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Alejandro G. Sinner deposited A central italian coin with Dyonysus/Panther types, and contacts between Central Italy and Spain in the 2nd and 1rst centuries BC in the group
Classical archaeology on Humanities Commons 5 years, 9 months agoThree “Dionysus / panther” coins are known from Catalonia, one from excavations at Cabrera de Mar. This is a key component of the Central Italian Assemblage of the Italo-Baetican series, and dates to the late 90s/early 80s BC. The excavation coin probably arrived during the Sertorian Wars (80–72 BC), certainly before 50 BC. We therefore revie…[Read more]
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Alejandro G. Sinner deposited Trade between Minturnae and Hispania in the Late Republic in the group
Roman Provincial Archaeology on Humanities Commons 5 years, 9 months agoTwo large complexes of struck lead pieces, from the Roman colony of Minturnae nd from Baetica (southern Spain) in the late Republic, have been documented in recent years. There are close and unique iconographic parallels between them. We accordingly undertook an analysis of the isotopic signatures of the leads used in the two areas, to see if this…[Read more]
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Alejandro G. Sinner deposited Trade between Minturnae and Hispania in the Late Republic in the group
Roman archaeology on Humanities Commons 5 years, 9 months agoTwo large complexes of struck lead pieces, from the Roman colony of Minturnae nd from Baetica (southern Spain) in the late Republic, have been documented in recent years. There are close and unique iconographic parallels between them. We accordingly undertook an analysis of the isotopic signatures of the leads used in the two areas, to see if this…[Read more]
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Alejandro G. Sinner deposited Trade between Minturnae and Hispania in the Late Republic in the group
Classical archaeology on Humanities Commons 5 years, 9 months agoTwo large complexes of struck lead pieces, from the Roman colony of Minturnae nd from Baetica (southern Spain) in the late Republic, have been documented in recent years. There are close and unique iconographic parallels between them. We accordingly undertook an analysis of the isotopic signatures of the leads used in the two areas, to see if this…[Read more]
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Alejandro G. Sinner deposited Methods of Palaeodemography: The Case of the Iberian Oppida and Roman Cities in North‐East Spain in the group
Roman Provincial Archaeology on Humanities Commons 5 years, 9 months agoAncient demography is a recurrent topic in archaeology, thanks to new methods and evidence from different surveys and excavations. However, different cultures or periods are studied on their own, without any comparison being made between them and of their population dynamics. The present paper seeks to advance the situation by defining…[Read more]
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Alejandro G. Sinner deposited Methods of Palaeodemography: The Case of the Iberian Oppida and Roman Cities in North‐East Spain in the group
Roman archaeology on Humanities Commons 5 years, 9 months agoAncient demography is a recurrent topic in archaeology, thanks to new methods and evidence from different surveys and excavations. However, different cultures or periods are studied on their own, without any comparison being made between them and of their population dynamics. The present paper seeks to advance the situation by defining…[Read more]
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Alejandro G. Sinner deposited Methods of Palaeodemography: The Case of the Iberian Oppida and Roman Cities in North‐East Spain in the group
Classical archaeology on Humanities Commons 5 years, 9 months agoAncient demography is a recurrent topic in archaeology, thanks to new methods and evidence from different surveys and excavations. However, different cultures or periods are studied on their own, without any comparison being made between them and of their population dynamics. The present paper seeks to advance the situation by defining…[Read more]
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Alejandro G. Sinner deposited Baitolo, una doble inscripción ibérica en un cepo de ancla de plomo del siglo I a.C. in the group
Roman Provincial Archaeology on Humanities Commons 5 years, 9 months agoThe lead stock in the Guerra collection is the first of its category found with an Iberian inscription: baitolo. The most feasible interpretation is to consider it as a place name, either as the name of the city of baitolo/Baetulo, the modern Badalona, which issued coins with the legend baitolo in the 2nd quarter of the 1st c. BC, or as the name…[Read more]
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Alejandro G. Sinner deposited Baitolo, una doble inscripción ibérica en un cepo de ancla de plomo del siglo I a.C. in the group
Roman archaeology on Humanities Commons 5 years, 9 months agoThe lead stock in the Guerra collection is the first of its category found with an Iberian inscription: baitolo. The most feasible interpretation is to consider it as a place name, either as the name of the city of baitolo/Baetulo, the modern Badalona, which issued coins with the legend baitolo in the 2nd quarter of the 1st c. BC, or as the name…[Read more]
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Alejandro G. Sinner deposited Baitolo, una doble inscripción ibérica en un cepo de ancla de plomo del siglo I a.C. in the group
Classical archaeology on Humanities Commons 5 years, 9 months agoThe lead stock in the Guerra collection is the first of its category found with an Iberian inscription: baitolo. The most feasible interpretation is to consider it as a place name, either as the name of the city of baitolo/Baetulo, the modern Badalona, which issued coins with the legend baitolo in the 2nd quarter of the 1st c. BC, or as the name…[Read more]
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Erin Averett deposited “Playing the Part: Masks and Ritual Performance in Rural Sanctuaries in Iron Age Cyprus,” in The Physicality of the Other. Masks from the Ancient Near East and the Eastern Mediterranean, edited by A. Berlejung and J. Filitz. Orientalische Religionen in der Antike 27. RA. Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck. 305-37. in the group
Classical archaeology on Humanities Commons 6 years agoThis volume comprises the conference proceedings of the international and interdisciplinary meeting held in Leipzig from November 9 to 11, 2015. Scholars from different research areas present masks from Egypt, Israel/Palestine, Syria, Mesopotamia, Phoenicia, Cyprus, and Greece, mainly from the third to the first millennium BCE. The masks are…[Read more]
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Justin Walsh deposited Contextualizing Greek Pottery at Hallstatt Sites in the group
Classical archaeology on Humanities Commons 6 years agoSeventeen years ago, Brian Shefton wrote, “the distribution pattern of the Greek imports for the Hallstatt period has crystallized a number of years ago and is unlikely to be greatly modified in the future except on point of detail” (Böhr and Shefton 2000, 28). Indeed, publications describing Greek pottery have reached similar conclusions: Gree…[Read more]
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Henry Colburn deposited Gemelli Careri’s Description of Persepolis in the group
Classical archaeology on Humanities Commons 6 years agoThis article examines the description of Persepolis, one of the capital cities of the Achaemenid Persian Empire (ca. 550–330 BCE), by Giovanni Francesco Gemelli Careri (1651–1725) in his illustrated travelogue Giro del mondo (1699–1700). Gemelli Careri’s extensive description of the site—some twenty pages of text accompanied by two plates en…[Read more]
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William Caraher deposited The Ambivalent Landscape of Christian Corinth: The Archaeology of Place, Theology, and Politics in a Late Antique City in the group
Roman Provincial Archaeology on Humanities Commons 6 years agoThis chapter argues that the textual and archaeological evidence for imperial involvement in the Corinthia provides faint traces of what Jas Elsner has called “internal friction” in the manifestation of imperial and Corinthian authority in the region.
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William Caraher deposited The Ambivalent Landscape of Christian Corinth: The Archaeology of Place, Theology, and Politics in a Late Antique City in the group
Roman archaeology on Humanities Commons 6 years agoThis chapter argues that the textual and archaeological evidence for imperial involvement in the Corinthia provides faint traces of what Jas Elsner has called “internal friction” in the manifestation of imperial and Corinthian authority in the region.
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William Caraher deposited Reflowing Legacy Data from Polis Chyrsochous on Cyprus in the group
Roman archaeology on Humanities Commons 6 years agoA short paper on legacy data, flow, and time in archaeology based on my experiences at Polis on Cyprus.
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Roland Steinacher deposited Richard Heuberger (1884 – 1968). Mediävist und Althistoriker in Innsbruck in the group
Roman Provincial Archaeology on Humanities Commons 6 years, 5 months agoIn der Reihe der in Innsbruck tatigen oder aus Innsbruck stammenden Historiker der ersten Halfte des 20. Jahrhunderts hat Richard Heuberger seinen festen Platz, auch wenn er bis auf wenige Eintrage in den einschlagigen Tiroler und biografischen Lexika auf kein nennenswertes „Nachleben“ zuruckblicken kann1. Allerdings gilt das nicht nur fur ihn…[Read more]
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Roland Steinacher deposited Rex Vandalorum – The Debates on Wends and Vandals in Swedish Humanism as an Indicator for Early Modern Patterns of Ethnic Perception in the group
Roman archaeology on Humanities Commons 6 years, 5 months agoFor more than four hundred years, up to the accession of the present king Carl XVI Gustaf in 1973, did the Swedish monarchs hold the title “King of the Wends“. The first evidence of this claim dates from the reign of Gustav I Vasa (1523-1560), who adopted the title Sveriges, Göthes och Wendes Konung in official sources around the year 1540. In L…[Read more]
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Anne Donlon started the topic #HCSummerRefresh 2: Reflection & Making it Official in the discussion
Humanities Commons Summer Camp on Humanities Commons 6 years, 5 months agoWelcome to the last day of our second Humanities Commons Summer Refresh Workshop session! If you missed out on joining us for either session, or if you want to do it all over again, you absolutely can! These posts, as well as the ones on our group site, will remain there indefinitely. Feel free to complete the activities in your own time and even…[Read more]
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Caitlin Duffy deposited EGL 194: Intro to Film (Fall 2019) in the group
Humanities Commons Summer Camp on Humanities Commons 6 years, 5 months agoThis is the syllabus I’ve designed for my Fall 2019 undergraduate-level Introduction to Film course. I focused the course as a genre study of American horror films. I want my students to be able to consider the socio-political contexts of popular films and to detect and explain the arguments and worldviews produced by film.
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