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Volume 46 Issue 6 September 2019 Nestor Bibliography of Aegean Prehistory and Related Areas Department of Classics, University of Cincinnati Editor: Carol Hershenson P.O. Box 0226, Cincinnati, Ohio, 45221-0226, U.S.A. Assistant Editor: Christine Wong http://classics.uc.edu/nestor [email protected] COMMUNICATIONS Grants and Fellowships On 1 November 2019 applications are due to the Institute for Aegean Prehistory (INSTAP) for 2020 New or Renewal Research Grants, 2nd or 3rd Year Applications, the SCEC Librarian Fellowship, Six-WeeK Research Grants at INSTAP SCEC, and the Petrography Internship at INSTAP SCEC. Applications for Publication Subventions have no specific due dates. The application process is online at https://instap.smapply.io/. Further information is available at http://www.aegeanprehistory.net/. On 1 February 2020 applications are due for both the Margo Tytus Visiting Scholars Program and the Cincinnati Summer Residency Program for 2020-2021. Applicants for the Margo Tytus Visiting Scholars Program will ordinarily be senior scholars who are a minimum of five years beyond receipt of the PhD, with notable publication histories, who are expected to be in residence at the University of Cincinnati for a minimum of one semester (ca. four months) and a maximum of two during the regular academic year. Tytus Scholars receive a monthly stipend of $1,500 plus housing near campus and a transportation allowance, as well as office space attached to the Burnam Classics Library. Applicants for the Cincinnati Summer Residency program may be recent PhDs , scholars early in their careers, and/or those turning to new topics of research with their PhD in hand by the time of application, and will ordinarily be in residence at the University of Cincinnati for approximately two months in the summer terms, May to mid-August. Cincinnati Summer Residents receive housing near campus and office space attached to the Burnam Classics Library only. Further information and application forms are available at https://classics.uc.edu/departments/classics/tytus. Calls for Papers On 15 September 2019 submissions are due to the journal SYNERGHEION. Rivista internazionale di studi greci. Lingue, Culture, Società on all aspects of the Greek language and culture, from the prehistoric antiquity to the modern and contemporary age, including their transmission through the ages, the translation activity and the history of tradition and reception of texts and other tangible or intangible resources. Submitted papers can be written in Italian, English, French, and Modern Greek, accompanied by an abstract in English and in Nestor 46.6 137 September 2019 the language of the contribution. The academic articles are peer-reviewed by applying the double-blind method, in accordance with international scientific standards. Further information is available at https://www.synergheion.org/. On 1 October 2019 abstracts (2000 characters, title 200 characters) are due for the 23rd annual Symposium On Mediterranean Archaeology (SOMA 2019): The International Trade Around Mediterranean, to be held on 14-17 November 2019 in Koper, Slovenia. Further information is available at http://genama.info/soma/2019/Registration.html. Sessions will include: Legislation of the cultural heritage Management and interpretation of underwater cultural heritage Tools and methods (conservation, restoration, documentation, excavation) Maritime cultural landscapes Ports, harbours, and anchorages Material culture of maritime trade Seafaring and navigation On 15 October 2019 session submissions (300 words maximum) are due for the 9th World Archaeological Congress (WAC – 9), to be held on 5-10 July 2020 in Prague. On 15 December 2019 session abstracts will be announced and on 21 March 2020 submissions of individual papers and posters are due. Further information is available at https://www.wac- 9.org/. On 28 October 2019 session and paper proposals are due for the 8th Annual International Conference on History & Archaeology: From Ancient to Modern, to be held on 1-4 June 2020 in Athens. Further information is available from Dr. Gregory T. PapaniKos at [email protected]. On 15 November 2019 abstracts for presentations are due for the annual conference of Computer Applications and Quantitative Methods in Archaeology (CAA 2020): iNside iNformation, to be held on 14-17 April 2020 in Oxford. Further information is available at https://2020.caaconference.org/. On 30 November 2019 abstracts (500 words maximum) for presentations are due for the 14th International Congress of Thracology: ThRACing the Past from Bronze Communities to Iron Kingdoms, to be held on 6-9 May 2020 in Deva, Romania. Further information is available at https://thracology2020.com/?lang=en. Future Lectures and Conferences The program of the Cycladic Seminar has been announced for autumn 2019. All seminars begin at 7:00 pm at the Archaeological Society, 22 Panepistimiou, Athens. 12 November 2019: Χ. Τελεβάντου, “Η μυκηναϊκή Ακρόπολη του Αγίου Ανδρέα Σίφνου: τα τελευταία δεδομένα” 10 December 2019: J. Rambach, “Evidence of contact between the Cyclades and Peloponnese in the 4th and 3rd millennia BC” On 4-7 September 2019 the 25th Annual Meeting of the European Association of Archaeologists (EAA AM 2019): Beyond Paradigms will be held in Bern. Further information is available at https://www.e-a-a.org/eaa2019. Papers and posters of interest to Nestor readers will include: Nestor 46.6 138 September 2019 G. Naumov, “Everything Else Matters: Reconsidering The Lacustrine Societies in the Prehistoric BalKans” V. TodorosKa, “The Prehistoric Wetland Sites of Ohrid and Prespa Lake” T. GiagKoulis, “Does It Really Matter? Aspects of Spatial Organization of the Prehistoric Settlements in Amindeon Basin Western Macedonia, Greece” P. ZervoudaKis, “A Glocal Reevaluation of Possible Pleistocene Sea-crossings” B. Whitford, “Life in the Foothills: A Diachronic Assessment of Neolithic Settlement Patterns in the Sandanski-Petrich Basin of Southwest Bulgaria” R. Kunze, “Prospecting for Prehistoric Copper - Field Observations from a Geoarcheological Survey in SE Bulgaria” T. Krapf, I. Gjipali, M. Gori, R. Ruka, and T. HaucK, “The Bronze and Iron Age Occupation of the Blazi, Neziri and Këputa Caves in the Mati Region of Northern Albania” L. Burkhardt, “Socio-Economic Entanglements of the LBA Goldmine at Ada Tepe (Bulgaria)” D. Nenova, “Is It Lonely in the Mountains? Patterns of Isolation and Interaction in Late Bronze Age Thrace” M. VerciK, P. Ardjanliev, and P. Tušlová, “Going Global, Staying Local? The Ohrid Region Between the Bronze and the Iron Ages” H. Price, P. Gheorghiade, T. Evans, R. Rivers, “The Mycenaean Aegean: Negotiating Too Much and Too Little Data” S. Sebald, A. Papathanasiou, M. Richards, and G. Grupe, “You Are What You Eat: Isotopic Mixing Models Applied to Data from Neolithic Europe” F. Fulminante and E. Farinetti, “Textile Tools from Survey Data: What Can We Learn from Them? A Test Study from Central Italy and Greece” M. Gurova, “Neolithic Flint Assemblages from Bulgaria: The Challenge of Capturing a Transition” T. Dzhanfezova and M. GrębsKa-Kulowa, “Pottery Tradition in Transition? The Passage from the Early to the Middle Neolithic Period at Ilindentsi, Southwest Bulgaria” P. Zidarov, “Who MaKes History in Prehistory? The Social Meaning of Advanced Technologies at Varna and Troy” T. Boloti, “What Did Phugegwris See? Aspects of Domestic Furniture in the Late Bronze Age Aegean” H. WhittaKer, “Forms and Functions of Mycenaean Furniture” J. Muñoz Sogas, “The Idaean Cave in Crete: An Ivory Carving Workshop” B. Morda, “Crafting and Marketing in Neopalatial Crete: The Talismanic Seals as a Vehicle of Social Ideas” E. Miller Bonney, “Concealing Crafting as a Message to the User” A. MazaraKis Ainian, “Cult Practices in Early Iron Age Oropos?” P. Charalambidou, “The Role of Feasting and Commensality: Comparing Euboean Sanctuaries During the Early Iron Age and Protoarchaic Period” V. Kuleshov, “Remnants of the Past, Fragments of the Present: Means of Payment and Ways of Counting Wealth in the Homeric Age” C. Marangou, “A RocK-Cut Landscape by the Sea: Myrina Kastro in Prehistory and Antiquity (Lemnos Island, Greece)” H. Ozturk, “Babies in the Aegean Bathwater” E. Zangger, “Introduction: The Luwians and Their Contemporaries in Late Bronze Age Western Asia Minor” I. Hajnal, “West of Troy – An Interdisciplinary Approach” M. Vassileva, “Southeastern Balkans and the LBA Aegean-Anatolian Network” C. Bachhuber and M. Massa, “In Search of a ‘Luwian’ State: Regional Analysis of the Late Bronze Age in the Konya Plain, Turkey” Nestor 46.6 139 September 2019 M. Tü rkteki and E. Fidan, “An Important Bronze Age Settlement in Inland Western Anatolia: Intensive Survey Project of Tavsanli Höyük and Its Surroundings” A. Asinmaz, “A Spatial Investigation of the Distribution of Late Bronze Age Settlements in Western Anatolia” S. Aydingun, “Late Bronze Age of Istanbul” A. Kourkoulakos, “A Re-Interpretation of the Late Bronze Age Chronology at Beycesultan Based on C-14 Dating” A. Kloekhorst, “The Linguistic Landscape of Middle and Late Bronze Age Western Anatolia” W. Waal, “In Search of the Missing Link. Writing in Western Anatolia During the Late Bronze Age” F. Breyer, The Relationship Between Hieroglyphic and Cuneiform Luwian. Reflections on the Origins of Anatolian Hieroglyphs” F. Wouduizen, “Arzawa, Assuwa, and Mira: Three Names for One and the Same Country in Western Anatolia” S. TasKin, “Possible Coastal Luwian Settlements in the North-East Aegean” U. Berndt,