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The roof tiles and covering joints of Laconian type discovered in an ancient workshop at Thasos between 1985 and 1988 can most likely be dated between the last quarter of the 6th cent. B.C. and the first quarter of the 5th cent. The presence of vase fragments at the site raises the possibility that both tiles and vases were produced in the same shop -- an apparent rarity for this period.
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La céramique attique est, dès son apparition au Proche-Orient, un produit de demi-luxe qui fait l'objet d'échanges commerciaux réguliers. Ce matériel montre notamment l'originalité et la relative indépendance de chaque cité dans ses relations avec les Grecs. Il permet aussi de déterminer des périodes d'activité intense suivies de brusques ruptures. La période étudiée connaît de profonds changements dans l'organisation du commerce tant à l'ouest qu'à l'est.
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Analyse des importations grecques, notamment de leur répartition géographique et quantitative.
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The archaeological fieldwork conducted in Greece in 2019 and 2020 under the aegis of the Canadian Institute in Greece is reported here, based on the presentation given by the director at the Institute's annual Open Meeting in 2021.
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For the last twenty years, a team of Greek and Canadian archaeologists have been excavating Argilos, the earliest known Greek colony in the area of the mouth of the Strymon river. An overview of research on what was one of the four colonies founded by Andrians after the abandonment of Zagora allows discussion of questions related to the origin of the settlers, the choice of location, the foundation date, and the reasons for the settlement. First occupied by Thracians, Argilos was settled by Greeks no later than the mid-7th cent. B. C. Some of these Greeks came from Andros ; however, one should not eliminate the possibility that Argilos may have been a joint venture between Andrians and Chalcidians. Cohabitation between Greeks and Thracians lasted until the mid-6th cent., when it is believed a wave of immigrants arrived, some of whom were from east Greece. Argilos remained affluent until the foundation of Amphipolis in 437, after which it suffered decline. Its capture by Philip II in 357 and the deportation of its inhabitants to Amphipolis put an end to its existence.
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Les fouilles reprises depuis 2000 par l'Université de Montréal ont dégagé des vestiges des 3e-6e s. Une chapelle médiévale succède ensuite à la basilique byzantine. À noter une plaque de marbre inscrite en grec et inédite, retaillée et remployée en placage
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This article deals with the Greek colonization of ancient Argilos which took place towards the middle of the 7th century B.C., and addresses the question of cohabitation between the Greek colonists and the native Thracian population. A study of the archaeological remains, the literary sources and the development of Greek penetration in the lower region of the Strymon river tends to show that Greeks and Thracians did live together in Argilos, but also in several other sites of this region.
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This paper utilizes the stable carbon and nitrogen isotopic composition of bulk animal bone collagen to better understand animal management practices in Archaic and Classical period Argilos in northern Greece. The results from Argilos are compared with data from other sites in northern Greece to provide new insights into herd management in the region over time. Our results reveal some changes in cattle and pig diets at Argilos between the Archaic and Classical periods. Throughout both periods cattle and caprines exhibit evidence of having consumed C4 vegetation, likely obtained from the nearby salt marshes in the Strymon river delta. This dietary regime is similar to that observed at other north Aegean sites dating back to the Neolithic, suggesting that the long tradition of animal herding in the marshes was an environmentally specific practice in the region.
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Description de la céramique par phases chronologiques entre 650 et 500 av. J.-C.
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Overview of the architectural remains of a Late Archaic pottery workshop (late-6th/early-5th cent. B.C.) unearthed at Fari, Thasos, during excavations conducted between 1985 and 1989 by the Ephorate of Antiquities of Kavala and the French School at Athens.
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The archaeological fieldwork conducted in Greece in 2011 under the aegis of the Canadian Institute in Greece (CIG) is summarized based on the presentation given by the director at the institute’s annual Open Meeting in Athens in May 2012. , Les travaux archéologiques menés en Grèce en 2011 sous l’égide de l’Institut canadien en Grèce sont présenté sur la base d’une allocution donnée par le directeur lors de l’assemblée publique annuelle à Athènes en mai 2012.