2020 Employee Compensation Information

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

2020 Employee Compensation Information Village of Wilmette 2020 Budget -- Total Compensation Disclosure Employer Employer Employer Employer Employer All Other Base Allowances FICA / Medicare IMRF Pension Police Pension Fire Pension Health Insurance Budgeted Total Vacation Days / Sick Days / Position Employee Wages and Stipends Contribution Contribution Contribution Contribution Contribution Benefits Compensation 24 Hr. Shifts 24 Hr. Shifts Accountant Freimanis, Larisa 85,097 - 6,510 9,539 - - 14,940 1,658 117,744 10.0 12 Accountant Wayland, Troy 85,097 - 6,510 9,539 - - 9,216 1,658 112,020 10.0 12 Accts Rec Clerk Budd, Susan 74,866 - 5,727 8,392 - - 21,732 3,403 114,120 23.0 12 Accts Rec Clerk Janowiak, Emily 54,861 - 4,197 6,150 - - 18,684 1,346 85,238 10.0 12 Accts Rec Clerk Joyce, Kathleen 50,171 - 3,838 5,624 - - 14,940 1,293 75,866 10.0 12 Accts Rec Clerk Miller, Joan 74,866 - 5,727 8,392 - - 9,216 3,403 101,604 25.0 12 Accts Rec Clerk O'Malley, Daniel 56,375 - 4,313 6,320 - - 8,868 1,363 77,239 10.0 12 Admin Services Director Skiles, Peter 162,869 - 10,890 18,258 - - 25,152 4,158 221,327 23.0 12 Administrative Manager Perley, Emma 94,856 - 7,256 10,633 - - 25,152 1,742 139,640 10.0 12 Administrative Systems Analyst Walker, Sam 87,689 - 6,708 9,830 - - 21,732 1,680 127,639 10.0 12 AP/AR Clerk Pristovnik, Lucy 50,171 - 3,838 5,624 - - 18,684 1,293 79,610 10.0 12 Assistant Director of Community Development Roberts, Lisa 132,891 - 10,166 14,897 - - 9,216 3,901 171,071 23.0 12 Assistant Finance Director Risko, John 108,904 - 8,331 12,208 - - 9,216 1,863 140,522 18.0 12 Assistant to the Public Works Director Amoruso, Kate 86,260 - 6,599 9,670 - - 9,216 3,500 115,245 15.0 12 Assistant Village Manager Braiman, Michael 189,660 - 11,278 21,261 - - 14,940 4,388 241,527 21.0 12 Assistant Water Plant Superintendent Jordan, Nate 107,295 - 8,208 12,028 - - 25,152 3,681 156,364 15.0 12 Assistant Director of Administrative Services Prejzner, John 126,389 - 9,669 14,168 - - 14,940 3,845 169,011 18.0 12 Assistant Director of Engineering Cruz, Jorge 130,156 - 9,957 14,590 - - 18,684 3,877 177,265 21.0 12 Building Inspector Norman, John 94,608 - 7,238 10,606 - - 9,216 3,572 125,239 18.0 12 Building Maintainer I Corcoran, Kevin 53,184 - 4,069 5,962 - - 19,380 1,327 83,922 10.0 12 Building Maintainer I Hartigan, Michael 53,184 - 4,069 5,962 - - 19,380 1,327 83,922 10.0 12 Business Development Coordinator Sivertsen, Lucas 103,447 - 7,914 11,596 - - 25,152 3,648 151,757 21.0 12 Cable TV Coordinator Meersman, Karen 92,027 - 7,040 10,316 - - 18,684 3,550 131,617 25.0 12 Code Enforcement Officer Blumenthal, Ted 84,313 - 6,450 9,451 - - 14,940 3,484 118,638 19.0 12 Community Development Director Adler, John 170,799 - 11,005 19,147 - - 18,684 4,226 223,861 25.0 12 Community Service Officer Eder, Steven 63,505 - 4,858 7,119 - - 21,732 3,277 100,491 19.0 12 Corporation Counsel Stein, Jeff 188,879 - 11,267 21,173 - - - 2,549 223,869 18.0 12 Crew Leader Conrad, Joseph 92,027 - 7,040 10,316 - - 16,800 3,550 129,733 25.0 12 Crew Leader DeBoer, Nicholas 92,027 - 7,040 10,316 - - 21,732 3,550 134,665 21.0 12 Crew Leader Falcone, Philip 75,737 - 5,794 8,490 - - 14,940 3,410 108,371 13.0 12 Crew Leader Rindfleisch, Steven 92,027 - 7,040 10,316 - - 18,684 3,550 131,617 21.0 12 Customer Service Specialist Issac, Jissenia 61,036 - 6,027 8,832 - - - 1,604 77,499 15.0 12 Customer Service Supervisor Padron, Andrea 67,142 - 5,136 7,527 - - 25,152 1,486 106,443 10.0 12 Deputy Director of Public Works Lam, Guy 147,450 - 10,666 16,529 - - 9,216 4,026 187,887 21.0 12 Deputy Fire Chief Brill, Robert 151,725 - 2,200 - - 96,158 21,732 4,063 275,878 10.5 12 Deputy Police Chief Collins, Patrick 152,736 - 2,215 - 75,671 - 25,152 4,071 259,845 25.0 12 Director of Public Works Berger-Raish, Brigitte 194,588 - 11,350 21,813 - - 18,684 4,431 250,866 25.0 12 Director of Water Management Quafisheh, Nabil 162,869 - 10,890 18,258 - - 25,152 4,158 221,327 19.0 12 Engineering Assistant I Kordek, Kristopher 72,331 - 5,533 8,108 - - 8,868 826 95,666 6.0 12 Engineering Assistant I Smith, Dan 78,787 - 6,027 8,832 - - 9,216 1,604 104,466 10.0 12 Equipment Coordinator Abplanalp, Eric 99,979 - 7,648 11,208 - - 18,684 3,618 141,137 15.0 12 Exec Sec/Vil Deputy Clerk Norwood, Karen 74,616 - 5,708 8,364 - - 18,684 1,568 108,941 15.0 12 Facilities Manager Ramaker, John 104,546 - 7,998 11,720 - - 21,732 3,657 149,653 25.0 12 Finance Director Molloy, Melinda 185,323 - 11,215 20,775 - - 14,940 4,351 236,604 21.0 12 Fire Battalion Chief Bentz, James 140,886 - 2,043 - - 89,289 14,940 2,137 249,295 12.5 6 Fire Battalion Chief Bucci, Anthony 140,886 - 2,043 - - 89,289 14,436 2,137 248,791 12.5 6 Fire Battalion Chief Menzies, Ryan 140,886 - 2,043 - - 89,289 21,732 3,969 257,919 10.5 6 Fire Chief Wozney, Benjamin 166,511 - 2,414 - - 105,529 25,152 4,190 303,796 25.0 12 Fire Department Secretary Anderson, Diane 80,530 - 6,161 9,027 - - 9,216 3,451 108,385 18.0 12 Fire Lieutenant Hughes, Robert 129,913 - 1,884 - - 82,334 16,056 3,875 234,062 12.5 6 Fire Lieutenant Isaacson, Michael 129,913 - 1,884 - - 82,334 25,152 3,875 243,158 10.5 6 Fire Lieutenant Wilk, Jason 129,913 - 1,884 - - 82,334 25,152 3,875 243,158 12.5 6 Fire Lieutenant Minogue, Michael 127,237 - 1,845 - - 80,638 21,732 3,852 235,305 10.5 6 Fire Lieutenant Rodgers, Jennifer 127,237 - 1,845 - - 80,638 9,216 3,852 222,789 10.5 6 Fire Lieutenant Scheetz, Michael 124,625 - 1,807 - - 78,983 18,684 3,830 227,929 8.0 6 Firefighter/Paramedic Blomquist, John 107,437 1,935 1,586 - - 68,090 25,152 1,867 206,067 12.5 6 Firefighter/Paramedic Halterman, Michael 107,437 1,935 1,586 - - 68,090 25,152 3,699 207,899 11.5 6 Firefighter/Paramedic Mager, Frank 107,437 1,935 1,586 - - 68,090 21,732 1,867 202,647 12.5 6 Village of Wilmette 2020 Budget -- Total Compensation Disclosure Employer Employer Employer Employer Employer All Other Base Allowances FICA / Medicare IMRF Pension Police Pension Fire Pension Health Insurance Budgeted Total Vacation Days / Sick Days / Position Employee Wages and Stipends Contribution Contribution Contribution Contribution Contribution Benefits Compensation 24 Hr. Shifts 24 Hr. Shifts Firefighter/Paramedic Simon, Thomas 107,437 1,935 1,586 - - 68,090 21,732 3,699 204,479 12.5 6 Firefighter/Paramedic Wokurka, Gary 107,437 1,935 1,586 - - 68,090 14,940 3,699 197,687 11.5 6 Firefighter/Paramedic Grajewski, David 105,226 1,935 1,554 - - 66,689 16,056 3,680 195,140 10.5 6 Firefighter/Paramedic Harrington, Patrick 105,226 1,935 1,554 - - 66,689 19,380 3,680 198,464 10.5 6 Firefighter/Paramedic Barton, Kenneth 103,062 1,935 1,522 - - 65,317 21,732 3,661 197,230 10.0 6 Firefighter/Paramedic Eastman, Blake 103,062 1,935 1,522 - - 65,317 25,152 3,661 200,650 10.0 6 Firefighter/Paramedic Jost, Robert 103,062 1,935 1,522 - - 65,317 19,380 3,661 194,878 8.5 6 Firefighter/Paramedic Kofoed, Edward 103,062 1,935 1,522 - - 65,317 9,216 3,661 184,714 8.0 6 Firefighter/Paramedic Schmidt, Ryan 103,062 1,935 1,522 - - 65,317 25,152 3,661 200,650 10.0 6 Firefighter/Paramedic Walters, Daniel 103,062 1,935 1,522 - - 65,317 21,732 3,661 197,230 8.0 6 Firefighter/Paramedic Weglarz, Jason 103,062 1,935 1,522 - - 65,317 25,152 3,661 200,650 8.5 6 Firefighter/Paramedic Bonilla, Guillermo 100,943 1,935 1,492 - - 63,974 25,152 3,643 197,139 6.0 6 Firefighter/Paramedic Cirone, Thomas 100,943 1,935 1,492 - - 63,974 8,868 3,643 180,855 6.0 6 Firefighter/Paramedic Kopczyk, Thomas 100,943 1,935 1,492 - - 63,974 21,732 3,643 193,719 7.0 6 Firefighter/Paramedic Neurauter, Timothy 100,943 1,935 1,492 - - 63,974 19,380 3,643 191,367 7.0 6 Firefighter/Paramedic Paczosa, Scott 100,943 1,935 1,492 - - 63,974 16,056 3,643 188,043 8.0 6 Firefighter/Paramedic Riggan II, Richard 100,943 1,935 1,492 - - 63,974 25,152 3,645 197,141 7.5 6 Firefighter/Paramedic Schuman, Kevin 100,943 1,935 1,492 - - 63,974 25,152 3,643 197,139 7.5 6 Firefighter/Paramedic Wessel, Michael 100,943 1,935 1,492 - - 63,974 25,152 3,643 197,139 8.0 6 Firefighter/Paramedic Durband, William 97,530 1,935 1,442 - - 61,811 21,732 3,614 188,064 5.5 6 Firefighter/Paramedic Guth, Matthew 97,530 1,935 1,442 - - 61,811 9,216 3,614 175,548 5.5 6 Firefighter/Paramedic Kolze, Ryan 97,530 1,935 1,442 - - 61,811 9,216 3,614 175,548 5.5 6 Firefighter/Paramedic Lettieri, Michael 97,530 1,935 1,442 - - 61,811 21,732 3,614 188,064 5.5 6 Firefighter/Paramedic Murray, Colin 97,530 1,935 1,442 - - 61,811 19,380 3,614 185,712 5.5 6 Firefighter/Paramedic Fisher, Benjamin 93,153 1,935 1,379 - - 59,037 19,380 3,576 178,460 5.0 6 Firefighter/Paramedic Markovich, Bradley 93,153 - 1,351 - - 59,037 19,380 3,560 176,480 5.0 6 Firefighter/Paramedic Aguirre-Garcia, Jose 88,970 - 1,290 - - 56,386 7,980 3,523 158,148 5.0 6 Firefighter/Paramedic Richards, Robert 88,970 - 1,290 - - 56,386 - 3,525 150,170 5.0 6 Firefighter/Paramedic Caffie, Jeremy 81,161 - 1,177 - - 51,437 8,868 3,457 146,099 5.0 6 Firefighter/Paramedic Garard, Ted 75,740 1,935 1,126 - - 48,001 18,684 3,427 148,913 5.0 6 Human Resources Manager Cease, Alejandra 98,805 - 7,559 11,076 - - 25,152 3,608 146,200 18.0 12 Maintenance Supervisor Kumiega, Peter 103,447 - 7,914 11,596 - - 14,940 3,648 141,545 21.0 12 Maintenance Worker I Gomez, Steven 56,375 - 4,313 6,320 - - 7,980 1,363 76,351 10.0 12 Maintenance Worker I O'Malley, Christine 51,687 - 3,954 5,794 - - - 366 61,801 10.0 12 Maintenance Worker I Perri, Joe 57,220 - 4,377 6,414 - - 8,868 1,373 78,253 10.0 12 Maintenance Worker I Toppel, Chad 57,220 - 4,377 6,414 - - 25,152 1,373 94,537 10.0 12 Maintenance Worker II Archibald, Chad 69,264 - 5,299 7,764 - - 9,216
Recommended publications
  • Seven Churches of Revelation Turkey
    TRAVEL GUIDE SEVEN CHURCHES OF REVELATION TURKEY TURKEY Pergamum Lesbos Thyatira Sardis Izmir Chios Smyrna Philadelphia Samos Ephesus Laodicea Aegean Sea Patmos ASIA Kos 1 Rhodes ARCHEOLOGICAL MAP OF WESTERN TURKEY BULGARIA Sinanköy Manya Mt. NORTH EDİRNE KIRKLARELİ Selimiye Fatih Iron Foundry Mosque UNESCO B L A C K S E A MACEDONIA Yeni Saray Kırklareli Höyük İSTANBUL Herakleia Skotoussa (Byzantium) Krenides Linos (Constantinople) Sirra Philippi Beikos Palatianon Berge Karaevlialtı Menekşe Çatağı Prusias Tauriana Filippoi THRACE Bathonea Küçükyalı Ad hypium Morylos Dikaia Heraion teikhos Achaeology Edessa Neapolis park KOCAELİ Tragilos Antisara Abdera Perinthos Basilica UNESCO Maroneia TEKİRDAĞ (İZMİT) DÜZCE Europos Kavala Doriskos Nicomedia Pella Amphipolis Stryme Işıklar Mt. ALBANIA Allante Lete Bormiskos Thessalonica Argilos THE SEA OF MARMARA SAKARYA MACEDONIANaoussa Apollonia Thassos Ainos (ADAPAZARI) UNESCO Thermes Aegae YALOVA Ceramic Furnaces Selectum Chalastra Strepsa Berea Iznik Lake Nicea Methone Cyzicus Vergina Petralona Samothrace Parion Roman theater Acanthos Zeytinli Ada Apamela Aisa Ouranopolis Hisardere Dasaki Elimia Pydna Barçın Höyük BTHYNIA Galepsos Yenibademli Höyük BURSA UNESCO Antigonia Thyssus Apollonia (Prusa) ÇANAKKALE Manyas Zeytinlik Höyük Arisbe Lake Ulubat Phylace Dion Akrothooi Lake Sane Parthenopolis GÖKCEADA Aktopraklık O.Gazi Külliyesi BİLECİK Asprokampos Kremaste Daskyleion UNESCO Höyük Pythion Neopolis Astyra Sundiken Mts. Herakleum Paşalar Sarhöyük Mount Athos Achmilleion Troy Pessinus Potamia Mt.Olympos
    [Show full text]
  • Separating Fact from Fiction in the Aiolian Migration
    hesperia yy (2008) SEPARATING FACT Pages399-430 FROM FICTION IN THE AIOLIAN MIGRATION ABSTRACT Iron Age settlementsin the northeastAegean are usuallyattributed to Aioliancolonists who journeyed across the Aegean from mainland Greece. This articlereviews the literary accounts of the migration and presentsthe relevantarchaeological evidence, with a focuson newmaterial from Troy. No onearea played a dominantrole in colonizing Aiolis, nor is sucha widespread colonizationsupported by the archaeologicalrecord. But the aggressive promotionof migrationaccounts after the PersianWars provedmutually beneficialto bothsides of theAegean and justified the composition of the Delian League. Scholarlyassessments of habitation in thenortheast Aegean during the EarlyIron Age are remarkably consistent: most settlements are attributed toAiolian colonists who had journeyed across the Aegean from Thessaly, Boiotia,Akhaia, or a combinationof all three.1There is no uniformityin theancient sources that deal with the migration, although Orestes and his descendantsare named as theleaders in mostaccounts, and are credited withfounding colonies over a broadgeographic area, including Lesbos, Tenedos,the western and southerncoasts of theTroad, and theregion betweenthe bays of Adramyttion and Smyrna(Fig. 1). In otherwords, mainlandGreece has repeatedly been viewed as theagent responsible for 1. TroyIV, pp. 147-148,248-249; appendixgradually developed into a Mountjoy,Holt Parker,Gabe Pizzorno, Berard1959; Cook 1962,pp. 25-29; magisterialstudy that is includedhere Allison Sterrett,John Wallrodt, Mal- 1973,pp. 360-363;Vanschoonwinkel as a companionarticle (Parker 2008). colm Wiener, and the anonymous 1991,pp. 405-421; Tenger 1999, It is our hope that readersinterested in reviewersfor Hesperia. Most of trie pp. 121-126;Boardman 1999, pp. 23- the Aiolian migrationwill read both articlewas writtenin the Burnham 33; Fisher2000, pp.
    [Show full text]
  • The Thermopylae Line
    CHAPTER 6 THE THERMOPYLAE LINE ENERAL Wavell arrived in Athens on the 19th April and immediately e Gheld a conference at General Wilson's quarters . Although an effectiv decision to embark the British force from Greece had been made on a higher level in London, the commanders on the spot now once agai n deeply considered the pros and cons . The Greek Government was unstable and had suggested that the British force should depart in order to avoid further devastation of the country. It was unlikely that the Greek Army of Epirus could be extricated and some of its senior officers were urging sur- render. General Wilson considered that his force could hold the Ther- mopylae line indefinitely once the troops were in position.l "The arguments in favour of fighting it out, which [it] is always better to do if possible, " wrote Wilson later,2 "were : the tying up of enemy forces, army and air , which would result therefrom ; the strain the evacuation would place o n the Navy and Merchant Marine ; the effect on the morale of the troops and the loss of equipment which would be incurred . In favour of with- drawal the arguments were : the question as to whether our forces in Greece could be reinforced as this was essential ; the question of the maintenance of our forces, plus the feeding of the civil population ; the weakness of our air forces with few airfields and little prospect of receiving reinforcements ; the little hope of the Greek Army being able to recover its morale . The decision was made to withdraw from Greece ." The British leaders con- sidered that it was unlikely that they would be able to take out any equip- ment except that which the troops carried, and that they would be lucky "to get away with 30 per cent of the force" .
    [Show full text]
  • Survey Archaeology and the Historical Geography of Central Western Anatolia in the Second Millennium BC
    European Journal of Archaeology 20 (1) 2017, 120–147 This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. The Story of a Forgotten Kingdom? Survey Archaeology and the Historical Geography of Central Western Anatolia in the Second Millennium BC 1,2,3 1,3 CHRISTOPHER H. ROOSEVELT AND CHRISTINA LUKE 1Department of Archaeology and History of Art, Koç University, I˙stanbul, Turkey 2Research Center for Anatolian Civilizations, Koç University, I˙stanbul, Turkey 3Department of Archaeology, Boston University, USA This article presents previously unknown archaeological evidence of a mid-second-millennium BC kingdom located in central western Anatolia. Discovered during the work of the Central Lydia Archaeological Survey in the Marmara Lake basin of the Gediz Valley in western Turkey, the material evidence appears to correlate well with text-based reconstructions of Late Bronze Age historical geog- raphy drawn from Hittite archives. One site in particular—Kaymakçı—stands out as a regional capital and the results of the systematic archaeological survey allow for an understanding of local settlement patterns, moving beyond traditional correlations between historical geography and capital sites alone. Comparison with contemporary sites in central western Anatolia, furthermore, identifies material com- monalities in site forms that may indicate a regional architectural tradition if not just influence from Hittite hegemony. Keywords: survey archaeology, Anatolia, Bronze Age, historical geography, Hittites, Seha River Land INTRODUCTION correlates of historical territories and king- doms have remained elusive.
    [Show full text]
  • Troas Synoikisis'iı Synoecism in the Troad
    TROAS SYNOİKİSİS'İı SYNOECISM IN THE TROAD Ayşe Gül Akalın Özet Grekçe bir kelime olan Synoikisis fiziki yönüyle ele alındığında genelolarak farklı yerleşimlerden gelen halkların birleşip, yer değiştirerek tek bir yerleşim kurmaları yada aynı bölgede oturan farklı yerleşim halklarının topraklarını birleştinneleri olarak tanımwnır. Yerleşim kurmak yeni bir sosyal-politik yapılanmayı da içediğinden, Synoikisis aynı ,zamanda Antik Grek politikası terminojisinde farklı halkların yönetim düzenlerini birleştirip yeni tek bir yönetici yçuja ortak !?ir.yönetim organı belirlemeleri olarak nitelendirilir. Erken Dönem (/0. 1600-/0.6. yy.) Synoikisisler'inde toprakları ortak savunma,. yerüstü ve yeraltı kaynaklarını ortak kullanma gibi pratik nedenler ön plandayken /0 6. yy ve sonrasında politik nedenler öne çıkmıştır. Hellenistik döneme gelindiğindeyse Synoikisis halkların kendi kararlarıyla yaptıkları bir eylem olmaktan çıkarak Hellenleştirme'ye hizmet eden etkin bir yerleşim politikası haline getiriImiştir. Biz Hellenistik dönem Synp.ikisis'ini Troas'daki örneğiyle ele alarak araştırdık. Söz konusu Troas Synoikisis'i, /0311 yılı Diodokhlar arası büyük barışın hemen sonrasında, Antigonos Monoptalmos tarafindan, bölgenin stratejik noktalarında konumlanmış altı yerleşimin (Kebren, Skepsis, Neandria, Kolonai, Larisa, Hamaksitos) halklarının Aleksandria Troas adlı yeni yerleşime göç ettirilmesiyle gerçekleştirilmiştir. Abstract: Synoikism, which is a Greek word, is a tenn that is found in the ancient em sett/ement terminolosy. Considering the physical aspects of Synoikism it can be broadly defined as Jolks living in separate settlements joining their land and thus creating a single settlement within the same borders, or folks coming from different settlements joining each other, moving away from their old lands and creating a new settlement on new lands. The concept of settling doesn it only cover physical aspects and costruction, but also social and politieal organizations.
    [Show full text]
  • Lycus Dergisi Kapak Baskı Converdli
    2015 e-ISSN: 2717-8471 PAMUKKALE ÜNİVERSİTESİ ARKEOLOJİ ENSTİTÜSÜ SÜRELİ YAYINI JOURNAL OF PAMUKKALE UNIVERSITY INSTITUTE OF ARCHAEOLOGY DERGİSİ LYCUS JOURNAL ● Sayı/Issue 1 ● Haziran/June 2020 https://dergipark.org.tr/lycus LYCUS DERGİSİ BİLİM KURULU Prof. Dr. Fikri KULAKOĞLU Prof. Dr. Levent ZOROĞLU (Ankara Üniversitesi, Türkiye) (Batman Üniversitesi, Türkiye) Ord. Prof. Dr. Francesco D’ANDRIA Prof. Dr. Musa KADIOĞLU (Accademia dei Lincei, Italy) (Ankara Üniversitesi, Türkiye) Prof. Dr. Francesco GUIZZI Prof. Dr. Ramazan ÖZGAN (Sapienza Università di Roma, Italy) (Selçuk Üniversitesi (Emekli), Türkiye) Prof. Dr. Grazia SEMERARO Prof. Dr. R. R. Roland SMITH (Università del Salento, Italy) (University of Oxford, England) Prof. Dr. Havva İŞKAN IŞIK Prof. Dr. Thekla SCHULZ-BRIZE (Akdeniz Üniversitesi, Türkiye) (Technische Universität Berlin, Germany) LYCUS DERGİSİ YAYIN KURULU Prof. Dr. Celal ŞİMŞEK Dr. Öğr. Ü. Umay OĞUZHANOĞLU-AKAY (Pamukkale Üniversitesi, Türkiye) (Pamukkale Üniversitesi, Türkiye) Prof. Dr. Bilal SÖĞÜT Dr. Öğr. Ü. İnci TÜRKOĞLU (Pamukkale Üniversitesi, Türkiye) (Pamukkale Üniversitesi, Türkiye) Prof. Dr. Elif ÖZER Dr. Öğr. Ü. Evin CANER-ÖZGEL (Pamukkale Üniversitesi, Türkiye) (Pamukkale Üniversitesi, Türkiye) Prof. Dr. Fahriye BAYRAM Dr. Bilge YILMAZ KOLANCI (Pamukkale Üniversitesi, Türkiye) (Pamukkale Üniversitesi, Türkiye) Doç. Dr. Bahadır DUMAN Dr. Çağrı Murat TARHAN (Pamukkale Üniversitesi, Türkiye) (Pamukkale Üniversitesi, Türkiye) Doç. Dr. Ali OZAN Dr. Murat TAŞKIRAN (Pamukkale Üniversitesi, Türkiye) (Pamukkale Üniversitesi, Türkiye) Doç. Dr. Esengül AKINCI-ÖZTÜRK Dr. Barış YENER (Pamukkale Üniversitesi, Türkiye) (Pamukkale Üniversitesi, Türkiye) Dr. Öğr. Ü. Coşkun DAŞBACAK (Pamukkale Üniversitesi, Türkiye) e-ISSN: 2717-8471 LYCUS DERGİSİ ○ LYCUS JOURNAL PAMUKKALE ÜNİVERSİTESİ ARKEOLOJİ ENSTİTÜSÜ SÜRELİ YAYINI JOURNAL OF PAMUKKALE UNIVERSITY INSTITUTE OF ARCHAEOLOGY ● Sayı/Issue 1 ● Haziran/June 2020 Yayın Sahibi Pamukkale Üniversitesi Arkeoloji Enstitüsü adına Müdür Prof.
    [Show full text]
  • A HISTORY of the PELASGIAN THEORY. FEW Peoples Of
    A HISTORY OF THE PELASGIAN THEORY. FEW peoples of the ancient world have given rise to so much controversy as the Pelasgians; and of few, after some centuries of discussion, is so little clearly established. Like the Phoenicians, the Celts, and of recent years the Teutons, they have been a peg upon which to hang all sorts of speculation ; and whenever an inconvenient circumstance has deranged the symmetry of a theory, it has been safe to ' call it Pelasgian and pass on.' One main reason for this ill-repute, into which the Pelasgian name has fallen, has been the very uncritical fashion in which the ancient statements about the Pelasgians have commonly been mishandled. It has been the custom to treat passages from Homer, from Herodotus, from Ephorus, and from Pausanias, as if they were so many interchangeable bricks to build up the speculative edifice; as if it needed no proof that genealogies found sum- marized in Pausanias or Apollodorus ' were taken by them from poems of the same class with the Theogony, or from ancient treatises, or from prevalent opinions ;' as if, further, ' if we find them mentioning the Pelasgian nation, they do at all events belong to an age when that name and people had nothing of the mystery which they bore to the eyes of the later Greeks, for instance of Strabo;' and as though (in the same passage) a statement of Stephanus of Byzantium about Pelasgians in Italy ' were evidence to the same effect, perfectly unexceptionable and as strictly historical as the case will admit of 1 No one doubts, of course, either that popular tradition may transmit, or that late writers may transcribe, statements which come from very early, and even from contemporary sources.
    [Show full text]
  • OLBA XXII (Ayrıbasım / Offprint)
    ISSN 1301 7667 MERSİN ÜNİVERSİTESİ KILIKIA ARKEOLOJİSİNİ ARAŞTIRMA MERKEZİ MERSIN UNIVERSITY PUBLICATIONS OF THE RESEARCH CENTER OF CILICIAN ARCHAEOLOGY KAAM YAYINLARI OLBA XXII (Ayrıbasım / Offprint) MERSİN 2014 KAAM YAYINLARI OLBA XXII © 2014 Mersin Üniversitesi/Türkiye ISSN 1301 7667 Yayıncı Sertifika No: 14641 OLBA dergisi; ARTS & HUMANITIES CITATION INDEX, EBSCO, PROQUEST ve TÜBİTAK-ULAKBİM Sosyal Bilimler Veri Tabanlarında taranmaktadır. Alman Arkeoloji Enstitüsü’nün (DAI) Kısaltmalar Dizini’nde ‘OLBA’ şeklinde yer almaktadır. OLBA dergisi hakemlidir ve Mayıs ayında olmak üzere, yılda bir kez basılmaktadır. Published each year in May. KAAM’ın izni olmadan OLBA’nın hiçbir bölümü kopya edilemez. Alıntı yapılması durumunda dipnot ile referans gösterilmelidir. It is not allowed to copy any section of OLBA without the permit of KAAM. OLBA dergisinde makalesi yayımlanan her yazar, makalesinin baskı olarak ve elektronik ortamda yayımlanmasını kabul etmiş ve telif haklarını OLBA dergisine devretmiş sayılır. Each author whose article is published in OLBA shall be considered to have accepted the article to be published in print version and electronically and thus have transferred the copyrights to the journal OLBA.. OLBA’ya gönderilen makaleler aşağıdaki web adresinde ve bu cildin giriş sayfalarında belirtilen formatlara uygun olduğu taktirde basılacaktır. Articles should be written according the formats mentioned in the following web address. Redaktion: Yrd. Doç. Dr. Deniz Kaplan OLBA’nın yeni sayılarında yayınlanması istenen makaleler için yazışma adresi: Correspondance addresses for sending articles to following volumes of OLBA: Prof. Dr. Serra Durugönül Mersin Üniversitesi Fen-Edebiyat Fakültesi, Arkeoloji Bölümü Çiftlikköy Kampüsü, 33342 Mersin - TURKEY Diğer İletişim Adresleri Other Correspondance Addresses Tel: 00.90.324.361 00 01 (10 Lines) 4730 / 4734 Fax: 00.90.324.361 00 46 web mail: www.kaam.mersin.edu.tr www.olba.mersin.edu.tr e-mail: [email protected] [email protected] Baskı / Printed by Oksijen Basım ve Matbaacılık San.
    [Show full text]
  • The Orthodox Messenger
    The Orthodox Messenger The Resurrection of Christ Sunday, May 17, 2020 Christ the Savior Greek Orthodox Church “A Pan-Orthodox Christian Community” Ecumenical Patriarchate + Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America + Metropolis of Atlanta 10401 Spring Hill Drive, Spring Hill, FL 34608 Mailing Address: P.O. Box 15303, Spring Hill, FL 34604 Website: www.christthesavior.info Very Reverend Fr. John Lazarek, Priest E-mail: [email protected], (412) 310-0608 Orthros at 9:15 a.m. Divine Liturgy at 10:00 a.m. Welcome Visitors! At Christ the Savior Greek Orthodox Church, the people sing the responses in English. You are invited to sing with the congregation. Use the bulletin and service book located in the pew. Ministries Parish Council President: Peter George (727) 505-8556 Philoptochos President: Larisa Culda-Skinner (779) 212-8188 Stewardship: Stacey George (727) 505-8556 Sunday School: Airien Thomas (352) 277-6332 and Maria Angeliadis (352) 345-8840 Fundraising: Emily Thomas (352) 650-0307 Welcoming Committee: Larisa Culda-Skinner (779) 212-8188 Bulletin: Ryan Otero, [email protected] (352) 515-3523 Epistle Reader: Vasilios Major, Demetri Thomas EPISTLE Acts of the Apostles 11:19-30 In those days, those apostles who were scattered because of the persecution that arose over Stephen traveled as far as Phoenicia and Cyprus and Antioch, speaking the word to none except Jews. But there were some of them, men of Cyprus and Cyrene, who on coming to Antioch spoke to the Greeks also, preaching the Lord Jesus. And the hand of the Lord was with them, and a great number that believed turned to the Lord.
    [Show full text]
  • Synoikism, Urbanization, and Empire in the Early Hellenistic Period Ryan
    Synoikism, Urbanization, and Empire in the Early Hellenistic Period by Ryan Anthony Boehm A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Ancient History and Mediterranean Archaeology in the Graduate Division of the University of California, Berkeley Committee in charge: Professor Emily Mackil, Chair Professor Erich Gruen Professor Mark Griffith Spring 2011 Copyright © Ryan Anthony Boehm, 2011 ABSTRACT SYNOIKISM, URBANIZATION, AND EMPIRE IN THE EARLY HELLENISTIC PERIOD by Ryan Anthony Boehm Doctor of Philosophy in Ancient History and Mediterranean Archaeology University of California, Berkeley Professor Emily Mackil, Chair This dissertation, entitled “Synoikism, Urbanization, and Empire in the Early Hellenistic Period,” seeks to present a new approach to understanding the dynamic interaction between imperial powers and cities following the Macedonian conquest of Greece and Asia Minor. Rather than constructing a political narrative of the period, I focus on the role of reshaping urban centers and regional landscapes in the creation of empire in Greece and western Asia Minor. This period was marked by the rapid creation of new cities, major settlement and demographic shifts, and the reorganization, consolidation, or destruction of existing settlements and the urbanization of previously under- exploited regions. I analyze the complexities of this phenomenon across four frameworks: shifting settlement patterns, the regional and royal economy, civic religion, and the articulation of a new order in architectural and urban space. The introduction poses the central problem of the interrelationship between urbanization and imperial control and sets out the methodology of my dissertation. After briefly reviewing and critiquing previous approaches to this topic, which have focused mainly on creating catalogues, I point to the gains that can be made by shifting the focus to social and economic structures and asking more specific interpretive questions.
    [Show full text]
  • Inscriptions from Northwest Pisidia 3
    Habelt-Verlag · Bonn Epigraphica Anatolica 48 (2015) 1–85 IINSCRIPTIONSNSCRIPTIONS FFROMROM NNORTHWESTORTHWEST PISIDIAPISIDIA The inscriptions published below were all found or studied as a part of the Isparta Archaeologi- cal Survey from 2009 to 2015,1 thirty-one of which are published here for the first time.2 1 I am particularly grateful to Director of the Isparta Archaeological Survey (IAS), Bilge Hürmüzlü, for all her support and encouragement. Thanks also go to Andrea De Giorgi (co-Director of the IAS until 2011), as well as to the T. C. Kültür ve Turizm Bakanlığı for the survey and museum permits and financial support, to the min- istry representatives in 2009–2015, and to Süleyman Demirel Üniversitesi for providing support, including the IAS’s Survey House. Also special thanks go to İlhan Güceren and Mustafa Akaslan of the Isparta Museum and Hacı Ali Ekinci of the Burdur Museum for granting access to the collections, and to the Case Western Reserve University’s College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classics, and the Baker Nord Center for the Humanities for their financial support. 2 On the research of the Isparta Archaeological Survey, see bibliography cited by Iversen 2012, p. 103, n. 2. Since then, also see B. Hürmüzlü and P. Iversen, Notes on Cultural Interaction in Northwest Pisidia in the Iron Age, in N. Chr. Stampolidis, Ç. Maner, K. Kopanias (eds), NOSTOI: Indigenous Culture, Migration, and Integration in the Aegean Islands and Western Anatolia During the Late Bronze and Early Iron Ages (Istanbul 2015), pp. 531–537; A. De Giorgi, Between Continuity and Change: Northern Pisidia Through Classical and Late Antiquity, MDAI(I) 64 (2014), pp.
    [Show full text]
  • ECCLESIAE OCCIDENTALIS MONUMENTA IURIS ANTIQUISSIMA Ed
    ECCLESIAE OCCIDENTALIS MONUMENTA IURIS ANTIQUISSIMA ed. C.H. Turner (Oxford, 1899-1939) Index of Names and Selected Words Corrected, revised, and extended 2008 by Philip R. Amidon, S.J. Creighton University [email protected] It has seemed opportune to republish this index in a corrected and extended version; there has been added to the list of names a list of selected words, and the method of referring to the text has been somewhat altered. The exact scope of C.H. Turner’s masterpiece is not immediately apparent from its title or subtitles (Canonum et conciliorum graecorum interpretationes latinae; Canones et concilia graeca ab antiquis interpretibus latine reddita). What one in fact finds here is an edition of the earliest surviving collections of church canons in Latin which are undoubtedly from the fourth century or have been assigned to it by at least some consensus of scholarship; some of them are translations from Greek, while others were originally drafted in Latin itself. Most of them, with the exception of the Apostolic Constitutions and Canons, are attributed to church councils. Turner, however, also offers a selection of doctrinal and historical material of enormous value, some of it indeed connected to the councils whose canons he edits; a comparison, for instance, of the creed contained in the synodical letter of the Council of Sardica with the Tomus Damasi, will suggest how far the doctrinal education of the western church advanced during the course of the fourth century. The connection of other historical matter to the canons is less obvious, however; one wonders what the Athanasian Historia acephala is doing here (granted that it is part of the collection of Theodosius the Deacon), however grateful one is to have the edition.
    [Show full text]