Liburnians and Illyrian Lembs
This book explores the origins of two types of ancient ship connected with the protohistoric eastern Adriatic area: the 'Liburnian' and the southern Adriatic 'lemb'. An extensive overview of written, iconographic and archaeological evidence questions the existing scholarly assump...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Otros Autores: | , |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Oxford :
Archaeopress,
2021.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents Page
- Abbreviations
- Primary sources
- Modern literature
- Acknowledgements
- Preface
- 1. Introduction
- 1.1. Research problems and previous scholarship
- 1.2. Overview of the book
- 1.3. Terminology
- 2. Geographical context
- Map 1. Geography of the Adriatic (D. Džino using Google Earth).
- 3. Eastern Adriatic populations in the 1st millennium BC
- 3.1. The Liburni
- 3.2. Other Iron Age Eastern Adriatic indigenous seafaring groups
- 3.3. Greek colonising activities in the eastern Adriatic
- 3.4. Piracy in the eastern Adriatic?
- 3.5. Conclusion
- Map 2. Distribution of the most important indigenous ethnonyms in the pre-Roman Adriatic and its hinterlands. In white: the ethnonyms not mentioned in the sources related to the Roman conquest (D. Džino using Google Earth).
- Figure 1. Distribution of Iron Age Liburnian hillforts (from Batović 1977).
- Figure 2. The city walls of Varvaria-Bribirska glavica (photo: D. Džino).
- Figure 3. Aerial photo of Nedinium-Nadin (photo: M. Grgurić).
- Map 3. The sites related to the East Adriatic Greeks (D. Džino using Google Earth).
- Figure 4. The helmet from the Cape of Jablanac on the island of Cres (from Blečić 2007b, courtesy of the author).
- 4. Archaeological and iconographic evidence in protohistoric eastern Adriatic
- 4.1. Underwater finds
- 4.1.1. Zambratija near Savudrija
- 4.1.2. Pula
- 4.1.3. Caska on the island of Pag
- 4.1.4. Zaton near Nin
- 4.2. Iconography
- 4.2.1. Grieves from the Ilijak burial mound on Glasinac
- 4.2.2. The images of ships from the Daunian Stellae
- 4.2.3. Situla from Nesactium
- 4.2.4. Belt buckle from Prozor
- 4.2.5. Relief from Varvaria (Bribirska glavica)
- 4.2.6. South Adriatic coinage
- 4.3. Protohistoric archaeological and iconographical sources for eastern Adriatic ships
- Map 4. The sites of shipwrecks (pink), iconographic representation of the ships (yellow), and places where the coins with images of ships were minted (white) (D. Džino using Google Earth).
- Figure 5. The sewn boat of Zambratija (photo: Ph. Groscaux, from Koncani Uhač et al. 2017, courtesy of I. Koncani Uhač.
- Figure 6. Drawing of the sewn boat of Zambratija (drawing: V. Dumas, from Boetto et al. 2017, courtesy of I. Koncani Uhač.
- Figure 7. The sewn ships of Pula (photo: T. Brajković, from Boetto et al. 2017, courtesy of I. Koncani Uhač).
- Figure 8. Drawing of the sewn ships of Pula (from Boetto et al. 2017, courtesy of I. Koncani Uhač).
- Figure 9. The sewn boat Caska 1 (photo: L. Damelet).
- Figure 10. Drawing of the sewn boat Caska 1 (drawing: V. Dumas, from Boetto, Radić Rossi 2017).
- Figure 11. Remains of the sewn boat Caska 3 (photo: T. Seguin).
- Figure 12. Drawing of the sewn boat Caska 3 (drawing: P. Poveda, from Boetto, Radić Rossi 2017).
- Figure 13. The sewn boat Caska 4 (photo: L. Roux).