
- Galeries photographiques des musées et expositions
- Exposition Toutankhamon, le trésor du pharaon à Paris-La Villette
- Exposition Osiris par Franck Goddio à l'Institut du Monde Arabe (IMA)
- Exposition Sésostris III, à Lille
- L'art du contour, le dessin dans l'Egypte ancienne
- Le nouveau Musée des Confluences, à Lyon
- Le Grand Egyptian Museum (GEM)
- Le National Museum of Egyptian Civilization (NMEC)
- Expositions Dieux Génies Démons et De Stargate aux Comics, au musée Royal de Mariemont
- Exposition au Louvre-lens en 2015 : Des animaux et des pharaons - Le règne animal dans l’Égypte ancienne
- Exposition l'Or des Pharaons au Grimaldi Forum, Monaco, été 2018
- Exposition au musée de Grenoble : Servir les dieux d'Égypte, divines adoratrices, chanteuses et prêtres d'Amon à Thèbes
- Musée gallo-romain de Lyon et exposition Ludique - Jouer dans l antiquité
- Musée de Tessé au Mans, la reconstitution de la tombe de Nefertari
- Exposition Bes, small god in Ancient Egypt, Allard Pierson Museum, Amsterdam
- L'influence de l'Égypte sur Chypre
- Louxor
- Héliopolis
- Guizeh - Saqqara
- La Moyenne Egypte
- Tanis
- Galeries photographiques de Munich
- Galeries de l'étrange
- Autres galeries photographiques
Copyright Alain Guilleux. Les textes et photographies présents sur ce site sont la propriété exclusive de leur auteur.
Aucun texte ou photographie ne peut être reproduit, modifié, diffusé sans autorisation préalable.
Toute fraude ou abus sera facturé avec majoration, conformément aux mentions légales et conditions générales.
Open Access Monograph Series: McDonald Institute Monographs & Conversations
The McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research exists to further research by Cambridge archaeologists and their collaborators into all aspects of the human past, across time and space. It supports archaeological fieldwork, archaeological science, material culture studies, and archaeological theory in an interdisciplinary framework. The Institute is committed to supporting new perspectives and ground-breaking research in archaeology and publishes peer-reviewed books of the highest quality across a range of subjects in the form of fieldwork monographs (McDonald Institute Monographs) and thematic edited volumes (McDonald Institute Conversations).
And see See AWOL's Alphabetical List of Open Access Monograph Series in Ancient Studies
The Evolution of Fragility: Setting the Terms
Explanations for the collapse of early states (and complex societies) often assume that they were integrated and stable until something bad happened, usually environmental change or because enemies overwhelmed them. In fact, many of these early states lasted a relatively short time, at least in archaeological reckoning. Others were longer-lived, but struggled to overcome structural weaknesses that eventually resulted in the fragmentation or a large-scale undoing of political orders. Rulers who attempted to institute mechanisms of control often laid the conditions for resistance and the disintegration of their regimes. The central theme of this volume is to undermine some traditional themes that naturalize the state and legitimize its historical claims to permanence.
Editor:
Norman Yoffee is professor emeritus in the Departments of Near Eastern Studies and Anthropology, University of Michigan. His latest book is the edited Volume 3 in The Cambridge World History, Early Cities in Comparative Perspective, 4000 bce-1200 ce (2015). He is also the series editor of Cambridge World Archaeology. He lives in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
The Evolution of Fragility: Setting the Terms [complete volume] Chapter 1 - Introducing the Conference: There Are No Innocent Terms Chapter 2 - Fragility of Vulnerable Social Institutions in Andean States Chapter 3 - Why Early Cities Failed: Fragility and Resilience in Bronze Age China Chapter 4 - Fragile Authority in Monumental Time: Political Experimentation in the Classic Maya Lowlands Chapter 5 - Ancient Egyptian Exceptionalism: Fragility, Flexibility and the Art of Not Collapsing Chapter 6 - Fragile Cahokian and Chacoan Orders and Infrastructures Chapter 7 - Diversity, variability, adaptation and ‘fragility’ in the Indus Civilization Chapter 8 - Fragile States in Sub-Saharan Africa Chapter 9 - Universal Rule and Precarious Empire: Power and Fragility in the Angkorian State Chapter 10 - Negotiating Fragility in Ancient Mesopotamia: Arenas of Contestation and Institutions of Resistance
Exhibition: Fish, Fishing, and Fish Stories From Antiquity - Antik Çağ’da Balık, Balıkçılık ve Balık Hikayeleri
The Mediterranean Sea is a very important in terms of its rich and diverse fish resources. In particular, the journey of migratory fish in schools from one sea to another can be followed even with the naked eye from time to time. The processes and activities that various species of fish or sea creatures undergo throughout this journey to reach the dinner table led to the emergence of fishing as a commercial venture. While fish were caught using different means in ancient times, today this need can be met by “fish farms.”The fossils of fish and other sea creatures as well as fishing hooks and similar tools dating to the Prehistoric period (ca. 40.000-10.000 BC) have been found in archaeological excavations. Wall and vase paintings, reliefs and archaeological finds from Near Eastern civilizations such as Mesopotamia and Egypt, where the first states emerged (Bronze Age, ca. 3000-1200 BC), provide a rich picture of the diversity of fish and fishing in that period. The seas that surround Anatolia – Black, Marmara, Aegean and Mediterranean – as well as the straits that connect these seas, were very important food sources for both Anatolia and other surrounding civilizations. Undoubtedly, settlements far from the sea were able to meet their fish needs from those in freshwater lakes and rivers.
The Minoan and Mycenaean civilizations (3rd and 2nd millennium BC), which flourished in the Aegean world, produced wall and vase paintings that present the most beautiful repertoire of sea creatures in the Aegean and the Mediterranean Seas. Likewise, the art of the Mycenaean civilization (2nd millennium BC), which flourished in Greece, is also very rich and interesting in its depiction of sea creatures. Regarding the ancient Greek and Roman civilizations, our knowledge of fish and fisheries increases, for fishing had become an industry. Literary sources inform us about various topics such as fishing, fish recipes, serving fish, preserving fish as canned food, fish sauces, and fish importing and exporting. Mosaics of the Roman Imperial period reveal the fish repertoire of the period, and scenes related to fishing are almost like photo frames.
This exhibition takes you on a short journey through our seas in Antiquity. You will meet different types of sea creatures such as fish, dolphins, mussels and snails, and hear their stories. You will find answers to many questions about how they were caught and consumed as food.
Open Access Journal: ANMED: News of Archaeology from Anatolia's Mediterranean Areas
ANMED: News of Archaeology from Anatolia's Mediterranean Areas
ISSN: 1303-9660
ANMED, one of the annual periodicals by Suna & İnan Kıraç Research Institute on Mediterranean Civilisations, has been published bilingual in Turkish and English in Antalya since 2003.
Within the frame of the Institute's foundation goals and priorities, the preliminary annual reports of excavations, surveys, restoration-conservation projects and other archaeological works by scientific missions undertaken in the region identified as Anatolia's Mediterranean Areas, that is encompassing ancient Lycia, Pamphylia, Cilicia and Pisidia, constitute the scope of ANMED

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