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The second interregional volume of the ARCANE collection gathers fourteen contributions concerning artefacts that were produced from Egypt to Iran and from Thrace to Southern Mesopotamia across the third millennium BCE. These contributions, written by senior scholars and advanced doctoral students, are based primarily on artefacts from secure stratigraphical contexts. They present the most recent and complete update on Near and Middle Eastern artefact production throughout the Early Bronze Age. As an integral component of the ARCANE Programme, the volume provides a careful examination of interregional contacts and allows for a deeper understanding and fine-tuning of the relative chronologies of the entire area. The contributors relied on the methodology and interdisciplinary focus of the ARCANE Programme. As a result, scholars and students will find this volume an essential reference work for the interregional study of the material culture of the ancient Near East and Eastern Mediterranean world. --Back cover.
Excavations (Archaeology) --- Bronze age --- Antiquities. --- Bronze age. --- Excavations (Archaeology). --- Middle East --- Middle East (general region). --- Middle East. --- Midden-Oosten --- Oudheden --- Antiquités --- Fouilles archéologiques --- Antiquités --- Fouilles archéologiques
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La 4eme de couverture indique : "Almost four dozen articles are devoted to the Near Eastern Archaeologist Frances Pinnock (La Sapienza, Roma). In accordance with her special field of research several focus on the archaeology of and excavations in ancient Syria, especially Ebla / Tell Mardikh. Further contributions also explore and discuss excavations, objects, and questions of cultural history of Anatolia, Lebanon, Jordan, Palestine (Jericho), and Mesopotamia."
Antiquities. --- Archaeology --- Archaeology. --- Art, Ancient --- Art, Ancient. --- Art, Middle Eastern. --- Excavations (Archaeology) --- Excavations (Archaeology). --- Middle East (general region). --- Middle East --- Middle East. --- Fouilles archéologiques
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This is the ninth volume of Babel und Bibel, an annual of ancient Near Eastern, Old Testament, and Semitic studies. The principal goal of the annual is to reveal the inherent relationship between Assyriology, Semitics, and biblical studies—a relationship that our predecessors comprehended and fruitfully explored but that is often neglected today. The title Babel und Bibel is intended to point to the possibility of fruitful collaboration among the three disciplines, in an effort to explore the various civilizations of the ancient Near East.This volume includes as a major portion of its contents selected papers from the 6th Biannual Meeting of the International Association for Comparative Semitics.
Middle Eastern philology --- Near Eastern philology --- Oriental philology --- Philologie sémitique. --- Middle Eastern philology. --- Semitic philology. --- Afroasiatic languages. --- Bible. --- Language, style. --- Criticism, interpretation, etc. --- Proche-Orient --- Middle East --- Civilisation --- Civilization --- Semitic languages --- Afroasiatic languages --- "Bible. --- Middle East (general region) --- Alter Orient --- Orient --- Vorderasien --- Altorientalistik --- Naher Osten --- Philologie sémitique.
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The study of the semiotics of palaces in the Ancient Near East and Ancient Egypt provides the historian with diverse information as size and type of architecture demonstrate the kind of representation chosen by rulers towards their world. Some features were adopted from temples in order to stage the appearance of the ruler like a divine epiphany. Some further integrate a temple within the palace, showcasing the desire of the ruler to live with a specific deity under one roof for divine support and protection. The importance of this ruler can also be reflected by the size of the throne room and the number of columns, showing as well a hierarchy in the use of space within the whole building complex and its different units. For instance, the presence of a rather intimate throne room or a second small throne room points to space for confidential exchange between the ruler and his visitors. The capacity of storerooms additionally gives us insight into the economic power standing behind the palace. The comparison of different elements between palatial and domestic architecture also proves helpful in identifying the origins of particular components.0Exploration of such semiotics was initiated with the publication of the first palace volume in 2018 (Verlag der ÖAW, Vienna) following a conference held in London 2013. The present volume stands in direct continuation and is the result of a second palace conference that took place at the 10th ICAANE 2016 in Vienna. Besides introducing other palaces in Egypt and Nubia, this volume is dedicated primarily to Near Eastern palaces which are presented and studied by prominent experts in this field.
Palaces --- Architecture, Ancient --- Excavations (Archaeology) --- Egypt --- Middle East --- Antiquities. --- Archaeological digs --- Archaeological excavations --- Digs (Archaeology) --- Excavation sites (Archaeology) --- Ruins --- Sites, Excavation (Archaeology) --- Archaeology --- Buildings --- Conferences - Meetings --- Antiquities --- Palaces - Middle East - Congresses --- Palaces - Egypt - Congresses --- Architecture, Ancient - Middle East - Congresses --- Architecture, Ancient - Egypt - Congresses --- Excavations (Archaeology) - Middle East - Congresses --- Excavations (Archaeology) - Egypt - Congresses --- Egypt - Antiquities --- Middle East - Antiquities --- Architecture antique --- Architecture, Ancient. --- Excavations (Archaeology). --- Palaces. --- Egypt. --- Middle East. --- Ancient Egypt (region). --- Middle East (general region).
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