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Cities and Citadels in Turkey : from the Iron Age to the Seljuks / edited by Scott Redford, Nina Ergin.

Contributor(s): Language: English Series: Ancient Near Eastern Studies ; Supplement Series, 40. | Ancient Near Eastern Studies ; Supplement Series, 40. Publication details: Leuven ; Paris ; Walpole : Peeters, 2013.Description: x, 346 p. : illus. (some col.) ; 31 cmISBN:
  • 9789042927124
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • DS56 C58 2013
Contents:
City and Citadel at Troy from the Late Bronze Age through the Roman Period / Carolyn Chabot Aslan & Charles Brian Rose -- The Neo-Assyrian Citadel City and the Walled City as Theme in the Visual Representation of Imperialism / Mehmet-Ali Ataç -- An Intervening Phenomenon in a Non-Urban Environment: Iron Age Cities in Eastern Anatolia / Özlem Çevik -- The Urartian City and Citadel of Ayanis : An Example of Interdependence / Altan Çilingiroğlu -- Landscapes of Power : Neo-Hittite Citadels in Comparative Perspective / Timothy P. Harrison -- The Writing on the Wall: Reviewing Sculpture and Inscription on the Gates of the Iron Age Citadel of Azatiwataya (Karatepe-Aslantaş) / Aslı Özyar -- The Kale at Kerkenes Dağ : An Iron Age Capital in Central Anatolia / Geoffrey D. Summers & Francoise Summers -- Gordion as Citadel and City / Mary M. Voigt -- Sinope and Byzantine Citadels and Fortresses on the Black Sea / James Crow -- The Blachernai Palace and its defense / Neslihan Asutay-Effenberger -- The Citadel of Byzatine Constantinnople / Ruth Macrides -- Mamalik and Mamalik : Decorative and Epigraphic Programs of Anatolian Seljuk Citadels / Scott Redford.
Summary: For millennia, walled cities have served both as residences for rulers and military forces and as sacred centers embodying the power of the elite. The outcome of a symposium organized by Koç University's Research Center for Anatolian Civilizations, the essays in this volume are by leading scholars on the area that is now Turkey, from the first millennium BC through the fourteenth century AD. They examine the phenomenon of citadels in a comparative perspective in Anatolia and neighboring regions. Archaeology, art history, and history are brought to bear on the phenomenon of the citadel in its urban context.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Vol info Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Books Books Hollanda Araştırma Enstitüsü Kütüphanesi / Netherlands Institute in Turkey Library DS56, C58 2013 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 1 Not For Loan 10004

Includes bibliographical references.

City and Citadel at Troy from the Late Bronze Age through the Roman Period / Carolyn Chabot Aslan & Charles Brian Rose -- The Neo-Assyrian Citadel City and the Walled City as Theme in the Visual Representation of Imperialism / Mehmet-Ali Ataç -- An Intervening Phenomenon in a Non-Urban Environment: Iron Age Cities in Eastern Anatolia / Özlem Çevik -- The Urartian City and Citadel of Ayanis : An Example of Interdependence / Altan Çilingiroğlu -- Landscapes of Power : Neo-Hittite Citadels in Comparative Perspective / Timothy P. Harrison -- The Writing on the Wall: Reviewing Sculpture and Inscription on the Gates of the Iron Age Citadel of Azatiwataya (Karatepe-Aslantaş) / Aslı Özyar -- The Kale at Kerkenes Dağ : An Iron Age Capital in Central Anatolia / Geoffrey D. Summers & Francoise Summers -- Gordion as Citadel and City / Mary M. Voigt -- Sinope and Byzantine Citadels and Fortresses on the Black Sea / James Crow -- The Blachernai Palace and its defense / Neslihan Asutay-Effenberger -- The Citadel of Byzatine Constantinnople / Ruth Macrides -- Mamalik and Mamalik : Decorative and Epigraphic Programs of Anatolian Seljuk Citadels / Scott Redford.

For millennia, walled cities have served both as residences for rulers and military forces and as sacred centers embodying the power of the elite. The outcome of a symposium organized by Koç University's Research Center for Anatolian Civilizations, the essays in this volume are by leading scholars on the area that is now Turkey, from the first millennium BC through the fourteenth century AD. They examine the phenomenon of citadels in a comparative perspective in Anatolia and neighboring regions. Archaeology, art history, and history are brought to bear on the phenomenon of the citadel in its urban context.

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