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1

Harper, John L., Marta Petricioli, and Ennion di Nolfo. "L'Italia in Asia Minore: Equilibrio mediterraneo e ambizioni imperaliste alla vigilia della prima guerra mondiale." American Historical Review 90, no. 2 (April 1985): 455. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1852763.

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Vacante, Salvatore. "Le paludi di Eritre: un'interpretazione ecologico-ambientale." Klio 99, no. 2 (February 7, 2018): 399–419. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/klio-2017-0032.

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Riassunto: Le fonti relative alle paludi di Eritre in Asia Minore sono qui riesaminate in chiave storico-ambientale. La menzione dell'organizzazione degli heleoreontes o ‚Guardiani delle paludi‘ su una pietra confinaria dai dintorni di Eritre fornisce evidenza circa l'amministrazione della chōra cittadina nel periodo tardo Classico – primo Ellenistico. Una nuova datazione per l'iscrizione è suggerita, precisamente al tardo IV secolo a. C., quando le città greche della costa anatolica furono conquistate dai Macedoni. I ‚Guardiani delle paludi‘ erano probabilmente membri di una delle chiliastyes (‚gruppi di mille‘) territoriali forse introdotte sotto Alessandro Magno. L'evidenza disponibile induce ad annoverare le locali paludi nel gruppo delle antiche e oggi per lo più estinte ‚foreste allagate‘ mediterranee.
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3

Di Benedetto, Paolo. "Costruire e ri-costruire la storia e l’identità d’Asia in età imperiale." Ars & Humanitas 16, no. 1 (December 22, 2022): 47–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.4312/ars.16.1.47-63.

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Nell’antica Grecia, il mito delle Amazzoni, che, nell’immaginario collettivo greco, rappresentavano l’elemento “altro”, è spesso associato a tradizioni di fondazione e di eponimia in rapporto a città, soprattutto nella Ionia e nell’Eolide d’Asia Minore. Queste tradizioni si possono rintracciare in racconti locali, che si sono conservati fino all’età imperiale romana, in un momento in cui, in particolare, si assiste ad una ripresa delle tradizioni greche arcaiche e classiche durante la seconda sofistica. L’epoca dell’imperatore Adriano, più di ogni altra, sarebbe stata importante per la rinascita ed il recupero di questi miti di fondazione, in quanto molte città ioniche ed eoliche (come Efeso, Smirne, Cuma e Mirina) creavano un nesso con il loro passato e con la loro origine per mezzo della figura dell’Amazzone, rappresentata anche sulla monetazione locale, con l’obiettivo di affermare la loro antichità e priorità: tali tradizioni sono attestate anche nelle fonti letterarie. Grazie alla remota antichità ed adattabilità, il mito di fondazione basato sulle Amazzoni attraversò diversi processi di rielaborazione e rifunzionalizzazione e fu riutilizzato come “paradigma” in Asia Minore, soprattutto in età imperiale, per sottolineare l’archaiologia delle antiche poleis. Queste elaborazioni, fondate su antiche tradizioni mitiche locali, sono state determinanti per riaffermare e rivendicare l’identità culturale ed etnica dei Greci sotto l’Impero romano in un preciso momento storico. Obiettivo del presente lavoro è indagare i processi di costruzione e ri-costruzione dell’identità cittadina attraverso l’analisi delle fonti relative ai racconti di fondazione e di eponimia attestati in Ionia e in Eolide in relazione al particolare contesto legato al revival delle tradizioni locali greche in età imperiale.
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Scirpo, Paolo Daniele. "Rezension zu: Emiliano Cruccas, Gli dei senza nome. Sincretismi, ritualità e iconografia dei Cabiri e dei Grandi Dei tra Grecia e Asia minore." Frankfurter elektronische Rundschau zur Altertumskunde, no. 31 (December 26, 2016): 65–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.21248/fera.31.190.

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5

Segre, Claudio G. "L'Accordo Italo-Russo di Racconigi. Guido DonniniL'Italia in Asia Minore: Equilibrio mediterraneo e ambizioni imperialiste alla vigilia della prima guerra mondiale. Marta Petricioli." Journal of Modern History 58, no. 1 (March 1986): 346–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/242998.

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6

Bosworth, Richard. "Reviews : Marta Petricioli, L'Italia in Asia Minore: equilibrio mediterraneo e ambizioni imperialiste alla vigilia della prima guerra mondiale, Florence, Sansoni Editore, 1983. 478pp. IL32,000." European History Quarterly 17, no. 1 (January 1987): 108–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/026569148701700109.

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7

Chiafele, Anna. "Il viaggiatore sedentario (1993) e Città e dintorni (2001): sensibilità postmoderna e etica ambientale in due testi odeporici di Luigi Malerba." Quaderni d'italianistica 36, no. 2 (July 27, 2016): 155–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.33137/q.i..v36i2.26903.

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In questo saggio si vogliono prendere in disamina due testi di Luigi Malerba: Il viaggiatore sedentario (1993) e Città e dintorni (2001). Questi testi odeporici raccontano i viaggi di Malerba in Cina, Thailandia, Europa, Nord America, Grecia e Asia Minore e raccolgono le riflessioni dell’autore nate e rielaborate lungo un ampio arco di tempo. Grazie al supporto teorico offerto dal lavoro di studiosi quali Serenella Iovino, Serpil Oppermann, Ursula Heise e Rob Nixon, quest’articolo evidenzia la sensibilità postmoderna di Malerba verso l’ambiente e la sua maestria nel raffigurare il rapporto complementare esistente tra l’essere umano e la natura, tra l’umano e il non-umano. Dalle pagine di questi testi odeporici emerge, con forza, la figura di un uomo sensibile, intelligente, curioso, ironico e attento alle storie di tutti quegli esseri ignoti di passaggio sul pianeta Terra. Le osservazioni di Malerba non cadono mai in localismo nostalgico e tantomeno in “utopia regressiva” (Parole al vento 230). L’autore, invece, mostra rispetto e premura per ogni luogo, abitazione, cultura e popolo con cui entra in contatto nei sui numerosi viaggi a “zig-zag” (Viaggiatore 8) sempre fatti in compagnia della moglie Anna Lapenna.
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8

Kotecki, Dariusz. "„Bądź wierny aż do śmierci” (Ap 2,10)." Verbum Vitae 11 (January 14, 2007): 159–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.31743/vv.1426.

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L'articola affronta il tema della fedelta nel libro dell'Apocalisse sulla base dell'analisi di Ap 2,10: "Sii fedele alla morte". Questo testo fa parte della lettera alla Chiesa di Smirne e nella struttura della lettera costituisce l'esortazione particolare del Risorto alla sua Chiesa che vive nelle difficolta, tribolazioni, poverta e viene in certo modo perseguitata dai Giudei, chiamati "sinagoga di satana". La chiesa di Smirne e l'unica, accanto a quella di Filadelfia, alla quale Gesu non indirizza nessuna critica. L'esortazione "sii fedele fino alla morte" non significa necessariamente un invito al martirio, pero non si puo escludere tale interpretazione, perche i cristiani nel libro dell'Apocalisse sono visti com e potenziali martiri. Quest'esortzione e valida per tutte le communita ecclesiali di Asia Minore del tempo dell'Apocalisse e per tutta la Chiesa di ogni tempo e posto. Questa e un invito alla vita secondo lo stile pasquale, che ci ha insegnato Gesu Cristo - "testimone fedele". La realizzazione di quest'esortazione non e possibile senza una collaborazione continua con la grazia di Gesu, che proviene dal suo mistero pasquale. Cristano rimane fedele solo se assorbisce tutte le forze da Gesu Risorto, perció l'Apocalisse dice che cristiani "hanno vinto per mezzo del sangue dell'Agnello" (Ap 12,11).
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LAÇİN, Davut. "Petrographical and chemical properties of building stone, plaster and mortar used in Güvercinkayası Settlement (Asia Minore): An overview of material usage habits in the Middle Chalcolithic period." Proceedings of the Geologists' Association 132, no. 5 (October 2021): 563–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pgeola.2021.08.004.

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10

Urbainczyk, Theresa. "S. Bussi, Economia e demografia della schiavitù in Asia Minore ellenistico-romana. Milan: Edizioni Universitarie di Lettere Economia Diritto, 2001. Pp. 178. ISBN 88-791-6151-2. €15.50." Journal of Roman Studies 96 (November 2006): 228. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0075435800001039.

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11

Blakely, Sandra. "(E). Cruccas Gli dei senza nome: Sincretismi, ritualità e iconografia dei Cabiri e dei Grandi Dei tra Grecia e Asia minore. Rahden: Verlag Marie Leidorf, 2014. Pp. 306. €64.80. 9783896469939." Journal of Hellenic Studies 136 (2016): 260–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0075426916000732.

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12

Borsch, Jonas. "Erdbeben im römischen Kleinasien und die Grenzen der Resilienz." Historia 70, no. 2 (2021): 206. http://dx.doi.org/10.25162/historia-2021-0009.

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13

ANDERSON, William. "Asia Minor Ampullae." Eastern Christian Art 2 (December 1, 2005): 9–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.2143/eca.2.0.2004545.

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14

Niu, Lili, KeYu Shi, Jing-Jing Xie, Sen Liu, and Tao Zhong. "Divergent Evolutional Mode and Purifying Selection of the KIT Gene in European and Asian Domestic Pig Breeds." BioMed Research International 2018 (August 19, 2018): 1–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2018/8932945.

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The recent geographic expansion of wild boars and the even more recent development of numerous domestic pigs have spurred exploration on pig domestic origins. The porcine KIT gene has been showed to affect pleiotropic effects, blood parameters, and coat colour phenotypes, especially the white colour phenotype formation in European commercial breeds. Here, we described the use of SNPs to identify different selection patterns on the porcine KIT gene and the phylogenetic relationships of the inferred haplotypes. The phylogenetic tree revealed four clades in European and Asian wild and domestic pigs: two major clades with European and Asian origins and one minor clade with Iberian origins as well as the other minor clade in Asia, consistent with the major introgression of domestic Asian pigs in Europe around 18th -19th century. The domestication history of pigs, which occurred in the domestication centers (Europe and Asia), has also been demonstrated by mtDNA analysis. Furthermore, both Asian and European domestic pigs evolved under purifying selection. This study indicated that domestic pigs in Europe and Asia have different lineage origins but the porcine KIT gene was undergoing a purifying selection during their evolutional histories.
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15

Trinh, Dinh Thi. "Australia’s engagement with East Asia: Evolution of a re-orientation in foreign policy." Science & Technology Development Journal - Social Sciences & Humanities 1, no. X1 (June 30, 2017): 5–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.32508/stdjssh.v1ix1.427.

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The outbreak and warfare activities of World War II unintendedly forced Australia to re-orient their security and defense thinking. Having realized that the British security environment and that of their own were far diverged from each other, Australia began to re-orient their priority in foreign policy from European issues to East Asian ones. For the Bristish, East Asia is the Far East but in Australia’s new perspective it is the Near North; thus, the security matters in East Asia are closely linked with Australian national interests. Australian independent diplomacy has been shaped during the course following their re-orienting foreign and security thinking to East Asia. This paper examines the re-orienting of Australia’s strategic thinking from Europecentered problems to Asia-centered ones as well as changing orientation towards ‘Asia’ and ‘Asian engagement’. It also argues that since it had formed, Australia’s Asia-oriented foreign policy, despite minor constraints, has been continuously developed until today.
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16

Trinh, Dinh Thi. "Australia’s engagement with East Asia: Evolution of a re-orientation in foreign policy." Science & Technology Development Journal - Social Sciences & Humanities 1, no. X1 (June 30, 2017): 5–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.15419/stdjssh.v1ix1.427.

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The outbreak and warfare activities of World War II unintendedly forced Australia to re-orient their security and defense thinking. Having realized that the British security environment and that of their own were far diverged from each other, Australia began to re-orient their priority in foreign policy from European issues to East Asian ones. For the Bristish, East Asia is the Far East but in Australia’s new perspective it is the Near North; thus, the security matters in East Asia are closely linked with Australian national interests. Australian independent diplomacy has been shaped during the course following their re-orienting foreign and security thinking to East Asia. This paper examines the re-orienting of Australia’s strategic thinking from Europecentered problems to Asia-centered ones as well as changing orientation towards ‘Asia’ and ‘Asian engagement’. It also argues that since it had formed, Australia’s Asia-oriented foreign policy, despite minor constraints, has been continuously developed until today.
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17

van den Hout, Theo, Maciej Popko, and Iwona Zych. "Religions of Asia Minor." Journal of the American Oriental Society 119, no. 2 (April 1999): 341. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/606134.

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18

Mitchell, Stephen. "STRABONE ON ASIA MINOR." Classical Review 52, no. 2 (September 2002): 270–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/cr/52.2.270.

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19

Ceylan, Burcu. "EPISKOPEIA IN ASIA MINOR." Late Antique Archaeology 3, no. 2 (2006): 169–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/22134522-90000064.

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Although there are several complexes in Asia Minor which have been proposed as bishops’ residences, only Side, Miletus and Ephesus can be identified with certainty as episkopeia. This paper mainly focuses on these three examples, evaluating architectural elements in order to classify rooms and assess their usage. It will shed light on the physical surroundings of the late antique bishop and provide clues about his life. At the same time, the study will try to define the place of episkopeia in the architecture of the period and their physical position within the late antique city
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20

Langer, Gerhard. "Rabbinic References to Asia Minor." Journal of Ancient Judaism 5, no. 2 (May 14, 2014): 259–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.30965/21967954-00502011.

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The article surveys references to Asia Minor in Rabbinic sources and concludes that there is little evidence preserved in Rabbinic literature. Most references are vague or even legendary and cannot be connected with real places. The Rabbis seem to have recognized Asia Minor only as far away.
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21

Foss, Clive. "Pilgrimage in Medieval Asia Minor." Dumbarton Oaks Papers 56 (2002): 129. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1291859.

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22

Collins, Nina L., and Paul Treblico. "Jewish Communities in Asia Minor." Novum Testamentum 34, no. 4 (October 1992): 410. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1561189.

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23

Langer, Gerhard. "Rabbinic References to Asia Minor." Journal of Ancient Judaism 5, no. 2 (November 1, 2014): 259–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.13109/jaju.2014.5.2.259.

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24

Mitchell, Stephen. "BARBARA LEVICK AND ASIA MINOR." Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies 50, Supplement_100 (December 1, 2007): xv—xviii. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.2041-5370.2007.tb02459.x.

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Vucetic, Sanja. "Sexualities in Roman Asia Minor." Heritage Turkey 5 (December 9, 2015): 8–9. http://dx.doi.org/10.18866/biaa2015.108.

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Christodoulou, A. "Cyprus and Asia Minor Defense." Kathedra, no. 13 (2022): 110–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.52607/26587157_2022_13_110.

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27

Das, Dilip K. "Evolving Domestic Bond Markets and Financial Deepening in Asia." Global Economy Journal 14, no. 1 (April 2014): 89–112. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/gej-2013-0057.

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The principal thesis of this paper is growth and development of the debt securities markets in Asia, which resulted in financial deepening. In the post-Asian financial crisis period development of Asian currency dominated long-term bond markets was given a high priority. Conception and launch of the ABMI initiative proved to be exceedingly meaningful in this regard. Additionally, with an objective to develop well-capitalized regional bond markets, the EMEAP group of central banks launched the Asian Bond Fund or the ABF1 and ABF2. This process was exceedingly helpful in providing opportunities for learning the game of issuing and investing in bonds. In the post-Asian crisis phase central bankers and finance ministries in several Asian economies were successful in their efforts to develop domestic or local currency bond markets, which included both the government and corporate bond sectors. The paper discusses both the government and corporate bond markets in Asia. During the decade of the 2000s domestic debt securities markets in several Asian economies expanded dramatically. This paper shows that the global financial crisis and the Eurozone sovereign debt crisis have had both direct and indirect impacts over the global economy. However, statistical data show that the global financial crisis (2007–2009) had only a minor impact on the Asian bond issue trend.
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Dokou, Christina. "From Asia Minor to Asia for Minors: Pregnant Boys and Girl Warriors as Empowering Authorial Metaphors in Lilika Nakos and Maxine Hong Kingston." Σύγκριση 23 (February 1, 2013): 133. http://dx.doi.org/10.12681/comparison.25.

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Το άρθρο ερευνά τις ομοιότητες μεταξύ του διηγήματος «Μητρότης» της Λιλίκας Νάκου και του μυθιστορήματος Η Γυναίκα Πολεμιστής: Αναμνήσεις Μιας Παιδικής Ηλικίας Ανάμεσα σε Φαντάσματα της Κινεζο-Αμερικανίδας συγγραφέως Μαξίν Χονγκ Κίνγκστον. Οι δύο συγγραφείς ταυτίζουν την έννοια της κειμενικής μεταφοράς και ερμηνευτικής πολλαπλότητας με τη μορφή του ανδρογυνικού εφήβου, δηλαδή ενός ατόμου το οποίο αφενός φέρει τα ψυχολογικά χαρακτηριστικά που αποδίδονται παραδοσιακά στο ένα ή στο άλλο φύλο και αφετέρου βρίσκεται σε μία ηλικία μεταβατική, γεμάτη προβλήματα, αλλά και δυνατότητες για το μέλλον. Στη Νάκου η μορφή αυτή είναι ένα αγόρι που γίνεται “μητέρα” και στην Κίνγκστον ένα κορίτσι που ταυτίζεται με τον θρύλο της παρενδυτικής πολεμίστριας Μουλάν. Ακολουθώντας το Μπατλεριανό μοτίβο της επιτελεστικότητας ως ανατρεπτικής παρωδίας των κοινωνικών σταθερών του φύλου, οι δύο συγγραφείς κατασκευάζουν έναν μυθοπλαστικό εαυτό που αντιπαρέρχεται επιτυχώς τις αντιξοότητες της βίαιης μεταφοράς τους σε μία άλλη γη, ιδιαίτερα καθώς αυτή εκφράζει και προκαλεί το Οριενταλιστικό χάσμα μεταξύ Δύσης και Ανατολής· τη διχασμένη κληρονομιά και ταυτότητα που επωμίζονται ως αποτέλεσμα· και τα προβλήματα της ανάληψης από μέρους τους μίας ταυτότητας δημιουργού-συγγραφέως που αντιτίθεται στα σεξιστικά στερεότυπα της παραδοσιακής τους κουλτούρας.
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Wang, Bin, Xiao Luo, and Jian Liu. "How Robust is the Asian Precipitation–ENSO Relationship during the Industrial Warming Period (1901–2017)?" Journal of Climate 33, no. 7 (April 1, 2020): 2779–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1175/jcli-d-19-0630.1.

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AbstractInstrumental observations (1901–2017) are used to uncover the seasonality, regionality, spatial–temporal coherency, and secular change of the relationship between El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) and Asian precipitation (AP). We find an abrupt seasonal reversal of the AP–ENSO relationship occurring from October to November in a large area of Asia north of 20°N due to a rapid northward shift of the ENSO-induced subsidence from Indonesia to the Philippines. We identified six subregions that have significant correlations with ENSO over the past 116 years with |r| > 0.5 (p < 0.001). Regardless of the prominent subregional differences, the total amount of AP during a monsoon year (from May to the next April) shows a robust response to ENSO with r = −0.86 (1901–2017), implying a 4.5% decrease in the total Asian precipitation for 1° of SST increase in the equatorial central Pacific. Rainfall in tropical Asia (Maritime Continent, Southeast Asia, and India) shows a stable relationship with ENSO with significant 31-yr running correlation coefficients (CCs). However, precipitation in North China, the East Asian winter monsoon front zone, and arid central Asia exhibit unstable relationships with ENSO. Since the 1950s, the AP–ENSO relationships have been enhanced in all subregions except over India. A major factor that determines the increasing trends of the AP–ENSO relationship is the increasing ENSO amplitude. Notably, the AP response is asymmetric with respect to El Niño and La Niña and markedly different between the major and minor ENSO events. The results provide guidance for seasonal prediction and a metric for assessment of climate models’ capability to reproduce the Asian hydroclimate response to ENSO and projected future change.
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Destephen, Sylvain. "The Late Milestones of Asia Minor." Gephyra 16 (November 15, 2018): 173–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.37095/gephyra.480120.

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31

Darbyshire, Gareth, Stephen Mitchell, and Levent Vardar. "The Galatian settlement in Asia Minor." Anatolian Studies 50 (December 2000): 75–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3643015.

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Until very recently almost everything of substance that was known about the Galatians was derived from historical, more specifically Greek and Roman, sources. Modern perceptions of the Galatians have accordingly not only been one-sided, but have also depended on outsiders' views and representations of a complex culture. A stereotypical picture established itself in the modern literature, which itself was moulded by the preconceptions of ancient Greek observers. This view, which will also provide a chronological framework for an examination of Galatian culture, may be summarised broadly as follows: the Galatians were groups of Celticspeaking peoples who arrived on the borders of the Classical world, Macedonia, Greece and Asia Minor, around 281 BC (see fig 1). Warlike, barbarous and set upon raiding and plunder, they attacked cities and sanctuaries in Greece, before crossing to Asia Minor where they conducted themselves in similar fashion until the various efforts of Hellenistic rulers forced them to settle in north central Anatolia, the region around Ankara (see fig 2).
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32

Smith, Genaro Ky Ly. "Asia Minor, Los Angeles June 1979." Amerasia Journal 26, no. 3 (January 2000): 133–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.17953/amer.26.3.3115x42661308637.

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33

COHEN, G. M. "Katoikiai, katoikoiand Macedonians in Asia Minor." Ancient Society 22 (January 1, 1991): 41–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.2143/as.22.0.2005909.

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34

Karatsareas, Petros. "The Asia Minor Greek Adpositional Cycle." Journal of Greek Linguistics 16, no. 1 (2016): 47–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15699846-01601001.

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This paper examines the interplay of language-internal continuity and external influence in the cyclical development of the Asia Minor Greek adpositional system. The Modern Greek dialects of Asia Minor inherited an adpositional system of the Late Medieval Greek type whereby secondary adpositions regularly combined with primary adpositions to encode spatial region. Secondary adpositions could originally precede simple adpositions ([preposition + preposition + NP ACC ]) or follow the adpositional complement ([preposition + NP ACC + postposition]). Asia Minor Greek replicated the structure of Ottoman Turkish postpositional phrases to resolve this variability, fixing the position of secondary adpositions after the complement and thus developing circumpositions of the type [preposition + NP ACC + postposition]. Later, some varieties dropped the primary preposition se from circumpositional phrases, leaving (secondary) postpositions as the only overt relator ([NP ACC + postposition]) in some environments. In addition, a number of Turkish postpositions were borrowed wholesale, thus enriching the Greek adpositional inventory.
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Chichagov, V. P. "Anthropogenic arid plains of Asia Minor." Geography and Natural Resources 31, no. 1 (March 2010): 86–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.gnr.2010.03.016.

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36

Mitchell, Stephen. "Archaeology in Asia Minor 1990-98." Archaeological Reports, no. 45 (1998): 125. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/580979.

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37

Mitchell, Stephen. "Archaeology in Asia Minor 1985-1989." Archaeological Reports, no. 36 (1989): 83. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/581028.

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38

Schwonek, Matthew R. "Ionian Vision: Greece in Asia Minor." Small Wars & Insurgencies 28, no. 2 (March 4, 2017): 404–5. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09592318.2017.1288412.

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39

Jin, L., Y. Peng, F. Chen, and A. Ganopolski. "Modeling sensitivity study of the possible impact of snow and glaciers developing over Tibetan Plateau on Holocene African-Asian summer monsoon climate." Climate of the Past Discussions 4, no. 6 (December 11, 2008): 1265–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/cpd-4-1265-2008.

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Abstract. The impacts of various scenarios of snow and glaciers developing over the Tibetan Plateau on climate change in Afro-Asian monsoon region and other regions during the Holocene (9 kyr BP–0 kyr BP) are studied by using the coupled climate model of intermediate complexity, CLIMBER-2. The simulations show that the imposed snow and glaciers over the Tibetan Plateau in the mid-Holocene induce global summer temperature decreases, especially in the northern parts of Europe, Asia, and North America. At the same time, with the imposed snow and glaciers, summer precipitation decreases strongly in North Africa and South Asia as well as northeastern China, while it increases in Southeast Asia and the Mediterranean. For the whole period of Holocene (9 kyr BP–0 kyr BP), the response of vegetation cover to the imposed snow and glaciers cover over the Tibetan Plateau is not synchronous in South Asia and in North Africa, showing an earlier and a more rapid decrease in vegetation cover in North Africa from 9 to 6 kyr BP while it has only minor influence on that in South Asia until 5 kyr BP. Imposed gradually increased snow and glacier cover over the Tibetan Plateau causes temperature increases in South Asia and it decreases in North Africa and Southeast Asia during 6 kyr BP to 0 kyr BP. The precipitation decreases rapidly in North Africa and South Asia while it decreases slowly or unchanged during 6 kyr BP to 0 kyr BP with imposed snow and glacier cover over the Tibetan Plateau. The different scenarios of snow and glacier developing over the Tibetan Plateau would result in differences in variation of temperature, precipitation and vegetation cover in North Africa, South Asia and Southeast Asia. The model results show that the response of climate change in African-Asian monsoon region to snow and glacier cover over the Tibetan Plateau is in the way that the snow and glaciers amplify the effect of vegetation feedback and, hence, further amplify orbital forcing.
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40

Veerappan, Deepak, Raju Vyas, V. Giri, and K. Karanth. "A taxonomic mystery for more than 180 years: the identity and systematic position of Brachysaura minor (HARDWICKE &amp; GRAY, 1827)." Vertebrate Zoology 65, no. 3 (November 13, 2015): 371–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/vz.65.e31528.

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Brachysaura is a monotypic genus of agamid lizard found in the Indian subcontinent; the identity and systematic position of B. minor has been long debated, and it has at times been subsumed into Agama, Charasia and Laudakia, with some authors suggesting affinities to Calotes. We constructed nuclear and mitochondrial phylogenetic trees including Brachysaura and allied agamid genera to resolve its phylogenetic position. We also compared osteology and external morphology with the genera Agama, Calotes and Laudakia. Hemipenial morphology was compared with Calotes and some other agamids from South Asia. Both nuclear and mitochondrial phylogenies demonstrate that Brachysaura is nested within the widespread South and Southeast Asian genus Calotes, with which it also shares certain external morphological, osteological and hemipenial characters. Adaptations to ground dwelling in Brachysaura minor has resulted in unique modifications to its body plan, which is likely why generic allocation has been long confused. This study also highlights the need for an integrated systematic approach to resolve taxonomic ambiguity in Asian agamids.
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41

Wyatt, David K. "Presidential Address: Five Voices From Southeast Asia's Past." Journal of Asian Studies 53, no. 4 (November 1994): 1076–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2059234.

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In 1962 the association for asian studies met, as this year, in Boston, at its fourteenth annual meeting, when the Association was addressed by its President that year, Lauriston Sharp. In his search for “some of the continuities and discontinuities of human experience in Southeast Asia,” Sharp proposed that “we should first work back from the present and up the little streams, the short runs of Southeast Asian history and prehistory” (Sharp 1962:5). Following Sharp's metaphor of time as the river, we can find that the rocks and rivulets, the surges and pools and mighty dams of a very minor river in the northern part of what is now called Thailand have much to tell us of the rich and complex past of Southeast Asia. We are concerned here with a small and, most would argue, inconsequential river; but any river at its spate is capable of raising and pushing along the largest boulders. I would hope that this particular river might serve to wash clean and highlight anew the ground that Sharp so eloquently covered so many years ago.
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Ashton, Richard H. J. "Astragaloi on Greek Coins of Asia Minor." Archimède. Archéologie et histoire ancienne 6 (2019): 113–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.47245/archimede.0006.ds2.05.

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43

Zangeneh, Hakhamanesh. "From Jena to Freiburg, via Asia Minor." Gatherings: The Heidegger Circle Annual 3 (2013): 88–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.5840/gatherings201336.

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44

Kuhrt, Amelie, and Martha T. Roth. "Law Collections from Mesopotamia and Asia Minor." American Journal of Legal History 41, no. 1 (January 1997): 143. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/845485.

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45

Bowersock, G. W., and H. W. Parke. "The Oracles of Apollo in Asia Minor." Classical World 81, no. 1 (1987): 65. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/4350154.

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46

Robertson, Sam. "Pliny in Asia Minor: The Christian Question." Literary Imagination 19, no. 2 (July 2017): 172. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/litimag/imx039.

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47

Kitromilides, Paschalis M. "Greek irredentism in Asia minor and Cyprus." Middle Eastern Studies 26, no. 1 (January 1990): 3–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00263209008700801.

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48

Coulton, J. J. "Pedestals as ‘altars’ in Roman Asia Minor." Anatolian Studies 55 (December 2005): 127–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0066154600000697.

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AbstractThe Greek word bomos usually means ‘altar’, but in inscriptions of the Roman period it sometimes refers to statue bases and other forms of support, where the meaning ‘altar’ is not appropriate. Many scholars believe that in addition to its normal meaning of cult or votive altar and (by extension) funerary altar, bomos could also mean a pedestal, socle or platform in general. This paper examines the use of the term bomos in Roman Asia Minor for statue bases, for pedestals for sarcophagi, ash chests and columns, and for other structures which are not altars, concentrating particularly on their shapes. It concludes that in all these cases the element called bomos had the shape of a normal type of altar, and that in many cases (but not all) it also carried some of the symbolic value of an altar.
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Galiotou, Eleni, Nikitas Karanikolas, Ioanna Manolessou, Nikolaos Pantelidis, Dimitris Papazachariou, Angela Ralli, and George Xydopoulos. "Asia Minor Greek: Towards a Computational Processing." Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences 147 (August 2014): 458–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.sbspro.2014.07.138.

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50

Sikkenga, Elizabeth. "Asia Minor Greek: Contact-Induced Change Retention." Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society 19, no. 1 (June 25, 1993): 323. http://dx.doi.org/10.3765/bls.v19i1.1499.

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