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La mission archéologique syro-française de Qinnasrin a mené ses travaux de 2008 à 2010 sur le site d’al-‘Iss (Syrie du Nord, région d’Alep), dans l’ensemble du bourg et dans ses environs immédiats, grâce aux financements de la Commission des fouilles du ministère de l’Europe et des Affaires étrangères, de la Fondation Max van Berchem, du CNRS et de la Direction générale des Antiquités et Musées de Syrie. Attestée depuis la fin du IIIe millénaire avant notre ère, Qinnasrin est un nœud routier et militaire important, qui domine une plaine fertile, aux confins de la steppe et des zones d’agriculture irriguée. Renommée Chalcis par les Grecs, elle est, à l’époque romaine, le siège d’une royauté et frappe monnaie. Elle joue un rôle essentiel dans le système de fortification de la Syrie du Nord mis en place par Justinien face aux Perses, puis lors de la conquête de la Syrie du Nord par les armées de l’islam. Étroitement liée à Alep, elle décline, à son profit, à partir du milieu du xe siècle et tombe dans l’oubli vers le xive siècle. Cet ouvrage dresse un état des lieux et une synthèse des sources textuelles et archéologiques. Il présente la documentation constituée par les prospections pédestre et géophysique, les premières fouilles archéologiques jamais menées sur le site, l’inventaire des blocs architecturaux et la collecte de matériel. Plusieurs découvertes permettent de rendre compte de l’importance acquise par la ville, tant aux périodes les plus anciennes qu’aux époques grecque, romaine ou islamique. Pour la première fois, un scénario de l’évolution morphologique de la ville et de ses transformations est proposé. Ce second volume de la série consacrée à Qinnasrin livre un portrait inédit d’un site remarquable et largement méconnu. The syro-french archaeological research mission of Qinnasrin has worked between 2008 and 2010 on the site of al-‘Iss (Northern Syria, Aleppo region), in the village itself and in the imediate surroundings. These fieldworks have been…
Fouilles archéologiques --- Chalcis ad Belum (ville ancienne) --- Excavations (Archeology) --- Architecture, Ancient --- Syria --- Antiquities --- Archaeology --- archéologie --- épigraphie --- morphologie urbaine --- Syrie du Nord --- âge du Bronze --- période hellénistique --- Empire romain --- Antiquité tardive --- période omeyyade --- période abbasside --- Moyen Âge --- églises d’Orient --- conquête musulmane --- fortification --- céramique --- sigillée --- archaeology --- epigraphy --- urban morphology --- Northern Syria --- Bronze Age --- hellenistic period --- roman empire --- Late Antiquity --- umayyad period --- abbasid period --- Middle Age --- oriental churches --- muslim conquest --- pottery --- sigillata --- Fouilles archéologiques --- Antiquité tardive.
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This book contains five research articles and one review article derived from the 6th Fabos Conference on Greenway Planning held at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, in April of 2019. Specific topics covered include greenway planning and analysis for urban morphology, typology, climate change impact and recreational and health usage, in addition to historic greenway restoration. All the articles illustrate multidisciplinary approaches for analyzing urban greenway functions within expanding and contracting cities.
greenway --- community greenway --- everyday activities --- use patterns --- resident evaluation --- high density residential areas --- everyday public space --- living environment --- landscape research --- view --- visual link --- castle garden --- garden renewal --- Carpathian Basin --- research and design --- historic garden and landscape --- stream coverage --- city character change --- land use change --- development policy --- green corridor --- green infrastructure --- urban morphology --- vegetation --- Lisbon --- urban greenways --- urban parks --- urban greening --- systematic review --- landscape typology --- park cooling effect --- park characteristic --- urban heat island --- land surface temperature --- Zhengzhou --- expanding city --- planning --- urban landscape
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urban morphology --- urban form --- cities --- open spaces --- streets --- Cities and towns --- City planning --- Urban geography --- Urbanization --- Growth --- History --- Cities and towns, Movement to --- Urban development --- Urban systems --- Social history --- Sociology, Rural --- Sociology, Urban --- Urban policy --- Rural-urban migration --- Geography --- Civic planning --- Land use, Urban --- Model cities --- Redevelopment, Urban --- Slum clearance --- Town planning --- Urban design --- Urban planning --- Land use --- Planning --- Art, Municipal --- Civic improvement --- Regional planning --- Urban renewal --- Global cities --- Municipalities --- Towns --- Urban areas --- Human settlements --- Government policy --- Management --- Urbanization. --- Urban geography. --- City planning. --- Growth. --- Growth, Urban --- Sprawl, Urban --- Urban growth --- Urban sprawl --- Migration, Internal --- Population --- Vital statistics
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This book focuses on the use of GIScience in conjunction with historical visual sources to resolve past scenarios. The themes, knowledge gained and methodologies conducted might be of interest to a variety of scholars from the social science and humanities disciplines.
Research & information: general --- Geography --- land use/land cover (LULC) --- landscapes --- historical maps --- Geographic Information System (GIS) --- agriculture --- vineyards --- olive groves --- Ein Karem --- Bethlehem --- Hebron --- urban geomorphology --- anthropogenic landforms --- old maps --- contour lines --- Genoa --- historical GIS --- HGIS --- GIS tools --- fishnet --- grid --- urban morphology --- Inoh’s map --- coastlines --- terrain --- land use --- uncertainty --- visibility --- topographic accessibility --- Central Europe --- information system --- Vltava River --- geolocation --- photographs --- historical visual sources --- graph embeddings --- geospatial descriptors --- indexing and retrieval of historical data --- GIS --- carbon balance --- rural landscape --- total environment --- historical geography --- GIScience --- visual sources --- spatial approaches --- cartography
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This book contains five research articles and one review article derived from the 6th Fabos Conference on Greenway Planning held at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, in April of 2019. Specific topics covered include greenway planning and analysis for urban morphology, typology, climate change impact and recreational and health usage, in addition to historic greenway restoration. All the articles illustrate multidisciplinary approaches for analyzing urban greenway functions within expanding and contracting cities.
Research & information: general --- greenway --- community greenway --- everyday activities --- use patterns --- resident evaluation --- high density residential areas --- everyday public space --- living environment --- landscape research --- view --- visual link --- castle garden --- garden renewal --- Carpathian Basin --- research and design --- historic garden and landscape --- stream coverage --- city character change --- land use change --- development policy --- green corridor --- green infrastructure --- urban morphology --- vegetation --- Lisbon --- urban greenways --- urban parks --- urban greening --- systematic review --- landscape typology --- park cooling effect --- park characteristic --- urban heat island --- land surface temperature --- Zhengzhou --- expanding city --- planning --- urban landscape
Choose an application
This book focuses on the use of GIScience in conjunction with historical visual sources to resolve past scenarios. The themes, knowledge gained and methodologies conducted might be of interest to a variety of scholars from the social science and humanities disciplines.
Research & information: general --- Geography --- land use/land cover (LULC) --- landscapes --- historical maps --- Geographic Information System (GIS) --- agriculture --- vineyards --- olive groves --- Ein Karem --- Bethlehem --- Hebron --- urban geomorphology --- anthropogenic landforms --- old maps --- contour lines --- Genoa --- historical GIS --- HGIS --- GIS tools --- fishnet --- grid --- urban morphology --- Inoh’s map --- coastlines --- terrain --- land use --- uncertainty --- visibility --- topographic accessibility --- Central Europe --- information system --- Vltava River --- geolocation --- photographs --- historical visual sources --- graph embeddings --- geospatial descriptors --- indexing and retrieval of historical data --- GIS --- carbon balance --- rural landscape --- total environment --- historical geography --- GIScience --- visual sources --- spatial approaches --- cartography
Choose an application
This book contains five research articles and one review article derived from the 6th Fabos Conference on Greenway Planning held at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, in April of 2019. Specific topics covered include greenway planning and analysis for urban morphology, typology, climate change impact and recreational and health usage, in addition to historic greenway restoration. All the articles illustrate multidisciplinary approaches for analyzing urban greenway functions within expanding and contracting cities.
Research & information: general --- greenway --- community greenway --- everyday activities --- use patterns --- resident evaluation --- high density residential areas --- everyday public space --- living environment --- landscape research --- view --- visual link --- castle garden --- garden renewal --- Carpathian Basin --- research and design --- historic garden and landscape --- stream coverage --- city character change --- land use change --- development policy --- green corridor --- green infrastructure --- urban morphology --- vegetation --- Lisbon --- urban greenways --- urban parks --- urban greening --- systematic review --- landscape typology --- park cooling effect --- park characteristic --- urban heat island --- land surface temperature --- Zhengzhou --- expanding city --- planning --- urban landscape
Choose an application
This book focuses on the use of GIScience in conjunction with historical visual sources to resolve past scenarios. The themes, knowledge gained and methodologies conducted might be of interest to a variety of scholars from the social science and humanities disciplines.
land use/land cover (LULC) --- landscapes --- historical maps --- Geographic Information System (GIS) --- agriculture --- vineyards --- olive groves --- Ein Karem --- Bethlehem --- Hebron --- urban geomorphology --- anthropogenic landforms --- old maps --- contour lines --- Genoa --- historical GIS --- HGIS --- GIS tools --- fishnet --- grid --- urban morphology --- Inoh’s map --- coastlines --- terrain --- land use --- uncertainty --- visibility --- topographic accessibility --- Central Europe --- information system --- Vltava River --- geolocation --- photographs --- historical visual sources --- graph embeddings --- geospatial descriptors --- indexing and retrieval of historical data --- GIS --- carbon balance --- rural landscape --- total environment --- historical geography --- GIScience --- visual sources --- spatial approaches --- cartography
Choose an application
The Heritage Patterns—Representative Models issue of Heritage welcomed twelve articles that discussed traditional and contemporary methodologies, as well as scholars from different backgrounds who intended to seek patterns of tangible heritage and its underlying principles to understand the diversity of heritage approaches. The Special Issue aims to research the patterns in heritage and the underlying rules that define tangible heritage as a universal value in spatial coexistence, economics, urban life, and design via case studies and theoretical proposals that could be implemented in the future. The pattern language and the heritage phenomenon could act as a base of observation to deduct logic and create generative algorithms (generative design); to understand the importance of spatial connection with tangible heritage and urban forms (space syntax, urban morphology, and urban morphometrics) and its visibility; as well as archaeological, architectural, and urban heritage. Based on the UNESCO-ICOMOS doctrines and the examination of morphological regions, urban morphological research and its different layers (urban forms, structural components, built environment, urban tissue, and their interaction) act as a background and foundation for general urban heritage conservation and protection proposals, and also as the base of specific interventions in the built environment caused by natural disasters.
The arts --- Architecture --- urban morphology --- historico-geographical --- town plan --- preservation --- design guidelines --- conservation --- heritage --- urban form --- town-plan --- streets --- plots --- block-plans of buildings --- New York --- urban planning --- pattern language --- generative modelling --- Vienna --- Austria-Hungary --- Barnet --- suburban centres --- spatial morphology --- heritage syntax urbanism --- community heritage --- tangible heritage --- intangible heritage --- space syntax --- cultural heritage --- industrial landscape planning --- industrial landscape --- post-industrial landscape --- industrial tourism --- industrial heritage --- spatial layout --- spatial distribution --- spatial structure --- mapping --- surveying --- indigenous place values --- colonisation --- Michel de Certeau --- lost landscapes --- design reparation --- architecture --- healing architecture --- ergonomics --- community building --- ecology --- architecture for children --- low-tech --- universal design --- vernacular architecture --- regionalism --- visibility analysis --- isovist --- field of view --- urban heritage --- built environment --- Istanbul --- architectural heritage --- spatial distribution characteristics --- influencing factors --- UNESCO heritage --- heritage protection --- urban history --- urban design of 19th century --- system of public squares and city parks --- Zagreb --- Croatia --- urban block --- urban transformation --- urban reconstruction --- historical core --- sustainable urbanisation --- liveable urbanism --- evidence-based design --- Asian cities
Choose an application
The Heritage Patterns—Representative Models issue of Heritage welcomed twelve articles that discussed traditional and contemporary methodologies, as well as scholars from different backgrounds who intended to seek patterns of tangible heritage and its underlying principles to understand the diversity of heritage approaches. The Special Issue aims to research the patterns in heritage and the underlying rules that define tangible heritage as a universal value in spatial coexistence, economics, urban life, and design via case studies and theoretical proposals that could be implemented in the future. The pattern language and the heritage phenomenon could act as a base of observation to deduct logic and create generative algorithms (generative design); to understand the importance of spatial connection with tangible heritage and urban forms (space syntax, urban morphology, and urban morphometrics) and its visibility; as well as archaeological, architectural, and urban heritage. Based on the UNESCO-ICOMOS doctrines and the examination of morphological regions, urban morphological research and its different layers (urban forms, structural components, built environment, urban tissue, and their interaction) act as a background and foundation for general urban heritage conservation and protection proposals, and also as the base of specific interventions in the built environment caused by natural disasters.
The arts --- Architecture --- urban morphology --- historico-geographical --- town plan --- preservation --- design guidelines --- conservation --- heritage --- urban form --- town-plan --- streets --- plots --- block-plans of buildings --- New York --- urban planning --- pattern language --- generative modelling --- Vienna --- Austria-Hungary --- Barnet --- suburban centres --- spatial morphology --- heritage syntax urbanism --- community heritage --- tangible heritage --- intangible heritage --- space syntax --- cultural heritage --- industrial landscape planning --- industrial landscape --- post-industrial landscape --- industrial tourism --- industrial heritage --- spatial layout --- spatial distribution --- spatial structure --- mapping --- surveying --- indigenous place values --- colonisation --- Michel de Certeau --- lost landscapes --- design reparation --- architecture --- healing architecture --- ergonomics --- community building --- ecology --- architecture for children --- low-tech --- universal design --- vernacular architecture --- regionalism --- visibility analysis --- isovist --- field of view --- urban heritage --- built environment --- Istanbul --- architectural heritage --- spatial distribution characteristics --- influencing factors --- UNESCO heritage --- heritage protection --- urban history --- urban design of 19th century --- system of public squares and city parks --- Zagreb --- Croatia --- urban block --- urban transformation --- urban reconstruction --- historical core --- sustainable urbanisation --- liveable urbanism --- evidence-based design --- Asian cities
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