Showing posts with label Armenia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Armenia. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 28, 2016

Biainili-Urartu

[First posted in AWOL 7 March 2014, updated 28 September 2016]

Biainili-Urartu
Stephan Kroll, 21-01-2016
This website is devoted to archaeological and historical research in the area of the ancient near-eastern kingdom of "Biainili", better known by the Assyrian name "Urartu". This is the area of Eastern Turkey, North-Western Iran, Armenia and parts of Azerbaijan.
The intention is to inform about recent developments in the area. The contributions of this website are often written in German, sometimes in English. But it is planned to publish them more and more in English for better understanding and distribution.
  • RIVAGES DE LA CASPIENNE / CASPIAN SEA SHORES Contacts, espaces et territoires autour de la Caspienne aux âges du Bronze et du Fer Contacts, Spaces and Territories along the Caspian Sea during the Bronze and Iron Ages. 4-5 décembre / December 2015 Maison de l’Archéologie et de l’Ethnologie (Nanterre, France) Musée d’Archéologie Nationale (Saint-Germain-en-Laye, France). Abstracts.


Thursday, July 30, 2015

Project ArAGATS: Archaeological Research in Armenia

Project ArAGATS: Archaeological Research in Armenia
http://aragats.arts.cornell.edu/wp-content/uploads/2013/01/version06.jpg
Project ArAGATS is a collaborative archaeological research program dedicated to the exploration of southern Caucasia’s rich past and the preservation of modern Armenia’s diverse cultural heritage.  Our mission is to investigate critical anthropological and historical problems in the region from the earliest times through the modern era, utilizing cutting-edge techniques of field study and laboratory analysis.  In order to do so, we are committed to educating and training a new generation of archaeologists in contemporary approaches to analysis, to presenting the results of work in both scholarly and popular fora, and to preserving the region’s sites and material culture for succeeding generations.
Founded in 1998 by Dr. Adam T. Smith (Department of Anthropology, University of Chicago) and Dr. Ruben S. Badalyan (Institute of Archaeology and Ethnography, Yerevan), Project ArAGATS is celebrating its 10th anniversary in 2008.
To date, our investigations have been focused in the Tsaghkahovit Plain of Central Armenia which lies just under the northern slopes of Mt. Aragats.
In 1998 and 2000, we completed the first systematic intensive regional survey ever conducted in the South Caucasus.  This work recorded a complex history of settlements, ranging from large Early Bronze Age (Kura-Araxes) villages, to stone-walled Late Bronze Age fortresses, to well-planned towns of the mid-first millennium B.C.  But beyond the restricted confines of these settlements our survey recorded a landscape crowded with the cemeteries, irrigation canals, reservoirs, and corrals of millennial of occupation.

ArAGATS Library