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Books by Lucijana Šešelj
Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies Supplements, 2022
This volume is a corpus of seven hundred Greek graffiti on ceramic artefacts from sixteen sites i... more This volume is a corpus of seven hundred Greek graffiti on ceramic artefacts from sixteen sites in Dalmatia, ranging in date from the late sixth to the first century BC. Most notably, the catalogue contains a substantial number of pieces from recent excavations at the two sanctuaries of Diomedes, on the central Adriatic islet of Palagruža and the windswept Cape Ploča. Appearing here in publication for the first time, other than in preliminary reports, the size of these two corpora puts them on a level with other published sites of significance including Naukratis and Gravisca, providing an important contribution to Greek epigraphy. As texts, the materials covered in this volume offer insights into dialect usage and letter forms, and comparisons are made with material from related sites elsewhere.
Papers by Lucijana Šešelj
Saetak: An analysis of the fine pottery of the Hellenistic and Roman period, found in excavated ... more Saetak: An analysis of the fine pottery of the Hellenistic and Roman period, found in excavated sanctuaries of hero/god Diomedes in the island of Palagrua and on Cape Ploča in Dalmatia (Croatia). The archaeological research on the island of Palagrua and at cape ...
Vjesnik za arheologiju i historiju dalmatinsku, Dec 29, 2017
Diadora : glasilo Arheološkog muzeja u Zadru, 2013
The Archaeological Museum of Zadar has in its collections fragments of a bell-krater which can be... more The Archaeological Museum of Zadar has in its collections fragments of a bell-krater which can be attributed to the Dolon Painter, who worked at Metaponto in the first quarter of the 4th century BC. The vessel, found in 1964 in the Liburnian Iron Age settlement of Beretinova gradina, was probably part of the domestic assemblage of one the houses found in the area. The fragments provide evidence for the occurrence of South Italian exports to the eastern coast of the central Adriatic at the beginning of the 4th century BC.
Vjesnik Za Arheologiju I Povijest Dalmatinsku, Oct 28, 2005
Vjesnik Za Arheologiju I Povijest Dalmatinsku, Dec 1, 2005
The Holocene, Feb 1, 2017
The excavations on the Cape Ploca (Ražanj, south of Rogoznica, Sibenik), according to Plin. NH II... more The excavations on the Cape Ploca (Ražanj, south of Rogoznica, Sibenik), according to Plin. NH III 141, called in antiquity promunturium Diomedis, revealed the remains of a Hellenistic sanctuary. The cult place existed from the end of the 4^th cent. to the mid 1^st cent. BC. An enormous quantity of pottery fragments, a number of gems, small metal objects and coins were found. There are more than 500 pottery fragments bearing Greek graffiti. They belong to votive pots offered to Diomedes whose name was attested 30 times. The preserved names of the dedicants are almost all Greek. From a votive formula X kai hoi synnautai attested 11 times, it could be presumed that the shrine was visited mainly by the crews of the ships sailing along the east Adriatic. The promoters and patrons of the Diomedes cult on this place could be Greek Isseans ; their important role in the Adriatic commerce of the period is well known.
Vjesnik za arheologiju i historiju dalmatinsku 114, 2022
Northern Dalmatia and south-eastern Lika together yielded 14 Hellenistic bronze coins originally ... more Northern Dalmatia and south-eastern Lika together yielded 14 Hellenistic bronze coins originally from the various minting centers of ancient Greece, Macedonia and Thrace. Such coins are rare finds in the territory of Dalmatia and its wider hinterland, so they constitute an intriguing phenomenon. The assumption is that they came to Liburnia (northern Dalmatia) via maritime routes, and the overland routes whereby they spread into the interior are indicated by the topography of the find sites, which say much about how they moved into the interior toward southern Velebit and its mountain passes. This flow of money corresponds to other known issues of currency that circulated in this territory during the Hellenistic era.
5. Internationaler Österreichischer Numismatikertag in Enns. Abstracts, Oct 11, 2012
Abstract: Numismatic finds from Liburnian region (area from the river Rasa to the river Krka, acc... more Abstract: Numismatic finds from Liburnian region (area from the river Rasa to the river Krka, according to Plinius the Elder) from the pre-imperial period has never been systematically studied before. Because of this in scientific literature there are still many misconceptions ...
The Archaeological Museum of Zadar has in its collections fragments of a bell-krater which can be... more The Archaeological Museum of Zadar has in its collections fragments of a bell-krater which can be attributed to the Dolon Painter, who worked at Metaponto in the first quarter of the 4th century BC. The vessel, found in 1964 in the Liburnian Iron Age settlement of Beretinova gradina, was probably part of the domestic assemblage of one the houses found in the area. The fragments provide evidence for the occurrence of South Italian exports to the eastern coast of the central Adriatic at the beginning of the 4th century BC.
Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies Supplements, 2022
This volume is a corpus of seven hundred Greek graffiti on ceramic artefacts from sixteen sites i... more This volume is a corpus of seven hundred Greek graffiti on ceramic artefacts from sixteen sites in Dalmatia, ranging in date from the late sixth to the first century BC. Most notably, the catalogue contains a substantial number of pieces from recent excavations at the two sanctuaries of Diomedes, on the central Adriatic islet of Palagruža and the windswept Cape Ploča. Appearing here in publication for the first time, other than in preliminary reports, the size of these two corpora puts them on a level with other published sites of significance including Naukratis and Gravisca, providing an important contribution to Greek epigraphy. As texts, the materials covered in this volume offer insights into dialect usage and letter forms, and comparisons are made with material from related sites elsewhere.
Saetak: An analysis of the fine pottery of the Hellenistic and Roman period, found in excavated ... more Saetak: An analysis of the fine pottery of the Hellenistic and Roman period, found in excavated sanctuaries of hero/god Diomedes in the island of Palagrua and on Cape Ploča in Dalmatia (Croatia). The archaeological research on the island of Palagrua and at cape ...
Vjesnik za arheologiju i historiju dalmatinsku, Dec 29, 2017
Diadora : glasilo Arheološkog muzeja u Zadru, 2013
The Archaeological Museum of Zadar has in its collections fragments of a bell-krater which can be... more The Archaeological Museum of Zadar has in its collections fragments of a bell-krater which can be attributed to the Dolon Painter, who worked at Metaponto in the first quarter of the 4th century BC. The vessel, found in 1964 in the Liburnian Iron Age settlement of Beretinova gradina, was probably part of the domestic assemblage of one the houses found in the area. The fragments provide evidence for the occurrence of South Italian exports to the eastern coast of the central Adriatic at the beginning of the 4th century BC.
Vjesnik Za Arheologiju I Povijest Dalmatinsku, Oct 28, 2005
Vjesnik Za Arheologiju I Povijest Dalmatinsku, Dec 1, 2005
The Holocene, Feb 1, 2017
The excavations on the Cape Ploca (Ražanj, south of Rogoznica, Sibenik), according to Plin. NH II... more The excavations on the Cape Ploca (Ražanj, south of Rogoznica, Sibenik), according to Plin. NH III 141, called in antiquity promunturium Diomedis, revealed the remains of a Hellenistic sanctuary. The cult place existed from the end of the 4^th cent. to the mid 1^st cent. BC. An enormous quantity of pottery fragments, a number of gems, small metal objects and coins were found. There are more than 500 pottery fragments bearing Greek graffiti. They belong to votive pots offered to Diomedes whose name was attested 30 times. The preserved names of the dedicants are almost all Greek. From a votive formula X kai hoi synnautai attested 11 times, it could be presumed that the shrine was visited mainly by the crews of the ships sailing along the east Adriatic. The promoters and patrons of the Diomedes cult on this place could be Greek Isseans ; their important role in the Adriatic commerce of the period is well known.
Vjesnik za arheologiju i historiju dalmatinsku 114, 2022
Northern Dalmatia and south-eastern Lika together yielded 14 Hellenistic bronze coins originally ... more Northern Dalmatia and south-eastern Lika together yielded 14 Hellenistic bronze coins originally from the various minting centers of ancient Greece, Macedonia and Thrace. Such coins are rare finds in the territory of Dalmatia and its wider hinterland, so they constitute an intriguing phenomenon. The assumption is that they came to Liburnia (northern Dalmatia) via maritime routes, and the overland routes whereby they spread into the interior are indicated by the topography of the find sites, which say much about how they moved into the interior toward southern Velebit and its mountain passes. This flow of money corresponds to other known issues of currency that circulated in this territory during the Hellenistic era.
5. Internationaler Österreichischer Numismatikertag in Enns. Abstracts, Oct 11, 2012
Abstract: Numismatic finds from Liburnian region (area from the river Rasa to the river Krka, acc... more Abstract: Numismatic finds from Liburnian region (area from the river Rasa to the river Krka, according to Plinius the Elder) from the pre-imperial period has never been systematically studied before. Because of this in scientific literature there are still many misconceptions ...
The Archaeological Museum of Zadar has in its collections fragments of a bell-krater which can be... more The Archaeological Museum of Zadar has in its collections fragments of a bell-krater which can be attributed to the Dolon Painter, who worked at Metaponto in the first quarter of the 4th century BC. The vessel, found in 1964 in the Liburnian Iron Age settlement of Beretinova gradina, was probably part of the domestic assemblage of one the houses found in the area. The fragments provide evidence for the occurrence of South Italian exports to the eastern coast of the central Adriatic at the beginning of the 4th century BC.
The period from the 4th to the 1st c. BC on the eastern Adriatic is marked by the rise of commerc... more The period from the 4th to the 1st c. BC on the eastern Adriatic is marked by the rise of commercial traffic and intensified relations with Hellenised parts of the Mediterranean. This trade exchange is mainly conducted by sea on local, regional and wider Mediterranean scope. There is no ample evidence in ancient literary sources about maritime affairs, so our main source of information is archaeology, study of shipwrecks, ports, maritime sanctuaries, inscriptions and movable finds like amphorae, pottery and coins. The aim of this contribution is to give an overview of the present state of research on ceramic and numismatic evidence in the territory of Liburnia in order to better understand the problems of maritime trade in the Adriatic region during the Hellenistic period 1. In this period it is possible to trace the processes of growing acculturation as a result of continuous strengthening of relations with the Hellenistic world. The first official relations with the Romans were es...
Vjesnik Za Arheologiju I Povijest Dalmatinsku, 2005
U radu se donose preliminarni kvantifikacijski podaci o distribuciji i broju nalazista, kako kopn... more U radu se donose preliminarni kvantifikacijski podaci o distribuciji i broju nalazista, kako kopnenih tako i onih pod morem, na kojima su nađene amfore i fina keramika iz razdoblja od 4. do 1. st. pr. Kr. u srednjoj Dalmaciji. Analiza keramickih nalaza s velikog broja nalazista na otoku Visu te velicina plodnih povrsina na otoku Visu upucuju na zakljucak da se u razodblju od 4. do 1. st. pr. Kr na Visu moglo proizvesti i do dva miljuna litara vina godisnje, sto je ocit znak da se vino izvozilo. Analiza amfora i fine keramike omogucuju potpuno nove poglede na ekonomske i socijalne odnose u helenistickom razdoblju u srednjoj Dalmaciji. U deset dodataka donose se podaci o nalazistima razlicitih tipova amfora i fine keramike, te 16 karata i obilna bibliografija
Antička Budva: Zbornik radova s Međunarodnog multidisciplinarnog naučnog simpozijuma po pozivu održanog u Budvi 28–30. novembra 2018. godine, 2021