Paris, Librairie Hachette, bibliothèque des merveilles, 1890, in-12 broché, 286 pp, illustré de 80 vignettes. Etat d'usage.
Reference : 30648
LE SERPENT QUI PENSE
M. ERIC BIBAULT
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État : Bon état - Année : 1965 - Format : in 8° - Pages : 345pp - Editeur : Presses de la Cité - Lieu d'édition : Paris - Type : Cartonnage toile éditeur, jaquette illustrée - Divers : Tranches un peu salies (tranche de tête particulièrement). Léger frottement de la jaquette et du cartonnage en coiffes. Intérieur bien propre. - Commander rapidement : https://www.bons-livres.fr/livre/jean-larteguy/9715-les-tambours-de-bronze?lrb
Ce roman est un hymne au charme troublant et sensuel du Laos. C'est aussi un récit d'espionnage dans l'ambiance complexe de la guerre que mène l'Occident au communisme asiatique. Mais c'est également une histoire d'amitié entre deux adversaires qui se rejoignent dans leur échec commun et d'amour entre un homme et une jeune femme, entre deux peuples. Ce n'est peut-être pas le roman le plus connu de Jean Lartéguy mais c'est celui qui met le plus en lumière l'amour que l'auteur porte aux paysages et aux peuples de l'Asie du sud-est. Dans cette histoire complexe d'espionnage et de guerre des années d'après-guerre, les personnages apparaîssent tels des hommes de chair et de sang maîtres de leur destin en dépit de leurs désillusions. Et puis l'auteur nous conduit à la découverte des derniers peuples libres des montagnes: les Méos et les Khas.
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Knut Ivar Austvoll, Marianne Hem Eriksen, Per Ditlef Fredriksen, Lene Melheim, Lisbeth Pr sch-Danielsen, Lisbeth Skogstrand (eds)
Reference : 65484
, Brepols, 2021 Paperback, 284 pages, Size:215 x 280 mm, Illustrations:61 b/w, 30 col., 16 tables b/w., Language: English. ISBN 9782503588773.
Summary The Bronze Age in Northern Europe was a place of diversity and contrast, an era that saw movements and changes not just of peoples, but of cultures, beliefs, and socio-political systems, and that led to the forging of ontological ideas materialized in landscapes, bodies, and technologies. Drawing on a range of materials and places, the innovative contributions gathered here in this volume explore the disparate facets of Bronze Age society across the Nordic region through the key themes of time and trajectory, rituals and everyday life, and encounters and identities. The contributions explore how and why society evolved over time, from the changing nature of sea travel to new technologies in house building, and from advances in lithic production to evolving burial practices and beliefs in the afterlife. This edited collection honours the ground-breaking research of Professor Christopher Prescott, an outstanding figure in the study of the Bronze Age north, and it takes as its inspiration the diversity, interdisciplinarity, and vitality of his own research in order to make a major new contribution to the field, and to shed new light on a Bronze Age full of contrasts and connections. TABLE OF CONTENTS List of Illustrations Preface Contrasts of the Bronze Age - Time, Ritual and Encounters in the Nordic World: An Introduction - IVAR AUSTVOLL, MARIANNE HEM ERIKSEN, PER DITLEF FREDRIKSEN, LENE MELHEIM, LISBETH PR SCH-DANIELSEN AND LISBETH SKOGSTRAND Part I. Time and Trajectory in the Nordic Bronze Age The Nordic Bronze Age Rose from Copper Age Diversity: Contrasts in the Cimbrian Peninsula -JOHANNES M LLER AND HELLE VANDKILDE On the Periphery of an Agricultural Society: Traces From the Formative Agricultural Period in Norway - A Case Study From ygarden in Hordaland, Western Norway - ARNE JOHAN N R Y The Contrasting Region of Hedmark, Southeast Norway: A Border Zone Through Three Millennia - BERNT RUNDBERGET AND HILDE RIGMOR AMUNDSEN Lithic Production in Bronze Age Norway: The Legacy of a Neolithic Mosaic - ASTRID J. NYLAND Places to Be, or Places to Live? Transformations in Prehistoric Dwellings in the North-western Iberian Peninsula - M. PILAR PRIETO-MART NEZ A History in Prehistory: The Making of a Migration Period 'Technology of Remembrance' in South-West Norway - PER DITLEF FREDRIKSEN AND ELNA SIV KRISTOFFERSEN Part II. Ritual and Everyday Life: Ontologies, Images, and Place-making Practices Together or Apart? Identifying Ontologies in the Nordic Bronze and Iron Age through the Study of Human-Horse Relationships - JACOB KVEIBORG The Stacked, the Partial and the Large. Visual Modes of Material Articulation in M laren Bay Rock Art - FREDRIK FAHLANDER Ritual or Mundane? Scandinavian Tar Loaves from the Bronze Age - CAMILLA C. NORDBY AND KRISTINE ORESTAD S RGAARD Identifying and Investigating Diversity: New Perspectives and Possibilities Within Scandinavian Rock Art Research - JAMES DODD Patterns or Contrast? A GIS-based Study of the Landscape Context and Localization of Southern Rock Art Tradition in Stj rdal, Mid-Norway - ARNE ANDERSON STAMNES AND HEIDRUN STEBERGL KKEN Knapped Quartz in Finnish Bronze Age Cairns - JARKKO SAIPIO Bridging Perspectives: Social Dynamics of Houses and Households in the Nordic Bronze Age - MARIANNE HEM ERIKSEN AND KNUT IVAR AUSTVOLL Part III. Encounters: Identity, Things, and People on the Move A Safe Harbour: Identifying and Theorizing Harbours in Late Neolithic and Bronze Age Norway - H VARD KILHAVN What Can Artefacts Tell Us About Societies? Foreign Objects in Bronze Age Central Europe and Scandinavia - LUKAS WIGGERING Clay, Burial Urns, and Social Distinction in Late Bronze Age Southern Scandinavia - SERENA SABATINI, TORBJ RN BRORSSO, AND PETER SKOGLUND The Contrasts Within: Intersecting Identities in the Luseh j Mound, Denmark - LISBETH SKOGSTRAND Contrasting the Women in the Rege and Molkhaug Mounds: Poised Between the Here and the Beyond - KRISTIN ARMSTRONG OMA Thy at the Crossroads: A Local Bronze Age Community's Role in a Macro-Economic System - KRISTIAN KRISTIANSEN, LENE MELHEIM, JENS-HENRIK BECH, MORTEN FISCHER MORTENSEN, AND KARIN MARGARITA FREI
, Brepols, 2020 Paperback, xxvi + 398 pages, Size:216 x 280 mm, Illustrations:133 b/w, 36 col., 16 tables b/w., Languages: English, French. ISBN 9782503551838.
Summary This volume corresponds to the acts of a conference that closes the international interdisciplinary research project Badiyah, directed by Corinne Castel and Jan-Waalke Meyer (Directors of the Tell Al-Rawda and Tell Chuera archaeological missions). Both sites illustrate the importance of the 3rd millennium BCE 'circular cities' discovered in today's Syria. These pre-planned cities were fortified and organized following a concentric and radial urban pattern. They represent a particular form of the endogenous process of urbanization that appeared in this region when the first cities and territorial states emerged. The main results obtained from these two sites are compared to other Syrian 'circular cities' of the Early Bronze Age. Twenty-nine contributions enable us to reassess the process of urbanization in the Near East and to question the Southern Mesopotamian model as the unique cradle of urban civilization. TABLE OF CONTENTS TABLE OF CONTENTS PREFACE AVANT-PROPOS Introduction Syrian Circular Cities of the Third Millennium BC: A Syrian Urban Model - CORINNE CASTEL Spatial and Temporal Distribution of Circular Cities in Early Bronze Age Syria: A Reappraisal - PHILIPPE QUENET The Birth of the Circular Cities - JAN-WAALKE MEYER SECTION I - THEMATIC TOPICS Origins of the Model The Origin and Early Development of Tell Chu?ra and Neighbouring Settlements - RALPH HEMPELMANN Retracing Settlements, Pots, and People: Frankfurt University's Southeast Anatolia Project (SOAP) - CHRISTIAN FALB & MUSTAFA KIBARO?LU Circular Cities: Fortifications and Official Areas The Fortification of Circular Cities: The Examples of Tell Chu?ra and Tell Al-Rawda - TOBIAS?B.?H. HELMS & PHILIPPE QUENET Creating the Urban Landscape. The Emergence of Monumentality in Third Millennium Chu?ra - OLESIA KROMBERG The Early Bronze Age Palace at Chu?ra and the Decline of the Settlement - ALEXANDER TAMM Circular Cities: Material Culture A Comparison of Early Bronze Age Ceramic Assemblages from Circular Cities in Inner Syria and the Western Jezirah: Some Preliminary Considerations - TAOS BABOUR & GEORGES MOUAMAR Djemdet Nasr or Early Bronze Age?III? Dating the Find Locations of Tell Chu?ra Seal Impressions - ANNE-BIRTE BINDER Peri-Urban Constructions and Environmental Studies The Circular Cities of Northern Syria in their Environmental Context - STEFAN LORENZ SMITH & TONY JAMES WILKINSON? Soils and Land Use Potential Around Tell Chu?ra in the Third Millennium BC - HEINRICH THIEMEYER Central Places in the Wadi ?amar Survey Area. Aspects of Urban Planning in the Regions of the Badiyah Project in the Third Millennium BC - VERONIKA KUDLEK Strat gies de subsistance et conomie v g tale dans les villes circulaires de la Shamiyah au Bronze ancien. Tell Al-Rawda et Tell Sh'airat dans les marges arides de Syrie - LINDA HERVEUX Potentiels agro-pastoraux et am nagements agricoles p riurbains de la micror gion d'Al-Rawda - OLIVIER BARGE & MARIE-LAURE CHAMBRADE Animal Economy at the End of the Third Millennium bc in the Syrian Badiyah: A Comparative Study of Tell Chu?ra and Tell Al-Rawda - EMMANUELLE VILA A Cataclysm in the Steppe? Environmental History of Al-Rawda, an Ephemeral City in the Syrian Arid Margins at the End of the Third Millennium - JACQUES E LIE BROCHIER Society and Textual Sources The Ebla Palace G Texts and the Circular Cities of Third Millennium Eastern Syria: Some Remarks - MARIA GIOVANNA BIGA The Ebla Palace G Texts and the Circular Cities of Third Millennium Southern Syria: Some Remarks - AMALIA CATAGNOTI Square Temples and Circular Cities: Sites of Attraction, 'Traditions of Identity' and Third Millennium Urbanisation in Northern Syria - ANNE PORTER SECTION II - REGIONAL TOPICS Anatolia The Spatial Organisation, Development and Sociology of Radial Pattern Settlements in Early Bronze Age Anatolia - B RENG RE PERELLO Jezirah Mari, une ville circulaire ordinaire? - PASCAL BUTTERLIN Notes sur l'architecture et l'urbanisme du Royaume de Nagar (3): similarit s entre Tell Brak et Tell Beydar l' poque Early Jezirah IIIb - MARC LEBEAU Tell Khazna I - A Concentric Planned Settlement in The Khabur Steppe - AMIROV SHAMARDAN N. Tell Tcholema Foqani: A New Circular City 'Kranzh gel' in the Region of Upper Jezirah - CHEIKHMOUS ALI A Season's Work at Khirbet Malhat, North-Eastern Syria - PHILIPPE QUENET & AHMAD SULTAN Bishri La contribution du Jebel Bishri la th matique des villes circulaires du troisi me mill naire av. J.-C. - AHMAD SULTAN A Planned new Major City on the Margins of the Syrian Steppe: Early Bronze Age Tell Sh?a?rat - GEORGES MOUAMAR Southern Mesopotamia Town-Planning in Third Millennium Mesopotamia: A View from the Alluvial Plain - R GIS VALLET INDEX OF SITES
, Brepols, 2024 Hardback, xxviii + 232 pages, Size:152 x 229 mm, Illustrations:226 b/w, 7 tables b/w., Language: English. ISBN 9780897223959.
Summary This monograph examines the Late Classical and Hellenistic bronze coinages of five mints in the Thessalian perioikic region of Magnesia. At the core of this work lies a new die-study of the coins produced by the strategically and economically important coastal cities of Homolion and Meliboia as well as the lesser-known mints of Eureai, Eurymenai, and Rhizous. Combining this die-study with a close examination of the cities' topographical context in a border region between Thessaly and Macedon and drawing on archaeological data from Magnesia and beyond, the monograph addresses key questions concerning the chronology, denominations, and circulation patterns of the bronze issues minted on eastern Mount Ossa. This analysis not only throws new light on coin production in Late Classical and Hellenistic Magnesia, but also allows a discussion of the possible military and non-military functions of the region's different bronze issues. Placing the coins of Eureai, Eurymenai, Homolion, Meliboia, and Rhizous in their wider context, this monograph furthermore addresses broader issues in the history of Thessalian coinage. In particular, the monograph's regional approach offers an unusual opportunity to examine to what extent Thessaly's Late Classical and Hellenistic civic coins were genuinely local in design, production, and function. The monograph thus both explores the coins of Mount Ossa and contributes towards a better understanding of the introduction and development of bronze coinages in the wider Thessalian region and beyond. TABLE OF CONTENTS Preface Abbreviations List of Tables List of Figures List of Plates 1. Setting the Scene: Thessalian Bronze Coinages 2. The Topography and Political Geography of Eastern Mount Ossa 3. The Cities of Eastern Mount Ossa and their Coinages (Homolion, Meliboia, Eurymenai, Rhizous, and Eureai) 4. The Chronology of the Coinages of Mount Ossa 5. The Bronze Coinages of Northeastern Magnesia: Circulation, Denominations, and Patterns of Minting Activity 6. The Bronze Coinages of Northeastern Magnesia: Two Possible Functions 7. Conclusion: Bronze Coinages between Magnesia, Thessaly, and Macedone Bibliography Appendix I: Catalogue of Coins Appendix II: Tables Indexes (Coins by Collection, Coins by Excavation and Findspot, Coins by Auction, Sources, General) Plates
, Brepols, 2024 Hardback, 2 vols, xxxiv + 836 pages, Size:210 x 297 mm, Illustrations:37 b/w, 122 plates, Language: English. ISBN 9780897223980.
Summary Coins of the Ptolemaic Empire, Part 1, Volumes 1 and 2 (Precious Metal and Bronze) by Catharine Lorber, is the massive, long-anticipated catalogue of coins struck by the first four Ptolemaic kings. It essentially rewrites the sections on these rulers in J. N. Svoronos' classic, but now much out of date,?Ta Nomismata tou Kratous ton Ptolemaion?(1904). The body of coinage catalogued by Svoronos is enlarged by more than 300 further emissions in precious metal and more than 180 emissions in bronze, recorded from subsequent scholarship, from hoards, from commercial sources, and from private collections, and constituting about a third of the total catalogue entries. Lorber's attributions, dates, and interpretations rest on numismatic research since Svoronos, or on the latest archaeological and hoard information. She also provides extensive historical and numismatic introductions that give the coins deeper context and meaning. The coinage of Ptolemies I through IV is supplemented by a few issues possibly attributable to Cleomenes of Naucratis, the predecessor of Ptolemy I in Egypt, as well as by coinages of Ptolemy Ceraunus, Magas, and Ptolemy of Telmessus, members of the Lagid dynasty ruling their own kingdoms outside of Egypt. TABLE OF CONTENTS Volume 1: Precious Metal Preface Acknowledgements Guide for Users Maps Introduction Ptolemy I Soter Ptolemy II Philadelphus Ptolemy III Euergetes Ptolemy IV Philopator Precious Metal Catalogue Cleomenes of Naucratis Ptolemy I Soter Ptolemy II Philadelphus Ptolemy III Euergetes Ptolemy IV Philopator Third-Century Provincial(?) Tetradrachms Unattributable as to Reign (Ptolemy I-IV) Late Additions to the Catalogues Appendices Ptolemaic Precious Metal Hoards Additional Provenances of Precious Metal Coins Bibliography Concordance to Svoronos Indices Remarkable Types in Gold and Silver Remarkable Denominations in Gold and Silver Remarkable Inscriptions on Gold and Silver Controls on Precious Metal Coins Image Credits Plates Volume 2: Bronze Preface Acknowledgements Guide for Users Bronze Catalogue Cleomenes of Naucratis Ptolemy I Soter Macedonia under Ceraunus and Meleager Ptolemy II Philadelphus Ptolemy of Telmessus Ptolemy III Euergetes Ptolemy IV Philopator Appendices 1. Ptolemaic Bronze Hoards 2. Additional Bronze Provenances Bibliography Concordance to Svoronos Numbers Indices 1. Remarkable Types in Bronze 2. Remarkable Inscriptions 3. Controls Image Credits Plates