This article focuses on eight new oil lamps excavated by As-Salt archaeology office at Tell- Al-Gadur and As-Salalm, in As-Salt, Jordan. Based on their form and related stratigraphic evidence, these pottery oil lamps date to the EBIV-MBI Period. All of them found in tombs discovered during excavation, they appear to have never been used
The paper\u27s subject is fifteen copper alloy lamps of various types and sizes from the Roman Colle...
Among the stone artefacts found in Fewet, vesicular basalt bowls represented peculiar finds both fro...
Some fragments of pottery vessels from Tell Beydar in the Khabur region of north-eastern Syria bear ...
This article focuses on eight new oil lamps excavated by As-Salt archaeology office at Tell- Al-Gad...
These terracotta oil lamps were used for centuries in the Greek and Roman world and were the primary...
Article disponible en ligne www.springerlink.comInternational audienceIdentification of numerous rem...
During the 2015 season, the Italian Archaeological Mission in Sudan working at Jebel Barkal brought ...
In this short paper, nine formerly unpublished rayed lamps fromsouth-eastern Turkey, eight from Mard...
This paper discusses the analysis of organic residues preserved in the fabric of twelve pottery sher...
Oil lamps as archaeological finds and in museum collections provide a wealth of information. Various...
Significant changes in the material culture, subsistence and mode of life are associated with the Mi...
WOS: 000418885600001Eight black residues, scraped from outer surfaces of painted ceramics, unearthed...
In 64 B.C., the Romans turned Syria into a Roman province and this occupation continued, with many v...
Olive cultivation and oil pressing can be considered as cultural phenomenon characteriz-ing the Medi...
Unglazed oil jar, Greco-Roman find from a dig in Jerusalem. The oil jar sits on a small base and fla...
The paper\u27s subject is fifteen copper alloy lamps of various types and sizes from the Roman Colle...
Among the stone artefacts found in Fewet, vesicular basalt bowls represented peculiar finds both fro...
Some fragments of pottery vessels from Tell Beydar in the Khabur region of north-eastern Syria bear ...
This article focuses on eight new oil lamps excavated by As-Salt archaeology office at Tell- Al-Gad...
These terracotta oil lamps were used for centuries in the Greek and Roman world and were the primary...
Article disponible en ligne www.springerlink.comInternational audienceIdentification of numerous rem...
During the 2015 season, the Italian Archaeological Mission in Sudan working at Jebel Barkal brought ...
In this short paper, nine formerly unpublished rayed lamps fromsouth-eastern Turkey, eight from Mard...
This paper discusses the analysis of organic residues preserved in the fabric of twelve pottery sher...
Oil lamps as archaeological finds and in museum collections provide a wealth of information. Various...
Significant changes in the material culture, subsistence and mode of life are associated with the Mi...
WOS: 000418885600001Eight black residues, scraped from outer surfaces of painted ceramics, unearthed...
In 64 B.C., the Romans turned Syria into a Roman province and this occupation continued, with many v...
Olive cultivation and oil pressing can be considered as cultural phenomenon characteriz-ing the Medi...
Unglazed oil jar, Greco-Roman find from a dig in Jerusalem. The oil jar sits on a small base and fla...
The paper\u27s subject is fifteen copper alloy lamps of various types and sizes from the Roman Colle...
Among the stone artefacts found in Fewet, vesicular basalt bowls represented peculiar finds both fro...
Some fragments of pottery vessels from Tell Beydar in the Khabur region of north-eastern Syria bear ...