Listing 1 - 3 of 3 |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
Neolithic period --- Excavations (Archaeology) --- Human settlements --- Néolithique --- Fouilles (Archéologie) --- Etablissements humains --- Cyprus --- Chypre --- Antiquities. --- Antiquités --- Néolithique --- Fouilles (Archéologie) --- Antiquités --- Shillourokambos Site (Cyprus)
Choose an application
Dans le cadre du renouveau que connaissent les études sur Chypre à l'âge du Fer, ce volume apporte une réflexion sur le thème des continuités, ruptures et changements qui accompagnent l’histoire des royaumes chypriotes du Ier millénaire avant notre ère. On y examine les évolutions politiques, en insistant sur le passage d’un mode de gouvernement à un autre ; les transitions culturelles, avec la création de la koinè pan-chypriote d’époque géométrique, la naissance des styles régionaux ou encore l’impact de l’hellénisme ; les modifications ou la continuité des structures économiques, avec les dynamiques d’exploitation du territoire et leurs conséquences sur l’évolution des limites territoriales des royaumes chypriotes. Sans nier ou diminuer la radicalité et l’importance de certains phénomènes ou événements – de l’hellénisation de l’île à sa conquête par les Lagides, en passant par l’enracinement de la présence phénicienne à l’époque archaïque et la grandissante infl uence athénienne pendant l’époque classique –, on en réévalue l’impact à la lumière d’autres facteurs essentiels, parfois moins visibles et plus difficiles à saisir en raison du biais de la documentation disponible. La perspective « chyprocentrique » paraît ainsi celle qui permet le mieux de refonder, sur de nouvelles bases méthodologiques et théoriques, l’analyse de l’histoire et des caractéristiques constitutives des royaumes chypriotes. Archéologues, épigraphistes, numismates, historiens, céramologues, spécialistes de tout horizon scientifique apportent ainsi leur regard, soit par l'étude de cas ciblés, dont plusieurs découvertes récentes, soit en dégageant des caractéristiques communes à l'ensemble des royaumes. Within the context of a revival in studies on Iron Age Cyprus, this volume considers the theme of continuity, ruptures and changes that go hand in hand with the history of the Cypriot kingdoms of the first millennium BC. We examine political developments, emphasizing the transition from one…
Cyprus --- Antiquities. --- Politics and government --- Bronze age --- Civilization --- Kıbrıs --- Kypros --- Zypern --- Chypre --- Qubruṣ --- Kipriaki Dhimokratia --- Kıbrıs Cumhuriyeti --- Cipro --- Chipre --- Cypern --- Kipŭr --- Tsiprus --- Kypriakē Dēmokratia --- Republic of Cyprus --- Ciper --- Κύπρος --- Κυπριακή Δημοκρατία --- Kipr --- Кипр --- Ostrov Kipr --- Остров Кипр --- Cyprus (Turkish republic of northern Cyprus, 1983- ) --- Cyprus (Turkish federated state, 1975-1983) --- Antiquities --- History --- Bronze final --- Conferences - Meetings --- Excavations (Archaeology) --- Iron age --- Material culture --- Architecture, Ancient --- Greece --- Grèce --- Periodicals --- Antiquités --- Périodiques --- Periodicals. --- E-books --- Bronze age - Cyprus - Congresses. --- Bronze final - Chypre - Congrès. --- Cyprus - Antiquities - Congresses. --- Cyprus - History - Congresses. --- Griechische Welt --- antike geschichtsschreibung --- historische geographie --- Altes Griechenland --- Ziprioten
Choose an application
Cultural crossroads and focal point of passage, Cyprus has had a very important mediating function that the book illuminates in various aspects: from contaminations of a religious nature and the contiguity of mythical traditions (as in the case of Asarte-Aphodite) to multiple linguistic and cultural influences. Cyprus is located in a strategic position, historically presenting itself as a place of political and military confrontations. Cyprus, through the growing flow of merchants, contributed to the change of mentality which stopped looking at the sea as a source of danger and started to see in it a principle of openness and communication. A sea that divides, but also a sea that unites. This path is followed through epigraphic and material sources, from those dating back to the III millennium B.C. which mention the island as a stage for expeditions with military functions or as a supply of timber and metals, to those of the eighth century B.C. where Cyprus marks the north-western border of the 'officially existing world' in the East, and then up to to the Middle Ages, observed from the West with the registers of Genoese and Venetian notaries of the fourteenth century. Three continents compete for the island of Cyprus: in addition to Asia, also Africa with Egypt opposite, and Europe, as the extreme offshoot of Greece and the islands of the Aegean Sea.
Chypre --- Civilization, Aegean --- Diplomatics --- Documents --- Auxiliary sciences of history --- Cartularies --- Historiography --- History --- Archives --- Manuscripts --- Paleography --- Aegean civilization --- Sources --- Cyprus --- Kıbrıs --- Kypros --- Zypern --- Qubruṣ --- Kipriaki Dhimokratia --- Kıbrıs Cumhuriyeti --- Cipro --- Chipre --- Cypern --- Kipŭr --- Tsiprus --- Kypriakē Dēmokratia --- Republic of Cyprus --- Ciper --- Κύπρος --- Κυπριακή Δημοκρατία --- Kipr --- Кипр --- Ostrov Kipr --- Остров Кипр --- Cyprus (Turkish republic of northern Cyprus, 1983- ) --- Cyprus (Turkish federated state, 1975-1983) --- Foreign relations --- Description and travel. --- Description and travel --- Antiquités --- Philosophie grecque --- Diffusion de la culture.
Listing 1 - 3 of 3 |
Sort by
|