The Oxford Handbook of the Phoenician and Punic Mediterranean
Herausgeber: López-Ruiz, Carolina; Doak, Brian R
The Oxford Handbook of the Phoenician and Punic Mediterranean
Herausgeber: López-Ruiz, Carolina; Doak, Brian R
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The Phoenicians created the Mediterranean world as we know it-yet they remain a poorly understood group. In this Handbook, the first of its kind in English, readers will find expert essays covering the history, culture, and areas of settlement throughout the Phoenician and Punic world.
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The Phoenicians created the Mediterranean world as we know it-yet they remain a poorly understood group. In this Handbook, the first of its kind in English, readers will find expert essays covering the history, culture, and areas of settlement throughout the Phoenician and Punic world.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 792
- Erscheinungstermin: 26. August 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 257mm x 186mm x 42mm
- Gewicht: 1671g
- ISBN-13: 9780190499341
- ISBN-10: 0190499346
- Artikelnr.: 55754794
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 792
- Erscheinungstermin: 26. August 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 257mm x 186mm x 42mm
- Gewicht: 1671g
- ISBN-13: 9780190499341
- ISBN-10: 0190499346
- Artikelnr.: 55754794
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Carolina López-Ruiz is Professor at the University of Chicago Divinity School and Department of Classics. She is the author of Phoenicians and the Making of the Mediterranean, for which she received the support of the National Endowment of the Humanities. Her previous books include Tartessos and the Phoenicians in Iberia, When the Gods Were Born: Greek Cosmogonies and the Near East, and Colonial Encounters in Ancient Iberia: Phoenician, Greek, and Indigenous Relations (co-edited with M. Dietler). Some of her books have been translated into Turkish and Spanish. Brian R. Doak (PhD Harvard University) is Associate Professor of Biblical Studies and Faculty Fellow in the William Penn Honors Program at George Fox University, just outside of Portland, Oregon. He is the recipient of the Aviram Prize for archaeological research (2012) as well as the George Fox University Undergraduate Researcher of the Year (2014). He is the author of several books, including Phoenician Aniconism in its Mediterranean and Ancient Near Eastern Contexts (SBL Press, 2015), Heroic Bodies in Ancient Israel (Oxford University Press, 2018), and the forthcoming Ancient Israel's Neighbors (Oxford University Press).
* Introduction (Carolina López-Ruiz and Brian R. Doak)
* Research Tools (Philip Schmitz)
* Birth and Prospects of a Discipline (Nicholas C. Vella)
* Part One: Histories
* The East
* Canaanite Roots and the Proto-Phoenician Period: c. 1300-1000 BCE
(Ann E. Killebrew)
* Phoenicia in the Later Iron Age: Tenth Century BCE to the Assyrian
and Babylonian Periods (Guy Bunnens)
* Tyre and its Colonial Expansion (María Eugenia Aubet Semmler)
* Phoenicia under the Achaemenid Empire (Vadim Jigoulov)
* The Hellenistic Period and Hellenization in Phoenicia (Corinne
Bonnet)
* Phoenicia in the Roman Empire (Julien Aliquot)
* The Archaeology of Phoenician Cities (Hélène Sader)
* The West
* Early Carthage: From its Foundation to the Battle of Himera (ca.
814-480 BCE) (Hédi Dridi)
* Classical-Hellenistic Carthage before the Punic Wars (479-265 BCE)
(Dexter Hoyos)
* The Punic Wars (264-146 BCE) (Christopher de Lisle)
* Carthage after the Punic Wars and the Neo-Punic Legacy (Matthew
Hobson)
* Part Two: Areas of Culture
* Language and Literature
* The Language (Maria Giulia Amadasi Guzzo)
* Inscriptions (Madadh Richey)
* The Alphabet and its Legacy (Madadh Richey)
* Phoenician Literature (Carolina López-Ruiz)
* Religion
* Religion (Paolo Xella)
* Ritual and the Afterlife (Mireia López-Bertran)
* The tophet and Infant Sacrifice (Matthew McCarty)
* Material Culture
* Pottery and Trade (Francisco J. Núñez)
* Art and Iconography (Eric Gubel)
* Levantine Art in the Orientalizing Period (Marian Feldman)
* Coins (John Betlyon)
* Metallurgy and Other Technologies (Philip Andrew Johnston and Brett
Kaufman)
* Seafaring and Shipwreck Archaeology (Jeffrey P. Emanuel)
* Residential Architecture (Roald Docter)
* Agriculture (Carlos Gómez Bellard)
* Part Three: Regional Studies and Interactions
* The Levant (Gunnar Lehmann)
* Cyprus (Sabine Fourrier)
* The Aegean (Nikos Stampolidis)
* The Italian Peninsula (Jeremy Hayne)
* Sardinia (Andrea Roppa)
* Sicily (Salvatore de Vincenzo)
* Malta and Gozo (Nicholas C. Vella and Maxine Anastasi)
* Ibiza (Benjamí Costa)
* The Iberian Peninsula (José Luis López Castro)
* Phoenicians in Portugal (Ana Margarida Arruda)
* The Gadir-Tyre Axis (Manuel Álvarez Martí-Aguilar)
* North Africa: from the Atlantic to Algeria (Alfredo Mederos)
* Phoenician Exploration (Duane W. Roller)
* Part Four: Receptions
* Phoenicians in the Hebrew Bible (Brian R. Doak)
* Phoenicians and Carthaginians in Classical Literature (Josephine C.
Quinn)
* Neo-Phoenician Identities in the Roman Empire (Anthony Kaldellis)
* Phoenicians and Carthaginians in the Western Imagination (Brien K.
Garnand)
* Phoenician Identity in Modern Lebanon (Claude Doumet-Serhal)
* Punic Heritage in Tunisia (Kathryn Lafrenz Samuels and Peter van
Dommelen)
* Research Tools (Philip Schmitz)
* Birth and Prospects of a Discipline (Nicholas C. Vella)
* Part One: Histories
* The East
* Canaanite Roots and the Proto-Phoenician Period: c. 1300-1000 BCE
(Ann E. Killebrew)
* Phoenicia in the Later Iron Age: Tenth Century BCE to the Assyrian
and Babylonian Periods (Guy Bunnens)
* Tyre and its Colonial Expansion (María Eugenia Aubet Semmler)
* Phoenicia under the Achaemenid Empire (Vadim Jigoulov)
* The Hellenistic Period and Hellenization in Phoenicia (Corinne
Bonnet)
* Phoenicia in the Roman Empire (Julien Aliquot)
* The Archaeology of Phoenician Cities (Hélène Sader)
* The West
* Early Carthage: From its Foundation to the Battle of Himera (ca.
814-480 BCE) (Hédi Dridi)
* Classical-Hellenistic Carthage before the Punic Wars (479-265 BCE)
(Dexter Hoyos)
* The Punic Wars (264-146 BCE) (Christopher de Lisle)
* Carthage after the Punic Wars and the Neo-Punic Legacy (Matthew
Hobson)
* Part Two: Areas of Culture
* Language and Literature
* The Language (Maria Giulia Amadasi Guzzo)
* Inscriptions (Madadh Richey)
* The Alphabet and its Legacy (Madadh Richey)
* Phoenician Literature (Carolina López-Ruiz)
* Religion
* Religion (Paolo Xella)
* Ritual and the Afterlife (Mireia López-Bertran)
* The tophet and Infant Sacrifice (Matthew McCarty)
* Material Culture
* Pottery and Trade (Francisco J. Núñez)
* Art and Iconography (Eric Gubel)
* Levantine Art in the Orientalizing Period (Marian Feldman)
* Coins (John Betlyon)
* Metallurgy and Other Technologies (Philip Andrew Johnston and Brett
Kaufman)
* Seafaring and Shipwreck Archaeology (Jeffrey P. Emanuel)
* Residential Architecture (Roald Docter)
* Agriculture (Carlos Gómez Bellard)
* Part Three: Regional Studies and Interactions
* The Levant (Gunnar Lehmann)
* Cyprus (Sabine Fourrier)
* The Aegean (Nikos Stampolidis)
* The Italian Peninsula (Jeremy Hayne)
* Sardinia (Andrea Roppa)
* Sicily (Salvatore de Vincenzo)
* Malta and Gozo (Nicholas C. Vella and Maxine Anastasi)
* Ibiza (Benjamí Costa)
* The Iberian Peninsula (José Luis López Castro)
* Phoenicians in Portugal (Ana Margarida Arruda)
* The Gadir-Tyre Axis (Manuel Álvarez Martí-Aguilar)
* North Africa: from the Atlantic to Algeria (Alfredo Mederos)
* Phoenician Exploration (Duane W. Roller)
* Part Four: Receptions
* Phoenicians in the Hebrew Bible (Brian R. Doak)
* Phoenicians and Carthaginians in Classical Literature (Josephine C.
Quinn)
* Neo-Phoenician Identities in the Roman Empire (Anthony Kaldellis)
* Phoenicians and Carthaginians in the Western Imagination (Brien K.
Garnand)
* Phoenician Identity in Modern Lebanon (Claude Doumet-Serhal)
* Punic Heritage in Tunisia (Kathryn Lafrenz Samuels and Peter van
Dommelen)
* Introduction (Carolina López-Ruiz and Brian R. Doak)
* Research Tools (Philip Schmitz)
* Birth and Prospects of a Discipline (Nicholas C. Vella)
* Part One: Histories
* The East
* Canaanite Roots and the Proto-Phoenician Period: c. 1300-1000 BCE
(Ann E. Killebrew)
* Phoenicia in the Later Iron Age: Tenth Century BCE to the Assyrian
and Babylonian Periods (Guy Bunnens)
* Tyre and its Colonial Expansion (María Eugenia Aubet Semmler)
* Phoenicia under the Achaemenid Empire (Vadim Jigoulov)
* The Hellenistic Period and Hellenization in Phoenicia (Corinne
Bonnet)
* Phoenicia in the Roman Empire (Julien Aliquot)
* The Archaeology of Phoenician Cities (Hélène Sader)
* The West
* Early Carthage: From its Foundation to the Battle of Himera (ca.
814-480 BCE) (Hédi Dridi)
* Classical-Hellenistic Carthage before the Punic Wars (479-265 BCE)
(Dexter Hoyos)
* The Punic Wars (264-146 BCE) (Christopher de Lisle)
* Carthage after the Punic Wars and the Neo-Punic Legacy (Matthew
Hobson)
* Part Two: Areas of Culture
* Language and Literature
* The Language (Maria Giulia Amadasi Guzzo)
* Inscriptions (Madadh Richey)
* The Alphabet and its Legacy (Madadh Richey)
* Phoenician Literature (Carolina López-Ruiz)
* Religion
* Religion (Paolo Xella)
* Ritual and the Afterlife (Mireia López-Bertran)
* The tophet and Infant Sacrifice (Matthew McCarty)
* Material Culture
* Pottery and Trade (Francisco J. Núñez)
* Art and Iconography (Eric Gubel)
* Levantine Art in the Orientalizing Period (Marian Feldman)
* Coins (John Betlyon)
* Metallurgy and Other Technologies (Philip Andrew Johnston and Brett
Kaufman)
* Seafaring and Shipwreck Archaeology (Jeffrey P. Emanuel)
* Residential Architecture (Roald Docter)
* Agriculture (Carlos Gómez Bellard)
* Part Three: Regional Studies and Interactions
* The Levant (Gunnar Lehmann)
* Cyprus (Sabine Fourrier)
* The Aegean (Nikos Stampolidis)
* The Italian Peninsula (Jeremy Hayne)
* Sardinia (Andrea Roppa)
* Sicily (Salvatore de Vincenzo)
* Malta and Gozo (Nicholas C. Vella and Maxine Anastasi)
* Ibiza (Benjamí Costa)
* The Iberian Peninsula (José Luis López Castro)
* Phoenicians in Portugal (Ana Margarida Arruda)
* The Gadir-Tyre Axis (Manuel Álvarez Martí-Aguilar)
* North Africa: from the Atlantic to Algeria (Alfredo Mederos)
* Phoenician Exploration (Duane W. Roller)
* Part Four: Receptions
* Phoenicians in the Hebrew Bible (Brian R. Doak)
* Phoenicians and Carthaginians in Classical Literature (Josephine C.
Quinn)
* Neo-Phoenician Identities in the Roman Empire (Anthony Kaldellis)
* Phoenicians and Carthaginians in the Western Imagination (Brien K.
Garnand)
* Phoenician Identity in Modern Lebanon (Claude Doumet-Serhal)
* Punic Heritage in Tunisia (Kathryn Lafrenz Samuels and Peter van
Dommelen)
* Research Tools (Philip Schmitz)
* Birth and Prospects of a Discipline (Nicholas C. Vella)
* Part One: Histories
* The East
* Canaanite Roots and the Proto-Phoenician Period: c. 1300-1000 BCE
(Ann E. Killebrew)
* Phoenicia in the Later Iron Age: Tenth Century BCE to the Assyrian
and Babylonian Periods (Guy Bunnens)
* Tyre and its Colonial Expansion (María Eugenia Aubet Semmler)
* Phoenicia under the Achaemenid Empire (Vadim Jigoulov)
* The Hellenistic Period and Hellenization in Phoenicia (Corinne
Bonnet)
* Phoenicia in the Roman Empire (Julien Aliquot)
* The Archaeology of Phoenician Cities (Hélène Sader)
* The West
* Early Carthage: From its Foundation to the Battle of Himera (ca.
814-480 BCE) (Hédi Dridi)
* Classical-Hellenistic Carthage before the Punic Wars (479-265 BCE)
(Dexter Hoyos)
* The Punic Wars (264-146 BCE) (Christopher de Lisle)
* Carthage after the Punic Wars and the Neo-Punic Legacy (Matthew
Hobson)
* Part Two: Areas of Culture
* Language and Literature
* The Language (Maria Giulia Amadasi Guzzo)
* Inscriptions (Madadh Richey)
* The Alphabet and its Legacy (Madadh Richey)
* Phoenician Literature (Carolina López-Ruiz)
* Religion
* Religion (Paolo Xella)
* Ritual and the Afterlife (Mireia López-Bertran)
* The tophet and Infant Sacrifice (Matthew McCarty)
* Material Culture
* Pottery and Trade (Francisco J. Núñez)
* Art and Iconography (Eric Gubel)
* Levantine Art in the Orientalizing Period (Marian Feldman)
* Coins (John Betlyon)
* Metallurgy and Other Technologies (Philip Andrew Johnston and Brett
Kaufman)
* Seafaring and Shipwreck Archaeology (Jeffrey P. Emanuel)
* Residential Architecture (Roald Docter)
* Agriculture (Carlos Gómez Bellard)
* Part Three: Regional Studies and Interactions
* The Levant (Gunnar Lehmann)
* Cyprus (Sabine Fourrier)
* The Aegean (Nikos Stampolidis)
* The Italian Peninsula (Jeremy Hayne)
* Sardinia (Andrea Roppa)
* Sicily (Salvatore de Vincenzo)
* Malta and Gozo (Nicholas C. Vella and Maxine Anastasi)
* Ibiza (Benjamí Costa)
* The Iberian Peninsula (José Luis López Castro)
* Phoenicians in Portugal (Ana Margarida Arruda)
* The Gadir-Tyre Axis (Manuel Álvarez Martí-Aguilar)
* North Africa: from the Atlantic to Algeria (Alfredo Mederos)
* Phoenician Exploration (Duane W. Roller)
* Part Four: Receptions
* Phoenicians in the Hebrew Bible (Brian R. Doak)
* Phoenicians and Carthaginians in Classical Literature (Josephine C.
Quinn)
* Neo-Phoenician Identities in the Roman Empire (Anthony Kaldellis)
* Phoenicians and Carthaginians in the Western Imagination (Brien K.
Garnand)
* Phoenician Identity in Modern Lebanon (Claude Doumet-Serhal)
* Punic Heritage in Tunisia (Kathryn Lafrenz Samuels and Peter van
Dommelen)