Ancient West and East: Volume 4, No. 2G. R. Tsetskhladze BRILL, 2006 - 286 pages Annotation. Ancient West & East is a peer-reviewed (bi- )annual devoted to the study of the history and archaeology of the periphery of the Graeco-Roman world, concentrating on local societies and cultures and their interaction with the Graeco-Roman, Near Eastern and early Byzantine worlds. The chronological and geographical scope is deliberately broad and comprehensive, ranging from the second millennium BC to Late Antiquity, and encompassing the whole ancient Mediterranean world and beyond, including ancient Central and Eastern Europe, the Black Sea region, Central Asia and the Near East. Ancient West & East aims to bring forward high-calibre studies from a wide range of disciplines and to provide a forum for discussion and better understanding of the interface of the classical and barbarian world throughout the period. Ancient West & East will reflect the thriving and fascinating developments in the study of the ancient world, bringing together Classical and Near Eastern Studies and Eastern and Western scholarship. Each volume will consist of articles, notes and reviews. Libraries and scholars will appreciate to find so much new material easily accesible in one volume. |
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Page 438
... example , Gela was founded by Rhodes and ( in some accounts ) Crete ; Megara Hyblaea by Megara ; Naxos by Chalchis and so on . Occasionally slight variations in origin are implied : Strabo ( 8. 6. 22 ) , for example , notes that the ...
... example , Gela was founded by Rhodes and ( in some accounts ) Crete ; Megara Hyblaea by Megara ; Naxos by Chalchis and so on . Occasionally slight variations in origin are implied : Strabo ( 8. 6. 22 ) , for example , notes that the ...
Page 450
... example advanced by Hall minimising the role of language in elaboration of a Hellenic identity is somewhat perverse : ' this means that a Greek citizen of , say , Ephesos could have communicated with a Karian with whom he came into ...
... example advanced by Hall minimising the role of language in elaboration of a Hellenic identity is somewhat perverse : ' this means that a Greek citizen of , say , Ephesos could have communicated with a Karian with whom he came into ...
Page 452
... example , Archilochus , some of whose fragments ( for example , 43 , 93a , 216 West ) show how hate , bitter- ness and scorn towards non - Greeks in colonial environments are part of the justification of actions carried out by the poet ...
... example , Archilochus , some of whose fragments ( for example , 43 , 93a , 216 West ) show how hate , bitter- ness and scorn towards non - Greeks in colonial environments are part of the justification of actions carried out by the poet ...
Contents
Articles | 255 |
Notes and Queries | 278 |
H G Niemeyer There is No Way Out of the Al Mina Debate | 292 |
Copyright | |
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3rd century 3rd millennium BC 4th century BC Aegean Al Mina Anatolia ancient Animal Style archaeological architecture Arjoune Athenian Athens Black Sea Boardman Bouzek Bulgaria burial Central ceramics Chapter Classical colonial context Corinthian cult decoration deity discussion Early Iron Age East Eastern ethnic identity Etruscan Europe evidence excavation finds Geometric Greece Greek Hall Hall's Hellenic identity Hellenistic illustrations important Iron Age ISBN ISSN Italy Kiev culture kinship Kitov late antique Late Bronze Age Macedonian Marazov material Mediterranean Middle Tushemla millennium BC Moesia Mogila Museum non-Greeks objects Odessos Odrysian Olympia Oxford Panagjurishte Paperback Pella Persian Phoenician photographs Pistiros population pottery radiocarbon region rhyton Rogozen Roman period Sagona sanctuary Scythian settlement Seuthopolis Sicily silver Sofia summary in English Thrace Thracian tion tombs toreutics tradition Tsetskhladze tumuli Urartian Urartu Venedikov vessels volume West Western