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         Italy Archaeology:     more books (100)
  1. Ancient Italy from Above by Antonio Attini, Marcello Bertinetti, 2008-01-08
  2. The Baths of Caracalla: A Study in the Design, Construction, and Economics of Large-Scale Building Projects in Imperial Rome (Journal of Roman Archaeology Supplementary Series) by Janet Delaine, 1997-12
  3. History of Early Medieval Towns of North and Central Italy BAR IS1780 (bar s) by Giacomo Gonella, 2008-12-31
  4. Earliest Italy: An Overview of the Italian Paleolithic and Mesolithic (Interdisciplinary Contributions to Archaeology) by Margherita Mussi, 2001-11
  5. The Archaeology Of Early Roman Baetica (Journal of Roman Archaeology Supplementary Series) by Simon Keay, 1998-12-30
  6. The Cities and Cemeteries of Etruria (Cambridge Library Collection - Archaeology) (Volume 1) by George Dennis, 2010-09-09
  7. The Cities and Cemeteries of Etruria (Cambridge Library Collection - Archaeology) (Volume 2) by George Dennis, 2010-09-09
  8. Review of Archaeology in South Yorkshire 1992-1993 by South Yorkshire Archaeology Service, 1993-10
  9. Faces From the Past: A study of Roman Face Pots from Italy and the Western Provinces of the Roman Empire (bar s) by Gillian Braithwaite, 2007-12-31
  10. History of Archaeological Research in the Melfese, Southern Italy (bar s) by Pasqualina Iosca, 2010-12-31
  11. Deliciae Fictiles III, Architectural Terracottas in Ancient Italy: New Discoveries and Interpretations: Proceedings of the International Conference Held 7-8, 2002 by Ingrid Edlund-Berry, 2006-09-30
  12. Centralization, Early Urbanization and Colonization in First Millennium BC Greece and Italy. Part 1 (Babesch Supplementa) (Pt. 1) by Peter Attema, 2004-12-31
  13. New Developments in Italian Landscape Archaeology (bar s) by Peter Attema, Gert-Jan Burgers, et all 2002-12-31
  14. Villa to Village: The Transformation of the Roman Countryside (Duckworth Debates in Archaeology) by Riccardo Francovich, Richard Hodges, 2003-11-01

21. The Looting Of Italy
TOC WRITE TO US © 1998 by the Archaeological Institute of Americahttp//www.archaeology.org/9805/abstracts/italy.html. advertisment.
http://www.archaeology.org/9805/abstracts/italy.html
A BSTRACTS Volume 51 Number 3 May/June 1998 T HE L OOTING OF I TALY BY A NDREW L. S LAYMAN T HE C ASE OF THE G OLDEN P HIALE [LARGER IMAGE] ometime between 1976 and 1980, a fourth-century B.C. The phiale has a near twin in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, which was purchased in 1962 from the well-known antiquities dealer Robert E. Hecht, Jr. For more photographs of the phiale and updates on the lawsuit, see The Phiale of Achyris T HE M ORGANTINA H OARD ifteen silver vessels at the Metropolitan Museum of Art may have been looted from the site of Morgantina, Sicily. Archaeologist Malcolm Bell, who directs American excavations at Morgantina, gives his account of the hoard's discovery and the subsequent investigation. A recent article in the Boston Globe named the dealer who had sold the Morgantina hoard to the Metropolitan as Robert E. Hecht, Jr.the same person who had sold them the gold phiale in 1962 and the famous Euphronios krater in 1972. The article also named the purchase price as $2.74 million and said that Italian authorities had interviewed the looters who had found the treasure. I TALY F IGHTS B ACK Officers of the Guardia di Finanza, the police force of the Italian Ministry of Finance, seize a stash of artifacts near Rome. (Photos courtesy Guardia di Finanza)

22. WWW: Classical Archaeology
beautiful Vienna. . archaeology of Central italy, Digs, research,and reconstructions in Central italy. (Mostly in Italian.). Classic
http://www.archaeology.org/wwwarky/classical.html
T HE WWW ORLD OF A RCHAEOLOGY C LASSICAL A RCHAEOLOGY
R EFERENCE ArtServe 16,000 photographs of art and architecture mainly from the Mediterranean basin, including many of classical archaeological sites, from Michael Greenhalgh of the Australian National University Classics and Mediterranean Archaeology A very big list of web resources, from the University of Michigan Mediterranean Archaeology Resources Links to journals, bibliographies, search engines, online courses, organisations, and schools The Perseus Project A searchable digital library of ancient Greece, including plans and photos of archaeological sites, photos of coins and vases, and ancient texts in Greek and English, from Tufts University RomanSites A catalog of over 2,000 websites on Roman antiquity ROMARCH Links to numerous sites covering Roman archaeology, both in Italy and in the provinces
J OURNALS American Journal of Archaeology The AJA website features pdf versions of articles and book reviews in the current issue and a searchable archive of past articles. Abstracts are currently available for articles from 1995 to present. Arachnion Journal of Roman Archaeology An international journal printing contributions in English, French, German, Italian, and Spanish. Contents of all issues and selected articles from the latest issue.

23. Academic Info: Archaeology - Italy
Home / Keyword Search / Subject Index / Reference Desk / StudentCenter Blacknet Education Resource archaeology italy.
http://www.blacknet.co.uk/education/archyitaly.html
Home Keyword Search Subject Index Reference Desk ... Student Center
Blacknet Education Resource
Archaeology: Italy
Social Sciences Archaeology Social Sciences History ... ROMARCH: Roman Art and Archaeology
"...the original crossroads for Web resources on the art and archaeology of Italy and the Roman provinces, ca. 1000 BC - AD 700. ROMARCH is sponsored by the Department of Classics and the Interdepartmental Program in Classical Art and Archaeology (IPCAA) at the University of Michigan, and the Department of Classics at the University of Cincinnati."
A most impressive site for academic resources AQVILEIA - The Archaeological Site of Aquileia
"Our target is how to talk about this amazing place of Northern Italy, Aquileia and Archaeology, with the help of the new emerging technologies."
Using VRML one can Zoom in on particular parts of the images Learning to Read Rome's Ruins
Online Vatican Exhibit Pompeii Forum Project
"This document was released on the WWW in May 1994 and is intended to remain unchanged...There are three components to the project: documentation of standing remains; archaeological analysis; and urban study that seeks a) to interpret the developments at Pompeii in the broader context of urban history and b) to identify at Pompeii recurring patterns of urban evolution that can be applied to contemporary issues in American urbanism."

24. Richard Jones
Profile of this Glasgow University Senior Lecturer. Research interests include relations between the Aegean and italy in the Late Bronze Age and the ceramic evidence and Neolithic pottery on Orkney.
http://www.gla.ac.uk/archaeology/staff/rej/index.html

Home

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University
Richard Jones
BSc, MSc, PhD, FSA, MBE Senior Lecturer in Archaeological Science
Department of Archaeology
University of Glasgow
Glasgow G12 8QQ
Scotland
Tel: +44 (0)141 330 5371
Fax: +44 (0)141 330 3544
Email: r.jones@archaeology.gla.ac.uk
Teaching
Current Research Interests
  • Relations between the Aegean and Italy in the Late Bronze Age: the ceramic evidence. Collaboration with Dr L Vagnetti (CNR Istituto Studi Micenei, Rome) and Dr S Levi. Neolithic pottery on Orkney: production, function and replication Post-excavation phase of the Historic Scotland funded Cuween-Wideford (Orkney) Landscape Project, in collaboration with Dr Colin Richards (Manchester University) and Orkney Archaeological Trust Exploration of Xerxes Canal, North Greece

25. Theory And World Archaeology: Italy (Part 2)
Theory and World archaeology italy (Part 2). Session Organiser MarkPearce (Nottingham University) This part session proposes to
http://csweb.bournemouth.ac.uk/consci/tag97/italy_2.htm
Theory and World Archaeology: Italy (Part 2)
Session Organiser: Mark Pearce
(Nottingham University) This part session proposes to let Italian archaeologists speak for themselves, presenting their own theoretical agenda - linked to the nature of their archaeological record and their contingent social and historical situation. The picture that will emerge is of an archaeology which reads and is aware of the debate in the English-speaking world, but does not necessarily consider it completely relevant to its own particular problems.
Alessandro Guidi
Is Italian archaeology theoretical?
    Italian classical archaeology is, by definition, a theoretical branch of our discipline. For at least a century classical archaeologists have made much use of history, art history, philosophy and other similar paradigms to interpret their data. The problem was that field practice in this branch of archaeology was introduced quite recently. On the other hand, prehistoric archaeology is a different story. The paper will develop previous work of the author on the history of ideas in archaeology to reconstruct a coherent picture of the development of Italian archaeological thought.

Amilcare Bietti
What is new in Italian palaeolithic archaeology?

26. Theory And World Archaeology: Italy (Part 1)
Theory and World archaeology italy (Part 1). Postprocessual archaeology,on the other hand, has had very little impact in italy so far.
http://csweb.bournemouth.ac.uk/consci/tag97/italy_1.htm
Theory and World Archaeology: Italy (Part 1)
Session Organiser: Keri A Brown
(UMIST) This part session deals with the contribution British archaeologists have added to the theoretical debate in Italian archaeology. A number of approaches to the Italian data have been made over the years, but recent work incorporating gender, ritual and acculturation and other post-processual theory have been amongst the most exciting, controversial and influential work in Italian prehistory, attracting both criticism and praise from Italian scholars.
Dr. Ruth Whitehouse
(Institute of Archaeology, 31-34 Gordon Square, London WC1H 0PY email r.whitehouse@ucl.ac.uk) Will post-processual archaeology ever catch on in Italy
    In a paper given to the 13th International Congress of Prehistoric and Protohistoric Sciences in Forli in September 1996, Alessandro Guidi discussed processual and post-processual trends in Italian archaeology. He argued that archaeology of broadly processual type has taken root in Italy, although restricted in the main to groups of scholars working in Rome and the Veneto. Post-processual archaeology, on the other hand, has had very little impact in Italy so far. Guidi explains this terms of:
      a) the idealist character of post-processualism, which, while novel to Anglo-Saxon archaeologists in the 1980s, was already familiar to Italian archaeologists. However, it is not regarded favourably by Italian scholars, who attribute the long delay in introducing scientific and interdisciplinary methods to archaeology to the inheritance of Benedetto Croce's idealism

27. VoS - Voice Of The Shuttle
The Roman italy Project (joint program in history and archaeology ofRoman italy run by the Universities of Newcastle and Manchester).
http://vos.ucsb.edu/browse.asp?id=2704

28. The Archaeology Of Sicily, Italy, Greece And The Near East
The archaeology of Sicily, italy, Greece, and the Near East. An Electronic ResearchOutlet of The Center for Old World archaeology and Art Brown University.
http://www.brown.edu/Departments/Old_World_Archaeology_and_Art/html/publications
The Archaeology of Sicily, Italy, Greece,
and the Near East
An Electronic Research Outlet of
The Center for Old World Archaeology and Art
Brown University
click to continue

29. The Archaeology Of Sicily, Italy, Greece And The Near East, Index
Under this title the Center for Old World archaeology and Art is grouping togetherpublications ranging in size from preliminary research reports to full size
http://www.brown.edu/Departments/Old_World_Archaeology_and_Art/html/publications
Ancient Art
The Hand of Daedalus
by R. Ross Holloway
The Master of Olympia: the Documentary Evidence
by R. Ross Holloway
Italian Pre-History
The Classical Mediterranean, its Prehistoric Past and the Formation of Europe
by R. Ross Holloway
Ustica: Report on the Excavation of the Bronze Age Site of I Faraglioni 1999
by R. Ross Holloway and Susan S. Lukesh
The Muculufa Master and Reconsiderations of Castelluccian Sequences
by Susan S. Lukesh
Numismatics
The Dating of the Coinage of Alexander the Great
Mission Statement Under this title the Center for Old World Archaeology and Art is grouping together publications ranging in size from preliminary research reports to full size monographs. It is our ambition to contribute to a rebirth of that continuous flow of correspondence which animated the dawn of modern archaeology in the nineteenth century but which, as time passed, has petrified into slow-moving publication. Electronic communication can do for our field today what the penny post and the telegraph did for the dissemination of information a century and a half ago. And this is our contribution toward that new era.
The Center for Old World Archeology and Art Box 1837
Brown University
Providence RI 02912 USA
For more information, email our front office

30. Open Archaeology: Location Albenga (Savona, Italy)
OPEN archaeology HomeLocations-Bibliography-XML Ceramic Typology-CeramicFinds Albenga (Savona, italy) General Information locid none.
http://www.openarchaeology.org/cgi-bin/oabrowser?xsl=ShowLocation¶m=Albenga

31. Open Archaeology: Location Roccagloriosa (Salerno, Italy)
OPEN archaeology HomeLocations-Bibliography-XML Ceramic Typology-CeramicFinds Roccagloriosa (Salerno, italy) General Information locid none.
http://www.openarchaeology.org/cgi-bin/oabrowser?xsl=ShowLocation¶m=Roccaglo

32. C C 340: Archaeology Of Ancient Italy - POMPEII

http://www.utexas.edu/courses/italianarch/pompeii.html

POMPEII
CLICK ON THUMBNAILS BELOW FOR FULL SIZED IMAGES Plan of the city of Pompeii in 79 CE. Temples and government buildings surrounded a forum; paved streets were lined with shops and houses; a protective wall with fortified gates surrounded the city. Wall painting. Fourth (intricate) style. Ixion Room, House of Vetti, Pompeii, ca. 1st. century AD. House of Vetti painting of Pasiphae and Daedalus in the triclinium. Detail of bride arranging her hair, from the Great Frieze of the Dionysiac Mysteries, in the Villa of the Mysteries, Pompeii. Augustan period; 2nd style. Detail of the domina, from the Great Frieze of the Dionysiac Mysteries, in the Villa of the Mysteries, Pompeii. Augustan period; 2nd style. View of a terror stricken woman. From the Great Frieze of the Dionysiac Mysteries, in the Villa of the Mysteries, Pompeii. Augustan period; 2nd style. Dionysos in the lap of Ariadne. From the Great Frieze of the Dionysiac Mysteries, in the Villa of the Mysteries, Pompeii. Augustan period; 2nd style.

33. C C 340: Archaeology Of Ancient Italy - POMPEII

http://www.utexas.edu/courses/italianarch/ostia.html

OSTIA
CLICK ON THUMBNAILS BELOW FOR FULL SIZED IMAGES Ostia. Baths of Mithras Mosaic of the Orientation grades from Mithraeum of Felicissimus in Ostia Ostia. Mosaic of the Orientation Grades from Mithraeum of Felicissimus. Seven rectangles refer to planets and to the relative initiatic degrees, with corresponding ritual objects. Ostia. Mosaic of the Orientation Grades from Mithraeum of Felicissimus. First rectangle: Under Mercury-Caduceus' protection, the Corax degree (raven), with a vase for ablutions. Ostia. Mosaic of the Orientation Grades from Mithraeum of Felicissimus.Third rectangle: the planet Mars (helmet); Miles' degree (lance) with a soldier's packsaddle. Ostia. Mosaic of the Orientation Grades from Mithraeum of Felicissimus. Seventh rectangle: the planet Saturn (sickle); Pater's degree, the hierarchy's supreme one (Phrygian cap, Mithras' hat) with the command stick and patera for libations. Two large Roman sailing vessels passing each other at the lighthouse marking the entrance to Portus, Rome's harbor. The ship to the right has the traditional rounded prow, while the ship to the left has a prow that ends at the waterline in a jutting cutwater much like the ram of a warship; its stempost is finished off with an adornment in the form of a scroll. Note its three masts; it carries a mizzen as well as main and foresail. The mosaic decorated the floor outside an office which, as the inscription reveals, belonged to 'the shippers of Sullecthum', a town on the eastern coast of Tunisia. Foro delle Corporazioni, Ostia; ca. 200 CE.

34. Europe, ITALY Maps And Atlases From East View Cartographic, Leader In Transition
Geophysics, Historical Geography, archaeology, General History, History Of IndividualEpochs, Topography, Transport Geography, Europe, italy Maps and Atlases, italy
http://www.cartographic.com/xq/ASP/AreaID.3/RegionID.135/ClassID.3100/europe/ita
home about east view standing orders service specials: Ukrainian maps ... site map Search GIS / Map Librarian Position shopping cart my account Browse Regions Browse Types Topographic
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ITALY
East View Cartographic offers large and small scale mapping of Europe in national topographic maps and Russian Military Topographic mapping. EVC can offer georeferenced topographic maps to the customer's requirements.
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samples specials: Ukrainian maps contact us ... publications

35. Ananova - News - World - Italy - Uk - Science And Discovery - Archaeology
Lotto News AZ. Orange Personal News. Corrections. Ananova World italy Uk Science and discovery archaeology. Get the latest
http://www.ananova.com/news/?keywords=World,Italy,Uk,Science and discovery,Archa

36. Ananova - News - UK - World - Italy - Science And Discovery - Archaeology
Lotto News AZ. Orange Personal News. Corrections. Ananova UK World italy Science and discovery archaeology. Get the latest
http://www.ananova.com/news/?keywords=UK,World,Italy,Science and discovery,Archa

37. Archaeology Resources In Italy - CIRS
Nazionale delle Ricerche. •Istituto per l'Archeologia Etrusco-Italica.
http://www.cirs-tm.org/organisms/archaeology/Italy2.htm
Italy Societies Associazione Italiana di Archeometria Research institutes Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche Istituto per l'Archeologia Etrusco-Italica Universitie s Dipartimento di Archeologia Dipartimento di Studi Archeologici, Filologici e Storici Dipartimento di Archeologia, Filologia Classica e loro tradizioni in epoca cristiana, medievale e umanistica "Francesco Della Corte" Dipartimento di Scienze Archeologiche ...
[home]

38. ARCL 3001: The Archaeology Of Pre-Roman Italy
THE UNIVERSITY OF SYDNEY. CLASSICAL archaeology 3001,2002. THE archaeology OF PREROMAN italy SOUTH italy.
http://teaching.arts.usyd.edu.au/archaeology/arcl3001/
THE UNIVERSITY OF SYDNEY CLASSICAL ARCHAEOLOGY 3001, 2002 THE ARCHAEOLOGY OF PRE-ROMAN ITALY: SOUTH ITALY About the exam General Information Lecture outlines and bibliographies Lecture Schedule ... Instructions for off-campus access to electronic items in Special Reserve

39. Aquileia Archaeology Links
Girlie trip IT; ABC; Friuli Venezia Giulia; www.abcitaly.com; www.insalento.it;www.alterego.it; friulweb.com; Gabri On Line; In italy Online. archaeology Sites.
http://www.aquileia.it/links/links.htm
A RCHAEOLOGY L INKS In this page we have collected all the sites - organized by categories - who have linked us. If you have in your site* a link to Aquileia, please let's know, and we shall add your site here, since we strongly believe in links exchange. Museums Galleries Sites Exhibitions ... Misc Museums Galleries Exhibitions
  • VRML
  • Korean Sites Universities Cultural Tourism in Italy
  • 40. Archaeology In Italy, Tuscania
    Translate this page Discover the secrets of Etruscan archaeology living in an unforgettablehistorical Country House, Archaeological site in Tuscania, italy.
    http://www.italytuscania.com/Archaeology in Italy, Tuscania.htm
    Our family album Japanese Friends LAST NEWS ITALIANO CASA CAPONETTI TUSCANIA the farmhouse Laura's Cooking School Giorgio's ... the ghost towns Tuscania view from the necropolis of San Potente, today Casa Caponetti (S.J. Ainsley, July,7,1842) "Sono una persona molto fortunata: perché ho il privilegio di vivere in un sito archeologico di straordinaria importanza, tutto compreso nei nostri terreni; perché Tuscania è una emozione continua per chiunque sia sensibile al fascino della storia e dell'arte; perché l'Etruria che ci sta tutt'intorno è una fonte inesauribile di ricchezze storiche, archeologiche, ambientali, artistiche. Anche per me ogni giorno porta nuove emozioni, nuove scoperte che non finiscono mai di stupirmi: e non è solo l'immenso patrimonio etrusco ad emozionarmi. La civiltà etrusca, anche se misteriosa, più o meno la conosciamo, tutti ne hanno sentito parlare, tutti hanno a disposizione musei e immagini, tutti sanno quali sono le necropoli più importanti e tutti possono visitarle. Quindi, a mio modo di vedere, gli Etruschi sono solo una delle componenti dell'interesse di questa zona.

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