catarina viegas - Academia.edu (original) (raw)
Papers by catarina viegas
Proceedings of the 36th International Symposium on Archaeometry, (Cahiers d'archéologie du CELAT 25), (Quebec, Maio de 2006), 2007
… Ages and in …, 2004
This paper presents the sigil/ala and amphorae recovered during the excavations of the Roman Vill... more This paper presents the sigil/ala and amphorae recovered during the excavations of the Roman Villa at Tourega in southern Portugal, utilising the analysis of the data to identify commercial links and trade routes supplying the villa. Of all the sigil/ata recovered, the Italian type, the south Gaulish, the Spanish and African fonns were present; but taken as a whole, there was a higher proportion of northern Spanish sigil/ata, travelling by river and road networks. The amphorae, canying mainly fish-based products, derived from the river valleys of the Tagus and Sado in Lusl/onio. Only a small proportion of amphorae came from Hoe/lea and other areas. IntroductioD This paper aims to study the sigillala and amphorae from a Roman villa in southern Portugal as presented in the session Close encounters: sea-and riverborne trade, ports and hinterlands ... , focusing on trade, production areas and commercial routes. Even though these two types of materials, sigil/ala and amphorae, were traded for very different reasons (the former to acquire and use as table ware, and the latter bought for their contents), they are both particularly interesting in the study of the economic exchanges and commercial connections of a Roman vil/a and its region. They were both specialised commodities, produced in very specific areas, and sometimes traded over long distances. were no longer possible. Certainly, an active commercial route would run from the eastern Algarve up the Guadiana River towards the capital of the province, Emerita Augusta, supplying the cities along the way, and avoiding navigation of the severe Atlantic. On the Atlantic coast, the Tagus and Sado estuaries, as well as the river Mira one, were also important distribution points for riverboume commerce towards the interior of the province.
Al-Ulya. Revista do Arquivo Municipal de Loulé, 2020
As primeiras referências à existência de achados arqueológicos junto da actual povoação da Manta ... more As primeiras referências à existência de achados arqueológicos junto da actual povoação da Manta Rota remontam aos finais do séc. XIX, quando Estácio da Veiga refere a existência de uma série de alicerces de grandes edifícios de época romana, além de outros achados de cerâmica que atribui ao período islâmico. O material por ele recolhido encontra-se no Museu Nacional de Arqueologia. Nos anos 20 do século passado, Leite de Vasconcellos assinala, na secção das "Cousas Velhas" do Arqueólogo Português, a presença de vestígios de uma olaria lusitano-romana na Manta Rota além de cerâmicas como ânforas e candeias de barro. indicando que, apesar dos trabalhadores terem quebrado '"muita cousa", ainda muito teria ficado enterrado. Mais recentemente, em 1992, o sítio foi objecto de uma intervenção de emergência. na sequência de um projecto de urbanização da área, tendo os trabalhos sido conduzidos pela Dra. Cristina Garcia. Dada a dispersão de vestígios numa área relati...
Société Française d'Étude de la Céramique …, 2004
Research carried out recently in different contexts at Roman sites in the Algarve and Alentejo ha... more Research carried out recently in different contexts at Roman sites in the Algarve and Alentejo has defined distinct sets of South Gaulish sigillata, so elucidating an understanding of the main consumption trends in that region. In this work, recent and older sets of data concerning this category of tableware imported from La Graufesenque are revisited, presented and discussed. The plain and decorated forms are analyzed, as well as the potter’s stamps from sites in southern areas of the present Portuguese territory, which in Roman times corresponded to the province of Lusitania. Even in the case of samples with very unequal compositions, we have identified different consumption patterns between the Alentejo and the Algarve sites, and have compared them with each other and with sets from other regions of Lusitania and Baetica.A investigação realizada recentemente nos sítios algarvios e alentejanos em distintos contextos permitiu uma abordagem aos diferentes conjuntos de sigillata sudg...
Fundação Millenium BCPinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
O presente artigo estuda os ritmos da vida económica dos núcleos urbanos de Ossonoba (Faro), Bals... more O presente artigo estuda os ritmos da vida económica dos núcleos urbanos de Ossonoba (Faro), Balsa (Quinta de Torre de Ares) e Baesuri (Castelo de Castro Marim), desde o séc. ii a.C. até ao séc. vii d.C. Partindo de uma base documental muito diversificada, constituída sobretudo pelos conjuntos de cerâmica de mesa importada e de produtos alimentares transportados em ânforas, sem esquecer igualmente a leitura crítica das fontes escritas, dos dados epigráficos e numismáticos, procurou-se estabelecer o faseamento da importação e consumo nestes núcleos urbanos do Algarve romano, analisando-se igualmente diversos aspectos da própria produção agrícola e artesanal de âmbito local e regional. Os padrões de importação dos três núcleos urbanos são comparados entre si, de forma de obter elementos sobre a dinâmica evolutiva do território algarvio, sendo igualmente confrontados com os dados de outras regiões, procurando-se integrar o sul da Lusitania no quadro das relações (económicas, políticas,...
Imports of African cooking ware in the Algarve region are very abundant and started appearing at ... more Imports of African cooking ware in the Algarve region are very abundant and started appearing at the end of the 1st century AD, with the first forms of ARS A. The typological and contextual data shows that these imports lasted until the 5th century. In this paper we focus on the African cooking ware imports, to establish their position within the larger volume of traffic in African products (amphorae and ARS wares) during the early and the late Roman Empire. We present a re-evaluation of old assemblages, as well as some new data.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
South Gaulish sigillata in Southwest Hispania: circulation and consumption
Roman pottery production in the Algarve was mainly located in the coast, although it was distribu... more Roman pottery production in the Algarve was mainly located in the coast, although it was distributed in the whole region and was directly related to the fish sauce production units. About a dozen production centers are known which produced amphorae, domestic and construction pottery. Most of these pottery production centers arise from the third century onwards, devoting primarily to the production of amphoras for transportation of fish sauces, though the pottery production of the eastern Algarve, such as in S. Bartolomeu de Castro Marim and in Manta Rota have occurred in the High Empire. The late production of amphoras has been related to several factors, and it has been suggested that the region would have used baetican amphoras to transport the regionaly manufactured fish products. Only afterwards, in response to increased local exploitation of marine resources and due to the decline of the potteries of the Baetican region, have the Algarve potters centers asserted themselves. After addressing the amphora types produced in the region, as well as the distribution of the production centers, we will focus on the structures of production, namely the organization of pottery production in Martinhal, the most extensive production center in the Algarve, which produced amphorae and ceramic construction until late Roman period.
Kenneth Aitchison, Efthymia Alphas, Vera Ameels, Martin Bentz, Corina Borș, Elisa Cella, Kerri Cl... more Kenneth Aitchison, Efthymia Alphas, Vera Ameels, Martin Bentz, Corina Borș, Elisa Cella, Kerri Cleary, Claudia Costa, Paul Damian, Mariana Diniz, Cidalia Duarte, Jan Frolik, Carolina Grilo, Initiative for Heritage Conservancy, Nele Kangert, Raimund Karl, Anette Kjaerulf Andersen, Viire Kobrusepp, Tina Kompare, Eduard Krekovic, Miguel Lago da Silva, Andrew Lawler, Irena Lazar, Katheriin Liibert, Alexandra Lima, Gavin MacGregor, Niamh McCullagh, Michaela Macalova, Ain Maesalu, Magdalena Malinska, Arkadiusz Marciniak, Mārtiņs Mintaurs, Katharina Moller, Ulla Odgaard, Eva Parga-Dans, Doris Pavlov, Vesna Pintaric Kocuvan, Doug Rocks-Macqueen, Jette Rostock, Joao Pedro Tereso, Alessandro Pintucci, Elena S. Prokopiou, Jorge Raposo, Karin Scharringhausen, Tine Schenck, Marjo Schlaman, Jeanette Skaarup, Andris Snē, Danica Stassikova-Stukovska, Ingrid Ulst, Monique van den Dries, Heleen van Londen, Rocio Varela-Pousa, Catarina Viegas, Armands Vijups, Nathalie Vossen, Tobias Wachter & Ludwika ...
Proceedings of the 36th International Symposium on Archaeometry, (Cahiers d'archéologie du CELAT 25), (Quebec, Maio de 2006), 2007
… Ages and in …, 2004
This paper presents the sigil/ala and amphorae recovered during the excavations of the Roman Vill... more This paper presents the sigil/ala and amphorae recovered during the excavations of the Roman Villa at Tourega in southern Portugal, utilising the analysis of the data to identify commercial links and trade routes supplying the villa. Of all the sigil/ata recovered, the Italian type, the south Gaulish, the Spanish and African fonns were present; but taken as a whole, there was a higher proportion of northern Spanish sigil/ata, travelling by river and road networks. The amphorae, canying mainly fish-based products, derived from the river valleys of the Tagus and Sado in Lusl/onio. Only a small proportion of amphorae came from Hoe/lea and other areas. IntroductioD This paper aims to study the sigillala and amphorae from a Roman villa in southern Portugal as presented in the session Close encounters: sea-and riverborne trade, ports and hinterlands ... , focusing on trade, production areas and commercial routes. Even though these two types of materials, sigil/ala and amphorae, were traded for very different reasons (the former to acquire and use as table ware, and the latter bought for their contents), they are both particularly interesting in the study of the economic exchanges and commercial connections of a Roman vil/a and its region. They were both specialised commodities, produced in very specific areas, and sometimes traded over long distances. were no longer possible. Certainly, an active commercial route would run from the eastern Algarve up the Guadiana River towards the capital of the province, Emerita Augusta, supplying the cities along the way, and avoiding navigation of the severe Atlantic. On the Atlantic coast, the Tagus and Sado estuaries, as well as the river Mira one, were also important distribution points for riverboume commerce towards the interior of the province.
Al-Ulya. Revista do Arquivo Municipal de Loulé, 2020
As primeiras referências à existência de achados arqueológicos junto da actual povoação da Manta ... more As primeiras referências à existência de achados arqueológicos junto da actual povoação da Manta Rota remontam aos finais do séc. XIX, quando Estácio da Veiga refere a existência de uma série de alicerces de grandes edifícios de época romana, além de outros achados de cerâmica que atribui ao período islâmico. O material por ele recolhido encontra-se no Museu Nacional de Arqueologia. Nos anos 20 do século passado, Leite de Vasconcellos assinala, na secção das "Cousas Velhas" do Arqueólogo Português, a presença de vestígios de uma olaria lusitano-romana na Manta Rota além de cerâmicas como ânforas e candeias de barro. indicando que, apesar dos trabalhadores terem quebrado '"muita cousa", ainda muito teria ficado enterrado. Mais recentemente, em 1992, o sítio foi objecto de uma intervenção de emergência. na sequência de um projecto de urbanização da área, tendo os trabalhos sido conduzidos pela Dra. Cristina Garcia. Dada a dispersão de vestígios numa área relati...
Société Française d'Étude de la Céramique …, 2004
Research carried out recently in different contexts at Roman sites in the Algarve and Alentejo ha... more Research carried out recently in different contexts at Roman sites in the Algarve and Alentejo has defined distinct sets of South Gaulish sigillata, so elucidating an understanding of the main consumption trends in that region. In this work, recent and older sets of data concerning this category of tableware imported from La Graufesenque are revisited, presented and discussed. The plain and decorated forms are analyzed, as well as the potter’s stamps from sites in southern areas of the present Portuguese territory, which in Roman times corresponded to the province of Lusitania. Even in the case of samples with very unequal compositions, we have identified different consumption patterns between the Alentejo and the Algarve sites, and have compared them with each other and with sets from other regions of Lusitania and Baetica.A investigação realizada recentemente nos sítios algarvios e alentejanos em distintos contextos permitiu uma abordagem aos diferentes conjuntos de sigillata sudg...
Fundação Millenium BCPinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
O presente artigo estuda os ritmos da vida económica dos núcleos urbanos de Ossonoba (Faro), Bals... more O presente artigo estuda os ritmos da vida económica dos núcleos urbanos de Ossonoba (Faro), Balsa (Quinta de Torre de Ares) e Baesuri (Castelo de Castro Marim), desde o séc. ii a.C. até ao séc. vii d.C. Partindo de uma base documental muito diversificada, constituída sobretudo pelos conjuntos de cerâmica de mesa importada e de produtos alimentares transportados em ânforas, sem esquecer igualmente a leitura crítica das fontes escritas, dos dados epigráficos e numismáticos, procurou-se estabelecer o faseamento da importação e consumo nestes núcleos urbanos do Algarve romano, analisando-se igualmente diversos aspectos da própria produção agrícola e artesanal de âmbito local e regional. Os padrões de importação dos três núcleos urbanos são comparados entre si, de forma de obter elementos sobre a dinâmica evolutiva do território algarvio, sendo igualmente confrontados com os dados de outras regiões, procurando-se integrar o sul da Lusitania no quadro das relações (económicas, políticas,...
Imports of African cooking ware in the Algarve region are very abundant and started appearing at ... more Imports of African cooking ware in the Algarve region are very abundant and started appearing at the end of the 1st century AD, with the first forms of ARS A. The typological and contextual data shows that these imports lasted until the 5th century. In this paper we focus on the African cooking ware imports, to establish their position within the larger volume of traffic in African products (amphorae and ARS wares) during the early and the late Roman Empire. We present a re-evaluation of old assemblages, as well as some new data.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
South Gaulish sigillata in Southwest Hispania: circulation and consumption
Roman pottery production in the Algarve was mainly located in the coast, although it was distribu... more Roman pottery production in the Algarve was mainly located in the coast, although it was distributed in the whole region and was directly related to the fish sauce production units. About a dozen production centers are known which produced amphorae, domestic and construction pottery. Most of these pottery production centers arise from the third century onwards, devoting primarily to the production of amphoras for transportation of fish sauces, though the pottery production of the eastern Algarve, such as in S. Bartolomeu de Castro Marim and in Manta Rota have occurred in the High Empire. The late production of amphoras has been related to several factors, and it has been suggested that the region would have used baetican amphoras to transport the regionaly manufactured fish products. Only afterwards, in response to increased local exploitation of marine resources and due to the decline of the potteries of the Baetican region, have the Algarve potters centers asserted themselves. After addressing the amphora types produced in the region, as well as the distribution of the production centers, we will focus on the structures of production, namely the organization of pottery production in Martinhal, the most extensive production center in the Algarve, which produced amphorae and ceramic construction until late Roman period.
Kenneth Aitchison, Efthymia Alphas, Vera Ameels, Martin Bentz, Corina Borș, Elisa Cella, Kerri Cl... more Kenneth Aitchison, Efthymia Alphas, Vera Ameels, Martin Bentz, Corina Borș, Elisa Cella, Kerri Cleary, Claudia Costa, Paul Damian, Mariana Diniz, Cidalia Duarte, Jan Frolik, Carolina Grilo, Initiative for Heritage Conservancy, Nele Kangert, Raimund Karl, Anette Kjaerulf Andersen, Viire Kobrusepp, Tina Kompare, Eduard Krekovic, Miguel Lago da Silva, Andrew Lawler, Irena Lazar, Katheriin Liibert, Alexandra Lima, Gavin MacGregor, Niamh McCullagh, Michaela Macalova, Ain Maesalu, Magdalena Malinska, Arkadiusz Marciniak, Mārtiņs Mintaurs, Katharina Moller, Ulla Odgaard, Eva Parga-Dans, Doris Pavlov, Vesna Pintaric Kocuvan, Doug Rocks-Macqueen, Jette Rostock, Joao Pedro Tereso, Alessandro Pintucci, Elena S. Prokopiou, Jorge Raposo, Karin Scharringhausen, Tine Schenck, Marjo Schlaman, Jeanette Skaarup, Andris Snē, Danica Stassikova-Stukovska, Ingrid Ulst, Monique van den Dries, Heleen van Londen, Rocio Varela-Pousa, Catarina Viegas, Armands Vijups, Nathalie Vossen, Tobias Wachter & Ludwika ...