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E-raamat: TRADE: Transformations of Adriatic Europe (2nd 9th Centuries AD): Proceedings of the Conference in Zadar, 11th 13th February 2016

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  • Formaat: 416 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 17-Aug-2023
  • Kirjastus: Archaeopress Archaeology
  • ISBN-13: 9781803271736
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  • Formaat: 416 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 17-Aug-2023
  • Kirjastus: Archaeopress Archaeology
  • ISBN-13: 9781803271736
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TRADE: Transformations of Adriatic Europe presents the proceedings of a 2016 conference held in Zadar (Croatia) which analysed the transformative phenomena of Late Antiquity in an area where research has been comparatively scarce and results less widely known. The contributions span the period between the 2nd and 9th centuries, that is from roughly the establishment of the Severan dynasty to the end of the Carolingian period. The volume collects 45 papers dealing with the Adriatic area that aim to create a new dataset for the historical reconstruction of processes related to forms of settlement, aspects of production, and trade and the movement of pottery and other craft products between its two coasts, here examined either through regional synthesis or the presentation of individual study contexts.
Preface The Editors


 


Invited lecture


The Adriatic route of the Attic sarcophagus trade Nenad Cambi


 


Regional trends of Late Roman and early medieval urban transformations


Mutations of the late antique urban landscape in Byllis and other cities in
Epirus Nova (5th-7th century) Pascale Chevalier


Franco-Albanian archaeological collaboration (2012-2015): research on the
topography of Durrës Eduard Shehi, Catherine Abadie-Reynal, Brikena
Shkodra-Rrugia and Yann Mannon


The imperial presence in Dalmatian epigraphy from Decius to Diocletian. A
note on the epigraphic landscape Mattia Vitelli Casella


The Spolia phenomenon in the architecture of Dalmatian towns Vedrana Jovi
Gazi


Diocletians Palace: monument of the new social system tetrarchy Ivana
Jadri-Kuan


Early medieval architectural adaptation of the early Christian churches in
the territory of Zadar Ana Jordan Kneevi


Pesaro. A necropolis from the 6th-7th centuries AD, adjacent to the Via
Flaminia Laura Cerri, Chiara Delpino, Vanessa Lani, Claudia Maestri and
Erika Valli


Cupra Marittima (Marche): transformations of the villa with nymphaeum from
the 2nd through the 6th century AD Nicoletta Frapiccini, Federica Galazzi
and Loris Salvucci


The periphery of the Mediterranean Aguntum (Southwestern Noricum) in Late
Antiquity Martin Auer, Sabine Deschler-Erb and Veronika Sossau


 


Late Antique landscapes, fortifications and churches in Adriatic rural areas


Mapping the early medieval shores of the Balkans Dominik Heher


Transformations of a Post-Roman countryside: first results from field survey
and excavations in the Upper Vjosa valley (SE Albania) Ardit Miti and
Eglantina Serjani


Wine and olive oil in Roman Histria and Dalmatia. Production centres in Late
Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages Jana Kopáková


Transformations of baptismal complexes in central Dalmatia during the late
antique period Ana Mikovi


Banjae an example of rural architecture of the 5th and 6th centuries
Ivana Oani Rogulji and Ina Miloglav


Rural landscape transformations in Roman Aenona Martina Dubolni Glavan,
Igor Kulenovi and Neda Kulenovi


Issues related to the transformation of Late Antique fortresses on the east
coast of the Adriatic Sea: the example of the Benedictine monastery of Sts.
Cosmas and Damian located on the hill okovac, on the island of Paman
Josipa Baraka Perica and Boana Maleti


Stivanje field in Telaica Nature Park from Antiquity into the Middle Ages
Jona Petei


Crkvie-Bukovlje near Generalski Stol Late Antique hillfort. Results of
the 2012-2015 excavations Ana Azinovi Bebek and Ivana Hirschler Mari


Continuity of use of the landscape of the Vinodol valley (northern Liburnia,
NE Adriatic): communications, settlements and surveillance points from
prehistory to Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages Goranka Lipovac
Vrkljan, Ranko Starac and Ana Konestra


Rural landscapes in Istrian Late Antiquity Robert Matijai and Davor
Buli


Landscape, resource management and plant economy in the Parentium area
(Croatia) between the Imperial period and the beginning of the Middle Ages.
First results of archaeobotanical investigation Christophe Vaschalde,
Margaux Tillier, Nuria Rovira, Frédéric Guibal, David Kaniewski, Charlotte De
Bruxelles, Marie-Brigitte Carre, Corinne Rousse, Gaetano Beni, Vladimir
Kovai and Davor Munda


Stancija Blek (Tar-Vabriga): craft activities and traces of transformations
from a villa to a medieval settlement Ana Konestra, Bartul iljeg and
Gaetano Beni


Settlement and economy in early medieval Franciacorta Simone Sestito


New excavations at Santa Maria in Pado Vetere and in the Po Delta (2014-2015)
Mario Cesarano and Carla Corti


The Late Antique and medieval landscape to the north-west of Ravenna. The
Bassa Romandiola Project Marco Cavalazzi, Michele Abballe, Anna Benato and
Michela De Felicibus


Population and rural landscape organization in Numana (Ancona, Italy) between
the 2nd and 9th centuries: preliminary notes Maurizio Bilò and Sonia
Virgili


 


Material culture in Late Antiquity: trends in the Adriatic region


Crecchio Ware: a special connection between Abruzzo and Egypt? Archer
Martin


A look through the glass glass trade on the Adriatic and its hinterland in
the imperial period Irena Lazar


Adriatic imports to Rome: an insight from the wine amphorae Giorgio Rizzo
and Cristina Molari


Late Roman pottery standardization: Hayes 85 as a case study Miguel
Busto-Zapico and Enrico Cirelli


Expanding African trade in the Adriatic during the early Imperial age Diana
Dobreva


The trade networks of Butrint within the mid-Imperial Adriatic (2nd-4th
century AD): the amphorae from the Roman Forum Excavations Project Gloria
Bolzoni


Export of Dalmatian sarcophagi in the 6th century: chronology and topography
Ivan Basi


Aquileia, Canale Anfora finds from 1988: pottery as a marker of trade
Patrizia Donat, Paola Maggi, Paola Ventura and Ella Zulini


Aquileia, Canale Anfora the 2004-2005 excavation: commercial trade between
the 2nd and the 3rd century AD witnessed by terra sigillata Patrizia Donat,
Paola Maggi, Franca Maselli Scotti and Ella Zulini


The Mediterranean inside the city. The Late Antique imports from the Padua
Baptistery excavation Giovanna Ganzarolli


The limestone sarcophagus trade from the quarries on Bra: New evidence from
Ravenna and the Northern Adriatic Paola Novara


Amphorae from a medieval context of the Monastery of St Severo in Classe (RA)
Bianca Maria Mancini


Economy and trade in the mid- Imperial Adriatic between Classe and the
Mediterranean Francesca Assirelli


Soapstone from the northern Marches: Reconstruction of the ancient trade
routes to Senigallia in the upper and middle Adriatic between Late Antiquity
and the Middle Ages Maria Teresa Gatto


Short and long range trade in the Roman Adriatic (3rd-6th century). The
material culture: between counterfeit goods and original products     Carlo
De Mitri


Changing trade routes in Late Antique and early medieval Cicolano: evidence
of Adriatic and other imported pottery at the San Martino site(Torano di
Borgorose, Rieti, Italy) Elizabeth Colantoni, Gabriele Colantoni, Maria
Rosa Lucidi, Jeffrey A. Stevens and Francesco Tommasi
Igor Borzi is Associate professor at the Department of Archaeology, University of Zadar, Croatia. His main research interests are focused on two big themes: the transition from the Iron Age to the Classical world in the Dalmatian area, and Hellenistic/Roman pottery. Currently he is a member of several excavation teams and a leader of a national scientific project investigating continuity of life on the island of Korula.



 



Enrico Cirelli is a medieval archaeologist and lecturer at the University of Bologna. His research interests are focused on the transformations of cities and ports in the Mediterranean, the birth of castles in the Medieval Europe and the development of techniques and artisan productions.



 



Kristina Jelini Vukovi joined the Institute of Archaeology in Zagreb in 2004 and works there as a senior expert assistant-documentalist. Her research interests are Roman pottery, villae rusticae, rural settlements, economy, trade, Dalmatia and Pannonia.



 



Ana Konestra is a Research Associate at the Institute of Archaeology in Zagreb. She currently leads several fieldwork projects revolving around landscape archaeology, in particular in insular and coastal areas of the eastern Adriatic and concerning the development of Roman rural sites.



 



Ivana Oani Rogulji is a Senior Research Associate at the Institute of Archaeology in Zagreb. Her interests focus on classical archaeology, especially Roman pottery and ceramics workshops, instrumenti domestici, the history of food, travel stations and communications, experimental archaeology and the popularisation of science.