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To Aleppo gone : Essays in honour of Jonathan N. Tubb [Mīkstie vāki]

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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 246 pages, height x width x depth: 290x205x10 mm, weight: 880 g, Colour illustrations throughout
  • Sērija : Archaeopress Ancient Near Eastern Archaeology
  • Izdošanas datums: 18-May-2023
  • Izdevniecība: Archaeopress Archaeology
  • ISBN-10: 1803274700
  • ISBN-13: 9781803274706
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  • Cena: 61,22 €
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 246 pages, height x width x depth: 290x205x10 mm, weight: 880 g, Colour illustrations throughout
  • Sērija : Archaeopress Ancient Near Eastern Archaeology
  • Izdošanas datums: 18-May-2023
  • Izdevniecība: Archaeopress Archaeology
  • ISBN-10: 1803274700
  • ISBN-13: 9781803274706
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
To Aleppo Gone ... is a festschrift offered in honour of Jonathan Tubb, former Levant curator and Keeper of the Department of the Middle East at the British Museum. It includes 44 contributions invited from Jonathans friends and colleagues from across the world, with each short essay exploring a single idea and its wider ramifications. The assembled volume also reflects the development of Jonathans own career and professional interests, with a focus on the Jordan Valley and southern Levant, but also extending to north Syria, Mesopotamia, the protection of endangered cultural heritage, and the lives of early archaeological pioneers.





The editors are all former colleagues of Jonathan, and curators in the Department of the Middle East in the British Museum.
Preface J.N. Tubb: a bibliography of works PART ONE: Along the Jordan Valley Notes on the figurines from Tell es-Sa'idiyeh - Josef Mario BRIFFA SJ Early Bronze Age capers at Tell es-Sa'idiyeh in Jordan - Caroline R. CARTWRIGHT On the naming of Tell es-Sa'idiyeh - Rupert L. CHAPMAN III The Shaft Grave with loculus at Tell es-Sa'idiyeh - Jack GREEN Tell Um Hammad in the Early Bronze IV period - Svend HELMS, Melissa KENNEDY and Alison BETTS A stamp seal impression from Kataret es-Samra - Albert LEONARD, Jr. A view from a tell redux - Suzanne RICHARD Tell es-Sa'idiyeh and the Egyptian trade - Eveline J. VAN DER STEEN PART TWO: Beyond the Jordan A playing scene on an ivory panel from Megiddo - Anne DUNN-VATURI Rural cult in urban Canaan: an MB/LB 'temple' at el-Khawarij in the Jordan Valley escarpment - James A. FRASER, Jaimie L. LOVELL, Paul DONNELLY An elephant in the Siq? - Sam MOORHEAD 'Canaanites' at Bethlehem - Lorenzo NIGRO A possible sundial from Zoara in the Ghor as-Safi - Konstantinos D. POLITIS An Ammonite god in the British Museum - Katharina SCHMIDT An Egyptian figurine mould from Tell Halif - Joe D. SEGER A human-headed chariot linchpin from Tell Fara - Rachael Thyrza SPARKS An enigmatic scarab from Rishon le-Zion - James M. WEINSTEIN PART THREE: From Syria to southern Iraq The tip of the spear: fortification at Tell Nebi Mend - Stephen BOURKE Facing the sunrise: the orientation of certain Levantine Bronze Age temples - Christopher J. DAVEY Out of the stores: further obsidian objects from Tell Chagar Bazar - Elizabeth HEALEY Peering behind the pictographs - Irving FINKEL Found in Assyria, made in Phoenicia, copied in Syria, exported to Iberia: a well-travelled motif of the early 1st millennium BC - Eric GUBEL Making a mark: evidence for cattle branding on the Nimrud ivories - Hannah GWYTHER The Loftus ladies - Georgina HERRMANN 'Keeper of the inhabited world' - John MacGINNIS Idols for the household: two bronze figurines from Late Bronze I Tasli Gecit Hoyuk - Nicolo MARCHETTI Sun, hero and hair - Astrid NUNN The bitumen trade of Hit from antiquity to Ottoman times - Andrew D. PETERSEN Sumerian harmonics - Sebastien REY Griffins in paradise: Canaanite to Phoenician in a Nimrud ivory - Michael SEYMOUR Smoking and drinking: from Tell es-Sa'idiyeh to Ur - St John SIMPSON PART FOUR: Cultural heritage Protecting cultural heritage in museums during crises and wars 165 - Maamoun ABDULKARIM The Cyrus Cylinder: anatomy of the Tehran 2010 loan - Dean BAYLIS 'Standing Caliph' coins from Syria: probably looted and on the market - Neil BRODIE The Palestine Archaeological Museum in Jerusalem, 1926-1938 - Mahmoud HAWARI PART FIVE: Personal stories John Garstang in retrospect - Piotr BIENKOWSKI The Palestine Exploration Fund, Charles Clermont-Ganneau and the Mesha stela - Felicity COBBING Reasoning in archaeological discourse - Anthony J. FRENDO The Megiddo water system: a letter from R.S. Lamon to J.L. Starkey - Yosef GARFINKEL Memories of Tell es-Sa'idiyeh - Loretta HOGAN and Sandra SMITH A Confluence of Stories: a personal journey - Imran JAVED An unexpected find: a letter from Flinders Petrie to Leonard Woolley - Carlo LIPPOLIS 'I am the Bull of Nineveh': a monument on the move - Henrietta McCALL Family Bibles: an early 18th-century case and beyond - Gerrit van der KOOIJ AFTERWORD From Palestine Room to Levant Gallery at the British Museum - Jonathan N. TUBB Indices
Irving Finkel is the senior curator responsible for the cuneiform tablet collection in the museum. He is a specialist in medical and magical works in Akkadian and particularly interested in esoteric inscriptions that concern ancient thought and speculation. He has been responsible for exhibitions inside and outside the museum, including Asian Games: The Art of Conquest (Asia Society New York, 2004) and Babylon: Myth and Reality (British Museum, 2008). He is the author of books for adults and children, including the bestselling The Ark before Noah, and is a world expert on ancient games and Founder of the Great Diary Project.





James Fraser is Curator for the Ancient Levant and Anatolia (supported by HENI) at the British Museum. In 2018, the Palestine Exploration Fund published his monograph Dolmens in the Levant in its Annual series, and this book was awarded the G. Ernest Wright Award for Best Archaeological Publication. James directs a British Museum excavation project in Jordan investigating a 4,500 year-old olive oil factory at Khirbet Um al-Ghozlan in the Wadi ar-Rayyan.





St John Simpson is responsible for the collections from Iran, Central Asia and Arabia, specialises in the archaeology of the Sasanian and early medieval periods, and has excavated extensively in the Middle East and Central Asia. He has curated three exhibitions at the museum, Queen of Sheba: Treasures from Ancient Yemen (2004), Afghanistan: Crossroads of the Ancient World (2011) and Scythians: Warriors of Ancient Siberia (2017/18), as well as the Rahim Irvani Gallery for Ancient Iran (2007). He was Jonathans deputy for the Iraq Emergency Heritage Management Training Scheme (20152021), and has museum-wide responsibility for repatriation of trafficked antiquities to their countries of origin.