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Ovoid Amphorae in the Central and Western Mediterranean: Between the last two centuries of the Republic and the early days of the Roman Empire Bilingual edition [Mīkstie vāki]

  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 430 pages, height x width x depth: 297x210x23 mm, weight: 1580 g, Illustrated throughout in colour and black & white (65 pages in colour)
  • Sērija : Roman and Late Antique Mediterranean Pottery
  • Izdošanas datums: 19-Sep-2019
  • Izdevniecība: Archaeopress
  • ISBN-10: 1789692962
  • ISBN-13: 9781789692969
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  • Cena: 87,23 €
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 430 pages, height x width x depth: 297x210x23 mm, weight: 1580 g, Illustrated throughout in colour and black & white (65 pages in colour)
  • Sērija : Roman and Late Antique Mediterranean Pottery
  • Izdošanas datums: 19-Sep-2019
  • Izdevniecība: Archaeopress
  • ISBN-10: 1789692962
  • ISBN-13: 9781789692969
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
Based on the proceedings of a workshop held at Seville University in 2015, this book looks at several series of amphorae created in the Late Republican Roman period, sharing a generally ovoid shape in their bodies – a group of material which, until now, has rarely been studied.

The production of amphorae and the export of commodities transported in them was a key activity for the Mediterranean world in Antiquity. Consequently, their study is of enormous value for analysing the agricultural and fishing economy, and also the commercial mechanism of that period. Through the typological and chronological analysis of these ceramic containers, a high degree of knowledge has been achieved, especially for the production of the different Mediterranean societies from the second millennium BC to the Middle Ages.

In The Ovoid Amphorae in the Central and Western Mediterranean between the last two centuries of the Republic and the early days of the Roman Empire, several series of amphorae created in the Late Republican Roman period (2nd and 1st centuries BC) have been studied &; a group of material until now little studied. All of these groups of containers share a common feature in the shape of their bodies which is generally ovoid. The fact that they were conceived and developed in the economic and political context in which Rome expanded throughout the Mediterranean, transferring to its new territories its production and commercialization procedures, bears witness to the almost total integration of the Mediterranean markets.

This publication is based on the proceedings of the workshop held at Seville University in December 2015. The book brings together contributions on the main production areas of these ovoid amphorae from the Atlantic to the Greek mainland / North Peloponnese, analysing in detail the origins, evolution and disappearance of their main series. It also includes case studies that are particularly relevant in relation to their distribution, consumption patterns, contents and relationship with other groups of amphorae manufactured in the Roman Imperial era. The aim of this publication has been to present an updated and complete synthesis of the so-called ovoid amphorae, from an interdisciplinary, international and diachronic standpoint.
Prologue
Introduction xiii
Part I Ovoid amphorae production in the Mediterranean
The ovoid amphorae from Aigion, in the north-west Peloponnese. The connections with Corinth and the Brindisi area
3(32)
Konstantinos Filis
Produzioni di anfore ovoidi di area brindisina
35(7)
Daniele Manacorda
Late Republican and Early Imperial ovoid amphorae: the African production
42(20)
Alessia Contino
Claudio Capelli
Ovoid amphorae as the first Roman provincial repertoire in Hispanic* Ulterior (the Guadalquivir valley)
62(50)
Enrique Garcia Vargas
Horacio Gonzalez Cesteros
Rui Roberto de Almeida
Ovoid amphorae production in the Bay of Cadiz and the southern coast of the Ulterior/Baetica (Late Republican and Early Imperial periods)
112(36)
Enrique Garcia Vargas
Antonio M. Saez Romero
Anforas ovoides del noreste de la Hispania Citerior Tarraconensis en epoca tardorepublicana. Ensayo de smtesis
148(27)
Jordi Miro Canals y Ramon Jarrega Dommguez
The `early production' of Roman amphorae in Lusitania. State of play of a universe (still) under construction
175(16)
Rui Roberto de Almeida
Carlos Fabiao
De la production de anforas Ovoide 1 gaditanas: aportaciones del alfar de Verinsur
191(24)
Dario Bernal-Casasola
Jose J. Diaz Rodriguez
Maria Luisa Lavado-Florido y Rosario Garcia-Gimenez
Part II Ovoid amphorae throughout the Mediterranean: Case studies, commercial routes, consumption contexts and contents
Ovoid Amphoras found in Hellenistic Southern Levant contexts: their chronology and need for proveniences
215(13)
Gerald Finkielsztejn
Northern Peloponnesian amphorae with convex-concave rims from the Styra A shipwreck
228(9)
Lucie S. Vidlickova
Ovoid African and Hispanic amphorae in Italy. Some examples from Ostia and Pompeii
237(37)
Alessia Contino
Lucilla D'Alessandro
Guillermo Pascual Berlanga
Albert Ribera i Lacomba
The Italic ovoid amphorae in the Toulouse area at the end of the Iron Age (Midi-Pyrenees, France)
274(24)
Laurence Benquet
The diffusion of south-Hispanic ovoid amphorae in Gaul, between the Late Republican and Early Empire times
298(16)
Kevin Quillon
Max Luaces
Distribution of ovoid amphorae in north-west Europe. Consumption contexts and main trade routes
314(23)
Horacio Gonzalez Cesteros
Amphorae of the Brindisi area in Gallia Belgica: The example of Titelberg (Luxembourg)
337(9)
Debora C. Tretola Martinez
Ovoid amphorae in Hispania Citerior/Tarraconensis: consumption contexts and mam trade areas
346(21)
Daniel Mateo Corredor
Jaime Molina Vidal
La importation de anforas ovoides en la Tarraco republicana
367(9)
Moises Diaz Garcia
Are you Local? Imported and locally produced amphorae in Alto Alentejo (Portugal) during the 1st century BC: three case studies at Soeiros, Rocha da Mina and Caladinho
376(15)
Rui Mataloto
Joey Williams
Conceigao Roque
Preliminary organic residue analysis of Ovoid 1 and Ovoid 5 amphorae from the Guadalquivir valley
391(12)
Dario Bernal-Casasola
Alessandra Pecci
Antonio M. Saez Romero
Epilogue
Oviod amphorae in the Mediterranean (2nd century BC-early 1st century AD.) State of the play and future research perspectives 403
The Editors
Enrique Garcķa Vargas (PhD History, University of Seville) is Lecturer at the University of Seville. Currently, he co-leads the Tomares Treasure Project, on a huge coin hoard buried near Seville during the first decades of the 4th century AD.





Rui Roberto de Almeida holds a Masters degree in Archaeology and is currently developing his PhD research and thesis on maritime food trade from the Guadalquivir valley to Lusitania during the Roman era (I century BC - VI AD).





Horacio Gonzįlez Cesteros (PhD Archaeology, University of Tarragona and the Catalan Archaeological Institute) is a member of the research staff of the Austrian Archaeological Institute.





Antonio Sįez Romero (PhD Archaeology, University of Cadiz) is Assistant Professor at the University of Seville (Spain) and has been part or directed several research projects in Gibraltar, Portugal, Morocco, Italy and Greece.