Literatura académica sobre el tema "Antiquities, Minoan"

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Artículos de revistas sobre el tema "Antiquities, Minoan"

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Kotsonas, Antonis. "GREEK AND ROMAN KNOSSOS: THE PIONEERING INVESTIGATIONS OF MINOS KALOKAIRINOS". Annual of the British School at Athens 111 (15 de junio de 2016): 299–324. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0068245416000058.

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Minos Kalokairinos is renowned for his discovery of the Minoan palace of Knossos. However, his pioneering investigations of the topography and monuments of Greek and Roman Knossos, as laid out especially in hisCretan Archaeological Journal, have largely been overlooked. In theJournal, Kalokairinos offers invaluable information on the changing archaeological landscape of Knossos in the second half of the nineteenth century. This enables the identification of several unknown or lost monuments, including major structures, inscriptions and sculptures, and allows the location of the context of discovery to be assigned to specific parts of the ancient city. Additionally, theJournaloffers glimpses into the collection of Knossian antiquities and their export beyond the island. Antiquities from the site ended up in Athens, and as far afield as Egypt and western Europe, and have hitherto been considered as unprovenanced. They are here identified as Knossian and are traced to their specific context of discovery, with considerable implications for our understanding of the topography, the monuments and the epigraphic record of the ancient city.
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Bevan, Andrew, Evangelia Kiriatz, Carl Knappett, Evangelia Kappa y Sophia Papachristou. "Excavation of Neopalatial deposits at Tholos (Kastri), Kythera". Annual of the British School at Athens 97 (noviembre de 2002): 55–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0068245400017342.

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Several rock-cut features, exposed on the surface of a trackway in the Tholos area of Kastri, Kythera, were excavated in July–August 2000 as a synergasia between Kythera Island Project and 2nd Ephoria of Prehistoric and Classical Antiquities. Although the surviving deposits were extremely shallow, they produced large quantities of conical cups and other pottery of Late Minoan I date. Further comparative analysis of the features themselves and their finds suggests that these are the remains of tomb chambers similar to those excavated in the area in the 1960s. These tombs and their assemblages show extremely strong cultural connections with Crete, but also idiosyncrasies that probably reflect the particular mortuary customs of the island.
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McGowan, Erin. "A GUIDE TO THE ASHMOLEAN AEGEAN COLLECTIONS - (Y.) Galanakis (ed.) The Aegean World. A Guide to the Cycladic, Minoan and Mycenaean Antiquities in the Ashmolean Museum. Pp. 176, b/w & colour ills, colour maps. Oxford / Athens: Ashmolean Museum / Kapon Editions, 2013. Paper, £20, €29. ISBN: 978-960-6878-59-6." Classical Review 64, n.º 2 (23 de junio de 2014): 564–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0009840x14001024.

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Hummler, Madeleine. "Aegean and eastern Mediterranean archaeology - Christopher Mee & Josette Renard (ed.). Cooking up the past: Food and Culinary Practices in the Neolithic and Bronze Age Aegean. xii+380 pages, 103 illustrations, 20 tables. 2007. Oxford: Oxbow; 9781-824217-227-8 paperback £35. - Lila Marangou, Colin Renfrew, Christos Doumas & Giorgos Gavalas. Mαρκıανη AμoρƔoυ/Markiani, Amorgos: An Early Bronze Age Fortified Settlement, Overview of the 1985-1991 Excavations. xvi+296 pages, 107 figures, 56 plates., 58 tables. 2006. London: British School at Athens; 978-0-9048887-52-5 hardback £85 +p&p. - Eva Rystedt & Berit Wells (ed.). Pictorial pursuits: Figurative painting on Mycenaean and Geometric pottery. Papers from two seminars at the Swedish Institute at Athens 1999 and 2001 (Skrifter Utgivna av Svenska Institutet i Athens 4°, LIII). 314 pages, 292 illustrations, 4 tables. 2006. Stockholm: Swedish Institute in Athens; 91-7916-053-0 paperback. - Malcolm H. Wiener, Jayne L. Warner, Janice Polonsky & Erin E. Hayes with Catriona McDonald (ed.). Pottery and Society: The Impact of Recent Studies in Minoan pottery. Gold Medal Colloquium in honour of Philip P. Betancourt (104th Annual Meeting of the Archaeological Institute of America, New Orleans, Louisiana, 5 January 2003). xxii+158 pages, 86 b&w & colour illustrations. 2006. Boston (MA): Archaeological Institute of America; 1-931909-14-8 hardback $45. - ΠΑYΛΟΣ ΦΛoypentzoΣ (Pavlos Flourentzos) (ed.). Eπıστηµονıκη Eπετηρις τουTμηματος Aρχαιoτητων Kυπρου/Report of the Department of Antiquities, Cyprus. viii+416 pages, numerous b&w & colour illustrations, tables. 2006. Nicosia: Department of Antiquities, Cyprus; ISSN 0070-2374 hardback. - Pavlos Flourentzos (ed.). Annual Report of the Department of Antiquities for the year 2004. 116 pages, 92 illustrations. 2006. Nicosia: Department of Antiquities, Republic of Cyprus Ministry of Communications and Works; ISSN 1010-1136 paperback. - Pavlos Flourentzos (ed.). Annual Report of the Department of Antiquities for the year 1999. 102 pages, 72 illustrations. 2006. Nicosia: Department of Antiquities, Republic of Cyprus Ministry of Communications and Works; ISSN 1010-1136 paperback." Antiquity 81, n.º 312 (1 de junio de 2007): 502. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003598x00120344.

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James, N. "Eastern Mediterranean - Paul Halstead (ed.). Neolithic society in Greece (Sheffield Studies in Aegean Archaeology 2). 163 pages, 50 figures, 4 tables. 1999. Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press; 1-85075-824-7 paperback £14.95 & US$19.95. - Angelos Chaniotis (ed.). From Minoan farmers to Roman traders: sidelights on the economy of ancient Crete (Heidelberger Althistorische Beiträge und Epigraphische Studien 29). x+ 394 pages, 27 figures, 19 tables. 1999. Stuttgart: Franz Steiner; 3-515-07621-2 paperback DM/SF148, Sch1080. - Vassos Karageorghis with Joan R. Mertens & Marice E. Rose. Ancient art from Cyprus: the Cesnola Collection in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. xiv+ 305 pages, colour & b&w photographs, 2 maps. New York (NY): Metropolitan Museum of Art; 0-87099-945-1 & 0-87099-944-3 hardback & paperback $55 & $40 or from Harry N. Abrams 0-8109-6552-6 hardback $60. - Vassos Karageorghis & Terence P. Brennan. Ayia Paraskevi figurines in the University of Pennsylvania Museum. iii+ 44 pages, 24 figures. 1999. Philadelphia (PA): University of Pennsylvania Museum; 0-924171-75-8 paperback $8.95. - John A. Koumilides (ed.). Cyprus: the legacy - historic landmarks that influenced the art of Cyprus, Late Bronze Age to A.D. 1600. 118 pages, figures. 1999. Bethesda (MD): University Press of Maryland; 1-883-05351-X hardback $30. - Cyprus Department of Antiquities. Report of the Department of Antiquities, Cyprus, 1999. x+ 350 pages, figures, tables. 1999. n.p.: Republic of Cyprus Ministry of Communications & Works Department of Antiquities. - Roy MacLeod (ed.). The library of Alexandria: centre of learning in the ancient world. xii+ 196 pages, 1 figure. 2000. London: I.B. Tauris; 1-86064-428-7 hardback £39.50." Antiquity 74, n.º 285 (septiembre de 2000): 713–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003598x00120939.

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James, N. "Mediterranean - Stuart Swiny (ed.). The earliest prehistory of Cyprus: from colonization to exploitation (Cyprus American Archaeological Research Institute Monograph 2/American Schools of Oriental Research Archaeological Report 5). xiv+171 pages, 34 figures. 2001. Boston (MA): American Schools of Oriental Research; 0-89757-051-0 hardback $84.95 & £65. - Curtis Runnels & Priscilla M. Murray Greece before history: an archaeological companion and guide, xv+202 pages, 104 figures. 2001. Stanford (CA): Stanford University Press 08047-4036-4 hardback $45 & £35, 08047-4050-X paperback $17.95 & £11.95. - Yannis Hamilakis (ed.). Labyrinth revisited: rethinking ‘Minoan’ archaeology, x+237 pages, 39 figures, 4 tables. 2002. Oxford: Oxbow; 1-84217-061-9 paperback £28. - Paul Äström (ed.). The chronology of base-ring ware and bichrome wheel-made ware: proceedings of a colloquium held in the Royal Academy of Letters, History & Antiquities, Stockholm, May 18–19 2000 (Conferences 54). 251 pages, 54 figures, 9 colour plates, 9 tables. 2001. Stockholm: Royal Academy of Letters, History & Antiquities; 91-7402-320-9 (ISSN 0348-1433) paperback Kr239 (+VAT). - Charlotte Scheffer (ed.). Ceramics in context: proceedings of the Internordic Colloquium on ancient pottery, held at Stockholm. 13–15 June 1997 (Acta Universitatis Stockholmiensis Stockholm Studies in Classical Archaeology 12). 170 pages, 62 figures, 3 colour illustrations, 14 tables. 2001. Stockholm: Stockholm University; 91-22-01913-8 (ISSN 0562-1062) paperback Kr 223 (+VAT). - Edward Herring & Kathryn Lomas (ed.). The emergence of state identities in Italy in the first millennium EC (Accordia Specialist Studies on Italy 8). vii+227 pages, 50 figures, 3 tables. 2000. London: Accordia; 1-873415-22-2 paperback. - Birger Olsson, Dieter Mitternacht & Olof Brandt (ed.). The synagogue of ancient Ostia and the Jews of Borne: interdisciplinary studies (Skrifter Utgivna av Svenska Institutet i Rom 4° LVII/Acta Instituti Romani Regni Sueciae ser. in 4° LVII). 202+v pages, 141 figures, 2 tables. Stockholm: Swedish Instilulein Rome; 91-7042-165-X (ISSN 0081-993X) paperback Kr450. - José María Blázquez. Religiones, ritos y creencias funerarias de la Hispania prerromana. 350 pages, 3 tables. 2001. Madrid: Biblioteca Nueva; 84-7030-7975 paperback. - Simon Keay, John Creighton & José Remesal Rodríguez. Celti (Peñaflor): the archaeology of a Hispano-Roman town in Baetica (University of South-ampton Department of Archaeology Monograph 2). xii+252 pages, 216 figures. 2000. Oxford: Oxbow; 1-84217-035-X paperback £35. - Janet Burnett Grossman. Greek funerary sculpture: catalogue of the collections at the Getty Villa. xi+161 pages, b&w illustrations. 2001. Los Angeles (CA): Getty; 0-89236-612-5 hardback £42.50. - Marion True & Mary Louise Hart (ed.). Studia varia from the J. Paul Getty Museum (Vol. 2; Occasional Papers on Antiquities 10). ii + 166 pages, 191 figures, 5 tables. 2001. Los Angeles (CA): Getty; 089236-634-6 paperback £38.50. - Jairus Banaji. Agrarian change in late antiquity: gold, labour, and aristocratic dominance, xvii+286 pages, 1 map, 12 tables. 2001. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 0-19-924440-5 hardback £50. - Maria Wyke. The Roman mistress: ancient and modern representations, x+452 pages, 32 figures. 2002. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 0-19-815075-X hardback £40." Antiquity 76, n.º 292 (junio de 2002): 567–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003598x00119416.

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Tesis sobre el tema "Antiquities, Minoan"

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Lowe, Fri Maria. "The double axe in Minoan Crete : a functional analysis of production and use /". Stockholm : Department of Archaeology and Classical Studies, Stockholm University [distributör], 2007. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:su:diva-7039.

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Kieser, Deanne. "Minoan trade: aspects and ambiguities". Diss., [S.l. : s.n.], 2005. http://etd.unisa.ac.za/ETD-db/ETD-desc/describe?urn=etd-08192005-084633.

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Gillis, Carole. "Minoan conical cups : form, function and significance /". Göteborg : P. Aströms, 1990. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb388953629.

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Papatsarouha, Elisabeth. "La conception minoenne du monde végétal à travers l'iconographie des sceaux". Paris 1, 1998. http://www.theses.fr/1998PA010617.

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Ce travail essaye de retracer le mode selon lequel les minoens concevaient le monde de la flore. Les données de la glyptique, à savoir quelques milliers de sceaux appartenant à la Crète protohistorique, constituent la base de cette étude. Le texte comporte quatre parties. Dans la première partie, on trouve une tentative de reconstitution du paysage crétois pour l’âge du bronze. Cette reconstitution s'appuie sur les résultats d'enquêtes scientifiques réalisées par des savants de disciplines diverses (palynologues, archéobotanistes, botanistes, etc. ). La deuxième partie comporte la typologie des motifs végétaux présents sur les compositions. Ces motifs sont repartis en cinq catégories : feuilles simples, feuilles multiples, branches, arbres, et fleurs ou graines. Pour chaque motif les informations suivantes sont fournies : typologie (types, sous-types et variantes), mise en scène, historique (origine du motif et son parcours dans l'art minoen), datation, et identification de l'espèce végétale représentée. La troisième partie concerne la typologie des compositions dans lesquelles apparaissent les motifs végétaux. Cette partie permet de retracer les types des compositions, leur vie et leur popularité, ainsi que l'emplacement des motifs par rapport aux autres éléments constitutifs des compositions en question. Enfin, la dernière partie traite la signification de la représentation de la végétation au sein de la scène. Elle aborde des problèmes concernant le choix artistique, la religion et la symbolique des minoens, en mettant l'accent sur certaines questions précises. Quels types de paysage les minoens préfèrent-ils représenter ? Quels sont les motifs de plantes les plus populaires et pourquoi (valeur esthétique, utilitaire ou autre) ? Quelles sont les informations qu'on possède sur le culte d'arbre et les "bosquets sacres" ou sur les actes et les croyances ayant des plantes comme point de référence ?
The aim of this work is to piece together the way in which the minoans perceived the flora. The glyptic data - a few thousand of cretan protohistorical seals - forms the basis of the study. The text is divided into four parts. The first part is an attempt to reconstitute the cretan landscape as it was in the bronze age. This reconstitution is based upon the result of scientific work carried out by experts in different disciplines (palynologists, archeobotanists, botanists, etc. ). The second part presents the typology of the motifs of the plants presented on the compositions decorating the seals. These motifs are divided into five main categories: leaves, multiple leaves, branches, trees and flowers or seeds. The following elements are given for each motif: typology (types, subtypes and variations), history (origin of the motif and its evolution troughout the minoan art), datation and identification of the plant species represented. The third part deals with the typology of the compositions which include plants. This part makes it possible to define the types of the scenes represented, their history and popularity, and the place of the motifs in relation with the other constituent elements of the composition. Finally, the last part deals with the signification of the representation of the vegetation and especially the problems related to the artistic choice, the religion and the symbolism of the minoan culture: which landscape and plants do the minoans prefer and why ? What do we know about the tree-cult but also about the acts and beliefs the referential axis of which is plants ?
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Löwe, Wanda. "Spätbronzezeitliche Bestattungen auf Kreta /". Oxford : Tempus reparatum, 1996. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb36994806v.

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Lauzier, Dominique. "Impact des contacts des sociétés complexes de l’est de la Méditerranée sur le développement de la société en Crète au cours de l’âge du Bronze". Master's thesis, Université Laval, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/25545.

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L’âge du Bronze, est une époque caractérisée par de nombreux et d’importants changements sociaux, particulièrement autour de la Méditerranée. La Crète fut l’une de ces régions où la société s’est transformée au cours de cette période. L’ampleur et la rapidité des bouleversements qui ont alors lieu s’expliquent peut-être par le rôle joué par certains facteurs externes, en particulier les contacts entre les populations de la Crète et celles de l’est de la Méditerranée. Malgré son insularité, la Crète n’est pas complètement isolée du reste de la Méditerranée puisque du matériel exogène y parvient dès le Néolithique, et peut-être même avant. Cela démontre donc que la Crète devait faire partie de certains réseaux de contacts dont l’importance a pris de l’ampleur au cours des premières périodes de l’âge du Bronze. Le matériel archéologique retrouvé en Crète, de même qu’ailleurs en Méditerranée orientale, permet de retracer ces réseaux de contacts et d’évaluer l’impact que ces échanges de biens, mais aussi de connaissances et d’idées, ont pu avoir sur les processus de transformation sociale qui ont conduit au développement des sociétés minoennes. Ces contacts ont alors pu mener à la mise en place de structures organisant les communautés, mais aussi de nombreuses innovations techniques qui auraient modifié et stimulé les productions artisanales de l’île à cette époque.
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Panagiotópoulos, Diamantís. "Das Tholosgrab E von Phourni bei Archarnes : Studien einem frühkretischen Grabfund und seinem Kulturellen Kontext /". Oxford : Archaeopress, 2002. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb400632736.

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Luke, Joanna. "Ports of trade, Al Mina and geometric Greek pottery in the Levant /". Oxford : Archaeopress, 2003. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb39135006p.

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Rueff, Bastien. "De la lampe à l'éclairage en Crète minoenne (3200 - 1100 av. J.-C.)". Thesis, Paris 1, 2020. http://www.theses.fr/2020PA01H006.

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Les lampes minoennes sont les seules sources de lumière artificielle à ne pas avoir été étudiées comme telles mais plutôt comme marqueurs chronologiques et régionaux. Ce travail de recherche propose une analyse fonctionnelle de ces objets, depuis la mèche jusqu’à la lumière produite et enquête, par ce prisme, sur le rythme des activités et l’espace vécu des Minoens. À cet effet, une approche interdisciplinaire a été mise en œuvre. Une analyse typo-techno-fonctionnelle a été appliquée à 543 lampes et objets ayant pu avoir un lien avec l’éclairage. Ce corpus est issu de sept sites dont la séquence chronologique couvre l’ensemble de l’âge du Bronze ; il autorise une analyse diachronique des techniques d’éclairage dans l’habitat. Le fonctionnement des lampes a été étudié dans le cadre d’un programme expérimental. Fondé sur la reconstitution du répertoire des formes, des combustibles et des mèches disponibles dans l’environnement des Minoens, il a jeté un éclairage nouveau sur les aspects techniques de leur utilisation (transport, durée de combustion, fumées, odeurs, lumière). Dans ce cadre, un référentiel de dépôts de suie a été élaboré. La forme et la texture de ces dépôts varie selon la nature des combustibles utilisés. Des enregistrements photométriques expérimentaux ont, par ailleurs, montré que les ambiances lumineuses diffèrent en fonction des combustibles utilisés. Le référentiel a donc non seulement permis d’identifier les combustibles des lampes minoennes (huiles végétales, graisses animales, cire d’abeille) mais aussi la couleur et l’intensité de leurs flammes, à partir desquels de premiers modèles en trois dimensions ont été réalisés. Une analyse spatiale des lampes dans leur contexte archéologique a, enfin, contribué à préciser le rôle de la lumière dans le rythme et la localisation des activités quotidiennes en s’appuyant, par moments, sur des analogies ethnographiques. C’est l’image d’une société préindustrielle qu’il faut avoir en tête : la journée de travail commence à l’aube et se termine au crépuscule. Son rythme et son intensité varient en fonction des saisons, de la météo et de l’altitude. Les lampes éclairaient, le soir venu, et parfois en journée, des activités collectives et individuelles, à l’extérieur ou à l’intérieur. Mais leurs flammes ne permettaient pas de voir à plus d’un mètre, ce qui suggère que l’on se déplaçait régulièrement dans le noir
Minoan lamps remain the only artificial light sources that have not yet been studied as lighting devices but rather as chronological and regional markers. This research proposes a functional analysis of these objects, entailing from the wick to the light, and investigates, through this prism, the rhythm of activities and the Minoans’ lived space. To this end, an interdisciplinary approach was developed. A typo-techno-functional analysis has been applied to 543 lamps and objects that could have a link with lighting. This corpus comes from seven settlements in a chronological sequence covering the whole Bronze Age, thus permitting a diachronic analysis of lighting techniques within the sites. The function of lamps has been studied through an experimental approach. Based on the reconstruction of shapes, fuels and wicks available in the Minoans’ environment, it has shed light on technical aspects of their utilization (transport, burning length, smokes, smells, light). In this frame, a reference database of soot deposits has been designed. These deposits’ shape and texture vary according to the fuels used. Experimental photometric recordings have, besides, showcased that light ambiances differ according to the fuels. Consequently, the reference database not only helped identifying the fuels of minoan lamps (vegetal oils, animal fats, beeswax) but also their flames’ colour and intensity, based on which some first three-dimensions models have been built. A spatial analysis of lamps in their archaeological context, eventually, contributed to define the role of light on the rhythm and the localization of activities from the daily life, sometimes thanks to ethnographic analogies. This is the picture of a preindustrial society that one shall keep in mind: work starts at dawn and ends at dusk. Its rhythm and intensity vary according to seasons, weather and altitude. Lamps lighted, from the evening onwards, and sometimes during daytime, collective and individual activities, inside and outside. However, their flames didn’t permit to see beyond one meter far, suggesting that moving in the dark was common
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Andreadáki-Vlazáki, María. "La ville de Canée (Kydônia) aux époques minoenne et géométrique". Clermont-Ferrand 2, 2000. http://www.theses.fr/2000CLF20007.

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La ville de Canée, en Crète occidentale, a un long héritage historique. Cette étude a pour but de rassembler l'ensemble des témoignages issus des fouilles récentes et de présenter une image de la vie du site pendant les époques minoenne et géométrique. La première installation humaine remonte au 3e millénaire, à l'époque du bronze ancien. L'occupation du site s'est poursuivie ensuite sans interruption jusqu'au 12e avant notre ère, en dépit de destructions répétées ; dues principaement à l'activité sismique, sans que l'on puisse exclure d'autres catastrophes naturelles ou des incursions. Après une interruption du début du 11e jusqu'au 9e avant notre ère, le site, comme les autres villes de Grèce, connaît un nouveau développement au 8e siècle, à la fin de l'époque géométrique, période marquée par l'apparition des cités-états. Il semble que le nom de la ville antique, à l'époque minoenne comme à l'époque géométrique, était celui de Kydonia, ville connue dans la tradition antique comme l'une des plus importantes de Crète. Fondée à un emplacement privilégié pour la navigation en Méditerranée orientale, disposant d'un excellent fort naturel, elle a développé le commerce maritime dans le bassin égéen et vers Chypre, le Proche-Orient, l'Egypte, l'Italie, La Sardaigne. Par ailleurs, des relations se sont établies à l'époque géométrique avec de nombreuses villes et régions de Grèce (Arcadie, Argos, Egine, Samos, Zakynthos) dont les habitants ont parfois trouvé refuge sur son sol, lui donnant le caractère cosmopolite qu'elle a gardé jusqu'à maintenant
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Libros sobre el tema "Antiquities, Minoan"

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Soles, Jeffrey S. The prepalatial cemeteries at Gournia and Mochlos and the house tombs of Bronze Age Crete. Princeton, N.J: American School of Classical Studies at Athens, 1992.

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Galanakis, Konstantinos. Minoan glyptic: Typology, deposits and iconography : from the early Minoan period to the late Minoan IB destruction in Crete. Birmingham: University of Birmingham, 2003.

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Newberry, John. Minoan history in hieroglyphics. [Vancouver: J. Newberry], 1993.

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1990), Duisburger Akzente (14th. Kreta: Das Erwachen Europas : Begleitband zur Ausstellung im Niederrheinischen Museum der Stadt Duisburg, 22. April bis 29. Juli 1990 = Crete : the cradle of Europe. Editado por Bechert Tilmann, Pöhling Werner, Niederrheinisches Museum der Stadt Duisburg. y Greece Hypourgeio Politismou. Duisburg: Niederrheinisches Museum der Stadt Duisburg, 1990.

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Soles, Jeffrey S. The prepalatial cemeteries at Mochlos and Gournia and the house tombs of Bronze Age Crete. Princeton, N.J: American School of Classical Studies at Athens, 1992.

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Betancourt, Philip P. The history of Minoan pottery. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1985.

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The history of Minoan pottery. Princeton, N.J: Princeton University Press, 1985.

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Ambiguity and Minoan neopalatial seal imagery. Uppsala: Åströms förlag, 2011.

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H, Sackett L., Driessen Jan y British School at Athens, eds. Palaikastro: Two late Minoan wells. London: British School at Athens, 2007.

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Vasilakēs, Antōnēs. Ho chrysos kai ho argyros stēn Krētē kata tēn prōimē periodo tou chalkou. [Hērakleio]: Dēmos Hērakleiou, 1996.

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Capítulos de libros sobre el tema "Antiquities, Minoan"

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Lahiri, Nayanjot. "A Life in Public Archaeology". En Archaeology and the Public Purpose, 31–54. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190130480.003.0002.

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This chapter explores the various dimensions of the professional life of an Archaeological Survey of India’s Superintendent of Archaeology ranging from conserving monuments to undertaking field work, from dealing with antiquities in the field to engaging with village and city folk, bureaucrats and politicians. Unlike university men and women, such government people were public archaeologists in the sense that they dealt with all kinds of grass roots challenges that monument administration and research involved. Deshpande’s early years in different parts of Maharashtra and Karnataka was centrally of this type, with the conservation of Gol Gumbad being a professional landmark. About a decade after this, his conservation work at another renowned medieval complex, Delhi’s Qutb Minar would earn the Archaeological Survey laurels. It was also during these years that Deshpande’s abiding obsession with shrines and monasteries in the Western rock-cut caves began and included work at Bhaja, Pitalkohora, Ajanta and Ellora where apart from making new discoveries, he also undertook extensive conservation work.
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2

Fant, Clyde E. y Mitchell G. Reddish. "Corinth". En A Guide to Biblical Sites in Greece and Turkey. Oxford University Press, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195139174.003.0013.

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No city in the ancient world both benefited and suffered from its location more than Corinth. Situated on the main north-south route between northern and southern Greece, and with two good ports that linked it to Italy on the west and Asia Minor on the east, Corinth quickly became a center for commerce. But the location of Corinth also had its downside. The city often found itself caught in the middle between hostile neighbors, Athens to the north and Sparta to the south. Armies crisscrossed its streets as often as merchants, and more than once the city had to arise from ashes and rubble. Today only Athens attracts more interest in Greece for its historic antiquities than Corinth. It ranks as a must-see location for every traveler to Greece. Ancient Corinth is located less than two hours south of Athens. Tours run often from local hotels. Likewise, a rental automobile gives easy access and makes it possible to see nearby sites of interest not on the usual tours. The great city of Corinth prospered for many reasons. In addition to its prominence as a center for trade and commerce, agriculture also flourished in the area. The soil around the city was thin and rocky, but just to the west, along the Nemean River, a rich plain produced heavy harvests of grain and other crops. Raisins were first developed there, and the word currant is a medieval corruption of Corinth. Tourism was another important source of income. The famous Isthmian Games, second only to the Olympic Games and more prestigious than those held in Delphi and Nemea, brought thousands of tourists to Corinth every two years and further added to its fame and fortune. During its early period Corinth also attracted many travelers to its famous (or notorious) Temple of Aphrodite atop the Acrocorinth (“high Corinth,” or upper Corinth, the portion of the city atop the 1,900-foot mountain to the southeast of the city). Additionally, according to Plutarch, these multiple sources of wealth caused Corinth to become one of the three great banking centers of Greece, along with Athens and Patrae.
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3

Rowley-Conwy, Peter. "The Disinterested Gentlemen: England to 1860". En From Genesis to Prehistory. Oxford University Press, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199227747.003.0008.

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In 1852 Thomas Wright reviewed Europe’s ancient past of Europe in his book The Celt, the Roman, and the Saxon (Wright 1852). Wright was an archaeologist who worked in a variety of Welds. During his active life he did a great deal of work on medieval manuscripts, history, antiquities, folklore, arts, and sciences; he wrote full-length histories of Scotland, Ireland, and France; he excavated at the Roman town of Viriconium; and finally, he took an interest in the pre- Roman past. Wright typified a generation of mid-nineteenth century archaeological scholars whose interest in pre-Roman matters amounted to no more than a minor sideline. There were arguably two main reasons why most of the London archaeologists paid little or no attention to the pre-Roman past. The first was that, as Englishmen themselves, they had no nationalist axe to grind by stressing the earliest archaeology of England. The ancient Celtic past had been firmly claimed by the Welsh, the Irish, and the Scots ever since the ‘Celtic Revival’ of the mid eighteenth century (Morse 2005: 41–7), while the English were post-Roman immigrants. The pre-Roman or Celtic past was therefore the past of other people—the ancestors of the Welsh or Irish, nationalities not generally held in high esteem by anyone but themselves. To emphasize the Celtic past was thus to exalt the inferior—and perhaps also, by emphasizing the relatively recent arrival of the English, to play into the hands of the nascent Celtic nationalisms. Such views were by no means articulated in the publications of Wright and his generation, and we can at this remove only guess how consciously motivating such concerns really were; but it remains true that the pre-Roman past got little attention. In Wright’s The Celt, the Roman, and the Saxon, the pre-Roman Celts were dealt with in just forty-four pages, or 9 per cent of the total book, the post-Roman Celts in a mere five pages, or 1 per cent. The second reason for the Londoners’ lack of concern with the pre-Roman past emerges from the very first sentences in Wright’s book: According to the system now generally adopted by ethnologists, Europe was peopled by several successive migrations . . . , all flowing from one point in the east.
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