Paris, Nagel verlag archaeologia mvndi , 1965; in-8, 211 pp., cartonnage d'éditeur . avec jaquette en allemand.
Reference : 201005428
avec jaquette en allemand.
Librairie Lire et Chiner
Mme Laetitia Gorska
36 rue Marchands
68000 Colmar
France
03 89 24 16 78
commande par internet, retrait possible au magasin. Les colis sont expédiés dès réception du règlement après entente concernant les frais de port, envoi vers la France mais aussi vers l'étranger nous contacter pour le calcul des frais d'envoi
Paola Sconzo, Marco Iamoni, Luca Peyronel, Johnny Samuele Baldi (eds)
Reference : 64946
, Brepols, 2022 Paperback, xxii + 263 pages, Size:216 x 280 mm, Illustrations:52 b/w, 16 col., 9 tables b/w., 20 maps b/w, 1 maps color, Language: English. ISBN 9782503596044.
Summary Many of the debates that have until recently driven research into Mesopotamia's proto-urban phase (5th- 4th millennia BCE) have now been reassessed thanks to new fieldwork in Iraqi Kurdistan and new data into the relationships between the north and south of the Alluvium from hitherto poorly-documented regions. These debates were re-examined in the light of this new material during a workshop held at the ICAANE in 2018 in Munich, leading to unprecedented perspectives on the patterns of early urbanization, social mobility, and the organization of Late Chalcolithic communities. Drawing on research first presented at ICAANE, and building on the most recent data from surveys and excavations, this volume engages with one key question from different angles: namely, how can we reconcile detailed analysis of the multifaceted local variations of proto-urbanism with the supra-regional, intricate, and more widespread nature of this same phenomenon across Mesopotamia? TABLE OF CONTENTS Preface and Acknowledgments Introduction: The Late Chalcolithic of Northern Mesopotamia in Context: Building on a Long and Eventful Debate ? JOHNNY SAMUELE BALDI, MARCO IAMONI, LUCA PEYRONEL & PAOLA SCONZO Unravelling Early Urbanism and Cultural Encounters in Late Chalcolithic North-eastern Iraq ? TIM BOAZ BRUUN & CARLO COLANTONI Beyond Subsistence? Settlement Strategies of the Late Chalcolithic Period in the Selevani Plain (Upper Iraqi Tigris) ? MARCO IAMONI & PAOLA SCONZO? Un air de famille. Preliminary Observations on the Ubaid and Late Chalcolithic Horizon of the Shahrizor Plain (Iraqi Kurdistan) ? MARIA BIANCA D'ANNA, OLIVIER NIEUWENHUYSE & SIMONE MÜHL The 'Uruk Conundrum' in the Shahrizor, Iraqi-Kurdistan: Petrographic Developments, Ceramic Variation and Cultural Connections at Gird-i Shamlu and Gurga Chiya ? MICHAEL P. LEWIS Towards a Definition of the Late Chalcolithic Period in the Erbil Plain: The Contribution of the Helawa Pottery Sequence ? AGNESE VACCA & LUCA PEYRONEL? North-eastern Mesopotamian Ceramic Sub-Assemblages and their Potential for Identifying Communication Networks: The Formation of Red/Grey Ware Assemblages during Late Chalcolithic 1 and 2 ? KHALED ABU JAYYAB Bits of Uruk Before and Outside the Uruk Colonial Sphere. The Qara Dagh Area and Some Early Thoughts on a Reassessment of the Uruk Expansion ? JOHNNY SAMUELE BALDI What Complexity? Late Chalcolithic Developments at the Site of Arslantepe in the Upper Euphrates Region ? FRANCESCA BALOSSI RESTELLI On the Edge of Mesopotamia: The Presence of Uruk and Uruk-related Material Culture in the Upper Tigris Region ? ?NAN AYDO?AN, METIN BATIHAN & HALUK SA?LAMTIMUR The Late Chalcolithic Canaanean Blade System in Northern Mesopotamia: Connections with the Uruk Phenomenon? ? FRANCESCA MANCLOSSI Conclusions: Late Chalcolithic Northern Mesopotamia. Setting the Agenda in the Debate on the Rise of Urbanization in the Ancient Near East ? JOHNNY SAMUELE BALDI, MARCO IAMONI, LUCA PEYRONEL & PAOLA SCONZO
, Brepols - Harvey Miller, 2004 Hardcover. X 420 p., 60 colour ill., one Cd-Rom, 210 x 295 mm, Languages: English, Including an index. Fine copy. ISBN 9782503991207.
Due to an important number of salvage projects and rescue excavations in Northern Syria, Southern Turkey and Northern Iraq, the archaeological records documenting Upper Mesopotamia drastically increased these last decades. More than 300 regular or rescue preclassical excavations have been registered in Upper Mesopotamia so far. This Atlas of Preclassical Upper Mesopotamia is the result of a systematic examination of the published evidence. More than 100 collaborators have contributed to set up an analytical repertory, summing up the available data through a standardized file. This repertory enumerates each site and reports topography, dimensions of the settlement, geographical location, data on the excavations, periods of occupation (A to Z), environmental and archaeometrical studies, material culture (72 entries), 14C samplings and bibliography. All these ancient settlements are carefully located in new 4-colour maps. Subartu XI includes an updated bibliography, to be considered as the Supplement to Subartu I.
, Brepols - Harvey Miller, 1998 Softcover . 2 vol., 550 pages., 210 x 295 mm, Languages: English, French, Including an index. Fine copy. ISBN 9782503506524.
Since the excavations in the Assad Lake region (Syria) and a large number of rescue projects in Syria, Turkey and Iraq, Upper Mesopotamia has been the focus of a wide interdisciplinary research. ?About Subartu. Studies Devoted to Upper Mesopotamia? constitutes an attempt at a wide-scope evaluation of these historical and archaeological extensive activities. Historians, epigraphers, geomorphologists, art historians and archaeologists contribute to produce together a balanced account of considerable new evidence from the Neolithic period to the Iron Age. ?About Subartu? is a collective work, including papers by Trevor Watkins, Danielle Stordeur, Toshio Matsutani
University Press Group 2007 368 pages 13 7x20 2x3cm. 2007. Broché. 368 pages. Avec de nombreuses illustrations
Bon état
, Brepols - Harvey Miller, 2000 Hardcover. 250 p., ill., 210 x 295 mm, Languages: English, Including an index. Fine copy. ISBN 9782503507293.
The early prehistory of Mesopotamia provides a uniquely rich and significant contribution to the study of the human past. Within the geographic bounds of Mesopotamia many major developments took place. Early forms of hominid, probably Homo erectus and definitely Neandertal, passed countless millennia here, to be succeeded by anatomically modern humans. After the end of the last Ice Age the pace of human activity increased. Settled communities appeared for the first time, followed by the extensive and intensive exploitation and domestication of plants and animals. By 4,500 bc settled human communities were practising a full spectrum of agricultural techniques, cultivating a range of crops and husbanding domesticated animals for a variety of purposes, while maintaining an involvement in traditional hunting strategies. Firmly based on site by site examination, this volume contains detailed analyses of all evidence relevant to these and other major concerns of the early Mesopotamian past.