This poster presents the Roman bathhouse uncovered during the 2015 season at \u27Ayn Gharandal, a Tetrarchic military fort located in the Wadi Araba just north of Aqaba, Jordan. Sitting underneath the loose desert sand, the fort\u27s bathhouse has been remarkably well-preserved providing invaluable information about the technology of Roman building techniques, the management of natural resources at the site, and hints of the interaction between the Roman military and local traders in a period of imperial expansion and power-consolidation. In the 2015 season, two squares were opened in the bathhouse: one investigated the heating systems of the cauldarium (hot room) and tepidarium (warm room), and the other strove to uncover the graffiti on t...
For a decade, several studies have renewed significantly our knowledge about public baths and their ...
The hammams (or Islamic bath-houses), commonly known as ‘Turkish baths’, are one of the key urban fa...
Fortified buildings (in Arabic known as qsur, singular qasr) that stand isolated or formed part of w...
This poster presents the Roman bathhouse uncovered during the 2015 season at \u27Ayn Gharandal, a Te...
International audienceSince 2010, archaeological investigations of an exceptionally well-preserved m...
Project Title: 2009 ‘Ayn Gharandal Survey and Preservation Project Directors: Robert Darby (Universi...
The Jabal Khubthah summit, generally interpreted as a religious "high-place", remained poorly unders...
International audienceThe Jabal Khubthah summit, generally interpreted as a religious “high-place”, ...
This paper deals with a geophysical experimental activity carried out in the Maxentius Complex, an a...
The remains of a Nabataean private complex located west of the Roman-period apsidal building in the ...
International audienceA new excavation campaign was carried out in Dharīḥ between the 18th and the 3...
Since 2008, a Graeco-Roman bath is excavated in Buto/Tell el-Fara'in by a French mission led by Pasc...
Abstract: The Kharga Oasis, in Egypt’s Western Desert, is endowed with a scatter of Late Roman forts...
International audienceThe remains of a Nabataean private complex located west of the Roman-period ap...
For a decade, several studies have renewed significantly our knowledge about public baths and their ...
The hammams (or Islamic bath-houses), commonly known as ‘Turkish baths’, are one of the key urban fa...
Fortified buildings (in Arabic known as qsur, singular qasr) that stand isolated or formed part of w...
This poster presents the Roman bathhouse uncovered during the 2015 season at \u27Ayn Gharandal, a Te...
International audienceSince 2010, archaeological investigations of an exceptionally well-preserved m...
Project Title: 2009 ‘Ayn Gharandal Survey and Preservation Project Directors: Robert Darby (Universi...
The Jabal Khubthah summit, generally interpreted as a religious "high-place", remained poorly unders...
International audienceThe Jabal Khubthah summit, generally interpreted as a religious “high-place”, ...
This paper deals with a geophysical experimental activity carried out in the Maxentius Complex, an a...
The remains of a Nabataean private complex located west of the Roman-period apsidal building in the ...
International audienceA new excavation campaign was carried out in Dharīḥ between the 18th and the 3...
Since 2008, a Graeco-Roman bath is excavated in Buto/Tell el-Fara'in by a French mission led by Pasc...
Abstract: The Kharga Oasis, in Egypt’s Western Desert, is endowed with a scatter of Late Roman forts...
International audienceThe remains of a Nabataean private complex located west of the Roman-period ap...
For a decade, several studies have renewed significantly our knowledge about public baths and their ...
The hammams (or Islamic bath-houses), commonly known as ‘Turkish baths’, are one of the key urban fa...
Fortified buildings (in Arabic known as qsur, singular qasr) that stand isolated or formed part of w...