Editions Hatier 2012 320 pages 14x1 2x18 8cm. 2012. Broché. 320 pages.
Très bon état - légères marques de lecture et/ou de stockage mais du reste en très bon état- expédié soigneusement depuis la France
Lyon, Chambre Syndicale des Employés de Soierie de la Ville de Lyon, 1929, 1 demi basane, dos à nerfs. in-8, f.t., titre, II-306 pp., illustrations ;
Phone number : 06 80 15 77 01
Gintrac Cécile Mendola Daniel Frémont-Vanacore Anne Smaghue Nicolas Vandoolaeghe Ludovic
Reference : 500186531
(2015)
ISBN : 9782218995439
Editions Hatier 2015 298 pages 14 2x1 6x18 8cm. 2015. Broché. 298 pages.
Bon état
Fernand Nathan 2008 239 pages 19 2x1 2x27 8cm. 2008. Relié. 239 pages.
Etat correct
Cle International 1998 160 pages 19 2x0 8x27cm. 1998. Broché. 2 volume(s). 160 pages.
Etat correct
, Brepols - Harvey Miller, 2025 Paperback, Pages: xii + 164 pages, Size:216 x 280 mm, Illustrations:42 b/w, 56 col., 9 tables b/w., Language:English, *New. ISBN 9782503616681.
Landscape archaeology has, in recent years, expanded as a discipline to include various aspects of human-environment interactions in the past. In line with this trend, this volume offers a comprehensive perspective on three topics: theoretical and textual approaches to landscape, which provides an important framework for interdisciplinary research; the use of land and resources, which, while a popular topic in Southwest Asian archaeology, remains relatively understudied in connection to ancient technologies; and human impact on the highlands. The contributions gathered in this volume cover topics as diverse as agricultural practices, metallurgy, trade, and environmental research, and draw together evidence from both textual and material evidence to shed light on different places and periods from the Bronze Age through to the Roman era. Together, these varied case studies offer new insights into how different methods can be utilized to assess unique patterns in human-environment interactions in Southwest Asia. TABLE OF CONTENTS List of Illustrations Introduction: The Society for Near Eastern Landscape Archaeology (SNELA) Gonca Dardeniz and B lent Ar?kan Landscapes 1. Highlands of Elmali Plain (Antalya) B lent Ar?kan and Hilal Seren ?ahin 2. Exposing the Settlement of Historic Landscapes in Vegetated Terrain: The Jezreel Valley Experience Jeffrey C. Howry 3. Wadi Al Helo: Testimony of Bronze Age Human Impacts on the Highlands Khuloud Alhouli and Ossama Khalil 4. Toward the Militarized Use of Landscape: Northwest Iran during the Late Bronze Age and Early Iron Age (c. 1450?1050 BCE) Zahra Kouzehgari and Bita Khaterizadeh 5. The Commagene Land Use Wisdom Yaprak Tanr?verdi, Erhan Ak a, Kahraman Ya??z, Kemal Zorlu, and Muzaffer z iri? Highland and Lowland Products and Resources: Theories and Textual Records 6. Trade and the Use of Resources in the Ancient Near East during the Middle Bronze Age Jan Gerrit Dercksen 7. The Importance of Boat Transport for Ur III Economy: A Preliminary Study Virginia Cara Girardi Material Evidence 8. In the Light of New Evidence of Long-Distance Obsidian Trade and Possible Central Place Distribution at the Upper Plain in Cilicia Orkun Hamza Kayci and F sun T lek 9. Arsenical Copper Metallurgy in Anatolia and Iran: A Comparative Approach Timur G zey, Mohammadamin Emami, and Gonca Dardeniz 10. The Beginning of Beekeeping in Western Asia and the Levant with some Comments on the Aegean Prentiss de Jesus 11. Agricultural Production on the Nif Mountain (?zmir) G knur Bekta? 12. Surviving the Valley of Plenty: The Earliest Iron Age Occupation at Tell Tayinat (Turkiye) through a Zooarchaeological Lens Radovan Kabatiar
, Brepols, 2023 Hardback, 309 pages, Size:156 x 234 mm, Illustrations:21 b/w, 17 col., 4 tables b/w., 1 maps b/w, Language: English. ISBN 9782503585994.
Summary A collaborative investigation of one of the best-known works of late medieval European literature, the Franco-Burgundian collection of short stories known as the Cent Nouvelles nouvelles. Modelled loosely on Boccaccio's Decameron and incorporating elements from Old French fabliaux as well as Poggio Bracciolini's Liber Facetiarum, the anonymous collection attributes its morally challenging and frequently humorous tales to named narrators including Philip the Good, Duke of Burgundy and Louis of Luxembourg, Count of Saint Pol. The contribution of this new volume of essays is threefold: - empirical, in that it brings entirely new interdisciplinary insights into the study of the genesis and reception of the work; - methodological, in that it integrates study of the text within a 360-degree evaluation of the work's manuscript and early printed context; and - conceptual, in that it seeks to understand the social dimensions of textual production and consumption. These approaches unite ten principal contributions by specialists in the fields of art history, book history, court history and linguistics from France, the Netherlands, the USA and the UK. TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction Graeme Small Part I - The manuscript witness Chapter 1. Les Cent Nouvelles nouvelles. The physical fabric of the fables Richard Gameson Chapter 2. MS Hunter 252: precursors, date and patronage Hanno Wijsman Part II - Reception in manuscript and print Chapter 3. Printing the Cent Nouvelles nouvelles. Anthoine V rard's 1486 edition and its sixteenth-century successors Mary Beth Winn Chapter 4. Opening and closing the Cent Nouvelles nouvelles. Paratext, context and reception, 1469- c. 1550 Graeme Small Part III - Reading text and image in manuscript form Chapter 5. Storytelling through architecture. The miniatures of the Cent Nouvelles nouvelles Maud Perez-Simon Chapter 6. Narratological readings of the Cent Nouvelles nouvelles (CNN3, 21, 27). Text and image in MS Hunter 252 Alexandra Velissariou ? Part IV - The text as a site of language use Chapter 7. Toward a scriptology of Middle French. The case of MS Hunter 252 Geoffrey Roger Chapter 8. Stylistic implications of linguistic archaism and contemporaneity in MS Hunter 252 Peter V. Davies ? Part V - Archives in the fiction Chapter 9. Locating storytelling in time and space (Hainaut-Brussels, 1458-59). A Decameronian moment Edgar de Blieck & Graeme Small Chapter 10. Tales from the chamber. The Cent Nouvelles nouvelles between Burgundy and Luxembourg Graeme Small Conclusions Graeme Small
Hachette 1995 19x0 4x25 4cm. 1995. Broché.
Etat correct
Magnard 2006 32 pages 17 4x0 6x20 8cm. 2006. pocket_book. 32 pages.
Etat correct
Didier 2006 244 pages 15 4x0 8x22 8cm. 2006. Broché. 244 pages.
Bon état intérieur propre
Hachette 2004 160 pages 23 3x28 4x1 2cm. 2004. Broché. 160 pages.
Bon état
HACHETTE EDUC 1992 144 pages 19 2x1x26 6cm. 1992. Broché. 144 pages.
Bon état
, Brepols, 2022 Paperback, 320 pages, Size:178 x 254 mm, Illustrations:106 col., 16 tables b/w., 58 maps b/w, Language: English. ISBN 9782503599816.
Summary This book offers new and innovative perspectives on long-distance trade between Europe, the Mediterranean area, the Middle East, Africa, India and China during the Early Medieval period. The archaeological data and historical insights presented in this volume are without exception of great interest, often exciting, and more than once astonishing. The goods which travelled between the continents in the timespan under discussion (ca. 6th to 12th centuries) include pottery in all shapes and forms, textiles, coins, metal, lava millstones, glass, marble columns, rock-crystal beads, and also plants used for incense. The scope of the contributions includes the wide-ranging economic contacts of a Viking community, the changing patterns of long-distance trade in the Byzantine Empire, the spread of Chinese pottery to Africa, the Near East and Europe, the information on maritime routes provided by shipwrecks in the Java Sea, the reconstruction of an incense trade network, and the production and distribution of textiles as well as stone objects in the Middle East and beyond. The varied approaches in this volume underline that the movement of objects in Early Medieval times over vast distances not only reflect mechanisms of exchange, but also imply social networks and the transfer of ideas. Thus, Riches Beyond the Horizon sheds compelling light on a world which was much more complex and much more interconnected than has often been assumed. TABLE OF CONTENTS Joanita Vroom, Preface Hagit Nol, Long distance trade in the Early Medieval period: A general introduction Natalie Kontny, Arabo-Islamic geographies: Indian Ocean trade in Ibn KhurradKit (fl. 884 CE) Sterenn Le Maguer-Gillon, Elusive remains: Identifying incense trade routes in western Asia from biodegradable commodities (ca. 7th-13th centuries) Dashu Qin & Justin Ching Ho, Chinese ceramics exported to Africa during the 9th-10th centuries Guangcan Xin, Maritime trade in Southeast Asia from the 9th-10th centuries: A study of the Belitung and Cirebon Shipwrecks Joanita Vroom, From Xian to Birka and back: Constantinople as a nodal point in long-distance contacts during the early Middle Ages (ca. 6th-12th centuries) Hagit Nol, Rolling stones: Distribution patterns of marble, basalt and beach rock from Early Medieval Israel (ca. 7th-11th centuries) Orit Shamir & Alisa Baginski, Early medieval textiles from excavations in Israel (9th-13th centuries) trade and Transfer Ralf Wiechmann, Advancing into unknown lands: The numismatic material of Gros Stromkendorf near Wismar during the Early Viking age (ca. 8th-9th centuries)
Halberstadt Hans Goyat Adeline Le Berre Sterenn Rizza Béatrice
Reference : 500158062
(2017)
ISBN : 9782278088140
Didier 2017 144 pages 18 8x22 6x1cm. 2017. Broché. 144 pages.
Bon état
Halberstadt Wolf Goyat Adeline Le Berre Sterenn Rizza Béatrice
Reference : 500119877
(2017)
ISBN : 9782278087952
Didier 2017 168 pages 19 5x27 9x1 2cm. 2017. Broché. 168 pages.
Bon état
Didier 2016 120 pages 19 2x0 8x28cm. 2016. Broché. 120 pages.
Bon état
Harald Ingholt, Olympia Bobou (ed), Jesper Vestergaard Jensen (ed), Nathalia Breintoft Kristensen (ed), Rubina Raja (ed), Rikke Randeris Thomsen (ed)
Reference : 65431
, Brepols, 2021 Paperback, xxiv + 562 pages, Size:216 x 280 mm, Illustrations:554 b/w, 7 col., Language: English. ISBN 9782503591247.
Summary This volume presents the first English translation of Harald Ingholt's seminal work Studier over Palmyrensk Skulptur, together with a number of studies that contextualize this important volume in the light of current research. Almost a century after its publication in 1928, Ingholt's ground-breaking Danish-language monograph remains essential reading for all scholars of Palmyrene archaeology and iconography, setting out observations on the typology and style of securely dated Palmyrene portraits, and establishing a stylistic and chronological sequence that remains in use today. Included alongside the translation of Ingholt's writings are contributions by leading scholars in the field who seek to introduce Harald Ingholt and explore the impact of his work in Palmyra, as well as presenting a survey of all the portraits from Palmyra that can be securely dated by inscription. The translation and commentary have been realized as part of the Palmyra Portrait Project, directed by Prof. Rubina Raja. TABLE OF CONTENTS List of Figures Acknowledgements Notes to the Reader Preface: An Introduction from the Ingholt-Underdown Family - HAROLD UNDERDOWN Harald Ingholt and Palmyrene Sculpture: Continuing a Lifelong Relationship a Century Later - RUBINA RAJA A Brief Note on Harald Ingholt - as I Remember Him - PEDER MORTENSEN Studier over Palmyrensk Skulptur (Studies on Palmyrene Sculpture) - HARALD INGHOLT (Translated by HEIDI FLEGAL) Figures Concordance A: Locations of Objects Concordance B: Inscriptions Appendix 1. Collecting Then and Now - OLYMPIA BOBOU and RIKKE RANDERIS THOMSEN Appendix 2. Acquisition Histories Appendix 3. Dated Palmyrene Objects Publications by Harald Ingholt Palmyra Portrait Project Publications
Harald Ingholt, Rubina Raja (ed), Jean-Baptiste Yon (ed), Julia Steding (ed)
Reference : 65284
, Brepols, 2021 Hardback, 2 vols, 1846 pages, Size:216 x 280 mm, Illustrations:22 b/w, 1027 col., 2 maps color, Language: English . ISBN 9782503595313.
Summary When the Danish archaeologist Harald Ingholt conducted his ground-breaking excavations of Palmyra in the 1920s and 1930s, during which time he investigated several grave monuments and carried out the first observations of Palmyra's famous funerary portraits, he kept detailed diaries of his work. For a long time, these have been stored at the Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek in Copenhagen together with the extensive Ingholt Archive, while further photographs and notes on Palmyrene sculpture have been kept with Ingholt's family in the United States. Now this material and Ingholt's diaries, written primarily in Danish, have for the first time been transcribed and translated into English with a full commentary written by Professor Rubina Raja, Dr Julia Steding, and Dr Jean-Baptiste Yon, in order to make these unique texts available to a wider public. The diaries contain a wealth of information on Palmyrene sculpture, grave complexes, and inscriptions from the city, as well as offering previously unpublished details into Ingholt's excavations, and his time in the field that will provide essential new insights for scholars working on Palmyra. TABLE OF CONTENTS VOLUME I Introduction Reading the Ingholt Excavation Diaries and Acknowledgements -RUBINA RAJA 'Den smukkeste Kvindebuste, jeg endnu har set': The Palmyra Excavation Diaries of Harald Ingholt, 1924-1928 - RUBINA RAJA Figures: Life in Syria and a Trip to Palmyra Diary 1 - 1924 Figures: Monuments in Palmyra Appendix - 1924 Figures: At Work in Palmyra Diary 2 - 1925-1928 Figures: Uncovered Objects Diary 3 - 1925 Figures: The Tombs of Palmyra VOLUME II Diary 4 - 1928 Figures: To Those at Home Diary 5 - Tombs Figures: The Near East and Hama Supplementary Material Map of graves Map of graves - degrees (locations) List of All Tombs Mentioned in the Diaries of Harald Ingholt A List of Tombs from Diary 3 Concordance of Published Inscription in the Diaries Concordances of Inscriptions from the Diaries Prosopography of the Unpublished Inscriptions in the Diaries Bibliography, Diaries Selected Bibliography of Harald Ingholt Palmyra Portrait Project - List of Publications Index
Hueber Verlag 2020 152 pages 18 4x23 6x1 1cm. 2020. Broché. 152 pages.
Etat correct
Nathan 1991 17 8x1 6x26cm. 1991. Broché.
Bon état
, Brepols, 2024 Paperback, 444 pages, Size:216 x 280 mm, Illustrations:111 b/w, 171 col., 0 tables b/w., 1 maps b/w, 4 maps color, Language: English. ISBN 9782503604381.
Summary How do we reconstruct ancient societies' cultural and visual identities? Prudence Oliver Harper has dedicated her scholarly and curatorial career to piecing together the material culture of communities across ancient Western Asia, Iran, and Central Asia. A number of her colleagues - art historians, archaeologists, philologists, and conservators - have contributed essays to this volume to reflect Harper's range of contributions throughout her six-decade career. Many of the essays focus on ancient metalwork, Harper's major expertise, while others on glyptics, ivory, or glass, three of her other interests. The essays aim to make sense of this region's diverse cultural identities, many of which are the results of cross-cultural exchange. Some authors have employed iconographical or socio-historical approaches; others have complementarily opened new facets of cultural identities through technical and scientific analyses, collection history, and provenance research. TABLE OF CONTENTS Kim Benzel (The Metropolitan Museum of Art) Foreword Judith A. Lerner (Institute for the Study of the Ancient World), Betty Hensellek (independent scholar) and Henry P. Colburn (New York University) Prudence Oliver Harper: Curator and Scholar Judith A. Lerner and Henry P. Colburn Bibliography of Prudence Oliver Harper Materials and Methods Matteo Compareti (Capital Normal University, Beijing) Textile Decorations in Sasanian Stucco Panels at Bandyan (Khorasan, Iran) Georgina Herrmann (Institute of Archaeology, University College London, Emerita) Bringing Order Out of Chaos: Connoisseurship as a Fundamental Tool Pieter Meyers (Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Emeritus) Bronze Casting in the Near East and Surrounding Areas St John Simpson (The British Museum) Sasanian Skeuomorphs: the Influence of Metalware on the Glass Industry K. Aslihan Yener (The Oriental Institute, University of Chicago, Emerita; and Ko University, Emerita) Silver for Justinian: Lead Isotope Analyses of Sixth- and Seventh-Century Silver Artifacts Sasanian and Sogdian Silver Betty Hensellek (Cornell Institute of Archaeology and Material Studies) The Many Lives of the Silver Saiga Rhyton in the Metropolitan Museum of Art Kate Masia-Radford (Independent Scholar) Aquatic Imagery on Silverware Attributed to the Sasanian Period Asadullah Souren Melikian-Chirvani (Independent Scholar) The Enduring Memory of Iranian Antiquity in Islamic Iran Nicholas Sims-Williams (School of Oriental and African Studies, Emeritus) and Bi Bo (Renmin University, Beijing) A Silver Vessel with a Sogdian Inscription from Chach Mediterranean and Central Asian Connections Joan Aruz (The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Emerita) and Annie Caubet (Mus e du Louvre, Emerita) Central Anatolia and the Mediterranean: Art and the Materials of Interaction Henry P. Colburn (New York University) On the Date and Cultural Context of Aurel Stein's Gilgit Rhyton Anca Dan (Centre national de la recherche scientifique, and cole Normale Sup rieure, Paris) and Frantz Grenet (Coll ge de France, Paris) Facing Dionysus at Silenus' Banquet in Tokharistan: A Possible Echo of a Greco-Roman Mystic Circle on a Fourth-Fifth Century "Bactrian" Silver Bowl in The al-Sabah Collection (LNS 1560M) Judith A. Lerner (Institute for the Study of the Ancient World) Thoughts on a Reused Roman Seal with a Middle Persian Inscription Andrew Oliver (Independent Scholar, Washington, D.C.) Fishing among the Flowers on a Roman Silver Cup Holly Pittman (University of Pennsylvania) Forerunners of Old Elamite Culture in Bronze Age Kerman Karen S. Rubinson (Institute for the Study of the Ancient World) Once More Identity at Tillya Tepe: the Iron Artifacts from Burial 2 History and Historiography Carol Bier (Center for Islamic Studies, Graduate Theological Union, Berkeley; The Textile Museum, Emerita) Professor Pope and Dr. Phyllis Ackerman: Carpets and the Study of Persian Textiles Martha L. Carter (Independent Scholar) Notes on the Creative Mind of Ardashir I John E. Curtis (Iran Heritage Foundation; The British Museum, Emeritus) and Vesta Sarkosh Curtis (The British Museum) A Statue from Hatra in the Basrah Museum Anne Dunn-Vaturi (The Metropolitan Museum of Art) Marie-Th r se Dubalen and the Ancient Near Eastern Study Collection Rika Gyselen (Centre national de la recherche scientifique, Paris, Emerita) Yazd, une province de l'empire sassanide Jens Kr ger (Museum f r Islamische Kunst, Emeritus) Revisiting the Ctesiphon Excavations of 1928-29 and How the Met's Trustees Saved the Second Campaign in 1931-32