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The Chrono-Typological Pottery Sequence from the Middle Bronze Age Palace at Kabri: Some Preliminary Results
Inbal Samet
Egypt and the Levant 24, Pp. 365-395
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Luciani 2023 Transitions in Material Culture of the 2nd Millennium BCE: The Middle Bronze to Late Bronze Age Shift Seen from Northwest Arabia
Marta Luciani
Material Worlds: Interdisciplinary Approaches to Contacts and Exchange in the Ancient Near East, 2023
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Exploring ‘Dark Ages’. Archaeological Markers of Transition in the Near East from the Bronze Age to the Early Islamic Period
Raffaella Pappalardo
Studia Chaburensia, 2022
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Lost in Transition: The Late Bronze–Iron Age Pottery Assemblage in Tell Atchana/Alalakh
Mariacarmela Montesanto
Studia Eblaitica, 2020
The transition from the Late Bronze to the Iron Age in the eastern Mediterranean and the Near East is rec- ognised as a period of major social and historical significance. Despite being at the centre of these changes, the Late Bronze-Iron Age transition at Alalakh and in the ‘Amuq valley generally remains poorly under- stood in terms of chronology and local development. This paper presents the pottery assemblage coming from selected Late Bronze Age II and Iron Age I contexts retrieved from the new excavations at Alalakh. In particular, the paper aims at analysing the changes occurred in pottery typology and function during the transition from the Late Bronze to the Iron Ages.
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Kamid el-Loz Report on the excavations in 2008 and 2009
Antonietta Catanzariti, Martin Weber, Julia Linke, Elisabeth Wagner-Durand
The present report on two seasons in Kamid el-Loz encompasses a short introduction into our general scientific aims and interests in Kamid el-Loz that cover the whole project and guide our work through every season. A very short remark concerning the influence of the so called Ancient Near Eastern cultures on the cultural development of the Greek and Roman cultures resp. vice versa the influence of the Greek and Roman on the Near and Middle Eastern cultures precedes our report on the actual excavations results 2008 / 2009. The latter covers the Iron Age, the Late and Middle Bronze Age, the architectural developments, our reflections concerning activities, executed in the settlements and functions allocated to several areas within the settlements. We present the pottery and small finds of both seasons and we are dealing with the burial customs observed on the east slope. We discuss the stratigraphy and introduce a reflection on the Middle Bronze chronology of Kamid el-Loz. The present report is a preliminary report. Comprehensive interpretations and theory based explanations of the social, political, economical and cultural developments that have occurred in Kamid el-Loz during roughly 1500 years will be submitted in detailed studies forthcoming.
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Yasur-Landau, Assaf. 2012. The Middle Bronze Age Pottery of Strata VII-V. Typology and Chronology. In: Gadot, Y. and Yasur-Landau, A. Qiryat Shemona (S). Fort and Village in the Hula Valley.. Tel Aviv. Emery and Claire Yass Publications in Archaeology: 39-75
Assaf Yasur-Landau
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together with Marlies Heinz et al., Kamid el-Loz in the Beqa'a plain / Lebanon Excavations in 2001, 2002 and 2004, BAAL 8, 2004 Pp. 83-117
Constance Von Rüden
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The pottery repertoire at the end of the third millennium BC as chronological marker between southern Mesopotamian and the neighbouring regions. The case-study of the Syrian Jazirah
eloisa Casadei
2020
The end of the third millennium BC in Southern Mesopotamia is characterized by a series of political events that, apparently, determined marked changes in the social structure of the area. Archaeologically, this period is still poorly represented, and a general reassessment of the available data is necessary. In the present paper, the pottery repertoire is taken as a case study for the identification of chronological markers of this period. The analysis of key pottery sequences allowed the identification of a homogenous ceramic horizon that characterized the timespan between the late Akkadian to the end of the Ur III periods. Two sub-phases are well distinguished by the presence/absence of types. The cross-dating between southern contexts and the well-know Syrian Jazirah helped in the better definition of the chronological limits of the two sub-phases and the general pottery phase as a whole. Nippur, Tell Asmar, Tell Brak and Tell Mozan have been used as key-sites.
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Heinz, M., Kulemann-Ossen, S., Linke, J., Wagner, E., Notes on the 2005 season at Kamid el-Loz – From the Romans to the Late Bronze Age, BAAL 10, 2006, 85ff.
Elisabeth Wagner-Durand
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D. Morandi Bonacossi, The Crisis of Qatna at the beginning of the Late Bronze Age II and the Iron Age II Settlement Revival. A Regional Trajectory towards the Collapse of the Late Bronze Age Palace System in the Northern Levant
daniele morandi bonacossi
In K.A. Yener (ed.), Across the Border: Late Bronze-Iron Age Relations between Syria and Anatolia, Ancient Near Eastern Studies, Supplement 42, Peeters Publishers, Leuven-Paris-Walpole, 2013, 113-146.
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