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XIth CONGRESS AIECM3 ON MEDIEVAL AND MODERN PERIOD MEDITERRANEAN CERAMICS PROCEEDINGS, 2018
Cette contribution présente une sélection des principales formes de céramiques communes et culina... more Cette contribution présente une sélection des principales formes de céramiques communes et culinaires mises au jour dans le cadre des récentes fouilles de Tarse Gözlükule. Il s’agit d’un assemblage cohérent, datant des 9e- 10e siècles, qui s’inscrit parfaitement dans la tradition des céramiques abbassides du nord du Bilad al-Sham.
FISCHER-GENZ B., GERBER Y. and HAMEL H. ,Roman Pottery in the Near-East : local Production and regional Trade. Proceedings of the round table held in Berlin, 19-20 February 2010 , 2014
This contribution presents a 3rd and 4th c. ceramic assemblage from Apamea. It focuses mainly on ... more This contribution presents a 3rd and 4th c. ceramic assemblage from Apamea. It focuses mainly on Brittle Ware (Syrian cooking ware) and on calcareous common wares. Starting from this context in Apamea, we will extend the discussion to productions in north-western Syria and in the Euphrates region. As far as Brittle Ware is concerned, the study will show that there is a great technological and morphological homogeneity, despite the existence of several workshops (sharing a common “savoir-faire”). Common wares are less documented. They seem to be regionally produced and distributed, with a clear gap in traditions between western Syria and the Euphrates region. This phenomenon becomes less visible in the 6th and 7th c. AD.
D. Dixneuf, LRCW 5. Late Roman Coarse Wares, Cooking Wares and Amphorae in the Mediterranean. Archaeology and Archaeometry (Études Alexandrines 43), Alexandria , 2017
This paper aims to present a general assessment of the Late Roman amphorae from Apamea in Syria a... more This paper aims to present a general assessment of the Late Roman amphorae from Apamea in Syria and, most specifically, the amphorae from the excavations undertaken by the Belgian mission at Apamea between 2000 and 2010 in the north-eastern quarter of the city.
SLSA-Jahresbericht 2009, 2010
Continuity and changes in ceramic production and exchange in Syria during the Byzantine and Early... more Continuity and changes in ceramic production and exchange in Syria during the Byzantine and Early Islamic periods (5th – 8th c. A.D.), in A. Kralidis and A. Gkoutzioukostas (eds), Πρακτικά του Διεθνούς Συμποσίου Βυζάντιο και Αραβικός Κόσμος: Συνάντηση Πολιτισμών / Proceedings of the International Symposium Byzantium and the Arab World: Encounter of Civilizations (Thessaloniki, 16-18 December 2011). Thessaloniki, 2013, p. 517-544.
LAVAN L. (ed.), Local Economies? Production and Exchange of Inland Regions in Late Antiquity" (Late Antique Archaeology 10), 2010
Archaeometry 52, 4, , 2010
BONIFAY M. and TREGLIA J.-C. (eds.), LRCW2. Late Roman Coarse Wares, Cooking Wares and Amphorae in the Mediterranean. Archaeology and Archaeometry (BAR International Series 1662, 2), Archaeopress, Oxford, p. 701-714., 2007
XIth CONGRESS AIECM3 ON MEDIEVAL AND MODERN PERIOD MEDITERRANEAN CERAMICS PROCEEDINGS, 2018
Cette contribution présente une sélection des principales formes de céramiques communes et culina... more Cette contribution présente une sélection des principales formes de céramiques communes et culinaires mises au jour dans le cadre des récentes fouilles de Tarse Gözlükule. Il s’agit d’un assemblage cohérent, datant des 9e- 10e siècles, qui s’inscrit parfaitement dans la tradition des céramiques abbassides du nord du Bilad al-Sham.
FISCHER-GENZ B., GERBER Y. and HAMEL H. ,Roman Pottery in the Near-East : local Production and regional Trade. Proceedings of the round table held in Berlin, 19-20 February 2010 , 2014
This contribution presents a 3rd and 4th c. ceramic assemblage from Apamea. It focuses mainly on ... more This contribution presents a 3rd and 4th c. ceramic assemblage from Apamea. It focuses mainly on Brittle Ware (Syrian cooking ware) and on calcareous common wares. Starting from this context in Apamea, we will extend the discussion to productions in north-western Syria and in the Euphrates region. As far as Brittle Ware is concerned, the study will show that there is a great technological and morphological homogeneity, despite the existence of several workshops (sharing a common “savoir-faire”). Common wares are less documented. They seem to be regionally produced and distributed, with a clear gap in traditions between western Syria and the Euphrates region. This phenomenon becomes less visible in the 6th and 7th c. AD.
D. Dixneuf, LRCW 5. Late Roman Coarse Wares, Cooking Wares and Amphorae in the Mediterranean. Archaeology and Archaeometry (Études Alexandrines 43), Alexandria , 2017
This paper aims to present a general assessment of the Late Roman amphorae from Apamea in Syria a... more This paper aims to present a general assessment of the Late Roman amphorae from Apamea in Syria and, most specifically, the amphorae from the excavations undertaken by the Belgian mission at Apamea between 2000 and 2010 in the north-eastern quarter of the city.
SLSA-Jahresbericht 2009, 2010
Continuity and changes in ceramic production and exchange in Syria during the Byzantine and Early... more Continuity and changes in ceramic production and exchange in Syria during the Byzantine and Early Islamic periods (5th – 8th c. A.D.), in A. Kralidis and A. Gkoutzioukostas (eds), Πρακτικά του Διεθνούς Συμποσίου Βυζάντιο και Αραβικός Κόσμος: Συνάντηση Πολιτισμών / Proceedings of the International Symposium Byzantium and the Arab World: Encounter of Civilizations (Thessaloniki, 16-18 December 2011). Thessaloniki, 2013, p. 517-544.
LAVAN L. (ed.), Local Economies? Production and Exchange of Inland Regions in Late Antiquity" (Late Antique Archaeology 10), 2010
Archaeometry 52, 4, , 2010
BONIFAY M. and TREGLIA J.-C. (eds.), LRCW2. Late Roman Coarse Wares, Cooking Wares and Amphorae in the Mediterranean. Archaeology and Archaeometry (BAR International Series 1662, 2), Archaeopress, Oxford, p. 701-714., 2007
The 6th International Conference on Late Roman Coarse Wares, Cooking Wares and Amphorae in the Me... more The 6th International Conference on Late Roman Coarse Wares, Cooking Wares and Amphorae in the Mediterranean: Archaeology and Archaeometry (LRCW 6) will be held in Agrigento (Sicily, Italy) from Tuesday 24th to Saturday 27th of May 2017. On Sunday 28th May there will be an opportunity for a post-congress excursion to Villa del Casale near Piazza Armerina (Enna).
After Barcelona (2002), Aix-en-Provence (2005), Parma-Pisa (2008), Thessaloniki (2011) and Alexandria (2014), Agrigento will host the conference organized by the Archaeological and Landscape Park of the Valley of the Temples, in collaboration with the University of Palermo and Soprintendenza of Agrigento.
The LRCW 6 Conference will comprise oral and poster presentations of Late Roman pottery found in the Mediterranean region.
Abstracts of 300 words maximum should be submitted to the conference address (lrcw6conference@gmail.com) in Word format including: title (in capitals), name(s), institution, email address of the author(s), and 5 key-words. The abstracts will be evaluated by the Scientific Committee. The deadline for abstract submission is 30th September 2016.
The deadline for registration and payment of fees is 31 December 2016.
by Romain DAVID, Mustafa Ahmad, Bettina Bader, Saskia Büchner, Katarzyna de Lellis-Danys, Bogusław Franczyk, Steven Matthews, Ulrike Nowotnick, Maria Paola Pellegrino, Mary Ownby, Agnes Vokaer, and Valentina Vezzoli
This bilingual English/Arabic manual is intended to accompany the training of future ceramic spec... more This bilingual English/Arabic manual is intended to accompany the training of future ceramic specialists in the Arab world. Resulting from the collaboration of four major institutions of French archaeology abroad: the Section française de la direction des Antiquités du Soudan (Sfdas), the Institut français d’archéologie orientale (Ifao), the Institut français du Proche-Orient (Ifpo) and the Centre français de recherche de la péninsule Arabique (Cefrepa), it draws on the recent work of specialists from the Nile Valley, the Near East and the Arabian Peninsula to shed light on the theoretical reflections that have enriched ceramic studies in recent decades. Providing a genuine field tool, this volume is nonetheless a skilfully illustrated collection of the contribution of ceramic studies to the understanding of human history.