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         Albanian Archaeology:     more detail
  1. New Directions in Albanian Archaeology: Studies Presented to Muzafer Korkuti (International Centre for Albanian Archaeology Monograph) (International Centre for Albanian Archaeology Monograph)
  2. Interviews With Ali Pacha of Joanina: In the Autumn of 1812, With Some Particulars of Epirus, and the Albanians of the Present Day by Peter Oluf Brndsted, 1999-04

61. Albaniaonline.com
Albaniaonline.com is the comprehesnive albanian directory, with Free Email,Discussion Forums, Chat, Home Arts and Entertainment archaeology
http://directory.albaniaonline.com/arts_and_entertainment/archaeology/index.shtm
[an error occurred while processing this directive] Home Free E-mail - News Discussions - Chat - Personals
Albania Online Search: All of Alb. Online This Category Only Within your results Help Quick Links > Most Voted Sites What's Cool New Sites Most Visited ... Suggest a Site
All Categories Personal Web Sites Alb. Owned Companies
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People and Culture:Culture@

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Please note that this is part one of the many things to come here at AlbaniaOnline.com and many links on the bottom and the design will change eventually but here it is.
Daily News, Yellow Pages, Postcards, Personals and more will be introduced one by one in the near future. About Us Contact Us Privacy Contributors ... © 2000 Albania Online.com

62. Art Culture For Albania
archaeology of Albaniaarchaeology of Albania-Art and archaeology of ancient albanian Identities Myth and History by Stephanie Schwandner-Sievers
http://www.escapeartist.com/albania/art.html
Balkans Index Index for Albania Albania Art Prints - Albania Art Prints
Albanian Culture - Albanian Culture
Albanian Folk Culture - Albanian Folk Culture
Antic city of Apollonia - Antic city of Apollonia
Archaeology in Albania- Archaeology in Albania
Archaeology of Albania- Archaeology of Albania -Art and archaeology of ancient Albania (Illyria).
Art, culture, literature - Art, culture, literature
Cultural page about Albania and Kosovo - Cultural page about Albania and Kosovo
Drita Albanian Folk Orchestra - Drita Albanian Folk Orchestra - Drita announces new CD release. This folk orchestra presents traditional and popular music of Albania and Kosova performed on authentic Albanian instruments.
Elvira Dones Homepage - Elvira Dones Homepage - Her website contains her books, short stories, and work in progress in Albanian, Italian, French and German.
Enver Hoxha Reference Archive - Enver Hoxha Reference Archive - Documents and speeches by Enver Hoxha on Albania, economics, politics, Marxism, Stalin, China, Maoism, imperialism and revolution. Ethnologue: Albania - Ethnologue: Albania Kadare's "The Concert" - Kadare's "The Concert" - A brief review of the novel.

63. Welcome To Frosina.org :: An Albanian Immigrant And Cultural Resource
Here you will find a wealth of information related to Albania. archaeology ofAlbania Date posted Friday, August 6, 2004 Author Dr. Karl M. Petruso,
http://www.frosina.org/about/infobits.asp?id=144

64. European Authorities & Contacts
researcher in classical archaeology and can be contacted as below, in albanian, Institute of Maritime archaeology (Nationalmuseets Marinarkæologiske
http://www.abc.se/~m10354/mar/authmain.htm
Each country has its own authorities dealing with underwater archaeology, wreck registration, and diving regulations. This is a short list mainly of European authorities, agencies, organisations, institutes, contacts and legislation. In some cases, interesting or relevant link lists have also been included. You may find more info from the separate pages of museums societies academic departments diving organisations ... worldwide authorities and There is also a couple of pan-European cultural heritage organisations worth mentioning: European Heritage and Baltic Sea Heritage Co-operation I cannot guarantee against errors. Please send a mail for additions or corrections. (A similar contact list used to be available from PADI Project AWARE , before thy re-arranged their website.) P.Å., editor rev. nov '04 Albania Qendra e Studimeve Detare e Arkeologjise Nenujore (QSDAN) The name translates to "Centre of Marine and Underwater Archaeology Studies". This is a private non-profit organisation founded in September 2001, located in Durres, co-operating with the Italian universities in Genova, Venezia, Pisa, Bari and Sassari. Rr. "Deshmoret", Pall. 959, Lagja 17, Durres, Albania

65. New Page 1
To date, INA and the Nautical archaeology Program have participated in over 125nautical Underwater survey of the albanian south Adriatic coast.
http://ina.tamu.edu/FieldProjectsGeneral.htm
Nautical Archaeology Research Projects Conducted by INA Staff Research Associates, and Faculty Members of the Nautical Archaeology Program at To date, INA and the Nautical Archaeology Program have participated in over 125 nautical archaeology projects in some 33 countries on five continents: ALBANIA AUSTRALIA BAHAMAS BAHRAIN ... USA ALBANIA Strait of Otranto . Underwater survey of the Albanian south Adriatic coast. AUSTRALIA * Freemantle. Excavation of the early 17th-century ship Batavia BAHAMAS Highborn Cay. Excavation of a 16th-century ship. BAHRAIN * Bahrain Island. Underwater survey of the Bahrain archipelago. BULGARIA * Black Sea. Underwater survey of the Bulgarian Black Sea coast. Kiten. Excavation of an Ottoman Ship located in Urdoviza Bay. CANADA * Ontario. Photographic survey of the early 19th-century ships Hamilton and Scourge * Ontario. Recording of the War of 1812 ships Tecumseh Newash , and Nancy CAYMAN ISLANDS, U.K. * Cayman Islands. Underwater survey of the Cayman archipelago. * Grand Cayman.

66. Greek011299
Davis, the Carl W. Blegen Professor of Greek archaeology at UC, is codirectorof the UC-albanian archaeological team which traveled to the Apollonia region
http://www.cincypost.com/living/1999/greek011299.html
UC team unearths Stone Age artifacts
By Sharon Moloney, Post staff reporter University of Cincinnati archaeologist Jack L. Davis and his team went to Albania to study traces of Greek colonists in that country in the seventh century B.C. 'That's what we thought we were going to do,' Davis said. 'But as often happens in archaeology, you don't find what you think you will.' Davis and his team instead found an amazing treasure trove of evidence of a much older society, a site apparently settled by humans from the Stone Age, Paleolithic times. In fact, they literally stumbled over the evidence. 'Large amounts of material from the Stone Age - which are typically found in caves - were strewn all over the surface,' Davis said. 'We didn't have to dig for them. They were actually right on the surface. There were too many even to be picked up.' Davis, the Carl W. Blegen Professor of Greek Archaeology at UC, is co-director of the UC-Albanian archaeological team which traveled to the Apollonia region of Albania in May and June. The team will return for further work next June and July. What the team unexpectedly found were ancient Stone Age artifacts, including axes, and other tools for pounding, scraping and cutting. Equally important, Davis said, was the debris left from the tool-making. Studying such debris, archaeologists can determine how tools were made, what they were used for (for example, farming) and from there go on to learn why and when human societies went from hunting to domesticating animals to planting food.

67. Andean And Tiwanaku Archaeology Page - Archaeology, Cultural Heritage And Politi
archaeology, Cultural Heritage and Politics in the National Museums of the a majority Macedonian population and an important 33% albanian population.
http://www.tiwanakuarcheo.net/1_main/saa2002.htm
The version of following paper is as it should have been read at the SAA meetings, prepared for a 15-minute presentation.
SAA MEETINGS 2002, FRIDAY MORNING MARCH 22, 2002
General Session: ARCHAEOLOGICAL REPRESENTATION IN THE MUSEUM CONTEXT
Alvaro Higueras
To papers list
Archaeology, Cultural Heritage and Politics in the National Museums of the ex-Yugoslavia
Original abstract: The conversion of the ex-republics of Yugoslavia into new nations has launched the creation of basic state institutions in each country. National museums are one institution recreated in this process. I will compare the archaeological presentations prepared or programmed for the National museums of Bosnia, Kosovo, and Macedonia to the historical, ethnic, and cultural reality of the new nation. And I will contrast the role of the archaeology section in these museums to other parts of the exhibit. I will conclude by discussing how “messages” provided in museums contrast to current situations where, after years of war and peace, these countries are still changing.
In this paper I explore recent trajectories and perspectives of cultural heritage conservation and National Museum in three territories that were part of Yugoslavia before 1992: Bosnia-Herzegovina and Macedonia, today independent countries; and Kosovo, a territory still in the Yugoslav federation but under control of NATO, the UN, and a local government. I will emphasize the situation in Kosovo, as it is the source of the primary data of this paper, and will compare it to the scenarios of the first two countries. Kosovo and Bosnia and Herzegovina have had severe destruction and have urgency to reorganize museum and institutes for monuments. These institutions need to rebuild presentations of the past in the museums halls and rebuild historic towns by restoring World-class heritage monuments burned and bombed during the war. The situation in Macedonia is quite less dramatic.

68. ECOCLUB, International Ecotourism Monthly, Issue 52, September 2003
Preston Candover to assist the albanian authorities with the archaeology and archaeology and conservation in Albania suffered from lack of financial
http://ecoclub.com/news/052/interview.html
ISSN 1108-8931 INTERNATIONAL ECOTOURISM MONTHLY Year 5-Issue 52, Sep 2003 EDITORIAL ECOCLUB INTERVIEW THE EXPERT ECO FOCUS ECO WORLD* ECO EVENTS ... Sponsored by:
*Columbia College, USA
The ECOCLUB Interview
Index of Past Interviews Sir Patrick Fairweather
Director, The Butrint Foundation
Sir Patrick is the Director of the Butrint Foundation, which funds archaeology and conservation in the World Heritage Site of Butrint, in south-western Albania, since 1997. A former member of the British Diplomatic Service, his career took him to more remote or less well-known parts of the world such as Laos, Angola, Sao Tome and Albania, as well as Rome (twice), Paris, Brussels (EU) and Athens. What and who are the Butrint Foundation, what was the main reason behind the Foundation's creation and who took the initiative? The Butrint Foundation is a non-profit organisation set up in 1993 by Lord Rothschild and Lord Sainsbury of Preston Candover to assist the Albanian authorities with the archaeology and conservation of the World Heritage Site of Butrint. Lord Rothschild, who has a house in Corfu almost opposite Butrint, was struck by the extraordinary beauty of the site when he was first able to visit in the early 1990s after the collapse of the Communist regime.

69. Hebrew University Archaeologists Reveal Additional Sections Of Ancient Synagogue
are being conducted under the auspices of the Institute of archaeology of theHebrew University of Jerusalem and the albanian Academy of Sciences.
http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2004-10/huoj-hu101904.php
Public release date: 19-Oct-2004
E-mail Article

Contact: Jerry Barach
jerryb@savion.huji.ac.il

Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Hebrew University archaeologists reveal additional sections of ancient synagogue in Albania
Excavations carried out this fall at an ancient synagogue in Albania have uncovered additional sections of the impressive structure. The excavations, now in their second season, are being conducted under the auspices of the Institute of Archaeology of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and the Albanian Academy of Sciences. The synagogue, which dates from the 5th or 6th century C.E., is located in the city of Saranda, a coastal city in Albania, opposite the Greek island of Corfu. The synagogue underwent various periods of use, including its conversion into a church at its last stage, prior to being abandoned. Initial excavations at the site were conducted some 20 years ago when Albania was under tight Communist rule. At that time that the building was identified as a church. Working in the past few weeks at the site, in the framework of the joint expedition, have been Professors Gideon Foerster and Ehud Netzer of the Hebrew University Institute of Archaeology, together with Albanian archaeologists Kosta Lako and Etleva Nalbani. Also working this year on the project was a French expert on mosaics, Marie-Pat Raynaud. This year the archaeologists concentrated on revealing additional rooms adjoining the elongated hall whose mosaic floors depict such features as a seven-branched candelabrum (menorah) flanked by a citron (etrog) and a ram's horn (shofar), symbols associated with Jewish holidays. The newly exposed rooms (which in fact were an extension of elongated hall) contain more of the decorative mosaic paving, including representations of fish, a popular theme in the ancient world. The joint Albanian-Hebrew University delegation intends to return soon to the site to continue uncovering the basilica section of the synagogue, which today lies under a main street in Saranda. The construction of the basilica, close to the elongated hall, was the last major development of the synagogue.

70. ArchaeoBlog
Rescue archaeology I Archaeologist faces challenges in Fourth Ward the Instituteof archaeology of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and the albanian
http://archaeoblog.blogspot.com/2004/10/rescue-archaeology-i-archaeologist.html
@import url(http://www.blogger.com/css/navbar/main.css); @import url(http://www.blogger.com/css/navbar/1.css); BlogThis!
ArchaeoBlog
News and views on archaeology.
Monday, October 25, 2004
Rescue archaeology I Archaeologist faces challenges in Fourth Ward
The future of the Fourth Ward site where Houston Independent School District wants to build a two-school campus remains on hold while Fred McGhee determines what to do about the site's history.
"There has not been any really meaningful archaeology conducted in the area before," said McGhee, an African-American archaeologist and historical anthropologist. "My goal is to try to do that."
On a recent autumn morning, McGhee leaned on a fence surrounding the troubled piece of land in the historic neighborhood almost in the shadow of Houston's downtown skyline. A rooster crowing in a nearby backyard sounded like a voice from the past.
Rescue archaeology II Mining drives need for archaeologists
Two men are crouched over, stabbing orange and blue flags among the hillside sagebrush while two others scan the hilltop.
"Found a scrape," one yells, referring to a tiny rock tool that likely was used to scrape animal hides clean hundreds of years ago - not significant enough to place in the National Museum of American History, but one of the big finds of the day.

71. Glossary Of English To Albanian Translations - Terms And Definitions In Various
English to albanian Glossary archaeology (0) English to albanian GlossaryArchitecture (0) English to albanian Glossary Art, Arts Crafts,
http://www.proz.com/glossary-translations/english-to-albanian-glossaries
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72. British Archaeology, No 50, December 1999: Features
The site is being excavated by the Museum of London archaeology Service (MoLAS)in advance The town also plays a significant role in albanian history.
http://www.britarch.ac.uk/ba/ba50/ba50feat.html
ISSN 1357-4442 Editor: Simon Denison
Issue no 50, December 1999
FEATURES
Dancing with the dead in a mass grave
Neolithic communities repeatedly handled the decaying bodies of their dead, writes Mary Baxter Every society must dispose of its dead in one way or another. The taboos surrounding death, however, are so deep-seated that any methods of disposal that differ from the norm are viewed by many today with a peculiar mixture of horror and fascination. For at least 3,000 years in Europe, and perhaps longer, the norm has been to dispose of the dead by either cremation or inhumation in a single grave. In the Neolithic period, however, from around 6,500-4,000 years ago, a completely different practice took place - disposal of the body first in one place, followed by a `secondary burial' of the whole body, or part of it, somewhere else. The great communal tombs of the Neolithic - earthen or stone long barrows, or passage graves - typically contain an apparently jumbled mass of bones from numerous bodies. The skeletons are often disarticulated (that is, the bones have been moved out of their natural skeletal positions), and frequently bones are missing. In short, Neolithic communities did not simply dispose of their dead; they handled them repeatedly and shifted them about. Antiquaries of the last century interpreted the sight of massed, disarticulated bone as the sign of lack of respect for the dead, or worse: cannibalism and ritual sacrifice, supported by written evidence from classical authors. More recent analysis has shown that the reordering of human remains was not random but often the result of careful arrangement. Examples include skeletons of men separated from women, and adults from children.

73. Ancient Synagogue Excavated In Albania
First discovered by albanian archaeologists twenty years ago, the site was onlyrecently investigated by the archaeology Institute of the albanian Academy
http://www.isjm.org/news/article11.htm
Ancient Synagogue Excavated in Albania
Archaeology Magazine (January/ February 2004) reports the excavation of a late antique synagogue in Saranda, Albania, a coastal town located across from the Greek island of Corfu. First discovered by Albanian archaeologists twenty years ago, the site was only recently investigated by the Archaeology Institute of the Albanian Academy of Sciences, together with archaeologists from the Hebrew University Institute of Archaeology. Jewish imagery is depicted on the mosaic floor of the excavated structures and clearly identified it as an early synagogue, one of a growing number now known from continental Europe. Other ancient synagogues have been excavated in recent years in Plovdiv (Bulgaria), Stobi (Macedonia) and Bova Marina (Italy). For full story see: "Albanian Synagogue Surfaces" by Jennifer Pinkowski in Archaeology Magazine, 57:1
Back to home page
Back to list of news articles I nternational Survey of Jewish Monuments
c/o Jewish Heritage Research Center
Box 210, 118 Julian Pl.

74. Lawrence University Press Release
albanian Excavations Focus of Lawrence University Archaeological Lecture Davis presents the slideillustrated lecture “archaeology in Albania A 21st
http://www.lawrence.edu/dept/public_affairs/media/release/0405/albania.html
Contact: Rick Peterson, Manager of News Services, 920/832-6590
For Immediate Release
April 7, 2005 Albanian Excavations Focus of Lawrence University Archaeological Lecture APPLETON, WIS. The collapse of the Soviet Union and the fall of communism in the early 1990s opened the borders in Eastern Europe, facilitating numerous collaborative research projects between Albanian scholars and foreign archaeologists into the history of that country. A specialist in Aegean prehistory, Davis will outline some of the current field work projects in progess in Albania, with a special emphasis on research he personally has directed around ancient Dyrrachium and Apollonia, two major Greek colonies established in the 7th- and 6th-centuries B.C. Davis is currently the co-director of the Durres Regional Archaeological project in Albania and formerly served as the
co-director of the Keos Archaeological Project in Greece. He also has done extensive fieldwork in Crete. Davis spent 16 years as a faculty member of the classics department at the University of Chicago and has held the title of Carl W. Blegen Chaired Professor of Greek Archaeology at the University of Cincinnati since 1993.

75. 29 JULY 1998 SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE BULGARIAN PARLIAMENT PASSES
PM ROW OVER WHO WILL MANAGE albanian ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITE Conservative employeesof the Institute for archaeology and National Monuments sent a petition to
http://www.b-info.com/places/Bulgaria/news/98-07/jul29.rfe

76. Albania Archaeological Resources
archaeology. Albania. Sites Research Institutions Researchers Culture A collection of photographic images from archaeological sites in Albania.
http://archaeology.about.com/library/atlas/blalbania.htm
zJs=10 zJs=11 zJs=12 zJs=13 zc(5,'jsc',zJs,9999999,'') About Homework Help Archaeology World Atlas ... Albania Albania Archaeological Resources Homework Help Archaeology Essentials Ancient Daily Life ... Help zau(256,140,140,'el','http://z.about.com/0/ip/417/C.htm','');w(xb+xb+' ');zau(256,140,140,'von','http://z.about.com/0/ip/496/7.htm','');w(xb+xb);
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Map of Albania (CIA FactBook) Archaeological Sites Butrint
Field survey and excavations from the University of Sheffield at the classical and Byzantine occupations.
In the Footsteps of Aeneas
From Richard Hodges and Archaeology magazine, a visit to Butrint Konispol Cave
Holocene occupation, investigations into paleoclimatic shifts shown in the deposits, an abstract from the Journal of Field Archaeology. Research Institutions École Française d'Athènes
Excavations in Greece, Cyprus, Albania, Bulgaria, and Russia. Current Researchers Cultural History Albania, Land of the Eagles - Shqiperia

77. Albanian Academy Of Sciences, Institute Of Archaelogy
The albanian archaeological researcher on these two periods is still at a startingpoint. The surveys carried out during the last years in the Mallakaster
http://www.academyofsciences.net/institutes/archeology/departments.htm
Academy of Sciences Institutes Library Projects ... GENERAL DEPARTMENTS MUSEUMS RESEARCH PUBLICATIONS CONTACT US ... INSTITUTES
THE INSTITUTE OF ARCHAEOLOGY
Departments The archaeological studies, researches and excavations are designed and directed by the three departments: Prehistory Department Classical Antiquity Late Antiquity and Middle Ages The Prehistory Department. Its object of study is the earliest traces of human society in the Albanian territory during the Palaeolithic, Mesolithic, Neolithic, Eneolithic, Bronze and Iron Ages. This study is achieved through archaeological research and excavation projects. Palaeolithic and Mesolithic. The Albanian archaeological researcher on these two periods is still at a starting point. The surveys carried out during the last years in the Mallakaster and Sarande areas have made possible the discovery of several new Palaeolithic and Mesolithic sites which open new perspectives in these fields. Neolithic and Eneolithic. These are the most studied periods of Albanian Prehistory.

78. Albanian Temple Unearthed By UC Archeologists
A team from the University of Cincinnati has discovered a monumental temple inAlbania that may be one of the earliest ever found in the region.
http://www.uc.edu/news/NR.asp?id=2601

79. University Of Cincinnati News: Archaeologists Head To Albania On Rescue Mission
The UC archaeologists will collaborate with albanian peers, According toDavis, looting of archaeological sites throughout Albania makes this mission an
http://www.uc.edu/news/rescue.htm
UC Home UC News Visiting UC Admission to UC ...
Sports
UC Archaeologists Head to Albania for Rescue Mission
Date: March 5, 2001
By: Marianne Kunnen-Jones
Phone: (513) 556-1826
Archive: Research News The chaos that was once Albania could become tomorrow's hotspot for development. Before that commercialization begins, University of Cincinnati archaeologists want to identify ancient sites that should be studied or preserved. Jack L. Davis, UC's Carl W. Blegen Professor of Greek Archaeology, and classics doctoral student Sharon Stocker are leading a UC team that will be heading to Durres, Albania, March 10-April 4. Their urgent mission will be funded by the Packard Center in Tirana. The UC archaeologists will collaborate with Albanian peers, led by Iris Pojani and Afrim Hoti of the Institute of Archaeology, also in Tirana. The international team plans to do an archaeological survey of the coastal region where an ancient Greek colony once flourished. Located in western Albania along the Adriatic Sea, the site is about 40 minutes northwest of Tirana by car. Although the turmoil and anarchy of 1997 has subsided, the U.S. State Department still views travel to Albania, Europe's poorest and least developed nation, as potentially dangerous. During the earlier unrest, many weapons were looted from government arms depots. Armed crime, especially at night, runs high.

80. ARCHAEOLOGY OF ALBANIA
Art and archaeology of ancient Albania (Illyria).
http://www.geocities.com/Paris/Louvre/6820/art.html
ARCHAEOLOGY ALBANIA
Click on image to zoom
...GO FOR MORE PHOTOS TO...... PAGE ONE Exclusive Click here View this page Go to this page Oricum City
By Olsi Lafe
From Illyria
to Albania
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Berat,archaeological museum
God Sabazios,Tirana museum
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Apollonia,monument for apollo
Durres museum
Apollonia from northeast Apollonia museum Bronze statue,Apol.museum Tirana,archaeological museum Butrint,theatre near acropolis Bridge in northern Albania Potrait of Augustus,Butrint Livia,wife of Augustus,Butrint Byllis City Found in Durres,6th century Antique City This Archaeology on the Net Web Ring site is owned by ARDI Join Previous Next ... Archaeology Ring site is owned by ARDI Want to join the The Archaeology Ring Skip Prev Prev Next ... List Sites

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