Keith R. Devries Papers 1153 Finding Aid Prepared by James Dewalt and Dan Cavanaugh
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Monuments, Materiality, and Meaning in the Classical Archaeology of Anatolia
MONUMENTS, MATERIALITY, AND MEANING IN THE CLASSICAL ARCHAEOLOGY OF ANATOLIA by Daniel David Shoup A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy (Classical Art and Archaeology) in The University of Michigan 2008 Doctoral Committee: Professor Elaine K. Gazda, Co-Chair Professor John F. Cherry, Co-Chair, Brown University Professor Fatma Müge Göçek Professor Christopher John Ratté Professor Norman Yoffee Acknowledgments Athena may have sprung from Zeus’ brow alone, but dissertations never have a solitary birth: especially this one, which is largely made up of the voices of others. I have been fortunate to have the support of many friends, colleagues, and mentors, whose ideas and suggestions have fundamentally shaped this work. I would also like to thank the dozens of people who agreed to be interviewed, whose ideas and voices animate this text and the sites where they work. I offer this dissertation in hope that it contributes, in some small way, to a bright future for archaeology in Turkey. My committee members have been unstinting in their support of what has proved to be an unconventional project. John Cherry’s able teaching and broad perspective on archaeology formed the matrix in which the ideas for this dissertation grew; Elaine Gazda’s support, guidance, and advocacy of the project was indispensible to its completion. Norman Yoffee provided ideas and support from the first draft of a very different prospectus – including very necessary encouragement to go out on a limb. Chris Ratté has been a generous host at the site of Aphrodisias and helpful commentator during the writing process. -
Middle and Late Phrygian Gordion
Iranica Antiqua, vol. XXXIV, 1999 FROM PHRYGIAN CAPITAL TO ACHAEMENID ENTREPOT: MIDDLE AND LATE PHRYGIAN GORDION BY Mary M. VOIGT College of William and Mary T. Cuyler YOUNG, Jr. University of Toronto Introduction In the early Spring of 1960 David Stronach and Cuyler Young stood on the edge of the Toll-i Takht at about four in the afternoon and looked out at the Achaemenid architecture of Pasargadae. David was fully recovered from his queasy tummy of the night before, spent in a tea house in Dehbid, and his natural enthusiasm for all matters archaeological was in full cry. Max Mallowan, not yet knighted but firmly in control of the Board of Trustees of the British Institute of Persian Studies in Teheran, had sug- gested that the Institute’s first excavation in Iran be an important historical site like Pasargadae. Stronach was keen. Certainly he was well trained for the task, having dug at Nimrud with Mallowan and at Charsada with Wheeler, though his work at Ras al’Amiya in Iraq and at Yarim Tepe in northeastern Iran had equally prepared him for a major prehistoric project. Pasargadae it was. On the plain below stood the remains of the Tomb of Cyrus, Palace S and P, the Zendan-i Suleiman, and the Sacred Enclosure. Behind David was the Toll-i Takht (Takht-i Madar-i Suleiman) and to the east, north and south the barely visible walls of the fortification enclosure joining the Takht. In three seasons of excavation Stronach would clarify the nature and function of these monuments, would uncover a number of structures never seen before, and would put the Achaemenids back on the intellectual map of Near Eastern archaeology. -
AR 88 1968-69.Pdf
{-·--·-. -·--·"'-.._ ............. ·--·-·- ............... ..... ........ ........ ._ .._ .._ ........ ...... ·-·---·-·--·-- ............... -. .._ . .__ ......... ._ .._ ........ ........ ----·-- ·-.._ . ._ ........ ........ -. ....... ·-·-·- ·; ( i I ~ ...................... ._.............. ......................................................... ._................................... ....... ..................... ....................................................................... , ................................................................ ~ ) i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i ? i i i I i i i i i i i i i i i i l t AMERICAN SCHOOL OF t ~ i i i i l } CLASSICAL STUDIES l ~ i i i i i i i i t i AT ATHENS l ~ i I i i i I i i • ? I i .'-1· I I ' i i . I i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i ? ? i I i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i 1 i I i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i EIGHTY-EIGHTH ANNUAL REPORT i i 1 i 196 ~-1969 i i i i i i i i i i I i i . .... ·- - -----~·- -·-·-- -- -· ... - ~ - - .............. ._. ....... -.-............... ._ ................ ---· ---· ---·-· .............. -. ........- ---·-................ -----------·-·-·--·-·-·-1 TABLE OF CONTENTS PAGE ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION 4 BOARD OF TRUSTEES 5 MANAGING CoMMITTEE 7 CoMMITTEES OF THE MANAGING CoMMITTEE 14 STAFF oF THE ScHOOL 15 CouNCIL OF THE ALUMNI AssociATION • .. 17 THE AuxiLIARY FuND AssociATION 17 CooPERATING INSTITUTIONs • 18 REPORTS: Director 20 Librarian of the School 29 Librarian of the Gennadeion . 33 Professors of Archaeology 37 Field Director of the Agora Excavations 41 Field Director of the Corinth Excavations 46 Special Research Fellows: Visiting Professors SO Secretary of the School 53 Chairman of the Committee on Admissions and Fellowships 54 Chairman of the Committee on Publications 56 Director of the Summer Session II 64 Treasurer of the Auxiliary Fund 67 Report of the Treasurer . -
Volume 45, Spring 2008
ARIT Newsletter American Research Institute in Turkey Number 45, Spring 2008 President LETTER FROM THE PRESIDENT G. Kenneth Sams As I announced in the last Newsletter, ARIT has been most fortunate to receive Immediate Past President Machteld J. Mellink from the National Endowment for the Humanities a Challenge Grant with a full Vice President potential (1:3 matching) of 2.2 million dollars. The purpose of the grant is to endow Ahmet Karamustafa and enhance the ARIT libraries in Istanbul and Ankara. Thanks to the timely receipt Secretary Linda Darling of a generous anonymous gift and a generous bequest from the estate of Machteld Treasurer Mellink, ARIT has made a good start toward meeting the match. Yet we still have Maria deJ. Ellis a considerable amount of money to raise. A finance and fundraising committee Directors Cornell Fleischer will guide us along the way. We need to identify potential major donors who will Beatrice Manz constitute the leadership force of the campaign. We are hopeful that in the end, Scott Redford Brian Rose with a successful NEH campaign behind us, we will have set in place a permanent Jennifer Tobin fundraising mechanism to ensure ARIT’s continued well being. Honorary Director Lee Striker Since 1997, ARIT has been privileged to award Samuel H. Kress Foundation Institutional Members Pre-doctoral Fellowships in Archaeology and the History of Art. Through the cur- Full Members rent year, a total of 29 young scholars have conducted research in Turkey as Kress University of Chicago Dumbarton Oaks Fellows. One of them was ARIT-Ankara Director Bahadır Yıldırım, who studied a Georgetown University series of Roman-period sculptural reliefs from Aphrodisias. -
Annual Report
2007ANN-U2008AL REPORT UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA MUSEUM OF ARCHAEOLOGY AND ANTHROPOLOGY ar | UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA MUSEUM OF ARCHAEOLOGY AND ANTHROPOLOGY | ar 2007ANN-U2008AL REPORT UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA MUSEUM OF ARCHAEOLOGY AND ANTHROPOLOGY 3 Letter from the Chair of the Board of Overseers 4 Letter from the Williams Director 5 THE YEAR IN REVIEW Collections and Programs 6 Collections Showcase: New Exhibitions and Traveling Exhibits 11 A Living Museum: Special Programs, Events, and Public Lectures 16 Preserving Our Collections: Conservation Work and Digitizing Our Archives 17 Stewarding Our Collections: The Museum’s Repatriation Office and Committee 18 Sharing Our Collections: Outgoing Loans from the Penn Museum Outreach and Collaboration 20 Community Outreach: Educational Programs and Collaborations 26 Global Engagement: Protecting the World’s Cultural Heritage Research and Dissemination 28 Generating Knowledge: Research Projects around the World 41 Disseminating Knowledge: Penn Museum Publications 42 Preserving and Sharing Knowledge: Digitizing Collections and Archives 44 Financial Highlights 45 IN GrateFUL ACKNOWLEDGMent 46 Highlights 50 Perpetual Support 51 Support of the Physical Plant 52 Annual Sustaining Support 62 Support of Museum Research Projects 64 Board of Overseers ON THE COVER The blocked tomb of Senwosret III at Abydos. Photo by Josef Wegner University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology 3260 South Street Philadelphia, PA 19104-6324 © 2008 University of Pennsylvania All rights reserved. | ar letter from the chair of the board of overseers The 2007/2008 academic year was a remarkable one in which as the holder of an extraordinary collection of artifacts and the University of Pennsylvania publicly launched its largest archival materials from a remarkable series of archaeological ever campaign—Making History—in October 2007 and saw excavations, including those of many World Heritage Sites, that campaign soar beyond the $2 billion mark by the end and anthropological expeditions. -
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A Cosmopolitan Village: The Hellenistic Settlement at Gordion A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED TO THE FACULTY OF THE GRADUATE SCHOOL OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA BY Martin Gregory Wells IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY Andrea M. Berlin, Advisor May, 2012 © Martin Gregory Wells 2012 Acknowledgements This study is dedicated to my parents, John and Judy. Their constant love, enthusiasm, and support throughout my undergraduate and graduate careers have made this all possible. I thank them with all my heart for what they have done for me and I hope I continue to make them proud. And thank you to the rest of my family, Matt and Julia, Phil and Carla, Charlie and Donna, Cathleen Getty, and the entire Wells and Martois families. There will be more to talk about now that this is finished. I am deeply indebted to the members of my dissertation committee: Andrea Berlin of Boston University, G. Kenneth Sams of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Barbara Tsakirgis of Vanderbilt University, and Philip Sellew and Nita Krevans, both of the University of Minnesota. Despite their busy teaching, research, traveling and personal schedules, they found time to read my drafts and offer helpful comments and criticism. I thank them for all their assistance in bringing this dissertation to completion. I began this project in 2003 and, since that time, the faculty of the Department of Classical and Near Eastern Studies at the University of Minnesota has been unfailing in their financial support. I am especially grateful for their nomination of my work for the Doctoral Dissertation Fellowship in addition to numerous grants for research trips to Gordion and to the Gordion Archives at the University of Pennsylvania Museum. -
The Archaeology of Phrygian Gordion, Royal City of Midas Ellen L
The Archaeology of Phrygian Gordion, Royal City of Midas Ellen L. Kohler at Gordion. Source: Gordion Archive, Penn Museum, image 175958. gordion special studies I: The Nonverbal Graffiti, Dipinti, and Stamps by Lynn E. Roller, 1987 II: The Terracotta Figurines and Related Vessels by Irene Bald Romano, 1995 III: Gordion Seals and Sealings: Individuals and Society by Elspeth R. M. Dusinberre, 2005 IV: The Incised Drawings from Early Phrygian Gordion by Lynn E. Roller, 2009 V: Botanical Aspects of Environment and Economy at Gordion, Turkey by Naomi F. Miller, 2010 VI: The New Chronology of Iron Age Gordion edited by C. Brian Rose and Gareth Darbyshire, 2011 gordion excavations final reports I: Three Great Early Tumuli by Rodney S. Young, 1982 II: The Lesser Phrygian Tumuli. Part 1: The Inhumations by Ellen L. Kohler, 1995 III: The Bronze Age by Ann Gunter, 1991 IV: The Early Phrygian Pottery by G. Kenneth Sams, 1994 museum monograph 136 GORDION SPECIAL STUDIES VII The Archaeology of Phrygian Gordion, Royal City of Midas C. Brian Rose, editor university of pennsylvania museum of archaeology and anthropology philadelphia Financial support for this volume’s publication was provided by the Penn Museum, the 1984 Foundation, the Provost’s Research Fund of the University of Pennsylvania, and the George B. Storer Foundation. ESNDPAPER : Map of the Near East and the eastern Mediterranean featuring sites mentioned in this volume. Drawing: Kimberly Leaman. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data The archaeology of Phrygian Gordion, royal city of Midas / edited by C. Brian Rose. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. -
A Case of Virtual Heritage Interpretation John E.Ha
August 17, 2006 Banu BEDEL Master of Science Architecture Revealing Gordion: A Case of Virtual Heritage Interpretation John E.Hancock Udo Greinacher Elizabeth Riorden Revealing Gordion: A Case of Virtual Heritage Interpretation A dissertation submitted to the Graduate School of the University of Cincinnati In partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of MASTER OF SCIENCE In the Department of Architecture of the College of Design, Art, Architecture, and Planning By BANU BEDEL B. Arch, Middle East Technical University, Turkey, June 1999 M. CP, Middle East Technical University, Turkey, December 2002 Committee Chair: John E. Hancock ABSTRACT Despite its significance in history and popular imagination, the city of Gordion today offers very little to be seen. The level of preservation and restricted access to the site obscure the city. Digital reconstruction of the site can compensate for these shortcomings and help non-experts see the architecture of the site as studied and imagined by the experts. This study deals with how the possibilities of digital modeling can be exploited in order to present a richer and more accurate picture of Gordion. Besides detailed and realistic images of a site, digital visualization can display how these images were generated from factual evidence and its interpretation. Cinema offers the model for this work in telling complex yet comprehensible stories by audio-visual means. ii to my family iii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I would like to thank my committee members: John Hancock whose experience with academic writing has helped make the task of writing this thesis not only manageable, but also enjoyable for me; Liz Riorden, because the match between our fields of interest and her combination of academic pursuit and entrepreneurship set her as an inspiring model for me; and Udo Greinacher, for he has contributed his expertise in visual media with his high level of intellectual and emotional engagement.