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Greeks --- Greek Americans --- Chicago (Ill.) --- Ethnology --- Mediterranean race
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D’après Dion de Pruse, les titulatures honorifiques que les cités d’Asie Mineure se disputaient avec acharnement sous le Haut-Empire étaient un sujet de risée à Rome, où on les désignait sous le nom de « bêtises grecques ». L’historiographie traditionnelle a repris à son compte cette interprétation des rivalités de l’époque impériale, considérée comme de vaines querelles symptomatiques de la décadence de la cité-État. Afin de dépasser ce lieu commun, il fallait enquêter en croisant les sources littéraires, épigraphiques et numismatiques, sur les enjeux matériels et symboliques de la compétition. Cet ouvrage met en lumière à la fois les implications concrètes des statuts privilégiés liés à l’organisation provinciale (capitale de « conventus », centre du culte impérial commun) et la fonction structurante de l’usage des titulatures, qui expriment et construisent une hiérarchie entre cités valable aux yeux des provinciaux comme des autorités romaines. Il propose en même temps une réflexion sur l’évolution qui a conduit à remplacer, au moins en partie, les conflits territoriaux classique par cette nouvelle forme d’« agôn » entre cités, qui établit Rome comme arbitre. Par-delà les mutations transparaît alors une profonde continuité : avec des armes nouvelles - la diplomatie sans la guerre, la rhétorique -, les Grecs continuent de s’affronter dans des conflits qui mettent en jeu d’importantes sources de revenus et des rapports de domination, en vertu des valeurs qui leur sont propres et qu’ils ont réussi à faire reconnaître par Rome. According to Dio Chrysostom, the constant rivalry of the cities of Asia Minor over rank and titles was moked by the Romans, who called those honorary appellations “Greek failings”. Modern historians, following this point of view, have generally interpreted rivalvies of the imperial period as vain quarrels symptomatic of the decadence of the Greek city-state. This book is an attempt to provide new insight by investigating through literary,…
Greeks --- City-states --- Grecs --- Cités-Etats --- Bithynia --- Greece --- Bithynie --- Grèce --- History. --- History --- Histoire --- Bithynia. --- Cités-Etats --- Grèce --- Ethnology --- Mediterranean race --- Bitinia --- decadence --- history --- titulature --- rivalry
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Sensing the Everyday is a multi-sited ethnographic inquiry based on fieldwork experiences and sharp everyday observations in the era of crisis. Blending sophisticated theoretical analyses with original ethnographic data, C. Nadia Seremetakis journeys from Greece to Vienna, Edinburgh, Albania, Ireland, and beyond. Social crisis is seen through its transnational multiplication of borders, thresholds and margins, divisions, and localities as linguistic, bodily, sensory, and performative sites of the quotidian in process. The book proposes everyday life not as a sanctuary or as a recessed zone distanced from the structural violence of the state and the market, but as a condition of im/possibility, unable to be lived as such, yet still an encapsulating habitus. There the impossibility of the quotidian is concretized as fragmentary and fragmenting material forces. Seremetakis weaves together topics as diverse as borders and bodies, history and death, the earth and the senses, language and affect, violence and public culture, the sociality of dreaming, and the spatialization of the traumatic, in a journey through antiphonic witnessing and memory. Her montage explores various ways of juxtaposing reality with the irreal and the imaginal to expose the fictioning of social reality. The book locates her approach to ethnography and the 'native ethnographer' in wider anthropological and philosophical debates, and proposes a dialogical interfacing of theory and practice, the translation of academic knowledge to public knowledge
Greeks --- Financial crises. --- Social life and customs. --- Greece --- Crashes, Financial --- Crises, Financial --- Financial crashes --- Financial panics --- Panics (Finance) --- Stock exchange crashes --- Stock market panics --- Crises --- Ethnology --- Mediterranean race --- Anthropology
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Terra-cotta figurines, Greek --- Votive offerings --- Greeks --- Figurines de terre cuite grecques --- Ex-voto --- Grecs --- Taranto (Italy) --- Antiquities. --- Antiquités --- Antiquités --- Antiquities --- Taranto (Italy) - Antiquities --- Terra-cotta figurines, Hellenistic --- Clay figurines --- Ethnology --- Mediterranean race --- Figurines, Clay --- Figurines --- Hellenistic terra-cotta figurines --- Tarentum (Italy) --- Taras (Italy) --- Taranto, Italy (City) --- Tarent (Italy) --- ex-voto --- époque archaïque --- figurine de terre cuite --- production artisanale --- coroplathie --- archéologie
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Fortification --- Greeks --- Excavations (Archaeology) --- Caulonia (Italy) --- Antiquities. --- Archaeological digs --- Archaeological excavations --- Digs (Archaeology) --- Excavation sites (Archaeology) --- Ruins --- Sites, Excavation (Archaeology) --- Archaeology --- Ethnology --- Mediterranean race --- Fortification, Primitive --- Forts --- Military engineering --- Siege warfare --- Castelvetere (Reggio di Calabria, Italy) --- Italie --- fouille archéologique --- Kaulonia --- Antiquité --- fortifications
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This book aims to offer a new interpretation of the settlement movement initiated by the city of Megara in archaic times. It shows the role of conflict between the aristocratic families for the departure of the Megarians and reveals the role of the heritage of the metropolis in the creation of institutions of colonial cities.
Megara (Greece) --- Mégare (Grèce) --- Antiquities --- History --- Antiquités --- Histoire --- Greeks --- Antiquities. --- Megara Hyblaea (Extinct city) --- Selinus (Extinct city) --- History. --- Ethnology --- Mediterranean race --- Marinella Selinunte (Extinct city) --- Selinous (Extinct city) --- Selinunte (Extinct city) --- Italy --- Megara Hyblaea (Ancient city) --- Megara Hyblaia (Extinct city) --- nomima --- propontis --- greek colonization --- judiciaries --- civil subdivisions --- megara --- sicily --- pontus
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La colonie grecque d’Agathé, établie par les Phocéens de Marseille, déjà citée par des auteurs de l’Antiquité, a fait couler beaucoup d’encre parmi les historiens modernes qui cherchaient surtout sa localisation précise et sa date de fondation. Les premières recherches de terrain de Raymond Aris à la fin des années 1930, puis les travaux d’André Nickels dans les années 1970-1980 ont permis de confirmer la présence de la ville antique sous le site de la ville actuelle d’Agde, et de mieux connaître la vie de ses habitants. Ils ont également occasionné la découverte des deux nécropoles se rapportant à cet établissement : le Peyrou 2, fort de trente-cinq tombes s’échelonnant entre l’extrême fin du Ve siècle et le milieu du IIe siècle av. J.-C., et Saint-André, avec seulement deux tombes conservées de la seconde moitié du IIe siècle av. J.-C. Cet ouvrage étudie de manière détaillée ces sépultures et leur aménagement. Il fait une large place aux défunts eux-mêmes, et aux objets qui accompagnent certains d’entre eux. Il met ainsi en lumière des pratiques funéraires révélatrices de coutumes grecques, très différentes de celles du monde gaulois environnant. Fort proches de ceux de Marseille/Massalia, comparables à ceux d’Ampurias/Emporion, ces usages participent à la définition d’un "paysage" funéraire propre aux colonies grecques de la Méditerranée nord-occidentale.
Excavations (Archaeology) --- Tombs --- Funeral rites and ceremonies --- Greeks --- Agde (France) --- Antiquities --- Sepulchral monuments --- Agde --- Funeral customs and rites --- Ethnology --- Mediterranean race --- Funeral monuments --- Funerary monuments --- Graves --- Gravestones --- Memorial tablets --- Tablets, Memorial --- Tombstones --- Monuments --- Archaeological digs --- Archaeological excavations --- Digs (Archaeology) --- Excavation sites (Archaeology) --- Ruins --- Sites, Excavation (Archaeology) --- Archaeology --- Agatha (France) --- Agathē (France) --- Agathē Tychē (France) --- Civitas Agathensium (France) --- Agathae Urbs (France) --- Antiquities. --- E-books --- Excavations (Archaeology) - France - Agde --- Tombs - France - Agde --- Sepulchral monuments - France - Agde --- Greeks - Funeral customs and rites - France - Agde --- Agde (France) - Antiquities --- nécropole --- sépulture --- pratique funéraire --- Grecs --- colonie grecque --- mobilier funéraire --- Greeks - Agde
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The results of excavations carried out over the last 120 years by Russian and Ukrainian archaeologists at the sites of ancient Greek colonies in the northern Black Sea, as well as sporadic chance discoveries made in these places, form a large body of material for research into various aspects of both the poleis of a non-Mediterranean colonial periphery, which was in contact with Scythian nomads, and the Greek world in general. This book is part of such research, dealing mainly with the philological-historical interpretation of epigraphic and literary texts, taking into account the research of archaeologists – as far as possible, since the author is not an archaeologist. The work contributes to studies on the relationship between polis and city; innovations in the religion of the Greeks of the far north-east; Orphic religiosity and its relationship to the origins of philosophy; ‘private justice’ (right of sylân); and the organization and social status of maritime trade.
Cities and towns, Ancient --- Greeks --- Inscriptions, Greek --- Civilization, Classical. --- Civilisation ancienne. --- Antiquities. --- Cities and towns, Ancient. --- Greeks. --- Inscriptions, Greek. --- Olbia (Ukraine : Extinct city) --- Black Sea Lowland (Ukraine) --- Olbia (Ukraine : Ville ancienne) --- Ukraine --- Classical civilization --- Civilization, Ancient --- Classicism --- Greek inscriptions --- Greek language --- Greek philology --- Ethnology --- Mediterranean race --- Geography, Ancient --- Archaeological specimens --- Artefacts (Antiquities) --- Artifacts (Antiquities) --- Specimens, Archaeological --- Material culture --- Archaeology --- Borysthenes (Extinct city) --- Europe --- Olbia --- Olʹbii︠a︡ (Extinct city) --- Olbiopolis (Extinct city) --- Olʹvii︠a︡ (Extinct city) --- Northern --- Olbia (Ancient city) --- Antiquities --- Greek religion --- Black Sea --- Orpheus --- social organization --- Greek city --- Greek World
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Greeks --- Excavations (Archaeology) --- Grecs --- Fouilles (Archéologie) --- Colonization --- Congresses --- Colonisation --- Congrès --- Siris (Italy : Extinct city) --- Heraclea (Italy : Extinct city) --- Metapontum (Extinct city) --- Metaponto (Italy) --- Basilicata (Italy) --- Siris (Italie : Ville ancienne) --- Héraclée de Lucanie (Ville ancienne) --- Metapontum (Ville ancienne) --- Metaponto (Italie) --- Basilicate (Italie) --- Congresses. --- Antiquities --- Antiquités --- History --- Italy --- 937.7 --- 325.33809377 --- History Ancient world Italy Southern Italy --- Social sciences Colonization by Ancient world Greece in Ancient world Southern Italy --- Conferences - Meetings --- Fouilles (Archéologie) --- Congrès --- Héraclée de Lucanie (Ville ancienne) --- Antiquités --- Ethnology --- Mediterranean race --- Metaponto Region (Italy) --- Siris (Ancient city) --- Metapontion (Extinct city) --- Metaponto (Extinct city) --- Metapontum (Ancient city) --- Eraclea (Italy : Extinct city) --- Herakleia (Italy : Extinct city) --- Hrakleia (Italy : Extinct city) --- Greeks - Colonization - Italy - Metaponto Region - History - Congresses --- Siris (Italy : Extinct city) - Congresses --- Heraclea (Italy : Extinct city) - Congresses --- Metapontum (Extinct city) - Congresses --- Italy - Antiquities - Congresses --- archeologia --- Siritide --- Metapontino --- scavi --- età del ferro
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L’idea di questo Convegno viene da lontano: ognuna delle istituzioni che lo hanno organizzato ha accumulato infatti un patrimonio di riflessioni su questo tema: per il Centre Jean Bérard questo precede la sua stessa nascita, trovando la sua origine in Rhégion et Zankle, il libro di un maestro di cui in quest’occasione più che mai abbiamo sentito la mancanza; seguirono poi le due Contributions à l’étude de la société et de la colonisation eubéennes, del 1975 e del 1981; per l’Università di Edinburgo basti pensare alla lungae fruttuosa consuetudine di D. Ridgway con Pithekoussaie con il suo scopritore, G. Buchner. Grazie alla generosità degli amici Greci attivi nelle Soprintendenzee nelle Università, il volume presenta scavi inediti, ο noti ancora soltanto attraverso relazioni preliminari. Lo stesso vale per lo scavo della nuova “capanna ovale” di Punta Chiarito a Pithekoussai. Ci si perdoni l’immodestia se diciamo che questi dati, da soli, giustificherebbero la soddisfazione degli organizzatori. Ma un altro aspetto ci premeva,e fu rammentato nel momento in cui ebbero inizio i lavori del Convegno,e riguardava in particolare i nuovi rinvenimenti della Calcidica.
Excavations (Archaeology) --- Greeks --- Fouilles (Archéologie) --- Grecs --- Congresses --- Antiquities --- Congrès --- Antiquités --- Euboea Island (Greece) --- Magna Graecia (Italy) --- Eubée (Grèce : Ile) --- Grande-Grèce --- Congresses. --- Regions & Countries - Europe --- History & Archaeology --- Greece --- -Greeks --- -938.4 --- Ethnology --- Mediterranean race --- Archaeological digs --- Archaeological excavations --- Digs (Archaeology) --- Excavation sites (Archaeology) --- Ruins --- Sites, Excavation (Archaeology) --- Archaeology --- History Ancient world Greece Boetia, Megaris; Euboea Island --- -Magna Graecia (Italy) --- -Egripo Island (Greece) --- Eubea Island (Greece) --- Eubée Island (Greece) --- Euböa Island (Greece) --- Euripos Island (Greece) --- Euvoia Island (Greece) --- Evia Island (Greece) --- Évvia Island (Greece) --- Évvoia Island (Greece) --- Negropont Island (Greece) --- Negroponte Island (Greece) --- Nísos Évvoia (Greece) --- Aegean Islands (Greece and Turkey) --- Magna Grecia (Italy) --- -Congresses --- Colonies --- Conferences - Meetings --- -Antiquities --- -Magna Grecia (Italy) --- Egripo Island (Greece) --- Fouilles (Archéologie) --- Congrès --- Antiquités --- Eubée (Grèce : Ile) --- Grande-Grèce --- 938.4 --- Excavations (Archaeology) - Greece - Euboea Island - Congresses --- Greeks - Italy - Magna Graecia - Congresses --- Euboea Island (Greece) - Antiquities - Congresses --- Chalcidique --- colonisation --- Méditerranée --- Eubée
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