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Contextos cerámicos y transformaciones urbanas en Carthago Nova : (s. II-III d.C.) / Alejandro Quevedo.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextLanguage: Spanish Summary language: English Series: Roman and late antique Mediterranean pottery ; 7.Publisher: Oxford : Archaeopress Publishing Ltd, [2015]Copyright date: ©2015Description: 1 online resource : illustrations (black and white, and colour)Content type:
  • text
  • still image
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 1784910554
  • 9781784910556
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: No titleDDC classification:
  • 936.6 23
LOC classification:
  • DP402.C4
Online resources:
Contents:
Prólogo Agradecimientos Introducción PARTE I 1. Carthago Nova a finales del Alto Imperio: preludio de una transformación 2. Los 'niveles de abandono' de Carthago Nova (s. II-III d.C.): problemática histórica PARTE II 3. Las producciones cerámicas 4. Contextos de los s. II-III d.C. en Cartagena y su entorno: casos de estudio PARTE III 5. Carthago Nova de Marco Aurelio a Diocleciano (161-305 d.C.) Conclusiones Summary Résumé Bibliografía Procedencia figuras Anexo -- Tablas.
Summary: The transition process of the Roman city between the Early Roman period and Late Antiquity is difficult to understand due to the absence of urban models and the decline in epigraphy. The transformations that accompany this period are detectable in the western provinces of the Empire from a very early time. Their interpretation varies with each study case. Ancient Cartagena is a paradigm of these changes. Starting under Marcus Aurelius, the city began to show symptoms of exhaustion, at the same time as literary and epigraphic evidence began to decline, until it disappeared altogether. In these pages the author contributes - and at the same time vindicates - an approach to discovering more about the 2nd and 3rd centuries AD based on the archaeological record and taking into account the stratigraphic sequences and especially the pottery material culture.
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Includes bibliographical references.

The transition process of the Roman city between the Early Roman period and Late Antiquity is difficult to understand due to the absence of urban models and the decline in epigraphy. The transformations that accompany this period are detectable in the western provinces of the Empire from a very early time. Their interpretation varies with each study case. Ancient Cartagena is a paradigm of these changes. Starting under Marcus Aurelius, the city began to show symptoms of exhaustion, at the same time as literary and epigraphic evidence began to decline, until it disappeared altogether. In these pages the author contributes - and at the same time vindicates - an approach to discovering more about the 2nd and 3rd centuries AD based on the archaeological record and taking into account the stratigraphic sequences and especially the pottery material culture.

Specialized.

Spanish text with English summary.

Online resource; title from home page (viewed on March 14, 2016).

Available through Archaeopress Digital Subscription Service.

Prólogo Agradecimientos Introducción PARTE I 1. Carthago Nova a finales del Alto Imperio: preludio de una transformación 2. Los 'niveles de abandono' de Carthago Nova (s. II-III d.C.): problemática histórica PARTE II 3. Las producciones cerámicas 4. Contextos de los s. II-III d.C. en Cartagena y su entorno: casos de estudio PARTE III 5. Carthago Nova de Marco Aurelio a Diocleciano (161-305 d.C.) Conclusiones Summary Résumé Bibliografía Procedencia figuras Anexo -- Tablas.

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