The handbook on Greek colonisation was a project that Gocha Tsetskhladze took over from Irad Malkin some 25 years ago; it yielded two excellent volumes (in 2006 and 2008), but it grew. The third volume fell victim to Gocha’s heavy engagements as Director of the excavations at Pessinus in Anatolia (from 2009). The project had been intended to be of two volumes, but, after the publication of the first, it became clear that a third would be needed. This is it, though not as it might be due to Gocha’s death. New chapters were recruited, old were updated, and a chapter on Miletus was rescued, enabling the main text of the volume to conclude where so much Greek colonisation began. The ten main chapters embody a variety of approaches, mixing breadth and depth: The Concept of Polis and its Application to Greek Colonies and other Greek Settlements Overseas; Greek Secondary Colonisation; Greeks between Cilicia, Tyre and the Ancient Near Eastern Hinterland: Textual Evidence and Historical Perspective; Nomads, Barbarians and Scythians: Idealisation and Cultural Difference; From Greek Colonisation to Cultural Encounters via Migration and Mobility: Historical and Methodological Considerations; The Ancient Discourse of (Archaic) Greek (Overseas) Settlements; A Short History of the Modern Framing of Archaic Greek Overseas Settlement as Colonisation; What’s in a Word? Colonisation Ancient and Modern, and Some Related Problems; East Greece in the 8th-6th centuries B.C.; and Miletus – the Ionian Metropolis in the Archaic Period. Gocha died before completing his own two chapters, one on the Black Sea and the other on publications on Greek colonisation over the past 25 years. No one can fill this gap. In partial substitution, for the Black Sea, his original thoughts of 1994 and those of over 20 years later are presented as appendices; on publications, though limited to the Black Sea, his introductory piece for the proceedings of the Sixth International Congress on Black Sea Antiquities, held in 2017, is relevant and it too (mildly updated) is provided as an appendix.
Le informazioni nella sezione "Riassunto" possono far riferimento a edizioni diverse di questo titolo.
Da: ISD LLC, Bristol, CT, U.S.A.
hardcover. Condizione: New. Codice articolo 1691841
Quantità: 15 disponibili
Da: Grand Eagle Retail, Bensenville, IL, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condizione: new. Hardcover. The handbook on Greek colonisation was a project that Gocha Tsetskhladze took over from Irad Malkin some 25 years ago; it yielded two excellent volumes (in 2006 and 2008), but it grew. The third volume fell victim to Gochas heavy engagements as Director of the excavations at Pessinus in Anatolia (from 2009). The project had been intended to be of two volumes, but, after the publication of the first, it became clear that a third would be needed. This is it, though not as it might be due to Gochas death. New chapters were recruited, old were updated, and a chapter on Miletus was rescued, enabling the main text of the volume to conclude where so much Greek colonisation began. The ten main chapters embody a variety of approaches, mixing breadth and depth: The Concept of Polis and its Application to Greek Colonies and other Greek Settlements Overseas; Greek Secondary Colonisation; Greeks between Cilicia, Tyre and the Ancient Near Eastern Hinterland: Textual Evidence and Historical Perspective; Nomads, Barbarians and Scythians: Idealisation and Cultural Difference; From Greek Colonisation to Cultural Encounters via Migration and Mobility: Historical and Methodological Considerations; The Ancient Discourse of (Archaic) Greek (Overseas) Settlements; A Short History of the Modern Framing of Archaic Greek Overseas Settlement as Colonisation; Whats in a Word? Colonisation Ancient and Modern, and Some Related Problems; East Greece in the 8th-6th centuries B.C.; and Miletus the Ionian Metropolis in the Archaic Period. Gocha died before completing his own two chapters, one on the Black Sea and the other on publications on Greek colonisation over the past 25 years. No one can fill this gap. In partial substitution, for the Black Sea, his original thoughts of 1994 and those of over 20 years later are presented as appendices; on publications, though limited to the Black Sea, his introductory piece for the proceedings of the Sixth International Congress on Black Sea Antiquities, held in 2017, is relevant and it too (mildly updated) is provided as an appendix. Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability. Codice articolo 9789042951310
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Da: CitiRetail, Stevenage, Regno Unito
Hardcover. Condizione: new. Hardcover. The handbook on Greek colonisation was a project that Gocha Tsetskhladze took over from Irad Malkin some 25 years ago; it yielded two excellent volumes (in 2006 and 2008), but it grew. The third volume fell victim to Gochas heavy engagements as Director of the excavations at Pessinus in Anatolia (from 2009). The project had been intended to be of two volumes, but, after the publication of the first, it became clear that a third would be needed. This is it, though not as it might be due to Gochas death. New chapters were recruited, old were updated, and a chapter on Miletus was rescued, enabling the main text of the volume to conclude where so much Greek colonisation began. The ten main chapters embody a variety of approaches, mixing breadth and depth: The Concept of Polis and its Application to Greek Colonies and other Greek Settlements Overseas; Greek Secondary Colonisation; Greeks between Cilicia, Tyre and the Ancient Near Eastern Hinterland: Textual Evidence and Historical Perspective; Nomads, Barbarians and Scythians: Idealisation and Cultural Difference; From Greek Colonisation to Cultural Encounters via Migration and Mobility: Historical and Methodological Considerations; The Ancient Discourse of (Archaic) Greek (Overseas) Settlements; A Short History of the Modern Framing of Archaic Greek Overseas Settlement as Colonisation; Whats in a Word? Colonisation Ancient and Modern, and Some Related Problems; East Greece in the 8th-6th centuries B.C.; and Miletus the Ionian Metropolis in the Archaic Period. Gocha died before completing his own two chapters, one on the Black Sea and the other on publications on Greek colonisation over the past 25 years. No one can fill this gap. In partial substitution, for the Black Sea, his original thoughts of 1994 and those of over 20 years later are presented as appendices; on publications, though limited to the Black Sea, his introductory piece for the proceedings of the Sixth International Congress on Black Sea Antiquities, held in 2017, is relevant and it too (mildly updated) is provided as an appendix. Shipping may be from our UK warehouse or from our Australian or US warehouses, depending on stock availability. Codice articolo 9789042951310
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Da: AussieBookSeller, Truganina, VIC, Australia
Hardcover. Condizione: new. Hardcover. The handbook on Greek colonisation was a project that Gocha Tsetskhladze took over from Irad Malkin some 25 years ago; it yielded two excellent volumes (in 2006 and 2008), but it grew. The third volume fell victim to Gochas heavy engagements as Director of the excavations at Pessinus in Anatolia (from 2009). The project had been intended to be of two volumes, but, after the publication of the first, it became clear that a third would be needed. This is it, though not as it might be due to Gochas death. New chapters were recruited, old were updated, and a chapter on Miletus was rescued, enabling the main text of the volume to conclude where so much Greek colonisation began. The ten main chapters embody a variety of approaches, mixing breadth and depth: The Concept of Polis and its Application to Greek Colonies and other Greek Settlements Overseas; Greek Secondary Colonisation; Greeks between Cilicia, Tyre and the Ancient Near Eastern Hinterland: Textual Evidence and Historical Perspective; Nomads, Barbarians and Scythians: Idealisation and Cultural Difference; From Greek Colonisation to Cultural Encounters via Migration and Mobility: Historical and Methodological Considerations; The Ancient Discourse of (Archaic) Greek (Overseas) Settlements; A Short History of the Modern Framing of Archaic Greek Overseas Settlement as Colonisation; Whats in a Word? Colonisation Ancient and Modern, and Some Related Problems; East Greece in the 8th-6th centuries B.C.; and Miletus the Ionian Metropolis in the Archaic Period. Gocha died before completing his own two chapters, one on the Black Sea and the other on publications on Greek colonisation over the past 25 years. No one can fill this gap. In partial substitution, for the Black Sea, his original thoughts of 1994 and those of over 20 years later are presented as appendices; on publications, though limited to the Black Sea, his introductory piece for the proceedings of the Sixth International Congress on Black Sea Antiquities, held in 2017, is relevant and it too (mildly updated) is provided as an appendix. Shipping may be from our Sydney, NSW warehouse or from our UK or US warehouse, depending on stock availability. Codice articolo 9789042951310
Quantità: 1 disponibili