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Love for Lydia: A Sardis Anniversary Volume Presented to Crawford H. Greenewalt, Jr. (Archaeological Exploration of Sardis Reports

Nicholas D. Cahill

A Sardis Anniversary Volume Presented to Crawford H. Greenewalt, Jr.

Barcode 9780674031951
Hardback

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Release Date: 01/02/2009

Edition: Illustrated
Genre: History
Sub-Genre: Archaeology
Label: Archeological Exploration of Sardis
Series: Archaeological Exploration of Sardis Reports
Contributors: Nicholas D. Cahill (Edited by), Elizabeth B. Baughan (Contributions by), Barbara Burrell (Contributions by), Elspeth R. M. Dusinberre (Contributions by), David Gordon Mitten (Contributions by), George M. A. Hanfmann (Contributions by), Andrew Ramage (Contributions by), Christopher Ratté (Contributions by), Christopher H. Roosevelt (Contributions by), Aimee Francesca Scorziello (Contributions by), Kent Severson (Contributions by), Philip T. Stinson (Contributions by), Grechen Umholtz (Contributions by), Fikret K. Yegül (Contributions by), Marcus Rautman (Contributions by)
Language: English
Publisher: Archeological Exploration of Sardis
Pages: 288

A Sardis Anniversary Volume Presented to Crawford H. Greenewalt, Jr.
This generously illustrated volume presents new studies by scholars closely involved with Professor Greenewalt’s excavations during the Sardis Expedition in western Turkey.
This generously illustrated volume, honoring Crawford H. Greenewalt, Jr., field director of the Sardis Expedition for over thirty years, and commemorating the fiftieth anniversary of the Harvard–Cornell archaeological excavation, presents new studies by scholars closely involved with Professor Greenewalt’s excavations at this site in western Turkey. The essays span the Archaic to the Late Antique periods, focusing primarily on Sardis itself but also touching on other archaeological sites in the eastern Mediterranean. Three papers publish for the first time an Archaic painted tomb near Sardis with lavish interior furnishings. Papers on Sardis in late antiquity focus on domestic wall paintings, spolia used in the late Roman Synagogue, and late fifth-century coin hoards. Other Sardis papers examine the layout of the city from the Lydian to the Roman periods, the transformation of Sardis from an imperial capital to a Hellenistic polis, the reuse of pottery in the Lydian period, and the history and achievements of the conservation program at the site. Studies of an Archaic seal from Gordion, queenly patronage of Hellenistic rotundas, and ancient and modern approaches to architectural ornament round out the volume.