Academic literature on the topic 'Unpublished necropolis'

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Journal articles on the topic "Unpublished necropolis"

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Orel, Sara E. "Two Unpublished Stelae from Beni Hasan." Journal of Egyptian Archaeology 81, no. 1 (1995): 216–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/030751339508100123.

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البكل, محمود لبيب حسن البكل, دعاء بدر الدين بدر الدين, منى مصطفى مصطفي, and باسم جهاد جهاد. "Unpublished Anthropoid Wooden Coffins from Ancient Philadelphia Necropolis." مجلة البحوث والدراسات الاثرية 12, no. 12 (2023): 43–62. https://doi.org/10.21608/archmu.2025.171623.1051.

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Lysandrou, Vasiliki. "Tomb architecture and distribution in the Eastern Necropolis of Nea Paphos, Cyprus." Studies in Ancient Art and Civilisation 24 (December 1, 2020): 231–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.12797/saac.24.2020.24.10.

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Tomb architecture and distribution in the Eastern Necropolis of Nea Paphos, Cyprus
 The Eastern necropolis of Nea Paphos is one of the most significant funerary landscapes of Cyprus, primarily because of its connection with the capital of the island during the Hellenistic and Roman times, and therefore of importance for the archaeology of the Eastern Mediterranean. The first systematic exploration of the site took place in the 1980s in the form of rescue excavations. Only limited research has been undertaken since then. This article discusses the necropolis based on unpublished material f
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Jeremic, Gordana, Snezana Golubovic, and Slobodan Drca. "Unpublished glass findings from the eastern necropolis of Naissus (Jagodin Mala, Nis)." Starinar, no. 67 (2017): 109–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.2298/sta1767109j.

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In the period from 1952-1967, during the systematic archaeological excavations of the area of the eastern necropolis of Naissus, in the modern day city quarter of Jagodin Mala, in Nis, a large number of glass objects was found. A representative portion of the findings was published in various publications, while the other findings, which belong to the study collection of the National Museum in Nis, have not been the subject of any separate study. These are new kinds of findings, such as glass lamps, window panes and tesserae, and the collection also includes the familiar, standard repertoire o
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Price, Jonathan J. "Five Inscriptions from Jaffa." Scripta Classica Israelica 22 (May 9, 2020): 215–31. https://doi.org/10.71043/sci.v22i.3721.

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Five unpublished inscriptions from the once-huge Roman-period Jewish necropolis in Jaffa are presented with edited texts and interpretation. The five texts shed light on the Jewish life in Jaffa in antiquity, and add to the evidence of an Egyptian Jewish community there.
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Kapuran, Aleksandar. "Jewellery made of bronze sheets from the prehistoric necropolis at the village of Velebit, near Kanjiza." Starinar, no. 68 (2018): 33–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.2298/sta1868033k.

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In 1970, a Bronze Age necropolis in the village of Velebit to the north of Vojvodina was fully explored, but has remained unpublished until today. Apart from possessing all of the features of a H?gelgr?ber culture complex, some finds indicate connections to the Belegis - Cruceni culture, developed at the very south of the Carpathian basin. In this paper, we shall present only some of the most attractive finds from the necropolis, including jewellery made of bronze sheets. They include spiral greaves, a belt and finger-rings. The remaining finds shall be presented in a monograph that is being p
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De Sciscio, Ylenia. "GIOIELLI DALLA NECROPOLI DI MOZIA." Vicino Oriente 28 (2024): 499–513. http://dx.doi.org/10.53131/vo2724-587x2024_35.

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This paper deals with the Phoenician-Punic jewellery found in the archaic necropolis of Motya during the excavations led by J. Whitaker and V. Tusa. Through the analysis of published and unpublished finds preserved in the “Giuseppe Whitaker” Museum in Motya, it was possible to identify and analyze the most attested types of jewels.
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Bonsangue, Maria-Luisa, Valérie Bel, and Maxime Guillaume. "Nouvelles inscriptions de la nécropole de la Robine à Narbonne." Revue archéologique de Narbonnaise 52, no. 1 (2019): 149–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/ran.2019.1986.

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The recent epigraphic discoveries in the necropolis of Robine in Narbonne (Narbo Martius), in the east of the city, are a rare example in this location of funerary inscriptions found either in situ or near their initial location. The set of seven epitaphs is composed of small, homogeneous marble plaques that likely decorated small funerary monuments or altars of necropolis. This unpublished finding dates to between the second quarter of the 1st century and the end of the 2nd century A. D. It shows the use of the necropolis by plebeians of differing legal status and social levels (from seruus t
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Lutsyk, Iryna. "The Medieval Christian Necropolis in the Kopachyntsi hillfort (Ukraine). Unpublished Research Materials." Ana­lecta Archa­eolo­gica Res­so­viensia 16 (2021): 125–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.15584/anarres.2021.16.7.

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The article deals with unpublished research materials from the medieval Christian cemetery located on the territory of the hillfort in the village of Kopachyntsi in Sub-Carpathian region (Ukraine) which were conducted in 1953. Excavations were verified, objects and artefacts were analysed, and an attempt to attribute and date them was made. The site is represented by inhumations in pits, as well as burials under stone slabs. The so-called “under the slab burials” are a separate category of monuments of funeral culture, which is characterized by its diffusion only on the territory of Halician-V
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Heinz, Sanda S., and Elsbeth M. van der Wilt. "Defining the Foundation Deposit in the Late and Ptolemaic Periods." Journal of Egyptian Archaeology 105, no. 2 (2019): 227–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0307513320902479.

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In this article, we take a closer look at the process and contents of caching in the Sacred Animal Necropolis at North Saqqara. Most of the contents of the approximately 68 caches are unpublished, but we are using the information preserved in the excavation archive held at the Egypt Exploration Society in London. This study has three parts. First, we take a closer look at the conceptual categorization of caches, followed by a review of a particular deposition practice, that of foundation deposits. Then we consider in detail four caches of bronzes found during British excavations at the North S
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Book chapters on the topic "Unpublished necropolis"

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Muñoz Pérez, Carmen. "Egyptian Amulets in the Western Mediterranean: The Case of Cadiz." In Antiquity - Including the “East” As “Western Identity” [Working Title]. IntechOpen, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/intechopen.111513.

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Among all the artefacts exported from Egypt in Antiquity, amulets have played an important role. These small objects were imbued with magic properties, based on their iconography and hieroglyphic inscriptions, the combination of materials and their colour. Because of their apotropaic properties, amulets were used in daily life and in funerary rituals in Egypt. Furthermore, Egyptian amulets have been attested in other funerary contexts in the Mediterranean area. In the western part, the city of Cadiz was one of the most important Phoenician cities. A great number of Egyptian and Egyptianizing amulets, which are still unpublished, have been found in the local necropolis. Thus, to precisely say if the same funerary amulets were used in Egypt and in the Phoenicians cities is still a work in progress. Nevertheless, their great number suggests that Egyptian amulets were closely part of the Western identity.
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