2013
DOI: 10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199682119.001.0001
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Ancient Economies of the Northern Aegean

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Cited by 20 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…It is known that muscovite can be added to the ceramic as an additive to make a durable, strong pot that heats evenly and stays warm longer, making food preparation easier (Murphy and Pardo 2017). It has been suggested that various ceramics, such as storage vessels, as well as tableware, are called the ‘silvery’ ceramic because of the mica‐dusted slip that gives it a distinctive sheen in ancient Rome (Archibald 2013).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is known that muscovite can be added to the ceramic as an additive to make a durable, strong pot that heats evenly and stays warm longer, making food preparation easier (Murphy and Pardo 2017). It has been suggested that various ceramics, such as storage vessels, as well as tableware, are called the ‘silvery’ ceramic because of the mica‐dusted slip that gives it a distinctive sheen in ancient Rome (Archibald 2013).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Subsequently, further development of such ideas has led to the conclusion that communities from the past should never be viewed through the prism of 'ancient civilisations' like Greece and Rome or modern European societies, but as culture-specific phenomena, and that the spirit of the age (or Zeitgeist) should always be taken into consideration when contemplating any past or present culture (cf., Вранић 2022: 157-180). Kale-Krševica: During the second half of the 5 th century BC, more than a hundred years before the first La Tène finds reached the Sava and the Danube region, another culture (or cultures) located in today's Northern Macedonia, Bulgaria, Albania and southern Serbia was going through extraordinary changes (see Papazoglu 1967;Папазоглу 1980;Микулчиќ 1999;Theodossiev 2011;Archibald 2013;Popov 2015), which was equally important for Petar Popović and his scholarly interests. This culture does not have a straightforward archaeological name as is the case with earlier prehistoric ones, and in archaeological literature, it is referred to after different Paleo-Balkan 'tribes' or 'peoples' -e.g., Paeonians, Thracians, Illyrians.…”
Section: A Step Into the Past: Approaches To Identity Communications Andmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…57 Teržan 1977: 339-340, 362, 377-380, Fig. 5h;30;48-50;Vasić 1989;Dizdar 2019: 327-330, Fig. 1,4-5;2,1;3,2;Soós 2019: 117-123, Fig.…”
Section: IIunclassified
“…These Macedonian successor kingdom rulers imported Greco-Macedonian colonists "who either founded new cities (often named after their Macedonian rulers or cities from the Greek mainland) or completely transformed existing settlements" [36] (p. 4). However, it is worth mentioning that the first cities founded by Philip II and Alexander were in European Thrace [37]. This phenomenon was sustained by Alexander, who has at least 20 cities named after him.…”
Section: Investigation Of the Hellenistic Localist Mode Of Expression And Translocal Culture Conceptionmentioning
confidence: 99%