Saturday, July 18, 2026

Tripolitania in the Roman Empire and Beyond

Niccolo Mugnai (Editor) 
 

Roman-period Tripolitania conjures up images of the monumental architecture of Lepcis Magna and Sabratha, but it was much more than this. This new volume provides up-to-date research by an international team of scholars who tackle important topics such as the urban development, artistic works, rural settlement, culture, religion, and the role of the military on the frontiers of this North African region. Spanning the Roman and later phases through to the early Islamic era, the chapters offer an accessible account of key aspects of Tripolitania’s archaeology for students, researchers, as well as general readers.

224 pages

eBook Formats

PDF: 166 MB

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Travels In Classical Libya: Snakes, Sands And Silphium

Paul Wright 
 

Egypt, Carthage and other African civilisations are well documented but the land and people between them are less well known yet also worthy of consideration. This collection of extracts from classical authors on subjects relating to ancient Libya presents more than fifty writers from Homer to the end of the Roman Empire and provides an eclectic mixture of descriptions of Libya, its people, flora, fauna, climate, geography and episodes in its history as presented by politicians, poets, philosophers, priests, historians and soldiers, both native and foreign.

Newly translated and illustrated with a variety of photographs, maps, line drawings and specially commissioned illustrations, with a comprehensive glossary and suggestions for further reading and research, the book is suitable for both the general reader and the specialist.

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Libya Archaeological Guides: Cyrenaica

Philip Kenrick, with a contribution by Ahmed Buzaian  

This is the second volume in this series, which was launched to great acclaim in 2009. Cyrenaica (known to the Arabs as the Jabal Akhdar, the Green Mountain) has a terrain which resembles that of Greece or western Turkey. It was settled at an early date by Greeks and subsequently was part of the Roman and Byzantine empires before the advent of the Arabs. Each of these civilisations has left its mark on the landscape, not only at the locations of the major cities on the coast, but also at a host of lesser towns and villages whose ruins still dot the countryside. All are described and explained in a comprehensive gazetteer.

ISBN-13 978-1-900971-14-0
(Silphium Books/Society for Libyan Studies 2013)

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Frontiers of the Roman Empire: the African Frontiers

David Mattingly, Alan Rushworth, Victoria Leitch, Martin Sterry 

The frontiers of the Roman empire together form the largest surviving monument of one of the world’s greatest stages. The Roman military remains in North Africa are remarkable in their variety and their state of preservation: they deserve to be better know. They include towers and forts, stretches of defensive lines of stone and earth with ditches broken by gates, and roads, sitting in the most remarkable scenery. This book, in English, German and French, with a separate version in Arabic, tells the illustrated story of this part of the empire.

96 pages
136 illustrations
English, French, German (for the Arabic version, see Arabic Publications)

eBook Formats

PDF: 28 MB

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Friday, July 17, 2026

Libya Archaeological Guides: Tripolitania

Philip Kenrick 
 

This is a new series of guides to the archaeology of Libya, from prehistoric times until the invasion of the Bani Hilal in AD 1051, written by acknowledged experts for the non-specialist traveller. The first volume, TRIPOLITANIA, by Philip Kenrick, deals with a region which offers the visitor not only the classical splendours of UNESCO World Heritage Sites such as Sabratha and Lepcis Magna, but also a hinterland which is rich in standing monuments of the Punic, Roman and early Islamic periods. All are described and explained in a comprehensive gazetteer.

ISBN-13: 978-1-900971-08-9

eBook Formats

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The Severan Buildings Of Lepcis Magna

The Severan Buildings Of Lepcis Magna
by J. B. Ward-Perkins. Edited by P. M. Kenrick with drawings by R. Kronenburg

The building programme begun in the A.D. 190s by the Roman emperor Septimius Severus at his home city of Lepcis Magna is widely recognised as the grandest project of its kind in the ancient world. This architectural study by the late J. B. Ward-Perkins provides a full description and analysis of the principal monuments of the Severan programme, namely the Forum, Basilica, Colonnaded Street and Nymphaeum. Copiously and handsomely illustrated, the corpus is accompanied by extended discussion which includes consideration of the remarkable evidence presented by these monuments for the organisation of the construction of major Roman public buildings. This book is based on several seasons of research at Lepcis by a team led by Ward-Perkins, whose substantial draft text and drawings have been prepared for publication by Philp Kenrick and Robert Kronenburg, with support from the Society for Libyan Studies.

This publication will be of interest to all students of classical antiquity and to architectural historians.

101 MB in total

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Productive and Social Practices in Prehistoric and Protohistoric Earthen Building

book cover  

Productive and Social Practices in Prehistoric and Protohistoric Earthen Building presents new perspectives on one of the most widespread yet historically undervalued forms of construction. Bringing together contributions from leading researchers, the volume explores the production, use and social significance of earthen architecture across a wide range of prehistoric and protohistoric contexts.

Drawing on evidence from the Mediterranean, Europe, the Near East and South America, the chapters examine construction techniques, architectural traditions, domestic and monumental structures, and adopt approaches including experimental reconstruction and the application of advanced archaeometric and micromorphological techniques. Together, they reveal how earthen buildings provide unique insights into technological innovation, cultural interaction, collective labour and the organisation of past communities.

The volume also considers the continuing relevance of earthen building traditions within contemporary debates on heritage management and sustainable construction, demonstrating the enduring value of these ancient practices in addressing modern challenges.

H 276 x W 203 mm

176 pages

42 figures, 9 tables (colour throughout)

Published Jul 2026

Archaeopress Archaeology

ISBN

Paperback: 9781805833246

Digital: 9781805833253

DOI 10.32028/9781805833246

Contents

List of Figures and Tables

The Social and Gender Fabric of Mud: Reviewing Earthen Architecture in Archaeology. Introduction to “Productive and Social Practices in Prehistoric and Protohistoric Earthen Building” – María Pastor Quiles, Lucía Ruano Posada, Alejandra Sánchez-Polo and Marta Mateu

Macroscopic Evidence for the Use of Adobes at Minoan Malia (Bronze Age Crete) – Maud Devolder

Production, Storage and Sustainability: The Use of Earthen and Sunken Architecture at Late Bronze Age Erimi-Pitharka, Cyprus – Lærke Recht and Katarzyna Zeman-Wiśniewska

Interactions and Continuity: Characterising Earthen Building Techniques of the Iberian Northern Plateau in a Transitional Period (Late Bronze Age–Early Iron Age) – Alejandra Sánchez-Polo and Lucía Ruano Posada

‘Tell Me How You Build and I Will Tell You Who You Are’: Earthen Construction Techniques at Sant Jaume d’Alcanar (Catalonia, NE Iberian Peninsula) and Their Cultural Attribution – Marta Mateu, David Garcia i Rubert and Sonia Carbonell Pastor

Early Neolithic Earth Mortar in the Iberian Peninsula: Chaff Tempering, Manufacture and Functionality in Domestic Structures – Magdalena Gómez-Puche and Ana Polo-Díaz

Constructions in Raw Earth in the Bronze Age Navetiforms in Mallorca (Spain): A Microstratigraphic View of Naveta I at Closos de Can Gaià – M. Mercè Bergadà, Joan Carbonell-Roca, Marta Mateu, David Javaloyas-Molina, Bartomeu Salvà-Simonet and Gabriel Servera-Vives

Rare Earth Elements Marking Anthropic Soil Development at the Geoglyphs of Acre (Brazil) – Gianni Gallello, Mirco Ramacciotti, Ivandra Rampanelli, Sonia López-Melón, Fernando Ferreira, Jacó César Piccoli, Ángel Morales-Rubio, Laura Bartual Moreno, Adriana Serra-Meléndez, Carlos Arnau-Félix and Agustín Diez-Castillo

A Geometric and Constructive Approach to Self-Supporting Domes and Vaults in the Architecture of the Ancient Near East – Luis Miguel Carranza Peco, Manuel Fortea Luna, Esther Rodríguez González and Sebastián Celestino Pérez

Building a Mesolithic Hut. A Social Interaction Analysis of Coordinated Engagement with the Material Environment – Antje Wilton and Kenan Hochuli

The EARTHERITAGE Project. Earthen Heritage in the Eastern Mediterranean between Archaeology and Sustainability – Marialucia Amadio, Luca Bombardieri, Ivano Rellini, Sabina Ghislandi and Maria Luisa Germanà