Achaios: Studies presented to Professor Thanasis I. Papadopoulos
In a career spanning more than forty years Prof. Thanasis I. Papadopoulos exhibited his intensive devotion to the Bronze Age of Greece, and especially to Mycenaean Achaea (his native land), through his excavations, publications and lessons to innumerable students in Greece and abroad. The origins, as well as the interconnections of the Mycenaeans with other civilizations, were always of great interest to Prof. Papadopoulos. This honorary volume expands to diverse eras, from Neolithic to Byzantine times, following Mycenaean paths that lead even to the distant East: to Egypt, whose culture Prof. Papadopoulos taught for many years at Ioannina University, and to Jordan, where he excavated for more than 10 years. In Achaios, thirty-five scholars from six different countries have contributed with thirty-one papers, as a small token of appreciation, gratitude and affection to a true scholar, who devoted his life studying and revealing the long journeys of the Mycenaeans and their culture, but also, to a passionate professor who, by transmitting his scientific knowledge, left an invaluable legacy for future generations.
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Achaios: Studies presented to Professor Thanasis I. Papadopoulos
In a career spanning more than forty years Prof. Thanasis I. Papadopoulos exhibited his intensive devotion to the Bronze Age of Greece, and especially to Mycenaean Achaea (his native land), through his excavations, publications and lessons to innumerable students in Greece and abroad. The origins, as well as the interconnections of the Mycenaeans with other civilizations, were always of great interest to Prof. Papadopoulos. This honorary volume expands to diverse eras, from Neolithic to Byzantine times, following Mycenaean paths that lead even to the distant East: to Egypt, whose culture Prof. Papadopoulos taught for many years at Ioannina University, and to Jordan, where he excavated for more than 10 years. In Achaios, thirty-five scholars from six different countries have contributed with thirty-one papers, as a small token of appreciation, gratitude and affection to a true scholar, who devoted his life studying and revealing the long journeys of the Mycenaeans and their culture, but also, to a passionate professor who, by transmitting his scientific knowledge, left an invaluable legacy for future generations.
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Achaios: Studies presented to Professor Thanasis I. Papadopoulos

Achaios: Studies presented to Professor Thanasis I. Papadopoulos

Achaios: Studies presented to Professor Thanasis I. Papadopoulos

Achaios: Studies presented to Professor Thanasis I. Papadopoulos

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Overview

In a career spanning more than forty years Prof. Thanasis I. Papadopoulos exhibited his intensive devotion to the Bronze Age of Greece, and especially to Mycenaean Achaea (his native land), through his excavations, publications and lessons to innumerable students in Greece and abroad. The origins, as well as the interconnections of the Mycenaeans with other civilizations, were always of great interest to Prof. Papadopoulos. This honorary volume expands to diverse eras, from Neolithic to Byzantine times, following Mycenaean paths that lead even to the distant East: to Egypt, whose culture Prof. Papadopoulos taught for many years at Ioannina University, and to Jordan, where he excavated for more than 10 years. In Achaios, thirty-five scholars from six different countries have contributed with thirty-one papers, as a small token of appreciation, gratitude and affection to a true scholar, who devoted his life studying and revealing the long journeys of the Mycenaeans and their culture, but also, to a passionate professor who, by transmitting his scientific knowledge, left an invaluable legacy for future generations.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781784913410
Publisher: Archaeopress Archaeology
Publication date: 10/31/2016
Pages: 300
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 1.25(h) x 9.00(d)

Table of Contents

INTRODUCTION

Thanasis I. Papadopoulos Professor Emeritus at the University of Ioannina

BIBLIOGRAPHY 1973 – 2015

FUNERARY MONUMENTS AND LANDSCAPE: THE EXAMPLE OF THE MIDDLE HELLADIC TUMULI IN MESSENIA (IPPOKRATIS ANGELETOPOULOS)

MYCENAEAN FIGURINES ON CYPRUS († PAUL ÅSTROM)

FOOT OF A BRONZE FIGURE FROM THE MINOAN PEAK SA NCTUARY AT AYIOS YEORGIOS STO VOUNO, KYTHERA (EMILIA BANOU)

WARRIORS IN MOVEMENT: WARRIOR BURIALS IN EASTERN CRETE DURING LATE MINOAN IIIC (DIMITRIS G. BASAKOS)

Ein Zutrunk für den Freund († HANS G. BUCHHOLZ)

THE MH CEMETERY AT KOUPHOVOUNO, SPARTA, LAKONIA (WILLIAM CAVANAGH AND † CHRISTOPHER MEE)

ATTIC BLACK-FIGURED CUPS FROM AMBELAKI, SALA MIS (YANNIS CHAIRETAKIS)

THE PROTOGEOMETRIC SETTLEMENT AT STAMNA, AETOLIA. SOME THOUGHTS ON THE SETTLERS’ ORIGIN BASED ON THE TYPOLOGY OF THE GRAVES (GIOULIKA CHRISTAKOPOULOU)

A SCARAB AND AN OVOID SEAL PLAQUE: EGYPTIAN OR EGYPTIANIZING OBJECTS FROM A CROSSROADS IN THE JORDAN VALLEY (VASSILIS CHRYSIKOPOULOS)

SOME REFLECTIONS ON WESTERN GREECE IN THE LATE BRONZE AND EARLY IRON AGES (SØREN DIETZ)

L’ ÉGYPTIEN, LE BEDOUIN ET LA TRANSJORDANIE (JEAN-CLAUDE GOYON)

NEW ARCHAEOLOGICAL DATA FOR EARLY CHRISTIAN AND EARLY BYZANTINE SALA MIS. THE CASE OF A BURIAL COMPLEX AT AIANTEIO (GEORGE KAKAVAS AND SOPHIA ZYRBA)

LARGE STORAGE JARS IN THE MYCENAEAN GRAVES OF ACHAEA: A BRIEF INTRODUCTION (SOFIA KASKANTIRI)

ON MINERAL AND ARTIFICIAL PIGMENTS OF THEOPHRASTUS OF ERESSOS FROM THE LIBRARY TO THE FIELD RESEARCH (THOMAS KATSAROS)

THE MIDDLE NEOLITHIC PATTERN PAINTED POTS FROM THE CAVE OF CYCLOPS: REVIEWING OLDER THEORIES (STELLA KATSAROU-TZEVELEKI)

GOLD BULL’S HEAD ORNAMENTS FROM THE TIRYNS HOARD AND THE DISTRIBUTION OF THE TYPE IN THE LH IIIC PERIPHERY OF THE MYCENAEAN WORLD (ELENI KONSTANTINIDI-SYVRIDI)

RISE IT UP! A CONTRIBUTION TO UNDERSTANDING TELL FORMATION. THE EVIDENCE FROM PARTICLE SIZE ANALYSIS ON ARCHAEOLOGICAL SEDIMENTS AND BUILDING MATERIALS FROM THE NEOLITHIC TELL SITE AT PALIAMBELLA (N. GREECE) (DIMITRIS KONTOGIORGOS)

NEW EVIDENCE FOR MINOAN RELATIONS WITH ITHACA († LITSA KONTORLI-PAPADOPOULOU)

AN OVERVIEW OF TREPANATION IN ANCIENT GREECE (MARIA A. LISTON, SHERRY C. FOX & LESLIE P. DAY)

A SHRINE WITHIN THE SOVEREIGN COMPLEX ON THE MYCENAEAN ACROPOLIS OF SALA MIS (YANNOS G. LOLOS)

MINOAN PREPALATIAL PERIBOLOS OF AMNISSOS, CRETE (STELLA MANDALAKI)

ON MYCENAEAN HYDREA: SHERDS FROM THE ACROPOLIS AT CHORIZA (CHRISTINA MARABEA)

WHO OWNS THE ROSETTA STONE? EGYPTIAN ANTIQUITIES AND “ELGINISM” (MARGARITA NICOLAKAKI-KENTROU)

ΤΩ ΑΡΙΣΤΩ ΠΑΤΡΙ. TERRAMARE, MYCENAEAN CENTERS AND THE ROLE OF THE ADRIATIC DURING THE LATE BRONZE AGE: THE INTERCULTURAL ROLE OF THE ADRIATIC: THE “WAY OF THE AMBER” AT THE END OF THE LATE BRONZE AGE SEEN FROM A NAUTICAL POINT OF VIEW (STAVROS OIKONOMIDIS)

PREHISTORIC VASES FROM A PRIVATE COLLECTION IN JORDAN (EVANGELIA PAPADOPOULOU-CHRYSIKOPOULOU)

TIES OF AFFECTION BURIALS OF PARENTS AND CHILDREN IN THE MYCENAEAN CEMETERY OF CLAUSS, NEAR PATRAS (KONSTANTINOS PASCHALIDIS)

ACHAIA: EASTERN AND WESTERN (MICHALIS PETROPOULOS)

THE SEREMETI MONKEY (JACKIE PHILLIPS)

SOME FRESH THOUGHTS ON THE USE OF THE MINOAN “STRAINER” (LEFTERIS PLATON)

MYCENAEAN CERAMIC VASES OF AN ARCHAEOLOGICAL PRIVATE COLLECTION (KOSTAS THEODORIDIS)

THE IMPORTANCE OF THE IONIAN AND ALBANIAN COAST FOR MARITIME COMMUNICATION DURING THE BRONZE AGE (AKIS TSONOS)

Th. Papadopoulos

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