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Journal articles on the topic 'Aegean world'

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1

Younger, John G. "Managing ‘AegeaNet’." Antiquity 71, no. 274 (1997): 1052–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003598x00085999.

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I became acquainted with email discussion lists when I subscribed to my first one, ‘ANE’ (ancient Near East), in September 1993; the discussions were so lively and informative that my colleague Paul Rehak and I thought there should be an Aegean counterpart for the Minoan-Mycenaean world. ‘AegeaNet’ was thus born on 1 December 1993, ‘a discussion and news group on the pre-classical Aegean world from Palaeolithic to Homer and beyond’. Three and a half years later, it is still growing with over 780 subscribers, archives (as of November 1995), and plans for more sophisticated services like digest
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Knapp, A. Bernard. "Bronze Age Cyprus and the Aegean: ‘exotic currency’ and objects of connectivity." Journal of Greek Archaeology 7 (November 23, 2022): 67–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.32028/jga.v7i.1711.

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The island of Cyprus is justly regarded as a key juncture in the eastern Mediterranean world, one that played a prominent role in the exchange networks operating within and beyond that region, especially during the Late Bronze Age (LBA). With respect to the Aegean world, contacts are well represented by Aegean and Aegean-style objects and imagery found on the island, a form of ‘exotic currency’ often associated with elite feasting and funerary activities.
 The arts and crafts of Bronze Age Cyprus are particularly rich in representational terms, particularly evident in the floruit of figur
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Foster, Karen Polinger, D. A. Hardy, C. G. Doumas, J. A. Sakellarakis, and P. M. Warren. "Thera and the Aegean World III. 1: Archaeology." American Journal of Archaeology 97, no. 2 (1993): 363. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/505669.

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Harding, A. F., and W. J. Tait. "‘The beginning of the end’: progress and prospects in Old World chronology." Antiquity 63, no. 238 (1989): 147–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003598x00075670.

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CEYHUN, Gökçe Çiçek. "Potential Effects of Aegean Sea Disputes on Maritime Transportation." MAS Journal of Applied Sciences 7, no. 4 (2022): 1017–23. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7364172.

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The transportation lines in the Aegean Sea, which are of great importance in every period of history, connect the Marmara, Western Anatolia and the Black Sea to other sea areas of the world. The cargo flows in the Aegean Sea and the current density in the ports make this area more and more remarkable day by day. The increase in freight flows in world trade with globalization is an important factor in the inclusion of riparian or non-riparian countries in the Aegean Sea into the problems in this area. Especially for Turkey and Greece, which have reciprocal coasts, the problems in the sea area i
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Giebfried, John. "The Mongol invasions and the Aegean world (1241–61)." Mediterranean Historical Review 28, no. 2 (2013): 129–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09518967.2013.837640.

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Choleva, Maria. "TRAVELLING WITH THE POTTER'S WHEEL IN THE EARLY BRONZE AGE AEGEAN." Annual of the British School at Athens 115 (August 24, 2020): 59–104. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0068245420000064.

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By adopting the chaîne opératoire approach as a dynamic theoretical and methodological framework for studying ancient technologies, this paper investigates the modalities behind the appearance of the potter's wheel in the Aegean during the Early Bronze Age II (c. 2550–2200 bc). Based on the comparative examination of ceramic assemblages from different Aegean sites, an extended technological study has been carried out in order to track the earliest wheel-made pottery and reconstruct the craft behaviours perpetrated by the use of the potter's wheel across the Aegean. The paper presents the resul
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ΠΑΠΑΖΑΧΟΣ, Β. Κ. "Active Tectonics in the Aegean and surrounding area." Bulletin of the Geological Society of Greece 34, no. 6 (2002): 2237. http://dx.doi.org/10.12681/bgsg.16865.

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The purpose of the present article is to summarize the current scientific knowledge related to the active tectonics of the Aegean and surrounding area (active deformation, lithospheric plate-motions, etc.), as well as describe the main information (data, methods, etc.) which were used to obtain this knowledge. It is pointed out that the understanding of active tectonics has not only theoretical but also practical interest, as it contributes to the solution of problems of direct social impact such as the problem of earthquake prediction. It is shown that most of our present knowledge relies on
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Aslan, Ergül, Gönül Bodur, Nezihe Kızılkaya Beji, Nevzat Alkan, and Ömercan Aksoy. "Exposure to domestic violence in women living in Istanbul and Aegean regions: a Turkish sample." Ciência & Saúde Coletiva 24, no. 8 (2019): 2835–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/1413-81232018248.22952017.

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Abstract Domestic violence (DV) is a serious public health problem in the world. DV against women is also a global problem without cultural, geographic, religious, social, economic or national boundaries. This descriptive cross-sectional study was carried out to determine the situations of DV in women living in Istanbul and the Aegean Region in Turkey. The study population included outpatient clinics of state hospitals both regions. A stratified sampling by age was performed and 1100 women were included into the sample. Data were collected at face-to-face interviews with Domestic Violence Agai
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10

MoonHyun Song. "Mycenaean World and Aegean Trade in the Late Bronze Age." Journal of Classical Studies ll, no. 43 (2015): 127–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.20975/jcskor.2015..43.127.

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11

Harding, Anthony. "Interactions and -isations in the Aegean and beyond." Antiquity 91, no. 355 (2017): 250–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.15184/aqy.2016.231.

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Connectivity in the ancient world has become a subject of such consuming interest in recent years that new publications on various aspects of the issue, pertaining to some area or period, appear with great regularity. Just in later European prehistory we haveContinental connections: exploring cross-channel relationships(Anderson-Whymarket al.2015),Exchange networks and local transformations(Alberti & Sabatini 2013) andEnclosed space—open society(Jaegeret al.2012), to name but a few. One can hardly believe otherwise than that every part of the later prehistoric world was intimately involved
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12

Tomei, Francesca. "Chiara Maria Mauro, Archaic and Classical Harbours of the Greek World. The Aegean and Eastern Ionian contexts, Oxford, Archaeopress Publishing LTD, 2019, 115 pp. [ISBN: 978-1-78969-128.3]." Gerión. Revista de Historia Antigua 38, no. 1 (2020): 333–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.5209/geri.68597.

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Review of the book by Chiara Maria Mauro, Archaic and Classical Harbours of the Greek World. The Aegean and Eastern Ionian contexts, Oxford, Archaeopress Publishing LTD, 2019, 115 pp. [ISBN: 978-1-78969-128.3].
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van Andel, Tjeerd H., and Curtis N. Runnels. "An essay on the ‘emergence of civilization’ in the Aegean world." Antiquity 62, no. 235 (1988): 234–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003598x00073968.

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The fascicules of the final report on Franchthi Cave in the Argolid, the key Aegean sequence for the Mesolithic–Neolithic transition, are starting to appear, along with the publications of the Stanford survey of the region. Here, those reports prompt a wider review of existing explanations for the emergence of Greek social complexity, and the identifying of a new and major impetus as the basis for a revised model.
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Iacono, Francesco. "From Networks to Society: Pottery Style and Hegemony in Bronze Age Southern Italy." Cambridge Archaeological Journal 26, no. 1 (2016): 121–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0959774315000190.

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During the last two decades, the use of network methodologies in archaeological studies of interaction has gradually emerged. In this paper I will explore the social significance of networks, advocating the explicit use of Marxist-inspired social theory to increase our understanding of the patterns recognized through graph-theory. Crucial in this will be the new concepts of Means, Relations and Modes of Interaction and the Gramscian notion of hegemony. I will illustrate the potential of this approach, through a case study based in MBA and LBA southern Italy, focused on the sharing of stylistic
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Manning, Sturt W. "Second Intermediate Period date for the Thera (Santorini) eruption and historical implications." PLOS ONE 17, no. 9 (2022): e0274835. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0274835.

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The historical relevance of the Thera (Santorini) volcanic eruption is unclear because of major dating uncertainty. Long placed ~1500 BCE and during the Egyptian New Kingdom (starts ~1565–1540 BCE) by archaeologists, 14C pointed to dates ≥50–100 years earlier during the preceding Second Intermediate Period. Several decades of debate have followed with no clear resolution of the problem—despite wide recognition that this uncertainty undermines an ability to synchronize the civilizations of the eastern Mediterranean in the mid-second millennium BCE and write wider history. Recent work permits su
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Gill, David W. J. "Excavating Under Gunfire: Archaeologists in the Aegean During the First World War." Public Archaeology 10, no. 4 (2011): 187–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1179/175355311x13206765126596.

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Jacoby, David. "The Gattilusio Lordships and the Aegean World, 1355–1462, by Christopher Wright." English Historical Review 131, no. 548 (2016): 164–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ehr/cev329.

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Gallou, Chrysanthi. "5. White Hair and Feeding Bottles: Exploring Interactions Between Children and the Elderly in the Late Bronze Age Aegean." AmS-Skrifter, no. 26 (May 2, 2019): 61–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.31265/ams-skrifter.v0i26.210.

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Scholarship on age and gender in prehistoric Greece has taken an adult-centric approach with focus placed mostly on young to middle-aged men and women and, as a result, two significant age groups – children and the elderly – have been widely neglected. Lacking a strong insight into attitudes that were shown towards these two age groups, however means that archaeologists do not really harbour a concept of the whole span of life in the cultures that developed in the Aegean region during the Late Bronze Age. Making children and the elderly visible in the archaeological record and examining their
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ÖZEL, Çiğdem Alev, Siti MAESAROH, and DEMİRBAĞ Nurdan ŞAHİN. "Cultivation and Breeding Activities of Cowpea: A Turkish Perspective." MAS Journal of Applied Sciences 8, no. 1 (2023): 122–33. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7691793.

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Cowpea syn long bean and Turkish vernacular name B&ouml;r&uuml;lce (<em>Vigna unguiculata</em> L) is an economically valuable crop plant in the dry and drought-hit resource-poor agricultural system of West Africa, where it is used as a vegetable, dry edible legume, salad, and soup. Green leaves can be used as feed. With the passage of time, the cowpea was introduced and naturalized in other parts of the World. It is grown in Turkey in the Aegean and Marmara regions.&nbsp; It can grow in drought-hit sandy areas, where most significant crops fail to emerge and grow. It is highly efficient to fix
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Katsonopoulou, Dora. "Travelers in the Mediterranean: The Case for Ancient Parians." Mare Nostrum 12, no. 2 (2021): 115–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.11606/issn.2177-4218.v12i2p115-125.

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The island of Paros located in the centre of the Aegean Sea, emerged as an organized polis/state already in mid-8th century BC. Its geographical position favored early sea communications and foundation of colonies along the Mediterranean. In the article, I discuss the impressive phenomenon of itinerant Parians in the Mediterranean in relation to (a) the colonies founded by Paros in the Propontis, the North Aegean and the Adriatic Sea, (b) certain activities of travelling groups of artists in Greece proper and the periphery of the Greek world, and (c) two exceptional cases of itinerant Parians,
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Fantalkin, Alexander. "Toward the Identification of the Goddess of Ekron." Journal of Ancient Near Eastern Religions 17, no. 2 (2017): 97–115. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15692124-12341288.

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AbstractThe article puts forward a new hypothesis concerning the origin of the goddess of Ekron, mentioned in Ekron’s royal dedicatory inscription from the early 7th centurybce. Contrary to a widely held view, it is suggested that the origin of the Philistine Goddess of Ekron should not be sought in the Aegean world but rather in northern Syria.
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Yaprak Gürsoy. "Regime Change in the Aegean after the Second World War: Reconsidering Foreign Influence." Journal of Modern Greek Studies 27, no. 2 (2009): 319–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/mgs.0.0075.

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23

Gardner, Chelsea A. M., and Rebecca M. Seifried. "Euboean towers and Aegean powers: insights into the Karystia’s role in the ancient world." Journal of Greek Archaeology 1 (January 1, 2016): 149–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.32028/jga.v1i.647.

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The Karystia, a region of southern Euboea directly across from the Attic mainland, features two peninsulas that are dry and agriculturally poor compared to the fertile plains found elsewhere in the region and on the island (Figure 1). Despite the aridity of this area, however, an unusual pattern of human activity was revealed during archaeological investigation and extensive survey carried out in the 1980s and the 1990s. The Paximadi peninsula was first explored by Donald Keller during his dissertation research between 1979–1981, and between 1986–1993 the Southern Euboea Exploration Project (S
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Ramsay, Rosalind. "Banished to a Greek island." Psychiatric Bulletin 14, no. 3 (1990): 134–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/pb.14.3.134.

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In October, public attention focused on psychiatrists gathering for the Eighth World Congress in Athens. Was psychiatry still being abused for political purposes in the Soviet Union (Bloch, 1990)? And were mental patients elsewhere being mistreated? At the Stadium of Peace and Friendship overlooking the Aegean Sea, delegates had the chance to meet and talk about these important issues concerning human rights and human dignity.
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Kougioumoutzis, Konstantinos, Aggeliki Kaloveloni, and Theodora Petanidou. "Assessing Climate Change Impacts on Island Bees: The Aegean Archipelago." Biology 11, no. 4 (2022): 552. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biology11040552.

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Pollinators’ climate change impact assessments focus mainly on mainland regions. Thus, we are unaware how island species might fare in a rapidly changing world. This is even more pressing in the Mediterranean Basin, a global biodiversity hotspot. In Greece, a regional pollinator hotspot, climate change research is in its infancy and the insect Wallacean shortfall still remains unaddressed. In a species distribution modelling framework, we used the most comprehensive occurrence database for bees in Greece to locate the bee species richness hotspots in the Aegean, and investigated whether these
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Asscher, Yotam, and Elisabetta Boaretto. "Absolute Time Ranges in the Plateau of the Late Bronze to Iron Age Transition and the Appearance of Bichrome Pottery in Canaan, Southern Levant." Radiocarbon 61, no. 1 (2018): 13–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/rdc.2018.58.

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ABSTRACTThe Late Bronze Age to Iron Age transition in the Levant includes the appearance of new material culture that is similar in styles to the Aegean world. In the southern Levant, the distribution of early styles of Aegean-like pottery, locally produced, is limited to the coastal areas of Canaan, making synchronization with the rest of the region difficult. Radiocarbon (14C) dating provides a high-resolution absolute chronological framework for synchronizing ceramic phases. Here, absolute14C chronologies of the Late Bronze to Iron Age transition in the sites Tel Beth Shean, Tel Rehov, Tel
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Hoppe, Hans-Joachim. "Bulgarian Nationalities Policy in Occupied Thrace and Aegean Macedonia." Nationalities Papers 14, no. 1-2 (1986): 89–100. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00905998608408035.

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After the outbreak of World War II, the Bulgarian government pursued a policy of non-alignment. In the fall of 1940 it rejected plans for a combined Italian-Bulgarian attack against Greece. And when Italy alone invaded Greece, Bulgaria facilitated Greek resistance by her own passivity. When Germany called on Bulgaria to enter the Tripartite Pact and make its territory available for a German attack against Greece, the Bulgarian leadership succeeded in retarding the talks. At the same time, the Soviet Union, Germany's Balkan rival, tried to entice Bulgaria into concluding a pact of mutual assist
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Bietak, Manfred. "‘Rich beyond the dreams of Avaris: Tell el-Dabca and the Aegean world—a guide for the perplexed’: A response to Eric H. Cline." Annual of the British School at Athens 95 (November 2000): 185–205. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0068245400004639.

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In his article inBSA93 (1998) 199–219, Eric Cline comments on the recent discoveries at the site of Tell el-Dabca, where palatial quarters of the late Hyksos Period and the early 18th Dynasty have been discovered. For Aegean scholars the most spectacular finds from these excavations were numerous fragments of wall paintings which were identified as Minoan by experts working at the excavations and visiting colleagues. Cline particularly criticises the change of dating given to the paintings which were attributed by the excavators originally to the Hyksos period (1992) and afterwards to the Earl
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Honigman, Sylvie. "The dance of the islands: insularity, networks, the Athenian empire, and the Aegean world." Mediterranean Historical Review 26, no. 2 (2011): 190–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09518967.2011.630835.

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Tartaron, Thomas F. "Aegean Prehistory as World Archaeology: Recent Trends in the Archaeology of Bronze Age Greece." Journal of Archaeological Research 16, no. 2 (2007): 83–161. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10814-007-9018-7.

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Melakopides, Costas. "Multi-vector Management of Soft Power Policies: Will Russian Soft Power Be Victimized by the Moscow-Erdogan Association?" RUDN Journal of Public Administration 7, no. 4 (2020): 361–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.22363/2312-8313-2020-7-4-361-370.

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This article analyzes the potential impact of Turkeys foreign policy on Russias soft power in several regions of the world. The author believes that the policy of President R.T. Erdogan in the Mediterranean, the Middle East and the Aegean Sea can cause significant damage to the image and international prestige of Moscow. The article argues that Russian policy should minimize the toxic impact of R.T. Erdogans foreign policy on Russias soft power in the considered regions.
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Gunawan, Yordan, Aldha Febrila, Carissa Shifa Novendra, and Siti Asdilla Dzakiyyah. "GREECE MILITARIZATION IN AEGEAN ISLAND: AN INTERNATIONAL LAW PERSPECTIVE." Diponegoro Law Review 8, no. 2 (2023): 159–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.14710/dilrev.8.2.2023.159-174.

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In June 2022, President Erdogan suspended bilateral contact with Greece, citing their alleged militarization of islands in the eastern Aegean Sea, as a violation of international law. The problem that Turkey and Greece currently dealing with was caused in the first place by Greece's militarization of an island in the Aegean Sea, which was supposed to be demilitarized in the Lausanne Peace Treaty. Greece claimed that the militarization was for self-defense. In the research, the author will examine the demilitarized state of the island from the perspective of international law, and the claim tha
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Akhmedova, E. R. "THE ROLE OF INTERNATIONAL LAW AND UN INTERNATIONAL COURT OF JUSTICE IN RESOLVING AEGEAN DISPUTE." Constitutional State, no. 44 (December 23, 2021): 132–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.18524/2411-2054.2021.44.245076.

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The articles states that the delimitation of the continental shelf in the Aegean has been the main contentious issue between Greece and Turkey for the past 50 years. It has been unsuccessfully brought before the International Court of Justice, has been repeatedly discussed in the Security Council and has given rise to at least one delimitation agreement. The key problem is Greece would like to resolve the Aegean Sea dispute by the International Court of Justice but if Turkey accepts Greek offer, which is to refer the Aegean Sea dispute before the International Court of Justice, it may not only
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CHIROSCA, Ana-Maria, and Liliana RUSU. "MARINE TRAFFIC ON MEDITERRANEAN SEAS AND ITS DIVISIONS." Mechanical Testing and Diagnosis 9, no. 4 (2020): 12–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.35219/mtd.2019.4.02.

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The Mediterranean Sea is the largest sea in the world and its most important sub-divisions regarding maritime traffic are the Ionian Sea, Tyrrhenian Sea, Ligurian Sea, Balearic Sea, Alboran Sea, Aegean Sea and the Adriatic Sea.&#x0D; This paper analyses how marine traffic has evolved in this area over the centuries, considering the historical traffic corridors (such as the Adriatic-Ionian Transport Corridor), the climate, the different sea-level rise due to climate change, and the wave heights and its period.&#x0D; Water circulation on Mediterranean is affected on a short time scale due to wea
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Vandkilde, Helle. "Breakthrough of the Nordic Bronze Age: Transcultural Warriorhood and a Carpathian Crossroad in the Sixteenth Century BC." European Journal of Archaeology 17, no. 4 (2014): 602–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1179/1461957114y.0000000064.

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The breakthrough of the Nordic Bronze Age (NBA) c. 1600 BC as a koiné within Bronze Age Europe can be historically linked to the Carpathian Basin. Nordic distinctiveness entailed an entanglement of cosmology and warriorhood, albeit represented through different media in the hotspot zone (bronze) and in the northern zone (rock). In a Carpathian crossroad between the Eurasian Steppes, the Aegean world and temperate Europe during this time, a transcultural assemblage coalesced, fusing both tangible and intangible innovations from various different places. Superior warriorhood was coupled to belie
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Dickinson, Oliver. "Maria Relaki and Yiannis Papadatos (eds) From the Foundations to the Legacy of Minoan Archaeology. pp. 331, 69 b/w ills, 9 tables. 2018. Oxford: Oxbow Books (Sheffield Studies in Aegean Archaeology). ISBN 978-1-78570-926-5, paperback £38." Journal of Greek Archaeology 5 (January 1, 2020): 577–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.32028/jga.v5i.453.

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This volume contains final versions of the majority of papers given at the 14th Sheffield Round Table in Aegean Archaeology, 29-31 January 2010, so it has taken a long time to arrive, but it can be said straight away that specialists in Minoan archaeology should find it worth the wait. The Round Table was held to honour Keith Branigan, founder of the Sheffield Centre for Aegean Archaeology, and its topics were evidently chosen to reflect the areas in which he has made particularly significant contributions. Thus, the papers published here are concerned principally with different aspects of the
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Gudev, P. "The Aegean Sea of Contradictions (Part II)." World Economy and International Relations 65, no. 11 (2021): 115–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.20542/0131-2227-2021-65-11-115-122.

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The Aegean Sea as a common sea region for Greece and Turkey is not only an important source of aquatic biological and energy resources, but also a water area where both countries have their own interests in its economic development and use. Traditionally, this sea area, most of which is a high sea in terms of rules and provisions of the modern international maritime law, has been used by both states on a parity basis, and other extra-regional countries have had equal rights with them here. However, the desire of Greece and Turkey to extend their zones of sovereignty, sovereign rights and juris
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Yon, Jean-Baptiste. "A propos de l'expression AΛƳΠE XAIPE 3". Syria 80, № 1 (2003): 151–59. https://doi.org/10.3406/syria.2003.7749.

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Abstract — The formula ὰλνπɛ χαῖρɛ is frequently met in many parts of the Greek world (Egypt, Egea), and above all in Syria and Roman Near East. It is besides often possible to show links between uses of the phrase in funerary context and Syrians in the Aegean world, ὰλνπɛ χαῖρɛ is very frequently found in the area between Seleucia-on-the-Euphrates/Zeugma and Hierapolis-Membidj. Recent works in Zeugma have revealed new examples showing that it was ubiquitous in all levels of population. Funerary reliefs are related to those found in Palmyra where about ten texts have the same formula, but belo
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Gorbyk, Olena. "ARCHITECTURE OF THE MEDITERRANEAN OIKUMEN: HE BIRTH OF THE MONUMENTAL FACADE (2 MILLENNIUM BC) AND ITS TRANSFORMATION INTO A PORTICO (FIRST HALF OF THE 1ST MILLENNIUM BC)." Current problems of architecture and urban planning, no. 59 (March 1, 2021): 3–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.32347/2077-3455.2021.59.3-15.

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The article presents a general picture of the development of architecture of the Ancient World in the 3nd - 1st millennium BC. identified three main style-making cultures of the Mediterranean (Egypt, Mesopotamia with the Levant, the Aegean world with Antalya) which were formed in 3 thousand BC. and changing trends in the development of their architecture, the birth of the facade composition and its change from plane to spatial, which, according to the author, reveals historical development through architectural form – socio-cultural, worldview changes. At the level of 3 thousand BC. it is poss
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Dana, Madalina. "Les relations des cités du Pont-Euxin ouest et nord avec les centres cultuels du monde grec." Ancient Civilizations from Scythia to Siberia 17, no. 1 (2011): 47–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/092907711x575322.

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Abstract The aim of this paper is to examine the interactions between the cities of the western and northern shores of the Black Sea (from Apollonia to the Bosporan Kingdom) and the sanctuaries and oracles of the Aegean world. Through the networks between these peripheral cities and the religious centers like Delphi, Delos, Samothrace or Claros, over the centuries, the purpose is to question the way that the gifts, the theoriai and the consultation of oracles involved assuming and asserting a common Greek identity.
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Bintliff, John. "Editorial: Volume 2." Journal of Greek Archaeology 2 (January 1, 2017): v. http://dx.doi.org/10.32028/jga.v2i.568.

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This issue maintains our mission to publish across the whole time range of Greek Archaeology, with articles from the Palaeolithic to the Early Modern era, as well as reaching out from the Aegean to the wider Greek world. Lithics and Ceramics are accompanied by innovative Art History and Industrial Archaeology. Our book reviews are equally wideranging. Our authors are international, and include young researchers as well as longestablished senior scholars. I am sure you readers will find a feast of stimulating studies and thoughtful reviews.
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Whitley, James. "Vyron Antoniadis. Knossos and the Near East / Barbara Bohen. Kratos and Krater / Xenia Charalambidou and Catherine Morgan (eds). Interpreting the Seventh Century BC." Journal of Greek Archaeology 5 (January 1, 2020): 591–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.32028/jga.v5i.456.

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The Aegean and Mediterranean world between 1000 and 600 BCE (the Early Iron Age and the earliest part of the Archaic period) continues to attract considerable scholarly attention. And for good reason. The period between 1000 and 600 BCE is the formative period in Greek history, where those institutions we most firmly associate with Greek culture (the sanctuary, the polis, the alphabet and the literature that resulted from it) took their definitive form. It is also a period where investigation has to be undertaken primarily by archaeologists.
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Ciesielska, Adriana. "Teoria centrum-peryferii Immanuela Wallersteina i jej recepcja w archeologii. Studium przypadku: egejski system-świat w epoce brązu." Folia Praehistorica Posnaniensia 22 (July 31, 2018): 9–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.14746/fpp.2017.22.01.

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This paper present the work of Nick Kardulias concerning the Egean World – System In the Bronze Age. It is paradoxical that the application of the Wallerstein’s model is the most popular and the most useful in Bronze Age studies. In the current article I assess the Kardulias’ work, his worldsystems approach to Aegean societies in the third and second millennia BC. He writes that ] in this era of the studied area societies developed complex economies based on accumulation of substantial agricultural surpluses, craft specialization, and intricate distribution systems.
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STOEV, PAVEL, and HENRIK ENGHOFF. "The first indigenous species of the millipede genus Eurygyrus C.L. Koch, 1847 from the European mainland, with remarks on E. nicarius (Verhoeff, 1901) and E. euboeus (Verhoeff, 1901), and a key to the species of the genus (Diplopoda: Callipodida: Schizopetalidae)." Zootaxa 419, no. 1 (2004): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.419.1.1.

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The genus Eurygyrus C.L. Koch, 1847 (Schizopetalidae) comprises 17 described species from Asia Minor and the Aegean islands, some of them the largest callipodidans in the world. Here, we describe E. peloponnesius sp. n., the first species from the Greek mainland, found in the Taygetos Mts. The holotypes of E. euboeus (Verhoeff, 1901) and E. nicarius (Verhoeff, 1901), both known only from females, are re-examined and are found both to be distinct from the new species. A key to all, but two species of Eurygyrus is included.
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Pettersen, Alvyn. "The Laity — Bishop's pawn? Ignatius of Antioch on the Obedient Christian." Scottish Journal of Theology 44, no. 1 (1991): 39–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0036930600025229.

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In c.lO6 AD Ignatius, the bishop of Antioch, was being led through the province of Asia to Rome and to martyrdom. As he went, he wrote letters to a number of the Asian Christian churches on the Aegean coastline. His aim was to ensure the cohesion of these local communities by encouraging their maintenance of purity in practice and in idea. To this end his letters stressed a strongly constituted, centralised ecclesiastical authority, whose sphere of activity was delimited by a clear boundary between the church and the world.
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Dawe, Kevin. "Minotaurs or musonauts? ‘World Music’ and Cretan Music." Popular Music 18, no. 2 (1999): 209–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0261143000009053.

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In a recent issue of Popular Music devoted to the music of the Middle East, Martin Stokes and Ruth Davis note that ‘the movement of Middle Eastern sounds into Western cultural spaces … has largely been ignored’ (1996, p. 255) and that ‘Middle Eastern popular musics will probably continue to mark an unassimilable and unwelcome “otherness” for most Europeans and Americans’ (ibid, p. 257). In this paper, written partly in response to these remarks, I examine the movement of contemporary Middle Eastern sounds into Greek cultural space and Greek musical culture, a musical culture that has an affini
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Sıdık BAYRAM and Sıdıka EKREN. "Investigation of the Effects of Worm Fertilizer on the Yield and Quality of Tobacco." ISPEC Journal of Agricultural Sciences 5, no. 2 (2021): 290–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.46291/ispecjasvol5iss2pp290-295.

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Tobacco which still has a great economic importance in the world and Turkey provides extensive employment opportunities from growing to evaluation stage to a certain part of our people and is produced as a family enterprise for centuries in our various regions. The aim of the study was to determine in the effects of worm fertilizer on Aegean type tobacco yield and some quality parameters. The search was carried out in a farmer field in Saruhanli district of Manisa province in 2019. Saribaglar-407 type tobacco was used as a research material. Experimental design was Randomized Complete Parcel D
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ΜΑΡΙΟΛΑΚΟΣ, Η., and Δ. ΘΕΟΧΑΡΗΣ. "Shorelines displacement in the Saronic gulf area during the last 18.000 years and the Kihrea Paleolake." Bulletin of the Geological Society of Greece 34, no. 1 (2001): 405. http://dx.doi.org/10.12681/bgsg.17043.

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The wider area of Attica region and generally the Saronic Gulf contains a significant part of the history and mythology of the ancient Hellenic world. Without overreacting, it could be said that it is one of the most sacred regions of Ancient Greece and perhaps is the only region in the whole world that is related to the birth of so many gods, goddesses and heroes. This fact is linked to the paleo-climatic and geo-environmental changes that have been taken place in the Aegean and Peri-Aegean area and especially in the Saronic Gulf. As it is known, during the last 18000 years, which is after th
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Vallianatos, Evaggelos. "Deciphering and Appeasing the Heavens: The History and Fate of an Ancient Greek Computer." Leonardo 45, no. 3 (2012): 250–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/leon_a_00367.

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In 1900, Greek sponge divers discovered an ancient Greek treasure in the waters of the Aegean island of Antikythera: a device with gears dubbed the Antikythera Mechanism. Scientists studied it for almost a century and eventually declared it the most advanced machine preserved from the ancient world. This device predicted solar and lunar eclipses and harmonized the Greeks' sacrifices to their gods with their Panhellenic games and agriculture. This geared computer from the 2nd century BCE is now said to mirror the philosophy of Aristotle and the science of Archimedes. It was the product of an ad
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Panagiotopoulou, E., J. Van der Plicht, A. Papathanasiou, et al. "Diet and Social Divisions in Protohistoric Greece: Integrating Analyses of stable Isotopes and Mortuary Practices." Journal of Greek Archaeology 3 (January 1, 2018): 95–115. http://dx.doi.org/10.32028/jga.v3i.524.

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The Early Iron Age (EIA, 11th – 8th century BC) in Greece is the transitional period following the end of the Mycenaean civilisation. The first half of this period is the so-called Protogeometric period (11th – 10th century BC) during which the mainland communities had to recover from the collapse of the Mycenaean palatial system, a centralised economic system of a stratified society. Social and economic structures were both severely damaged in the 12th century BC, resulting in various changes in technology, material culture and mortuary practices across the entire Aegean in the ensuing period
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