Στα περιεχόμενα του
περιοδικού «ΧΡΟΝΙΚΑ», τ. 5, για την Ευρωπαϊκή και Μεσογειακή Αρχαιολογία, διαβάζουμε:
- The Megara of the Thesmophoria: Reconciling the Textual and
Archaeological Records - K. R L McLardy, Monash University
- Imagi(ni)ng ‘The Palace of Minos’: A view from the Architectural
Drawings - G. Sofanos, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens
- Etruscan Genucilia Ware: A Discussion on Its History and Past
Scholarship - Al. Mazurek, University at Bufalo
- Hidden Treasures in Forgotten Archives:Exploring the Archaeology of
Greek Caves into the archives and the bulletin of the Hellenic Speleological
Society[1]
- K. P. Trimmis, Cardif University
- Bronze Age Flower Power: The Minoan Use and Social Signifcance of Safron
and Crocus Flowers - R. Dewan, University of Oxford
- The politics of currency and the use of images of the past in the
formation of the Cypriot national identity - C. Alexandrou, Trinity
College
- Images of Horsemen in Battle on Works of Thracian Art - M. Avramova,
The Antiquity of Southeastern Europe Research Center, University of Warsaw
- The Vandalism of the Mosaics in the Severan Synagogue in Hammat Tiberias
- R. Kasmin, New York University
Interviews:
Interview with Dr. Emily Holt, 2014-2015 IEMA Postdoctoral Fellow - Ryan E. Hughes, University at Bufalo
ΠΗΓΗ: Chronika, The Institute for European and Mediterranean Archaeology, Graduate Student Journal, vol. V., The Institute for European and Mediterranean Archaeology, The State University of New York at Buffalo, 2015.
ΣΗΜΕΙΩΣΙΣ:
[1] The Hellenic Speleological Society / HSS was founded in 1950 with the aim of exploring and studying the cave forms of Greece. In these 65 years of research more than 10,000 caves have been recorded in the H.S.S. archive. The H.S.S. has also been publishing an annual bulletin on Greek caves since 1950. The archives of the H.S.S. and the Bulletin volumes have been thoroughly researched in order to highlight the archaeological data from the caves from the Neolithic to the Middle Ages. A spatial analysis of the data has provided information about the geographical distribution of the archaeological cave sites in Greece, the type of their uses and the type of the caves that people seemed to prefer to exploit. The main focus is how the caves showcase the different lifeways of their users. Additionally, it demonstrates the actual number of caves that were used in a specific area during a specific era. – ΔΙΑΒΑΣΤΕ το ΕΔΩ.
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