Borders in archaeology : Anatolia and the South Caucasus ca. 3500-500 BCE / edited by Lorenzo d'Alfonso and Karen S. Rubinson.
Material type: TextSeries: Ancient Near Eastern studies. Supplement ; ; 58.Publication details: Leuven ; Bristol, CT : Peeters, 2021. Description: viii, 357 pages : illustrations (some color), maps ; 31 cmContent type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9042943734; 9789042943735Subject(s): Excavations (Archaeology) -- Turkey | Excavations (Archaeology) -- Caucasus, South | Borderlands | Fouilles (Archeologie) -- Transcaucasie | Regions frontalieres | marches (districts) | Borderlands | Boundaries | Historical geography | Turkey -- Boundaries -- History | Turkey -- Historical geography | Caucasus, South -- Boundaries -- History | Caucasus, South -- Historical geography | Asie Mineure -- Geographie historique | Transcaucasie -- Geographie historique | South Caucasus | Turkey | Caucasus (mountain range) | Asia MinorGenre/Form: History.DDC classification: 932-933 LOC classification: DS155 | .B675 2021Summary: This volume is devoted to the search for borders in archaeology and takes as a case study the archaeology of Anatolia and the South Caucasus in the Bronze and Iron Ages. Up until the mid-first millennium BCE, these regions differ in interregional and macro-regional interactions, political complexity, economic and mobility strategies, and communication of identities, among which is the use and spread of writing through time. They are united by their representation in ancient sources and modern literature as borderlands. These features represent the core of the discussion developed in the volume. Chapters include theoretical discussion of borders and boundaries, and regional investigations of the Early, Middle and Late Bronze Age (Assyrian colony period, Hittite empire in Anatolia, Kura-Araxes, Trialeti-Vanadzor, Van-Urmia and other traditions in the South Caucasus), the Early Iron Age and Middle Iron Age (Troy, Phrygia, Urartu), until the unification under the Achaemenid Empire. They offer a balanced interplay between site-based investigations and landscape archaeology in Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia and Turkey.Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Books | The BIAA David H. French Library Shelf 35 - Main Room | F D'ALFO 32740 | Not for loan | BOOKS-000000025967 |
This volume is devoted to the search for borders in archaeology and takes as a case study the archaeology of Anatolia and the South Caucasus in the Bronze and Iron Ages. Up until the mid-first millennium BCE, these regions differ in interregional and macro-regional interactions, political complexity, economic and mobility strategies, and communication of identities, among which is the use and spread of writing through time. They are united by their representation in ancient sources and modern literature as borderlands. These features represent the core of the discussion developed in the volume. Chapters include theoretical discussion of borders and boundaries, and regional investigations of the Early, Middle and Late Bronze Age (Assyrian colony period, Hittite empire in Anatolia, Kura-Araxes, Trialeti-Vanadzor, Van-Urmia and other traditions in the South Caucasus), the Early Iron Age and Middle Iron Age (Troy, Phrygia, Urartu), until the unification under the Achaemenid Empire. They offer a balanced interplay between site-based investigations and landscape archaeology in Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia and Turkey.