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         Italy Archaeology:     more books (100)
  1. The Baths of Caracalla: A Study in the Design, Construction, and Economics of Large-Scale Building Projects in Imperial Rome (Journal of Roman Archaeology Supplementary Series , No 25) by Janet Delaine, 1997-12
  2. A Prehistory of Sardinia: 2300-500 Bc (Monographs in Mediterranean Archaeology) by Gary Webster, 1996-02
  3. Centralization, Early Urbanization and Colonization in First Millenium BC Italy and Greece: Italy (Bulletin Antieke Beschaving. Supplement 9)
  4. Archaeology in South Italy and Sicily, 1970 - 1972. by A D Trendall, 1972
  5. Italy in the Early Middle Ages: 476-1000 (Short Oxford History of Italy)
  6. The foundations of Roman Italy, (Methuen's handbooks of archaeology) by Joshua Whatmough, 1937
  7. Bridging The Tiber: Approaches To Regional Archaeology In The Middle Tiber Valley (Archaeological Monograph)
  8. A Mediterranean Valley: Landscape Archaeology and Annales History in the Biferno Valley by Graeme Barker, 1995-04
  9. Archives And Excavations: Essays on the History of Archaeological Excavations in Rome And Southern Italy from the Renaissance to the Nineteenth Century (Archaeological Monograph)
  10. Tota Italia: Essays in the Cultural Formation of Roman Italy by Mario Torelli, 2000-01-20
  11. The Porticello Shipwreck: A Mediterranean Merchant Vessel of 415-385 B.C. (Nautical Archaeology Series) by Cynthia Jones Eiseman, Brunilde Sismondo Ridgway, 1988-01
  12. Early Village Life at Beidha, Jordan: Neolithic Spatial Organization and Vernacular Architecture: The Excavations of Mrs. Diana Kirkbride-Helbaek (British Academy Monographs in Archaeology) by Brian F. Byrd, 2005-08-04
  13. A cereal find from old Etruria (Studies in Mediterranean archaeology and literature) by Hakon Hjelmqvist, 1989
  14. Guide to the Etruscan and Roman Worlds at the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology by Donald White, Ann Blair Brownlee, et all 2002-11

41. Guardian | Barri Jones
Obituary in The Guardian July 23 1999 of the charismatic Welshborn Professor at Manchester University, a noted Romanist. Contributions to archaeology included aspects of ancient italy, north Africa, Roman Britain and Roman mining, and also played a leading role both in popularising his subject and creating a professional regional archaeology service.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/print/0,3858,3885777-103684,00.html
Barri Jones Charismatic archaeologist who transformed our knowledge of the Roman and Celtic worlds and brought his subject to a wider public Anthony Birley
Friday July 23, 1999
Guardian
Professor Barri Jones, who has died from a heart attack aged 63, was a charismatic and much-loved figure in British archaeology for more than 30 years. He transformed our knowledge of many aspects of ancient Italy, north Africa, Roman Britain and Roman mining, and played a leading role both in popularising his subject and in creating a professional regional archaeology service. If Barri's existence often seemed hectic - his students in the 1960s and 70s called him "Four-D Jones" and his lateness was renowned (he tended to stop for rapid field surveys en route to meetings) - his restless enthusiasm was immensely attractive. He was always a hands-on archaeologist, wielding spade and shovel as well as trowel and camera. He was born at St Helens, Lancashire, to Welsh-speaking parents, both teachers, who gave him a splendid set of Welsh Christian names but resolutely gave up speaking Welsh for his sake at his birth - to his regret. They later moved to High Wycombe, where he went to school, and from there as classics scholar to Jesus college, Oxford. He had already identified Roman roads and a new fort in Wales. His first article appeared when he was 16, and he was offered a lectureship in Wales before taking finals. But he was persuaded to begin a doctorate instead. As scholar to the British school in Rome (1959-1962), he joined John Ward-Perkins's Southern Etruria project.

42. Hotel Italy, Hotels Italy, Hospitality Italy, Lodge Italy, Lodges Italy, Lodging
Web Portal of Tourism in italy in order To find Hotels in italy, in order to find Horse italy, Horse Riding italy, archaeology italy, Monuments italy,
http://www.emmeti.it/index.uk.html
by Massimo Tonelli
Welcome to Italy Since 1994, Welcome to Italy has been, and remains, the principle point of reference in internet for aiding the selection of ways to visit to our "Fair Country".
escorts you through 1,200 municipalities and tourist areas, all subdivided geographically. Hotels - Accommodation
Agencies and Estate Agents

permits you to find your apartment, or whatever else your requirement, through the use of specialists in the sector. Business Hotels
aids you in the organisation of your smaller or more important work engagements. Healt Fitness and Beauty
is born for helping you to differentiate the locations of spas and healing waters and the various Beauty Centres. Art and Museums
is where you can find over 5,000 museums located throughout Italy. Italian Cooking
recounts the history of how food was once eaten, from the times of the Etruscans and the Romans up to the present day. Surveys
brings you to all the additional services offered by Welcome to Italy. Travel and Tourism PageRank order Welcome to Europe Welcome to
France
Welcome to Côte d'Azur Welcome to Paris Welcome to Corsica Welcome to Switzerland
Datatravel Srl

43. A Cache Of Vintage Ships: Introduction
An illustrated article by Andrew Slaymana in archaeology on the ancient Roman ships unearthed at Pisa, italy.
http://www.archaeology.org/9907/etc/pisa.html
Your browser does not support javascript A Cache of Vintage Ships Volume 52 Number 4, July/August 1999 by Andrew L. Slayman
Photographs by Giovanni Lattanzi Newsflash: Two more ships have been found. Go to preliminary report Nine Roman ships have been uncovered during construction at Pisa's San Rossore train station. Ship D (right), a small utilitarian vessel, is the best preserved. Summoned last April to survey a construction site in Pisa, Italian archaeologist Stefano Bruni never imagined what he would find: nine well-preserved Roman shipsthe largest group of ancient vessels ever discovered in a single placeand part of Pisa's classical port. Eight months of patient testing had yielded little, and construction of an office building at the San Rossore train station was proceeding. Then, in December, builders sinking a corrugated steel retaining wall to support the sides of the foundation pit realized they had bisected an ancient ship , nearly intact, its wooden frame and planks still held together by copper nails. During the next five months, eight others were found, dating between the second century B.C. and the fifth century A.D., from Pisa's florescence as a Republican naval naval base to the end of the Roman Empire. Bruni's original cores had stopped in what seemed like sterile soil three inches shy of the discovery of a lifetime. Clad in a professorial tweed jacket, pipe in hand, Bruni, of the Archaeological Superintendency of Tuscany, surveys his domain with the confidence of a man whose name is made. The vast foundation pit, nearly 300 feet long and 150 feet wide, stretches out before us, a temporary concrete floor interrupted at intervals by green corrugated plastic roofs supported on scaffolding. Beneath each shelter, archaeologists from the Florence-based contract firm

44. Richard Jones
Profile of this Glasgow University Senior Lecturer. Research interests include relations between the Aegean and italy in the Late Bronze Age and the ceramic evidence and Neolithic pottery on Orkney.
http://www.gla.ac.uk/archaeology/staff/rej/index.html

Home

About Us

News
Courses ... < Up one level
Richard Jones
BSc, MSc, PhD, FSA, MBE Senior Lecturer in Archaeological Science
Department of Archaeology
University of Glasgow
Glasgow G12 8QQ
Scotland
Tel: +44 (0)141 330 5371
Fax: +44 (0)141 330 3544
Email: r.jones@archaeology.gla.ac.uk
Teaching
Current Research Interests
  • Relations between the Aegean and Italy in the Late Bronze Age: the ceramic evidence. Collaboration with Dr L Vagnetti (CNR Istituto Studi Micenei, Rome) and Dr S Levi.
    Neolithic pottery on Orkney: production, function and replication Post-excavation phase of the Historic Scotland funded Cuween-Wideford (Orkney) Landscape Project, in collaboration with Dr Colin Richards (Manchester University) and Orkney Archaeological Trust Exploration of Xerxes Canal, North Greece

45. AskOxford: The Iceman Cometh To Italy
http//www.archaeologiemuseum.it/index_ice.html. Author Simon Darby. Photograph ©South Tyrol Museum of archaeology, italy, www.iceman.it.
http://www.askoxford.com/languages/culturevulture/italy/iceman/
Entire AskOxford Site Ask the Experts English dictionary Quotations dictionary First Names dictionary Entire UK Book Catalogue HOME SHOP EDUCATION PRESS ROOM ... FOREIGN LANGUAGES SELECT VIEW You are currently in the US view
The Iceman Cometh to Italy
Printer Friendly Version crossed the Italian border after almost eight years of legal battles with the Austrian authorities. His final home was to be a specially built facility in the South Tyrol Museum of Archaeology which would reveal the story of his life - and death. It was the end of a journey which had started one spring day 5300 years before in what are now known as the Tyrolean Alps. It was the start of much more. The South Tyrol Museum of Archaeology in Bolzano has a fascinating exhibition of the mysteries of The Discovery site has an excellent feature on the mystery of the Iceman.
http://dsc.discovery.com/convergence/iceman/interactive/iceman_flash.html
The official South Tyrol Museum of Archaeology website in English and Italian
http://www.archaeologiemuseum.it/index_ice.html
Author: Simon Darby. Photograph © South Tyrol Museum of Archaeology, Italy, www.iceman.it

46. AQUILEIA - Welcome To Aquileia, The Famous Archaeological Site In Northerner Ita
Aquileia is one of the most interesting archeological sites in italy, talk about this amazing place of Northerner italy, Aquileia and Roman archaeology,
http://www.aquileia.it/welcome.htm
The Archaeological Site Special thanks to: Ministero dei Beni Culturali Microsoft Network Italian Embassy in Tokyo The Roman Agency for the preparation of the Jubilee ... PARNASO Universities who linked us, for their support.
RESTATEAQUILEIA - Summer Manifestations in Aquileia
Don't miss to see the AQVILEIA Exhibition
AQUILEIA - Crossing of the RomanEmpire

nextly hosted in AQUILEIA vrmlstudio - All RightsReserved.

47. Ruth WHITEHOUSE: Institute Of Archaeology UCL
My main research area since I graduated has been prehistoric italy, course on Gender and archaeology ) and in connection with prehistoric italy.
http://www.ucl.ac.uk/archaeology/staff/profiles/whitehouse.htm
@import url(/css/fonts.css); @import url(/css/extras.css); UCL INSTITUTE OF ARCHAEOLOGY
Who We Are: Introduction Contacting Us Our Staff Our Research ... Our Facilities for Research and Learning Our Courses For: Undergraduates Graduate Students Research Degrees Affiliate Students Events: Programme For Current IoA Members: Institute Intranet
Professor Ruth WHITEHOUSE - M.A., Ph.D., FSA, MIFA
  • Professor of Prehistoric Archaeology
Research Interests:
  • 19781985. Excavation and survey at the Iron Age site of Gravina in Puglia in southern Italy. This large inland hilltop settlement site was occupied throughout most of the first millennium BC. It offers the opportunity to study a local community through a thousand years which witnessed the arrival first of Greek settlers in the area and later the military power of Rome. The aim of the work at Botromagno was directed at elucidating the nature and impact of relationships between the local community and these external groups in the context of concerns with issues of identity, ethnicity and local dynamics of state formation and urbanism. The final report was published in 2000 as Botromagno. Excavation and Survey at Gravina in Puglia. 1979-1985 (jointly with John Wilkins and Edward Herring).
  • A second phase of work was initiated with my involvement in the excavations at Cova d'es Carritx, a cave discovered in 1995, used for burial and other cult purposes in the Talayotic period. Excavations were conducted in summer '95 and spring '97 together with archaeologists from the University of Reading and the Autonomous University of Barcelona. The cave has been sealed since the mid-first millennium BC and is exceptional for the preservation of organic objects which do not usually survive. The Institute of Archaeology was involved in the conservation of the artefacts from this site. The excavation has now been completed and published by the Barcelona team.

    48. Institute Of Classical Archaeology
    Archaeological fieldwork. Publications, Annual Reports, Supporters,FIELDWORK SITES, Crotone, italy, Metaponto, italy, Chersonesos, UKRAINE, LANGUAGES
    http://www.utexas.edu/research/ica/metaponto/
    The University of Texas at Austin METAPONTO ICA Site Directory SUBJECT DIRECTORY Overview Personnel Research activities Territory survey Excavations Site description Remote Sensing/GIS Publications Annual Reports Supporters FIELDWORK SITES Crotone, ITALY Metaponto, ITALY Chersonesos, UKRAINE LANGUAGES Russian page Ukrainian page Versione Italiana Institute of
    Classical

    Archaeology
    Department of Classics ...
    The University of Texas

    at Austin
    MCC Building R1500
    3925 West Braker Lane
    Austin, Texas 78759
    E-mail

    1-512-232-9321 or 22
    1-512-232-9324 (fax) Archaeological Survey in the Chora of Metaponto Introduction Rural Settlement Trends in the Metapontino: A Preliminary Overview of Survey Results Between the Bradano and Basento Rivers Greek Settlement Patterns Roman Period Settlement The 1999 Pipeline Corridor Survey: Field Methods and Preliminary Results ... 1999 Contributors/Personnel Other reports Excavations in the Territory, Metaponto, 1980

    49. Institute Of Classical Archaeology
    Capo Alfiere A Neolithic site near Crotone, Calabria, italy by Jon Morter Institute of Classical archaeology The University of Texas at Austin
    http://www.utexas.edu/research/ica/italy/crotone/
    The University of Texas at Austin CROTONE ICA Site Directory SUBJECT DIRECTORY Overview Personnel Research activities Territory survey Excavations Site description Remote Sensing/GIS Publications Annual Reports Supporters FIELDWORK SITES Crotone, ITALY Metaponto, ITALY Chersonesos, UKRAINE LANGUAGES Russian page Ukrainian page Versione Italiana Institute of
    Classical

    Archaeology
    Department of Classics ...
    The University of Texas

    at Austin
    MCC Building R1500
    3925 West Braker Lane
    Austin, Texas 78759
    E-mail

    1-512-232-9321 or 22
    1-512-232-9324 (fax) Capo Alfiere: A Neolithic site near Crotone, Calabria, Italy by Jon Morter Contents: Background Capo Alfiere is the name of a Neolithic site located on a small headland on the eastern coast of Calabria. Archaeological excavations at the site were conducted by a team from the University of Texas in the summers of 1987 and 1990. The digging was directed by Jon Morter. The work is part of a broad study of the landscape of the territory of the Classical Greek colonial city of Kroton (modern Crotone) under the supervision of Prof. Joe Carter. The excavations have revealed the surviving portions of a stratified deposit dating to the Middle Neolithic period. Two main strata have been defined to date, each with sub-phases. The majority of the pottery appears to be of the Stentinello tradition, a type first defined in eastern Sicily by Paolo Orsi at the end of the last century. Other finds include both ground and chipped stone objects. A large floral and faunal assemblage is currently under analysis at the Laboratorio per Bioarcheologia in Rome under the supervision of Dott. Lorenzo Costantini.

    50. Archaeology And Cultural Resource Management Jobs And Field School Information -
    archaeology Field Schools, Southern Europe Mediterranean, italy KALATarchaeological work camp. italy - KALAT archaeological work camp
    http://shovelbums.org/content/view/70/130/
    Archaeology and Cultural Resource Management jobs and Field School information
    Great Bumper Stickers!
    Archaeologists The Cowboys... - BMP.yel

    2006 Field Schools Submit a 2006 Field School 2005 Field Schools 2005 FIELD SCHOOLS 2005 submissions are closed Click here to submit for 2006
  • EUROPE
  • ASIA ...
  • East Timor - University of Washington Events Calendar August 2005 S M T W T F S Last month September 2005 S M T W T F S This month October 2005 S M T W T F S Next month Amazon Search Box Search Now:
    Italy - KALAT: archaeological work camp 2005 Archaeology Field Schools
    KALAT: archaeological work camp
    Application Deadline : 07/30/2005 (Month/Day/Year)
    Start Date
    End Date University, Company, Institution
    : Archeoclub d'Italia site of Campobello diLicata -Italia- Agrigento
    Field School location :Campobello di Licata (Ag), Sicily - Agrigento Italy
  • Excavation : Yes Survey : Yes Prehistoric : Yes Historic : Yes Period: All historic period Long hike to site : Yes
  • Project Director: KALAT arcaeological workcamps are organized by Archeolub di Campobello di Licata. The field activities are guided by scientific collaborators from the University and the Superintendence BBCCAA, supported by foreign University students, will be carried out with the permission of the Superintendence BBCCAA of Agrigento and the consultation of the teaching staff of the University of Palermo and Napoli.

    51. Archaeology And Cultural Resource Management Jobs And Field School Information -
    archaeology FIELDWORK PASPARDO Valcamonica - italy. The Footsteps of ManArchaeological Cooperative Society is based in Valcamonica, an alpine valley
    http://shovelbums.org/content/view/69/129/
    Archaeology and Cultural Resource Management jobs and Field School information
    Great Bumper Stickers!
    Archaeologists Do It In The Dirt Sticker (Bumper)

    2006 Field Schools Submit a 2006 Field School 2005 Field Schools 2005 FIELD SCHOOLS 2005 submissions are closed Click here to submit for 2006
  • EUROPE
  • ASIA ...
  • East Timor - University of Washington Events Calendar August 2005 S M T W T F S Last month September 2005 S M T W T F S This month October 2005 S M T W T F S Next month Amazon Search Box Search Now:
    Italy - Cooperativa Archeologica "Le Orme dell'Uomo" 2005 Archaeology Field Schools
    Cooperativa Archeologica "Le Orme dell'Uomo"
    Dates: July 18 - August 8, 2005
    ARCHAEOLOGY FIELDWORK
    PASPARDO - Valcamonica - Italy The Footsteps of Man Archaeological Cooperative Society is based in Valcamonica, an alpine valley comprised between the province of Bergamo and Brescia in Northern Italy, where rock art constitutes an archaeological, artistic, Ethnographic and historical patrimony of inestimable value, not only for its antiquity but, above all, for the thematic and iconographic wealth. The rupestrian tradition of Valcamonica consists of about three hundred thousands engraved figures mainly located in open air and on flat rocks. The art is distributed across five fundamental periods from Palaeolithic to the arrival of the Romans in the valley.
  • 52. WWW: Classical Archaeology
    Links to websites on classical archaeology Greek and Roman archaeology, archaeology of Central italy Digs, research, and reconstructions in Central
    http://www.archaeology.org/wwwarky/classical.html
    Your browser does not support javascript Classical Archaeology American Journal of Archaeology
    The AJA website features pdf versions of articles and book reviews in the current issue and a searchable archive of past articles. Ancient Vienne
    "Ancient Vienne" offers the history and archaeology of the Roman city in southeastern France that the poet Martial called "pulchra [beautiful] Vienna." Archaeology of Central Italy
    Digs, research, and reconstructions in Central Italy. (Mostly in Italian.) Arachnion
    ArtServe

    16,000 photographs of art and architecture mainly from the Mediterranean basin, including many of classical archaeological sites, from Michael Greenhalgh of the Australian National University Athenian Agora Excavations
    Excavations of the Agora by the American School of Classical Studies. Classics and Mediterranean Archaeology
    A very big list of web resources, from the University of Michigan Corinth Computer Project
    Incorporates historical, literary, and archaeological information from the Roman city of Corinth, Greece. Dispilio Excavations
    Presents the excavations at the Neolithic settlement of Dispilio near Kastoria in northern Greece. Includes a history of the excavation, "diary" by site director, and brief sections on its museum, excavation park, and information and documentation center.

    53. The Looting Of Italy
    Sometime between 1976 and 1980, a gold phiale surfaced in the collection of aSicilian named Vincenzo Pappalardo.
    http://www.archaeology.org/9805/abstracts/italy.html
    Your browser does not support javascript The Looting of Italy Volume 51 Number 3, May/June 1998 by Andrew L. Slayman The Case of the Golden Phiale [LARGER IMAGE] The phiale has a near twin in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, which was purchased in 1962 from the well-known antiquities dealer Robert E. Hecht, Jr. For more photographs of the phiale and updates on the lawsuit, see The Phiale of Achyris The Morgantina Hoard Fifteen silver vessels at the Metropolitan Museum of Art may have been looted from the site of Morgantina, Sicily. Archaeologist Malcolm Bell, who directs American excavations at Morgantina, gives his account of the hoard's discovery and the subsequent investigation. A recent article in the Boston Globe named the dealer who had sold the Morgantina hoard to the Metropolitan as Robert E. Hecht, Jr.the same person who had sold them the gold phiale in 1962 and the famous Euphronios krater in 1972. The article also named the purchase price as $2.74 million and said that Italian authorities had interviewed the looters who had found the treasure. Italy Fights Back Officers of the Guardia di Finanza, the police force of the Italian Ministry of Finance, seize a stash of artifacts near Rome. (Photos courtesy Guardia di Finanza)

    54. Barcelo, Forte, And Sanders - Virtual Reality In Archaeology - Contents
    Virtual Reality in archaeology. Edited by Juan A. Barceló, THE ESTENSE CASTLEOF FERRARA (italy) MULTIMEDIA PROJECT AND VIRTUAL RECONSTRUCTION
    http://www.learningsites.com/Support_pages/BFS_VRinA_contents.html
    Virtual Reality in Archaeology
    ArcheoPress, Oxford (British Archaeological Reports, International Series #843) page added April 26, 2000 Contents
    PRESENTATION
    By Nick Ryan, Computer Applications and Quantitative Methods in Archaeology (CAA), President THE DIVERSITY OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL VIRTUAL WORLDS
    Introductory Papers VISUALIZING WHAT MIGHT BE: AN INTRODUCTION TO VIRTUAL REALITY TECHNIQUES IN ARCHAEOLOGY
    ARCHAEOLOGICAL PUBLICATIONS USING VIRTUAL REALITY: CASE STUDIES AND CAVEATS
    By Donald H. Sanders, Learning Sites, Inc., Williamstown, Massachusetts, USA REALISM VS. REALITY: CREATING VIRTUAL RECONSTRUCTIONS OF PREHISTORIC ARCHITECTURE
    By John Kantner, Georgia State University, Georgia, USA NATIVE AMERICAN VIRTUAL REALITY ARCHAEOLOGY: AN ARCHITECT'S PERSPECTIVE
    By Dennis R. Holloway, Architect, Rio Rancho, New Mexico, USA
    Technical Papers PLANS, ELEVATIONS AND VIRTUAL WORLDS: THE DEVELOPMENT OF TECHNIQUES FOR THE ROUTINE CONSTRUCTION OF HYPERREAL SIMULATIONS
    By Mark Gillings, University of Leicester, UK ACQUISITION OF DETAILED MODELS FOR VIRTUAL REALITY By M. Pollefeys, M. Proesmans, R. Koch, M. Vergauwen and L. Van Gool, Leuven University, Belgium

    55. Virtual Worlds In Archaeology Initiative -- Participants
    The VIRTUAL WORLDS IN archaeology INITIATIVE is pleased and honored to include Rome, italy (the Rome Reborn project seeks to create highly accurate and
    http://www.learningsites.com/VWinAI/VWAI_participants.htm
    page updated June 11, 2002
    Participants
    T he V IRTUAL W ORLDS IN A RCHAEOLOGY I NITIATIVE is pleased and honored to include the following international participants. Projects are listed here both alphabetically by contact person or group , with sites listed alphabetically underneath, and alphabetically by country , with sites listed underneath:
    Alphabetically by Person or Group CINECA (Italy)
    • Bologna - "The 4 Dimensional City" (the city of Bologna through time).
    Foundation of the Hellenic World (Greece)
  • Epidaurus , Greece (the theater of the Asklepieion). Miletus , Greece (reconstruction of the entire ancient city)
  • K. U. Leuven Center for the Processing of Speech and Images (Belgium)
    • Sagalassos , Turkey - new 3D modeling tools and virtual world
    Learning Sites, Inc. (United States)
    • Al-Meragh , Sudan (possibly a Meroitic settlement; an excavation visualization tool) link added October 16, 2001 Gebel Barkal , Sudan (a Nubian religious center; and museum research tool). Nimrud , Assyria (the Northwest Palace of Ashur-nasir-pal II; a scholarly research resource). Nemrud Dagi , Turkey (a Hellenistic mountain-top sanctuary).

    56. Europe
    european archaeology links, european archaeology web directory. bullet,Chianciano Terme, italy, from the University of Arizona
    http://archaeologic.com/europe.htm
    archaeologic.com/ Europe Want to go on a dig? Students/volunteers wanted for dig in Belize! ARCHAEOLOGY PORTAL THE GREAT PLAZA ADD OR CHANGE A LINK ... SITE INDEX We've been reading... Featured Partners:
    Zooarchaeology

    and

    Taphonomy

    Consulting
    A directory of European archaeology links
    Austria Cyprus Denmark France ... Electronic Mailing Lists
    Austria
    The Amber Road
    Cyprus
    The Marki Project
    Denmark
    Dolmens in Denmark
    France
    AFAN - Association pour les fouilles archéologiques nationales L'Age du Bronze, Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur ArchDATA GIS and Remote Sensing in Burgundy Psalmodi, Williams College
    Germany
    German Archaeology (English) Deutsch Gesellschaft zur Förderung der vor- und frühgeschichtlichen Ausgrabungen im Osnabrücker Land e.V. Kalkriese: Die Örtlichkeit der Varusschlacht ... Römische Inschriften in Germanien. Präsentation eines aktuellen Forschungsprojektes an der Universität Osnabrück
    Greece
    The Acropolis Museum Ancient City of Athens Corinth Computer Project Late Roman Delphi ... Temple of Athena Parthenon at the Acropolis
    Ireland (Republic of) Archaeology Ireland Magazine The Celtic High Cross , gravestones in Clonmacnoise, County Offalay.

    57. The British School At Rome - Archaeology
    To maintain a significant programme of archaeological activity in italy; To promotecontact and exchange between British, Commonwealth,
    http://www.bsr.ac.uk/ENG/sub_arch/BSR_Arch01.htm
    skip to: page content links on this page site navigation footer (site information) ... home page
    Department of Archaeology
    Tiber Valley Pompeii Herculaneum Geophysics ... Staff
    Archaeology Links
    Research Professorship
    Introduction
    Archaeology has always been a major part of the BSR's activities throughout Italy. Projects like the South Etruria Survey (a ground-breaking study in the development of landscape archaeology) were undertaken within the auspices of the BSR's archaeology programme. Current work of the BSR continues to be at the forefront of archaeological research in Italy. The ongoing Tiber Valley project and the Director's Pompeii project have clearly shown the key role that the BSR plays in promoting and developing major archaeological projects. Both these projects bring together the work of several British and Italian institutions, and enable a level of activity and research which would simply not be possible for an individual research group or UK-based institution. A vital function of the School is to create contacts between British, Commonwealth, and Italian academic communities and to serve as a centre for debate. Aside from the major projects, the aims of the BSR's archaeology research programme are:

    58. CLASSICAL ARCHAEOLOGY
    CL AR 447 The archaeology of Early italy (3) VLPA Harmon Study of the principalarchaeological sites of early italy, including Etruria, Sicily,
    http://www.washington.edu/students/crscat/clarch.html
    Search Directories Reference Tools UW Home ... Student Guide Glossary Search Course Descriptions UW Bothell Course Descriptions UW Tacoma Course Descriptions

    CLASSICS
    CLASSICAL ARCHAEOLOGY
    Detailed course offerings (Time Schedule) are available for To see the detailed Instructor Class Description, click on the underlined instructor name following the course description. CL AR 340 Pre-Classical Art and Archaeology (3) VLPA
    Survey of the art and the other material remains of the civilizations in the Aegean from the Neolithic Age to the end of the Bronze Age, with special emphasis on Minoan Crete and the Mycenaean kingdoms of mainland Greece, illustrated by slides. The history, techniques, and results of significant excavations are examined. Offered: jointly with ART H 340. CL AR 341 Greek Art and Archaeology (3) VLPA Bliquez
    Survey of the material remains and the developing styles in sculpture, vase painting, architecture, and the minor arts from the geometric to the Hellenistic periods, illustrated by slides. Principal sites and monuments, as well as techniques and methods of excavation, are examined in an attempt to reconstruct the material culture of antiquity. Offered: jointly with ART H 341. CL AR 342 Roman Art and Archaeology (3) VLPA Harmon
    Roman architecture and art, with emphasis on the innovations of the Romans; illustrated by slides. Offered: jointly with ART H 342.

    59. Ancient Italy @ National Geographic Magazine
    In the centuries leading up to the birth of the empire, ancient italy saw the rise The website for the University of Basilicata School of archaeology
    http://magma.nationalgeographic.com/ngm/0501/feature3/
    Ancient Italy
    Step into the world of writers and photographers as they tell you about the best, worst, and quirkiest places and adventures they encountered in the field
    Get the facts behind the frame in this online-only gallery. Pick an image and see the photographer's technical notes.
    Photo captions by
    Carol Kaufmann
    Italy's Early Ethnic Face
    By Erla Zwingle Photographs by O. Louis Mazzatenta
    Get a taste of what awaits you in print from this compelling excerpt.
    He came to her in a dream, a sad, beautiful Samnite boy who had lost his way home. "It was on a hill I know, but without any vegetation," Teresa Cerlone remembered, "and he was wandering back and forth in a world that wasn't his. He was looking for a door, not to a house but to a world. And there was a spring of water, I remember. There was an entrance with two columns with a tall staircase, like the temple at Pietrabbondante," she continued, speaking quietly but with intensity. "We went under the columns, and he asked me, 'Help me find my way.' He took my hand, and I felt that he was flesh and blood. Then he disappeared, but he left his hand in mine. It wasn't human anymore; it was made of terra-cotta. And I woke up, sweating."
    When it was light, Cerlone went immediately to the hillside she had dreamed about. She's not an archaeologist, but she is passionate about the Samnites, the fierce people who once dominated the mountains of Abruzzi and Molise not far from her home in Isernia. Where she had dreamed the spring was located, she began to dig in the loamy earth. Suddenly she touched something hard. She pulled it out. It was a piece of terra-cotta. It was a hand.

    60. VoS - Voice Of The Shuttle
    The Roman italy Project (joint program in history and archaeology of Roman italyrun by the Universities of Newcastle and Manchester)
    http://vos.ucsb.edu/browse.asp?id=2704

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