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Tell Atchana, Alalakh. Volume 2. The Late Bronze II city : 2006 – 2010 excavation seasons / edited by Kutlu Aslihan Yener, Murat Akar, Mara T. Horowitz
Ouvrage
Publication: Istanbul : Koç University press, 2019 cop. Description: 2 vol. (LI-570 p.) : ill., cartes, plans, graph. ; 29 cmTitres associés: , The Late Bronze II city : 2006 – 2010 excavation seasonsISBN: 9786057685193.Langue: AnglaisPays: Turquie Auteur principal: Yener, Kutlu Aslihan, Editeur scientifique Co-auteur: Akar, Murat ; Horowitz, Mara T., Editeur scientifique, 1976-... Résumé: The excavations at Tell Atchana (Alalakh) are a part of long-range, broadly-based archaeological investigations in the Turkish state of Hatay’s Plain of Antioch, today called the Amuq Valley. Tell Atchana is located at the southern center of the valley close to the major westward bend of the Orontes River and was for nearly a thousand years the capital of a small Bronze Age principality called variably Alalakh and Mukish. This volume presents the major new archaeological campaing from 2006-2010, which was designed to revisit the phasing and dating of previously excavated strata, to explore untouched areas of the site, to establish a typology and seriation of local artifact types, and to study local cultural and political history in the dynamic and international Late Bronze II period. The Alalakh Excavations project’s ongoing research on chronology, political history, material culture, city landscapes, international relations, and many other topics is beginning to form a coherent picture of ancient Alalakh. Coming into focus is a small city with ancient roots that dared to play a hard game of territorial checkers with its larger LB II neighbor kingdoms and empires. Today Alalakh continues to engage and amaze as excavations and analyses reveal surprise after surprise. The Alalakh Excavations project has taken great care to include a wide variety of scholarly voices and opinions and to challenge preconceptions and conventional wisdom at every turn. In keeping with the tradition of sound methodology and perseverance begun by Woolley, and the interdisciplinary and international spirit of the Alalakh Excavations project, this volume now proudly presents the excavation results of LB II strata from 2006-2010. (Source : éditeur).Note de contenu: Comprend : Vol. 2a, Text ; Vol. 2b, Appendices Item type: Ouvrage
Holdings
Current library Call number Status Notes Date due Barcode
Lyon : MOM - Bibliothèque de la Maison de l'Orient et de la Méditerranée Libre accès AOR DS156.A771. T4 2019 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available Vol. 2a (Text) 149519
Lyon : MOM - Bibliothèque de la Maison de l'Orient et de la Méditerranée Libre accès AOR DS156.A771. T4 2019 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available Vol. 2b (Appendices) 149520
Nanterre : MSH Mondes - Bibliothèque d’archéologie et des sciences de l’Antiquité D.310/120 ALAL 2 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available BMRG31854

The Late Bronze II city : 2006 – 2010 excavation seasons

Bibliogr. p. XV-XLV. Notes bibliogr.

Comprend : Vol. 2a, Text ; Vol. 2b, Appendices

The excavations at Tell Atchana (Alalakh) are a part of long-range, broadly-based archaeological investigations in the Turkish state of Hatay’s Plain of Antioch, today called the Amuq Valley. Tell Atchana is located at the southern center of the valley close to the major westward bend of the Orontes River and was for nearly a thousand years the capital of a small Bronze Age principality called variably Alalakh and Mukish. This volume presents the major new archaeological campaing from 2006-2010, which was designed to revisit the phasing and dating of previously excavated strata, to explore untouched areas of the site, to establish a typology and seriation of local artifact types, and to study local cultural and political history in the dynamic and international Late Bronze II period. The Alalakh Excavations project’s ongoing research on chronology, political history, material culture, city landscapes, international relations, and many other topics is beginning to form a coherent picture of ancient Alalakh. Coming into focus is a small city with ancient roots that dared to play a hard game of territorial checkers with its larger LB II neighbor kingdoms and empires. Today Alalakh continues to engage and amaze as excavations and analyses reveal surprise after surprise. The Alalakh Excavations project has taken great care to include a wide variety of scholarly voices and opinions and to challenge preconceptions and conventional wisdom at every turn. In keeping with the tradition of sound methodology and perseverance begun by Woolley, and the interdisciplinary and international spirit of the Alalakh Excavations project, this volume now proudly presents the excavation results of LB II strata from 2006-2010.
(Source : éditeur)

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