Classical World
Hinterlands and Inlands Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 350
ISBN: 9781902937892
Pub Date: 05 Apr 2020
Series: CAU Landscape Archives: New Archaeologies of the Cambridge Region Series
Description:
Thinking Hinterlands – Spanning 25 years of fieldwork across a 3 sq. km swathe on the west side of Cambridge, this and its companion volume present the results of 15 sites, including seven cemeteries. The main focus is on the area’s prehistoric ‘inland’ colonization (particularly its Middle Bronze Age horizon) and the dynamics of its Roman hinterland settlements.
City Walls in Late Antiquity Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 200
ISBN: 9781789253641
Pub Date: 01 Apr 2020
Imprint: Oxbow Books
Illustrations: b/w and colour
Description:
The construction of urban defences was one of the hallmarks of the late Roman and late-antique periods (300–600 AD) throughout the western and eastern empire. City walls were the most significant construction projects of their time and they redefined the urban landscape. Their appearance and monumental scale, as well as the cost of labour and material, are easily comparable to projects from the High Empire; however, urban circuits provided late-antique towns with a new means of self-representation.
Collapse and Transformation Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 280
ISBN: 9781789254259
Pub Date: 01 Apr 2020
Imprint: Oxbow Books
Description:
The years c. 1250 to 1150 BC in Greece and the Aegean are often characterised as a time of crisis and collapse. A critical period in the long history of the region and its people and culture, they witnessed the end of the Mycenaean kingdoms, with their palaces and Linear B records, and, through the Postpalatial period, the transition into the Early Iron Age.
Impinging on the Past Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 96
ISBN: 9780992633691
Pub Date: 01 Apr 2020
Imprint: The Highfield Press
Illustrations: 34 illus.
Description:
The prehistoric, Roman, and Anglo-Saxon periods were all represented in an excavation carried out in the centre of a Worcestershire village some time ago, but with results that can now be seen in new light because of all the archaeological work that has taken place since. A deep Iron Age ditch can be set in the context of enclosures revealed, mainly by air photography, of the gravel terraces in the river valleys of the Severn and Avon. The Romano-British skeletons form a small, elderly and hard-worked group, providing a contrast to the better-known large urban cemeteries.
Iron Age and Roman Coin Hoards in Britain Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 384
ISBN: 9781785708558
Pub Date: 01 Apr 2020
Imprint: Oxbow Books
Illustrations: b/w and colour
Description:
More coin hoards have been recorded from Roman Britain than from any other province of the Empire. This comprehensive and lavishly illustrated volume provides a survey of over 3260 hoards of Iron Age and Roman coins found in England and Wales with a detailed analysis and discussion.Theories of hoarding and deposition and examined, national and regional patterns in the landscape settings of coin hoards presented, together with an analysis of those hoards whose findspots were surveyed and of those hoards found in archaeological excavations.
The Fight for Greek Sicily Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 400
ISBN: 9781789253566
Pub Date: 01 Apr 2020
Imprint: Oxbow Books
Illustrations: b/w and colour
Description:
The island of Sicily was a highly contested area throughout much of its history. Among the first to exert strong influence on its political, cultural, infrastructural, and demographic developments were the two major decentralized civilizations of the first millennium BCE: the Phoenicians and the Greeks. While trade and cultural exchange preceded their permanent presence, it was the colonizing movement that brought territorial competition and political power struggles on the island to a new level.
Beyond the Romans Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 176
ISBN: 9781789251364
Pub Date: 31 Mar 2020
Imprint: Oxbow Books
Series: TRAC Themes in Archaeology
Illustrations: b/w
Description:
This third volume in the TRAC Themes in Roman Archaeology series offers a new encounter between posthumanism and Roman archaeology. Posthuman theoretical perspectives have had substantial impacts in various fields, including archaeology, critical studies, and feminist studies, but only recently have emerged in the study of the ancient world. Posthumanism is an umbrella term for a multiplicity of theoretical perspectives that critique humanism, de-centre the human subject, reconsider the boundaries and relations among humans and the natural world, and frame the human condition as non-fixed and variable.
RRP: £40.00
Dariali: The 'Caspian Gates' in the Caucasus from Antiquity to the Age of the Huns and the Middle Ages Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 1088
ISBN: 9781789251920
Pub Date: 25 Mar 2020
Imprint: Oxbow Books
Series: British Institute of Persian Studies Archaeological Monograph Series
Illustrations: 700 black and white & colour images
Description:
The Huns, invading through Dariali Gorge on the modern-day border between Russia and Georgia in AD 395 and 515, spread terror across the late antique world. Was this the prelude to the apocalypse? Prophecies foresaw a future Hunnic onslaught, via the same mountain pass, bringing about the end of the world.
The Masons' Marks of Minoan Knossos Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 650
ISBN: 9780904887716
Pub Date: 01 Feb 2020
Series: BSA Supplementary Volume
Illustrations: 310
Description:
The signs known as ‘masons’ marks’ were carved on blocks of stone in Bronze Age Crete over a period of some 500 years from around 2000 BC until the middle of the 15th century bc. The earliest examples seem to occur at Knossos, dating from the time when the so-called Early Palace was constructed there. Soon thereafter blocks with comparable signs were incorporated in the palatial centres at Phaistos and Malia.
Butrint 5: Life and Death at a Mediterranean Port Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 376
ISBN: 9781785708978
Pub Date: 31 Dec 2019
Imprint: Oxbow Books
Series: Butrint Archaeological Monographs
Illustrations: b/w and colour
Description:
This is the second volume arising from the 1994–2003 excavations of the Triconch Palace at Butrint (Albania), which charted the history of a major Mediterranean waterfront site from the 2nd to the 15th centuries AD. The sequence (Butrint 3: Excavations at the Triconch Palace: Oxbow, 2011) included the development of a palatial late Roman house, followed by intensive activity between the 5th and 7th centuries involving domestic occupation, metal-working, fishing and burial. The site saw renewed activity from the 10th century, coinciding with the revival of the town of Butrint, and for the following 300 years continued in intermittent use associated with its channel-side location.
RRP: £45.00
Illerup Adal 13 Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 288
ISBN: 9788788415629
Pub Date: 31 Dec 2019
Series: Jutland Archaeological Society Publications
Description:
Illerup Ådal Vol. 13 discusses the relationship between the use of weapons in war and the civilian use of bow and arrow for hunting or axes as a tool for daily tasks. Xenia Pauli Jensen writes about bows and arrows, and Lars Christian Nørbach analyses the axes and the production of them.
Death in Mycenaean Laconia Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 296
ISBN: 9781789252422
Pub Date: 15 Nov 2019
Imprint: Oxbow Books
Illustrations: approx. 550 drawings, images and maps,
Description:
A Silent Place: Death in Mycenaean Lakonia is the first book-length systematic study of the Late Bronze Age (LBA) burial tradition in south-eastern Peloponnese, Greece, and the first to comprehensively present and discuss all Mycenaean tombs and funerary contexts excavated and/or simply reported in the region from the 19th century to present day. The book will discuss and reconstruct the emergence and development of the Mycenaean mortuary tradition in Lakonia by examining the landscape of death, the burial architecture, the funerary and post-funerary customs and rituals, and offering patterns over a longue durée. The author proposes patterns of continuity from the Middle Bronze Age (even the Early Bronze Age in terms of burial architecture) to the LBA and, equally important, from the Late Bronze Age to the Early Iron Age,and reconstructs diachronic processes of invention of tradition and identity in Mycenaean communities, on the basis of tomb types and their material culture.
What did the Sarcophagus of Symmachus Look Like? Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 98
ISBN: 9788771847437
Pub Date: 01 Nov 2019
Description:
This book concerns the chronology of Roman mythological sarcophagi. The traditional chronology assumes a peak in production during the reign of Gallienus (AD 259-268) that fades away in the reign of Constantine. This chronology has some obvious flaws.
Butrint 6: Excavations on the Vrina Plain Volume 3 Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 336
ISBN: 9781789252217
Pub Date: 31 Oct 2019
Imprint: Oxbow Books
Series: Butrint Archaeological Monographs
Illustrations: b/w and colour
Description:
Butrint 6 describes the excavations carried out on the Vrina Plain by the Butrint Foundation from 2002–2007. Lying just to the south of the ancient port city of Butrint, these excavations have revealed a 1,300 year long story of a changing community that began in the 1st century AD, one which not only played its part in shaping the city of Butrint but also in how the city interacted and at times reacted to the changing political, economic and cultural situations occurring across the Mediterranean World over this period. Volume III discusses the Roman and Late Antique pottery from the Vrina Plain excavations.
RRP: £60.00
Butrint 6: Excavations on the Vrina Plain Volumes 1-3 Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 1200
ISBN: 9781789252255
Pub Date: 31 Oct 2019
Imprint: Oxbow Books
Series: Butrint Archaeological Monographs
Illustrations: b/w and colour
Description:
Butrint 6 describes the excavations carried out on the Vrina Plain by the Butrint Foundation from 2002-2007. Lying just to the south of the ancient port city of Butrint, these excavations have revealed a 1,300 year long story of a changing community that began in the 1st century AD, one which not only played its part in shaping the city of Butrint but also in how the city interacted and at times reacted to the changing political, economic and cultural situations occurring across the Mediterranean World over this period. Volume I discusses the results from the excavations, tracing the development of the area from an early Roman bridgehead suburb during the 1st and 2nd centuries AD to a major 3rd-century domus, one of the largest of its kind in the province of Epirus Vetus, its transformation into a new residential centre dominated by a Christian basilica in Late Antiquity, to becoming the home of a Byzantine archon during the 9th and 10th centuries when it was, in all but name, Butrint, and its subsequent uses following its abandonment due to the rising water table.
RRP: £155.00
The Roman Villa at Maasbracht Cover The Roman Villa at Maasbracht Cover
Format: 
Pages: 204
ISBN: 9789088908576
Pub Date: 30 Sep 2019
Imprint: Sidestone Press
Series: Analecta Praehistorica Leidensia
Pages: 204
ISBN: 9789088908569
Pub Date: 30 Sep 2019
Imprint: Sidestone Press
Series: Analecta Praehistorica Leidensia
Description:
In the Dutch archaeological community, the Roman Villa of Maasbracht has become famous for the beautiful remains of murals that have survived to this day. Almost all of this material was found in the infill of the stone cellar, a veritable time capsule that has been excavated with much patience and care. The first field campaign in 1981 consisted of some four trial trenches excavated by members of the local archaeological society.