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Glass manufacture --- Glass industry --- Ceramic industries --- History --- Mediterranean region
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Sepulchral monuments --- Excavations (Archaeology) --- Congresses --- Mediterranean Region --- Antiquities --- Conferences - Meetings --- Tombs --- Funeral monuments --- Funerary monuments --- Graves --- Gravestones --- Memorial tablets --- Tablets, Memorial --- Tombstones --- Monuments --- Sepulchral monuments - Mediterranean Region - Congresses --- Excavations (Archaeology) - Mediterranean region - Congresses --- Mediterranean Region - Antiquities - Congresses
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Folklore --- Mediterranean Region --- Greece --- Social life and customs
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Rassemblant à la fois des données du monde grec et du monde romain, cet ouvrage entend contribuer à une meilleure analyse des circuits économiques méditerranéens, locaux et régionaux, en remettant au cœur de la réflexion les questions d'entreposage, des modes de distribution et de la spéculation. En s’intéressant aux lieux et bâtiments de stockage, cette enquête est en même temps une étude des circuits et des flux, qui interroge à nouveaux frais la documentation écrite et archéologique, à travers plusieurs exemples montrant le pragmatisme et la plurifonctionnalité des bâtiments, les articulations entre le rôle de l’État et l’action des particuliers, la complexité des circuits. La connaissance de l’organisation des échanges s’enrichit de nombreuses études de cas qui témoignent de techniques de construction et d’aménagements de l’espace dans les bâtiments de stockage mais aussi de réseaux d’intérêts sociaux et économiques fondés sur des groupements professionnels, qui conduisent à réenvisager les formes de l’intégration économique en Méditerranée, de l’époque classique à l’Empire. Gathering data from the Greek world and the Roman world, this book aims to contribute to a better analysis of local and regional economic circuits in the Mediterranean, and puts therefore the issues of storage, distribution methods and speculation at the heart of the debate. By focusing on storage places and buildings, this survey is also a study of circuits and flows, addressed both in the written and archaeological documentation. Several examples show the pragmatism and multi-functionality of buildings, the links between the role of the State and the action of individuals, the complexity of circuits. Our knowledge of the organization of exchanges is enriched here by numerous case studies that testify to construction techniques and space arrangements in storage buildings but also to social and economic interest networks based on professional groups. This study leads to a re-examination of…
Warehouses --- Physical distribution of goods --- Marketing channels --- Management. --- Mediterranean Region --- Economic conditions. --- Antiquities. --- Circuits de distribution --- Civilisation ancienne. --- Civilization, Classical. --- Distribution (Économie politique) --- Economic history. --- Entrepôts --- Marketing channels. --- Physical distribution of goods. --- Histoire --- Gestion --- History --- Management --- Mediterranean Region. --- Méditerranée, Région de la --- Antiquités. --- Conditions économiques. --- History. --- E-books --- Warehouses - Mediterranean Region - Management - History. --- Physical distribution of goods - Mediterranean Region - History. --- Marketing channels - Mediterranean Region - History. --- Mediterranean Region - Antiquities. --- Mediterranean Region - Economic conditions. --- Griechische Welt --- römisches reich --- soziale organisation --- antike geschichtsschreibung --- Wirtschaft --- grieschische stadt
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Manuscripts - Mediterranean Region --- Manuscripts, Arabic - Mediterranean Region --- Manuscripts, Latin - Mediterranean Area --- Manuscripts --- Libraries --- Illumination of books and manuscripts --- Manuscrits --- Bibliothèques --- Enluminure --- Manuscripts, Arabic --- Manuscripts, Latin
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Annuaires --- Jaarboeken --- Mediterranean Region --- Middle East --- Antiquities --- 930 --- History Ancient world --- Periodicals
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Mediterranean Region --- Merchant marine --- Navigation --- Commerce --- History --- Congresses. --- Asia --- Foreign economic relations
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"La Méditerranée orientale du Bronze récent (seconde moitié du IIe millénaire avant notre ère) est caractérisée par d'intenses échanges de biens, d'hommes et d'idées, qui ont parcouru ses flots et ont contribué à la création d'une culture internationale le long de ses côtes. Ce commerce à longue distance fut favorisé par l'utilisation commune d'une langue internationale, l'accadien, un intérêt partagé pour les objets de prestige, et par l'échange de présents qui forgent des liens entre les pays et développent les négociations commerciales. L'étude de ce commerce maritime, à l'image de son caractère international, englobe les différents horizons culturels qui entouraient cette mer d'échanges, et procède à un réexamen critique des sources : matériel archéologique, épaves, sites côtiers et textes anciens. L'environnement, les moyens de transports, le statut des participants aux échanges ainsi que les réglementations commerciales, font partie des questions abordées dans cet ouvrage."--Cover p. 4. "The eastern Mediterranean of the Late Bronze Age (second half of the second millennium BC) was a period of intense exchange of goods, ideas, and people, who traversed the sea and contributed to the creation of an international culture along its shores. Long-distance trade was facilitated by the use of Akkadian as the international written communication system, by a shared interest for prestige goods, and by the exchange of gifts for the purpose of establishing diplomatic and commercial relations between countries. Reflecting its international character, the study of this maritime commerce embraces the diverse cultures that participated in circum-Mediterranean interaction, and involves a fresh critical examination of the sources: archaeological remains, shipwrecks, coastal sites, and ancient texts. The environment, means of transportation, status of participants in exchange, and the regulation of commerce are among the main themes treated in this volume."--Cover p. 4.
Bronze age --- Shipping --- Merchant ships --- Age du Bronze --- Transports maritimes --- Navires marchands --- History --- Histoire --- Trade routes --- Commerce, Prehistoric --- Mediterranean Region --- Antiquities --- Foreign economic relations --- Commercial routes --- Foreign trade routes --- Ocean routes --- Routes of trade --- Sea lines of communication --- Sea routes --- Commerce --- Exchange, Prehistoric --- Prehistoric commerce --- Civilization --- Circum-Mediterranean countries --- Mediterranean Area --- Mediterranean countries --- Mediterranean Sea Region --- Antiquities. --- Trade routes - Mediterranean Region - History - To 1500 --- Commerce, Prehistoric - Mediterranean Region --- Mediterranean Region - Antiquities --- Mediterranean Region - Foreign economic relations - History - To 1500 --- Mediterranean Region - History - To 476
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The volume contains studies dealing with Mediterranean history in the first millennium B.C., based mainly on epigraphic data. Chapter I concerns the Philistines and the kingdom of "terra firma", established by "Sea Peoples" on the Lower and Middle Orontes and in the Aleppo area, showing their Mycenaean background. Their obvious relations with the Phoenicians lead to the presentation of the newly identified material referring to the goddess Tanit, best known from Carthage, but coming from the Levant. Information provided by classical sources is then discussed in two chapters dealing with Herodotus and with later sources giving some information on Phoenician and Punic law and jurisprudence. The second part of the book consists in an analysis of Phoenician, Punic, and Neo-Punic inscriptions which so far have not been fully deciphered or interpreted. Most of them come from North Africa, but inscriptions from Ibiza and Sardinia are examined as well. Some of them offer the possibility of better understanding the molk-sacrifice and its human implications, especially in the second and first centuries B.C. Attention is paid also to the meaning and the implications of some personal names appearing in those inscriptions.
Phoenician antiquities --- Punic antiquities --- Sea Peoples --- Ethnology --- Academic collection --- Phoenician antiquities. --- Punic antiquities. --- Sea Peoples. --- Peuples de la Mer --- Inscriptions phéniciennes --- Inscriptions puniques --- Méditerranée (région) --- Histoire --- Mediterranean region --- Inscriptions [Phoenician ] --- Inscriptions [Punic ] --- History --- Antiquities [Phoenician ] --- Histoire. --- Ethnology - Mediterranean region
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Quelles étaient les circonstances et motivations de la fondation des lieux de culte antiques ? Qu’est-ce qui présidait au choix des dieux ? Quels étaient les agents et les processus d’exécution de la genèse des temples ? Quels étaient les critères qui prévalaient dans le choix des sites sacrés ou les modalités d’installation d’un temple sur des structures existantes ? L’enquête proposée dans cet ouvrage sur la naissance des dieux dans l’Antiquité méditerranéenne, à forte tonalité archéologique et présentant des dossiers inédits pour une grande part, permet de proposer un bilan collectif sur les multiples implications de la formation des lieux de culte dans l’Antiquité, en partant de la documentation fournie par les sanctuaires compris non pas seulement comme des lieux de culte, mais également comme des lieux de cristallisation de la mémoire collective des sociétés antiques. Un tel sujet, exploré dans le cadre d’un colloque organisé à Rome en 2015, se prêtait particulièrement bien au programme de recherches commun des Écoles françaises d’Athènes et de Rome qui proposait de réfléchir sur les lieux de culte. En partant des fouilles et études menées par les deux Écoles depuis le XIXe siècle, l’objectif annoncé de ce programme est avant tout de faire dialoguer l’Est et l’Ouest méditerranéen, souvent séparés par les cloisonnements disciplinaires de l’histoire et l’archéologie grecque et romaine, voire provinciale.
Sacred space --- Shrines --- Cults --- Religious architecture --- Archaeology and religion --- Excavations (Archaeology) --- Gods. --- Civilization, Ancient. --- Antiquities. --- Archaeology and religion. --- Cults. --- Religion. --- Religious architecture. --- Sacred space. --- Shrines. --- History. --- Mediterranean Region --- Mediterranean Region. --- Religion --- Religious life and customs. --- Antiquities --- Gods --- Civilization, Ancient --- History --- Sanctuaires --- Architecture religieuse --- Archéologie et religion --- Religious life and customs --- Antike. --- Antiquité. --- Architecture religieuse. --- Civilisation ancienne. --- Cultes --- Dieux. --- Fouilles (Archéologie) --- Heiligtum. --- Lieux sacrés --- Naissance. --- Sanctuaires. --- Actes de congrès --- Histoire --- Actes de congrès. --- Gaule. --- Griechenland --- Grèce antique. --- Italie. --- Italien. --- Méditerranée, Région de la --- Rome. --- Römisches Reich. --- Antiquités. --- Vie religieuse. --- Ancient. --- Archéologie et religion. --- Sacred space - Mediterranean Region - History --- Shrines - Mediterranean Region - History --- Cults - Mediterranean Region - History --- Religious architecture - Mediterranean Region - History --- Archaeology and religion - Mediterranean Region --- Excavations (Archaeology) - Mediterranean Region --- Archéologie et religion.
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