This is a study of identity, community, and the process of state formation in the Roman period at Palmyra, an oasis city in the Syrian desert, from the first to third centuries C.E. I address the key issue of cultural transmission and the development of an indigenous Palmyrene identity and community in the Roman Near East, as influenced by their pastoralist backgrounds and their contacts with Parthian and Roman powers. I examine these issues primarily through a re-evaluation of the local epigraphy in its urban context, complemented by examinations of the archaeology of the city and narrative sources. I demonstrate how the Palmyrenes managed to build a civic community that was distinctively Mediterranean in its makeup, and where a small e...
This dissertation studies the effects that a “koinon” in the Roman period could have on its constitu...
This dissertation investigates the social, political, cultural, and religious history of the Mani p...
The 1753 publication of The Ruins of Palmyra by Robert Wood was key in the formation of archaeologic...
Because of their relevance to the modern world, the topics of ethnicity, cultural performance, and c...
This presentation aims to report the conclusions of our dissertation, titled Th...
This paper offers a synthesis on my dissertation, titled The Phoenician communities of the Iberian P...
In this dissertation I examine the relationship between provincial society and empire. I draw the re...
International audienceThe goal of this series of studies is to synthesize our knowledge of the onoma...
Palmyra, ancient Tadmor, was in the first three centuries CE a flourishing trade node in theRoman Em...
Despite the almost continuous state of war that existed between the Roman and Persian Empires from t...
In approaching the scientific literature on the UNESCO world heritage site of Palmyra for the first...
Thesis: S.B., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Humanities, 2016.Cataloged from P...
This poster aims to report the conclusions of our PhD thesis, titled The Phoenician communities of ...
This dissertation studies the effects that a “koinon” in the Roman period could have on its constitu...
Abstract: In this paper I examine the scholarship of Roman Syria and the history of research on this...
This dissertation studies the effects that a “koinon” in the Roman period could have on its constitu...
This dissertation investigates the social, political, cultural, and religious history of the Mani p...
The 1753 publication of The Ruins of Palmyra by Robert Wood was key in the formation of archaeologic...
Because of their relevance to the modern world, the topics of ethnicity, cultural performance, and c...
This presentation aims to report the conclusions of our dissertation, titled Th...
This paper offers a synthesis on my dissertation, titled The Phoenician communities of the Iberian P...
In this dissertation I examine the relationship between provincial society and empire. I draw the re...
International audienceThe goal of this series of studies is to synthesize our knowledge of the onoma...
Palmyra, ancient Tadmor, was in the first three centuries CE a flourishing trade node in theRoman Em...
Despite the almost continuous state of war that existed between the Roman and Persian Empires from t...
In approaching the scientific literature on the UNESCO world heritage site of Palmyra for the first...
Thesis: S.B., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Humanities, 2016.Cataloged from P...
This poster aims to report the conclusions of our PhD thesis, titled The Phoenician communities of ...
This dissertation studies the effects that a “koinon” in the Roman period could have on its constitu...
Abstract: In this paper I examine the scholarship of Roman Syria and the history of research on this...
This dissertation studies the effects that a “koinon” in the Roman period could have on its constitu...
This dissertation investigates the social, political, cultural, and religious history of the Mani p...
The 1753 publication of The Ruins of Palmyra by Robert Wood was key in the formation of archaeologic...