Devenez Propriétaire Témoignage De Nos Propriétaires

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Devenez Propriétaire Témoignage De Nos Propriétaires DEVENEZ PROPRIÉTAIRE TÉMOIGNAGE DE NOS PROPRIÉTAIRES " Nous sommes propriétaires Moorings/Sunsail depuis près de 7 ans à présent, ayant acheté un Moorings 3900 puis un Sunsail 404. Essayer le concept, c'est l'adopter ! Nous passons toutes nos vacances au soleil, en famille, avec tous les avantages du bateau, sans en avoir les inconvénients : entretien, préparation, convoyages, etc. L'équipe Moorings/Sunsail s'occupe de tout : les bateaux sont tous très bien entretenus et le staff sait être réactif si besoin. Grâce à cette formule nous naviguons entre 5 à 7 semaines par an dans les plus belles mers du globe. Cela nous permet aussi de profiter des voyages pour visiter. Les bases sont toujours dans des endroits magnifiques. Une solution idéale pour passer des vacances de rêve avec un budget raisonnable ! " Isabelle et Philippe Propriétaires d'un Sunsail 404 en Polynésie POURQUOI ACHETER EN GESTION ? SOMMAIRE 1 2 3 NOS PROGRAMMES LES DESTINATIONS VOTRE BATEAU UTILISATION NOTRE GAGE MÉDITERRANÉE PROPRIÉTAIRE DE QUALITÉ LE PROGRAMMME À CARAÏBES & CATAMARANS REVENUS GARANTIS AMERIQUES À VOILE ET À MOTEUR LE PROGRAMMME À MONOCOQUES EXOTIQUES OPTION D'ACHAT À VOILE NOS BASES AUTOUR DU MONDE LE PROGRAMME EXISTE DEPUIS 1971 ! Grâce au programme de gestion-location, vous naviguez entre 4 et 6 semaines par an (+ semaines de dernière minute) et n’avez aucun frais d'exploitation. Nous prenons en charge l'entretien du bateau, l'assurance et la place de port. L’entretien de votre bateau est assuré par un professionnel. Si vous souhaitez naviguer vers une autre destination que Revenus mensuels garantis celle où est basé votre bateau, vous avez la possibilité de OU prix d'achat réduit partir sur un bateau similaire au départ d’une de nos nombreuses bases à travers le monde. Notre équipe "Relations Propriétaires" vous est entièrement dédiée et 4 à 6 semaines d'utilisation par an s'occupe de vos vacances sur-mesure. + 4 à 6 semaines en dernière minute UTILISATION PROPRIÉTAIRE Entretien du bateau, assurance et place de port inclus 1 jour en haute saison coûte 2 points. 1 jour en basse saison coûte 1 point. Accès à de nombreuses destinations de rêve Chaque propriétaire reçoit 84 points par an. 42 points peuvent être utilisés en réservation à l'avance. Utilisation d'autres bateaux de taille équivalente 42 points peuvent être utilisés en dernière minute. Si vous utilisez vos points uniquement en basse saison, Équipe dédiée vous pourrez naviguer jusqu'à 12 semaines par an ! aux Propriétaires 8% À 9% PAR AN GARANTIS LE PROGRAMME À REVENUS GARANTIS VOUS RECEVEZ UN REVENU FIXE PENDANT PLUS DE 5 ANS EXPLICATION EXEMPLE Chaque mois, nous vous versons des revenus locatifs Destination choisie : CARAÏBES fixes qui financent en partie votre bateau. Ces revenus Prix du bateau : 400 000 € sont garantis contractuellement et sont indépendants Votre revenu mensuel garanti : 3 000 € l'activité locative réelle de votre bateau. Vos revenus annuels (9%) : 36 000 € LES CHIFFRES CLÉS Revenus sur 5 saisons : 180 000€ 9% de rentabilité annuelle sur 5 saisons aux Caraïbes. 8% de rentabilité annuelle sur 6 saisons en Méditerranée et dans les zones Exotiques. APPORT INITIAL DE 45% LE PROGRAMME À OPTION D'ACHAT BÉNÉFICIEZ D'UNE REMISE EXCEPTIONNELLE ! EXPLICATION EXEMPLE Au début du programme Dans ce programme, le propriétaire achète le bateau à prix réduit et ne perçoit pas de revenu. Comme dans le Prix public du bateau : 200 000€ programme à revenus garantis, tous les frais d’exploitation Votre 1er versement : 90 000€ sont pris en charge. À la fin du programme Le bateau reste la propriété de Sunsail ou de Moorings et non pas d’une banque ou d’un bailleur pendant toute la Option 1: «Je veux garder ce bateau» durée du contrat. Ce programme est disponible en Grèce, Vous ne payez que 40 000€ ! Croatie, Thaïlande et Polynésie. Option 2: «Je ne veux pas récupérer le titre de propriété» LES CHIFFRES CLÉS Nous vous versons 40 000€ ! 45% du prix du bateau à verser au début du contrat. 2 options à la fin du contrat : 1) Devenez propriétaire en payant un solde de 20% 2) Ne gardez pas le bateau, nous vous remboursons 20% NOTRE PHILOSOPHIE Sunsail et Moorings proposent des destinations exceptionnelles dans le monde entier. La philosophie derrière la création de chaque base a été de choisir des zones de navigation idylliques facilement accessibles par avion. Toutes nos bases offrent les services suivants : un debriefing avant le départ, un service client avec assistance 4h et une maintenance professionnelle. Nos équipes vous accompagnent dans l'organisation de votre séjour (transferts, hôtel, courses, kayak, stand-up paddle, etc.). MEDITERRANÉE PALMABarcelona N 0 5 10 MAJORQUE,SPAIN Balearic ESPAGNE Sea Nautical Miles MENORCA MALLORCA Port d’Andratx Palma Cala Ratjada Marina Naviera Valencia Balear (PMI) Cala Figuera Ibiza National Park Of Cabrera Benidorm FORMENTERA DESCRIPTIF DE LA BASE Notre base se situe à la marina Naviera Balear, en plein coeur de Palma. L'île offre un grand nombre d'activités pour les familles ainsi qu'une belle vie nocturne. Les Baléares bénéficient d'un climat chaud et sec toute l'année avec des températures moyennes comprises entre 16°C et 32°C. Chef de base : Oliver Kinchin Monocoques : 17 Catamarans à voile : 9 Catamarans à moteur : 3 Total : 29 Haute saison : 16 juin - 22 septembre Basse saison : 1er mars - 15 juin & 23 septembre - 30 novembre DUBROVNIKBRAC CROATIE HVAR SCEDRO CROATIA KORCULA LUMBARDA STON POMENA STONSKI CANAL LASTOVO POLACE OKUKLJE SIPAN SLANO MLJET SUDURAD DUBROVNIK LOPUD DESCRIPTIF DE LA BASE La Marina ACI de Dubrovnik possède le label "Blue Flag" qui récompense les ports de plaisance les plus propres. Elle a également été élue meilleure marina de la mer Adriatique. Les îles de la Riviera de Dubrovnik sont renommées pour leur beauté naturelle et les eaux cristallines qui les entourent. Chef de base : Keith Harvey Monocoques : 36 Catamarans à voile : 7 Catamarans à moteur : N/A Total : 43 Haute saison : 16 juin - 22 septembre Basse saison : 1er mars - 15 juin & 23 septembre - 30 novembre AGANA (SPLIT) CROATIE Marina Agana Primosten (SPU) Split Rogoznica ŠOLTA Trogir Maslinica CROATIA BRAC ST. CLEMENT HVAR Komiza Peljesac BIŠEVO VIS N KORCULA DESCRIPTIF DE LA BASE Adriatic Sea LASTOVO Marina Agana est situé à l'ouest de Split, à environ 20 minutes de 0 5 10 MLJET son aéroport international. Le village est accessible en 5 minutes à Nautical Miles pied depuis la base. Vous y trouverez supermachés, bars, restaurants, bureau de change (haute saison), poste, pharmacie et même des petites plages de galets ! Chef de base : Antonio Lipanovic Monocoques : 51 Catamarans à voile : 23 Catamarans à moteur : 5 Total : 79 Haute saison : 16 juin - 22 septembre Basse saison : 1er mars - 15 juin & 23 septembre - 30 novembre LEFKAS GRÈCE N Preveza Vonitsa (PVK) Lefkas 0 5 10 Nautical Miles Vounaki MÉGANISSI GREECE LEFKAS KALAMOS DESCRIPTIF DE LA BASE Ionian Sea La base est idéalement située pour partir en croisière en Mer Ionienne et offre de nombreuses commodités. Vous avez d'ailleurs la possibilité de déguster votre premier petit-déjeuner Fiscardo KASTOS sur notre base. Frikes Chef de base : Claire Shields KEFALONIA ITHACA Monocoques : 51 Catamarans à voile : 9 Catamarans à moteur : N/A Total : 60 Haute saison : 16 juin - 22 septembre Basse saison : 1er mars - 15 juin & 23 septembre - 30 novembre CORFOU GRÈCE ALBANIA Gouvia Glyfada Beach (CFU) Syvota GREECE CORFU Parga PAXOS ANTIPAXOS Preveza Ionian Sea (PVK) LEFKAS MEGANISI KALAMOS DESCRIPTIF DE LA BASE N Fiscardo Gouvia Marina se situe sur la côte est de l'île, à environ 6 km de l'aéroport de Corfou. Profitez de l'hospitalité des habitants et de la beauté de l'île. Celle-ci est connue pour son histoire et ses sites KEPHALONIA ITHICA Patras archéologiques. 0 10 20 Chef de base : Johnny Adams Nautical Miles Monocoques : 12 Catamarans à voile : 10 Catamarans à moteur : 5 Total : 27 Haute saison : 16 juin - 22 septembre Basse saison : 1er mars - 15 juin & 23 septembre - 30 novembre ZEA (ATHÈNES) GRÈCE GREECE Karistos Athens Bay of Zea ANDROS Saronic Gulf (ATH) Lavrion AEGINA SOUNION GYAROS KEA N POROS Cyclades Peloponnesia KITHNOS HYDRA DESCRIPTIF0 5 10 DE LA BASE SPETSES Mediterranean Sea Nautical Miles Située à 45 km de l’aéroport International d’Athènes et à 15 km du centre-ville d’Athènes, la Marina de Zea dispose d'un grand nombre de commodités. Rendez-vous sur le quai C ! Chef de base : Mike Vorradakis Monocoques : 11 Catamarans à voile : 10 Catamarans à moteur : 1 Total : 22 Haute saison : 16 juin - 22 septembre Basse saison : 1er mars - 15 juin & 23 septembre - 30 novembre CORFU THE BASE GREECE The base is located in Gouvia Marina. On site marina facilities include: fuel station, electricity, water, supermarket, chandlery, restaurants, cafes and bars, toilets and showers, laundry and dryers, ALBANIA postal services, wireless Internet access, cash machines and swimming pool. Gouvia Glyfada Beach (CFU) Total Peak Fleet 2017: 23 Syvota GREECE CORFU Parga Base Manager: Johnny Adams Transfer from airport: 15 min PAXOS Staff: 5 people ANTIPAXOS Opening dates: April 1st to November 15th. Preveza Ionian Sea (PVK) LEFKAS MEGANISI KALAMOS N Fiscardo KEPHALONIA ITHICA Patras 0 10 20 Nautical Miles ZEA (ATHENS) THE BASE GREECE Zea Marina facilities include: fuel, electricity, water, supermarket, chandlery, restaurants, cafes and bars, toilets and showers, postal services, wireless GREECE Karistos Internet access, ATM and bank. Our boats are on pier B. In the marina there is a coffee shop- restaurant with a swimming pool. Athens Bay of Zea ANDROS (ATH) Total Peak Fleet 2017: 27 Saronic Gulf Base Manager: Kostas Tsigaris Lavrion AEGINA Transfer from airport: 45 min Staff: 11 people SOUNION GYAROS Opening dates: April 1st to November 7th.
Recommended publications
  • DESERTMED a Project About the Deserted Islands of the Mediterranean
    DESERTMED A project about the deserted islands of the Mediterranean The islands, and all the more so the deserted island, is an extremely poor or weak notion from the point of view of geography. This is to it’s credit. The range of islands has no objective unity, and deserted islands have even less. The deserted island may indeed have extremely poor soil. Deserted, the is- land may be a desert, but not necessarily. The real desert is uninhabited only insofar as it presents no conditions that by rights would make life possible, weather vegetable, animal, or human. On the contrary, the lack of inhabitants on the deserted island is a pure fact due to the circumstance, in other words, the island’s surroundings. The island is what the sea surrounds. What is de- serted is the ocean around it. It is by virtue of circumstance, for other reasons that the principle on which the island depends, that the ships pass in the distance and never come ashore.“ (from: Gilles Deleuze, Desert Island and Other Texts, Semiotext(e),Los Angeles, 2004) DESERTMED A project about the deserted islands of the Mediterranean Desertmed is an ongoing interdisciplina- land use, according to which the islands ry research project. The “blind spots” on can be divided into various groups or the European map serve as its subject typologies —although the distinctions are matter: approximately 300 uninhabited is- fluid. lands in the Mediterranean Sea. A group of artists, architects, writers and theoreti- cians traveled to forty of these often hard to reach islands in search of clues, impar- tially cataloguing information that can be interpreted in multiple ways.
    [Show full text]
  • More Than an Island 2 MORE THAN an ISLAND
    SYROS more than an island 2 MORE THAN AN ISLAND... ΧΧΧ TABLE OF CONTENTS Discovering Syros .................................... 4 Introduction From myth to history ............................. 6 History The two Doctrines .................................. 8 Religion will never forget the dreamy snowy white color, which got in my eyes when I landed in Syros at Two equal tribes this fertile land I dawn. Steamers always arrive at dawn, at this divide, where two fair cities rise all-white swan of the Aegean Sea that is as if it is with equal pride ...................................... 10 sleeping on the foams, with which the rainmaker is sprinkling. Kaikias, the northeast wind; on her Cities and countryside eastern bare side, the renowned Vaporia, which is Economy of Syros .................................... 14 always anchored beyond St. Nicholas, a fine piece of a crossway, and immortal Nisaki downtown, the Tourism, agricultural production, swan’s proud neck, with Vafiadakis’s buildings, and crafts and traditional shipbuilding the solid towers of the Customs Office, where the waves alive, as if they are hopping, laughing, run- Authentic beauty ..................................... 16 ning, chuckling, hunting, fighting, kissing, being Beaches, flora and fauna, habitats, baptized, swimming, brides white like foam. climate and geotourism At such time and in this weather, I landed on my dream island. I don’t know why some mysteries lie Culture, twelve months a year .......... 18 in man’s heart, always remaining dark and unex- Architecture, tradition, theatre, literature, plained. I loved Syra, ever since I first saw it. I loved music, visual arts and gastronomy her and wanted to see her again. I wanted to gaze at her once more.
    [Show full text]
  • A Brief History of Greek Herpetology
    Bonn zoological Bulletin Volume 57 Issue 2 pp. 329–345 Bonn, November 2010 A brief history of Greek herpetology Panayiotis Pafilis 1,2 1Section of Zoology and Marine Biology, Department of Biology, University of Athens, Panepistimioupolis, Ilissia 157–84, Athens, Greece 2School of Natural Resources & Environment, Dana Building, 430 E. University, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI – 48109, USA; E-mail: [email protected]; [email protected] Abstract. The development of Herpetology in Greece is examined in this paper. After a brief look at the first reports on amphibians and reptiles from antiquity, a short presentation of their deep impact on classical Greek civilization but also on present day traditions is attempted. The main part of the study is dedicated to the presentation of the major herpetol- ogists that studied Greek herpetofauna during the last two centuries through a division into Schools according to researchers’ origin. Trends in herpetological research and changes in the anthropogeography of herpetologists are also discussed. Last- ly the future tasks of Greek herpetology are presented. Climate, geological history, geographic position and the long human presence in the area are responsible for shaping the particular features of Greek herpetofauna. Around 15% of the Greek herpetofauna comprises endemic species while 16% represent the only European populations in their range. THE STUDY OF REPTILES AND AMPHIBIANS IN ANTIQUITY Greeks from quite early started to describe the natural en- Therein one could find citations to the Greek herpetofauna vironment. At the time biological sciences were consid- such as the Seriphian frogs or the tortoises of Arcadia. ered part of philosophical studies hence it was perfectly natural for a philosopher such as Democritus to contem- plate “on the Nature of Man” or to write books like the REPTILES AND AMPHIBIANS IN GREEK “Causes concerned with Animals” (for a presentation of CULTURE Democritus’ work on nature see Guthrie 1996).
    [Show full text]
  • Laurenti, 1768) (Reptilia Serpentes Colubridae) in the Aegean Island of Tsougriá, Northern Sporades, Greece
    Biodiversity Journal , 2013, 4 (4): 553-556 Fi rst record of Hierophis gemonensis (Laurenti, 1768) (Reptilia Serpentes Colubridae) in the Aegean island of Tsougriá, Northern Sporades, Greece Mauro Grano¹ *, Cristina Cattaneo² & Augusto Cattaneo³ ¹ Via Valcenischia 24 – 00141 Roma, Italy; e-mail: [email protected] ² Via Eleonora d’Arborea 12 – 00162 Roma, Italy; e-mail: [email protected] ³ Via Cola di Rienzo 162 – 00192 Roma, Italy; e-mail: [email protected] *Corresponding author ABSTRACT The presence of Hierophis gemonensis (Laurenti, 1768) (Reptilia Serpentes Colubridae) in Tsougriá, a small island of the Northern Sporades, Greece, is here recorded for the first time. KEY WORDS Aegean islands; Balkan whip snake; Hierophis gemonensis ; Northern Sporades; Tsougriá. Received 05.11.2013; accepted 02.12.2013; printed 30.12.2013 INTRODUCTION Psili: Clark, 1973, 1989; Kock, 1979. Tolon: Clark, 1973, 1989; Kock, 1979. The Balkan whip snake, Hierophis gemonensis Stavronissos, Dhokos, Trikkeri (archipelago of (Laurenti, 1768) (Reptilia Serpentes Colubridae), is Hydra): Clark, 1989. widespread along the coastal areas of Slovenia, Kythera: Boulenger, 1893; Kock, 1979. Croatia, Bosnia-Erzegovina, Montenegro, Albania Crete: Boettger, 1888; Sowig, 1985. and Greece (Vanni et al., 2011). The basic colour is Cretan islets silver gray to dark green with some spots only on Gramvoussa: Wettstein, 1953; Kock, 1979. one third of the body, tending to regular stripes on Gavdos: Wettstein, 1953; Kock, 1979. the tail. Melanistic specimens are also known Gianyssada: Wettstein, 1953; Kock, 1979. (Dimitropoulos, 1986; Schimmenti & Fabris, Dia: Raulin, 1869; Kock, 1979. 2000). The total length is usually less than 130 cm, Theodori: Wettstein, 1953. with males larger than females (Vanni et al., 2011).
    [Show full text]
  • The Other "Parthenon": Antiquity and National Memory at Makronisos
    See discussions, stats, and author profiles for this publication at: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/236763472 The Other "Parthenon": Antiquity and National Memory at Makronisos Article in Journal of Modern Greek Studies · October 2002 DOI: 10.1353/mgs.2002.0025 CITATIONS READS 25 133 1 author: Yannis Hamilakis Brown University 117 PUBLICATIONS 1,893 CITATIONS SEE PROFILE All content following this page was uploaded by Yannis Hamilakis on 06 September 2019. The user has requested enhancement of the downloaded file. “The other Parthenon” 307 “The other Parthenon”: Antiquity and National Memory at Makronisos Yannis Hamilakis Abstract Makronisos, the small, uninhabited island off the Attica coast, was the location of the most notorious concentration camp set up by the Greek government during the Civil War (1946–1949). It was a place of brutality, torture, and death, but its distinctive feature was its role as an indoctrination center for many thousands of political dissidents (mostly left-wing soldiers and citizens, but also ethnic and religious minorities) who, after they were “re- educated” in the national dogmas, were sent to fight against their ex-comrades. Classical antiquity was one of the main ideological foundations of this “experiment,” the audience for which was the whole of Greece and the international community. In the island, still known as “The New Parthenon,” the “redeemed” inmates were encouraged to build replicas of classical monu- ments, and the regime’s discourse emphasized the perceived incompatibility of the inmates’ “destiny” (as descendants of ancient Greeks) with left-wing ideologies. Paradoxically, many of the counter-discourses of the Makronisos inmates and their supporters also subscribed to the essentialist discourse of continuity and ancestral glory.
    [Show full text]
  • Network Biogeography of a Complex Island System: the Aegean
    Journal of Biogeography (J. Biogeogr.) (2016) ORIGINAL Network biogeography of a complex ARTICLE island system: the Aegean Archipelago revisited Konstantinos Kougioumoutzis1,2*, Anna Thalassini Valli1, Elisavet Georgopoulou3, Stylianos Michail Simaiakis4, Kostas A. Triantis2 and Panayiotis Trigas1 1Laboratory of Systematic Botany, Faculty of ABSTRACT Crop Science, Agricultural University of Aim The Aegean Archipelago has been the focal research area for identifying Athens, GR-118 55 Athens, Greece, 2 and testing several ecological and evolutionary patterns, yet its biogeographical Department of Ecology & Systematics, Faculty of Biology, National & Kapodistrian subdivision has been somewhat overlooked, with the processes driving the University of Athens, GR-157 03 Athens, assembly of the Aegean island plant communities still remaining largely Greece, 3Geological-Paleontological unclear. To bridge this gap, we identify the biogeographical modules (highly Department, Natural History Museum, 1010 linked subgroups of islands and plant taxa) within the Aegean Archipelago. 4 Vienna, Austria, Natural History Museum of Location The Aegean Archipelago, Greece. Crete, University of Crete, Heraklion GR- 71409 Crete, Greece Methods We used a network approach to detect island biogeographical roles and modules, based on a large and detailed database including 1498 Aegean endemic and subendemic plant taxa distributed on 59 Aegean Islands and five adjacent mainland areas. Results The Aegean was divided into six biogeographical modules; the net- work was significantly modular. None of the modules displayed all four possi- ble biogeographical roles (connectors, module hubs, network hubs, peripherals). Six new biogeographical regions in the Aegean were identified. Main conclusions The borders of the six biogeographical regions in the Aegean correspond well to the region’s palaeogeographical evolution from the middle Miocene to the end of the Pleistocene.
    [Show full text]
  • Action A2 Finalreport.Pdf
    INDEX INTRODUCTION 3 METHODOLOGY 5 Census 5 Breeding performance 7 GENERAL DESCRIPTION OF THE PROJECT AREAS 11 RESULTS 21 Census 21 Project area I (a): Antikythira and islets Prasonisi, Lagouvardos, Plakoulithra and 21 Thimonies Project area I (b): Chersonisos Gramvousas kai nisides Imeri kai Agria Gramvousa and 22 Pontikonisi Project area II: Dionysades nisoi 22 Project area III: Nisos Tilos and Nisides: Antitilos, Pelekousa, Gaidouronisi, Giakoumi, 23 Agios Andreas, Prasouda, Nisi Project area IV: Mikres Kyklades: Nisos Irakleia, Nisoi Makares, Mikros and Megalos 23 Avelas, Nisida Venetiko Irakleias Other Cyclades areas (1): Koufonisia, Schoinoussa and Keros 24 Other Cyclades areas (2): Mykonos, Serifos and Gyaros 25 Project area V: Skyros (Oros Kochylas) and Nisides Skyrou 26 Project area VI: Nisides and Vrachonisides Limnou: Nisos Sergitsi kai Nisides 27 Diavates, Kompio, Kastria Project area VII: Karpathos, Saria and surrounding islets 28 Breeding performance 29 1. Skyros (Oros Kochylas) and Nisides Skyrou 31 2. Mikres Kyklades: Nisoi Makares 32 3. Nisides and Vrachonisides Limnou: Nisos Sergitsi kai Nisides Diavates, Kompio, 33 Kastria 4. Dionysades nisoi 33 5. Antikythira 34 [1] DISCUSSION & CONCLUSIONS 35 REFERENCES 37 ANNEX 39 [2] INTRODUCTION The aim of Action A.2 was to implement a breeding population survey of Eleonora’s falcon (Falco eleonorae) in order to collect and update the existing baseline information on the size of the breeding populations and the breeding performance at the project sites. The objectives of the action were (a) to provide a reliable estimate of the current population size of Eleonora’s Falcon in the areas under research, and (b) to record the breeding performance of the species in the project areas.
    [Show full text]
  • ATLAS of CLASSICAL HISTORY
    ATLAS of CLASSICAL HISTORY EDITED BY RICHARD J.A.TALBERT London and New York First published 1985 by Croom Helm Ltd Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group This edition published in the Taylor & Francis e-Library, 2003. © 1985 Richard J.A.Talbert and contributors All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilized in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers. British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data Atlas of classical history. 1. History, Ancient—Maps I. Talbert, Richard J.A. 911.3 G3201.S2 ISBN 0-203-40535-8 Master e-book ISBN ISBN 0-203-71359-1 (Adobe eReader Format) ISBN 0-415-03463-9 (pbk) Library of Congress Cataloguing in Publication Data Also available CONTENTS Preface v Northern Greece, Macedonia and Thrace 32 Contributors vi The Eastern Aegean and the Asia Minor Equivalent Measurements vi Hinterland 33 Attica 34–5, 181 Maps: map and text page reference placed first, Classical Athens 35–6, 181 further reading reference second Roman Athens 35–6, 181 Halicarnassus 36, 181 The Mediterranean World: Physical 1 Miletus 37, 181 The Aegean in the Bronze Age 2–5, 179 Priene 37, 181 Troy 3, 179 Greek Sicily 38–9, 181 Knossos 3, 179 Syracuse 39, 181 Minoan Crete 4–5, 179 Akragas 40, 181 Mycenae 5, 179 Cyrene 40, 182 Mycenaean Greece 4–6, 179 Olympia 41, 182 Mainland Greece in the Homeric Poems 7–8, Greek Dialects c.
    [Show full text]
  • Inconsistent Patterns of Body Size Evolution in Co-Occurring Island Reptiles
    This is a repository copy of Inconsistent patterns of body size evolution in co-occurring island reptiles. White Rose Research Online URL for this paper: http://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/158008/ Version: Accepted Version Article: Itescu, Y., Schwarz, R., Donihue, C.M. et al. (7 more authors) (2018) Inconsistent patterns of body size evolution in co-occurring island reptiles. Global Ecology and Biogeography, 27 (5). pp. 538-550. ISSN 1466-822X https://doi.org/10.1111/geb.12716 This is the peer reviewed version of the following article: Itescu, Y, Schwarz, R, Donihue, CM, et al. Inconsistent patterns of body size evolution in co‐ occurring island reptiles. Global Ecol Biogeogr. 2018; 27: 538– 550., which has been published in final form at https://doi.org/10.1111/geb.12716. This article may be used for non-commercial purposes in accordance with Wiley Terms and Conditions for Use of Self-Archived Versions. Reuse Items deposited in White Rose Research Online are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved unless indicated otherwise. They may be downloaded and/or printed for private study, or other acts as permitted by national copyright laws. The publisher or other rights holders may allow further reproduction and re-use of the full text version. This is indicated by the licence information on the White Rose Research Online record for the item. Takedown If you consider content in White Rose Research Online to be in breach of UK law, please notify us by emailing [email protected] including the URL of the record and the reason for the withdrawal request.
    [Show full text]
  • ATHENS and the CYCLADES This Page Intentionally Left Blank Athens and the Cyclades
    ATHENS AND THE CYCLADES This page intentionally left blank Athens and the Cyclades Economic Strategies 540–314 BC BRIAN RUTISHAUSER 1 3 Great Clarendon Street, Oxford, OX2 6DP, United Kingdom Oxford University Press is a department of the University of Oxford. It furthers the University’s objective of excellence in research, scholarship, and education by publishing worldwide. Oxford is a registered trade mark of Oxford University Press in the UK and in certain other countries # Brian Rutishauser 2012 The moral rights of the author have been asserted First Edition published in 2012 Impression: 1 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means,without the prior permission in writing of Oxford University Press, or as expressly permitted by law, by licence or under terms agreed with the appropriate reprographics rights organization. Enquiries concerning reproduction outside the scope of the above should be sent to the Rights Department, Oxford University Press, at the address above You must not circulate this work in any other form and you must impose this same condition on any acquirer British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data Data available Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Data available ISBN 978–0–19–964635–7 Printed in Great Britain by MPG Books Group, Bodmin and King’s Lynn To my parents, Kurt and Eleanor Rutishauser This page intentionally left blank Preface The island group known as the Cyclades offers great potential to historians of Greek antiquity, yet this potential has only been slightly explored.
    [Show full text]
  • Draft Updated Regional Strategy for the Conservation of Monk Seal in the Mediterranean
    UNITED NATIONS UNEP/MED WG.461/5 Rev.1 UNITED NATIONS ENVIRONMENT PROGRAMME MEDITERRANEAN ACTION PLAN 28 May 2019 Original: English Fourteenth Meeting of SPA/BD Thematic Focal Points Portorož, Slovenia, 18-21 June 2019 Agenda Item 5: Conservation of Species and Habitats 5.1. Updating of the regional strategy and action plans for the conservation of the Mediterranean Monk Seal, Marine Turtles and Cartilaginous Fishes in the Mediterranean Sea Draft updated Regional strategy for the conservation of monk seal in the Mediterranean For environmental and cost-saving reasons, this document is printed in a limited number. Delegates are kindly requested to bring their copies to meetings and not to request additional copies UNEP/MAP SPA/RAC - Tunis, 2019 Note : les appellations employées dans ce document et la présentation des données qui y figurent n’impliquent de la part du CAR/ASP et du PNUE aucune prise de position quant au statut juridique des pays, territoires, villes ou zones, ou de leur autorité, ni quant au tracé de leur frontière ou limites. © 2019 Programme des Nations Unies pour l'Environnement Plan d'action pour la Méditerranée Centre d’Activités Régionales pour les Aires Spécialement Protégées, (CAR/ASP) Boulevard de l’Environement B.P.337 –1080 Tunis CEDEX E-mail: [email protected]. UNEP/MED WG.461/5 Rev.1 Note by the secretariat 1. In September 1985, the Contracting Parties to the Barcelona Convention included the protection of the Mediterranean monk seal among their priority objectives for the second decade of the Mediterranean Action Plan (Genoa Declaration, 1985).
    [Show full text]
  • Commission Implementing Decision
    15.2.2021 EN Offi cial Jour nal of the European Union L 51/187 COMMISSION IMPLEMENTING DECISION (EU) 2021/159 of 21 January 2021 adopting the fourteenth update of the list of sites of Community importance for the Mediterranean biogeographical region (notified under document C(2021) 19) THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION, Having regard to the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, Having regard to Council Directive 92/43/EEC of 21 May 1992 on the conservation of natural habitats and of wild fauna and flora (1), and in particular the third subparagraph of Article 4(2) thereof, Whereas: (1) The Mediterranean biogeographical region referred to in Article 1(c)(iii) of Directive 92/43/EEC comprises the Union territories of Greece, Cyprus, in accordance with Article 1 of Protocol No 10 of the 2003 Act of Accession, and Malta, parts of the Union territories of Spain, France, Italy, Portugal and Croatia, and, in accordance with Article 355(3) of the Treaty, the territory of Gibraltar, for which the United Kingdom is responsible for external relations, as specified in the biogeographical map approved on 20 April 2005 by the committee set up by Article 20 of that Directive (the ‘Habitats Committee’). (2) The initial list of sites of Community importance for the Mediterranean biogeographical region, within the meaning of Directive 92/43/EEC, was adopted by Commission Decision 2006/613/EC (2). That list was last updated by Commission Implementing Decision (EU) 2020/96 (3). (3) The sites included in the lists of Community importance for the Mediterranean biogeographical region form part of the Natura 2000 network which is an essential element of the protection of biodiversity in the Union.
    [Show full text]