In this one-off, extended Project Gallery article, the participants of a recent workshop jointly present a manifesto for the study of ancient Mediterranean maritime connectivity. Reviewing the advantages and perils of network modelling, they advance conceptual and methodological frameworks for the productive study of seaborne connectivity. They show how progressive research methods can overcome some of the problems encountered when working with uneven datasets spanning large geographical regions and long periods of time. The manifesto suggests research directions that could better inform our interpretations of human connections, both within and beyond the Mediterranean
Historians and archaeologists often take connectivity for granted, and fail to address the problems ...
Anthropologists aim to understand the human motives behind economic activities. During the Roman Rep...
International audienceDespite the huge importance of sea transport for world society and economy, em...
In this one-off, extended Project Gallery article, the participants of a recent workshop jointly pre...
How useful is the concept of "network" for historical studies and the ancient world in particular? U...
Attempts over the past few decades to utilize shipwrecks to answer long-term economic questions tend...
International audienceFor millennia, the Mediterranean has been one of the most active trading areas...
I shall show how different marine technologies - particularly widespread use of sail – and the diffe...
The 34 articles published in this volume form the proceedings of the 9th Red Sea conference held at ...
In the last 10 years, discussion of inter-Adriatic interactions during late Prehistory and their imp...
The ancient geographer Strabo imaged Rome’s conquest of a Mediterranean-wide empire as a ‘knitting t...
The 34 articles published in this volume form the proceedings of the 9th Red Sea conference held at ...
This article will discuss the possibilities and limitations of network models and analysis in tracin...
Book synopsis: How useful is the concept of "network" for historical studies and the ancient world i...
The waters of the Mediterranean may be the greatest museum of Antiquity. Scattered across the seafl...
Historians and archaeologists often take connectivity for granted, and fail to address the problems ...
Anthropologists aim to understand the human motives behind economic activities. During the Roman Rep...
International audienceDespite the huge importance of sea transport for world society and economy, em...
In this one-off, extended Project Gallery article, the participants of a recent workshop jointly pre...
How useful is the concept of "network" for historical studies and the ancient world in particular? U...
Attempts over the past few decades to utilize shipwrecks to answer long-term economic questions tend...
International audienceFor millennia, the Mediterranean has been one of the most active trading areas...
I shall show how different marine technologies - particularly widespread use of sail – and the diffe...
The 34 articles published in this volume form the proceedings of the 9th Red Sea conference held at ...
In the last 10 years, discussion of inter-Adriatic interactions during late Prehistory and their imp...
The ancient geographer Strabo imaged Rome’s conquest of a Mediterranean-wide empire as a ‘knitting t...
The 34 articles published in this volume form the proceedings of the 9th Red Sea conference held at ...
This article will discuss the possibilities and limitations of network models and analysis in tracin...
Book synopsis: How useful is the concept of "network" for historical studies and the ancient world i...
The waters of the Mediterranean may be the greatest museum of Antiquity. Scattered across the seafl...
Historians and archaeologists often take connectivity for granted, and fail to address the problems ...
Anthropologists aim to understand the human motives behind economic activities. During the Roman Rep...
International audienceDespite the huge importance of sea transport for world society and economy, em...