Morana Causevic Bully | Université de Franche-Comté (original) (raw)
Papers by Morana Causevic Bully
HAL (Le Centre pour la Communication Scientifique Directe), 2020
Hortus Artium Medievalium, 2006
Antiquité tardive, 2023
The research presented in this study was conducted within the program IATEKA-Interdisciplinary Ap... more The research presented in this study was conducted within the program IATEKA-Interdisciplinary Approach to the
Territorial Evolution of Kvarner Archipelago (Croatia) (UBFC-ISITE) on a corpus of the 5th-century insular population from
two late antique sites: Mirine-Fulfinum on the island of Krk and Martinšćica on the island of Cres. Both living conditions and
status of the inhabitants of those two sites are here studied through an interdisciplinary approach, combining, and confronting
archaeological contexts with bioarchaeological, isotopic and aDNA data. The study showed that all members of these
communities, of local and foreign origin, lived in harsh conditions and experienced a very low quality of life, regardless of their
social status as given by the archaeological context. This led us to reconsider the definition of “privileged members of society”
in the insular, northeastern Adriatic environments in the 5th century.
Archéologie médiévale, 2018
La mémoire des pierres. Mélanges d'archéologie, d'art et d'histoire en l'honneur de Christian SAPIN, 2016
Le Centre pour la Communication Scientifique Directe - HAL - Inria, Nov 7, 2019
After two previous conferences questioning the vocabulary of space (Dijon, May 4, 2018) and the h... more After two previous conferences questioning the vocabulary of space (Dijon, May 4, 2018) and the historical processes of ancient cities’ formation (Dijon, November 8, 2018), this conference proposes to explore the contexts of evolution and development of cities on borders, at the point of contact of different cultural areas, with multiple territorial and socio-ethnic identities. We will examine the different conceptual approaches, definitions and representations of these cities. Places of tension between different polarities, places of exchange and sociability, some of them, more permeable, participate in the constitution of “cross-border spaces”. How to apply the notion of boundary in such a singular context? Can we define a territory by the interlocking of borders, by a “network of borders”? Do these boundaries separate or represent a transition, an interface, a “buffer zone”? Can we identify the spatial practices and identities of the inhabitants of these spaces? Taking boundary towns into account, in the periphery, on the edge, on the limits, can it contribute to illustrate relations of domination, cooperation or asymmetrical relations with central establishments or structuring poles? Can we then recognize, within the same habitat, variations in the forms of exercise of power according to specific areas (economic, political, social, cultural)? Finally, if the habitat can serve as an entry point to the study of social relations or the understanding of identity compositions and recompositions, what are the social transactions and modes of hybridization that unfold in the border cities and the boundary towns? This conference should allow us to contribute to a reasoning on these issues. The very wide geographical and chronological framework, going from the archaic period to the late Antiquity, will highlight the salient, recurring or specific elements of some “crossroads” and “boundary towns” in Antiquity. In a multidisciplinary and cross-disciplinary diachronic approach, through the intersection and interaction of several complementary disciplines, bringing together historians and archaeologists, this conference aims to fill a historiographical gap on a theme that has not been widely studied so far, by exploring cross-cutting issues and by inviting to compare problems and methods, while being attentive to the spatio-temporal contexts.
International audienceIstria and the Kvarner archipelago are strategically located on the main ma... more International audienceIstria and the Kvarner archipelago are strategically located on the main maritime trade routes connecting the eastern Mediterranean withthe western provinces of the Byzantine Empire in the late antique period, and with Carolingian Europe in the ninth century. Ecclesiasticaland monastic institutions played a significant role in the establishment and maintenance of these North Adriatic trade networks, andthe archaeological material from these sites is essential for understanding the dynamics of exchange within the medieval ByzantineEmpire and beyond. The present contribution discusses the vitreous material recovered from several ecclesiastical and monastic sites inthe Kvarner Archipelago dating to the 5th to 11th centuries CE. 65 glass fragments were analysed by LA-ICP-MS to determine the major,minor and trace element compositions of the glass raw material. Particular attention is given to window glass and lighting devices incontext of a comparative multi-site approach to elucidate the chronological and geographical developments in the supply of glass tothis region. The data were compared with glass finds from Italy and the Balkans to determine commonalities and/or local specificities
Donato Coppola, Nicola De Pinto, Michele Pellegrino, Henry Baills, Vincenzo Stasolla, Martine Dew... more Donato Coppola, Nicola De Pinto, Michele Pellegrino, Henry Baills, Vincenzo Stasolla, Martine Dewailly, Jacopo Russo e Jessica Bartolomeo. Nel 2016 le ricerche archeologiche nel sito di Santa Maria di Agnano ad Ostuni-Brindisi sono proseguite nelle aree già indagate nel 2015 con l’estensione dello scavo del muro di recinzione ellenistico, l’esplorazione dei livelli olocenici e pleistocenici sottostanti la parete rocciosa occidentale del riparo nell’Area H-I-P-Q, la prosecuzione nei settori identificati come « Scavo esterno » riferibile alle stratificazioni paleolitiche, le Aree dei quadrati L-M, pertinenti alla terrazza centrale inferiore dove sono attestate frequentazioni già a partire da epoca ellenistica; inoltre sono state eseguite delle indagini geofisiche. 16 febbraio 2017.
Archéologie du bâti. Aujourd’hui et demain
https://edipuglia.it/catalogo/il-vetro/ Istria and the Kvarner archipelago are strategically loca... more https://edipuglia.it/catalogo/il-vetro/ Istria and the Kvarner archipelago are strategically located on the main maritime trade routes connecting the eastern Mediterranean with the western provinces of the Byzantine Empire in the late antique period, and with Carolingian Europe in the ninth century. Ecclesiastical and monastic institutions played a significant role in the establishment and maintenance of these North Adriatic trade networks, and the archaeological material from these sites is essential for understanding the dynamics of exchange within the medieval Byzantine Empire and beyond. The present contribution discusses the vitreous material recovered from several ecclesiastical and monastic sites in the Kvarner Archipelago dating to the 5th to 11th centuries CE. 65 glass fragments were analysed by LA-ICP-MS to determine the major, minor and trace element compositions of the glass raw material. Particular attention is given to window glass and lighting devices in context of a comparative multi-site approach to elucidate the chronological and geographical developments in the supply of glass to this region. The data were compared with glass finds from Italy and the Balkans to determine commonalities and/or local specificities.
Chronique des activités archéologiques de l’École française de Rome, 2017
Hortus Artium Medievalium, 2013
Hortus Artium Medievalium, 2012
HAL (Le Centre pour la Communication Scientifique Directe), 2020
Hortus Artium Medievalium, 2006
Antiquité tardive, 2023
The research presented in this study was conducted within the program IATEKA-Interdisciplinary Ap... more The research presented in this study was conducted within the program IATEKA-Interdisciplinary Approach to the
Territorial Evolution of Kvarner Archipelago (Croatia) (UBFC-ISITE) on a corpus of the 5th-century insular population from
two late antique sites: Mirine-Fulfinum on the island of Krk and Martinšćica on the island of Cres. Both living conditions and
status of the inhabitants of those two sites are here studied through an interdisciplinary approach, combining, and confronting
archaeological contexts with bioarchaeological, isotopic and aDNA data. The study showed that all members of these
communities, of local and foreign origin, lived in harsh conditions and experienced a very low quality of life, regardless of their
social status as given by the archaeological context. This led us to reconsider the definition of “privileged members of society”
in the insular, northeastern Adriatic environments in the 5th century.
Archéologie médiévale, 2018
La mémoire des pierres. Mélanges d'archéologie, d'art et d'histoire en l'honneur de Christian SAPIN, 2016
Le Centre pour la Communication Scientifique Directe - HAL - Inria, Nov 7, 2019
After two previous conferences questioning the vocabulary of space (Dijon, May 4, 2018) and the h... more After two previous conferences questioning the vocabulary of space (Dijon, May 4, 2018) and the historical processes of ancient cities’ formation (Dijon, November 8, 2018), this conference proposes to explore the contexts of evolution and development of cities on borders, at the point of contact of different cultural areas, with multiple territorial and socio-ethnic identities. We will examine the different conceptual approaches, definitions and representations of these cities. Places of tension between different polarities, places of exchange and sociability, some of them, more permeable, participate in the constitution of “cross-border spaces”. How to apply the notion of boundary in such a singular context? Can we define a territory by the interlocking of borders, by a “network of borders”? Do these boundaries separate or represent a transition, an interface, a “buffer zone”? Can we identify the spatial practices and identities of the inhabitants of these spaces? Taking boundary towns into account, in the periphery, on the edge, on the limits, can it contribute to illustrate relations of domination, cooperation or asymmetrical relations with central establishments or structuring poles? Can we then recognize, within the same habitat, variations in the forms of exercise of power according to specific areas (economic, political, social, cultural)? Finally, if the habitat can serve as an entry point to the study of social relations or the understanding of identity compositions and recompositions, what are the social transactions and modes of hybridization that unfold in the border cities and the boundary towns? This conference should allow us to contribute to a reasoning on these issues. The very wide geographical and chronological framework, going from the archaic period to the late Antiquity, will highlight the salient, recurring or specific elements of some “crossroads” and “boundary towns” in Antiquity. In a multidisciplinary and cross-disciplinary diachronic approach, through the intersection and interaction of several complementary disciplines, bringing together historians and archaeologists, this conference aims to fill a historiographical gap on a theme that has not been widely studied so far, by exploring cross-cutting issues and by inviting to compare problems and methods, while being attentive to the spatio-temporal contexts.
International audienceIstria and the Kvarner archipelago are strategically located on the main ma... more International audienceIstria and the Kvarner archipelago are strategically located on the main maritime trade routes connecting the eastern Mediterranean withthe western provinces of the Byzantine Empire in the late antique period, and with Carolingian Europe in the ninth century. Ecclesiasticaland monastic institutions played a significant role in the establishment and maintenance of these North Adriatic trade networks, andthe archaeological material from these sites is essential for understanding the dynamics of exchange within the medieval ByzantineEmpire and beyond. The present contribution discusses the vitreous material recovered from several ecclesiastical and monastic sites inthe Kvarner Archipelago dating to the 5th to 11th centuries CE. 65 glass fragments were analysed by LA-ICP-MS to determine the major,minor and trace element compositions of the glass raw material. Particular attention is given to window glass and lighting devices incontext of a comparative multi-site approach to elucidate the chronological and geographical developments in the supply of glass tothis region. The data were compared with glass finds from Italy and the Balkans to determine commonalities and/or local specificities
Donato Coppola, Nicola De Pinto, Michele Pellegrino, Henry Baills, Vincenzo Stasolla, Martine Dew... more Donato Coppola, Nicola De Pinto, Michele Pellegrino, Henry Baills, Vincenzo Stasolla, Martine Dewailly, Jacopo Russo e Jessica Bartolomeo. Nel 2016 le ricerche archeologiche nel sito di Santa Maria di Agnano ad Ostuni-Brindisi sono proseguite nelle aree già indagate nel 2015 con l’estensione dello scavo del muro di recinzione ellenistico, l’esplorazione dei livelli olocenici e pleistocenici sottostanti la parete rocciosa occidentale del riparo nell’Area H-I-P-Q, la prosecuzione nei settori identificati come « Scavo esterno » riferibile alle stratificazioni paleolitiche, le Aree dei quadrati L-M, pertinenti alla terrazza centrale inferiore dove sono attestate frequentazioni già a partire da epoca ellenistica; inoltre sono state eseguite delle indagini geofisiche. 16 febbraio 2017.
Archéologie du bâti. Aujourd’hui et demain
https://edipuglia.it/catalogo/il-vetro/ Istria and the Kvarner archipelago are strategically loca... more https://edipuglia.it/catalogo/il-vetro/ Istria and the Kvarner archipelago are strategically located on the main maritime trade routes connecting the eastern Mediterranean with the western provinces of the Byzantine Empire in the late antique period, and with Carolingian Europe in the ninth century. Ecclesiastical and monastic institutions played a significant role in the establishment and maintenance of these North Adriatic trade networks, and the archaeological material from these sites is essential for understanding the dynamics of exchange within the medieval Byzantine Empire and beyond. The present contribution discusses the vitreous material recovered from several ecclesiastical and monastic sites in the Kvarner Archipelago dating to the 5th to 11th centuries CE. 65 glass fragments were analysed by LA-ICP-MS to determine the major, minor and trace element compositions of the glass raw material. Particular attention is given to window glass and lighting devices in context of a comparative multi-site approach to elucidate the chronological and geographical developments in the supply of glass to this region. The data were compared with glass finds from Italy and the Balkans to determine commonalities and/or local specificities.
Chronique des activités archéologiques de l’École française de Rome, 2017
Hortus Artium Medievalium, 2013
Hortus Artium Medievalium, 2012
A one day conference hosted by Newcastle University in collaboration with the BSR
A one day conference hosted by Newcastle University in collaboration with the BSR
After two previous conferences questioning the vocabulary of space (Dijon, May 4, 2018) and the h... more After two previous conferences questioning the vocabulary of space (Dijon, May 4, 2018) and the historical processes of ancient cities’ formation (Dijon, November 8, 2018), this conference proposes to explore the contexts of evolution and development of cities on borders, at the point of contact of different cultural areas, with multiple territorial and socio-ethnic identities. We will examine the different conceptual approaches, definitions and representations of these cities.
Places of tension between different polarities, places of exchange and sociability, some of them, more permeable, participate in the constitution of “cross-border spaces”. How to apply the notion of boundary in such a singular context? Can we define a territory by the interlocking of borders, by a “network of borders”? Do these boundaries separate or represent a transition, an interface, a “buffer zone”? Can we identify the spatial practices and identities of the inhabitants of these spaces? Taking boundary towns into account, in the periphery, on the edge, on the limits, can it contribute to illustrate relations of domination, cooperation or asymmetrical relations with central establishments or structuring poles? Can we then recognize, within the same habitat, variations in the forms of exercise of power according to specific areas (economic, political, social, cultural)? Finally, if the habitat can serve as an entry point to the study of social relations or the understanding of identity compositions and recompositions, what are the social transactions and modes of hybridization that unfold in the border cities and the boundary towns?
This conference should allow us to contribute to a reasoning on these issues. The very wide geographical and chronological framework, going from the archaic period to the late Antiquity, will highlight the salient, recurring or specific elements of some “crossroads” and “boundary towns” in Antiquity. In a multidisciplinary and cross-disciplinary diachronic approach, through the intersection and interaction of several complementary disciplines, bringing together historians and archaeologists, this conference aims to fill a historiographical gap on a theme that has not been widely studied so far, by exploring cross-cutting issues and by inviting to compare problems and methods, while being attentive to the spatio-temporal contexts.
Bulletin du Centre d'études médiévales d'Auxerre, (BUCEMA), 14, 2010
Bulletin du Centre d'études médiévales d'Auxerre, (BUCEMA), 15, 2011
Bulletin du Centre d'études médiévales d'Auxerre, 11, 2007
Chronique des activités archéologiques de l’École française de Rome [En ligne], Jan 13, 2014
Chronique des activités archéologiques de l’École française de Rome [En ligne], Balkans, 2018
Chronique des activités archéologiques de l’École française de Rome [En ligne], Balkans,, 2017
Monastery of Saint Peter in Osor, report on the 2016 excavations campaign
IL VETRO IN TRANSIZIONE (IV-XII SECOLO). Produzione e commercio in Italia meridionale e nell’Adriatico, 2021
https://edipuglia.it/catalogo/il-vetro/ Istria and the Kvarner archipelago are strategically loc... more https://edipuglia.it/catalogo/il-vetro/
Istria and the Kvarner archipelago are strategically located on the main maritime trade routes connecting the eastern Mediterranean with the western provinces of the Byzantine Empire in the late antique period, and with Carolingian Europe in the ninth century. Ecclesiastical and monastic institutions played a significant role in the establishment and maintenance of these North Adriatic trade networks, and the archaeological material from these sites is essential for understanding the dynamics of exchange within the medieval Byzantine Empire and beyond. The present contribution discusses the vitreous material recovered from several ecclesiastical and monastic sites in the Kvarner Archipelago dating to the 5th to 11th centuries CE. 65 glass fragments were analysed by LA-ICP-MS to determine the major, minor and trace element compositions of the glass raw material. Particular attention is given to window glass and lighting devices in context of a comparative multi-site approach to elucidate the chronological and geographical developments in the supply of glass to this region. The data were compared with glass finds from Italy and the Balkans to determine commonalities and/or local specificities.