ΑΡΘΡΑ | 2013
Βιβλιοκρισία του: The complete archaeology of Greece: from hunter-gatherers to the 20th century A.D
Bryn Mawr Classical Review
Kontes, Ζ., 2013. Online review of J. L. Bintliff, The Complete Archaeology of Greece: From Hunter-Gatherers to the 20th Century A.D. (Oxford/Chichester 2012), Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2013.11.49.
Representing, Objectifying, and Framing the Body at Late Bronze Age Knossos
Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies 56:1 (June 2013): 1-25.
This paper explores how the human form is depicted, objectified and contextualized, in order to clarify the complex relationship between ‘representation’ and ‘reality’, and to investigate the various ways the body is bounded.Building the Bronze Age. Architectural and Social Change on the Greek Mainland during Early Helladic III, Middle Helladic and Late Helladic I (2 vols)
Groningen
Βιβλιοκρισία του: Sparta: Menelaion I. The Bronze Age (2 vols.)
Bryn Mawr Classical Review
Wright, J.C., 2013. Online review of H. W. Catling, Sparta: Menelaion I. The Bronze Age (2 vols.) [BSA Supplementary volume No. 45] (London 2009), Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2013.11.40.
A manifesto for a social zooarchaeology. Swans and other beings in the Mesolithic
Archaeological Dialogues 20:2 (2013):111-136.
Recent, non-anthropocentric explorations of the interaction between human and non-human animals have resulted in many groundbreaking studies. In this ‘animalturn’, zooarchaeology, which deals with and has access to the material traces of animals that existed alongside humans over the last 2.5 million years, could occupy a privileged and influential position.The Neolithic Settlement of Knossos in Crete: New Evidence for the Early Occupation of Crete and the Aegean Islands
Philadelphia
Changing Technological and Social Environments in the Second Half of the Third Millennium BC in Cyprus
in Frankel, D., Webb, J.M. & Lawrence S. (eds), Archaeology in Environment and Technology: Intersections and Transformations (New York, 2013): 135-148.
Two major archaeologically recognisable cultural entities are visible in mid-third millennium BC Cyprus: an indigenous Late Chalcolithic dependent on hoe-based agriculture and a migrant Philia Early Bronze Age with a radically different social and technological system, including the cattle/plough complex.Agricultural Economies and Pyrotechnologies in Bronze Age Jordan and Cyprus
in Frankel, D., Webb, J.M. & Lawrence S. (eds), Archaeology in Environment and Technology: Intersections and Transformations (New York, 2013): 123-134.
The development of early civilisations in the eastern Mediterranean and Near East is particularly noteworthy for the variety of paths whereby agrarian societies became increasingly differentiated, often invoking the periodic amalgamation and abandonment of urban communities.Managing the Archaeological Heritage: The Case of Akrotiri, Thera (Santorini)
στο Alexopoulos, G. & Fouseki, K. (επιμ.), Managing Archaeological Sites [Conservation and Management of Archaeological Sites 15:1 (2013)]: 109-120.
This article deals with the archaeological site of Akrotiri on the Cycladic island of Thera (Santorini), Greece, and demonstrates, in particular, how the construction of a new protective shelter has provided an opportunity for enhancing the present and future conservation and management of the site in accordance with, among other values, the aspirations of the local community.Domestic architecture in the Early Bronze Age of western Anatolia: the row-houses of Troy I
Anatolian Studies 63 (2013): 17-33.
Excavators have put forward opposing interpretations of the architectural sequence at the Early Bronze Age site of Troy. C.W. Blegen suggested that freestanding 'megaron' houses determined the visual pattern of the earliest settlement, while M.O. Korfmann compared Troy I to the circular layout of the Early Bronze Age site at Demircihüyük (the ‘Anatolian settlement plan’).Hector W. Catling. 1924-15 February 2013
Antiquity, Online Tributes, 2013.
Hector Catling, who died on 15 February 2013 aged 88, was one of the great archaeologists of his generation. He made major contributions to our understanding of the past of Greece and Cyprus.The settlement at Dhaskalio (The sanctuary on Keros and the origins of Aegean ritual practice: the excavations of 2006–2008. Volume I)
Oxford/Oakville