TY - BOOK AU - Kondoleon,Christine TI - Antioch: the lost ancient city SN - 0691049327 AV - N5865.A75 K66 2000 U1 - 709/.39/43 21 PY - 2000///] CY - Princeton, N.J., Worcester, MA PB - Princeton University Press, Worcester Art Museum KW - Art, Classical KW - Turkey KW - Antioch KW - Exhibitions KW - Antioch (Turkey) KW - Antiquities KW - Civilization KW - Exhibition catalogs KW - fast N1 - Published on the occasion of the exhibition held at the Worcester Art Museum, Worcester, Mass., Oct. 7, 2000-Feb. 4, 2001, at the Cleveland Art Museum, Cleveland, Ohio, Mar. 18-June 3, 2001, and at the Baltimore Museum of Art, Baltimore, Maryland, Sept. 16-Dec. 30, 2001; Includes bibliographical references (pages 229-243) and index; City of Antioch : an introduction; Christine Kondoleon --; People and identity in Roman Antioch; Michael Maas --; Late antique Antioch; Clive Foss --; Jews of ancient Antioch; Bernadette J. Brooten --; Antioch and Christianity; Susan Ashbrook Harvey --; Houses at Antioch; John J. Dobbins --; Mosaics of Antioch; Christine Kondoleon --; Household furnishings; James Russell --; Sculptures of Roman Syria; Cornelius Vermeule --; Mint of Antioch; William E. Metcalf --; Exotic taste : the lure of Sasanian Persia; Anna Gonosová --; Baths and bathing in Roman Antioch; Fikret Yegül --; Magic tablets and the games at Antioch; Florent Heintz --; Dining as a fine art : tablewares of the ancient Romans; Sandra Knudsen --; Pagan cults at Antioch; Sarolta A. Takács --; Church building at Seleucia Pieria; W. Eugene Kleinbauer --; Mosaic pavement of the church building at Seleucia Pieria; Christine Kondoleon --; Relief decoration of the church building at Seleucia Pieria; Susan Boyd N2 - "Antioch, the magnificent city known for its Hellenic culture and luxurious way of life, once ranked with Rome, Alexandria, and Constantinople as one of the great metropolises of the Roman and Early Christian world. Located in what is now southern Turkey, Antioch was the capital of Ancient Syria, a vital marketplace at the crossroads between East and West. It was here that Saint Paul preached to the first gentile community to be called "Christians" and where a Greek-speaking Jewish culture flourished alongside Roman, Egyptian, and Near Eastern traditions. A large middle-class shared in the wealth and culture of the city, and art abounded in numerous forms, especially in beautiful mosaics depicting scenes from mythology and everyday life; Featuring 118 objects excavated from the city's ruins, all reproduced in full color, Antioch: The Lost Ancient City recreates the spatial sensation, visual splendor, and cultural richness of this urban center."--Jacket ER -