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A crusader, Ottoman, and Early Modern Aegean archaeology built environment and domestic material culture in the Medieval and post-Medieval Cyclades, Greece / Athanasios K. Vionis.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Publication details: Leiden : Leiden University Press, (c)2012.Description: 1 online resource (423 pages) : illustrations (some color), maps, plansContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9400601174
  • 9789400601178
Subject(s): Genre/Form: LOC classification:
  • DF221 .C787 2012
Online resources: Available additional physical forms:
Contents:
Built space and domestic material culture -- The social and economic history of the Cyclades -- Settlement and housing : evaluation of published literature -- Cycladic settlements and housing : typology and chronology -- Cyclades Research Project, survey data : settlements and housing -- Cycladic settlements and housing in a social context -- Typo-chronology of post-Roman wares and CY. RE. P. surface ceramics -- Post-Roman ceramics in a social conext : diet and dining -- Furniture : archaeological evidence and social meaning -- Costumes : archaeological evidence and social meaning -- A test-case of 18th-century Paros -- Concluding remarks -- Appendix I (to chapter 7) -- Appendix II (to chapter 8 -- Catalogue).
Summary: This remarkable volume examines the built environment and aspects of domestic material culture of the Late Byzantine/Frankish, Ottoman and Early Modern Cyclades in the Aegean (13th-20th centuries). On the basis of primary archaeological data gathered by the Cyclades Research Project, the author reconstructs everyday domestic life in towns and villages. He also identifies socio-cultural identities that shaped or were reflected in the pre-Modern material remains and analyzes the history of island landscapes through the study of certain aspects of material culture, including settlement layout (fortified settlements and undefended nucleated villages), domestic buildings (housing of urban character, peasant housing and farmsteads), ceramics (locally produced and imported glazed tableware), internal fittings (built structures and mobile fittings) as well as clothing (male and female dress codes).
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"This book originally appeared as a Ph. D. thesis ... at the University of Leiden ... 2005. It comprises an updated version of the thesis and includes the results of a long study and research that required surface survey and the collection of original data from a number of islands in the Cyclades, Greece"--Page 11.

Includes bibliographies and index.

Introduction -- Built space and domestic material culture -- The social and economic history of the Cyclades -- Settlement and housing : evaluation of published literature -- Cycladic settlements and housing : typology and chronology -- Cyclades Research Project, survey data : settlements and housing -- Cycladic settlements and housing in a social context -- Typo-chronology of post-Roman wares and CY. RE. P. surface ceramics -- Post-Roman ceramics in a social conext : diet and dining -- Furniture : archaeological evidence and social meaning -- Costumes : archaeological evidence and social meaning -- A test-case of 18th-century Paros -- Concluding remarks -- Appendix I (to chapter 7) -- Appendix II (to chapter 8 -- Catalogue).

This remarkable volume examines the built environment and aspects of domestic material culture of the Late Byzantine/Frankish, Ottoman and Early Modern Cyclades in the Aegean (13th-20th centuries). On the basis of primary archaeological data gathered by the Cyclades Research Project, the author reconstructs everyday domestic life in towns and villages. He also identifies socio-cultural identities that shaped or were reflected in the pre-Modern material remains and analyzes the history of island landscapes through the study of certain aspects of material culture, including settlement layout (fortified settlements and undefended nucleated villages), domestic buildings (housing of urban character, peasant housing and farmsteads), ceramics (locally produced and imported glazed tableware), internal fittings (built structures and mobile fittings) as well as clothing (male and female dress codes).

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