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At the northern frontier of Near Eastern archaeology : recent research on Caucasia and Anatolia in the Bronze Age : publications of the Georgian-Italian Shida Kartli Archaeological Project, 2 : proceedings of the international Humboldt-Kolleg Venice, January 9th-January 12th, 2013 = An der Nordgrenze der vorderasiatischen Archäologie : neue Forschung über Kaukasien und Anatolien in der Bronzezeit / Elena Rova et Monica Tonussi, editors
Ouvrage
Appartient aux collections: Subartu, Centre européen de recherches sur la Haute Mésopotamie, Turnhout, 1995 -, 1780-3233, 38
Publication: Turnhout : Brepols, 2017 Description: 1 vol. (VII-587 p.) : ill., cartes, plans, graph. ; 30 cmCollection : Subartu; 38, ISSN 1780-3233Titre parallèle: An der Nordgrenze der vorderasiatischen Archäologie neue Forschung über Kaukasien und Anatolien in der BronzezeitTitre de forme: Congrès, Venise, 2013ISBN: 9782503548975.Langue: Anglais ; Allemand ; de résumé, AnglaisPays: Belgique Autre auteur: Rova, Elena, Editeur scientifique, 19..-...., archéologue; Tonussi, Monica, Editeur scientifique Résumé: 35 papers, originally presented by an international group of researchers at a conference held in Venice in January 2013, present the results of the last 20 years of archaeological research about the pre-classical cultures of the Caucasus and Anatolia, and analyse the latter in the wider framework of their changing relations with those of the Ancient Near East and of the Eurasian steppes. The volume covers a wide chronological span - from the late 5th to the early 1st millennium BC, and includes contributions about a wide range of topics (reports of archaeological excavations and surveys, chronology, economy, social organisation of the ancient populations, technology, long-distance exchange of raw materials and artefacts, archaeometallurgy, landscape archaeology, etc.). According to the most recent developments of research, these are investigated in a remarkably interdisciplinary perspective. The participation to the conference of well-recognised experts working not only in different countries of the Southern Caucasus and in Anatolia (in present-day Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Turkey) but also in the North-Caucasian republics of the present-day Russian Federation offered a rare opportunity to compare and discuss recent trends of archaeological research in these different regions. Therefore, this volume represents a fundamental contribution to both Near Eastern and Caucasian Archaeology. (Sources : 4e de couv.). Note de contenu: Table des matières Mots libres: Kouro-Araxe culture . Item type: Ouvrage
Holdings
Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Lyon : MOM - Bibliothèque de la Maison de l'Orient et de la Méditerranée Libre accès AOR DS56.3. A7 2017 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 148192
Nanterre : MSH Mondes - Bibliothèque d’archéologie et des sciences de l’Antiquité P 813 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available BMRG27595

Contributions en anglais et en allemand, résumés en anglais.

Bibliogr. en fin de certaines contributions. Notes bibliogr.

Table des matières http://www.ub.unibas.ch/tox/IDSBB/006719796/PDF

35 papers, originally presented by an international group of researchers at a conference held in Venice in January 2013, present the results of the last 20 years of archaeological research about the pre-classical cultures of the Caucasus and Anatolia, and analyse the latter in the wider framework of their changing relations with those of the Ancient Near East and of the Eurasian steppes. The volume covers a wide chronological span - from the late 5th to the early 1st millennium BC, and includes contributions about a wide range of topics (reports of archaeological excavations and surveys, chronology, economy, social organisation of the ancient populations, technology, long-distance exchange of raw materials and artefacts, archaeometallurgy, landscape archaeology, etc.). According to the most recent developments of research, these are investigated in a remarkably interdisciplinary perspective. The participation to the conference of well-recognised experts working not only in different countries of the Southern Caucasus and in Anatolia (in present-day Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Turkey) but also in the North-Caucasian republics of the present-day Russian Federation offered a rare opportunity to compare and discuss recent trends of archaeological research in these different regions. Therefore, this volume represents a fundamental contribution to both Near Eastern and Caucasian Archaeology. (Sources : 4e de couv.)

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