Results 221 to 230 of about 113,658 (272)
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The Archaeology of Roman Palestine

Near Eastern Archaeology, 2001
The latest installment in NEA's series, "Archaeological Sources for the History of Palestine" (ASHP), presents a comprehensive overview of the three phases of the Roman era in Palestine.
Mark Alan Chancey, Adam Lowry Porter
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The ‘romanization’ of gender archaeology

Archaeological Dialogues, 2006
Allison's paper shows how the complex world of real-life social relations, dependencies and needs may be extracted from the small finds and the mundane domestic aspects of life associated with a site – even when that site is a Roman fort. In her approach Allison does not presume that society in its totality is mirrored in these finds; rather her ...
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History, archaeology and Roman Scotland

Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, 1987
There is too little Roman documentation for an adequate history of Roman Scotland to be written. There is a consequent desire, and perhaps a need, to use archaeological material as a support or substitute. Some aspects of the consequent problems are examined in the light of recent discoveries on and interpretations of the Roman frontiers.
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Roman archaeology: crisis and revolution

Antiquity, 2003
Roman archaeological research in Britain has undergone a revolution in recent years, becoming a theoretically-informed subdiscipline exploring exceptionally rich data sets in new ways. It has a great deal to offer the rest of archaeology: however, it remains unduly isolated, and some perceive serious threats to its future.
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Roman Africa: An Archaeological Review

Journal of Roman Studies, 1995
The significance of the African provinces is well-appreciated in historical studies of the Roman Empire, but there is a distinct lack of good summaries in English on recent developments in the field of study. Some introductory books sacrifice readability in favour of detail, others offer a more synthetic view, but lack depth.
David J. Mattingly, R. Bruce Hitchner
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Roman Germany and provincial archaeology

2019
This chapter presents a North American perspective on the state of archaeological research and methodology in Roman Germany. It suggests that despite the huge amount of interest in classical antiquity in the New World, and scholarly research in other Roman provinces, the Roman west has been of so little interest as a result of educational and scholarly
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Story-telling in Roman archaeology

Archaeological Dialogues, 2002
It is a rare opportunity to be invited to comment upon two papers at the same time: the temptation is then to either search for common threads, or to directly compare them. Individually, both Slofstra and Woolf offer an interesting perspective on the process of Romanisation in Gaul and the Rhine delta, but taken together, they become a dialogue on how ...
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Roman households: an archaeological perspective

2005
This chapter assesses how a study of Pompeian house contents can throw light on the nature of Roman households. The study to which it refers was based on the analysis of thirty Pompeian atrium houses and their contents (Allison 1992a).1 The chapter is particularly concerned with archaeological data, its relationship to textual data and with the nature ...
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The Archaeology of Roman Britain

2014
Full text of this item is not currently available on the LRA. The final published version may be available through the links above. ; Within the colonial history of the British Empire there are difficulties in reconstructing the lives of people that came from very different traditions of experience.
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Theoretical Roman Archaeology

Britannia, 1999
Ray Laurence   +11 more
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