TY - BOOK ID - 58415289 TI - A companion to the archaeology of early Greece and the Mediterranean AU - Lemos, Irene S. AU - Kotsonas, Antonis PY - 2019 SN - 9781118770191 1118770196 PB - Hoboken, NJ Wiley-Blackwell DB - UniCat KW - Social archaeology KW - Material culture KW - Culture KW - Folklore KW - Technology KW - Archaeology KW - History KW - Methodology KW - Greece KW - Mediterranean Region KW - Circum-Mediterranean countries KW - Mediterranean Area KW - Mediterranean countries KW - Mediterranean Sea Region KW - Griechenland KW - Grèce KW - Hellas KW - Yaṿan KW - Vasileion tēs Hellados KW - Hellēnikē Dēmokratia KW - République hellénique KW - Royaume de Grèce KW - Kingdom of Greece KW - Hellenic Republic KW - Ancient Greece KW - Ελλάδα KW - Ellada KW - Ελλάς KW - Ellas KW - Ελληνική Δημοκρατία KW - Ellēnikē Dēmokratia KW - Elliniki Dimokratia KW - Grecia KW - Grčija KW - Hellada KW - اليونان KW - يونان KW - al-Yūnān KW - Yūnān KW - 希腊 KW - Xila KW - Греция KW - Gret︠s︡ii︠a︡ KW - Antiquities. KW - Civilization. KW - Antiquities KW - Civilization KW - Social archaeology - Greece KW - Social archaeology - Mediterranean Region KW - Material culture - Greece - History - To 1500 KW - Material culture - Mediterranean Region - History - To 1500 KW - Greece - History - To 1500 KW - Mediterranean Region - History - To 1500 KW - Greece - Antiquities KW - Mediterranean Region - Antiquities KW - Greece - Civilization KW - Mediterranean Region - Civilization UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:58415289 AB - "The Companion to the Archaeology of Early Greece and the Mediterranean engages with the study of the society and material culture of the Aegean and the Mediterranean, from the 14th to the early 7th centuries. In the Aegean, this era is distinguished from earlier periods in displaying a (limited) range of written texts, and from later periods in missing proper historical accounts. In this era, extensive parts of the Aegean developed wide-ranging connections with the central and the eastern Mediterranean, but it was only from the second half of the 7th century that these connections expanded significantly to encompass North Africa, the western Mediterranean and the Black Sea"-- ER -