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Die Bibliothek von Nysa am Mäander

Die Bibliothek von Nysa am Mäander

Since the studies on the Celsus Library in Ephesus, which opened new perspectives on the architecture of ancient libraries in general, several buildings had been identified as libraries based on specific features. The inscription names the function of the Celsus Library, and as a consequence the building provides fundamental information on the typology of ancient libraries in general: the main room has a rectangular form and three entrances and consists of a reading room, windows, a podium, and niches for bookcases, with access to the galleries and bookcases on the upper floor.

Water for the City, Fountains for the People: Monumental Fountains in the Roman East

Water for the City, Fountains for the People: Monumental Fountains in the Roman East

Although studies of monumental fountains of the Roman era have been abundant in recent decades, this is the first monograph to approach the genre principally from a functional standpoint with full attention to such matters as water systems, urban context, and practical utility. Prior studies, Richard argues, have relied too much on formal typology, dissolving fountains into mere ensembles of architectural components or isolating them from their urban contexts (1–14).

Défenses crétoises: Fortifications urbaines et défense du territoire en Crète aux époques classique et hellénistique

Défenses crétoises: Fortifications urbaines et défense du territoire en Crète aux époques classique et hellénistique

The fortifications of Crete are a persistent part of the island’s landscape, visible today looming over headlands and crossing hillsides, yet they had received little scholarly attention until this publication of Coutsinas’ copious research in 2013. This book focuses on the classical and Hellenistic fortifications of Crete, the periods when such defensive structures were most necessary; the coming of the Romans in ca. 67 B.C.E. brought centuries of internecine warfare and strife to an end.

Funerary Sculpture

Funerary Sculpture

This is the latest volume in the excellent series of publications of the finds from the Athenian Agora. It catalogues figured tombstones from the Classical to the Roman periods. Archaic finds are in Agora 11 (E.B. Harrison, Archaic and Archaistic Sculpture [Princeton 1965]), and some tombstones have been published elsewhere. The introductory section gives a history of the scholarship on grave monuments (ch. 1); a reasonably comprehensive survey of funerary sculpture in Athens (ch.

Corpus vasorum antiquorum. Germany 93. Berlin 13: Attisch rotfigurige Lekythen

Corpus vasorum antiquorum. Germany 93. Berlin 13: Attisch rotfigurige Lekythen

When it comes to the common Attic vase shape known as the lekythos, scholars have fixated on those produced in the special technique of white ground, the imagery of which is largely funerary and whose distribution was mostly limited to Attica. Thus, red-figure lekythoi have not received the attention they deserve for their more varied iconography, their wider distribution in the Mediterranean, and their role in Greek daily life.

Pottery Markets in the Ancient Greek World (8th–1st Centuries B.C.): Proceedings of the International Symposium Held at the Université libre de Bruxelles 19–21 June 2008

Pottery Markets in the Ancient Greek World (8th–1st Centuries B.C.): Proceedings of the International Symposium Held at the Université libre de Bruxelles 19–21 June 2008

In her introductory comments on “The Markets of Fine Wares,” Tsingarida refers to “a recent paper” (116) (M. Lawall, “Ceramics and Positivism Revisited: Greek Transport Amphoras and History,” in H. Parkins and C. Smith, eds., Trade, Traders and the Ancient City [London 1998] 75–101), in which I observed that transport amphoras were better indications of trade than fine wares because the latter were linked only to a narrow sector of the economy. The original date of publication (not the 2005 reprint cited by Tsingarida) is important.

The Transport Amphorae and Trade of Cyprus

The Transport Amphorae and Trade of Cyprus

The book under review is the third volume in the Gösta Enbom Monographs series, which focuses on the research of transport amphoras and trade in Cyprus to provide new information on the economic history of the island. Lawall and Lund, the organizers of the Canadian and Danish Institutes at Athens workshop and also the editors of the volume, are scholars with great experience and knowledge of transport amphora issues and the economic dimensions they bring to the study of the ancient societies.

Kleinasiatisch-Gräko-Persische Kunstwerke im Archäologischen Museum von Istanbul

Kleinasiatisch-Gräko-Persische Kunstwerke im Archäologischen Museum von Istanbul

Karagöz, a long time curator of the sculpture collection at the Istanbul Archaeological Museum and a leader of the museum’s excavations at the Marmaray-Üsküdar railway line under the Bosporus, has previously authored two books, one on ancient stelae in Anatolia (Anadolu’dan Mezar Stelleri: Arkaik, Greko Pers, Hellenistik, Roma, Bizans çağları [Istanbul 1984]) and another on earthquakes in antiquity (Eskiçağ’da Depremler [Istanbul 2005]), and a range of papers on finds and monuments dating from the Achaemenid through the Byzant

Complex Communities: The Archaeology of Early Iron Age West-Central Jordan

Complex Communities: The Archaeology of Early Iron Age West-Central Jordan

The excellent volume under review is an updated expansion of a Ph.D. dissertation written by the author in 2007 at the University of Pennsylvania. In this volume, the author presents the archaeological evidence and discusses the significance and underlying mechanisms of the appearance of small-scale sedentary settlements in the arid regions of Early Iron Age (late second–early first millennia B.C.E.) west-central Jordan.

The Ayl to Ras an-Naqab Archaeological Survey, Southern Jordan 2005–2007

The Ayl to Ras an-Naqab Archaeological Survey, Southern Jordan 2005–2007

The Ayl to Ras an-Naqab Archaeological Survey, Southern Jordan 2005–2007  is the latest contribution of MacDonald’s archaeological survey (ARNAS) of the “Edomite plateau” in southern Jordan, the area between the Wadi el-Hasa and the Ras en-Naqab Plateau, overlooking the Hisma Desert to the south (where Edomite remains are minimal).

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