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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Regional characteristics in the Protogeometric Period

Lemos, I. S. January 1988 (has links)
No description available.
2

The dance of the islands : perceptions of insularity in classical Greece

Constantakopoulou, Christy January 2002 (has links)
No description available.
3

De Nesiotarum republica commentatio dissertatio philologica quam ad sollemnia anniversaria Gymnasii Regii Maximilianei celebranda /

Stumpf, Phil. January 1881 (has links)
Diss. / Includes bibliographical references.
4

Storage, storage facilities and island economy : the evidence from LCI Akrotiri, Thera

Nikolakopoulou, Irene January 2002 (has links)
No description available.
5

Birds in the Aegean Bronze Age

Binnberg, Julia Karin January 2018 (has links)
The thesis discusses bird depictions in the Aegean Bronze Age. The iconographical study is based on a catalogue of almost 2000 objects showing bird images from Crete, the Cyclades, the Greek Mainland and the Dodecanese dating to EB I - LB IIIC. Three research aims are addressed. The first aim is the reliable and accurate identification of the depicted bird species by finding a middle ground between the two approaches that have prevailed in past scholarship, which either consisted of overambitious attempts at species identification or resorted to overgeneralised accounts of bird imagery. A systematic identification methodology, based on a combination of techniques from iconography, ornithology and in particular anthropological studies of folk taxonomies, is developed. The second aim is the interpretation of any specific symbolic functions and ideological roles of birds in different regions and periods. This analysis rests on the combined study of media and find contexts as well as the chosen bird species and iconographical associations. The third aim is the reconstruction of types of ontologies prevalent in different regions. Based on a structuralist model of ontologies developed by the anthropologist Descola, the bird depictions are studied by looking for features that are typical of analogical, naturalist, totemic or animist art. Each research aim has yielded numerous results, which deepen our understanding of biological knowledge and cultural diversity in the Aegean Bronze Age. First, the vast majority of bird depictions can be identified as belonging to one of the following folk-taxonomical groups: columbids (doves), birds of prey/corvids, waterbirds, wading birds, owls, hoopoes, galliformes, swallows and seabirds. Second, the existence of a multitude of particular functions and roles of birds is revealed. These vary significantly according to time and regions, mirroring historical developments and the presence of different cultural attitudes towards birds. Third, marked regional differences are detectable with regard to ontologies. Cretan and Cycladic bird art is consistent with animist iconography discernible because of a pronounced artistic naturalism, an emphasis on movement and agency, and the presence of shamanic imagery. The images from the Greek Mainland can be characterised as being consistent with an ontology termed analogical by Descola because of a preference of stylised and modular depictions and the persistence of symbolic functions through time. This work lays a foundation opening up a new perspective on interpreting iconography of the Aegean Bronze Age.
6

Petrogenesis of calc-alkaline and alkaline magmas from the southern and eastern Aegean Sea, Greece /

Wyers, Gerard Paul January 1987 (has links)
No description available.
7

Minoan pre-palatial sealstones in their economic and social context : a study based on the new material from Archanes-Phourni

Karytinos, Alexios January 1998 (has links)
Sealstones are one of the most important types of artifacts discovered in the Aegean Bronze Age. Their practical use for recording and administrating purposes, their association with identity, prestige and social status, their possible religious or ritual connotations speak clearly for their importance and value. The fact that they are deposited, among other artifacts in tombs, accompanying their owners, demonstrate this value not only in life but also in death. Especially in the pre-palatial period in Crete a large number of seals have come to light, coming mostly from mixed contexts in the Mesara and Asterousia, in south Crete. The Minoan pre-palatial sealstones from Archanes-Phourni comprise an important corpus of artifacts for many reasons. They come from a site in the North of the island, in contrast to the majority of pre-palatial seals. The excavation and recording techniques used offer the opportunity to study the seals in their context, which is dated with relative certainty. The study of these seals, in comparison with the published ones from the south of the island, may offer significant information about important aspects of life in this period. The examination of materials, shapes, motifs, style groups and consumption patterns of seals may present us with useful insights about craft specialization and technology, internal and external exchange, economic organization and administration, religion and ritual, social differentiation and organization in the pre-palatial period. The study of this multiple and complex role of sealstones can offer us valuable information about the period before the first palaces.
8

Down-dip geometry and depth extent of normal faults in the Aegean-evidence from earthquakes

Braunmiller, Jochen 19 July 1991 (has links)
Graduation date: 1992
9

The Church and the urban structure of the Aegean Island towns /

Kovatsi, Athena January 1979 (has links)
No description available.
10

The Church and the urban structure of the Aegean Island towns /

Kovatsi, Athena January 1979 (has links)
No description available.

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