Results 261 to 270 of about 100,442 (331)
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The Hellenistic and Roman Pottery
The Temple Complex at Horvat Omrit, 2021S. Herbert +3 more
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Hellenistic agricultural economies at Ashkelon, Southern Levant
Vegetation History and Archaeobotany, 2021J. Marston, K. Birney
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The Panayia Field Excavations at Corinth: The Neolithic to Hellenistic Phases
, 2022G. Sanders +3 more
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2013
AbstractThis chapter, which explores the history of state formation in ancient Greece during the Hellenistic period, describes state power during this period and discusses the narrative, genealogy, and structure of the Hellenistic state. It explains the concepts of basileia and basilikon, and argues that the importance of the Hellenistic empires in the
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AbstractThis chapter, which explores the history of state formation in ancient Greece during the Hellenistic period, describes state power during this period and discusses the narrative, genealogy, and structure of the Hellenistic state. It explains the concepts of basileia and basilikon, and argues that the importance of the Hellenistic empires in the
openaire +1 more source
2018
The Hellenistic schools dominated the Greco-Roman world from c.300 bc to the mid first century bc, making it an era of great philosophical brilliance. The principal doctrinal philosophies were Stoicism and Epicureanism, but this was also the age in which scepticism emerged as a philosophical movement.
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The Hellenistic schools dominated the Greco-Roman world from c.300 bc to the mid first century bc, making it an era of great philosophical brilliance. The principal doctrinal philosophies were Stoicism and Epicureanism, but this was also the age in which scepticism emerged as a philosophical movement.
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2015
Alexander the Great’s empire, which stretched from the Danube and the western shore of the Black Sea in the north to the Indus valley and Indian Ocean in the east, did not survive his death. Competition among his successors involved almost constant warfare, strategies to secure desirable commodities, and a nearly insatiable need for cash reserves ...
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Alexander the Great’s empire, which stretched from the Danube and the western shore of the Black Sea in the north to the Indus valley and Indian Ocean in the east, did not survive his death. Competition among his successors involved almost constant warfare, strategies to secure desirable commodities, and a nearly insatiable need for cash reserves ...
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Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences, 2019
D. Ashkenazi, A. Fantalkin
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D. Ashkenazi, A. Fantalkin
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Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences, 2019
Edyta Marzec +3 more
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Edyta Marzec +3 more
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2009
Abstract In the period after Alexander’s death Hellenistic writers tried to make sense of the radically recognized political and cultural present by exploring how it grew out of what went before. Such writers were often drawn to the notion of aitia, the ‘causes’ which laid the foundations for the contemporary world.
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Abstract In the period after Alexander’s death Hellenistic writers tried to make sense of the radically recognized political and cultural present by exploring how it grew out of what went before. Such writers were often drawn to the notion of aitia, the ‘causes’ which laid the foundations for the contemporary world.
openaire +1 more source
Happily Ever After? A Hellenistic Hoard from Tel Kedesh in Israel
American Journal of Archaeology, 2017A. Erlich
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