Commonly perceived as pawns in wider imperial machinations, the Cyclades have often been side-lined as peripheral due to their assumed seclusion. Conversely, even a brief analysis of the archaeological evidence indicates that these islands had groups of resident Christian communities, and experienced the monumentalized manifestation of Christianity, much earlier than their mainland counterparts to the west. To establish why this is the case, it is necessary to shed the bias of preconceived notions of insularity. In so doing, this allows identification of the significant variety of communication networks that the islands had. Evidence of Christianization is seen in the spread of churches throughout the islands. The earliest churches were fou...
The Byzantine and post-Byzantine cultural heritage of Greek islands and peninsulas is still a blank ...
In this study I argue that the character of Christian institutions and ideas that emerged during th...
Colonizing Christianity employs postcolonial critique to analyze the transformations of Greek and La...
Commonly perceived as pawns in wider imperial machinations, the Cyclades have often been side-lined ...
Conversion to Christianity was remarkably rapid on Aneityum but almost non-existent on Tanna during ...
International audienceThere are many good reasons for the anthropology of Christianity to stop in th...
For a long time, islands have served as the focal point for the studies of numerous researchers, who...
Studies of Christianization in mainland Greece have indicated different processes, planned and unpla...
In the early periods of human habitation, nomadic people moved from place to place searching for the...
It is usual to consider the main economic, social and artistic trends in early Mycenaean society as ...
Caribbean archaeologists have tended to focus exclusively on the prehistory of the largest islands, ...
This article focusses on the relationship of the church with productive landscapes and coastal topog...
This world is one of islands – forty-three island nation-states, many hundreds of island jurisdicti...
From tourist paradises to immigrant detention camps, from offshore finance centres to strategic mili...
International audienceFrom the end of the byzantine domination until the beginning of the British co...
The Byzantine and post-Byzantine cultural heritage of Greek islands and peninsulas is still a blank ...
In this study I argue that the character of Christian institutions and ideas that emerged during th...
Colonizing Christianity employs postcolonial critique to analyze the transformations of Greek and La...
Commonly perceived as pawns in wider imperial machinations, the Cyclades have often been side-lined ...
Conversion to Christianity was remarkably rapid on Aneityum but almost non-existent on Tanna during ...
International audienceThere are many good reasons for the anthropology of Christianity to stop in th...
For a long time, islands have served as the focal point for the studies of numerous researchers, who...
Studies of Christianization in mainland Greece have indicated different processes, planned and unpla...
In the early periods of human habitation, nomadic people moved from place to place searching for the...
It is usual to consider the main economic, social and artistic trends in early Mycenaean society as ...
Caribbean archaeologists have tended to focus exclusively on the prehistory of the largest islands, ...
This article focusses on the relationship of the church with productive landscapes and coastal topog...
This world is one of islands – forty-three island nation-states, many hundreds of island jurisdicti...
From tourist paradises to immigrant detention camps, from offshore finance centres to strategic mili...
International audienceFrom the end of the byzantine domination until the beginning of the British co...
The Byzantine and post-Byzantine cultural heritage of Greek islands and peninsulas is still a blank ...
In this study I argue that the character of Christian institutions and ideas that emerged during th...
Colonizing Christianity employs postcolonial critique to analyze the transformations of Greek and La...