Paraskevi (Vivi) Evaggeloglou | Hellenic Ministry of Culture & Sports (original) (raw)
Papers by Paraskevi (Vivi) Evaggeloglou
Museum School Education, τ. 4 (2), 2024
Ειρήνη Μπότσιου «Η φορεσιά μου η πολυλογού»-Μια πρώτη γνωριμία με τον κόσμο των παραδοσιακών ενδυ... more Ειρήνη Μπότσιου «Η φορεσιά μου η πολυλογού»-Μια πρώτη γνωριμία με τον κόσμο των παραδοσιακών ενδυμασιών για μικρούς επισκέπτες με μεγάλες απορίες! Ένα εκπαιδευτικό πρόγραμμα του Λαογραφικού και Εθνολογικού Μουσείου Μακεδονίας-Θράκης στη μόνιμη έκθεση των παραδοσιακών ενδυμασιών για παιδιά νηπιαγωγείου και δημοτικού σχολείου ..
Η συστηματική ανασκαφή της Αρχαίας Τενέας «Tenea Project» διεξάγεται την τελευταία δεκαετία στην ... more Η συστηματική ανασκαφή της Αρχαίας Τενέας «Tenea Project» διεξάγεται την τελευταία δεκαετία στην Κορινθία αποκαλύπτοντας μια από τις σημαντικότερες πόλεις της αρχαιότητας, που άφησε ισχυρό το αποτύπωμά της στη ΒΑ Μεσόγειο και σήμερα προκαλεί το παγκόσμιο ενδιαφέρον (BBC, National Geographic, New York Times, κ.ά.). Το «Tenea Project» εξαρχής στράφηκε σε εκπαιδευτικές δράσεις και προγράμματα που απευθύνονται στο ευρύ κοινό και διεξάγονται κυρίως στο ανασκαφικό πεδίο, με σκοπό την επικοινωνία του πολιτιστικού αποθέματος που παράγει. Η πρωτοβουλία αυτή σταδιακά εξελίχθηκε από εκπαιδευτικούς της δευτεροβάθμιας εκπαίδευσης, οι οποίοι εστίασαν στη διάχυση της επιστημονικής πληροφορίας στη σύγχρονη γενιά εφήβων, όπως προκύπτει μέσα από τις πλέον σύγχρονες μεθόδους έρευνας και τεχνολογίας που εφαρμόζει το «Tenea Project». Η παρούσα εισήγηση αφορά στην παρουσίαση ενός κοινού πολιτιστικού εκπαιδευτικού προγράμματος, που πραγματοποίησε το 4ο ΓΕΛ Κορίνθου με το Πειραματικό Λύκειο του ΕΚΠΑ και σχολικές μονάδες της Νορμανδίας. Η εν λόγω εκπαιδευτική προσέγγιση στηρίχθηκε στη συνεργασία εκπαιδευτικών διαφορετικών επιστημονικών ειδικοτήτων με ερευνητές της αρχαίας Τενέας, εστιάζοντας στη βιογραφία ενός Τενεάτη του 6ου αι. π.Χ. που προέκυψε από τη διεπιστημονική μελέτη και την ανθρωπολογική ανάλυση των σκελετικών του καταλοίπων. Η ανασύνθεση του Τενεάτη, ενός υπαρκτού ανθρώπου της αρχαιότητας στο δικό του πραγματικό χώρο και χρόνο σε συνδυασμό με την πρωτοποριακή μουσειακή αλλά και ψηφιακή του παρουσίαση, αποτέλεσε για τους εκπαιδευτικούς πεδίο δράσης. Αναπτύχθηκαν μοντέλα μάθησης μέσω της ψηφιακής τεχνολογίας, που στηρίζονται στην πρωτοτυπία και στην καινοτομία, στην ενεργητική και βιωματική μάθηση, στην καλλιέργεια και στην ενδυνάμωση προσωπικών δεξιοτήτων, ώστε οι μαθητές να αποκτήσουν σφαιρική αντίληψη τόσο για τον εαυτό τους όσο και για τον κόσμο που τους περιβάλλει. Στο πλαίσιο αυτής της πολυτροπικής εκπαιδευτικής προσέγγισης οι μαθητές-έφηβοι επιμορφώνονται διεπιστημονικά, συνδημιουργούν και αυτοεκφράζονται, ενώ ταυτόχρονα αλληλεπιδρούν με άλλα σχολεία και άλλους εφήβους της Ελλάδας και του εξωτερικού μέσα από την εμπλοκή ποικίλων γνωστικών αντικειμένων (Ιστορία, Βιολογία, Ανθρωπολογία, Φυσική, Νεοελληνική Γλώσσα και Λογοτεχνία, Μουσειακή Αγωγή και Δημιουργική Γραφή).
Mare Ponticum Vol. 10 | No. 1 , 2022
Από το 2013 διεξάγεται στην ανατολική Κορινθία η συστηματική αρχαιολογική έρευνα της Αρχαίας Τενέ... more Από το 2013 διεξάγεται στην ανατολική Κορινθία η συστηματική αρχαιολογική έρευνα της Αρχαίας Τενέας (Tenea Project). Το ερευνητικό πρόγραμμα ξεκίνησε μεαρχικό στόχο τον εντοπισμό της αρχαίας πόλης, η οποία ήταν γνωστή μόνον μέσα από τις αρχαίες πηγές. Μετά τον εντοπισμό των νεκροταφείων και τον εντοπισμό των πρώτων οικιστικών καταλοίπων της Τενέας, το 2018, οι ανασκαφικές εργασίες επικεντρώνονται στην αποκάλυψη του αστικού ιστού της. Κύριοι άξονες του προγράμματος είναι η ανασκαφή, η επιφανειακή έρευνα, η μελέτη και τεκμηρίωση των ανασκαφικών ευρημάτων, καθώς επίσης και η μετέπειτα ανάδειξη και προβολή τους. Στο πλαίσιο αυτό λειτουργεί μια διεπιστημονική ομάδα που εφαρμόζει όλες τις σύγχρονες μεθόδους έρευνας και τεχνολογίας που διέπουν την επιστήμη της αρχαιολογίας σήμερα. Κάθε χρόνο, στο πεδίο εκπαιδεύονται φοιτητές από ελληνικά και ξένα πανεπιστήμια, ενώ ταυτόχρονα αναπτύχθηκαν συνεργασίες με τοπικούς φορείς και πραγματοποιούνται δράσεις πολιτιστικού περιεχομένου. Η Τενέα είχε διαχρονική παρουσία στους προϊστορικούς και ιστορικούς χρόνους και μέσω της σύγχρονης αυτής έρευνας συμπληρώνεται μια ίσως από τις σημαντικότερες πτυχές της Κορινθιακής ιστορίας.
Since 2013, the archaeological research program of ancient Tenea, also known as “Tenea Project”, is being carried out under the direction of Dr. Elena Korka and under the auspices of the Greek Ministry of Culture and Sports. Tenea Project is the first systematic archaeological research program taking place between the villages of Chiliomodi and Klenia, in Corinthia, with the aim to locate, reveal and map the ancient city. The systematic excavation has already brought to light a well-organized cemetery of the archaic times, along with a funerary monument and part of the city’s main hub consisting of private and public buildings of the roman times revealing important information about the everyday life in the city of Tenea. At the same time,
the project is active in outreach activities with the local community, in an effort to raise public awareness on the protection of cultural heritage and the promotion of ancient Tenea as a cultural feature of the local people.
Ταφές ελληνιστικών χρόνων από την αρχαία Τενέα. , 2023
Το σχέδιο είναι έργο του καθηγητή της Σχολής Καλών Τεχνών του Αριστοτελείου Πανεπιστημίου Θεσσαλο... more Το σχέδιο είναι έργο του καθηγητή της Σχολής Καλών Τεχνών του Αριστοτελείου Πανεπιστημίου Θεσσαλονίκης Ξ. Σαχίνη, εμπνευσμένο από τον γνωστό κορινθιακό πίνακα από τα Πεντεσκούφια. Τον ευχαριστούμε θερμά. Στο βάθος αποδίδεται το φύλλο πηλού που προέρχεται από την ανασκαφή του Τομέα Τσακιρίδη στη Βεργίνα. FRONT COVER Drawing created by X. Sachinis, Professor at the School of Fine Arts of the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, inspired by the famous Corinthian pinax from Penteskoufia. We ought to him our thanks. In the background is depicted the clay plaque unearthed at the Tsakiridis Sector in Vergina.
ΑΕΜΘ 29, 2015., 2020
Αρχοντικό Τσιατσιαπά στην Καστοριά, τοιχογραφία µε απεικόνιση πόλης Το παρόν έργο πνευματικής ιδι... more Αρχοντικό Τσιατσιαπά στην Καστοριά, τοιχογραφία µε απεικόνιση πόλης Το παρόν έργο πνευματικής ιδιοκτησίας προστατεύεται κατά τις διατάξεις του ελληνικού νόμου (Ν. 2121/1993 όπως έχει τροποποιηθεί και ισχύει σήμερα) και τις διεθνείς συμβάσεις περί πνευματικής ιδιοκτησίας. Απαγορεύεται απολύτως η άνευ γραπτής άδειας του εκδότη και του συγγραφέα κατά οποιοδήποτε τρόπο ή μέσο αντιγραφή, φωτοανατύπωση και εν γένει αναπαραγωγή, εκμίσθωση ή δανεισμός, μετάφραση, διασκευή, αναμετάδοση στο κοινό σε οποιαδήποτε μορφή (ηλεκτρονική, μηχανική ή άλλη) και η εν γένει εκμετάλλευση του συνόλου ή μέρους του έργου.
ΑΕΜΘ 29, 2015, 2020
Αρχοντικό Τσιατσιαπά στην Καστοριά, τοιχογραφία µε απεικόνιση πόλης Το παρόν έργο πνευματικής ιδι... more Αρχοντικό Τσιατσιαπά στην Καστοριά, τοιχογραφία µε απεικόνιση πόλης Το παρόν έργο πνευματικής ιδιοκτησίας προστατεύεται κατά τις διατάξεις του ελληνικού νόμου (Ν. 2121/1993 όπως έχει τροποποιηθεί και ισχύει σήμερα) και τις διεθνείς συμβάσεις περί πνευματικής ιδιοκτησίας. Απαγορεύεται απολύτως η άνευ γραπτής άδειας του εκδότη και του συγγραφέα κατά οποιοδήποτε τρόπο ή μέσο αντιγραφή, φωτοανατύπωση και εν γένει αναπαραγωγή, εκμίσθωση ή δανεισμός, μετάφραση, διασκευή, αναμετάδοση στο κοινό σε οποιαδήποτε μορφή (ηλεκτρονική, μηχανική ή άλλη) και η εν γένει εκμετάλλευση του συνόλου ή μέρους του έργου.
The Corinthia and the North East Peloponnese, 2009
Θέματα Αρχαιολογίας, τ. 5(1), 2021
In 2019, the work of the systematic archaeological research program of ancient Tenea, brought to ... more In 2019, the work of the systematic archaeological research program of ancient Tenea, brought to light a roman bath complex, unveiling the first public building of the city, in a short distance from the residential facilities found in 2018. The numerous architectural members of the Archaic and Hellenistic period found in second use in the walls, alongside an archaic hexagonal well and an archaic deposit located in direct contact with the baths, indicate the existence of earlier large public buildings in the vicinity of the bath complex. Archaeological evidence such as the discovery of facilities of commercial activity to the east of the baths, prove the social character of the building as civic where wider everyday life activities were taking place.
About one hundred years after 146 BC when the city was destroyed by Lucius Mommius' legions, in 4... more About one hundred years after 146 BC when the city was destroyed by Lucius Mommius' legions, in 44 BC Julius Caesar dictator of Rome in perpetuity decides to refound Corinth as a Roman colony, acknowledging its particular geographical importance in his broader strategy for the eastern Mediterranean. His violent death that same year did not dash his grandly inspired far-reaching plan as it was carried out by his successor Octavian, the future Augustus. The new city was called Colonia Laus Iulia Corinthiensis or Clara Laus Iulia Corinthus or Iulia Corinthus Augusta, as the colony of the Julian family of Caesar and Augustus (Gens Iulia) and it was decreed in 27 BC the capital of the Roman province of Achaea (Provincia Achaiae), which comprises a large part of mainland Greece, the Peloponnese and numerous islands. Because of its depopulation following the battle of Leukopetra, the city was settled primarily by Roman freedmen and veteran soldiers who were rapidly encircled by Greeks who in their turn exploited the especially fertile soil that was seized by Rome (ager publicus = public land) and distributed to the young landless inhabitants. The goal of Rome was on one hand the creation of a stable Roman base in the tumultuous East, and on the other hand, a more rapid passage of the Roman fleet via Diolkos, the only paved portage road for the conveyance of ships that crossed the Isthmus; the feat is attested in a Latin inscription from 102 BC describing the haulage of a fleet to head off pirates en route towards Side of Pamphylia in Asia Minor under the command of the orator Antonius Marcus, grandfather of Mark Antony, companion of Queen Cleopatra and mortal enemy of Octavian in the War for Succession to the power of Julius Caesar.
Very rapidly the population of the city grew significantly as agriculture developed again, along with livestock-breeding and trade, with corresponding exports, such as woven material, textiles made of dyed wool, olive oil and honey as well as wood and metal objects. On the other hand, the needs and the customs of the Roman inhabitants of the new city, as well as its international role, led to the importation of commodities from other regions in the Empire like wine and construction materials (marble, granite) which were necessary for the new luxurious buildings.
According to scholars the city was redesigned following the Hippodamian system (grid-plan) that is to say with vertical and horizontal street axes (cardines and decumani) which demarcate urban islets (insulae). Around its Forum were erected resplendent public edifices and private monuments in honor of the affluent Greeks and Romans who wished to emphatically proclaim their presence in the capital of the province. Accounts of the construction of buildings can be found in numerous inscriptions while representations of them exist primarily in local coins of a later date. Horace’s adages “non cuivis homini contingit adire Corinthum/ non licet omnibus adire Corinthum” (Epistles 1.17.36) “It falls not to every man’s lot to go to Corinth/ not everyone can go to Corinth” and Strabo’s “οὐ παντὸς ἀνδρὸς ἐς Κόρινθον ἐσθ’ ὁ πλοῦς”/ “Not for every man is the voyage to Corinth” (Geography 8.6.20) reflect the prosperity of the city and high cost required of residence there. About the middle of the 1st century AD when the Apostle Paul visited, Corinth was already an important Roman city in the Empire, ruled by two local leaders, the duoviri, following the prototype of Roman consuls, a miniature of the capital that constituted a point of reference in the thought and the journey of Romans towards the East.
The portal to the city consisted in its two harbours, Kenchreai and Lechaion. Kenchreai was the seaport of Corinth in the Saronic Gulf where goods and passengers from the East were set ashore and continued on from there by way of the Kenchreai Road to reach the south side of the Roman Forum (Forum Romanum). Her other seaport, Lechaion, was located on the shores of the Gulf of Corinth and welcomed ships from the West. A long paved passage 3 km-long, Lechaion Road, started out from there and formed the principal road axis of the city going North-South (cardo maximus) which led straight to the Propylaea [entrance gateway] of the Forum Romanum. Up until 77 AD when a catastrophic earthquake struck the city, cardo maximus road [main north-south street] was not paved while at the Propylaea where it ended, there were still buildings – those for commercial use such as the Agora building that probably functioned as a meat – fish market (macellum – macellum piscarium). Next to it was located perhaps the biggest of the public fountains that provided the city’s water supply, the Peirene Fountain restored during the reign of Augustus.
Around the middle of the 1st century AD when Paul reached Corinth, the central section of the city and the environs of the Roman Forum already boasted impressive and sumptuous buildings, like public baths, the Roman Temple E (“Temple of Octavia”), most likely dedicated to the worship of the imperial family or to the “Capitoline Triad” [Triad of the Capitolium] (Jupiter, Juno, Minerva) or likewise the Roman Temple C, the Fountain of Glauke carved in natural rock, the North Market, the Odeum, the Roman Theater and at the north end of the terrace, the restored Sanctuary of Aslepis and Hygieia.
The Forum constituted the centre of the Roman city, in accordance to the prototype of Imperial Rome. It was situated south of the hill of the Temple of Apollo, like an open rectangular space for public gatherings measuring 15,000 square meters that was delimited by striking public buildings. At the southeastern end was located the so-called Southeastern Building which most probably functioned as a library, the gift of a former freedman of Greek descent and later governor of the city (duovir), Gnaeus Babbius Philinus. Nearby was the Julian Basilica, the seat of the imperial court in Corinth and later of the entire Achaean province but also the place of worship of the deified imperial Julio-Claudian dynasty (Gens Iulia and Gens Claudia). At the northeastern edge of the Forum was situated the so-called Northeast Stoa, presumably the first public building of the city’s Roman period. On the other side of the Lechaion Road and along its flank was erected the eponymous Lechaion Road Basilica or the North Basilica, an elongated rectangular building 70 meters in length that was also used as a tribunal. To the west of the main entrance of the Roman Forum along the southern slope of the Hill of the Temple of Apollo there stood a two-storied stoa, the Northwest one. Finally, on the homonymous hill, looms the once mighty Temple of Apollo which in the era when Paul reached the city may very well have already been converted to accommodate imperial worship.
The western side of the Forum was defined by the so-called West Terrace where a circular building with Corinthian columns, was erected under the patronage of Babbius Philinus in the beginning of the 1st century AD. The same terrace was dominated by the Poseidon Fountain, offered by the same benefactor, along with three other small temples (D, F and G), dedicated to Tyche, Venus Genetrix (Aphrodite Progenitor, protectress of Julius Caesar and of the Gens Iulia) and Apollo of Claros.
The south side of the Forum was demarcated by the renovated – presumably during Augustus’ reign – South Stoa, a two-storied building with colonnades at the front and inside of which there was a series of rooms, the so-called καταστήματα/katastemata [shops] that hosted commercial activities, baths and latrines but also the meeting hall of the parliament of the Achaean province (Bouleuterion). At the back part of the South Stoa ended Kenchreai Road, the paved street that connected the city to the homonymous eastern harbour.
At the centre of the Roman Forum and north of the South Stoa was erected (most probably during the first half of the 1st century AD and amidst the so-called Central Shops), the Rostra, a rectangular platform that was a podium for public announcements and dialogue between the rulers of the city and its inhabitants. Because of the references in the Acts of the Apostles (18:12-17), after its discovery this platform was associated with the Apostle Paul and his presence in the city.
ΑΕΠΕΛ(2), 2020
Occupying a strategic location controlling the roadway from Argos to ancient Corinth, Tenea was a... more Occupying a strategic location controlling the roadway from Argos to ancient Corinth, Tenea was a prosperous city in the 8th century BC due to its participation in the colonization of Syracuse. Pausanias states that the residents of Tenea were Trojan prisoners that Agamemnon brought over after the fall of Troy. Strabo mentions that Tenea was the place where Corinthian king Polybus nursed Oedipus. Strabo also informs us that Tenea became independent after the Roman destruction of Corinth. Archaeological investigations carried out in 2013-2017 in ancient Tenea at Chiliomodi in the Corinthia revealed an Archaic cemetery with unique finds, an extensive and rich Hellenistic and Roman cemetery, and part of one of the ancient city’s main roads. The Roman cemetery included an important Roman funerary monument built over a cistern, which had been used for ritual purposes.
Θέματα Αρχαιολογίας, τ. 3(1) , 2019
In July 1984, a sarcophagus of the early archaic period was found during rescue excavations in th... more In July 1984, a sarcophagus of the early archaic period was found during rescue excavations in the area of Faneromeni near the town of Chiliomodi. On the interior of the covering slab a unique composition of two lions of monumental character is depicted. The first systematic excavation in the area started in 2013. Initially, a rich archaic cemetery was excavated with unique finds worthy of the importance of the city of Tenea. During the excavations of 2016 and 2017, a magnificent funerary monument of the Roman times was revealed, with a unique lay-out for the Corinthia. Beneath it a cistern was discovered dedicated to ritual purposes. A very rich cemetery surrounds the Roman mausoleum, with burials from the Hellenistic and Roman periods, offering important knowledge in regard to the society, which inhabited the city. In 2018 elaborate domestic complexes were discovered, due to which the excavation of Tenea was considered to be among the most important projects in Greece and abroad.
Conferences by Paraskevi (Vivi) Evaggeloglou
Π ΡΑ Κ Τ Ι Κ Α ΤΟΥ Θ´ ΔΙΕΘΝΟΥΣ ΣΥΝΕΔΡΙΟΥ ΠΕΛΟΠΟΝΝΗΣΙΑΚΩΝ ΣΠΟΥΔΩΝ, ΝΑΥΠΛΙΟ 2015, ΤΟΜΟΣ Α΄ ΑΝΑΤΥΠΟΝ, 2021
by Korka Elena, Paraskevi (Vivi) Evaggeloglou, Tenea Project, Constantine Lagos, Maria Syrrou, Eleni Lazoga, Ioannis Christidis, Argyro Pissa, Panagiotis Panailidis, Michaelis Lefantzis, Antonio Corso, Απόστολος Παπαφωτίου, Afroditi Kamara, Ergun LAFLI, Grigorios Tsokas, Marina Guarente, Christofilis Maggidis, Konstantinos Giannakos, Andreas Georgopoulos, Elias K. Petropoulos, Dora Katsonopoulou, and Angelos Nakasis
These three famous cities were connected in antiquity according to myth. The fall of Troy and the... more These three famous cities were connected in antiquity according to myth. The fall of Troy and the establishment of Trojans in Tenea and Rome bound the fate of these faraway places.Tenea was very active in lower Italy and Sicily, especially in its colony of Syracuse. Later on, the Roman conquest of Greece strongly brought forward these connections and legends. The discovery of Ancient Tenea has stimulated archaeological research in this domain. Tenea project involves the study and archaeological excavation of the ancient city of Tenea, which has started coming to light these passed years in the Corinthia. In 2018 it was internationally recognized as ranking among the fifteen most important archaeological discoveries worldwide. The conference’s aspiration is the communication of Greek and foreign scholars and researchers from the fields of Archaeology, Architecture, Archaeometry, specialists in cultural communication and cultural resources, archaeological sites and museums, History, Mythology, Linguistics and Topography, all connected to the subject of the conference. The conference is connected to the celebration of the year of Troy. As such a scientific colloquium on this subject takes place for the first time, we are positive that it will produce fertile conclusions regarding relevant archaeological studies. Specifically, the objective is the exchange of opinion between researchers, considering all the new evidence and data, which we believe will lead to synergies and development of new cultural itineraries. The three cities Troy Tenea- Rome and their broader environment are connected through a common past and their study as whole will assist in the further apprehension and interpretation of the historical and archaeological data. Important finds from Tenea exist in museums in Greece, Germany and the USA. Through the conference we wish to inform the broader public on this subject of international interest.
Book Chapters by Paraskevi (Vivi) Evaggeloglou
On the Edge of a Roman Port Excavations at Koutsongila, Kenchreai, 2007–2014 (Hesperia Suppl. 52) edited by Elena Korka and Joseph L. Rife., 2022
Griechische Nekropolen. Bibliopolis / Möhnesee, 2019
The city of Tenea is mentioned by Strabo and Pausanias. It is Pausanias, who gives us information... more The city of Tenea is mentioned by Strabo and Pausanias. It is Pausanias, who gives us information about the origin of the people in Tenea. They were considered, according to tradition, as Trojan war-prisoners, who were brought over after the fall of Troy and were allowed by Agamemnon to settle in the region of Tenea. However, other scholars consider them inhabitants from the small island of Tenedos. During the Roman period Tenea was not destroyed, as the inhabitants were considered to have a common background with the Romans also coming, according to myth, from Troy.
Books by Paraskevi (Vivi) Evaggeloglou
Ι' ΔΙΕΘΝΗΣ ΣΥΝΑΝΤΗΣΗ ΓΙΑ ΤΗΝ ΕΛΛΗΝΙΣΤΙΚΗ ΚΕΡΑΜΙΚΗ, 2023
Η μελέτη της ερυθροβαφούς κεραμικής της όψιμης ελληνιστικής περιόδου από τα στρώματα καταστροφής ... more Η μελέτη της ερυθροβαφούς κεραμικής της όψιμης ελληνιστικής περιόδου από τα στρώματα καταστροφής του Μητρώου των Αιγών αποτελεί την αφετηρία για τη συζήτηση της εμφάνισης και διάρκειας χρήσης της κατηγορίας αυτής σε σχέση με την συναφή προς αυτήν κεραμική της Eastern Terra Sigillata (EST), η οποία κυριαρχεί στην κεραμική παραγωγή της ανατολικής Μεσογείου από τον 1ο προχριστιανικό αιώνα και εξής. Η μελέτη ασχολείται ουσιαστικά με την κεραμική του 2ου προχριστιανικού αιώνα στη Μακεδονία και κυρίως το δεύτερο μισό.
Η παρούσα μελέτη συνεκτιμά τα αποτελέσματα της μελέτης των λύχνων και των νομισμάτων, σε σχέση με τα νέα στοιχεία που προκύπτουν από την μελέτη της ερυθροβαφούς κεραμικής στη Μακεδονία, με απώτερο στόχο την κατανόηση της αντίληψης της κεραμικής παραγωγής στο τέλος των ελληνιστικών χρόνων.
by Heide Frielinghaus, Ourania Vizyinou, Maria Chidiroglou, Korka Elena, Anthi Aggeli, Tasos Kakamanoudis, athena athanassiadou, ANNA ALEXANDROPOULOU, Nikolas Dimakis, Stavroula Oikonomou, and Paraskevi (Vivi) Evaggeloglou
Museum School Education, τ. 4 (2), 2024
Ειρήνη Μπότσιου «Η φορεσιά μου η πολυλογού»-Μια πρώτη γνωριμία με τον κόσμο των παραδοσιακών ενδυ... more Ειρήνη Μπότσιου «Η φορεσιά μου η πολυλογού»-Μια πρώτη γνωριμία με τον κόσμο των παραδοσιακών ενδυμασιών για μικρούς επισκέπτες με μεγάλες απορίες! Ένα εκπαιδευτικό πρόγραμμα του Λαογραφικού και Εθνολογικού Μουσείου Μακεδονίας-Θράκης στη μόνιμη έκθεση των παραδοσιακών ενδυμασιών για παιδιά νηπιαγωγείου και δημοτικού σχολείου ..
Η συστηματική ανασκαφή της Αρχαίας Τενέας «Tenea Project» διεξάγεται την τελευταία δεκαετία στην ... more Η συστηματική ανασκαφή της Αρχαίας Τενέας «Tenea Project» διεξάγεται την τελευταία δεκαετία στην Κορινθία αποκαλύπτοντας μια από τις σημαντικότερες πόλεις της αρχαιότητας, που άφησε ισχυρό το αποτύπωμά της στη ΒΑ Μεσόγειο και σήμερα προκαλεί το παγκόσμιο ενδιαφέρον (BBC, National Geographic, New York Times, κ.ά.). Το «Tenea Project» εξαρχής στράφηκε σε εκπαιδευτικές δράσεις και προγράμματα που απευθύνονται στο ευρύ κοινό και διεξάγονται κυρίως στο ανασκαφικό πεδίο, με σκοπό την επικοινωνία του πολιτιστικού αποθέματος που παράγει. Η πρωτοβουλία αυτή σταδιακά εξελίχθηκε από εκπαιδευτικούς της δευτεροβάθμιας εκπαίδευσης, οι οποίοι εστίασαν στη διάχυση της επιστημονικής πληροφορίας στη σύγχρονη γενιά εφήβων, όπως προκύπτει μέσα από τις πλέον σύγχρονες μεθόδους έρευνας και τεχνολογίας που εφαρμόζει το «Tenea Project». Η παρούσα εισήγηση αφορά στην παρουσίαση ενός κοινού πολιτιστικού εκπαιδευτικού προγράμματος, που πραγματοποίησε το 4ο ΓΕΛ Κορίνθου με το Πειραματικό Λύκειο του ΕΚΠΑ και σχολικές μονάδες της Νορμανδίας. Η εν λόγω εκπαιδευτική προσέγγιση στηρίχθηκε στη συνεργασία εκπαιδευτικών διαφορετικών επιστημονικών ειδικοτήτων με ερευνητές της αρχαίας Τενέας, εστιάζοντας στη βιογραφία ενός Τενεάτη του 6ου αι. π.Χ. που προέκυψε από τη διεπιστημονική μελέτη και την ανθρωπολογική ανάλυση των σκελετικών του καταλοίπων. Η ανασύνθεση του Τενεάτη, ενός υπαρκτού ανθρώπου της αρχαιότητας στο δικό του πραγματικό χώρο και χρόνο σε συνδυασμό με την πρωτοποριακή μουσειακή αλλά και ψηφιακή του παρουσίαση, αποτέλεσε για τους εκπαιδευτικούς πεδίο δράσης. Αναπτύχθηκαν μοντέλα μάθησης μέσω της ψηφιακής τεχνολογίας, που στηρίζονται στην πρωτοτυπία και στην καινοτομία, στην ενεργητική και βιωματική μάθηση, στην καλλιέργεια και στην ενδυνάμωση προσωπικών δεξιοτήτων, ώστε οι μαθητές να αποκτήσουν σφαιρική αντίληψη τόσο για τον εαυτό τους όσο και για τον κόσμο που τους περιβάλλει. Στο πλαίσιο αυτής της πολυτροπικής εκπαιδευτικής προσέγγισης οι μαθητές-έφηβοι επιμορφώνονται διεπιστημονικά, συνδημιουργούν και αυτοεκφράζονται, ενώ ταυτόχρονα αλληλεπιδρούν με άλλα σχολεία και άλλους εφήβους της Ελλάδας και του εξωτερικού μέσα από την εμπλοκή ποικίλων γνωστικών αντικειμένων (Ιστορία, Βιολογία, Ανθρωπολογία, Φυσική, Νεοελληνική Γλώσσα και Λογοτεχνία, Μουσειακή Αγωγή και Δημιουργική Γραφή).
Mare Ponticum Vol. 10 | No. 1 , 2022
Από το 2013 διεξάγεται στην ανατολική Κορινθία η συστηματική αρχαιολογική έρευνα της Αρχαίας Τενέ... more Από το 2013 διεξάγεται στην ανατολική Κορινθία η συστηματική αρχαιολογική έρευνα της Αρχαίας Τενέας (Tenea Project). Το ερευνητικό πρόγραμμα ξεκίνησε μεαρχικό στόχο τον εντοπισμό της αρχαίας πόλης, η οποία ήταν γνωστή μόνον μέσα από τις αρχαίες πηγές. Μετά τον εντοπισμό των νεκροταφείων και τον εντοπισμό των πρώτων οικιστικών καταλοίπων της Τενέας, το 2018, οι ανασκαφικές εργασίες επικεντρώνονται στην αποκάλυψη του αστικού ιστού της. Κύριοι άξονες του προγράμματος είναι η ανασκαφή, η επιφανειακή έρευνα, η μελέτη και τεκμηρίωση των ανασκαφικών ευρημάτων, καθώς επίσης και η μετέπειτα ανάδειξη και προβολή τους. Στο πλαίσιο αυτό λειτουργεί μια διεπιστημονική ομάδα που εφαρμόζει όλες τις σύγχρονες μεθόδους έρευνας και τεχνολογίας που διέπουν την επιστήμη της αρχαιολογίας σήμερα. Κάθε χρόνο, στο πεδίο εκπαιδεύονται φοιτητές από ελληνικά και ξένα πανεπιστήμια, ενώ ταυτόχρονα αναπτύχθηκαν συνεργασίες με τοπικούς φορείς και πραγματοποιούνται δράσεις πολιτιστικού περιεχομένου. Η Τενέα είχε διαχρονική παρουσία στους προϊστορικούς και ιστορικούς χρόνους και μέσω της σύγχρονης αυτής έρευνας συμπληρώνεται μια ίσως από τις σημαντικότερες πτυχές της Κορινθιακής ιστορίας.
Since 2013, the archaeological research program of ancient Tenea, also known as “Tenea Project”, is being carried out under the direction of Dr. Elena Korka and under the auspices of the Greek Ministry of Culture and Sports. Tenea Project is the first systematic archaeological research program taking place between the villages of Chiliomodi and Klenia, in Corinthia, with the aim to locate, reveal and map the ancient city. The systematic excavation has already brought to light a well-organized cemetery of the archaic times, along with a funerary monument and part of the city’s main hub consisting of private and public buildings of the roman times revealing important information about the everyday life in the city of Tenea. At the same time,
the project is active in outreach activities with the local community, in an effort to raise public awareness on the protection of cultural heritage and the promotion of ancient Tenea as a cultural feature of the local people.
Ταφές ελληνιστικών χρόνων από την αρχαία Τενέα. , 2023
Το σχέδιο είναι έργο του καθηγητή της Σχολής Καλών Τεχνών του Αριστοτελείου Πανεπιστημίου Θεσσαλο... more Το σχέδιο είναι έργο του καθηγητή της Σχολής Καλών Τεχνών του Αριστοτελείου Πανεπιστημίου Θεσσαλονίκης Ξ. Σαχίνη, εμπνευσμένο από τον γνωστό κορινθιακό πίνακα από τα Πεντεσκούφια. Τον ευχαριστούμε θερμά. Στο βάθος αποδίδεται το φύλλο πηλού που προέρχεται από την ανασκαφή του Τομέα Τσακιρίδη στη Βεργίνα. FRONT COVER Drawing created by X. Sachinis, Professor at the School of Fine Arts of the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, inspired by the famous Corinthian pinax from Penteskoufia. We ought to him our thanks. In the background is depicted the clay plaque unearthed at the Tsakiridis Sector in Vergina.
ΑΕΜΘ 29, 2015., 2020
Αρχοντικό Τσιατσιαπά στην Καστοριά, τοιχογραφία µε απεικόνιση πόλης Το παρόν έργο πνευματικής ιδι... more Αρχοντικό Τσιατσιαπά στην Καστοριά, τοιχογραφία µε απεικόνιση πόλης Το παρόν έργο πνευματικής ιδιοκτησίας προστατεύεται κατά τις διατάξεις του ελληνικού νόμου (Ν. 2121/1993 όπως έχει τροποποιηθεί και ισχύει σήμερα) και τις διεθνείς συμβάσεις περί πνευματικής ιδιοκτησίας. Απαγορεύεται απολύτως η άνευ γραπτής άδειας του εκδότη και του συγγραφέα κατά οποιοδήποτε τρόπο ή μέσο αντιγραφή, φωτοανατύπωση και εν γένει αναπαραγωγή, εκμίσθωση ή δανεισμός, μετάφραση, διασκευή, αναμετάδοση στο κοινό σε οποιαδήποτε μορφή (ηλεκτρονική, μηχανική ή άλλη) και η εν γένει εκμετάλλευση του συνόλου ή μέρους του έργου.
ΑΕΜΘ 29, 2015, 2020
Αρχοντικό Τσιατσιαπά στην Καστοριά, τοιχογραφία µε απεικόνιση πόλης Το παρόν έργο πνευματικής ιδι... more Αρχοντικό Τσιατσιαπά στην Καστοριά, τοιχογραφία µε απεικόνιση πόλης Το παρόν έργο πνευματικής ιδιοκτησίας προστατεύεται κατά τις διατάξεις του ελληνικού νόμου (Ν. 2121/1993 όπως έχει τροποποιηθεί και ισχύει σήμερα) και τις διεθνείς συμβάσεις περί πνευματικής ιδιοκτησίας. Απαγορεύεται απολύτως η άνευ γραπτής άδειας του εκδότη και του συγγραφέα κατά οποιοδήποτε τρόπο ή μέσο αντιγραφή, φωτοανατύπωση και εν γένει αναπαραγωγή, εκμίσθωση ή δανεισμός, μετάφραση, διασκευή, αναμετάδοση στο κοινό σε οποιαδήποτε μορφή (ηλεκτρονική, μηχανική ή άλλη) και η εν γένει εκμετάλλευση του συνόλου ή μέρους του έργου.
The Corinthia and the North East Peloponnese, 2009
Θέματα Αρχαιολογίας, τ. 5(1), 2021
In 2019, the work of the systematic archaeological research program of ancient Tenea, brought to ... more In 2019, the work of the systematic archaeological research program of ancient Tenea, brought to light a roman bath complex, unveiling the first public building of the city, in a short distance from the residential facilities found in 2018. The numerous architectural members of the Archaic and Hellenistic period found in second use in the walls, alongside an archaic hexagonal well and an archaic deposit located in direct contact with the baths, indicate the existence of earlier large public buildings in the vicinity of the bath complex. Archaeological evidence such as the discovery of facilities of commercial activity to the east of the baths, prove the social character of the building as civic where wider everyday life activities were taking place.
About one hundred years after 146 BC when the city was destroyed by Lucius Mommius' legions, in 4... more About one hundred years after 146 BC when the city was destroyed by Lucius Mommius' legions, in 44 BC Julius Caesar dictator of Rome in perpetuity decides to refound Corinth as a Roman colony, acknowledging its particular geographical importance in his broader strategy for the eastern Mediterranean. His violent death that same year did not dash his grandly inspired far-reaching plan as it was carried out by his successor Octavian, the future Augustus. The new city was called Colonia Laus Iulia Corinthiensis or Clara Laus Iulia Corinthus or Iulia Corinthus Augusta, as the colony of the Julian family of Caesar and Augustus (Gens Iulia) and it was decreed in 27 BC the capital of the Roman province of Achaea (Provincia Achaiae), which comprises a large part of mainland Greece, the Peloponnese and numerous islands. Because of its depopulation following the battle of Leukopetra, the city was settled primarily by Roman freedmen and veteran soldiers who were rapidly encircled by Greeks who in their turn exploited the especially fertile soil that was seized by Rome (ager publicus = public land) and distributed to the young landless inhabitants. The goal of Rome was on one hand the creation of a stable Roman base in the tumultuous East, and on the other hand, a more rapid passage of the Roman fleet via Diolkos, the only paved portage road for the conveyance of ships that crossed the Isthmus; the feat is attested in a Latin inscription from 102 BC describing the haulage of a fleet to head off pirates en route towards Side of Pamphylia in Asia Minor under the command of the orator Antonius Marcus, grandfather of Mark Antony, companion of Queen Cleopatra and mortal enemy of Octavian in the War for Succession to the power of Julius Caesar.
Very rapidly the population of the city grew significantly as agriculture developed again, along with livestock-breeding and trade, with corresponding exports, such as woven material, textiles made of dyed wool, olive oil and honey as well as wood and metal objects. On the other hand, the needs and the customs of the Roman inhabitants of the new city, as well as its international role, led to the importation of commodities from other regions in the Empire like wine and construction materials (marble, granite) which were necessary for the new luxurious buildings.
According to scholars the city was redesigned following the Hippodamian system (grid-plan) that is to say with vertical and horizontal street axes (cardines and decumani) which demarcate urban islets (insulae). Around its Forum were erected resplendent public edifices and private monuments in honor of the affluent Greeks and Romans who wished to emphatically proclaim their presence in the capital of the province. Accounts of the construction of buildings can be found in numerous inscriptions while representations of them exist primarily in local coins of a later date. Horace’s adages “non cuivis homini contingit adire Corinthum/ non licet omnibus adire Corinthum” (Epistles 1.17.36) “It falls not to every man’s lot to go to Corinth/ not everyone can go to Corinth” and Strabo’s “οὐ παντὸς ἀνδρὸς ἐς Κόρινθον ἐσθ’ ὁ πλοῦς”/ “Not for every man is the voyage to Corinth” (Geography 8.6.20) reflect the prosperity of the city and high cost required of residence there. About the middle of the 1st century AD when the Apostle Paul visited, Corinth was already an important Roman city in the Empire, ruled by two local leaders, the duoviri, following the prototype of Roman consuls, a miniature of the capital that constituted a point of reference in the thought and the journey of Romans towards the East.
The portal to the city consisted in its two harbours, Kenchreai and Lechaion. Kenchreai was the seaport of Corinth in the Saronic Gulf where goods and passengers from the East were set ashore and continued on from there by way of the Kenchreai Road to reach the south side of the Roman Forum (Forum Romanum). Her other seaport, Lechaion, was located on the shores of the Gulf of Corinth and welcomed ships from the West. A long paved passage 3 km-long, Lechaion Road, started out from there and formed the principal road axis of the city going North-South (cardo maximus) which led straight to the Propylaea [entrance gateway] of the Forum Romanum. Up until 77 AD when a catastrophic earthquake struck the city, cardo maximus road [main north-south street] was not paved while at the Propylaea where it ended, there were still buildings – those for commercial use such as the Agora building that probably functioned as a meat – fish market (macellum – macellum piscarium). Next to it was located perhaps the biggest of the public fountains that provided the city’s water supply, the Peirene Fountain restored during the reign of Augustus.
Around the middle of the 1st century AD when Paul reached Corinth, the central section of the city and the environs of the Roman Forum already boasted impressive and sumptuous buildings, like public baths, the Roman Temple E (“Temple of Octavia”), most likely dedicated to the worship of the imperial family or to the “Capitoline Triad” [Triad of the Capitolium] (Jupiter, Juno, Minerva) or likewise the Roman Temple C, the Fountain of Glauke carved in natural rock, the North Market, the Odeum, the Roman Theater and at the north end of the terrace, the restored Sanctuary of Aslepis and Hygieia.
The Forum constituted the centre of the Roman city, in accordance to the prototype of Imperial Rome. It was situated south of the hill of the Temple of Apollo, like an open rectangular space for public gatherings measuring 15,000 square meters that was delimited by striking public buildings. At the southeastern end was located the so-called Southeastern Building which most probably functioned as a library, the gift of a former freedman of Greek descent and later governor of the city (duovir), Gnaeus Babbius Philinus. Nearby was the Julian Basilica, the seat of the imperial court in Corinth and later of the entire Achaean province but also the place of worship of the deified imperial Julio-Claudian dynasty (Gens Iulia and Gens Claudia). At the northeastern edge of the Forum was situated the so-called Northeast Stoa, presumably the first public building of the city’s Roman period. On the other side of the Lechaion Road and along its flank was erected the eponymous Lechaion Road Basilica or the North Basilica, an elongated rectangular building 70 meters in length that was also used as a tribunal. To the west of the main entrance of the Roman Forum along the southern slope of the Hill of the Temple of Apollo there stood a two-storied stoa, the Northwest one. Finally, on the homonymous hill, looms the once mighty Temple of Apollo which in the era when Paul reached the city may very well have already been converted to accommodate imperial worship.
The western side of the Forum was defined by the so-called West Terrace where a circular building with Corinthian columns, was erected under the patronage of Babbius Philinus in the beginning of the 1st century AD. The same terrace was dominated by the Poseidon Fountain, offered by the same benefactor, along with three other small temples (D, F and G), dedicated to Tyche, Venus Genetrix (Aphrodite Progenitor, protectress of Julius Caesar and of the Gens Iulia) and Apollo of Claros.
The south side of the Forum was demarcated by the renovated – presumably during Augustus’ reign – South Stoa, a two-storied building with colonnades at the front and inside of which there was a series of rooms, the so-called καταστήματα/katastemata [shops] that hosted commercial activities, baths and latrines but also the meeting hall of the parliament of the Achaean province (Bouleuterion). At the back part of the South Stoa ended Kenchreai Road, the paved street that connected the city to the homonymous eastern harbour.
At the centre of the Roman Forum and north of the South Stoa was erected (most probably during the first half of the 1st century AD and amidst the so-called Central Shops), the Rostra, a rectangular platform that was a podium for public announcements and dialogue between the rulers of the city and its inhabitants. Because of the references in the Acts of the Apostles (18:12-17), after its discovery this platform was associated with the Apostle Paul and his presence in the city.
ΑΕΠΕΛ(2), 2020
Occupying a strategic location controlling the roadway from Argos to ancient Corinth, Tenea was a... more Occupying a strategic location controlling the roadway from Argos to ancient Corinth, Tenea was a prosperous city in the 8th century BC due to its participation in the colonization of Syracuse. Pausanias states that the residents of Tenea were Trojan prisoners that Agamemnon brought over after the fall of Troy. Strabo mentions that Tenea was the place where Corinthian king Polybus nursed Oedipus. Strabo also informs us that Tenea became independent after the Roman destruction of Corinth. Archaeological investigations carried out in 2013-2017 in ancient Tenea at Chiliomodi in the Corinthia revealed an Archaic cemetery with unique finds, an extensive and rich Hellenistic and Roman cemetery, and part of one of the ancient city’s main roads. The Roman cemetery included an important Roman funerary monument built over a cistern, which had been used for ritual purposes.
Θέματα Αρχαιολογίας, τ. 3(1) , 2019
In July 1984, a sarcophagus of the early archaic period was found during rescue excavations in th... more In July 1984, a sarcophagus of the early archaic period was found during rescue excavations in the area of Faneromeni near the town of Chiliomodi. On the interior of the covering slab a unique composition of two lions of monumental character is depicted. The first systematic excavation in the area started in 2013. Initially, a rich archaic cemetery was excavated with unique finds worthy of the importance of the city of Tenea. During the excavations of 2016 and 2017, a magnificent funerary monument of the Roman times was revealed, with a unique lay-out for the Corinthia. Beneath it a cistern was discovered dedicated to ritual purposes. A very rich cemetery surrounds the Roman mausoleum, with burials from the Hellenistic and Roman periods, offering important knowledge in regard to the society, which inhabited the city. In 2018 elaborate domestic complexes were discovered, due to which the excavation of Tenea was considered to be among the most important projects in Greece and abroad.
Π ΡΑ Κ Τ Ι Κ Α ΤΟΥ Θ´ ΔΙΕΘΝΟΥΣ ΣΥΝΕΔΡΙΟΥ ΠΕΛΟΠΟΝΝΗΣΙΑΚΩΝ ΣΠΟΥΔΩΝ, ΝΑΥΠΛΙΟ 2015, ΤΟΜΟΣ Α΄ ΑΝΑΤΥΠΟΝ, 2021
by Korka Elena, Paraskevi (Vivi) Evaggeloglou, Tenea Project, Constantine Lagos, Maria Syrrou, Eleni Lazoga, Ioannis Christidis, Argyro Pissa, Panagiotis Panailidis, Michaelis Lefantzis, Antonio Corso, Απόστολος Παπαφωτίου, Afroditi Kamara, Ergun LAFLI, Grigorios Tsokas, Marina Guarente, Christofilis Maggidis, Konstantinos Giannakos, Andreas Georgopoulos, Elias K. Petropoulos, Dora Katsonopoulou, and Angelos Nakasis
These three famous cities were connected in antiquity according to myth. The fall of Troy and the... more These three famous cities were connected in antiquity according to myth. The fall of Troy and the establishment of Trojans in Tenea and Rome bound the fate of these faraway places.Tenea was very active in lower Italy and Sicily, especially in its colony of Syracuse. Later on, the Roman conquest of Greece strongly brought forward these connections and legends. The discovery of Ancient Tenea has stimulated archaeological research in this domain. Tenea project involves the study and archaeological excavation of the ancient city of Tenea, which has started coming to light these passed years in the Corinthia. In 2018 it was internationally recognized as ranking among the fifteen most important archaeological discoveries worldwide. The conference’s aspiration is the communication of Greek and foreign scholars and researchers from the fields of Archaeology, Architecture, Archaeometry, specialists in cultural communication and cultural resources, archaeological sites and museums, History, Mythology, Linguistics and Topography, all connected to the subject of the conference. The conference is connected to the celebration of the year of Troy. As such a scientific colloquium on this subject takes place for the first time, we are positive that it will produce fertile conclusions regarding relevant archaeological studies. Specifically, the objective is the exchange of opinion between researchers, considering all the new evidence and data, which we believe will lead to synergies and development of new cultural itineraries. The three cities Troy Tenea- Rome and their broader environment are connected through a common past and their study as whole will assist in the further apprehension and interpretation of the historical and archaeological data. Important finds from Tenea exist in museums in Greece, Germany and the USA. Through the conference we wish to inform the broader public on this subject of international interest.
On the Edge of a Roman Port Excavations at Koutsongila, Kenchreai, 2007–2014 (Hesperia Suppl. 52) edited by Elena Korka and Joseph L. Rife., 2022
Griechische Nekropolen. Bibliopolis / Möhnesee, 2019
The city of Tenea is mentioned by Strabo and Pausanias. It is Pausanias, who gives us information... more The city of Tenea is mentioned by Strabo and Pausanias. It is Pausanias, who gives us information about the origin of the people in Tenea. They were considered, according to tradition, as Trojan war-prisoners, who were brought over after the fall of Troy and were allowed by Agamemnon to settle in the region of Tenea. However, other scholars consider them inhabitants from the small island of Tenedos. During the Roman period Tenea was not destroyed, as the inhabitants were considered to have a common background with the Romans also coming, according to myth, from Troy.
Ι' ΔΙΕΘΝΗΣ ΣΥΝΑΝΤΗΣΗ ΓΙΑ ΤΗΝ ΕΛΛΗΝΙΣΤΙΚΗ ΚΕΡΑΜΙΚΗ, 2023
Η μελέτη της ερυθροβαφούς κεραμικής της όψιμης ελληνιστικής περιόδου από τα στρώματα καταστροφής ... more Η μελέτη της ερυθροβαφούς κεραμικής της όψιμης ελληνιστικής περιόδου από τα στρώματα καταστροφής του Μητρώου των Αιγών αποτελεί την αφετηρία για τη συζήτηση της εμφάνισης και διάρκειας χρήσης της κατηγορίας αυτής σε σχέση με την συναφή προς αυτήν κεραμική της Eastern Terra Sigillata (EST), η οποία κυριαρχεί στην κεραμική παραγωγή της ανατολικής Μεσογείου από τον 1ο προχριστιανικό αιώνα και εξής. Η μελέτη ασχολείται ουσιαστικά με την κεραμική του 2ου προχριστιανικού αιώνα στη Μακεδονία και κυρίως το δεύτερο μισό.
Η παρούσα μελέτη συνεκτιμά τα αποτελέσματα της μελέτης των λύχνων και των νομισμάτων, σε σχέση με τα νέα στοιχεία που προκύπτουν από την μελέτη της ερυθροβαφούς κεραμικής στη Μακεδονία, με απώτερο στόχο την κατανόηση της αντίληψης της κεραμικής παραγωγής στο τέλος των ελληνιστικών χρόνων.
by Heide Frielinghaus, Ourania Vizyinou, Maria Chidiroglou, Korka Elena, Anthi Aggeli, Tasos Kakamanoudis, athena athanassiadou, ANNA ALEXANDROPOULOU, Nikolas Dimakis, Stavroula Oikonomou, and Paraskevi (Vivi) Evaggeloglou