Marketing Roman Pottery: Economic Relationships Between Local and Imported Products” Cluj-Napoca, Romania, September 23Rd-30Th 2018

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Marketing Roman Pottery: Economic Relationships Between Local and Imported Products” Cluj-Napoca, Romania, September 23Rd-30Th 2018 31ST CONGRESS OF THE REI CRETARIAE ROMANAE FAUTORES INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION “Marketing Roman pottery: economic relationships between local and imported products” Cluj-Napoca, Romania, September 23rd-30th 2018 FINAL PROGRAMME Sunday, September 23rd, Cluj-Napoca Academic College, Mihail Kogălniceanu st., no. 5 17:00 Guest arrival and official registration 18:00-20:00 Get-together, welcome session Monday, September 24th, Cluj-Napoca “Jean Monnet” Hall of the Faculty of European Studies of Babeș-Bolyai University, Em. De Martonne st. 8:00-9:00 Official registration of the participants. 9:00-10:00 Congress Opening Ceremony Prof. univ. dr. Ioan Bolovan, Vicerector of the Babeș-Bolyai University PhD Felix-Florin Marcu, Manager of the National Museum of the Transylvanian History, Cluj- Napoca Professor dr. habil. Coriolan Horațiu Opreanu, Deputy Director of the Institute of Archaeology and Art History of the Romanian Academy, Cluj-Napoca PhD Tatjana Cvjetićanin, President of the International Association Rei Cretariae Romanae Fautores 10:00-10:40 Opening lecture Professor univ. dr. Mihai Bărbulescu, Mot d’accuiel Luciana Nedelea Roman pottery from Potaissa. The impact of fine ware on local production at the end of the 2nd century and the first half of the 3rd century AD at castra legionis V Macedonicae. 10:40-11:00 Coffee break “Nicolae Iorga” Amphitheatre, Faculty of History and Philosophy, main building of the Babeș-Bolyai University, Mihail Kogălniceau st., no. 1 Pottery display - main corridors 11:00-13:00 Lectures: Dacia 11:00-11:20 Mariana-Cristina Popescu Making Roman pottery before Roman conquest. Pottery produced in the Geto-Dacian settlements after Roman models in the 1st century AD. 11:20-11:40 Cătălin Cristescu, Gabriel Andreica Our pots, their capital. Roman cooking wares discovered at Sarmizegetusa Regia. 11:40-12:00 Lucian-Mircea Mureșan, Ioana Mureșan Legal aspects concerning pottery production in provincial territory – a study of ancient sources. 12:00-12:20 Viorica Rusu-Bolindeț The supply of terra sigillata in Roman Dacia: an overview of imports and local production. 12:20-12:40 Adela Bâltâc Terra sigillata in the rural environment of Dacia. 12:40-13:00 Mircea Negru, Dan Batalu, Petre Badica Kaolin ware discovered at Romula. 13:00-14:20 Lunch break 14:20-16:00 Lectures: Dacia and Lower Moesia 14:20-14:40 Ionuț Bocan, Mihaela-Cătălina Neagu The local production of lamps in Alburnus Maior: workshops or local branches? 14:40-15:00 Gergana Kabakchieva The fine pottery production in Moesia – between the influence of the West and East terra sigillata. 15:00-15:20 Constantin Băjenaru Terra sigillata and red slip wares from vicus Ulmetum. 15:20-15:40 Florin-Ovidiu Botiș, Irina Achim Eastern Sigillata at Histria. The distribution in the local contexts. 15:40-16:00 Ioan Carol Opriș African Red Slip Wares coming to the province of Scythia. A gazetteer of sites and forms. 16:00-16:20 Coffee break 16:20-19:00 Lectures: Lower Moesia, Pannonia and Eastern Provinces 16:20-16:40 Andrei Opaiț, Alexandru Barnea, Bianca Elena Grigoraș, Ioana Potra 2 Supplying with wine, olive oil and fish products the Lower Danube frontier. A case study: Dinogetia. 16:40-17:00 Alexander Harizanov Rural ceramic workshops in Roman Thrace (second half of the 1st – end of the 3rd c. AD). 17:00-17:20 Piroska Magyar-Hárshegyi, Dénes Gabler Household of the Roman urban elite in Aquincum (Folyamőr str., Budapest). Imported and local pottery. 17:20-17:40 Denis Zhuravlev Terra sigillata from Pantikapaion. 17:40-18:00 Lisa Peloschek Provenance matters: foreign tableware in the necropolis of Rhodes Town, Greece 18:00-18:20 Ertekin M. Doksanalti The Roman and Late Roman ceramic from the Heroon of Harbor street at Knidos 18:20-18:40 Mehmet Tekocak Roman Red Slip Wares in Stratonikeia excavations (Caria-Turkey). 18:40-19:00 Alice Waldner The economic life at Roman Ephesos. Pottery production, consumption, interaction and trade. 20:00 Reception offered by the Faculty of History and Philosophy, Babeș-Bolyai University. Tuesday, September 25th, Visit to Zalău and Porolissum 7:30 Departure from Cluj to Zalău from the main building of the Babeș-Bolyai University 9:00-9:20 Welcome speeches Tiberiu Marc, President of Sălaj County PhD Corina Bejenariu, Manager of the County Museum of History and Art of Zalău 9:20-10:40 Lectures: Eastern Provinces 9:20-9:40 Charikleia Diamanti, Yannos Kourayos, Anastasios Lamprakis Late Roman pottery from the excavations of the Archaic sanctuary complex of Apollo in Despotiko Island, Cyclades – Preliminary results. 9:40-10:00 Apostolos Garyfallopoulos Roman pottery from Pella. 10:00-10:20 Ayșe Fatma Erol, Deniz Tamer Local and imported amphorae from Fatsa / Cingirt Kayasi Excavations from the Southern Black Sea Region dating from Hellenistic to Early Byzantine Period. 10:20-10:40 Krzysztof Domżalski Late Roman and Early Byzantine fine pottery from Pompeiopolis in Paphlagonia: from the long distance trade to the local market. 3 10:40-11:00 Coffee break 11:00-13:00 Guided tour of the County Museum of History and Art at Zalău, including a pottery display (several groups). 13:00-14:30 Lunch break 14:30-15:00 Departure from Zalău to Porolissum. 15:00-18:30 Guided tour of the ancient site at Porolissum. 18:30-20:00 Dinner offered by the County Museum of History and Art and by the Sălaj County Council. 21:00 Arrival in Cluj-Napoca. Wednesday, September 26th, Cluj-Napoca “Nicolae Iorga” Amphitheatre, Faculty of History and Philosophy, Babeș-Bolyai University 9:00-10:40 Lectures: Eastern Provinces, Noricum and Lower Germany 9:00-9:20 Philip Bes What is imported pottery at Horvat Kur (Galilee, Israel)? 9:20-9:40 Martin Auer Pottery imports and their influence on regional productions in Aguntum, Noricum. 9:40-10:00 Roderick Geerts Colour-coded for your convenience. Skeuomorphism in Roman pottery production in Germania Inferior. 10:00-10:20 Tineke Volkers Terra sigillata finds from the elevated settlements (terps) in the northern part of the Netherlands. 10:20-10:40 Allard Mees Social aspects in the usage of terra sigillata. 10:40-11:00 Coffee break 11:00-13:00 Lectures: Britannia and Italy 11:00-11:20 Maria Duggan Imported pottery and economic connections at Tintagel, Cornwall. 11:20-11:40 Carlo De Mitri Import-export in the Ionian-Adriatic area in the Late Hellenistic Period: the evidence of pottery. 11:40-12:00 Simonetta Menchelli Marketing Roman pottery along the Tyrrhenian coast: the case studies of Vada Volaterrana, Pisae and Luna. 12:00-12:20 Diana Dobreva Sicilian amphorae in Aquileia: pattering Tyrrhenian ceramic exchange in northern Adriatic region (UD, Italy) 12:20-12:40 Girolamo Ferdinando De Simone 4 Integrating oversea imports with sub-regional economic clusters: a view from Campania. 12:40-13:00 Barbara Borgers Local production and overseas trade: exposing economic relationships in the Pontine Region during the Roman period. 13:00-:14:30 Lunch break 14:30-17:00 Poster session 17:00-17:20 Coffee break 17:20-17:30 Departure to the National Museum of Transylvanian History, Constantin Daicoviciu st., no. 2. 17:30-19:30 Opening of the National Exhibition “The supply of ceramic goods in Dacia and Lower Moesia: imports and local developments” at the headquarters of the National Museum of Transylvanian History, with a pottery display from the main ceramic production centres of the provinces. 20:00 Reception offered by the National Museum of Transylvanian History. Thursday, September 27th, Alba Iulia The “1 Decembrie 1918” University and The National Museum of Unification 7:30 Departure from Cluj-Napoca to Alba Iulia from the main building of the Babeș-Bolyai University 9:30-10:00 Welcome speeches (A9 amphitheatre of the “1 Decembrie 1918” University) Associate Professor dr. Cipriana Andreea Muntean, Vicerector of the “1 Decembrie 1918” University Professor dr. Mihai Gligor, Head of the Doctoral School of the “1 Decembrie 1918” University 10:00-11:00 Lectures: Italy 10:00-10:20 Fulvio Coletti Mensa Suburbana: nuovi dati sulle produzioni bollate in sigillata italica da uno scarico di epoca augusteo-tiberiana di Roma. 10:20-10:40 Francesca Diosono Sigillata e ceramica a pareti sottili nel territorio di Metaponto: produzioni regionali e importazioni. 10:40-11:00 Edoardo Radaelli Fine wares, African cooking ware and lamps from the Middle Imperial contexts of the ‘Terme di Elagabalo’ in Rome: deposition roles, productions, and origins 11:00-11:20 Coffee break 11:20-13:00 Lectures: Iberian Peninsula 11:20-11:40 Albert Ribera i Lacomba Entre Italia e Hispania. La ceramica de barniz negro de Cales en el siglo II a. C 11:40-12:00 Begoña Serrano-Arnáez, Oscar Bonilla-Santander, Ángel Santos-Horneros 5 Contexts of the Roman Republican era in Bursau, an oppidum of the Hispania Citerior. 12:00-13:30 Lunch break 13:30-18:00 Visit to the National Museum of Unification, with pottery display; visit to the Principia Museum of the 13th Gemina legion, the “Three fortifications tour”, the interior of the Vauban citadel (Alba Carolina), visit to the Roman Catholic and Orthodox Cathedrals and to the “Museikon” Museum. 18:00-19:30 Dinner 19:30 Departure to Cluj-Napoca Friday, September 28th Cluj-Napoca “Nicolae Iorga” Amphitheatre, Faculty of History and Philosophy, main building of the Babeș-Bolyai University, Mihail Kogălniceanu st., no 1 9:00-10:40 Lectures: Italy and Iberian Peninsula 9:00-9:20 Paola Puppo Pro itu et pro reditu: the pottery offered in the sanctuaries along the mountain passes. 9:20-9:40 Sónia Bombico, Cristina Nervi Tra rotte, relitti e porti: il ruolo delle isole del Mediterraneo Occidentale nel commercio di prodotti da salagione lusitani nella Tarda Antichità.
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