Format:
1 Online-Ressource (Part 1 XIV, 1144 Seiten, Part 2 XX, 377 Seiten)
ISBN:
9783110267501
Series Statement:
Topoi volume 27
Content:
Tumuli were the most widespread form of monumental tombs in the ancient world. Their impact on landscape, their allurement as well as their symbolic reference to a glorious past can still be felt today. The need of supra-regional and cross-disciplinary examination of this unique phenomenon led to an international conference in Istanbul in 2009. With almost 50 scholars from 12 different countries participating, the conference entitled TumulIstanbul created links between fields of research which would not have had the opportunity to meet otherwise. The proceedings of TumulIstanbul revolve around the question of the symbolic significance of burial mounds in the 1st millennium BC in the Eastern Mediterranean and Black-Sea regions, providing further insight into Kurgan neighbours from Eurasia
Note:
Enthält Part 1 und Part 2
,
"This volume presents the proceedings of an international conference entitled Tumulİstanbul 2009, which was held at the Research Center for Anatolian Civilization (Istanbul) from June 1 to June 3, 2009." (Foreword, Part 1)
,
Frontmatter -- -- Foreword -- -- Abbreviations -- -- Contents -- -- Time Traveling Tumuli. The Many Lives of Bumps on the Ground. A General Introduction: (Plates 1–4) -- -- Tumuli in the Western Mediterranean, 800–500 BC. A Review before the Istanbul Conference: (Plates 5–12) -- -- Southern Mediterranean: Cyrene and Cyprus -- -- Two Tumuli for Battus in the Agora of Cyrene: (Plates 13) -- -- Tumuli as Power Political Statements. On Tumuli in Cyprus in an East Mediterranean and Anatolian Context: (Plates 14–17) -- -- Greece, Albania and Macedonia -- -- The Complex of Tumuli 9, 10 and 11 in the Necropolis of Apollonia (Albania). A Time Span from the Early Bronze Age to the Early Hellenistic Period: (Plates 18–26) -- -- Social Landscape and Tumuli Burials in Late Bronze and Early Iron Age Southeastern Albania: (Plates 27–33) -- -- Defining Landscape. The Prehistoric Tumulus at Lofkënd, Albania: (Plates 34–38) -- -- Macedonian Grave Tumuli: (Plates 39–42) -- -- The History of a Fourth Century BC Tumulus at Aigai/Vergina. Definitions in Space and Time: (Plates 43–56) -- -- Tumulus and Memory. The Tumulus as a Locus for Ritual Action in the Greek Imagination: (Plates 57–68) -- -- Forging a Link with the Past. The Evidence from Thessalian Cemeteries in the Archaic and Classical Periods(Plates 69–80): (Plates 69–80) -- -- Tumuli, Sema and Greek Oral Tradition -- -- Thrace -- -- Tumuli in Southeastern Thrace: On the Periphery?: (Plates 81–90) -- -- On the Untraditional Use of Mounds in Thrace during the Late Iron Age: (Plates 91) -- -- The Hellenistic Necropolis of the Getic Capital at Sboryanovo (Northeastern Bulgaria): (Plates 92–105) -- -- The Commemorative Rituals at Thracian Dolmens: (Plates 106–107) -- -- Riders’ Burials in Thrace: (Plates 108–109) -- -- The Thracian Tomb as Ritual Space of the Beyond: (Plates 110–128) -- -- Early Tombs of Thrace. Questions of Chronology and Cultural Context: (Plates 129–141) -- -- A Fifth Century BC Tumulus with a Wooden Sarcophagus of the Upper Mesta Valley: (Plates 142–155) -- -- The Emergence and the Development of Tumuli in Eastern Thrace: (Plates 156–167) -- -- Asia Minor, from Aegean Coast to Cappadocia -- -- The Tumuli of Troy and the Troad: (Plates 168–177) -- -- Tumuli as Points of Interest in Greek and Latin Sources: (Plates 178–182) -- -- Memory and Meaning in Bin Tepe, the Lydian Cemetery of the ‘Thousand Mounds’: (Plates 183–191) -- -- Marking Karian Soil. Lydian Tumuli in Karia, Sixth to Fourth Century BC: (Plates 192–198) -- -- A ‘Door’ between Two Worlds. A Reflection on Tumuli: (Plates 199–211) -- -- Stone Tumuli in Pedasa on the Lelegian Peninsula. Problems of Terminology and Origin: (Plates 212–237) -- -- Tumuli in Lykien. Ein Überblick über den Forschungsstand: (Plates 238–244) -- -- Display of Power. The Mortuary Landscapes of Pisidian Tumuli: (Plates 245–249) -- -- Roofing the Dead. Architectural Allusions in Anatolian Tumuli: (Plates 250–258) -- -- The Significance of the Tumulus Burial among the Funeral Buildings of Hierapolis of Phrygia: (Plates 259–273) -- -- Tumuli in the Ancient Territory of Hierapolis in Phrygia: (Plates 274–289) -- -- Some Remarks on Tumuli of Late Hellenistic and Early Roman Times in Phrygia and the Development of Provincial Art: (Plates 290–298) -- -- Tumulus Tombs in Western Phrygia: (Plates 299–311) -- -- A Fresh Look at the Tumuli of Gordion: (Plates 312–323) -- -- ‘Royal’ Tombs in Balkan-Anatolian Context. Representations of Status in Phrygian Tumuli -- -- Le Tumulus d’Avanos et la ville sainte du grand Zeus Ouranos: (Plates 324–330) -- -- Tumuli and the Expression of a Colonial ‘Middle Ground’ in the Hinterland Landscape of Ionian Sinope: (Plates 331–336) -- -- Northern Black Sea -- -- The Use of GIS Technologies in Studying the Spatial and Time Concentration of Tumuli in the Scythian-time Lower Dnieper Region: (Plates 337–346) -- -- Kurgans in the Northeastern Azov Sea Region. Proposals for a Geo-archaeological Research Program: (Plates 347–354) -- -- Eurasia -- -- Archäologische und geoarchäologische Untersuchungen im Siebenstromland: (Plates 355–369) -- -- Early Iron Age Burial Mounds in the Altay Mountains. From Survey to Analysis: (Plates 370–377) -- -- Indices -- -- Index of Names -- -- Index of Places -- -- Index of Tumulus Names -- -- Index of Ancient Sources -- -- Tumulus as Sema. Part 2 -- -- Contents -- -- Authors -- -- Illustration Credits -- -- Plates -- -- Plates Alcock: Plate 1-4 -- -- Plates Naso: Plate 5-12 -- -- Plates Kreutz: Plate 13 -- -- Plates Carstens: Plate 14-17 -- -- Plates Amore: Plate 18-26 -- -- Plates Beijko: Plate 27-33 -- -- Plates Martin-McAuliffe: Plate 34-38 -- -- Plates Schmidt-Dounas: Plate 39-42 -- -- Plates Kyriakou: Plate 43-56 -- -- Plates McGowan: Plate 57-68 -- -- Plates Stamatopoulou: Plate 69-80 -- -- Plates Delemen: Plate 81-90 -- -- Plates Agre: Plate 91 -- -- Plates Chichikova: Plate 92 - 105 -- -- Plates Dichev: Plate 106 - 107 -- -- Plates Georgieva: Plate 108 - 109 -- -- Plates Rabadjiev: Plate 110 - 128 -- -- Plates Stoyanov/Stoyanova: Plate 129 - 141 -- -- Plates Tonkova: Plate 142 - 155 -- -- Plates Yıldırım: Plate 156 - 167 -- -- Plates Rose/Körpe: Plate 168 - 177 -- -- Plates Zwingmann: Plate 178 - 182 -- -- Plates Luke/Roosevelt: Plate 183 - 191 -- -- Plates Henry: Plate 192 - 198 -- -- Plates Bingöl: Plate 199 - 211 -- -- Plates Diler: Plate 212 - 237 -- -- Plates Hülden: Plate 238 - 244 -- -- Plates Hürmüzlü: Plate 245 - 249 -- -- Plates Summerer/von Kienlin: Plate 250 - 258 -- -- Plates Ronchetta: Plate 259 - 273 -- -- Plates Scardozzi: Plate 274 - 289 -- -- Plates Kelp: Plate 289 - 298 -- -- Plates Sivas/Sivas: Plate 299 - 311 -- -- Plates Liebhart et alii: Plate 312 - 323 -- -- Plates Thierry: Plate 324 - 330 -- -- Plates Doonan: Plate 331 - 336 -- -- Plates Daragan: Plate 337 - 346 -- -- Plates van Hoof/Schlöffel: Plate 347 - 354 -- -- Plates Gass: Plate 355 - 369 -- -- Plates Gheyle et alii: Plate 370 - 377
Additional Edition:
ISBN 9783110259902
Additional Edition:
Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe TumulIstanbul (Veranstaltung : 2009 : Istanbul) Tumulus as Sema Berlin : De Gruyter, 2016 ISBN 9783110259902
Language:
English
Keywords:
Mittelmeerraum
;
Hügelgrab
;
Schwarzmeer-Gebiet
;
Vor- und Frühgeschichte
;
Konferenzschrift
DOI:
10.1515/9783110267501
URL:
Volltext
(lizenzpflichtig)
Author information:
Kelp, Ute 1975-