Corinthian wares and the West (original) (raw)

Studia Antiqua et Archaeologica 25/2 (December 2019)

Studia Antiqua et Archaeologica, 2020

Studia Antiqua et Archaeologica 25/1 (August 2019) http://saa.uaic.ro/issues/xxv-1/ CUPRINS – CONTENTS – SOMMAIRE PAPERS OF THE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE Genealogies in the Ancient World Tartu (Estonia) 2016 —Sebastian FINK & Vladimir SAZONOV ——Introduction —Sebastian FINK & Vladimir SAZONOV ——Complex Genealogies in Mesopotamia: From Mesilim to Tukultī-Ninurta I —Siim MÕTTUS ——On the Lineage of King Telepinu —Mait KÕIV ——Manipulating Genealogies: Pheidon of Argos and the Stemmas of the Argive, Macedonian, Spartan and Median Kings —Jakub KUCIAK ——Der Mythos im Dienst der Politik: das Beispiel der euripideischen Tragödie Ion —Stephan SCHARINGER ——A Genealogy of Pythagoras —Tarmo KULMAR ——The Origin Myths as a Possible Basis for Genealogy of the Inca Imperial Dynasty in Ancient Peru ARTICLES —Radu-Ștefan BALAUR ——Community Structure, Economy and Sharing Strategies in the Chalcolithic Settlement of Hăbășești, Romania —Casandra BRAȘOVEANU ——Settlement Spatial Distribution from Late Chalcolithic to Early Hallstatt. Case Study: Cracău-Bistrița Depression —Anna LAZAROU ——Prehistoric Gorgoneia: a Critical Reassessment —Alexandr LOGINOV & Vladimir SHELESTIN ——La perception du sceptre en Grèce de l’époque d’Homère et de Mycènes à la lumière des parallèles de l’Orient Antique —Larisa PECHATNOVA ——Die Hypomeiones in Sparta —Elena NIKITYUK ——Kalokagathia: to a Question on Formation of an Image of the Ideal Person in Antiquity and During Modern Time —Maxim M. KHOLOD ——On the Representation and Self-representation of the Argead Rulers (before Alexander the Great): the Title Basileus —Dragana NIKOLIĆ ——Stoneworkers’ Hercules. A Comment on an Upper Moesian Inscription —José María ZAMORA CALVO ——Remarks on the so-called Plotinus’ Sarcophagus (‘Vatican Museums’, inv. 9504) —Cornel BALLA ——Some Considerations on the Praefectus ripae legionis primae Ioviae cohortis et secundae Herculiae musculorum Scythicorum et classis in plateypegiis —Felix-Adrian TENCARIU & Andrei ASĂNDULESEI ——‘Rock Salt Around the Clock’. Ethnoarchaeological Research Concerning Traditional Extraction of Salt for Animal Consumption

The Tenth Annual Byvanck Lecture - Guy D. R. Sanders - Recent Finds from Ancient Corinth: How Little Things Make Big Differences

BABESCH Byvanck Lectures, 2016

The location of Corinth at the Isthmus has ensured that from the Neolithic to the beginnings of the Modern Greek State, the city has had a central role in the commerce of the Eastern Mediterranean. Its location is also responsible for the poverty, in the archaeological record, of the famous wealth of the city with the result that researchers have been forced to concentrate on the mundane. Over the past 20 years we have adopted Northern European methodologies replacing those traditionally used by Classical archaeologists and, as a result, the little things we find have made big differences to the way we think about chronology, material culture and the place of Corinth in the past. Corinth’s cultural “reach”, both ancient and modern, means that these changes have a local regional and even European-wide impact. Tuesday 29 November 2016 at the National Museum of Antiquities in Leiden

Corinthian Developments in the Study of Trade in the Fifth Century

Hesperia, 1981

A S A RESULT of a major project carried out at Corinth during excavations of the ..-I.American School in 1977, 1978, and 1979, considerable information about Corinthian imports and exports of wine and oil and other produce has come to light.2 The 'All pieces not otherwise identified are from Corinth. I thank D. Adamesteanu for permission to illustrate the amphora from Schirone; P. Pelagatti, those from Camarina; E. DeMiro, that in Agrigento; and the owner of the early 5th-century Corinthian B jar, who kindly allowed me to study it and include it here. Plate 98 a. C-72-162, p. H. 0.625 m.; see footnote 7 below. b. Museo Nazionale, Policoro 38467, H. 0.631 m.; Necropolis at Schirone. For another view of the same jar, cf. Adamesteanu, footnote 9 below, loc. cit. Jars of this period can reach a height of 0.74 m.

Kees Neeft, ARGILOS, Corinthian Pottery, corrections January, 2022

2020

Much to my profound dismay, the printing process has rendered the photographic illustrations in the catalogue virtually illegible. Therefore, to properly serve scolarship, I have presented the original version of the catalogue, together with a few other relevant entries, as a separate entity here.