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ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress: Publishers of Academic Archaeology. Glazed Brick Decoration in the Ancient Near East. edited by Anja Fügert and Helen Gries. Paperback; 205x290mm; 130 pages; 97 figures, 5 tables (61 colour pages). 645 2020. Available both in print and Open Access. Printed ISBN 9781789696059. Epublication ISBN 9781789696066. ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress: Publishers of Academic Archaeology. Historic Landscapes and Mental Well-being. edited by Timothy Darvill, Kerry Barrass, Laura Drysdale, Vanessa Heaslip and Yvette Staelens. Paperback; xx+282 pages; 70 figures, 7 tables (75 pages in colour). 569 2019. Available both in print and Open Access. Printed ISBN 9781789692686. ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Epublication ISBN 9781789691207. With contributions by Rob Atkins, Alison Draper, J N James, Lloyd Laing, Matthew Ponting, Anthony Read, Jenny Wakely, Penelope Walton-Rogers, and Jacqui Watson. Illustrations by Olly Dindol, Jacqueline Harding and James Ladocha. MOLA (Museum of London Archaeology) undertook evaluation and subsequent excavation ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Howard Williams is Professor of Archaeology at the University of Chester and researches public archaeology and archaeologies of death and memory. He writes an academic blog: Archaeodeath. ; Pauline Magdalene Clarke is a postgraduate researcher at the University of Chester, having recently completed both her BA (Hons) and MA there. AESTHETICS, APPLICATIONS, ARTISTRY AND ANARCHY: ESSAYS IN Aesthetics, Applications, Artistry and Anarchy 10 work—like pre-Columbian rock art—is not supposed to be viewed aesthetically, perhaps because it was made ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGYHOMEBROWSE BY SUBJECTBROWSE BY SERIESCATALOGUESJOIN OUR MAILING LIST Archaeopress is an Oxford-based publisher specialising in scholarly books and journals in the field of archaeology and related heritage subjects. COVID-19 / Brexit Updates. Publishing: Our publishing schedule proceeds as normal without significant interruptions; our team continue to work as usual, albeit in various locations. ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress Journals. Archaeopress publish a range of journals in Archaeology and related heritage topics. Subjects include Greek and Mediterranean archaeology, Near Eastern studies, the Arabian Peninsula and more. We are actively seeking to broaden our journal output; if you have an idea for a new journal or are looking for a new publishing ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress Publishing Ltd, Summertown Pavilion, 18-24 Middle Way, Summertown, Oxford OX2 7LG, England tel +44 (0) 1865 311914 fax +44 (0) 1865 512231 email: info@archaeopress.com ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Various Aspects of Entrances and Doors of the Tombs in the Memphite Necropoleis during the Old Kingdom by Leo Roeten. Paperback; 205x290mm; 202 pages; 169 figures, 11 tables (black & white throughout). 714 2021 Archaeopress Egyptology 33. Available both in printed and e-versions. Printed ISBN 9781789698718. £34.00 (No VAT). ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY NEW: James Mellaart: The Journey to Çatalhöyük by Alan Mellaart. Hardback; 190x260mm; 476 pages, 200+ illustrations.ISBN 9786053965237. 65.00 (No VAT). Institutional Price £65.00 (No VAT). James Mellaart was a pioneering archaeologist who made some of the greatest discoveries about Turkey’s prehistoric past, changing ourunderstanding
ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress: Publishers of Academic Archaeology. Glazed Brick Decoration in the Ancient Near East. edited by Anja Fügert and Helen Gries. Paperback; 205x290mm; 130 pages; 97 figures, 5 tables (61 colour pages). 645 2020. Available both in print and Open Access. Printed ISBN 9781789696059. Epublication ISBN 9781789696066. ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress: Publishers of Academic Archaeology. Historic Landscapes and Mental Well-being. edited by Timothy Darvill, Kerry Barrass, Laura Drysdale, Vanessa Heaslip and Yvette Staelens. Paperback; xx+282 pages; 70 figures, 7 tables (75 pages in colour). 569 2019. Available both in print and Open Access. Printed ISBN 9781789692686. ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Epublication ISBN 9781789691207. With contributions by Rob Atkins, Alison Draper, J N James, Lloyd Laing, Matthew Ponting, Anthony Read, Jenny Wakely, Penelope Walton-Rogers, and Jacqui Watson. Illustrations by Olly Dindol, Jacqueline Harding and James Ladocha. MOLA (Museum of London Archaeology) undertook evaluation and subsequent excavation ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Howard Williams is Professor of Archaeology at the University of Chester and researches public archaeology and archaeologies of death and memory. He writes an academic blog: Archaeodeath. ; Pauline Magdalene Clarke is a postgraduate researcher at the University of Chester, having recently completed both her BA (Hons) and MA there. AESTHETICS, APPLICATIONS, ARTISTRY AND ANARCHY: ESSAYS IN Aesthetics, Applications, Artistry and Anarchy 10 work—like pre-Columbian rock art—is not supposed to be viewed aesthetically, perhaps because it was made ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress is an Oxford-based publisher run by archaeologists Dr David Davison and Dr Rajka Makjanic. The range of our publications includes monographs, conference proceedings, catalogues of archaeological material, excavation reports and archaeological biographies. Archaeopress is devoted to publishing serious academic work on all aspects of ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress Access Archaeology: Print Books and Free PDF Downloads. Access Archaeology has been designed to make archaeological research accessible to all and to present a low-cost (or no-cost) publishing solution for academics from all over the world. Material ranges from monographs, conference proceedings, catalogues of archaeological material, excavation reports, doctoral theses and beyond. ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress Publishing Ltd, Summertown Pavilion, 18-24 Middle Way, Summertown, Oxford OX2 7LG, England tel +44 (0) 1865 311914 fax +44 (0) 1865 512231 email: info@archaeopress.com ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Paperback; 205x290mm; 112 pages; 44 figures, 3 tables. 5 papers in French, 2 in English. 729 2021. Available both in print and Open Access. Printed ISBN 9781789697094. £27.00 (No VAT). Epublication ISBN 9781789697100. The reconstruction of the technical systems of ceramic production and of its ‘chaîne opératoire’ is a means ofexploring
ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY FORTHCOMING: Some Thoughts about the Evolution of Human Behavior: A Literature Survey by Arthur J. Boucot (with edits by John M. Saul and John B. Southard). Paperback; 174x245mm; 252 pages. Print RRP: 35.00. 739 2021. ISBN 9781789699036. On his death, Arthur Boucot (1924–2017) left an unfinished manuscript in which he surveyed the skeletal, behavioural, and cultural changes that have ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY NEW: Barāqish/Yathill (Yemen) 1986-2007 Excavations of Temple B and related research and restoration / Extramural excavations in Area C and overview studies edited by Sabina Antonini and Francesco G. Fedele.DOI: 10.32028/9781789694703.Paperback; 205x290mm; 2 volumes: 398pp & 546pp; 700 figures, tables and plates. Contributions in English, Italian, and French. ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress: Publishers of Academic Archaeology. Historic Landscapes and Mental Well-being. edited by Timothy Darvill, Kerry Barrass, Laura Drysdale, Vanessa Heaslip and Yvette Staelens. Paperback; xx+282 pages; 70 figures, 7 tables (75 pages in colour). 569 2019. Available both in print and Open Access. Printed ISBN 9781789692686. ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress: Publishers of Academic Archaeology. An Intellectual Adventurer in Archaeology: Reflections on the work of Charles Thomas. edited by Andy M Jones and Henrietta Quinnell. Paperback; 205x290mm; xiv+286 pages; illustrated throughout in colour and black & white. 418 2018. Available both in printed and e-versions. ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress: Publishers of Academic Archaeology. Journal of Greek Archaeology Volume 4 2019. edited by John Bintliff (Ed. in Chief). Paperback; vi+532 pages; illustrated throughout in colour and black & white. 4 2019. Available both in printed and e-versions. Printed ISBN9781789693775.
ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Paperback; 205x290mm; 366 pages; illustrated throughout in colour and black & white. 567 2019. Available both in print and Open Access. Printed ISBN 9781789693065. Epublication ISBN 9781789693072. This volume is a product of the 13th International Conference on Archaeological Prospection 2019, which was hosted by the Department ofEnvironmental
ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGYHOMEBROWSE BY SUBJECTBROWSE BY SERIESCATALOGUESJOIN OUR MAILING LIST Archaeopress is an Oxford-based publisher specialising in scholarly books and journals in the field of archaeology and related heritage subjects. COVID-19 / Brexit Updates. Publishing: Our publishing schedule proceeds as normal without significant interruptions; our team continue to work as usual, albeit in various locations. ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress Journals. Archaeopress publish a range of journals in Archaeology and related heritage topics. Subjects include Greek and Mediterranean archaeology, Near Eastern studies, the Arabian Peninsula and more. We are actively seeking to broaden our journal output; if you have an idea for a new journal or are looking for a new publishing ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Paperback; 205x290mm; 112 pages; 44 figures, 3 tables. 5 papers in French, 2 in English. 729 2021. Available both in print and Open Access. Printed ISBN 9781789697094. £27.00 (No VAT). Epublication ISBN 9781789697100. The reconstruction of the technical systems of ceramic production and of its ‘chaîne opératoire’ is a means ofexploring
ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress Publishing Ltd, Summertown Pavilion, 18-24 Middle Way, Summertown, Oxford OX2 7LG, England tel +44 (0) 1865 311914 fax +44 (0) 1865 512231 email: info@archaeopress.com ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress: Publishers of Academic Archaeology. NEW: Contribution of Ceramic Technological Approaches to the Anthropology and Archaeology of Pre- and Protohistoric Societies Proceedings of the XVIII UISPP World Congress (4-9 June 2018, Paris, France) Volume 12 Session IV-3 edited by François Giligny, Ekaterina Dolbunova, Louise Gomart ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY NEW: Barāqish/Yathill (Yemen) 1986-2007 Excavations of Temple B and related research and restoration / Extramural excavations in Area C and overview studies edited by Sabina Antonini and Francesco G. Fedele.DOI: 10.32028/9781789694703.Paperback; 205x290mm; 2 volumes: 398pp & 546pp; 700 figures, tables and plates. Contributions in English, Italian, and French. ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress: Publishers of Academic Archaeology. Historic Landscapes and Mental Well-being. edited by Timothy Darvill, Kerry Barrass, Laura Drysdale, Vanessa Heaslip and Yvette Staelens. Paperback; xx+282 pages; 70 figures, 7 tables (75 pages in colour). 569 2019. Available both in print and Open Access. Printed ISBN 9781789692686. ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Epublication ISBN 9781789691207. With contributions by Rob Atkins, Alison Draper, J N James, Lloyd Laing, Matthew Ponting, Anthony Read, Jenny Wakely, Penelope Walton-Rogers, and Jacqui Watson. Illustrations by Olly Dindol, Jacqueline Harding and James Ladocha. MOLA (Museum of London Archaeology) undertook evaluation and subsequent excavation ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Howard Williams is Professor of Archaeology at the University of Chester and researches public archaeology and archaeologies of death and memory. He writes an academic blog: Archaeodeath. ; Pauline Magdalene Clarke is a postgraduate researcher at the University of Chester, having recently completed both her BA (Hons) and MA there. AESTHETICS, APPLICATIONS, ARTISTRY AND ANARCHY: ESSAYS IN Aesthetics, Applications, Artistry and Anarchy 10 work—like pre-Columbian rock art—is not supposed to be viewed aesthetically, perhaps because it was made ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGYHOMEBROWSE BY SUBJECTBROWSE BY SERIESCATALOGUESJOIN OUR MAILING LIST Archaeopress is an Oxford-based publisher specialising in scholarly books and journals in the field of archaeology and related heritage subjects. COVID-19 / Brexit Updates. Publishing: Our publishing schedule proceeds as normal without significant interruptions; our team continue to work as usual, albeit in various locations. ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress Journals. Archaeopress publish a range of journals in Archaeology and related heritage topics. Subjects include Greek and Mediterranean archaeology, Near Eastern studies, the Arabian Peninsula and more. We are actively seeking to broaden our journal output; if you have an idea for a new journal or are looking for a new publishing ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Paperback; 205x290mm; 112 pages; 44 figures, 3 tables. 5 papers in French, 2 in English. 729 2021. Available both in print and Open Access. Printed ISBN 9781789697094. £27.00 (No VAT). Epublication ISBN 9781789697100. The reconstruction of the technical systems of ceramic production and of its ‘chaîne opératoire’ is a means ofexploring
ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress Publishing Ltd, Summertown Pavilion, 18-24 Middle Way, Summertown, Oxford OX2 7LG, England tel +44 (0) 1865 311914 fax +44 (0) 1865 512231 email: info@archaeopress.com ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress: Publishers of Academic Archaeology. NEW: Contribution of Ceramic Technological Approaches to the Anthropology and Archaeology of Pre- and Protohistoric Societies Proceedings of the XVIII UISPP World Congress (4-9 June 2018, Paris, France) Volume 12 Session IV-3 edited by François Giligny, Ekaterina Dolbunova, Louise Gomart ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY NEW: Barāqish/Yathill (Yemen) 1986-2007 Excavations of Temple B and related research and restoration / Extramural excavations in Area C and overview studies edited by Sabina Antonini and Francesco G. Fedele.DOI: 10.32028/9781789694703.Paperback; 205x290mm; 2 volumes: 398pp & 546pp; 700 figures, tables and plates. Contributions in English, Italian, and French. ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress: Publishers of Academic Archaeology. Historic Landscapes and Mental Well-being. edited by Timothy Darvill, Kerry Barrass, Laura Drysdale, Vanessa Heaslip and Yvette Staelens. Paperback; xx+282 pages; 70 figures, 7 tables (75 pages in colour). 569 2019. Available both in print and Open Access. Printed ISBN 9781789692686. ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Epublication ISBN 9781789691207. With contributions by Rob Atkins, Alison Draper, J N James, Lloyd Laing, Matthew Ponting, Anthony Read, Jenny Wakely, Penelope Walton-Rogers, and Jacqui Watson. Illustrations by Olly Dindol, Jacqueline Harding and James Ladocha. MOLA (Museum of London Archaeology) undertook evaluation and subsequent excavation ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Howard Williams is Professor of Archaeology at the University of Chester and researches public archaeology and archaeologies of death and memory. He writes an academic blog: Archaeodeath. ; Pauline Magdalene Clarke is a postgraduate researcher at the University of Chester, having recently completed both her BA (Hons) and MA there. AESTHETICS, APPLICATIONS, ARTISTRY AND ANARCHY: ESSAYS IN Aesthetics, Applications, Artistry and Anarchy 10 work—like pre-Columbian rock art—is not supposed to be viewed aesthetically, perhaps because it was made ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress is an Oxford-based publisher run by archaeologists Dr David Davison and Dr Rajka Makjanic. The range of our publications includes monographs, conference proceedings, catalogues of archaeological material, excavation reports and archaeological biographies. Archaeopress is devoted to publishing serious academic work on all aspects of ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress Access Archaeology: Print Books and Free PDF Downloads. Access Archaeology has been designed to make archaeological research accessible to all and to present a low-cost (or no-cost) publishing solution for academics from all over the world. Material ranges from monographs, conference proceedings, catalogues of archaeological material, excavation reports, doctoral theses and beyond. ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress Publishing Ltd, Summertown Pavilion, 18-24 Middle Way, Summertown, Oxford OX2 7LG, England tel +44 (0) 1865 311914 fax +44 (0) 1865 512231 email: info@archaeopress.com ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress Publishing Ltd, Summertown Pavilion, 18-24 Middle Way, Summertown, Oxford OX2 7LG, England tel +44 (0) 1865 311914 fax +44 (0) 1865 512231 email: info@archaeopress.com ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY NEW: James Mellaart: The Journey to Çatalhöyük by Alan Mellaart. Hardback; 190x260mm; 476 pages, 200+ illustrations.ISBN 9786053965237. 65.00 (No VAT). Institutional Price £65.00 (No VAT). James Mellaart was a pioneering archaeologist who made some of the greatest discoveries about Turkey’s prehistoric past, changing ourunderstanding
ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress: Publishers of Academic Archaeology. Historic Landscapes and Mental Well-being. edited by Timothy Darvill, Kerry Barrass, Laura Drysdale, Vanessa Heaslip and Yvette Staelens. Paperback; xx+282 pages; 70 figures, 7 tables (75 pages in colour). 569 2019. Available both in print and Open Access. Printed ISBN 9781789692686. ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress: Publishers of Academic Archaeology. Glazed Brick Decoration in the Ancient Near East. edited by Anja Fügert and Helen Gries. Paperback; 205x290mm; 130 pages; 97 figures, 5 tables (61 colour pages). 645 2020. Available both in print and Open Access. Printed ISBN 9781789696059. Epublication ISBN 9781789696066. ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Epublication ISBN 9781789691207. With contributions by Rob Atkins, Alison Draper, J N James, Lloyd Laing, Matthew Ponting, Anthony Read, Jenny Wakely, Penelope Walton-Rogers, and Jacqui Watson. Illustrations by Olly Dindol, Jacqueline Harding and James Ladocha. MOLA (Museum of London Archaeology) undertook evaluation and subsequent excavation ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress: Publishers of Academic Archaeology. Journal of Greek Archaeology Volume 4 2019. edited by John Bintliff (Ed. in Chief). Paperback; vi+532 pages; illustrated throughout in colour and black & white. 4 2019. Available both in printed and e-versions. Printed ISBN9781789693775.
ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Paul Bidwell was Head of Archaeology at Tyne & Wear Archives & Museums for almost three decades until his retirement in 2013. He has published numerous monographs, excavation reports and articles and is the author of Roman Forts in Britain (1997 and 2007). He is now an independent researcher and archaeological and heritage consultant. ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGYHOMEBROWSE BY SUBJECTBROWSE BY SERIESCATALOGUESJOIN OUR MAILING LIST Archaeopress is an Oxford-based publisher specialising in scholarly books and journals in the field of archaeology and related heritage subjects. COVID-19 / Brexit Updates. Publishing: Our publishing schedule proceeds as normal without significant interruptions; our team continue to work as usual, albeit in various locations. ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress Journals. Archaeopress publish a range of journals in Archaeology and related heritage topics. Subjects include Greek and Mediterranean archaeology, Near Eastern studies, the Arabian Peninsula and more. We are actively seeking to broaden our journal output; if you have an idea for a new journal or are looking for a new publishing ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Paperback; 205x290mm; 112 pages; 44 figures, 3 tables. 5 papers in French, 2 in English. 729 2021. Available both in print and Open Access. Printed ISBN 9781789697094. £27.00 (No VAT). Epublication ISBN 9781789697100. The reconstruction of the technical systems of ceramic production and of its ‘chaîne opératoire’ is a means ofexploring
ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress Publishing Ltd, Summertown Pavilion, 18-24 Middle Way, Summertown, Oxford OX2 7LG, England tel +44 (0) 1865 311914 fax +44 (0) 1865 512231 email: info@archaeopress.com ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress: Publishers of Academic Archaeology. NEW: Contribution of Ceramic Technological Approaches to the Anthropology and Archaeology of Pre- and Protohistoric Societies Proceedings of the XVIII UISPP World Congress (4-9 June 2018, Paris, France) Volume 12 Session IV-3 edited by François Giligny, Ekaterina Dolbunova, Louise Gomart ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY NEW: Barāqish/Yathill (Yemen) 1986-2007 Excavations of Temple B and related research and restoration / Extramural excavations in Area C and overview studies edited by Sabina Antonini and Francesco G. Fedele.DOI: 10.32028/9781789694703.Paperback; 205x290mm; 2 volumes: 398pp & 546pp; 700 figures, tables and plates. Contributions in English, Italian, and French. ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress: Publishers of Academic Archaeology. Historic Landscapes and Mental Well-being. edited by Timothy Darvill, Kerry Barrass, Laura Drysdale, Vanessa Heaslip and Yvette Staelens. Paperback; xx+282 pages; 70 figures, 7 tables (75 pages in colour). 569 2019. Available both in print and Open Access. Printed ISBN 9781789692686. ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Epublication ISBN 9781789691207. With contributions by Rob Atkins, Alison Draper, J N James, Lloyd Laing, Matthew Ponting, Anthony Read, Jenny Wakely, Penelope Walton-Rogers, and Jacqui Watson. Illustrations by Olly Dindol, Jacqueline Harding and James Ladocha. MOLA (Museum of London Archaeology) undertook evaluation and subsequent excavation ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Howard Williams is Professor of Archaeology at the University of Chester and researches public archaeology and archaeologies of death and memory. He writes an academic blog: Archaeodeath. ; Pauline Magdalene Clarke is a postgraduate researcher at the University of Chester, having recently completed both her BA (Hons) and MA there. AESTHETICS, APPLICATIONS, ARTISTRY AND ANARCHY: ESSAYS IN Aesthetics, Applications, Artistry and Anarchy 10 work—like pre-Columbian rock art—is not supposed to be viewed aesthetically, perhaps because it was made ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGYHOMEBROWSE BY SUBJECTBROWSE BY SERIESCATALOGUESJOIN OUR MAILING LIST Archaeopress is an Oxford-based publisher specialising in scholarly books and journals in the field of archaeology and related heritage subjects. COVID-19 / Brexit Updates. Publishing: Our publishing schedule proceeds as normal without significant interruptions; our team continue to work as usual, albeit in various locations. ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress Journals. Archaeopress publish a range of journals in Archaeology and related heritage topics. Subjects include Greek and Mediterranean archaeology, Near Eastern studies, the Arabian Peninsula and more. We are actively seeking to broaden our journal output; if you have an idea for a new journal or are looking for a new publishing ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Paperback; 205x290mm; 112 pages; 44 figures, 3 tables. 5 papers in French, 2 in English. 729 2021. Available both in print and Open Access. Printed ISBN 9781789697094. £27.00 (No VAT). Epublication ISBN 9781789697100. The reconstruction of the technical systems of ceramic production and of its ‘chaîne opératoire’ is a means ofexploring
ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress Publishing Ltd, Summertown Pavilion, 18-24 Middle Way, Summertown, Oxford OX2 7LG, England tel +44 (0) 1865 311914 fax +44 (0) 1865 512231 email: info@archaeopress.com ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress: Publishers of Academic Archaeology. NEW: Contribution of Ceramic Technological Approaches to the Anthropology and Archaeology of Pre- and Protohistoric Societies Proceedings of the XVIII UISPP World Congress (4-9 June 2018, Paris, France) Volume 12 Session IV-3 edited by François Giligny, Ekaterina Dolbunova, Louise Gomart ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY NEW: Barāqish/Yathill (Yemen) 1986-2007 Excavations of Temple B and related research and restoration / Extramural excavations in Area C and overview studies edited by Sabina Antonini and Francesco G. Fedele.DOI: 10.32028/9781789694703.Paperback; 205x290mm; 2 volumes: 398pp & 546pp; 700 figures, tables and plates. Contributions in English, Italian, and French. ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress: Publishers of Academic Archaeology. Historic Landscapes and Mental Well-being. edited by Timothy Darvill, Kerry Barrass, Laura Drysdale, Vanessa Heaslip and Yvette Staelens. Paperback; xx+282 pages; 70 figures, 7 tables (75 pages in colour). 569 2019. Available both in print and Open Access. Printed ISBN 9781789692686. ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Epublication ISBN 9781789691207. With contributions by Rob Atkins, Alison Draper, J N James, Lloyd Laing, Matthew Ponting, Anthony Read, Jenny Wakely, Penelope Walton-Rogers, and Jacqui Watson. Illustrations by Olly Dindol, Jacqueline Harding and James Ladocha. MOLA (Museum of London Archaeology) undertook evaluation and subsequent excavation ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Howard Williams is Professor of Archaeology at the University of Chester and researches public archaeology and archaeologies of death and memory. He writes an academic blog: Archaeodeath. ; Pauline Magdalene Clarke is a postgraduate researcher at the University of Chester, having recently completed both her BA (Hons) and MA there. AESTHETICS, APPLICATIONS, ARTISTRY AND ANARCHY: ESSAYS IN Aesthetics, Applications, Artistry and Anarchy 10 work—like pre-Columbian rock art—is not supposed to be viewed aesthetically, perhaps because it was made ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress is an Oxford-based publisher run by archaeologists Dr David Davison and Dr Rajka Makjanic. The range of our publications includes monographs, conference proceedings, catalogues of archaeological material, excavation reports and archaeological biographies. Archaeopress is devoted to publishing serious academic work on all aspects of ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress Access Archaeology: Print Books and Free PDF Downloads. Access Archaeology has been designed to make archaeological research accessible to all and to present a low-cost (or no-cost) publishing solution for academics from all over the world. Material ranges from monographs, conference proceedings, catalogues of archaeological material, excavation reports, doctoral theses and beyond. ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress Publishing Ltd, Summertown Pavilion, 18-24 Middle Way, Summertown, Oxford OX2 7LG, England tel +44 (0) 1865 311914 fax +44 (0) 1865 512231 email: info@archaeopress.com ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress Publishing Ltd, Summertown Pavilion, 18-24 Middle Way, Summertown, Oxford OX2 7LG, England tel +44 (0) 1865 311914 fax +44 (0) 1865 512231 email: info@archaeopress.com ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY NEW: James Mellaart: The Journey to Çatalhöyük by Alan Mellaart. Hardback; 190x260mm; 476 pages, 200+ illustrations.ISBN 9786053965237. 65.00 (No VAT). Institutional Price £65.00 (No VAT). James Mellaart was a pioneering archaeologist who made some of the greatest discoveries about Turkey’s prehistoric past, changing ourunderstanding
ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress: Publishers of Academic Archaeology. Historic Landscapes and Mental Well-being. edited by Timothy Darvill, Kerry Barrass, Laura Drysdale, Vanessa Heaslip and Yvette Staelens. Paperback; xx+282 pages; 70 figures, 7 tables (75 pages in colour). 569 2019. Available both in print and Open Access. Printed ISBN 9781789692686. ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress: Publishers of Academic Archaeology. Glazed Brick Decoration in the Ancient Near East. edited by Anja Fügert and Helen Gries. Paperback; 205x290mm; 130 pages; 97 figures, 5 tables (61 colour pages). 645 2020. Available both in print and Open Access. Printed ISBN 9781789696059. Epublication ISBN 9781789696066. ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Epublication ISBN 9781789691207. With contributions by Rob Atkins, Alison Draper, J N James, Lloyd Laing, Matthew Ponting, Anthony Read, Jenny Wakely, Penelope Walton-Rogers, and Jacqui Watson. Illustrations by Olly Dindol, Jacqueline Harding and James Ladocha. MOLA (Museum of London Archaeology) undertook evaluation and subsequent excavation ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress: Publishers of Academic Archaeology. Journal of Greek Archaeology Volume 4 2019. edited by John Bintliff (Ed. in Chief). Paperback; vi+532 pages; illustrated throughout in colour and black & white. 4 2019. Available both in printed and e-versions. Printed ISBN9781789693775.
ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Paul Bidwell was Head of Archaeology at Tyne & Wear Archives & Museums for almost three decades until his retirement in 2013. He has published numerous monographs, excavation reports and articles and is the author of Roman Forts in Britain (1997 and 2007). He is now an independent researcher and archaeological and heritage consultant. ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGYHOMEBROWSE BY SUBJECTBROWSE BY SERIESCATALOGUESJOIN OUR MAILING LIST Communicating the research of thousands of archaeologists worldwide. Archaeopress is an Oxford-based publisher specialising in scholarly books and journals in the field of archaeology and related heritage subjects. COVID-19 / Brexit Updates. Publishing: Our publishing schedule proceeds as normal without significant interruptions; ourteam
ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Paperback; 205x290mm; 112 pages; 44 figures, 3 tables. 5 papers in French, 2 in English. 729 2021. Available both in print and Open Access. Printed ISBN 9781789697094. £27.00 (No VAT). Epublication ISBN 9781789697100. The reconstruction of the technical systems of ceramic production and of its ‘chaîne opératoire’ is a means ofexploring
ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY FORTHCOMING: Chios dicta est et in Aegæo sita mari: Historical Archaeology and Heraldry on Chios by Ioanna N. Koukouni. Paperback; 205x290mm; 330 pages; 18 figures, 6 maps, 125 plates. Print RRP: 54.00. 743 2021. ISBN 9781789697469. Historical Archaeology and Heraldry on Chios presents the results of research into the island’s medieval period, a terra incognita in the contemporary ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress Publishing Ltd, Summertown Pavilion, 18-24 Middle Way, Summertown, Oxford OX2 7LG, England tel +44 (0) 1865 311914 fax +44 (0) 1865 512231 email: info@archaeopress.com ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Paperback; 205x290mm; 366 pages; illustrated throughout in colour and black & white. 567 2019. Available both in print and Open Access. Printed ISBN 9781789693065. Epublication ISBN 9781789693072. This volume is a product of the 13th International Conference on Archaeological Prospection 2019, which was hosted by the Department ofEnvironmental
ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress: Publishers of Academic Archaeology. Journal of Greek Archaeology Volume 4 2019. edited by John Bintliff (Ed. in Chief). Paperback; vi+532 pages; illustrated throughout in colour and black & white. 4 2019. Available both in printed and e-versions. Printed ISBN9781789693775.
ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY ARAMAZD: Armenian Journal of Near Eastern Studies (AJNES) Established in 2006 by the Association for Near Eastern and Caucasian Studies in corporation with Institute of Oriental Studies and Institute of Archaeology and Ethnography (National Academy of Sciences of Armenia) AJNES is the only periodical in the Republic of Armenia devoted exclusively to the investigation of ancient and medieval ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress: Publishers of Academic Archaeology. Hillforts of the Cheshire Ridge. Author: Dan Garner et al. xx+263 pages; illustrated throughout in colour and black & white. 277 2016. Available both in printed and e-versions. Printed ISBN 9781784914660. Epublication ISBN 9781784914677. The Cheshire hillforts are some of the most conspicuous THE CLASSIFICATION OF CHALCOLITHIC AND EARLY BRONZE AGE Access Archaeology A r c h a e o p r e s s A c c e s s A r c h a e o l o g y A The Classification of Chalcolithic and Early Bronze Age Copper and Bronze Axe-heads from Southern Britain PROCEEDINGS OF THE 13 NORDIC BRONZE AGE SYMPOSIUM HELD IN Archaeopress Open Access i I wish to express my sincere gratitude to all who participated in the 13th Nordic Bronze Age symposium. Thank you for attending the conference, for presenting excellent papers and for asking stimulating questions and sharing a ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGYHOMEBROWSE BY SUBJECTBROWSE BY SERIESCATALOGUESJOIN OUR MAILING LIST Communicating the research of thousands of archaeologists worldwide. Archaeopress is an Oxford-based publisher specialising in scholarly books and journals in the field of archaeology and related heritage subjects. COVID-19 / Brexit Updates. Publishing: Our publishing schedule proceeds as normal without significant interruptions; ourteam
ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Paperback; 205x290mm; 112 pages; 44 figures, 3 tables. 5 papers in French, 2 in English. 729 2021. Available both in print and Open Access. Printed ISBN 9781789697094. £27.00 (No VAT). Epublication ISBN 9781789697100. The reconstruction of the technical systems of ceramic production and of its ‘chaîne opératoire’ is a means ofexploring
ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY FORTHCOMING: Chios dicta est et in Aegæo sita mari: Historical Archaeology and Heraldry on Chios by Ioanna N. Koukouni. Paperback; 205x290mm; 330 pages; 18 figures, 6 maps, 125 plates. Print RRP: 54.00. 743 2021. ISBN 9781789697469. Historical Archaeology and Heraldry on Chios presents the results of research into the island’s medieval period, a terra incognita in the contemporary ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress Publishing Ltd, Summertown Pavilion, 18-24 Middle Way, Summertown, Oxford OX2 7LG, England tel +44 (0) 1865 311914 fax +44 (0) 1865 512231 email: info@archaeopress.com ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Paperback; 205x290mm; 366 pages; illustrated throughout in colour and black & white. 567 2019. Available both in print and Open Access. Printed ISBN 9781789693065. Epublication ISBN 9781789693072. This volume is a product of the 13th International Conference on Archaeological Prospection 2019, which was hosted by the Department ofEnvironmental
ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress: Publishers of Academic Archaeology. Journal of Greek Archaeology Volume 4 2019. edited by John Bintliff (Ed. in Chief). Paperback; vi+532 pages; illustrated throughout in colour and black & white. 4 2019. Available both in printed and e-versions. Printed ISBN9781789693775.
ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY ARAMAZD: Armenian Journal of Near Eastern Studies (AJNES) Established in 2006 by the Association for Near Eastern and Caucasian Studies in corporation with Institute of Oriental Studies and Institute of Archaeology and Ethnography (National Academy of Sciences of Armenia) AJNES is the only periodical in the Republic of Armenia devoted exclusively to the investigation of ancient and medieval ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress: Publishers of Academic Archaeology. Hillforts of the Cheshire Ridge. Author: Dan Garner et al. xx+263 pages; illustrated throughout in colour and black & white. 277 2016. Available both in printed and e-versions. Printed ISBN 9781784914660. Epublication ISBN 9781784914677. The Cheshire hillforts are some of the most conspicuous THE CLASSIFICATION OF CHALCOLITHIC AND EARLY BRONZE AGE Access Archaeology A r c h a e o p r e s s A c c e s s A r c h a e o l o g y A The Classification of Chalcolithic and Early Bronze Age Copper and Bronze Axe-heads from Southern Britain PROCEEDINGS OF THE 13 NORDIC BRONZE AGE SYMPOSIUM HELD IN Archaeopress Open Access i I wish to express my sincere gratitude to all who participated in the 13th Nordic Bronze Age symposium. Thank you for attending the conference, for presenting excellent papers and for asking stimulating questions and sharing a ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress is an Oxford-based publisher run by archaeologists Dr David Davison and Dr Rajka Makjanic. The range of our publications includes monographs, conference proceedings, catalogues of archaeological material, excavation reports and archaeological biographies. Archaeopress is devoted to publishing serious academic work on all aspects of ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress Journals. Archaeopress publish a range of journals in Archaeology and related heritage topics. Subjects include Greek and Mediterranean archaeology, Near Eastern studies, the Arabian Peninsula and more. We are actively seeking to broaden our journal output; if you have an idea for a new journal or are looking for a new publishing ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress: Publishers of Academic Archaeology. Glazed Brick Decoration in the Ancient Near East. edited by Anja Fügert and Helen Gries. Paperback; 205x290mm; 130 pages; 97 figures, 5 tables (61 colour pages). 645 2020. Available both in print and Open Access. Printed ISBN 9781789696059. Epublication ISBN 9781789696066. ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress: Publishers of Academic Archaeology. Journal of Greek Archaeology Volume 4 2019. edited by John Bintliff (Ed. in Chief). Paperback; vi+532 pages; illustrated throughout in colour and black & white. 4 2019. Available both in printed and e-versions. Printed ISBN9781789693775.
ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress: Publishers of Academic Archaeology. Historic Landscapes and Mental Well-being. edited by Timothy Darvill, Kerry Barrass, Laura Drysdale, Vanessa Heaslip and Yvette Staelens. Paperback; xx+282 pages; 70 figures, 7 tables (75 pages in colour). 569 2019. Available both in print and Open Access. Printed ISBN 9781789692686. ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress Publishing Ltd, Summertown Pavilion, 18-24 Middle Way, Summertown, Oxford OX2 7LG, England tel +44 (0) 1865 311914 fax +44 (0) 1865 512231 email: info@archaeopress.com ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress: Publishers of Academic Archaeology. Hillforts of the Cheshire Ridge. Author: Dan Garner et al. xx+263 pages; illustrated throughout in colour and black & white. 277 2016. Available both in printed and e-versions. Printed ISBN 9781784914660. Epublication ISBN 9781784914677. The Cheshire hillforts are some of the most conspicuous ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Howard Williams is Professor of Archaeology at the University of Chester and researches public archaeology and archaeologies of death and memory. He writes an academic blog: Archaeodeath. ; Pauline Magdalene Clarke is a postgraduate researcher at the University of Chester, having recently completed both her BA (Hons) and MA there. ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Svetlana Pankova is a senior researcher and curator of the Altai-Sayan collections in the Department of the Archaeology of Eastern Europe and Siberia in the State Hermitage Museum. Her main academic interests are sites from southern Siberia and central Asia with well-preserved organic materials dating from the 1st millennium BC to the 1st ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Anna Perenna was an ancient Roman goddess who had a festival ‘via Flaminia ad lapidem primum’, on the Ides of March, the primitive Roman New Year’s Eve, according to the Vatican, Antiates and Farnese Fasti (Fasti Vat., CIL XII, 342; Fasti Ant., Fasti Farn., CIL XII, 311). She was widely mentioned by Ovid and Silius Italicus and, as ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGYHOMEBROWSE BY SUBJECTBROWSE BY SERIESCATALOGUESJOIN OUR MAILING LIST Archaeopress is an Oxford-based publisher specialising in scholarly books and journals in the field of archaeology and related heritage subjects. COVID-19 / Brexit Updates. Publishing: Our publishing schedule proceeds as normal without significant interruptions; our team continue to work as usual, albeit in various locations. ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress is an Oxford-based publisher run by archaeologists Dr David Davison and Dr Rajka Makjanic. The range of our publications includes monographs, conference proceedings, catalogues of archaeological material, excavation reports and archaeological biographies. Archaeopress is devoted to publishing serious academic work on all aspects of ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress Publishing Ltd, Summertown Pavilion, 18-24 Middle Way, Summertown, Oxford OX2 7LG, England tel +44 (0) 1865 311914 fax +44 (0) 1865 512231 email: info@archaeopress.com ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress: Publishers of Academic Archaeology. NEW: Contribution of Ceramic Technological Approaches to the Anthropology and Archaeology of Pre- and Protohistoric Societies Proceedings of the XVIII UISPP World Congress (4-9 June 2018, Paris, France) Volume 12 Session IV-3 edited by François Giligny, Ekaterina Dolbunova, Louise Gomart ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress: Publishers of Academic Archaeology. Glazed Brick Decoration in the Ancient Near East. edited by Anja Fügert and Helen Gries. Paperback; 205x290mm; 130 pages; 97 figures, 5 tables (61 colour pages). 645 2020. Available both in print and Open Access. Printed ISBN 9781789696059. Epublication ISBN 9781789696066. ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress Publishing Ltd, Summertown Pavilion, 18-24 Middle Way, Summertown, Oxford OX2 7LG, England tel +44 (0) 1865 311914 fax +44 (0) 1865 512231 email: info@archaeopress.com ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Epublication ISBN 9781789691207. With contributions by Rob Atkins, Alison Draper, J N James, Lloyd Laing, Matthew Ponting, Anthony Read, Jenny Wakely, Penelope Walton-Rogers, and Jacqui Watson. Illustrations by Olly Dindol, Jacqueline Harding and James Ladocha. MOLA (Museum of London Archaeology) undertook evaluation and subsequent excavation ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Howard Williams is Professor of Archaeology at the University of Chester and researches public archaeology and archaeologies of death and memory. He writes an academic blog: Archaeodeath. ; Pauline Magdalene Clarke is a postgraduate researcher at the University of Chester, having recently completed both her BA (Hons) and MA there. AESTHETICS, APPLICATIONS, ARTISTRY AND ANARCHY: ESSAYS IN Aesthetics, Applications, Artistry and Anarchy 10 work—like pre-Columbian rock art—is not supposed to be viewed aesthetically, perhaps because it was made PROCEEDINGS OF THE 13 NORDIC BRONZE AGE SYMPOSIUM HELD IN Archaeopress Open Access i I wish to express my sincere gratitude to all who participated in the 13th Nordic Bronze Age symposium. Thank you for attending the conference, for presenting excellent papers and for asking stimulating questions and sharing a ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGYHOMEBROWSE BY SUBJECTBROWSE BY SERIESCATALOGUESJOIN OUR MAILING LIST Archaeopress is an Oxford-based publisher specialising in scholarly books and journals in the field of archaeology and related heritage subjects. COVID-19 / Brexit Updates. Publishing: Our publishing schedule proceeds as normal without significant interruptions; our team continue to work as usual, albeit in various locations. ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress is an Oxford-based publisher run by archaeologists Dr David Davison and Dr Rajka Makjanic. The range of our publications includes monographs, conference proceedings, catalogues of archaeological material, excavation reports and archaeological biographies. Archaeopress is devoted to publishing serious academic work on all aspects of ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress Publishing Ltd, Summertown Pavilion, 18-24 Middle Way, Summertown, Oxford OX2 7LG, England tel +44 (0) 1865 311914 fax +44 (0) 1865 512231 email: info@archaeopress.com ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress: Publishers of Academic Archaeology. NEW: Contribution of Ceramic Technological Approaches to the Anthropology and Archaeology of Pre- and Protohistoric Societies Proceedings of the XVIII UISPP World Congress (4-9 June 2018, Paris, France) Volume 12 Session IV-3 edited by François Giligny, Ekaterina Dolbunova, Louise Gomart ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress: Publishers of Academic Archaeology. Glazed Brick Decoration in the Ancient Near East. edited by Anja Fügert and Helen Gries. Paperback; 205x290mm; 130 pages; 97 figures, 5 tables (61 colour pages). 645 2020. Available both in print and Open Access. Printed ISBN 9781789696059. Epublication ISBN 9781789696066. ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress Publishing Ltd, Summertown Pavilion, 18-24 Middle Way, Summertown, Oxford OX2 7LG, England tel +44 (0) 1865 311914 fax +44 (0) 1865 512231 email: info@archaeopress.com ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Epublication ISBN 9781789691207. With contributions by Rob Atkins, Alison Draper, J N James, Lloyd Laing, Matthew Ponting, Anthony Read, Jenny Wakely, Penelope Walton-Rogers, and Jacqui Watson. Illustrations by Olly Dindol, Jacqueline Harding and James Ladocha. MOLA (Museum of London Archaeology) undertook evaluation and subsequent excavation ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Howard Williams is Professor of Archaeology at the University of Chester and researches public archaeology and archaeologies of death and memory. He writes an academic blog: Archaeodeath. ; Pauline Magdalene Clarke is a postgraduate researcher at the University of Chester, having recently completed both her BA (Hons) and MA there. AESTHETICS, APPLICATIONS, ARTISTRY AND ANARCHY: ESSAYS IN Aesthetics, Applications, Artistry and Anarchy 10 work—like pre-Columbian rock art—is not supposed to be viewed aesthetically, perhaps because it was made PROCEEDINGS OF THE 13 NORDIC BRONZE AGE SYMPOSIUM HELD IN Archaeopress Open Access i I wish to express my sincere gratitude to all who participated in the 13th Nordic Bronze Age symposium. Thank you for attending the conference, for presenting excellent papers and for asking stimulating questions and sharing a ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress Access Archaeology: Print Books and Free PDF Downloads. Access Archaeology has been designed to make archaeological research accessible to all and to present a low-cost (or no-cost) publishing solution for academics from all over the world. Material ranges from monographs, conference proceedings, catalogues of archaeological material, excavation reports, doctoral theses and beyond. ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress Archaeology. Our main peer-reviewed imprint currently publishes 70-100 new titles a year. The range of our publications includes monographs, conference proceedings, catalogues of archaeological material, excavation reports and archaeological biographies. We accept proposals across the full spectrum of archaeological topics, all ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Paperback; 205x290mm; 112 pages; 44 figures, 3 tables. 5 papers in French, 2 in English. 729 2021. Available both in print and Open Access. Printed ISBN 9781789697094. £27.00 (No VAT). Epublication ISBN 9781789697100. The reconstruction of the technical systems of ceramic production and of its ‘chaîne opératoire’ is a means ofexploring
ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress Publishing Ltd, Summertown Pavilion, 18-24 Middle Way, Summertown, Oxford OX2 7LG, England tel +44 (0) 1865 311914 fax +44 (0) 1865 512231 email: info@archaeopress.com ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY NEW: James Mellaart: The Journey to Çatalhöyük by Alan Mellaart. Hardback; 190x260mm; 476 pages, 200+ illustrations.ISBN 9786053965237. 65.00 (No VAT). Institutional Price £65.00 (No VAT). James Mellaart was a pioneering archaeologist who made some of the greatest discoveries about Turkey’s prehistoric past, changing ourunderstanding
ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Epublication ISBN 9781789691207. With contributions by Rob Atkins, Alison Draper, J N James, Lloyd Laing, Matthew Ponting, Anthony Read, Jenny Wakely, Penelope Walton-Rogers, and Jacqui Watson. Illustrations by Olly Dindol, Jacqueline Harding and James Ladocha. MOLA (Museum of London Archaeology) undertook evaluation and subsequent excavation ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Paperback; 205x290mm; 366 pages; illustrated throughout in colour and black & white. 567 2019. Available both in print and Open Access. Printed ISBN 9781789693065. Epublication ISBN 9781789693072. This volume is a product of the 13th International Conference on Archaeological Prospection 2019, which was hosted by the Department ofEnvironmental
ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Archaeopress: Publishers of Academic Archaeology. Journal of Greek Archaeology Volume 4 2019. edited by John Bintliff (Ed. in Chief). Paperback; vi+532 pages; illustrated throughout in colour and black & white. 4 2019. Available both in printed and e-versions. Printed ISBN9781789693775.
ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Howard Williams is Professor of Archaeology at the University of Chester and researches public archaeology and archaeologies of death and memory. He writes an academic blog: Archaeodeath. ; Pauline Magdalene Clarke is a postgraduate researcher at the University of Chester, having recently completed both her BA (Hons) and MA there. ARCHAEOPRESS: PUBLISHERS OF ACADEMIC ARCHAEOLOGY Paul Bidwell was Head of Archaeology at Tyne & Wear Archives & Museums for almost three decades until his retirement in 2013. He has published numerous monographs, excavation reports and articles and is the author of Roman Forts in Britain (1997 and 2007). He is now an independent researcher and archaeological and heritage consultant. We use cookies to enhance your experience on our site. By continuing to use the site you agree to our use of cookies. Privacy &Cookies .
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Archaeopress: Publishing Scholarly Archaeology since 1997 ------------------------- Communicating the research of thousands of archaeologists worldwide. Archaeopress is an Oxford-based publisher specialising in scholarly books and journals in the field of archaeology and related heritagesubjects.
COVID-19 / Brexit Updates Publishing: Our publishing schedule proceeds as normal without significant interruptions; our team continue to work as usual, albeit in various locations. Our printing and fulfilment partners are all open and functioning at this time. Shipping delays: We are accepting and processing orders in the usual way. The ongoing impact of COVID, compounded throughout January as shipping firms adapt to new export rules following Brexit, have caused considerable delay to shipments to Europe and beyond. Packages are safely reaching their destination, however delivery times are unpredictable and are typically far longer than usual. We sincerely thank you for your patience while you await your order. If you do have any concerns, please contact info@archaeopress.com. EU customers: Website orders destined for EU addresses are now likely to be subject to import VAT and customs clearance charges. If you have any queries on this point please contact us and we will do our best to advise: info@archaeopress.com. _NEW:_ CHIOS DICTA EST… ET IN AEGÆO SITA MARI: HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY AND HERALDRY ON CHIOS by Ioanna N. Koukouni. Paperback; 205x290mm; 330 pages; 18 figures, 6 maps, 125 plates. 743 2021. Available both in printed and e-versions. Printed ISBN 9781789697469. 54.00 (No VAT). Epublication ISBN 9781789697476. £16.00 (Exc. VAT) Institutional Price £54.00 (Exc. UK VAT) _Historical Archaeology and Heraldry on Chios _presents the results of research into the island’s medieval period, a _terra incognita _in the contemporary scholarly record. It is the first to be devoted to this topic in more than 100 years, following the publication of the seminal _History of Chios _by G. Zolotas in the 1920s. The book discusses the archaeology and history of Chios during the Byzantine and Genoese periods, focusing on Mount Amani, the region on the north-western part of the island. Harsh, remote, and poor, Mount Amani is nevertheless surprisingly rich in material for the landscape archaeologist and the student of historical topography, yet unknown in scholarly literature. Different types of evidence—both tangible and intangible—are used to discuss aspects of the local history and culture, from the evolution of the Byzantine settlement pattern, the rural economy, communications by land and sea and the chain of watchtowers, to the genealogy, the prosopography and the insignia of the local aristocracy, with many stone carvings illustrated for thefirst time.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
_Ioanna N. Koukouni _is a medieval archaeologist and expert in Cultural Heritage Digitisation, a graduate of the National & Kapodistrian University of Athens and the University of Birmingham. After holding a European research fellowship, she co-founded the Centro degli Studi sui Genovesi in Oltremare – NPO together with Professors Sandra Origone and Gabriella Airaldi, aiming to promote and disseminate research on the medieval Genoese network overseas. _NEW:_ SANTUARI E SPAZI CONFESSIONALI NELL’ITALIA TARDOANTICA by Alessandro Luciano. Paperback; 205x290mm; 274 pages; 274 black & white figures. Italian text. 742 2021. Available both in printed and e-versions. Printed ISBN 9781789697544. £40.00 (No VAT). Epublication ISBN 9781789697551. £16.00 (Exc. VAT) Institutional Price £40.00(Exc. UK VAT)
The cult of relics, encouraged by, among others, the emperor Constantine, Pope Damasus and the bishops Ambrose of Milan and Paulinus of Nola, led to the transformation of the Late Antique Italian landscape, and of suburban areas in particular. The process of gradual enhancement of the martyrs' tombs led to the creation of extensive sanctuaries, generally composed of funerary and cultic buildings, as well as service structures, pilgrims' lodgings and monasteries. The most important sanctuaries, such as those of Saints Peter in the Vatican, Paul on the Ostiense, Erasmus in Formia, Alexander in Nomentum, Felix in Cimitile, Gennaro in Naples, Felix in Venosa, Marcianus in Syracuse, and the Apostles in Concordia Sagittaria, became so popular that they justified Jerome's phrase: _movetur urbs sedibus suis et currit ad martyrum tumulos_. Between the 5th and 6th century, sanctuaries spread also in rural areas, usually along important roads, as documented by the site of San Canzian d'Isonzo. Analysing hypogeal and subdial contexts, _Santuari e spazi confessionali nell’Italia tardoantica_ outlines the evolution of _loca sancta_, in a process that led the venerated tombs to become first _memoriae_, then places of worship and finally articulated sanctuaries. For the first time, the contexts of Rome are organically compared with those of the rest of Italy.ABOUT THE AUTHOR
_Alessandro Luciano_ works at the National Archaeological Museum of Naples and has a PhD in the Science of Antiquity. His main scientific interests lie in the transition between Antiquity and the Middle Ages. He has published dozens of articles in specialist and popular journals and presented the results of his research at national and international conferences. He has published several books, including further academic studies alongside works of historical fiction.ITALIAN DESCRIPTION
Il culto delle reliquie, incentivato tra gli altri dall’imperatore Costantino, da papa Damaso e dai vescovi Ambrogio di Milano e Paolino di Nola, ha determinato la trasformazione del paesaggio italiano tardoantico, delle aree suburbane in particolare. Il processo di graduale valorizzazione delle tombe martiriali, infatti, condusse alla nascita di estesi santuari, generalmente composti da edifi ci funerari e cultuali, oltre che da strutture di servizio, alloggi per pellegrini e monasteri. I santuari più importanti, come quelli dei santi Pietro in Vaticano, Paolo sull’Ostiense, Erasmo a Formia, Alessandro a Nomentum, Felice a Cimitile, Gennaro a Napoli, Felice a Venosa, Marciano a Siracusa, nonché degli Apostoli a Concordia Sagittaria, divennero così popolari da giustifi care la locuzione di Girolamo: _movetur urbs sedibus suis et currit ad martyrum tumulos_. Tra V e VI secolo i santuari si diff usero anche in aree rurali, di solito lungo importanti percorsi viari, come documenta il sito di San Canzian d’Isonzo. Analizzando contesti ipogei e subdiali, il volume delinea l’evoluzione degli spazi santifi cati da reliquie, in un processo che portò le tombe venerate a divenire dapprima memoriae, quindi luoghi di culto e infi ne articolati santuari. Per la prima volta nella storia degli studi, i contesti di Roma sono messi organicamente a confronto con quelli del resto d’Italia. _Alessandro Luciano_, nato nel 1980, lavora al Museo Archeologico Nazionale di Napoli ed è dottore _NEW:_ SPECTACLE AND DISPLAY: A MODERN HISTORY OF BRITAIN’S ROMAN MOSAIC PAVEMENTS by Michael Dawson. Paperback; 176x250mm; 256 pages; 60 figures. 740 2021 _Archaeopress Roman Archaeology 79_. Available both in printed and e-versions. Printed ISBN 9781789698312. £40.00 (No VAT). Epublication ISBN 9781789698329. £16.00 (Exc. VAT) Institutional Price £40.00 (Exc. UK VAT) _Spectacle and Display: A Modern History of Britain’s Roman Mosaic Pavements _is the first narrative to explore responses and attitudes to mosaics, not just at the point of discovery but during their subsequent history. It is a field which has received scant attention in the literature and provides a compelling insight into the agency of these spectacular remains. Analysis shows how mosaics have influenced and have been instrumental in the commodification of the past, the development of conservation practice and promoting the rise of the archaeologist. ‘The most spectacular remains of Roman Britain’ is a familiar description applied to the discovery of mosaics floors. They are exceptional symbols of Roman life in the province of Britannia and each new discovery is eagerly reported in the press. Yet one estimate suggested that 75% of all known mosaics from Britain have been lost, and they are commonly displayed out of context, wall mounted as artwork in museums and exhibitions and far from their role as floors. This is a contested narrative in which spectacle and survival, conservation and fine art, ownership and curation provide the discourse and texts of contemporary attitudes.ABOUT THE AUTHOR
_Michael Dawson _is a heritage consultant, Heritage Director at RPS (UK and Ireland). He is editor of the international journal _Historic Environment Policy and Practice_ and is panel lecturer with Oxford University Dept. of Continuing Education. He has excavated in Britain, Bulgaria and Romania, publishing widely both in Britain and eastern Europe and has been instrumental in making the case for the Roşia Montană World Heritage nomination. _NEW:_ SOME THOUGHTS ABOUT THE EVOLUTION OF HUMAN BEHAVIOR: A LITERATURE SURVEY by Arthur J. Boucot (with edits by John M. Saul and John B. Southard). Paperback; 174x245mm; 252 pages. 739 2021. Available both in printed and e-versions. Printed ISBN 9781789699036. 35.00 (No VAT). Epublication ISBN 9781789699043. £16.00 (Exc. VAT) Institutional Price £35.00 (Exc. UK VAT) On his death, Arthur Boucot (1924–2017) left an unfinished manuscript in which he surveyed the skeletal, behavioural, and cultural changes that have characterized _Homo _from its first recognition in the Late Pliocene to the present. The subjects he treated were as varied as the preparation of food for infants, the length of intestines, hafting, plastering, use of flint and metals, the domestication of grains and animals, and the prevalence of parasitic diseases. His text repeatedly notes the difficulties imposed by the enormous gaps in both fossil and archaeological records. Boucot deduced a continuity in basic human behaviours from the Oldowan and Acheulian into modern forms, and made a point of including Neandertals and Denisovans. But he also pointed out that morphological changes in successive species of _Homo _do not coincide in time with major changes in lithic technologies. Boucot concluded that a quantum evolutionary gap separates hominins from the great apes: that members of our line were sapient and had been using language long before they became _sapiens_. In his text he also indicates his concern for changes to the environment wrought by human activities. The results of this late-life effort, edited after his death, provide a heavily referenced sourcebook for future workers in diverse fields.ABOUT THE AUTHOR
_Arthur James Boucot _(1924-2017) was an internationally renowned paleontologist, a former President of the Paleontological Society (1980-1981), and the recipient of numerous awards and medals. His seven-decade career involved fieldwork that covered all continents, including Antarctica, resulting in over 500 peer-reviewed publicationsand books.
_NEW:_ THE GREEKS AND ROMANS IN THE BLACK SEA AND THE IMPORTANCE OF THE PONTIC REGION FOR THE GRAECO-ROMAN WORLD (7TH CENTURY BC-5TH CENTURY AD): 20 YEARS ON (1997-2017) _Proceedings of the Sixth International Congress on Black Sea Antiquities (Constanţa – 18-22 September 2017)_ edited by Gocha R. Tsetskhladze, Alexandru Avram and James Hargrave. Paperback; 205x290mm; 778 pages; 476 figures, 16 tables; Papers in English, French and German. 736 2021. Available both in printed and e-versions. Printed ISBN 9781789697582. £85.00 (No VAT). Epublication ISBN 9781789697599. £16.00 (Exc. VAT) Institutional Price £85.00 (Exc. UK VAT) _The Greeks and Romans in the Black Sea_ presents the Proceedings of the Sixth International Congress on Black Sea Antiquities, dedicated to the 90th birthday of Prof. Sir John Boardman, President of the Congress since its inception. It was held in Constanţa in September 2017 with the same theme as the first of these congresses, which took place just down the coast in Varna 20 years earlier (‘the Greeks and Romans in the Black Sea and the importance of the Pontic region for the Graeco-Roman world between the 7th century BC and 5th century AD’), celebrating the work of successive congresses in bringing together scholars and scholarship from Eastern and Western Europe and the extensive progress of ‘Black Sea Studies’ in the intervening years. Overall, 85 papers were received for publication from authors in Western and Eastern Europe—there is also a full set of the abstracts submitted to the Congress in Appendix 2. As with previous congresses, the work is divided into sections, the largest of which, the fourth, is, following a pattern established with the first congress, devoted to New Excavations and Projects. The opening lectures and various papers in the first sections reflect (on) the ‘20 years on’ in the title. The vast majority of contributions are in English, a handful each in French and German.ABOUT THE EDITORS
_Gocha Tsetskhladze _(PhD Moscow, DPhil Oxford) is a classical archaeologist who specialises in ancient Greek colonisation and the archaeology of the Mediterranean, the Black Sea, Caucasia, Anatolia, and Central and Eastern Europe in the 1st millennium BC. He is the founder and series editor of the publication series _Colloquia Antiqua_; and founder and editor-in-chief of the journal _Ancient West and East_. He has organised many international conferences, notably the International Congress on Black Sea Antiquities that he established in 1995. ; _Alexandru Avram _has been a professor of ancient Greek history at the University of Le Mans since 2002 after having taught at the University of Bucharest. He is also a fellow of the Vasile Pârvan Institute of Archaeology, Bucharest and, since 2011, has been co-director of the excavations at Istros (Histria). His academic interests include Greek archaeology and amphorology and Greek and Latin epigraphy, in particular from the region of the Black Sea and Asia Minor. ; _James Hargrave _has a PhD in Economic History from the University of Durham and a Diploma in Archive Administration from the University of Wales (Aberystwyth). He specialised for 25 years in cataloguing large collections of papers accumulated by dukes, prime ministers, businesses, etc., but his historical interests stretch from antiquity to railway finance and equipment, Central and Eastern Europe, and the British Empire-Commonwealth, including comparisons between colonisations and empires ancient and modern. _NEW:_ THE HIPPOS OF TROY _Why Homer Never Talked about a Horse_ by Francesco Tiboni. Paperback; 175x245mm; 120 pages; 32 figures. 734 2021. Available both in printed and e-versions. Printed ISBN 9781789698992. £24.99 (No VAT). Epublication ISBN 9781789699005. 16.00 (Exc. VAT) Institutional Price £24.99 (Exc. UK VAT) _The Hippos of Troy: Why Homer Never Talked About a Horse _deals with one of the most famous episodes of the whole of Classical mythology, the Wooden Horse of Troy. Thanks to the analysis of words, images and wrecks, the author proposes a new interpretation of what Homer actually intended when he spoke of the _hippos _used by the Greeks to conquer the city of Troy. The archaeological, iconographic and philological evidence discussed by the author leads to the conclusion that Homer never talked about a giant wooden horse, nor a war machine. In fact, Homer referred to the use of a particular ship type, a merchant ship of Levantine origin in use in the Late Bronze Age/Early Iron Age Mediterranean, used to pay tribute to Levantine kings, as well as to trade precious metal around the Mediterranean coast.ABOUT THE AUTHOR
_Francesco Tiboni_ graduated with a degree in Prehistory from the University of Milan and a PhD in Naval Archaeology from the Centre Camille Jullian - Université Aix-Marseille in France. He has directed dozens of underwater archaeological research projects in Italy and abroad, including the recovery of three wrecks, two of which date to the Roman era. He has published books and articles on the themes of nautical archaeology, underwater archaeology and naval archaeology andhistory.
_NEW:_ PEOPLES IN THE BLACK SEA REGION FROM THE ARCHAIC TO THE ROMAN PERIOD _Proceedings of the 3rd International Workshop on the Black Sea in Antiquity held in Thessaloniki, 21-23 September 2018_ edited by Manolis Manoledakis. Paperback; 205x290mm; 200 pages; 93 figures (28 pages in colour). 738 2021. Available both in printed and e-versions. Printed ISBN 9781789698671. £35.00 (No VAT). Epublication ISBN 9781789698688. £16.00 (Exc. VAT) Institutional Price £35.00 (Exc. UKVAT)
_Peoples in the Black Sea Region from the Archaic to the Roman Period _includes papers presented at the _Third International Workshop on the Black Sea in Antiquity_, which, like the two previous ones, took place at the International Hellenic University, Greece, on 21-23 September 2018. The ‘Peoples’ of the title are defined widely to include not only those that either inhabited or colonised the Black Sea area, but also those who are considered to have visited, acted in, or influenced the region. Papers draw on a mix of archaeological evidence, epigraphy and written sources, as well as maps to explore the activities and characteristics of these peoples. The contributors are scholars from ten countries, and their papers cover all shores of the Black Sea.ABOUT THE EDITOR
_Manolis Manoledakis _is Associate Professor of Classical Archaeology at the International Hellenic University in Thessaloniki. He has participated in various research programmes and is the director of the International Hellenic University’s excavation in Neo Rysio, Thessaloniki. His research concentrates on the archaeology and ancient history of the Black Sea as well as central Macedonia, ancient topography and geography, ancient Greek religion and cults, Greek mythology in its historical context, and ancient Greek painting andvase-painting.
_NEW:_ LE COMMERCE DE CÉRAMIQUES FINES À AMMAIA, UNE VILLE DU SUD DE LA LUSITANIE (50 – 550 APR. J.-C.) by José Carlos Quaresma. Paperback; 210x297mm; 228 pages; 133 figures; French text. 737 2021 _Roman and Late Antique Mediterranean Pottery 16_. Available both in printed and e-versions. Printed ISBN 9781789696837. £35.00 (No VAT). Epublication ISBN 9781789696844. £16.00 (Exc. VAT) Institutional Price £35.00 (Exc. UK VAT) This volume presents the entire assemblage of fine wares (terra sigillata, lamps and thin-walled wares) from Ammaia, a Roman and Late Antique town located in the hinterland of southern Lusitania (presently in Portuguese territory). Despite its distance from the Atlantic coast, Ammaia took advantage of its proximity to Augusta Emerita, the capital of Lusitania. This aspect is particularly strong between c. AD 50 and c. AD 150, when the local market imported large quantities of fine wares from the capital. The Late Antique phase reveals a balanced capacity of importation at Ammaia, whose fine wares, essentially related to terra sigillata, were provided by wares from northern Hispania (Douro and Ebro valleys) and North Africa (Tunisia). Moreover, recent research at Ammaia has provided excellent stratigraphic contexts dated to between c. AD 50 and c. AD 150, crucial for the understanding of the chronological evolution of Italian, South-Gaulish and Hispanic terra sigillata. In the final chapter, the author undertakes a wide-ranging analysis of southern Lusitania with regard to the consumption of fine wares and amphorae. Several chronological phases have been established, based on stratigraphic and typological evidence, for the period between c. AD 50 and c. AD 550: that is the Early Empire (from the Claudio-Neronian period onwards) and its transition into the Late Roman period and the post-Roman phase. In the final sub-chapters, this analysis focuses on the problematic 5th century and up to the latest Lusitanian stratigraphic evidence of around the middle of the 6th century AD.ABOUT THE AUTHOR
_José Carlos Quaresma_ is a professor at the New University of Lisbon. His research centres on Roman and Late Antique Archaeology, with special focus on ceramics, trade and the ancient economy. Over the last decade the author has carried out studies not only within Portugal (roughly equivalent to the Roman province of Lusitania), but also in Spain (Tarragona and Mallorca) and southern France (Arles).FRENCH DESCRIPTION:
Ce livre présente l’ensemble de céramiques fines (sigillées, lampes et parois fines) d’_Ammaia_, une ville d’époque romaine et tardo-romaine, située dans l’hinterland de la région méridionale de la _Lusitania _(actuellement dans le territoire portugais). Malgré la distance de la côte atlantique, _Ammaia _a profité de sa proximité avec _Augusta Emerita_, la capitale de la _provincia _de la _Lusitania_. Cet aspect est particulièrement important entre c.50 et c.150 apr. J.-C., quand le marché local a importé de grandes quantités de céramiques fines de la capitale. La phase de l’Antiquité Tardive démontre une importation équilibrée _Ammaia_, dont les céramiques fines, essentiellement formées par des sigillées, sont fournies par les productions du Nord de l’_Hispania _(les vallées du Douro et de l’Èbre) et l’Afrique du Nord. En plus, la recherche plus récente à _Ammaia _a livré d’excellents contextes datés entre c.50 et c.150 apr. J.-C., un aspect crucial pour la compréhension de l’évolution chronologique de la sigillée italique, sud-gallique et hispanique. Dans le dernier chapitre, l’auteur met en place une analyse à large spectre de la _Lusitania _méridionale, par rapport à la consommation de céramiques fines et d’amphores. Quelques phases chronologiques furent établies, basées sur l’évidence stratigraphique et typologique, pour la période entre c. 50 et c. 550 apr. J.-C., c’est-à-dire le Haut-Empire ( partir de la période claudio-néronienne) et sa transition vers la période romaine tardive et la phase post-romaine. Au cours des derniers sous-chapitres, cette analyse se concentre sur les problématiques du Ve siècle, jusqu’à la dernière évidence stratigraphique lusitanienne, au milieu du VIe siècle. _José Carlos Quaresma _est professeur à l’Université Nouvelle de Lisbonne. Ce livre fut écrit au cours d’une bours _NEW:_ PITS AND BOOTS: EXCAVATION OF MEDIEVAL AND POST-MEDIEVAL BACKLANDS UNDER THE BON ACCORD CENTRE, ABERDEEN by Michael Roy. Paperback; 205x290mm; 368 pages; 170 figures, 43 tables. 735 2021. Available both in print and Open Access. Printed ISBN 9781789694871. 55.00 (No VAT). Epublication ISBN 9781789694888. _Pits and Boots _derives from excavations carried out in 2007-8, in advance of an extension to the Bon Accord Centre in Aberdeen, that uncovered the backlands of an area that would have formed part of the industrial quarter of the medieval town. The site is well-dated by dendrochronology, augmented by artefactual evidence, and indicates activity from the late 12th century AD into the early modern period, with a particularly intensive period in the 13th century. Structural evidence consists primarily of the backland boundaries, hearth/ovens, several wood-lined wells and many large pits. It is the contents of these pits and wells which forms the core of this monograph. The waterlogged conditions within the pits and wells has meant that a remarkable assemblage of organic remains including leather, wooden artefacts, textiles, animal pelts, fibres, and cordage has survived. The leather assemblage is the largest ever to be found in Scotland and has revealed a range of activities associated with the use of animal hides, from hide processing to tanning and shoemaking. The wood assemblage is also extensive and includes bowls, platters, coopered vessels and tools. Metalwork, crucibles, clay mould fragments and ceramics all testify to the industrial nature of the area, while the large quantities of animal and fishbone demonstrate that butchery on an industrial scale took place in the area. The excavation charts the changing nature of this once-peripheral area of Aberdeen, from an industrial zone in the medieval period, to horticultural and domestic spaces in post-medieval times, and has thus greatly enhanced our knowledge of Scottish urban development.ABOUT THE AUTHOR
_Michael Roy _currently works as a Project manager in the Post-Excavation sector at AOC Archaeology Group. After graduating from the University of Cambridge in 1993 and the University of Leicester in 1994, Michael has worked in archaeology across the UK, working for several years for the Scottish Urban Archaeological Trust and Essex County Council’s Field Archaeology Unit. Joining AOC Archaeology in 2004, he has directed substantial urban excavations in Edinburgh (Parliament House), Aberdeen (Bon Accord) and Dunbar, in addition to working in their Consultancy sector. _NEW:_ CRIMES IN THE PAST: ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND ANTHROPOLOGICAL EVIDENCE edited by Tatyana Shvedchikova, Negahnaz Moghaddam and Pier Matteo Barone. Paperback; 205x290mm; 264 pages; 102 figures, 5 tables. 733 2021. Available both in printed and e-versions. Printed ISBN 9781789697780. £40.00 (No VAT). Epublication ISBN 9781789697797. 16.00 (Exc. VAT) Institutional Price £40.00 (Exc. UK VAT) _Crimes in the Past: Archaeological and Anthropological Evidence _aims to discuss the possible examples of crimes in the archaeological past, their detection and interpretation with the help of modern scientific methods, and how interdisciplinary approaches can be conducted in further research concerning ‘crimes of the past.’ The idea to create this publication was born after organizing Session #169 Past Crimes during the 25th Annual Meeting of the European Association of Archaeologists (EAA 2019) in Bern. In this book, readers will find cases of historic and prehistoric ‘crimes scenes’ known from various contexts, including the findings of (pre)historic (mass) graves and lethal violent acts related to warfare, ritual killings, or possible murder cases. In order to get to the bottom of the possible archaeological crime scenes, contemporary interdisciplinary approaches will be used, which allow us to extend the frames of classical archaeological study.About the Editors
_Tatyana Shvedchikova _completed her studies in Social Anthropology at the Russian State University for the Humanities in Moscow. From 2010 she has worked as a research fellow at the Department of Theory and Methods at the Institute of Archaeology, Russian Academy of Sciences. Dr Shvedchikova’s main research interests lie in the fields of forensic anthropology and archaeology, in particular bone tissue degradation processes and multidisciplinary approaches to the study and identification of human remains. ; _Negahnaz Moghaddam _completed her studies in Human Genetics and Physical Anthropology at the Ludwig-Maximilians-University of Munich, Germany. Since 2017 she has been head of the forensic anthropology research group at the Unit of Forensic Imaging and Anthropology (UIAF) and the Swiss Human Institute of Forensic Taphonomy (SHIFT). Her activities on archaeological excavations, laboratory analyses including stable isotope research, and forensic case work have allowed her to bridge the gaps between various disciplines. ; _Pier Matteo Barone _is a full-time lecturer in the Archaeology and Classics Department of the American University of Rome. He teaches Forensic Geoscience with particular regard to geophysical prospections, remote sensing, GIS, and archaeology applied to crime scene investigations and to crimes in antiquity. _NEW:_ BARĀQISH/YATHILL (YEMEN) 1986-2007 _Excavations of Temple B and related research and restoration / Extramural excavations in Area C and overview studies_ edited by Sabina Antonini and Francesco G. Fedele. DOI: 10.32028/9781789694703 . Paperback; 205x290mm; 2 volumes: 398pp & 546pp; 700 figures, tables and plates. Contributions in English, Italian, and French. Chapter abstracts in English and Arabic. 732 2021. Available both in print and Open Access. Printed ISBN 9781789694703. £98.00 (No VAT). Epublication ISBN 9781789694710. The walled town of Barāqish in interior Yemen – ancient Yathill of the Sabaeans and Minaeans – was for Alessandro de Maigret (1943-2011) ‘one of the archaeological marvels not just of Yemen, but of the entire Near East’. Established as an oasis settlement in the semi-desert depression of the Jawf, it became in the 1st millennium BCE a thriving caravan station on the ‘incense’ route and a famed place of worship, controlled by rich rulers and merchants. Topography and trade made it a crucible of South Arabian and foreign traditions, and on several occasions, it was a border town disputed between rival powers. A sustained archaeological effort to investigate the site and area began in 1986 by the Italian Archaeological Mission, led by de Maigret, and developed in two phases. In 1989-1992 the temple of the patron god was excavated, while between 2003-2007 a range of new excavations were undertaken, including a second temple, a sounding, a dissection of the tell's edge outside the Minaean wall,and a cemetery.
Presented across two volumes, _Volume 1: Excavations of Temple B and related research and restoration _is particularly devoted to the temple of god ʿAthtar dhu-Qabḍ (Temple B), dated to the second half of the 1st millennium BCE. Six chapters fully illustrate its excavation, architecture, restoration, findings, inscriptions, and dating. The contribution of this work and monument to regional history transcends its local significance. The report is framed by ten chapters detailing the historiography of research on Barāqish, the initial surveys carried out in 1986-1987, the architecture and restoration of Temple A together with the extramural excavation at the adjacent curtain wall, the cultic equipment, and radiocarbon datings. The nine contributors are leading scholars in the above fields and include recognized experts in South Arabian archaeology. The core of _Volume 2: Extramural excavations in Area C and overview studies_ is a final report on Area C, an exploratory dissection through the western edge of the Barāqish mound outside the curtain wall, and a unique operation for Yemen until now. Eight chapters detail the excavation, stratigraphy, and geoarchaeology (from about 800 BCE to the present), in addition to radiocarbon chronology, cultural finds, animal and plant remains, economy, major historical events, and unique evidence for trade. Four further chapters offer a glimpse of settlement archaeology for Sabaean Yathill and the survey of a religious centre to the west, together with a first typology of Minaean pottery and an epigraphic and political-historical overview for Barāqish and the Jawf. The contributors are recognized experts in South Arabian archaeology.ABOUT THE EDITORS
_Sabina Antonini _heads the Italian Archaeological Mission to Yemen c/o Monumenta Orientalia (Rome). Since 1984 she has taken part in archaeological surveys and excavations of prehistoric sites in Khawlān al-Ṭiyāl and Ramlat al-Sabʿatayn and of South Arabian sites, including Yalā, Tamnaʿ, Ḥayd ibn ʿAqīl, and Barāqish. She is a specialist in South Arabian archaeology and history of art. Her contribution, ‘The Italian Archaeological Mission at Šibām al-Ġirās, Yemen’, has appeared in _Festschrift in honour of Professor Mikhail Piotrovsky _(2019). ; _Francesco G. Fedele _has been Professor of Anthropology and Prehistoric ecology at the Università di Napoli ‘Federico II’, Naples, until retirement in 2011. As a member of the Italian Archaeological Mission to Yemen since 1984 he has conducted excavations in Khawlān al- Ṭiyāl and at Barāqish, with a particular focus on site geoarchaeology and archaeofaunas. His recent publications include ‘New data on domestic and wild camels in Sabaean and Minaean Yemen’ in _Archaeozoology of the Near East _9(2017).
_NEW:_ THE FIRST THOUSAND YEARS OF GLASS-MAKING IN THE ANCIENT NEAR EAST _Compositional Analyses of Late Bronze and Iron Age Glasses_ by Wendy Reade. Paperback; 205x290mm; 274 pages; 204 figures, 72 tables. 731 2021. Available both in printed and e-versions. Printed ISBN 9781789697032. £45.00 (No VAT). Epublication ISBN 9781789697049. 16.00 (Exc. VAT) Institutional Price £45.00 (Exc. UK VAT) _Glass-Making in the Ancient Near East _explores glass composition and production from the mid-second to mid-first millennia BC, essentially the first thousand years of glass-making. Multi-element analyses of 132 glasses from Pella in Jordan, and Nuzi and Nimrud in Iraq (ancient Mesopotamia), produce new and important data that provide insights into the earliest glass production. A novel method for data interpretation and presentation has been developed and used to characterise the glass types and to investigate questions of composition, raw materials, regional differences and similarities, and changes through time from the earliest consistent glass manufacture as represented at 16th century BC Pella, which is compared with Late Bronze Age Nuzi, to the Iron Age at both Pella and Nimrud. These compositional data are compared with available glass compositional data from the widespread regions of the Levant, Mesopotamia, Egypt, Iran and France, uncovering fascinating connections that, when placed in the archaeological context, reveal much about glass production, raw material sources, and distribution of finished and raw glasses. Technological innovations, including the introduction of natron-fluxed glasses, early decolouring with antimony, and the use of Egyptian cobalt colourant in Near Eastern glasses, are explored as part of this unique investigation of the critical developments in sophisticated and complex glass-making that laid the foundations for the establishment of large-scale production in the ensuing Hellenistic and Romanperiods.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
_Wendy Reade _has obtained a Postgraduate Diploma in Ancient Documentary Studies from Macquarie University and a PhD in Archaeological Science from the University of Sydney in 2009. She is an Honorary Associate in the Department of Archaeology at the University of Sydney, where she lectured in Archaeology and Archaeological Science from 1999 to 2015. She has worked as an archaeologist and conservator on excavations in Jordan, Egypt, Bahrain, United Arab Emirates, Syria, Greece, the Republic of North Macedonia, Myanmar and Australia. _NEW:_ CLASSIFICATION OF LITHIC ARTEFACTS FROM THE BRITISH LATE GLACIAL AND HOLOCENE PERIODS by Torben Bjarke Ballin. Paperback; 205x290mm; 100 pages; 128 figures. 730 2021. Available both in print and Open Access. Printed ISBN 9781789698695. £25.00 (No VAT). Epublication ISBN 9781789698701. A system for the hierarchical _Classification of Lithic Artefacts from the British Late Glacial and Holocene Periods _is offered in this book. It is hoped that it may find use as a guide book for archaeology students, museum staff, non-specialist archaeologists, local archaeology groups and lay enthusiasts. To allow the individual categories of lithic objects to be classified and characterised in detail, it was necessary to first define a number of descriptive terms, which forms the first part of this guide. The main part of the book is the lithic classification section, which offers definitions of the individual formal debitage, core and tool types. The basic questions asked are: what defines Object X as a tool and not a piece of debitage or a core; what defines a microlith as a microlith and not a knife or a piercer; and what defines a specific implement as a scalene triangle and not an isosceles one? As shown in the book, there are disagreements within the lithics community as to the specific definition of some types, demonstrating the need for all lithics reports to define which typological framework they are based on. The eBook edition of this publication is available in Open Access, supported by Historic Environment Scotland.ABOUT THE AUTHOR
After having worked as an archaeological specialist and Project Manager in Denmark, the Faroe Islands and Norway, _Torben Ballin _relocated to Scotland in 1998. Since then, he has worked as an independent lithics specialist in Scotland, England, Northern Ireland and Ireland, representing the consultancy Lithic Research. Torben’s special interests have been lithic terminology and typology, lithic technology, chronological frameworks, raw material studies, intra-site spatial analyses, prehistoric territories and exchange networks, and Scotland’s Late Upper Palaeolithic and Early Mesolithic industries. His interest in lithic terminology and typology led to the production and publication of a number of works on general lithic typology within and outwith Britain. _NEW:_ VISIONS OF THE ROMAN NORTH: ART AND IDENTITY IN NORTHERN ROMAN BRITAIN by Iain Ferris. Paperback; 175x245mm; 236pp; 107 figures, colour throughout. 729 2021 _Archaeopress Roman Archaeology 80_. Available both in printed and e-versions. Printed ISBN 9781789699050. 35.00 (No VAT). Epublication ISBN 9781789699067. £16.00 (Exc. VAT) Institutional Price £35.00 (Exc. UK VAT) _Visions of the Roman North: Art and Identity in Northern Roman Britain_ is the first book to present an analysis of art from the northern frontier zones of Roman Britain and to interpret the meaning and significance of this art in terms of the formation of a regional identity at this time. It argues that a distinct and vibrant visual culture flourished in the north during the Roman period, primarily due to its status as a heavily militarized frontier zone. Artworks from forts and the frontier-works of Hadrian’s Wall and the Antonine Wall, along with funerary monuments from military and civilian cemeteries, are analysed and discussed. The book also explores religious sculpture depicting classical deities, Romano-British gods and goddesses and eastern deities such as Mithras in terms of the use of imagery in various belief systems and in terms of the establishment of individual and group identities.ABOUT THE AUTHOR
_Iain Ferris _is an archaeologist living in Pembrey, Carmarthenshire, Wales. He has over forty years of experience working in professional archaeology in Britain and abroad and in teaching archaeology at Birmingham and Manchester universities. His research interests include Roman art and material culture and Romano-British archaeology and artefacts. He has directed major archaeological research excavations in northern and midland England and is a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries. He has published widely in academic journals and is the author of nine books, all on Roman art and archaeology.REVIEWS
_‘…this is amongst the very best books on Roman Britain which I have ever read. It engages with what made Northern Britain special and culturally distinct in the Roman Empire. There is a real understanding for Northern Roman Britain here, and an understanding for a unique artistic culture that raises it very high indeed as a book on the provincial art of the Roman Empire.’_ – REVD PROFESSOR MARTIN HENIG, UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD _NEW:_ EL TESORO DE REGINA TURDULORUM (CASAS DE REINA, BADAJOZ) by David Martínez Chico. Paperback; 203x276mm; 94 pages; 9 figures, 3 tables, illustrated catalogue (30 plates); colour throughout. Spanish text. 137 2021. Available both in print and Open Access. Printed ISBN 9781789699401. £25.00 (No VAT). Epublication ISBN 9781789699418. The Regina Turdulorum Hoard (Casas de Reina, Badajoz) was buried with 818 imitative antoniniani of Divo Claudio type, minted in copper. The vast majority of the coins bear the reverse legend CONSECRATIO. This figure makes the Regina Turdulorum hoard one of the most important in Spain and Portugal. In numismatic terms, the most common reverse type is the funeral pyre, as opposed to the eagle. In addition to this main group, there is a second group, where there are curious imitations that follow various prototypes for the manufacture of the reverse. The study of the posthumous coinage of Claudius II and his imitations represents one of the most complex tasks in ancient numismatics. The work is considerably complicated by the fact that they are highly copied coins, which means that regular issues are very difficult to distinguish from the imitations. In this sense, the hoard provides vital information for the western monetary circulation of the Roman Empire, contributing to the debate on Gallic and African imitations. It also opens the way to the hypothesis that Hispania may have been another centre for issuing Divo Claudio imitations. Although the latter remains to be proven, the tentative and open nature of this book provides the opportunity to open new lines of study in the hope that they will be resolved sooner rather than later. SPANISH DESCRIPTION: _El tesoro de Regina Turdulorum (Casas de Reina, Badajoz)_ se compone de 818 antoninianos de imitación, fundamentalmente del tipo Divo Claudio, acuñados en cobre. La inmensa mayoría de las monedas tiene en el reverso la característica leyenda CONSECRATIO. Esta cifra convierte al tesoro de Regina Turdulorum como de los más importantes en España y Portugal. A nivel numismático, la tipología de reverso más común es la de pira funeraria, frente a la de águila. Junto a este principal grupo se añade otro segundo, donde hay curiosas imitaciones que siguen varios prototipos para la confección de los reversos. El lector debe ser consciente que el estudio de las acuñaciones póstumas de Claudio II y sus imitaciones representa una de las tareas más complejas en numismática antigua. La labor se complica considerablemente por el hecho de ser monedas muy copiadas, de tal modo que las emisiones regulares son muy difíciles de distinguir de las imitaciones. En este sentido, el tesoro aporta una información vital para la circulación monetaria occidental del Imperio Romano, contribuyendo al debate de las imitaciones galas y africanas. Y abriendo paso a la hipótesis de que Hispania posiblemente fue otro centro emisor de imitaciones divoclaudianas. Aunque esto último estaría por demostrarse, el carácter provisional y abierto de este libro brinda la oportunidad de abrir nuevas líneas de estudio, con la esperanza de que se resuelvan más pronto quetarde.
_David Martínez Chico_ es un historiador, arqueólogo y numismático, así como fundador y director editorial desde 2014 de Revista Numismática Hécate. Anteriormente, en 2008, fundó plataformas numismáticas como Foro Imperio Numismático, consciente de la importancia en la difusión y transferencia de conocimientos en sucampo.
_NEW:_ CONVERSATIONS IN HUMAN EVOLUTION: VOLUME 2 edited by Lucy Timbrell. Paperback; 203x276mm; 132 pages; colour throughout. 136 2021. Available both in print and Open Access. Printed ISBN 9781789699470. £34.00 (No VAT). Epublication ISBN 9781789699487. _Conversations in Human Evolution _is an ongoing science communication initiative seeking to explore the breadth and interdisciplinarity of human evolution studies. This volume reports another twenty interviews (referred to as ‘conversations’ as they are informal in style) with scholars at the forefront of human evolution research, covering the broad scientific themes of Palaeolithic archaeology, palaeoanthropology and biological anthropology, earth science and palaeoclimatic change, evolutionary anthropology and primatology, and human disease co-evolution. This project features academics at various different stages in their careers and from all over the world; in this volume alone, researchers are based at institutions in eleven different countries (namely Iran, India, the United Kingdom, Greece, Australia, South Africa, the United States of America, the Netherlands, Germany, France and Israel), covering five continents. Having arisen at the start of the COVID19 pandemic, _Conversations in Human Evolution _aims to encourage engagement with both human evolutionary studies and the broader socio-political issues that persist within academia, the latter of which is particularly pertinent during this time of global uncertainty. The conversations delve deeply into the study of our species’ evolutionary history through the lens of each sub-discipline, as well as detailing some of the most current advances in research, theory and methods. Overall, _Conversations in Human Evolution _seeks to bridge the gap between the research and researcher through contextualisation of the science with personal experience and historical reflection.ABOUT THE EDITOR
_Lucy Timbrell _is a PhD researcher in the Archaeology of Human Origins Research Group at the University of Liverpool, funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council, The Leakey Foundation and the Lithic Studies Society. Broadly, she is interested in the evolution of modern human diversity, with her doctoral research focussing on quantifying the population structure of early _Homo sapiens _in Late-Middle Pleistocene Africa. Alongside her PhD research, she organises the widely-known University of Liverpool Evolutionary Anthropology seminar series. _NEW:_ TONINÁ, UNA CIUDAD MAYA DE CHIAPAS _Vida y muerte en las postrimerías del colapso maya_ by Judith L. Ruiz González. Paperback; 203x276mm; 328 pages; 150 figures, 68 tables. Spanish text. 135 2021. Available both in print and Open Access. Printed ISBN 9781789699289. £49.00 (No VAT). Epublication ISBN 9781789699296. Toniná was a Mayan city, located between two cultural areas near the Chiapas Highlands. It has been widely proposed that the Maya collapse implied the disappearance and depopulation of many cities; this research addresses the survival of Toniná towards the threshold of the Postclassic. For this purpose, 15,956 human bones found in Structure 15 of the fifth platform in the Acropolis of Toniná were analysed. The analysis of anthropological osteology allowed us to know the biological profile and to document the cultural taphonomy, through which the practice of human sacrifice and the posthumous treatment of the victims was evidenced. The application of stable isotope and strontium analyses also allowed us to determine the dietary profile of those sacrificed, their geographical origin and mobility throughout their lives. A change in ritual practices in the Mayan area was glimpsed, as ideological influences were found, possibly from the Gulf Coast in the cult of other deities, as in the case of Xipe Totéc; the Gulf Coast had great influence in the Mayan area since ancient times and this has been confirmed at this site through ceramics.SPANISH DESCRIPTION
Toniná fue una ciudad maya, localizada entre dos áreas culturales hacia los Altos de Chiapas. Se ha planteado de manera generalizada que el colapso maya implicó la desaparición y despoblamiento de muchas ciudades; en esta investigación se aborda la pervivencia de Toniná hacia el umbral del Posclásico. Para ello se analizaron 15 956 huesos humanos hallados en la Estructura 15 de la quinta plataforma en la Acrópolis de Toniná. El análisis de osteología antropológica permitío conocer el perfil biológico y documentar la tafonomía cultural, a través de la cual se evidenció la práctica del sacrificio humano y los tratamientos póstumos de las víctimas. Así también la aplicación de análisis de isótopos estables y de estroncio permitió conocer el perfil dietario de los sacrificados, su origen geográfico y movilidad a lo largo de su vida. Se vislumbró un cambio en las prácticas rituales en el área maya, al encontrar influencias ideológicas posiblemente de la Costa del Golfo en el culto a otras deidades, es el caso de Xipe Totéc; la Costa del Golfo tuvo gran influencia en el área maya desde tiempos remotos y se ha constatado en este sitio a través de la cerámica. _Judith L. Ruiz González:_ Antropóloga Física por la ENAH, estudios de Maestría y Doctorado en el Posgrado de Estudios Mesoamericanos, UNAM. Líneas de interés académico. 1) Condiciones de vida y salud en poblaciones esqueléticas y en restos momificados prehispánicos y coloniales. 2) Paleopatología y perspectivas bioarqueológicas en Mesoamérica. 3) Diversidad dietaria y movilidad humana a través de estudios bioarquemétricos en poblaciones antiguas. 4) Evidencias de sacrificio humano y tratamientos rituales póstumos del cuerpo en Mesoamérica. Ha participado en diferentes proyectos de investigación de la Dirección de Estudios Arqueológicos del INAH, de la Zona Arqueológica de Tlatelolco, INAH, del Instituto de Investigaciones Antropológicas y del Instituto de Geología de la UNAM. Es profesora de Asignatura en el Centro de Estudios Antropológicos, Facultad de Ciencias Políticas y Sociales, UNAM. Protecyo de investigacion reciente: Interacciones culturales y dinámicas poblacionales desde la Costa veracruzana al interior: isotopía de la dieta e historiaresidencial.
_NEW:_ ASH-SHARQ - BULLETIN OF THE ANCIENT NEAR EAST VOL 5 NO 1-2 2021 edited by Laura Battini (editor-in-chief). Paperback; 127x245mm; Vol 5 No 1: 78pp, Vol 5 No 2: TBA. 5 2021. Only available as e-version. 10.00 (Exc. VAT) Institutional Price £68.00 (Exc. UK VAT) Vol 5 No 1 digital edition available to access now. Printed edition of Vol 5 will contain issues 1 and 2 and will be released when Vol 5 No 2 becomes available later in the year. NOTE FOR INSTITUTIONAL SUBSCRIBERS: PLEASE BE SURE TO LOG IN FIRST VIA YOUR INSTITUTION'S UNIQUE URL - THIS PAGE WILL THEN DISPLAY DOWNLOAD OPTIONS. OTHERWISE ONLY PURCHASE OPTIONS WILL DISPLAY. IF YOU EXPERIENCE DIFFICULTIES LOGGING IN PLEASE CONSULT YOUR LIBRARIAN OR CONTACT ARCHAEOPRESS DIRECTLY VIA THE FOLLOWING EMAIL: info@archaeopress.com _FORTHCOMING:_ ROOTS OF REFORM: CONTEXTUAL INTERPRETATION OF CHURCH FITTINGS IN NORFOLK DURING THE ENGLISH REFORMATION by Jason Robert Ladick. Paperback; 205x290mm; 182pp; 17 black & white figures, 21 tables, 62 colour plates. 746 2021. ISBN 9781789697667. _Roots of Reform _provides a thorough examination of the impact of the English Reformation through a detailed analysis of medieval and early modern church fittings surviving at parish churches located throughout the county of Norfolk in England. By utilizing an archaeological approach along with the written record, a deeper and more nuanced understanding of public worship reveals the theological imperatives of the reformers and conformers. This study compiled data from both rural and urban parish churches which provides a regional approach to engaging the issues of visuality, space and identity. Church fittings were selected based on their liturgical function and propensity to feature decorative iconography. This includes baptismal fonts, screens, wall paintings, and sculptures. Through an extensive analysis of church fittings, this research is the first to suggest that the Bible-centric component to Protestant theology provided the framework which contributed to the success of the Reformation. The religious identity of England was transformed as visual continuity enabled an entire generation to continue their religious experience in a traditional context despite the moderate alteration to liturgy and comprehensive transformation of doctrine. This criterion eased the transition, as liturgical continuity and selective iconoclasm forged a new physical religious environment that retained enough elements to satiate traditionalist. Furthermore, an assessment of post-Reformation innovations reveals the use of vernacular Biblical text as a preferred mode of decoration, with an increase in the use of secular heraldry and commemoration directly on church fittings. _Jason Robert Ladick _is an independent researcher and public library administrator in Long Island, NY. Ladick recently completed his PhD and MA in Historical Archaeology from the University of Leicester and MS in Library and Information Science from Long Island University. His research interests lie in the late medieval/early modern period and historical archaeology, with a particular interest in the archaeology of standing buildings and the transformation of religious architecture in the period following the 16th-century Protestant Reformation. _FORTHCOMING:_ FRONTIERS OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE: THE ROMAN FRONTIER IN EGYPT _Frontières de l’empire romain : la frontière romaine en Égypte_ by David J. Breeze and Michel Reddé. Paperback; 185x248mm; 96pp; 150 figures (colour throughout). Full text in English and French. Print RRP: £14.99. 745 2021 _Frontiers of the Roman Empire (FRE) _. ISBN 9781789699456. The frontiers of the Roman empire together form the largest monument of one of the world’s greatest states. They stretch for some 7,500km through 20 countries which encircle the Mediterranean Sea. The remains of these frontiers have been studied by visitors and later by archaeologists for several centuries. Many of the inscriptions and sculpture, weapons, pottery and artefacts created and used by the soldiers and civilians who lived on the frontier can be seen in museums. Equally evocative of the lost might of Rome are the physical remains of the frontiers themselves. The aim of this series of books is not only to inform the interested visitor about the history of the frontiers but to act as a guidebook as well. The Roman military remains of Egypt are remarkable in their variety and in their state of preservation. They deserve to be better known. They include forts, quarries under the authority of the army and whose materials were used in the monumental buildings of Rome, as well as the roads which crossed the desert landscape and brought the Mediterranean into con¬tact with the Indian Ocean. It is hoped that each reader of this book will enjoy learning more about the remarkable Roman inheritance of Egypt. The full text is presented side-by-side dual-language in English andFrench.
ABOUT THE AUTHORS
_Professor David J. Breeze_ has published several books on Roman frontiers and the Roman army. He is a former chairman of the International Congress of Roman Frontier Studies and led the team which successfully nominated the Antonine Wall as a World HeritageSite. ;
_Michel Reddé_ is a professor emeritus at the School for Advanced Studies at the Paris Sciences et Lettres University. He has directed or collaborated on several archaeological sites in Egypt and in France (Alésia). He has been director of the European project on studying north-east Roman Gaul.FRENCH DESCRIPTION
Prises ensemble, les frontières de l’Empire romain constituent le monument le plus important de ce qui fut l’un des plus grands États du monde. Elles s’étendent sur environ 7.500 km à travers une ving-taine de pays autour de la Méditerranée. Depuis plusieurs siècles, les vestiges de ces frontières ont fait l’objet d’études par des curieux puis plus tardivement par des archéologues. Bon nombre des inscriptions, sculptures, armes, poteries et autres objets créés et utilisés par les militaires et les civils qui peuplaient ces frontières sont visibles dans les musées. Mais les vestiges physiques de ses frontières sont tout aussi évocateurs de la puissance que fut Rome. La présente séries de livres est conçue non seulement pour informer le visiteur curieux de l’histoire des frontières mais également pour servir de guidesur le terrain.
Les vestiges militaires romains en Égypte sont remarquables tant par leur diversité que par leur état de conservation : ils méritent d’être mieux connus. On y dénombre des forts, des carrières exploitées sous l’autorité des militaires et dont les matériaux ont servi aux constructions monumentales de Rome, ainsi que des pistes qui traversent des paysages désertiques et mettaient la Méditerranée en relation avec l’Océan Indien. Nous espérons que le lecteur prendra plaisir à en apprendre davantage sur l’étonnant héritage romain en Égypte. _Le Professeur David J. Breeze_ a publié plusieurs livres sur les frontières et l’armée romaines. Il est ancien président du Congrès International d’Études sur les Frontières Romaines et il a dirigé l’équipe qui a réussi à faire inscrire le mur d’Antonin au patrimoine Mondial. ; _Michel Reddé_ est professeur (ém.) à l’École pratique des Hautes Études/Université de Paris Sciences et Lettres. Il a dirigé ou collaboré à de nombreux chantiers archéologiques en Égypte et en France (Alésia). Il a été directeur du projet ERC Rurland. _FORTHCOMING:_ PHARMACY AND MEDICINE IN ANCIENT EGYPT _Proceedings of the conference held in Barcelona (2018)_ edited by Rosa Dinarès Solà, Mikel Fernàndez Georges and Maria Rosa Guasch-Jané. Paperback; 174x245mm; 156 pages; 76 figures, 14 tables. Print RRP: 30.00. 744 2021 _Archaeopress Egyptology 34_. ISBN 9781789697704. _Pharmacy and Medicine in Ancient Egypt _presents the proceedings of the _3rd International Conference on Pharmacy and Medicine in Ancient Egypt _(Barcelona, October 25-26, 2018). The conference included presentations on new research and advances in the topics covered in the first two conferences (Cairo, 2007 and Manchester, 2008). It showcased the most recent pharmaceutical and medical studies on human remains and organic and plant material from ancient Egypt, together with related discussions on textual and iconographic evidence, to evaluate the present state of knowledge and the advances we have made on pharmacy and veterinary and human medicine in Ancient Egypt. The conference program combined plenary sessions, oral communications and posters with discussions that established interdisciplinary collaborations between researchers and research groups to formulate breakthrough approaches in these fi elds. Participation in the conference and poster sessions ranged from distinguished researchers and professors from academic institutions, museums and universities, to postgraduates and doctoral students at the beginning of theircareers.
ABOUT THE EDITORS
_Dr Rosa Dinarès Solà _holds a BSc in Medicine (1980), specialising in radiology and a MA in Egyptology (2000) from the Autonomous University of Barcelona (UAB). She was President of the Catalan-Balearic Association of Paleopathology (2014-2017) and has conducted research in missions at Luxor (Egypt) practicing radiographs on mummies and human remains. ; _Dr Mikel Fernandez Georges _has obtained BScs in both Biology (1995) and Linguistics (2005) from the University of Barcelona. He has a MA in Egyptology (1999) from the Autonomous University of Barcelona and a PhD in Linguistics (2015) from the University of Barcelona. Dr Fernandez took part in the excavation campaign (1986) of Tertiary fauna at the palaeontological site of Incarcal. He currently teaches at the INS Frederica Montseny secondary school at Badia del Vallès. ; _Dr Maria Rosa Guasch-Jané _holds a BSc in Pharmacy (1996), MSc in Nutrition and Food Science (1998), MA in Egyptology (2000) and PhD in Pharmacy (2005). Dr Guasch has been director of the Study of Viticulture and Oenology in Egyptian Tombs research project (2011-2014) at Nova University, Lisbon, and post-doctoral researcher Marie-Sklodowska Curie on the EGYWINE European project (2016-2018) at the _Mondes Pharaoniques _lab (UMR 8167 ‘Orient et Méditerranée’) of Sorbonne University in Paris. _FORTHCOMING:_ TAYMĀʾ II: CATALOGUE OF THE INSCRIPTIONS DISCOVERED IN THE SAUDI-GERMAN EXCAVATIONS AT TAYMĀʾ 2004–2015 by Michael C. A. Macdonald. Hardback; 210x297mm; 264 pages; colour illustrations throughout. Print RRP: £65.00. 717 2020 _Taymāʾ: Multidisciplinary Series on the Results of the Saudi-German Archaeological Project 2_.ISBN 9781789698763.
_Taymāʾ II _is a Catalogue which contains all the inscriptions discovered during the 24 seasons of the Saudi- German excavations at Taymāʾ from 2004–15 which were funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG). The 113 objects carry inscriptions in different languages and scripts, illustrating the linguistic diversity of the oasis through time. Although the majority are fragmentary, they provide an important source for the history of the oasis in ancient and mediaeval times. The Babylonian cuneiform inscriptions in this volume confirm for the first time the ten-year sojourn at Taymāʾ of the last Babylonian king Nabû-na’id (556–539 BC). In addition, Imperial Aramaic inscriptions dated by the reigns of Lihyanite kings, based at Dadan (modern al-ʿUlā), reveal for the first time that they ruled Taymāʾ at a period in the second half of the first millennium BC. As well as editing the volume, Michael C. A. Macdonald edited the Imperial Aramaic inscriptions found from 2010–15, plus those in the form of the Aramaic script which developed in Taymāʾ, and the Nabataean, Dadanitic, and Taymanitic texts. In addition, Hanspeter Schaudig edited the cuneiform inscriptions; Peter Stein, the Imperial Aramaic texts found from 2004–09; and Frédéric Imbert, the Arabic inscriptions. Arnulf Hausleiter and Francelin Tourtet provided archaeological contributions, while Martina Trognitz curated the virtual edition of many of the texts recorded by RTI. The indexes contain the words and names from all known texts from the oasis, including those in the Taymāʾ Museum and other collections which will be published as Taymāʾ III.ABOUT THE AUTHOR
_Michael C. A. Macdonald _is an Honorary Fellow of Wolfson College, Oxford, and Fellow of the British Academy. He works on the languages, scripts and ancient history of Arabia and directs the Online Corpus of the Inscriptions of Ancient North Arabia (http://krc.orient.ox.ac.uk/ociana/). He has been working at Taymāʾsince 2010. ;
WITH CONTRIBUTIONS BY: _Arnulf Hausleiter _is researcher at the DAI’s Orient Department for the Archaeology of the Arabian Peninsula. He has been co-directing the excavations at Taymāʾ since 2004 with Ricardo Eichmann. ; _Frédéric Imbert _is Professor at the Institut de recherches et d’études sur les mondes arabes et musulmans, Aix-MarseilleUniversity. ;
_Hanspeter Schaudig _is Associate Professor of Assyriology at the Seminar für Sprachen und Kulturen des Alten Orients at the Universityof Heidelberg. ;
_Peter Stein _is Associate Professor for Semitic studies at the Faculty of Theology / Ancient Languages Division at the University ofJena. ;
_Francelin Tourtet _is a PhD candidate at the Freie Universität Berlin working on his dissertation on Bronze and Iron Age pottery fromTaymāʾ. ;
_Martina Trognitz _is member of the Austrian Centre of Digital Humanities and Cultural Heritage at the Austrian Academy of Sciences. _FORTHCOMING:_ BURIALS AND SOCIETY IN LATE CHALCOLITHIC AND EARLY BRONZE AGE IRELAND by Cormac McSparron. Paperback; 205x290mm; 220pp; 75 figures, 26 tables. 630 2020 _Queen's University Belfast Irish Archaeological Monograph Series 1_. ISBN 9781789696318. _THIS BOOK IS FORTHCOMING IN SPRING/SUMMER 2020. CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE PRE-ORDER FORM AND SAVE 20%_
The Single Burial Tradition is the name given to a set of burial practices found in Ireland from the later Chalcolithic Period through the Early Bronze Age. The tradition commenced in the decades after 2200 BC and continued until about 1600 BC. During this time there was a significant evolution in burial practice. The earliest burials of this tradition were single inhumation burials in a cist, apparently always accompanied by a decorated funerary bowl or vase. In time the practice of burial in a pit was added to the tradition, and cremation began to supersede inhumation. Additional varieties of accompanying funerary vessel were now found in many, but not in all, burials. From about 2000 BC onwards cremation burials inserted into an inverted urn became increasingly common. The number and sophistication of grave goods, in addition to pottery, accompanying the burials gradually increased through the era. _Burials and Society in Late Chalcolithic and Early Bronze Age Ireland_ describes and analyses the increasing complexity of later Chalcolithic and Early Bronze Age burial in Ireland, using burial complexity as a proxy for increasing social complexity, and as a tool for examining social structure. The book commences with a discussion of theoretical approaches to the study of burials in both anthropology and archaeology and continues with a summary of the archaeological and environmental background to the Irish Chalcolithic and Early Bronze Age. Then a set of criteria for identifying different types of social organisation is proposed, before an in-depth examination of the radiocarbon chronology of Irish Single Burials, which leads to a multifaceted statistical analysis of the Single Burial Tradition burial utilising descriptive and multivariate statistical approaches. A chronological model of the Irish Chalcolithic and Early Bronze Age is then presented which provides the basis for a discussion of increasing burial and social complexity in Ireland over this period, proposing an evolution from an egalitarian society in the later Chalcolithic Period through to a prestige goods chiefdom emerging around 1900 BC. It is suggested that the decline of copper production at Ross Island, Co. Cork after 2000 BC may have led to a 'copper crisis' which would have been a profoundly disrupting event, destroying the influence of copper miners and shifting power to copper workers, and those who controlled them. This would have provided a stimulus towards the centralisation of power and the emergence of a ranked social hierarchy. The effects of this 'copper crisis' would have been felt in Britain also, where much Ross Island copper was consumed and may have led to similar developments, with the emergence of the Wessex Culture a similar response in Britain to the samestimulus.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
_Cormac McSparron_ studied Archaeology and Modern History at Queen’s University Belfast, graduating with a BA in 1989. He was awarded an MPhil in 2008 and a PhD in 2018. Since 2002, he has worked at the Centre for Archaeological Fieldwork at Queen’s and has directed and published a large number of important excavations in Northern Ireland. TABLE OF CONTENTS (PROVISIONAL) Foreword and acknowledgements ; Chapter 1: Introduction ; Chapter 2: Theoretical Approaches to the study of Death, Funerary Rituals and Social Structure in Archaeology and Anthropology ; Chapter 3: Ireland in the Late Chalcolithic and Early Bronze Age ; Chapter 4: Methodology ; Chapter 5: Radiocarbon Dating the Single Burial Tradition ; Chapter 6: Analysis ; Chapter 7: Analysing Complexity in the Iris _FORTHCOMING:_ TRES USURPADORES GODOS: TRES ESTUDIOS SOBRE LA TIRANÍA EN EL REINO VISIGODO DE TOLEDO by Rafael Barroso Cabrera, Jorge Morín de Pablos and Isabel Mª. Sánchez Ramos. Paperback; 203x276mm; 446 pages; 112 figures (colour throughout). Spanish text with English summaries. Print RRP: £60.00. 138 2021. ISBN 9781789699593. _Tres usurpadores godos_ is a study of three famous usurpations of the Visigothic period. It first examines the nature of the uprising of Prince Hermenegild (579-585), the civil war and the complex political context of the time, as well as the important implications of the conflict. The second study deals with the rebellion of Duke Argimundo at the beginning of the reign of Recaredo and the consequences it had on the newly conquered Suebi kingdom. A prominent member of the Aula Regia and doge prouinciae, Argimundus started a rebellion in the province of Gallaecia that could have ruined the political endeavours of Leovigild and Recaredo. Finally, it analyses the figure of Duke Theudemirus, one of the great magnates of the kingdom of Toledo at the end of the 7th century, his actions within the complicated Visigothic political situation and the role he played in the transmission of power between Visigoths and Arabs after the fall of the kingdom ofToledo.
ABOUT THE AUTHORS
_Rafael Barroso Cabrera _(Madrid, 1963) holds a degree in Prehistory and Archaeology from the Universidad Autónoma de Madrid. He is a specialist in studies on the Visigothic kingdom of Toledo, a period to which he has devoted much of his research work and numerouspublications. ;
_Jorge Morín de Pablos_ (Madrid, 1967) holds a PhD in Archaeology from the Universidad Autónoma de Madrid and is director of the Department of Archaeology, Palaeontology and Cultural Resources at AUDEMA. He has directed more than 300 archaeological excavations at different sites in Spain and abroad, with chronologies ranging from the Palaeolithic to contemporary times. ; _Isabel Sánchez Ramos_ (Córdoba, 1977) holds a PhD in Archaeology, specialising in the historical period of Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages. Her main scientific interest has been the study of phenomena related to urban societies in transformation between the Roman period and the High Middle Ages in the western Mediterranean, the spaces and architectures of power linked to the elites, and the impact they had on the evolution of urban landscapes.SPANISH DESCRIPTION
_Tres usurpadores godos_ es un estudio sobre tres famosas usurpaciones de época visigoda. Se analiza en primer lugar la naturaleza del levantamiento del príncipe Hermenegildo (579-585), la guerra civil y el complejo contexto político del momento, así como las importantes implicaciones que se derivaron del conflicto. El segundo estudio aborda la rebelión del duque Argimundo a comienzos del reinado de Recaredo y las consecuencias que ésta tuvo en el recién conquistado reino suevo. Destacado miembro del Aula Regia y dux prouinciae, Argimundus inició una rebelión en la provincia Gallaecia que pudo haber arruinado la obra política construida por Leovigildo y Recaredo. Por último, se analiza la figura del duque Theudemirus, uno de los grandes magnates del reino de Toledo de finales del siglo VII, su actuación dentro de la complicada situación política visigoda y el papel que desempeñó en la transmisión del poder entre visigodos y árabes a la caída del reino de Toledo. _Rafael Barroso Cabrera_ (Madrid, 1963) es Licenciado en Prehistoria y Arqueología por la Universidad Autónoma de Madrid. Es especialista en estudios sobre el reino visigodo de Toledo, periodo al que ha dedicado buena parte de su labor investigadora y numerosaspublicaciones. ;
_Jorge Morín de Pablos_ (Madrid, 1967) es Doctor en Arqueología por la Universidad Autónoma de Madrid y director del Departamento de Arqueología, Paleontología y Recursos Culturales de AUDEMA. Ha dirigido más de 300 excavaciones arqueológicas en diferentes yacimientos de España y el extranjero, con cronologías que van desde el Paleolítico hasta época contemporánea. ; _Isabel Sánchez Ramos_ (Córdoba, 1977) es doctora en Arqueología especialista en el periodo histórico de la Ant _FORTHCOMING:_ VINCENZO LA ROSA (1941- 2014): UN ARCHEOLOGO TRA SICILIA E EGEO edited by Lucia Arcifa and Pietro Militello. Paperback; 150x210mm; 172 pages; 36 figures. Italian text. Italian text. Print RRP: £30.00. 9 2021. ISBN 9781789698176. _Vincenzo La Rosa (1941- 2014) Un archeologo tra Sicilia e Egeo_ collects the contributions of the Study Day _Una lezione per il futuro. Vincenzo La Rosa (1941-2014)_ organised in 2015 by the University of Catania in collaboration with ISVNA, to re-examine the scientific figure of Vincenzo La Rosa, professor of Aegean Civilisations at the University of Catania, director of the excavations at Haghia Triada and Festòs in Crete, and the excavations at Milena in Sicily. Scholars and students demonstrate the contribution that Vincenzo La Rosa has made to our knowledge of the prehistory of Crete, Sicily and the Aegean, and to the application of a long-term perspective linking the ancient and modern worlds, emerges in his long career as a university lecturer, director of the Centre for the Study of Greek Archaeology at the C.N.R. in Catania, deputy director of the Italian Archaeological School in Athens (1993-1999) and director of the Centre of Cretan Archaeology (1998-2011).ABOUT THE EDITORS
_Lucia Arcifa _is professor of Medieval Archaeology at the University of Catania and director of the archaeological excavations in Rocchicella and Milena, in Sicily. Her interests focus on Byzantine and Islamic Mediterranean and on the relation between Sicily, Byzantium, Ifrīqiya in the Early Middle Age. ; _Pietro Militello _is professor of Aegean civilisation at the University of Catania and director of the Mission of Phaistos in Crete. He is also directing excavations in Sicily. His interests focus on II millennium Crete and on the relation between the Aegean and Sicily in prehistory.ITALIAN DESCRIPTION
_Vincenzo La Rosa (1941- 2014) Un archeologo tra Sicilia e Egeo _raccoglie i contributi della Giornata di Studio _Una lezione per il futuro. Vincenzo La Rosa (1941-2014) _organizzata nel 2015 dall’Università di Catania in collaborazione con l’ISVNA, per riesaminare la figura scientifico di Vincenzo La Rosa, professore ordinario di Civiltà Egee presso l’Università di Catania, e direttore degli scavi di Haghia Triada e Festòs a Creta, e degli scavi di Milena in Sicilia. Attraverso i contributi di studiosi ed allievi emerge il contributo che Vincenzo La Rosa ha apportato alla conoscenza della preistoria di Creta, della Sicilia e dell’Egeo, ed alla applicazione di una prospettiva di lunga durata che collegava il mondo antico a quello moderno, nella sua lunga carriera di docente universitario, direttore del Centro di studi sull’Archeologia greca del C.N.R. di Catania, vicedirettore della Scuola Archeologica Italiana di Atene (1993-1999) e Direttore del Centro di Archeologia Cretese (1998-2011). _FORTHCOMING:_ ORIENTATION OF PREHISTORIC MONUMENTS IN BRITAIN: A REASSESSMENT by Alistair Marshall. Paperback; 203x276mm; 704pp; 2 printed figures, extensive online image archive. Print RRP: 85.00.ISBN 9781789697056. _Orientation of Prehistoric Monuments in Britain: A Reassessment_ views the type of major axial alignment seen at many megalithic ritual and funerary monuments of Neolithic to Bronze Age date in Britain and Ireland, not in terms of more abstract astronomical concerns, but rather as an expression of repeated seasonal propitiation, basically solar, involving community, agrarian economy, and the ancestors in a combined attempt to mitigate variable environmental conditions. The analysis is supported by over 800 images, open-source, for unrestricted use, and available digitally.ABOUT THE AUTHOR
_Alistair Marshall_ has a formal background in archaeology and the natural sciences, general interests in European prehistory, and is currently developing various projects including: application of remote sensing, from broader study of landscapes to detailed interpretation of ritual monuments with related experimental work; structural analysis of megalithic sites, with especial reference to interpretation of axial alignment; investigation of broader aspects of tribal economies during the later Iron Age in Britain and NorthwesternEurope.
_FORTHCOMING:_ THE STATUES AT ROUSHAM PARK by Anne Schlee. Paperback; 250x280mm; 110 pages; 76 figures (colour throughout). Print RRP: 19.99.ISBN 9780955892349. Rousham and its landscape garden, located in rural Oxfordshire, is one of the few gardens of the first phase of English landscape design to have escaped alteration. Informative and well-illustrated, _The Statues at Rousham Park_ describes how the retired General James Dormer, who inherited Rousham in 1738, completed Charles Bridgeman’s garden design with the help of William Kent, but reserved for himself the choice of statues andtheir placement.
Taken together, the statues and busts, in both lead and stone, suggest an autobiographical portrait of Dormer. Despite the gardens at Rousham being a popular local attraction, a site of pilgrimage to students of William Kent, and the backdrop to world-famous television drama including the BBC’s recent adaptation of Nancy Mitford’s _The Pursuit of Love_ (2021), this is the first publication of its kind on its statues and their surroundinglandscape.
_Anne Schlee_ is a Booker Prize and Carnegie Medal shortlisted, and Guardian Prize winning, novelist whose work includes _The Vandal_ (Macmillan 1980), _Rhine Journey_ (1981) and _The Time in Aderra_ (1996). She has judged a number of literary competitions including the Somerset Maugham Award, the David Higham Prize, and the Booker Prize. She was elected as a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in2007.
_FORTHCOMING:_ DIE GRÄBER VON BAT UND AL-AYN UND DAS GEBÄUDE II IN BAT by Stephanie Döpper. DOI: 10.32028/9781789699494 . Hardback; 210x297mm; 336pp. Price TBA. 741 2021 _Arabia Orientalis: Studien zur Archäologie Ostarabiens 2_. ISBN 9781789699494. The Early Bronze Age in third-millennium-BC Eastern Arabia was a period of fundamental change, which is apparent in the development of social complexity, the exploitation of new resources and the emergence of new modes of life. Hallmarks of this period include monumental structures, so-called towers, and stone-built circular tombs. The second volume of the series Arabia Orientalis is dedicated to the archaeological investigation of the Early Bronze Age necropolises of the UNESCO world heritage sites Bat and Al-Ayn in the Sultanate of Oman, as well as the monumental tower structure Building II at Bat. It encompasses detailed reports on the architecture and stratigraphy, as well as the find assemblages from the excavated buildings, including pottery and small finds, along with anthropological as well as anthracological studies. The publication presents insights into changing burial customs, as well as the function of the monumental tower structures. Three out of the four excavated Hafit- and Umm an-Nar-period tombs in the necropolises featured evidence for reuse at later times, especially during the Samad period, where new inhumations were placed into the Bronze Age tombs. The early Umm an-Nar tower Building II is surrounded by a large ditch system that might have served as protection against flooding from the nearby wadi.ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Stephanie Döpper is a postdoctoral researcher at Goethe University Frankfurt with an interest in mobile and sedentary communities of the Bronze Age in Eastern Arabia, as well as the reuse of prehistoric tombs and early modern mud-brick villages in the region. To facilitate public engagement with archaeological sites, she co-developed the ArchaeoTrail app for self-guided smartphone tours at archaeologicalsites.
GERMAN DESCRIPTION
Die frühe Bronzezeit im dritten Jahrtausend v. Chr. in Südostarabien ist eine Zeit grundlegender Veränderungen, die sich in der Entwicklung sozialer Komplexität, der Ausbeutung neuer Ressourcen und dem Aufkommen neuer Lebensformen zeigt. Kennzeichen dieser Epoche sind monumentale Bauwerke, sogenannte Türme, und aus Stein gebaute rundeGräber.
Der zweite Band der Reihe Arabia Orientalis widmet sich der archäologischen Untersuchung der frühbronzezeitlichen Nekropolen der UNESCO-Welterbestätten Bat und Al-Ayn im Sultanat Oman sowie dem monumentalen Turm Gebäude II in Bat. Er umfasst ausführliche Abhandlungen zur Architektur und Stratigraphie sowie zu den Fundeassemblagen aus den ausgegrabenen Bauwerken, darunter Keramik-, Kleinfunde-, anthropologische sowie anthrakologische Untersuchungen. Die Publikation präsentiert Einblicke in sich verändernde Bestattungssitten und die Funktion des monumentalen Turms. Drei der vier ausgegrabenen Hafit- und Umm an-Nar-zeitlichen Gräber in den Nekropolen belegen spätere Nachnutzungen, vor allem in der Samad-Zeit, in der neue Bestattungen in die bronzezeitlichen Gräber eingebracht wurden. Das Gebäude II aus der frühen Umm an-Nar-Zeit ist von einer großen Grabenanlage umgeben, die möglicherweise als Schutz vor Überschwemmungen des nahen Wadis diente. Stephanie Döpper ist wissenschaftliche Mitarbeiterin an der Goethe-Universität Frankfurt und beschäftigt sich mit mobilen und sesshaften Gesellschaften der Bronzezeit in Südostarabien sowie der Nachnutzung prähistorischer Gräber und frühneuzeitlicher Lehmziegeldörfer in dieser Region. Um der Öffentlichkeit den Zugang zu archäologischen Stätten zu erleichtern, hat sie die ArchaeoTrail-App für selbstgeführte Smartphone-Touren an archäologischen Stätten mitentwickelt. _NEW:_ CONTRIBUTION OF CERAMIC TECHNOLOGICAL APPROACHES TO THE ANTHROPOLOGY AND ARCHAEOLOGY OF PRE- AND PROTOHISTORIC SOCIETIES _Proceedings of the XVIII UISPP World Congress (4-9 June 2018, Paris, France) Volume 12 Session IV-3_ edited by François Giligny, Ekaterina Dolbunova, Louise Gomart, Alexandre Livingstone Smith and Sophie Méry. Paperback; 205x290mm; 112 pages; 44 figures, 3 tables. 5 papers in French, 2 in English. 729 2021. Available both in print and Open Access. Printed ISBN 9781789697094. £27.00 (No VAT). Epublication ISBN 9781789697100. The reconstruction of the technical systems of ceramic production and of its ‘chaîne opératoire’ is a means of exploring certain social structures in time and space. For many years, methodological procedures based on multidisciplinarity have made it possible to analyse both materials and methods of fabrication for this purpose. Session IV-3 organised at the 18th Congress of the UISPP in 2018 aimed to highlight the contribution of technological approaches to ceramics, both in archaeology and in ethnology, to the analysis of pre- and protohistoric societies. The case studies focus on the Neolithic and the European Bronze Age, but also on the megalithism of our era inSenegal.
APPORT DES APPROACHES TECHNOLOGIQUES DE LA CÉRAMIQUE À L’ANTHROPOLOGIE ET À L’ARCHÉOLOGIE DES SOCIÉTÉS PRÉ ETPROTOHISTORIQUES
La reconstitution des systèmes techniques et des chaînes opératoires de production céramique est un moyen qui permet d’explorer certaines structures sociales dans le temps et l’espace. Depuis de nombreuses années, des procédures méthodologiques basées sur la pluridisciplinarité permettent d’analyser tant les matériaux que les méthodes de façonnage cette fin. La session IV-3 organisée lors du 18e Congrès de l’UISPP en 2018 avait pour but de mettre en évidence l’apport des approches technologiques de la céramique, tant en archéologie qu’en ethnologie des techniques à l’analyse des sociétés pré et protohistoriques. Les études de cas portent essentiellement sur le Néolithique et l’âge du Bronze européen, mais aussi sur le mégalithisme de notre ère au Sénégal. _NEW:_ NEOLITHIC AND BRONZE AGE STUDIES IN EUROPE: FROM MATERIAL CULTURE TO TERRITORIES _Proceedings of the XVIII UISPP World Congress (4-9 June 2018, Paris, France) Volume 13 Session I-4_ edited by Marie Besse and François Giligny. Paperback; 205x290mm; 104 pages; 37 figures, 13 tables. 728 2021. Available both in print and Open Access. Printed ISBN 9781789697193. £27.00 (No VAT). Epublication ISBN9781789697209.
_Neolithic and Bronze Age Studies in Europe: from material culture to territories _presents eight papers from the 2018 UISPP Congress. Topics include the neolithisation process in the Iberian Peninsula; faunal exploitation in early Neolithic Italy; the economic and symbolic role of animals in eastern Germany; Copper Age human remains in central Italy; animal figurines; spatula-idols; territories and schematic art in the Iberian Neolithic; and finally Bronze age hoards at a European scale. The diversity of the papers reflects contemporary approaches and questions in those periods.ABOUT THE EDITORS
_Marie Besse _is Professor of Prehistoric Archaeology at the University of Geneva and is Director of the Laboratory of Prehistoric Archaeology and Anthropology at the same university. ; _François Giligny _is Professor of Archaeological Methodology at Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne University.Home
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