Aspa Kostageorgou | UNIVERSITY OF THESSALY, GREECE (original) (raw)
MSc in Field Arcaheology and Material Culture
University of Thessaly
BA in Archaeology and History of Art University of Ioannina
less
Related Authors
National Institute of Archaeology and Museum, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences
Uploads
Papers by Aspa Kostageorgou
MAGS 2023 Short Reports Series, 2024
The following paper was presented during the fifth Maritime Archaeology Graduate Symposium (MAGS ... more The following paper was presented during the fifth Maritime Archaeology Graduate Symposium (MAGS 2023) that took place at the Archaeological Research Unit (ARU) of the University of Cyprus (1st - 4th of March 2023) and was supported by the Honor Frost Foundation and the University of Cyprus.
This paper focuses on the study of seventy-four shipwrecks as evidence for the understanding of complex navigation patterns and the formation of maritime trade networks in the Aegean during the Middle and Late Byzantine periods. An analysis based on the spatial and chronological distribution of wrecks and on the nature of their cargo has been followed. The aim of this study is to place the maritime archaeological data in the broader historical and archaeological context of the period, for the interpretation of the mechanisms of maritime trade activity and the distinguished characteristics they present.
MAGS 2023 Short Reports Series, 2024
The following paper was presented during the fifth Maritime Archaeology Graduate Symposium (MAGS ... more The following paper was presented during the fifth Maritime Archaeology Graduate Symposium (MAGS 2023) that took place at the Archaeological Research Unit (ARU) of the University of Cyprus (1st - 4th of March 2023) and was supported by the Honor Frost Foundation and the University of Cyprus.
This paper focuses on the study of seventy-four shipwrecks as evidence for the understanding of complex navigation patterns and the formation of maritime trade networks in the Aegean during the Middle and Late Byzantine periods. An analysis based on the spatial and chronological distribution of wrecks and on the nature of their cargo has been followed. The aim of this study is to place the maritime archaeological data in the broader historical and archaeological context of the period, for the interpretation of the mechanisms of maritime trade activity and the distinguished characteristics they present.