Thursday, March 20, 2025

Livy Study Maps: Book 22


AWMC is pleased to announce the release of Livy Study Maps: Book 22, the latest addition to the Maps for Texts series. Building upon the work of Livy Study Maps: Book 21, this set of twenty-three maps is designed for students and teachers working with Livy’s text, and offers detailed coverage of famous episodes such as the Battles of Lake Trasimene and Cannae, as well as of lesser-known campaigns from Book 22 of the History of Rome.  The maps are available as free digital downloads under the CC-BY-NC 4.0 license.

Click this link for an introduction and table of contents, or access the full collection of maps on Dropbox.

AWMC eagerly invites feedback on the Livy Study Maps from academics, educators, students, and enthusiasts alike.  Please email comments to awmc@unc.edu.  The Center hopes to incorporate community feedback in future revisions to these maps, as well as using it to guide the creation of maps for subsequent books of Livy.  Maps for Book 23 are currently in production, with an anticipated publication date in Fall 2025.


 

Publié le par Th. Castelli

Kashuba, M. T., M. V. Medvedeva, E. O. Stoyanov, éd. (2024) : Древности Северного Причерноморья, Кавказа и Средней Азии: от открытий Н.И. Веселовского к современной науке. / Материалы международной научной конференции, посвященной 175-летию Николая Ивановича Веселовского (1848–1918) / Drevnosti Severnogo Prichernomor’ja, Kavkaza i Srednej Azii: ot otkrytij N.I. Veselovskogo k sovremennoj nauke. Materialy mezhdunarodnoj nauchnoj konferencii, posvjashhennoj 175-letiju Nikolaja Ivanovicha Veselovskogo (1848–1918), Saint-Pétersbourg [Antiquités de la région nord de la mer Noire, du Caucase et de l’Asie centrale : d’après les découvertes de N.I. Veselovsky à la science moderne. Actes de la conférence scientifique internationale consacrée au 175e anniversaire de Nikolai Ivanovich Veselovsky (1848-1918)]

Cet ouvrage rassemble de courts articles sur les différentes étapes de la vie de cet archéologue russe : le nord de la mer Noire antique et médiévale, l’Asie centrale, le monde des collectionneurs et des musées. Un tiers des articles concerne le nord de la mer Noire antique.

L’ouvrage en ligne : https://www.old.archeo.ru/izdaniya-1/vagnejshije-izdanija/pdf/2024Veselovskij.pdf

 

Bridging the Gap: Disciplines, Times, and Spaces in Dialogue – Volume 2. Sessions 3, 7 and 8 from the Conference Broadening Horizons 6 Held at the Freie Universität Berlin, 24–28 June 2019

Edited by Nathalie Kallas 
book cover

Since 2007, the conferences organized under the title ‘Broadening Horizons’ have provided a regular venue for postgraduates and early career scholars in Ancient Near Eastern Studies. Three volumes present the proceedings of the 6th Broadening Horizons Conference, which took place at the Freie Universität Berlin from 24–28 June, 2019. The general theme, ‘Bridging the Gap: Disciplines, Times, and Spaces in Dialogue’, is aimed at encouraging communication and the development of multidisciplinary approaches to the study of material cultures and textual sources.

The second volume compiles papers presented in three enlightening sessions: Session 3 – Visual and Textual Forms of Communication; Session 7 – The Future of the Past. Archaeologists and Historians in Cultural Heritage Studies; and Session 8 – Produce, Consume, Repeat. History and Archaeology of Ancient Near Eastern Economies. Within this volume, the 20 papers traverse diverse topics spanning multiple periods, from the 5th millennium BCE to the Roman Empire, and encompass a wide array of geographical regions within the Near East.

H 276 x W 203 mm

292 pages

71 figures, 11 tables, 2 plates (colour throughout)

Published Mar 2025

Archaeopress Access Archaeology

ISBN

Paperback: 9781803277288

Digital: 9781803277295

DOI 10.32028/9781803277288

 

Contents

Foreword


Introduction – Nathalie Kallas

 

Session 3 — Visual and Textual Forms of Communication

Meaning and Meaningfulness in the Visual Arts: The Akkadian Legacy in the Ur III Period – Marian H. Feldman


Sexuation of animals’ bodies in the bullae from Qasr-I Abu Nasr – Delphine Poinsot


Generations of Writing: The Secondary Inscriptions of Darius’ tacara at Persepolis – Olivia Ramble


A few insights into the variety of interactions between texts and diagrams in Old Babylonian mathematics – Adeline Reynaud


Chariots, Thrones, and Emblems. Visual/Material Bonds in Old Babylonian Legal Practice – Elisa Roßberger


When Horses and Onagers Collide: The Use of Constraining Force in the Neo-Assyrian Reliefs – Margaux Spruyt


Up/down, close/far, front/back: the conceptualization of the dynamics of power in Hittite texts – Marta Pallavidini


Apotropaic representations on Late Bronze Age ring seals – Benedetta Bellucci


Seal-Impressed Vessels at Hama, Syria (c. 2500-2000 BC) – Agnese Vacca, Valentina Tumolo, Georges Mouamar and Stephen Lumsden


Potmarks on the Lebanese coast: A medium of communication in the Early Bronze Age – Metoda Peršin


Personal Religion in the Ramesside Period from the Deir el-Medina Votive Stelae: A Case for the Study of Iconography – Iria Souto Castro


Texts, scenes and rituals to preserve the memory of the deceased in private tombs at the end of the 18th Dynasty in Thebes – María Silvana Catania


The transmission of priestly science in ancient Egyptian temples of the Graeco-Roman period: The case study of the sacred trees* – Federica Pancin

 

Session 7 –The Future of the Past. Archaeologists and Historians in Cultural Heritage Studies

Codifying culture: The making of Phoenician style – Lamia Sassine


Come, Tell Me Where You Live! Perceptions of Local Antiquity and Cultural Awareness in the Region of Koya – Cinzia Pappi

 

Session 8 – Produce, Consume, Repeat. History and Archaeology of Ancient Near Eastern Economies

Making new sense of ancient economies. Markets, networks, and social orders in the pre-Islamic Near East – Eivind Heldaas Seland


Deciphering the Skills of the Prehistoric Painting Technique: Case Study of the Painted Pottery of the 5th Millennium BCE from Tall-e Bakun A (Fars province, Iran) – Takehiro Miki


Persian Female Weavers in the Persepolis Economy – Yazdan Safaee


Shops in Ancient Berytus: New Data from Old Excavations – Hassan El-Hajj


Viticulture in the Roman Colony of Berytus: Economic Considerations – Naseem Raad

Empire and excavation: Critical perspectives on archaeology in British-period Cyprus, 1878–1960

Edited by Thomas Kiely, Anna Reeve & Lindy Crewe

The modern discipline of archaeology developed in tandem with the expansion of European imperialism in the 19th and 20th centuries. Cyprus, ruled by Britain between 1878 and 1960, is a fascinating example of how archaeology was practiced and developed in a specific colonial context. This volume explores the mechanisms, the institutions and the characters who contributed to the development of Cypriot archaeology, often within a fraught political environment.

The 23 papers in this volume address aspects such as the role of local agents within a colonial environment; changing attitudes towards and interpretations of cultural heritage; the export of excavated materials and their onward journeys; the development of legal frameworks to prevent looting, and their practical application; co-operation and competition between different nation-states at the peak and decline of empires; the conflicts caused by economic priorities; and the impact of institutions and individuals who attempted to support or control rights over the heritage of the island. Through the lens of British-period Cyprus they trace the evolution of institutions and practices that remain important for archaeology in Cyprus to this day.

This volume will be of interest to archaeologists, cultural heritage practitioners, museums, and anyone with an interest in the history of Cyprus.

Paperback ISBN: 9789464271140 | Hardback ISBN: 9789464271157 | Imprint: Sidestone Press Academics | Format: 210x280mm | 458 pp. | Language: English | 100 illus. (bw) | 50 illus. (fc) | Keywords: Cyprus; archaeology; historiography; colonialism; heritage; heritage management; archaeological ethics; museums; collecting; British Empire; Ottoman Empire | download cover | DOI: 10.59641/h6k2e3f4g5

 

Preface and acknowledgments
Thomas Kiely, Anna Reeve and Lindy Crewe

By way of introduction. Empires and excavations in Cyprus 1878–1960
Thomas Kiely

PART 1: PEOPLE AND PLACES

Over the landscape, in the landscape? Knowledge and agency in Cypriot archaeology, 1870–1910
Michael Given

Dr Francis Henry Hill Guillemard (1852–1933) and the formation of the Cyprus Exploration Fund
Robert S. Merrillees and Thomas Kiely, with a note by Antoine Hermary

Was there an official German interest in the archaeology of Cyprus between 1878 and 1914?
Stephan Schmid

The Italian entomologist Giacomo Cecconi and Cyprus: a step towards the formation of the Cypriot collection in the National Archaeological Museum of Florence
Sebastiano Soldi

Colonial society and the dismissal of John Hilton, first Director of Antiquities in Cyprus
Nicholas Stanley-Price

Archaeological entanglements: Palestinian refugee archaeologists in Cyprus, Libya and Jordan
Sarah Irving

A clash of personalities, archaeological practices and empires at Enkomi
George Papasavvas

PART 2: POLITICS AND PRACTICES

The implementation of ‘imperial policy’ on the antiquities of Cyprus (1869–1935): targeted or circumstantial?
Despina Pilides

Of goats, monuments and men: George Jeffery and the early management of Waqf-owned medieval monuments in British Cyprus
Pertev Basri

Archaeological politics in colonial Cyprus: Imperialism, Hellenism, and the Eteocypriots
Raphael Marshall

Law and archaeology in British-period Cyprus: the case of Lapithos
Stella Diakou

Mining in the archives: the mining industry and Cypriot archaeology in the British colonial period
Vasiliki Kassianidou

Works and days of the Cyprus Survey Branch during the period 1955–1974
Lindy Crewe, Anna Georgiadou and Despina Pilides

Diving into the past: archival research results of the Cyprus Coastal Assessment Project (CCAP) and the history of the first underwater archaeological explorations in Cyprus
Panagiotis Theofanous, Maria Volikou and Despina Pilides

PART 3: LEGACIES AND RECEPTIONS

Exploring the legacy of imperialist logic: new theoretical approaches to the historiography of Cypriot sculpture
Catherine V. Olien

Cyprus and its antiquities at the British Empire Exhibition, 1924–1925
Anna Reeve

The Ancient Cyprus Collection at the British Museum: retracing stories of travelling antiquities, knowledge, and empire
Polina Nikolaou

National press coverage of the Swedish Cyprus Expedition
Kristian Göransson

The Diaspora of Cypriot Antiquities in Swansea
Ersin Hussein

Communicating archaeology in British-period Cyprus: from Ohnefalsch-Richter to Dikaios
Anastasia Leriou and Giorgos Vavouranakis

Prehistoric archaeology in the Republic of Cyprus: the first sixty years
A. Bernard Knapp

Cypriot Aphrodite, archaeological representation and British colonial discourse: a reappraisal
Christine E. Morris and Giorgos Papantoniou

References

 

Wednesday, March 19, 2025

The Small Stuff of Roman Antiquity

Gowers, Emily
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Why are the small and unimportant relics of Roman antiquity often the most enduring, in material form and in our affections? Through close encounters with minor things such as insects, brief lives, quibbles, irritants, and jokes, Emily Gowers provocatively argues that much of what the Romans dismissed as superfluous or peripheral in fact took up immense imaginative space. It was often through the small stuff that the Romans most acutely probed and challenged their society’s overarching values and priorities and its sense of proportion and justice. There is much to learn from what didn’t or shouldn’t matter. By marking the spots where the apparently pointless becomes significant, this book radically adjusts our understanding of the Romans and their world, as well as our own minor feelings and intimate preoccupations. “The Small Stuff is quintessential Gowers. Written with characteristic verve and elegance, it challenges us to think again about what constitutes a subject worth pursuing.” — WILLIAM FITZGERALD, Professor of Latin Language and Literature, King’s College London “The bold essayistic orientation of Emily Gowers’s book—in which wit, subversive potential, and interpretive levity stunningly come together—sets a new standard, which many will no doubt attempt to imitate.” — MARIO TELÒ, author of Greek Tragedy in a Global Crisis: Reading through Pandemic Times
ISBN
9780520413146
Publisher website
www.ucpress.edu
Publication date and place
Oakland, 2025
Pages
193

 

 

Milk and Dairy Products in the Medicine and Culinary Art of Antiquity and Early Byzantium (1st–7th Centuries AD)

Rzeźnicka, Zofia 
Kokoszko, Maciej
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The following publication constitutes a continuation of a longstanding research conducted by both authors on nourishment, dietetics, pharmacology and gastronomy in the Late Antiquity and early Byzantium. The book was created based primarily on Greek medical treatises composed from the 1st to 7th century, but it takes into account data that originates outside of this collection. The goal of the authors was to present the knowledge of the people in antiquity and Byzantium on milk and dairy products. To achieve that they attempted to translate into contemporary language the way of thinking of then doctors, and to present main points of the theory propagated by them. In particular, the authors have shown ways of utilizing aforementioned alimentary products as food and medicine. Thus, they consciously encroach the area of history of pharmacology and gastronomy. Even though the nature of their research led the authors to focus on conclusions in the field of the history of food and medicine, they also take up the issues related to society and economy of this period.
ISBN
9788381426480, 9788381426473, 9788323347453, 9788323370246
Publisher website
https://www.press.uni.lodz.pl/
Publication date and place
2020
Imprint
electronic
Series
Byzantina Lodziensia,

 

 

 

Eleatic Ontology from the Hellenistic Period to Late Antiquity

Motta, Anna (editor)
Kurfess, Christopher (editor)
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Eleatic Ontology from the Hellenistic Period to Late Antiquity collects essays exploring the late-ancient reception of Parmenides of Elea’s groundbreaking account of being. Written by an international array of scholars and reflecting a range of outlooks and approaches, the essays included offer fresh perspectives on crucial points in that reception, reveal points of contact and instances of mutual interaction between philosophic traditions, and allow readers to reflect on the revolutionary new conceptions that thinkers of these eras developed in the continuing confrontation with the venerable figure of Parmenides and the challenges posed by his thought.
 
Eleatic Ontology from the Hellenistic Period to Late Antiquity collects essays exploring the late-ancient reception of Parmenides of Elea’s groundbreaking account of being. Written by an international array of scholars and reflecting a range of outlooks and approaches, the essays included offer fresh perspectives on crucial points in that reception, reveal points of contact and instances of mutual interaction between philosophic traditions, and allow readers to reflect on the revolutionary new conceptions that thinkers of these eras developed in the continuing confrontation with the venerable figure of Parmenides and the challenges posed by his thought.
 
Keywords
Eleatismo, Ontologia, Ricezione, Parmenide, Essere; Eleaticism, Ontology, Reception, Parmenides, Being
Publication date and place
Naples, 2024
Series
Scuola di Scienze Umane e Sociali. Quaderni, 29
Classification
Philosophy: metaphysics and ontology