Plon 1977 308 pages in8. 1977. Cartonné jaquette. 308 pages.
Bon état haut du faux-titre découpé avec hommage de l'auteur intérieur propre
1971 Albin Michel , 1971, in8 broché, 323 pp . Très nombreuses reproductions hors texte ( fac similés, cartes ,photos couleurs ).
LIBRAIRIE ADOLPHE JOURDAN. 1896. In-18. Broché. Etat d'usage, Coins frottés, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur acceptable. 186 pages - ouvrage accompagné de plans, vues et cartes.. . . . Classification Dewey : 930.1-Archéologie
Collection A.Jourdan - Sommaire : histoire de la ville - visite des ruines - le musée - oeuvres d'art antiques conservées à Tipasa - ouvrages à consulter - tables des cartes plans et vignettes. Classification Dewey : 930.1-Archéologie
1974 Beyrouth, 1974, 2 volumes, cartonnages éditeur, environ 28x22 pour le volume de texte et 27x21cm pour celui d'illustrations, 192 p. + 67 p. de planches (le tout tapuscrit et imprimé au recto seulement), des frottements d'usage sur le dos, les mors et le bord des plats, bon état pour le reste.
Table des matières : Les ivoires d'Ugarit / Les ivoires de Megiddo / Les ivoires de Samarie / Les ivoires d'Arslan-Tash / Les ivoires de Nimroud : ivoires de la série "Layard" ou du "Palais nord-ouest", ivoires du groupe Loftus, ivoires du fort Shalmaneser.Mémoire présenté pour l'obtention du diplôme d'études supérieures en arts et archéologie à la faculté des lettres et des sciences humaines de l'université libanaise, Beyrouth, Liban, 1974. Merci de nous contacter à l'avance si vous souhaitez consulter une référence au sein de notre librairie.
Stephanie Aulsebrook, Katarzyna ?ebrowska, Agata Ulanowska, Kazimierz Lewartowski (eds)
Reference : 64898
, Brepols, 2022 Paperback, 223 pages, Size:210 x 297 mm, Illustrations:18 b/w, 46 col., 6 tables b/w., 2 tables col., 1 maps b/w, 6 maps color, Language: English. ISBN 9782503599915.
Summary Sympozjum Egejskie: Papers in Aegean Archaeology is a peer-reviewed sub-series of Warsaw Studies in Archaeology. It has been designed to fulfil the role of a platform for presenting and introducing a wide range of new research approaches and themes within the broad area of Aegean Archaeology. This is primarily achieved through showcasing the work of newcomers to the discipline, in other words those scholars who are currently at the beginning of their research career in the field of Aegean Archaeology, as well as scholars working outside the traditional university structure such as independent scholars, professional field archaeologists, museum curators, and conservators. It is our hope that this series will serve as a concise guide to the most recent research undertaken by early career scholars and the diverse and inspiring new trends in the archaeology of the Prehistoric Aegean, as well as shining a light on the future direction of the discipline. TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction by the editors Stephanie Aulsebrook, Katarzyna ?ebrowska, Agata Ulanowska, Kazimierz Lewartowski; University of Warsaw 1. Epidemic, Infectious and Parasitic Diseases in Prehistoric Greece (Tom ? Alu? k; Charles University) 2. Perforated Furnace Mettalurgy in the Final Neolithic Aegean. New Archaeological Evidence from the Acropolis of Athens and Preliminary Observations from other Contemporary Sites (Vasiliki Eleni Dimitriou; National and Kapodistrian University of Athens) 3. The ?Emblems" on the Jugs in the Late Prepalatial Ayia Triada Necropolis and the Iconography of Seals: A Comparison (Chiara De Gregorio; Heidelberg University) 4. Birdcage Vases (Vasi a Gabbietta) from Protopalatial Phaistos (Crete) in Context. A Note on an Enigmatic Vase (Valeria Taglieri; Ca' Foscari University of Venice) 5. At the Roots of Production. The Kouris Valley (Cyprus) as a Bronze Age 'Textile Environment' (C. 2200-1400 BCE) (Giulia Muti, Giulia Albertazzi; Independent Researcher; Universit degli Studi di Venezia, Udine, e Trieste) 6. Building a Minoan Larnax: Techniques, Gestures and Craftsmanship. Preliminary Results (Sarah Georgel-Debedde; Universit de Paris 1 Panth on-Sorbonne) 7. Problematising Peak Sanctuaries. Should Differences Make a Difference? (Jan Sienkiewicz; University of Cambridge) 8. Forcing Ahead or Foiled Again? The Application of Cross-Craft Analysis to Late Bronze Age Metal Working in the Aegean (Stephanie Aulsebrook; University of Warsaw) 9. Pictorial Style and Mycenaean Wall Paintings: Two Distinct Art Forms (Sofia Antonello; Ca' Foscari University of Venice) 10. Practices for Adverting Evil and the Notion of Ritual Protection in Mycenaean Cult Performance (Christina Aamodt; Independent Researcher) 11. Reassessing a Peripheral Geopolitical Vacuum: The Case for a Mycenaean Palace-State in the Spercheios Valley Region (Christofilis Maggidis, Efi Karantzali, Adrianos Psychas; Mycenaean Foundation; Ephorate of Antiquities of Phthiotida & Eurytania; University of Athens) 12. All's Well that Ends Well: An In-Depth Look at how Objects Entered Aegean Late Bronze Age Wells (Stephanie Aulsebrook; University of Warsaw) 13. Investigating the 'Peripheral' Mycenaean Community: Preliminary Results of the Bioarchaeological Study of the Late Helladic III Kallithea-Rampantania Cemetery, Achaea, Peloponnese, Greece (Maria Katsimicha, Ioanna Moutafi, Tina Jakob; The University of Manchester; Malcolm H. Wiener Laboratory for Archaeological Science of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens; Durham University 14. Funerary Places in East Crete: The Case of the LM III Cemetery of Mysini-Aspopilia, Siteia (Maria Psallida; National and Kapodistrian University of Athens) 15. Changes in Religious Ritual in Mycenaean Greece. Communicative Memory and the Postpalatial Period (Ulrike Berndt; Independent Researcher) 16. Between Heritage Preservation and Public Appreciation: Re-evaluating Reburial Strategies (Th r se Claeys; UCLouvain)
, Brepols, 2024 Paperback, 178 pages, Size:210 x 297 mm, Illustrations:12 b/w, 41 col., 5 tables b/w., 2 maps b/w, 7 maps color, Language: English. ISBN 9782503610375.
Summary Sympozjum Egejskie. Papers in Aegean Archaeology is a peer- reviewed series that has been designed to fulfil the role of a platform for presenting and introducing a wide range of new research approaches and themes within the broad area of Aegean Archaeology. This is primarily achieved through showcasing the work of newcomers to the discipline, in other words those scholars who are currently at the beginning of their research career in the field of Aegean Archaeology, as well as scholars working outside the traditional university structure such as independent scholars, professional field archaeologists, museum curators and conservators. It is our hope that this series will serve as a concise guide to the most recent research undertaken by early career scholars and the diverse and inspiring new trends in the archaeology of the Prehistoric Aegean, as well as shining a light on the future direction of the discipline. TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction STEPHANIE AULSEBROOK, KATARZYNA ?EBROWSKA & AGATA ULANOWSKA Metal ?Ring Idols?: a Material Approach to Metalworking in the Aegean Neolithic VALENTINE MARTIN The Cultural Practices of Bronze Age Aegean Societies as Demonstrated by Chipped Stone Assemblages: the North/South Debate Revisited GEORGIOS STERGIOU Early and Middle Bronze Age Zoomorphic Figurines and Depictions from the Present-Day Area of Bulgaria PETAR MINKOV The Settlement of the Trapeza (Eastern Achaea, Greece): an Insight into the Beginning of the Middle Helladic Period in Achaea ASSUNTA MERCOGLIANO Exploring the Social Fabric of Ceramics Trough Firing Treatment. The Case of Middle Helladic Pottery POLINA KAPSALI Storage Determines Design. The Example of the Minoan Hall ANASTASIA M.A. VERGAKI Naturalism and Movement in Bird Imagery from Minoan Crete and Thera JULIA BINNBERG Between Crete and the Mainland: From the Neopalatial to the Mycenaean Cyclades ANNA BELZA A Tale of a Mycenaean Palatial Town. Development of the Late Bronze Age Site of Mycenae PIOTR ZEMAN, KATARZYNA DUDLIK An Archaeological Perspective on Food Storage on the Mycenaean Mainland (13th-12th Centuries BC) RUSSELL WEBB Tracing the Distribution of 'Aegean-Type Hearths'. Type and Construction Techniques Trough Space and Time DIMITRIS PAPAGEORGIOU
Rheinland-Verlag GmBH 1978 in8. 1978. Broché.
Bon état tranche un peu ternie intérieur propre
Librairie Guénégaud, 1981. In-4 broché 27,5 x 23,5 cm, 205 pages, illustré de 97 planches avec 252 figures. Les photographies illustrant cet ouvrage sont de J. A. Leclerc, Gaston Karcher, Jeanne Eparvier. Très bon état.
Paris Aux Editions Tel 1935. In-4 broché couverture illustrée en couleurs 1 feuillet non chiffré 88pp 4 feuillets non chiffrés table sur 2 colonnes. Abondante illustration d'après des objets de fouilles et des documents anciens dont 2 planches lettrées A et B et 68 autres numérotées en chiffres romains (3 de celles-ci en couleurs y compris la reproduction d'une aquarelle inédite de Pierre Loti). Edition de luxe, tirage à 1200 exemplaires. Bel exemplaire frais et complet.
Cette édition réunissait, à l'époque de sa parution, le plus grand nombre de connaissances sur l'île de Pâques concernant sa géographie, sa flore et sa faune, la religion, les monuments et les constructions megalithiques, les objets sculptés en bois et les tablettes "parlantes".
Marg Publications, Bombay, 1992. In-4, relié, toilé éditeur noir sous jaquette illustrée, 124 pages. Jaquette convenable. Intérieur agréable. Jaunissures aux bords. Exemplaire convenable.
London, Society of Antiquaries of London, 2009 Two volumes, linnen bound, 600 pages, 31 x 24.5 cm. EN. New!. ISBN 9780854312894.
The third volume in this massive project to create the first complete corpus of the Roman mosaics of Britain covers the areas of Britain that were first to come under Roman control and where some of Britain's most impressive mosaics are to be found - in Colchester, Silchester, London and Verulamium, and in villas and palaces at Brading, Bignor, Fishbourne and Rockbourne. In their introduction to the volume, the authors trace the origins of mosaic-making in Britain, and the development of colour palettes and motifs, from the mainly black-and-white geometric designs of first-century Fishbourne Palace, reflecting contemporary Gaulish fashions, to the more elaborate polychrome designs of the third and fourth centuries, featuring figures from classical mythology, some of which (like Brading's Orpheus taming the animals with his music, or Lullingstone's Bellerophon slaying the Chimera) had been invested with new meaning as symbols of Christianity. They consider too the types of buildings with which mosaics are associated, the functions of mosaic-decorated rooms, the materials from which they are made, the impact of mosaic discoveries on early antiquaries and the pioneering mosaic paintings of artists such as Richard Smirke and Charles Stothard, published in Samuel Lysons' Reliquae Britanniae Romanae (1817). The catalogue follows the format of earlier volumes in providing an account of each mosaic's discovery and locating the mosaic within its building plan. Every mosaic is described, with significant parallels and major references, and illustrated with the authors' own paintings, reproductions of historic engravings and photographs, taken in situ wherever possible, before lifting or restoration. The result is an unrivalled scholarly resource for anyone interested in Roman art, craftsmanship, architecture and social life, which will shortly be complete with the publication of the fourth and final volume on Western Britain, including Wales. About the Author: David S Neal, FSA (b 1940), was first introduced to Roman mosaics and archaeology at Verulamium in 1957 while studying graphic design at Watford School of Art. In 1961 he joined the Ancient Monuments Inspectorate of the then Ministry of Works as an archaeological illustrator and for almost fifteen years supervised the archaeological drawing office. In this period one of his tasks was to record mosaics found on excavations conducted, or sponsored, by the Government. From 1963 he began his own series of excavations on Roman villas in Hertfordshire and in 1975 became a full-time archaeologist with the Department of the Environment (later English Heritage). He is now a freelance consultant. He was made a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries in 1971 and awarded a Doctor of Letters for his contribution to Romano-British villa studies in 1992. Stephen R Cosh, FSA (b 1950), studied archaeology at Reading University before embarking on a career in teaching. As with David Neal, his interests in art and archaeology led to the study of Romano-British mosaics which he has illustrated since the 1970s, soon adopting Neal's technique. He has written numerous articles on Roman mosaics, particularly the study of regional groups. He has been the Honorary Secretary of ASPROM (the Association for the Study and Preservation of Roman Mosaics) since 1993 and was elected a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries in 2002. The authors formally agreed to collaborate on the corpus in 1993.
London, Society of Antiquaries of London, 2010 Hardback with dustjacket, 480 Pages, 31 x 25 cm. NEW. EN. ISBN 9780854312948.
This volume brings to a triumphant conclusion this monumental project to catalogue, describe and illustrate every Romano-British mosaic. The area covered by the fourth and final volume in the corpus is one of the richest regions of Britain in economic as well as architectural and artistic terms and this is reflected in the quantity and quality of the region's mosaics, which include the largest figured mosaic ever found in Britain - the Woodchester Orpheus pavement - which was perhaps the inspiration for the other famous Orpheus mosaics of the Roman Cotswolds. At the heart of this affluent region is Cirencester, Roman Britain's second largest town, represented here by more than sixty mosaics, the second-century examples being the most exquisite in the country. There are also many fine mosaics from the region's highly ornate villas, as well as from the towns of Gloucester, Caerwent and Wroxeter. The catalogue follows the format of earlier volumes in providing an account of each mosaic's discovery and locating the mosaic within its building plan. Following the description are notable parallels and major references. Many of the illustrations are by the authors, with additional ones by Luigi Thompson, as well as photographs and historical engravings, a high proportion of the latter by Samuel Lysons whose home was in Gloucestershire where he did much of his pioneering work in archaeological excavation and illustration. Brief biographies of Lysons and all the other artists whose work grace all four volumes appear at the end of this volume. As with previous volume the work is preceded with a substantial introduction. This deals with the history and topography of the region, buildings and rooms, an assessment of regional workshops, and schemes, ending with a consideration of mosaics in relation to the end of Roman Britain.
London a. Copenhagen, Williams and Norgate, H.H.J. Lynge, 1876. 4to. Orig. printed wrappers. Wrappers with small tears. 27 pp., 2 plates of runic stones.
London, Williams and Norgate, 1883. Orig. full blindtooled cloth. (4),180 pp. Richly textillustr. with woodcuts.
(Overprint from ""Memoires de la Societe royale des Antiquaires du Nord"", Copenhagen 1882-84.)
Kbhvn., 1868. 4to. Ubeskåret med orig. bogtrykte omslag. Lille plet på foromslaget. VII,25 pp. samt mange træsnitplancher og tekstillustr.
Stephens blev en af runeforskningen pioneerer, særligt med hensblik på hans flid på indsamlingsområdet.
Kbhvn., 1868. 4to. Blankt omslag. Titelblad brunet. VII,25 pp., mange træsnitplancher og tekstillustr.
Stephens blev en af runeforskningen pioneerer, særligt med henblik på hans flid på indsamlingsområdet.
London, Köbenhavn, John Russell Smith, Michaelsen and Tillge, 1866-68. Folio. Bound in 2 fine contemp. full calf. Richly gilt spine. Tome- and titlelabels with gilt lettering. Gilt borders on covers, inner panel with gilt cornerpieces (Cambridge-binding style). On covers goldstamped ""HL"", (Johan Henrik Schubothe Langhoff) and also with his engraved exlibris on inside frontcovers. 2 engraved frontispieces (1 portrait). LXX,(2),1038,(2) pp. Richly textillustrated with chemitypes and 13 plates of which 12 are printed in colour 8gold, silver, bronce etc.). Faint scattered brownspots.
Quezaltenango [Guatemala], Tipografia "El Noticiero evangélico", 1939 - 1940 2 vol. in-8, XIII pp., 332 pp. ; [2] ff. n. ch., VIII pp., 370 pp., avec des illustrations dans le texte et 69 planches hors texte, dont un plan dépliant, brochés. Couvertures défraîchies, manque de papier au f. I-II du vol. II, avec perte de lettres, mouillures suprapaginales au volume II.
Une des traductions en castillan des Incidents of travel in central America, Chiapas and Yucatan (New York, 1841), relation d'un voyage d'exploration effectué en 1839-1840, et qui exerça une influence considérable sur les débuts de l'archéologie maya. Il s'agit au départ d'un récit de voyage à la mode de l'époque, mêlant anecdotes diverses, portraits, description des lieux visités, ainsi qu'une importante partie consacrée à la situation politique et la guerre civile qui ravageait l'Amérique centrale. La partie la plus originale, archéologique, ne compte pourtant que pour un tiers de l'œuvre, mais c'est elle qui fut la plus retenue par la postérité. L'ouvrage, tiré à 15 000 exemplaires, connut en effet un immense succès de librairie, et les rééditions se multiplièrent.Édition mésoaméricaine absente de Palau. - - VENTE PAR CORRESPONDANCE UNIQUEMENT
Bruxelles 1996 in4. 1996. Broché.
Bon Etat intérieur propre bonne tenue
Plymouth Meeting, 1986. 21 x 30, 124 pp., broché (thermocollé), très bon état.
Fondation égyptologique reine élisabeth 1992 in8. 1992. Broché.
sous papier de soie marque de plie sur la tranche intérieur frais
[Editions du Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, CNRS,] - STERN, Henri ; BLANCHARD-LEMEE, Michèle ; DARMON, Jean-Pierre ; LAVAGNE, Henri
Reference : 63014
(1967)
Xe supplément à Gallia, 4 vol. in-4 br. sous couv. illustrée, Editions du Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, CNRS, Paris, 1967, 1975, 1977, 1991. Rappel du titre complet : Recueil général des mosaïques de la Gaule. II : Province de Lyonnaise (4 Tomes ) 1 : Lyon ; 2 : Partie Sud-Est ; 3 : Partie Centrale ; 4 : Partie occidentale, cités des Carnutes, Turons, Andécaves, Cénomans, Diablintes, Namnètes
Bon ensemble (couv. lég. frottée) réunissant les 4 premiers volumes (sur 5) consacrés aux mosaïques de la Province lyonnaise, dont le rare tome premier consacré à la cité de Lyon.
STERN Henri , LE GLAY Marcel Organisateur Du II° Colloque International pour L'étude de la Mosaïque Antique
Reference : 020569
(1975)
Paris Picard , CNRS 1975 Grand In Quarto Reliure en simili cuir blanc illustré . Complet de ses plans dépliants . Nombreuses participations et la moitié de l'ouvrage en photographies couleurs et noir et blanc des mosaïques en deuxième partie . Index et Index des auteurs modernes . Archéologie . - 446 p. + CXCV Planches , 2kg 500 gr.
Couverture rigide Très Bon État . 1ère Édition
,New York, Brentano's 1943, 397 pp., 1 vol. in 8 br. cartes dépliantes hors-texte, annexes, bibliographie et index