Results 41 to 50 of about 18,636 (262)

Les moulins de l’Antiquité tardive en Gaule méridionale : l’exemple des meulières de Saint-Quentin-la-Poterie (Gard)

open access: yesGallia, 2013
How can milling activities in Late Antique Gallia Narbonensis be defined? How important were they within the family setting? Did water mills and bakeries, well represented since the Early Empire, grow or decline in number?
Samuel Longepierre
doaj   +1 more source

Rome à la campagne : les décors en pierre de la villa de la Grande Boussue à Nouvelles (Mons, Belgique)

open access: yesGallia, 2023
The remains of the Nouvelles villa (Mons, Belgium) were discovered by Émile de la Roche de Marchiennes at the end of the 19th century. They extend over at least six hectares and were investigated during eighteen excavation campaigns between 1964 and 1985.
Catherine Coquelet   +4 more
doaj   +1 more source

De l’agglomération antique de Cassinomagus au village de Chassenon (Charente) : un bilan des connaissances

open access: yesGallia, 2021
This article represents an opportunity to draft a developed and detailed assessment of the major advances in knowledge, provided by the last eight years of research, and pertaining to the Cassinomagus agglomeration.
Lucie Carpentier, Sandra Sicard
doaj   +1 more source

A Fistful of Denarii. Coinage, Conquest and Connectivity in Southern Gaul (c. 150–c. 70 BC)

open access: yes, 2022
Roman armies operated for the first time west of the Alps in around 150 BC, to provide assistance to the allied city of Massalia (Marseille) (Polyb. 33.8–10). More decisive campaigns took place during the 120s BC and the 100s BC. There are few archaeological traces of these military operations, however, and their interpretation is ambiguous.
Parisot-Sillon, Charles, Hiriart, Eneko
openaire   +3 more sources

How wildlife respond to tropical cyclones: short‐term tactics and long‐term impacts

open access: yesBiological Reviews, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT From butterflies to lizards and from sharks to seabirds, wildlife exhibit tactics to survive the impacts of tropical cyclones, also known as hurricanes, cyclones, or typhoons depending on where they occur. Some species seek refuge during the storm by moving, some remain in place and ride it out, and others move longer distances, avoiding the ...
Erin L. Koen   +15 more
wiley   +1 more source

Le mausolée turriforme d’une villa près de Carcassonne/Carcasso (Aude)

open access: yesGallia, 2019
In the last decades of the 1st c. BC, around the time when Carcassonne acquired the title of city under Latin law, Montredon hill, located near the city and the via Aquitania, and occupied since the Neolithic, was completely transformed by the creation ...
Richard Pellé
doaj   +1 more source

Exemples d’habitats aristocratiques sur les sites des rues Eugène-Desteuque et Ponsardin à Reims/Durocortorum

open access: yesGallia, 2022
Though Reims’ territory is above all marked by traces of its successive enclosures, the road networks, monuments, and habitat installations are no less essential as components of this ancient urban landscape.
Magalie Cavé   +2 more
doaj   +1 more source

Courtyard Houses and Other Complex Buildings in the Protohistory of Southern Gaul [PDF]

open access: yesJournal of Mediterranean Archaeology, 2010
Courtyard houses are attested at several sites in southern Gaul between the 5th and the 1st centuries BC. They represent a new concept when compared to the traditional protohistoric houses of the region and have often been interpreted in terms of Mediterranean, Greek or Italic influences.
openaire   +2 more sources

Realistic Representation, Dynamic Evolution and Determinants of Institutional Quality in China

open access: yesInternational Studies of Economics, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT The paper delves into the role of institutional quality in bolstering China's economic resilience post‐COVID‐19, CITIC‐Entropy. It divides institutions into basic and changeable categories, establishing an index system via the CITIC‐Entropy TOPSIS model.
Susu Wang, Qidi Zhang, Jing Fang
wiley   +1 more source

La stips des Alpes à la Méditerranée : interpréter la présence des monnaies dans les sanctuaires d’époque romaine

open access: yesGallia, 2019
This contribution explores first of all the contexts of coins in Roman sanctuaries, in a study area where monetary offerings exist from the 5th c. BC onwards for southern Gaul (Correns, Var), from at least La Tène C2 in the Alps (Grand-Saint-Bernard ...
Raphaël Golosetti
doaj   +1 more source

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