Abstract In the sixth century after Christ, the Greek cities of Corinth and Thessaloniki were both still centers of imperial Roman and nascent Christian administrations, ancient population centers protected by high fortification walls. But much of scholarship continues to portray Thessaloniki as a veritable island of civilization during the next two "dark" centuries, with cities of southern Greece like Corinth virtually abandoned after earthquakes, plague, and barbarian invasion. Yet recently historians are reading the few literary sources much more critically, and excavation is also slowly beginning to fill in this gap. Thus long-known evidence of urban continuity in Thessaloniki along with the fruits of some of these methodological advanc...
When Rome fell in 476 CE, the city of Athens in Greece also shrank, moving inside its walls to prote...
Across the Mediterranean region, human-environment interactions constitute a major research focus, o...
Corinth, known to the Ottomans as Korintos or Koritos, later as Gördüs, was in Antiquity a sea port ...
Late antique Corinth was on the frontline of the radical political, economic and religious transform...
This paper reexamines the archaeological evidence for three episodes of rural abandonment and resett...
This paper reexamines the archaeological evidence for three episodes of rural abandonment and resett...
Even with increasing interest in Hellenistic and Roman Crete the story of the settlements that once ...
The narrow neck of land that joins the Peloponnese with the Greek mainland was central to the fortun...
"The Byzantine Dark Ages explores current debates about the sudden transformation of the Byzantine E...
Archaeological survey indicates the Dark Ages of Greece extended from the eleventh to the eighth Cen...
From the late-3rd century AD until the 6th century AD, continuous private investments fuelled a sign...
Even with increasing interest in Hellenistic and Roman Crete the story of the settlements that once ...
Thessaloniki is a significant crossroad between Europe and the near and middle east and has had a c...
In the early periods of human habitation, nomadic people moved from place to place searching for the...
Since Homer - who called the island ἑκατόμπολις (Iliad II, 649) - Crete is said to have had a hundre...
When Rome fell in 476 CE, the city of Athens in Greece also shrank, moving inside its walls to prote...
Across the Mediterranean region, human-environment interactions constitute a major research focus, o...
Corinth, known to the Ottomans as Korintos or Koritos, later as Gördüs, was in Antiquity a sea port ...
Late antique Corinth was on the frontline of the radical political, economic and religious transform...
This paper reexamines the archaeological evidence for three episodes of rural abandonment and resett...
This paper reexamines the archaeological evidence for three episodes of rural abandonment and resett...
Even with increasing interest in Hellenistic and Roman Crete the story of the settlements that once ...
The narrow neck of land that joins the Peloponnese with the Greek mainland was central to the fortun...
"The Byzantine Dark Ages explores current debates about the sudden transformation of the Byzantine E...
Archaeological survey indicates the Dark Ages of Greece extended from the eleventh to the eighth Cen...
From the late-3rd century AD until the 6th century AD, continuous private investments fuelled a sign...
Even with increasing interest in Hellenistic and Roman Crete the story of the settlements that once ...
Thessaloniki is a significant crossroad between Europe and the near and middle east and has had a c...
In the early periods of human habitation, nomadic people moved from place to place searching for the...
Since Homer - who called the island ἑκατόμπολις (Iliad II, 649) - Crete is said to have had a hundre...
When Rome fell in 476 CE, the city of Athens in Greece also shrank, moving inside its walls to prote...
Across the Mediterranean region, human-environment interactions constitute a major research focus, o...
Corinth, known to the Ottomans as Korintos or Koritos, later as Gördüs, was in Antiquity a sea port ...