Results 161 to 170 of about 9,677 (218)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
The Annual of the British School at Athens, 1965
Obsidian to the Greeks was no more than a semi-precious stone, black and shiny, suitable for mirrors or exotic ornaments. But to their predecessors in the Aegean through five millenia it was an important raw material for the manufacture of tools and weapons.
Colin Renfrew, J. R. Cann, J. E. Dixon
openaire +1 more source
Obsidian to the Greeks was no more than a semi-precious stone, black and shiny, suitable for mirrors or exotic ornaments. But to their predecessors in the Aegean through five millenia it was an important raw material for the manufacture of tools and weapons.
Colin Renfrew, J. R. Cann, J. E. Dixon
openaire +1 more source
2019
This chapter concerns the presence of the Phoenicians and Near Easterners in the Aegean, with a special focus on the Early Iron Age and dealing sporadically with later periods. Divided into two parts, the chapter discusses first the picture that emerges from the written sources in antiquity regarding the Phoenicians (or more generally, easterners) and ...
openaire +1 more source
This chapter concerns the presence of the Phoenicians and Near Easterners in the Aegean, with a special focus on the Early Iron Age and dealing sporadically with later periods. Divided into two parts, the chapter discusses first the picture that emerges from the written sources in antiquity regarding the Phoenicians (or more generally, easterners) and ...
openaire +1 more source
2004
Abstract Of the many islands mentioned one way or another in our sources, here are some of the more important which were probably inhabited. In no case is there evidence to show, or even suggest, that these islands were poleis, but it is possible that some of them were.
openaire +1 more source
Abstract Of the many islands mentioned one way or another in our sources, here are some of the more important which were probably inhabited. In no case is there evidence to show, or even suggest, that these islands were poleis, but it is possible that some of them were.
openaire +1 more source
The Dinaric and Aegean ARCS: Greece and the Aegean Sea
1977The present high relief of Greece is primarily the result of Alpine folding. For most of the Mesozoic and Cenozoic, Greece formed part of the Tethys. Paleozoic rocks are known in a number of regions, both in the Aegean Islands and on the mainland. These rocks were affected by Caledonian and Hercynian tectonic movements to form a Hercynian landmass over
openaire +1 more source
1990
Abstract Cycladic pottery forms much of the eighth-century Greek material from Al Mina,1 and it may be conjectured that some at least among the Cycladic Greeks became acquainted very early with the Greek alphabet from their trading along the Semitic coast. The script of the Cyclades may be divided basically into two types, the Naxian and
openaire +1 more source
Abstract Cycladic pottery forms much of the eighth-century Greek material from Al Mina,1 and it may be conjectured that some at least among the Cycladic Greeks became acquainted very early with the Greek alphabet from their trading along the Semitic coast. The script of the Cyclades may be divided basically into two types, the Naxian and
openaire +1 more source
2012
Abstract The northern Aegean communities were dynamic partakers of the cultural processes that transformed southeast Europe and the Aegean during the Neolithic period until the end of the fifth millennium. During the third millennium, however, the dramatic developments in settlement organization, elaboration of material culture ...
openaire +1 more source
Abstract The northern Aegean communities were dynamic partakers of the cultural processes that transformed southeast Europe and the Aegean during the Neolithic period until the end of the fifth millennium. During the third millennium, however, the dramatic developments in settlement organization, elaboration of material culture ...
openaire +1 more source

