AEGIS
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AEGIS

Essays in Mediterranean Archaeology: Presented to Matti Egon by the scholars of the Greek Archaeological Committee UK

  1. 250 pages
  2. English
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eBook - PDF

AEGIS

Essays in Mediterranean Archaeology: Presented to Matti Egon by the scholars of the Greek Archaeological Committee UK

About this book

The honorand of this volume, Matti Egon, has been a great benefactor to museums, schools, universities and hospitals in the UK and also in Greece: all areas that her background and life's interests have made dear to her. One of these is the Greek Archaeological Committee UK, that she helped found in 1992: an organization dedicated to informing academe and the public in Britain of archaeological work carried out in Greece, and of enabling the 'brightest minds' of Greece and Cyprus to pursue post-graduate research at British institutions, to the mutual enrichment of both. Some fifty-five graduates have so benefited. This volume offers essays by a good half of those so assisted: roughly split between the sexes, they range between post-graduates still completing their studies in the UK, up to those with doctorates, almost half the group, now successfully in employment at Universities and similar Institutions in the UK, Greece, Cyprus and the USA, with rather fewer working in Museums, within the Greek Ephorates and even at a Foreign School in Athens. The hugely varied topics they offer cover the entire range of prehistory and history down to the modern day on Greek and Cypriot soil. Neolithic animal butchery rubs shoulders with regional assessments of the end of the Mycenaean era, investigations into Hellenistic sculptors and lamps, life in Byzantine monasteries and the politics behind modern exhibitions; the Phoenicians and even an Islamic general make cameo appearances. This startling range of subjects accurately reflects the depth of scholarship Matti Egon has nurtured into being; the affection and gratitude expressed by the graduates equally mirrors the deep appreciation they acknowledge for the opportunities so given.

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Yes, you can access AEGIS by Zetta Theodoropoulou Polychroniadis,Doniert Evely, Zetta Theodoropoulou Polychroniadis, Doniert Evely in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Social Sciences & Archaeology. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright Page
  4. The Founder of GACUK Matti Egon with the ‘unusual bouquet’ offered by the scholars.
  5. The Founder of GACUK Matti Egon with the ‘unusual bouquet’ offered by the scholars.
  6. The scholars of GACUK and its Founder Matti Egon
  7. The scholars of GACUK and its Founder Matti Egon, the Chair Zetta Theodoropoulou and the Treasurer Panos Arvanitakis in the ga den of the BSA, September 2014.
  8. Contents
  9. List of Figures
  10. Foreword
  11. The value of digital recordings and reconstructions for the understanding of three-dimensional archaeological features
  12. The value of digital recordings and reconstructions for the understanding of three-dimensional archaeological features
  13. Fig. 1. 3D models of the figurines from Koutroulou Magoula, without an accurate representation of colour and texture. Laser scanned with Konica Minolta Vivid 9i in 2010.
  14. Fig. 2. 3D models of a figurine from Koutroulou Magoula (Trench Θ4 703/07) with problems in the depiction of geometry, colour and texture. Laser Scanned with Creaform VIUScanner in 2014.
  15. Fig. 3. A. 3D model of Building 1 from Koutroulou Magoula; B. 3D model of Building 2 from Koutroulou Magoula. Photogrammetry application with Agisoft Photoscan in 2012.
  16. Fig. 4. Homemade light box with 3 LED lights for photographing and producing 3D models of the figurines from Koutroulou Magoula; 3D model of figurine Θ4 703/07 produced in Agisoft Photoscan.
  17. Fig. 5. The exterior and interior of Building 1 at Koutroulou Magoula, with three different types of roof and the corresponding supporting beams. Top to bottom: Flat/slightly gabled roof; Gabled roof; Saddle roof.
  18. Fig. 6. The interior of Building 1 at Koutroulou Magoula, at night time with human figures around the hearth.
  19. Fig. 7. The ‘window of light’ in the interior of Building 1 at Koutroulou Magoula.
  20. The contribution of systematic zooarchaeological analysis in understanding the complexity of prehistoric societies
  21. The contribution of systematic zooarchaeological analysis in understanding the complexity of prehistoric societies
  22. The example of late Neolithic Toumba Kremastis-Koiladas in northern Greece
  23. The example of late Neolithic Toumba Kremastis-Koiladas in northern Greece
  24. Fig. 1. Plan of the 1998–1999 excavation campaign at TKK. (after Hondrogianni-Metoki 2009).
  25. Fig. 2. Location of two sheep skeletons found in Pit 225. (photograph courtesy of A. Hondrogianni-Metoki).
  26. Fig. 3. Location of the pig skeleton, accompanied by the skull of a dog in Pit 132. (photograph courtesy of A. Hondrogianni-Metoki).
  27. A preliminary technological and provenance assessment of the Early Bronze Age II late to III (c. 2500–2000 BC) pottery
  28. A preliminary technological and provenance assessment of the Early Bronze Age II late to III (c. 2500–2000 BC) pottery
  29. The Heraion of Samos under the microscope
  30. The Heraion of Samos under the microscope
  31. Fig 1. a-f. Micrographs: (a) Fabric 1b, Fine mica and monocrystalline quartz; (b) Fabric 2: Coarse quartz and muscovite mica; (c) Fabric 3: Well-rounded volcanic inclusions; (d) Fabric 4a: Muscovite-schist fragment; (e) HT12/06: Rounded basalt with porphy
  32. Time past and time present: the emergence of the Minoan palaces as a transformation of temporality
  33. Fig. 1. Map of Cyprus with sites mentioned in the text. (Data provided by the Cyprus Geological Survey Department).
  34. Palaepaphos during the Late Bronze Age: characterizing the urban landscape of a late Cypriot polity
  35. Palaepaphos during the Late Bronze Age: characterizing the urban landscape of a late Cypriot polity
  36. Fig. 2. Landscape map of Kouklia showing the four main plateaus on to which the urban polity of Palaepaphos developed.
  37. Fig. 3. Orthophoto map of Kouklia with localities mentioned in the text.
  38. Fig. 4. Map of the Paphos hydrological zone, showing the distribution of Middle Cypriot III-Late Cypriot IA sites, the Upper a d Lower Pillow Lavas and the distribution of slag heaps in the Paphos forest.
  39. Fig. 5. The remains of the megalithic Sanctuary at Palaepaphos with the preserved monolithic blocks.
  40. Fig. 6. A “Teratsoudhia ware” jug found at Tomb 104, Chamber B at Palaepaphos-Teratsoudhia.
  41. the archaeology of children and death in LH IIIC Greece
  42. the archaeology of children and death in LH IIIC Greece
  43. ‘What would the world be to us if the children were no more?’:1
  44. ‘What would the world be to us if the children were no more?’:1
  45. Fig. 1. Drawing of side B of a larnax from Tomb 3 at Tanagra. This depicts the preparation of a dead child for burial.
  46. Fig. 2. Drawing of a child’s prothesis scene on the lower panel of the short end of a larnax from tomb 22 at Tanagra.
  47. The Late Helladic IIIC period in coastal Thessaly
  48. The Late Helladic IIIC period in coastal Thessaly
  49. Fig. 1. Distribution maps of Late Helladic IIIC (top, a) and Sub-Mycenaean (bottom, b) sites around the Pagasetic Gulf.
  50. Fig. 2. a-f. Pottery fragments decorated in the LH IIIC Middle Pictorial Style from the settlement at Kastro, Volos (not to scale)
  51. Fig. 3. Plans of the excavation of D. Theocharis at the settlement at Kastro, Volos
  52. Fig. 4. Plan of LH IIIC cist tombs (a: Tomb 56, b: Tomb 57) from the cemetery at Nea Ionia, Volos
  53. Fig. 5. Aerial photograph indicating the location of site 1990/35 and the cist grave cemetery with inhumations at Voulokaliva
  54. Fig. 6. S (a, top) and N (b, bottom) part of the cist grave cemetery with inhumations (LH IIB-SPG) at Voulokaliva in the Almiros plain
  55. The Bronze Age on Karpathos and Kythera
  56. East Phokis revisited: its development in the transition from the Late Bronze to the Early Iron Age in the light of the lates finds
  57. East Phokis revisited: its development in the transition from the Late Bronze to the Early Iron Age in the light of the lates finds
  58. Fig. 1. East Phokis and neighbouring areas
  59. Fig. 2. East Phokis in the Late Bronze Age
  60. Fig. 3. East Phokis in the Submycenaean period
  61. Fig. 4. East Phokis in the Protogeometric period
  62. Early Iron Age Greece, ancient Pherae and the archaeometallurgy of copper
  63. Early Iron Age Greece, ancient Pherae and the archaeometallurgy of copper
  64. Fig. 1. Photomicrograph of the cross-section of a folded metal sheet (no. 1309); plain polarised light, 25x, image length 7mm.
  65. Fig. 2. Back-scatter image with a scanning electron microscope (SEM) of ring AE 34, showing growth corrosion on the ring’s su face (patina, dark grey), a corroded layer in the substrate (medium grey) distinguished by a thin corrosion layer (white line) wh
  66. Fig. 3. Typical Thessalian bow fibula M 1909 with decoration of alternate globes and disks, long catch-plate and a spring on the fibula’s ‘arm’ to support the ‘foot’, namely the long wire which secured into the catch-plate; samples of this type of object
  67. Fig. 4. Chronological distribution of the diagnostic fibulae in the sample (n= 110) according to their typology which covers he time span from the Early Geometric to the Archaic periods (825–600 BC); absolute dating for Thessaly after Coldstream (200) a
  68. Fig. 5. Photomicrograph of sheet/vessel fragment AE 606: a dendritic structure surrounded by corrosion products is visible; plain polarised light, 100x, image length 1.8 mm
  69. Fig. 6. Photomicrograph of sheet M 1217.2: a recrystallised grain microstructure with annealing twins and slip lines is visible; plain polarised light, 500x, image length 350 ÎŒm (=0.35 mm)
  70. Funerary art, ritual and the belief in an after-life
  71. Funerary art, ritual and the belief in an after-life
  72. Representations of western Phoenician eschatology
  73. Fig. 1 Map of settlements and necropoleis in coastal Malaga and Granada.
  74. Fig. 2 Sections of tombs at Laurita. (After Pappa 2013, fig. 32; adapted from the original by Pellicer CatalĂĄn 2007, fig. 13).
  75. Fig. 3 Table of finds based on information from Pellicer Catalan (2007, fig. 76, supplemented with information from 55–71, fig. 76, 97, lám. XIII)
  76. a. Wall painting of the two ‘nefesh’ monuments of 4th c. BCE tomb at Jebel Mlezza, Kerkoune, Tunisia. Ostrich eggshell vase from Laurita with bird decoration (adapted from: a. Pellicer Catalán 2007, fig. 85, by permission of Prof. M.E. Aubet); b. Fant
  77. Piraeus: beyond ‘known unknowns’
  78. Piraeus: beyond ‘known unknowns’
  79. Table 1. Material from rescue excavations conducted from the 1950’s onwards in modern Piraeus according to the ΑρχαÎčολογÎčÎșόΜ Î”Î”Î»Ï„ÎŻÎżÎœ.
  80. The casting technique of the bronze Antikythera ephebe
  81. The casting technique of the bronze Antikythera ephebe
  82. Fig. 1. The Antikythera ephebe: front view.
  83. Fig. 2. The Antikythera ephebe: rear view.
  84. Fig. 3. The Antikythera ephebe: front view of the head.
  85. Fig. 4. The Antikythera ephebe: detail of the right hand.
  86. Fig. 5. The Antikythera ephebe: front view with drawing of the ancient seams/joins of the statue.
  87. Fig. 6. The Antikythera ephebe: detail of the right foot.
  88. A brief, phenomenological reading of the Arkteia
  89. Cylindrical altars and post-funerary ritual in the south-eastern Aegean during the Hellenistic period: 3rd to 2nd centuries BC
  90. Cylindrical altars and post-funerary ritual in the south-eastern Aegean during the Hellenistic period: 3rd to 2nd centuries BC
  91. Fig. 1. Cylindrical altars from Rhodes (left) and Kos (right).
  92. Fig. 2. Plans of the tomb of Archokrates.
  93. Fig. 3. Peribolos with restored cylindrical altars at Korakonero, Rhodes.
  94. Fig. 4. Cylindrical altars at Peros plot, Excavation area A.
  95. Lamps, symbolism and ritual in Hellenistic Greece
  96. In search of the garden-peristyle in Hellenistic palaces: a reappraisal of the evidence
  97. In search of the garden-peristyle in Hellenistic palaces: a reappraisal of the evidence
  98. Fig. 1. Comparison of the Hellenistic palace peristyle courtyards mentioned in the text: size and proportion to total surface, floor type and date (by author). The Doric peristyle in Ai Khanoum cannot be compared to a building section, as it is by itself
  99. Fig. 2. Building I, basileion of Pella, reconstruction at foundation level
  100. Fig. 3. Palace on the Acropolis, Jebel Khalid
  101. Fig. 4. Palace V, Pergamon
  102. Fig. 5. Section through the northern part of the peristyle courtyard of Section A, in the palace of Demetrias
  103. Fig. 6. House of the Faun, original construction phase
  104. Damophon in Olympia: some remarks on his date
  105. Entering the monastic cell in the Byzantine world: archaeology and texts
  106. Entering the monastic cell in the Byzantine world: archaeology and texts
  107. Fig. 1 Monastery of Hosios Meletios, plan
  108. Fig. 2 Monastery of Sagmata, monastic cell of the west wing
  109. Fig. 3 Monastery of the Panaghia Paregoretissa, monastic cells of the east wing
  110. Fig. 4 Monastery of St George Diasorites, aerial view
  111. Fig. 5 Monastery at Synaxis, north side, looking east
  112. Fig. 6 Monastery at Synaxis, north side, looking west
  113. Discovering the Byzantine countryside: the evidence from archaeological field survey in the Peloponnese
  114. Discovering the Byzantine countryside: the evidence from archaeological field survey in the Peloponnese
  115. Fig. 1. The locations of the field surveys in the Peloponnese.
  116. Fig. 2. Comparison chart for inland and coastal surveyed sites (Maria Papadaki).
  117. Fig. 1. Kursī, carved wood, general view. Egypt, 11th century AD. Monastery of Saint Catherine, Sinai, Egypt.
  118. On a FātÌŁimid KursÄ« in the Monastery of Saint Catherine at Mount Sinai
  119. On a FātÌŁimid KursÄ« in the Monastery of Saint Catherine at Mount Sinai
  120. Fig. 2. Kursī, carved wood, side A. Egypt, 11th century. Monastery of Saint Catherine, Sinai, Egypt.
  121. Fig. 3. Kursī, carved wood, side B. Egypt, 11th century. Monastery of Saint Catherine, Sinai, Egypt.
  122. Fig. 4. Kursī, carved wood, side C. Egypt, 11th century. Monastery of Saint Catherine, Sinai, Egypt.
  123. Fig. 5. Kursī, carved wood, side D. Egypt, 11th century. Monastery of Saint Catherine, Sinai, Egypt.
  124. Fig. 6. The conjunction of the Moon and Saturn, from a treatise in Persian on astrology, angels and talismans (BN persan 174, folio 109v). Seljuk Anatolia, 1272–1273. © BibliothĂšque Nationale, Paris.
  125. Fig. 7. Prayer niche (lower right). Hagia Koryphē is visible in the distance. October 1998.
  126. The discovery of ancient Cyprus: archaeological sponsorship from the 19th century to the present day
  127. Showcasing new Trojan wars: archaeological exhibitions and the politics of appropriation of ancient Troy
  128. Showcasing new Trojan wars: archaeological exhibitions and the politics of appropriation of ancient Troy
  129. Fig. 1. Cover of catalogue for the German exhibitions in Stuttgart, Braunschweig and Bonn (2001–2002).
  130. Fig. 2. Cover of catalogue for the Istanbul exhibition (2002–2003).
  131. Fig. 3. Cover of catalogue for the exhibition held in Amsterdam (2012–2013).