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New English Original bdg. HC. 4to. (31 x 23 cm). In English. 118, [1] p., color ills. The Lydians and Sardis. In ancient literature the Lydians are frequently mentioned as one of the distinguished peoples of western Anatolia in about the middle of the first millennium BCE and they ruled, although for a relatively short period of some hundred and fifty years, from the Aegean shore to the great curve of the Halys. The scribes of the Old Testament knew and included the Lydians in the Table of the Nations. Their burial mounds which are spread on the flats of the Hermus near Sardis have been a sight of wonder for travellers since antiquity. The information supplied by ancient literature, much of which we owe to Herodotus and Xenophon and research in the first half of the last century, has been supplemented by what is being revealed by excavations in and around their capital Sardis and other regions of Lydia during the last few decades. What may be known about the Lydians by the general reader, however, may not amount to more than some stories such as that of the fabulous wealth of King Croesus which inspired tales of prosperity and gave birth to the expression ¿rich as Croesus¿ or that the Lydians were the people who invented metal coinage. The objective of this book is to present the history and culture of the Lydians as a whole without trying to give all of what is known about them. Despite its limited size, much of what the book comprises is not accessible to the general reader as a whole anywhere else.
xxv + 243pp. + 1 folding map, 29cm., text in English, Doctoral Dissertation (Universiteit Amsterdam), softcover, stamp at verso of title page, text is clean and bright, X113157
New English Paperback. Pbo. Demy 8vo. (21 x 15 cm). In English. 292 p., ills. Contents:1. Prologue 2. A New Perspective of the Aegean Bronze Age 3. The Luwians 3.1 Who Are the Luwians? 3.2 Habitat and Natural Resources 3.3 Late Bronze Age Archaeological Sites in Western Asia Minor 3.4 Petty States in Western Asia Minor 3.5 Luwian Scripts 3.6 Linear A Script 3.7 The Phaistos Disc 3.8 The Missing Link 3.9 Why are the Luwians Missing? 4. Bronze Age 4.1 Late Bronze Age Shipwrecks 4.2 The Mycenaean Culture on the Greek Mainland 4.3 Minoan Crete 4.4 Hatti ¿ the Hittite Empire 4.5 The New Kingdom in Egypt 4.6 Petty Kingdoms in Syria and Palestine 5. Troy 5.1 The History of Troy 5.2 The Investigation of Troy 5.3 The Lower Town 5.4 Hydro Engineering During the Bronze Age 5.5 Descriptions of Ancient Troy 6. The Sea Peoples 6.1 The Sea Peoples' Inscriptions and Excavation Results 6.2 Hypotheses Regarding the Sea Peoples¿ Invasions 6.3 The Initial Sea Peoples¿ Raids 6.4 The Trojan War as a Mycenaean Counterattack 6.5 Civil War on the Greek Mainland 7. Iron Age 7.1 Migrations at the Beginning of the Iron Age 7.2 Caria 7.3 Phrygia 7.4 Lydia 7.5 The Philistines in Canaan and Palestine 7.6 Phoenicians 7.7 The Etruscan Culture 8. Sources 8.1 The Homeric Epics 8.2 Non-Homeric Accounts of the Trojan War 8.3 Dio Chrysostom 8.4 Dictys Cretensis 8.5 Dares Phrygius 8.6 Quintus of Smyrna 8.7 Eusebius of Caesarea 8.8 John Malalas 8.9 Joseph of Exeter 8.10 Benoît de Sainte-Maure 8.11 Guido de Columnis 9. Luwian Studies and its Goals 9.1 Closing the Research Gap 9.2 Proposed Methods 10. Epilogue 11. Appendices Glossary Sources Bibliography Picture credits.
New English Paperback. Pbo. Large Roy. 8vo. In English and Turkish. 128 p., b/w plates. ISBN: 9789751629096. Contents: Preface.; Abbreviations.; 1. Kültepe excavations.; 2. The tablets of Kültepe and some conclusions drawn.; The letter sent to Hurmeli King of Harsamna.; Two letters sent to Hudarlani from Kaliya.; Iqqati tablets.; Indices.; Photos.
As New English Paperback. Pbo. Large Roy. 8vo. In English and Turkish. 128 p., b/w plates. ISBN: 9789751629096. Contents: Preface.; Abbreviations.; 1. Kültepe excavations.; 2. The tablets of Kültepe and some conclusions drawn.; The letter sent to Hurmeli King of Harsamna.; Two letters sent to Hudarlani from Kaliya.; Iqqati tablets.; Indices.; Photos.
New English Paperback. Pbo. Demy 8vo. (21 x 15 cm). In English and Turkish. 170, [1] p., 1 folding plan. B/w ills. The largest sculpture workshop of the Ancient Near East: Yesemek.= Eski Önasya dünyasinin en büyük heykel atelyesi: Yesemek. ARCHEOLOGY Ancient history Yesemek Gaziantep Anatolian civilizations History of art Prehistory Excavations.
Fine English Paperback. 4to. (28 x 20 cm). In English and Turkish. [70] p., b/w ills, 1 map. The lands of Phrygia.= Frigya vadisi. ARCHEOLOGY Anatolian civilizations Phrygia.
New English Paperback. Pbo. Oblong large 8vo. (22 x 22 cm). In English. B/w ills. 155 p. 1 folding color map. The land of Hittites. Through the eyes of European travellers.
Fine English Paperback. Pbo. Cr. 8vo. (20 x 14 cm). In English. 23 p., b/w ills. The journeys of St. Paul at Antioch of Pisidia.
Fine English Original bdg. HC. Folio. (31 x 24 cm. In Englsh. 84, [xxvii] p., 89 numerous photos, 27 b/w plates. The inscriptions of Side (Researches in the Region of Antalya No: 5.= Side kitabeleri (Antalya Bölgesinde Arastirmalar 5.
New English Paperback. Pbo. Roy. 8vo. (24 x 17 cm). In English (with a large abstract) and Turkish. 229, [1] p., color and b/w ills. The holy city Euchaita in Asia Minor and the stoneworks of Byzantine period.= Küçük Asya'da kutsal kent Euchaita ve Bizans dönemi tas eserleri. Euchaita was a Byzantine town in Pontus, in northern Asia Minor (mod. Turkey). Today the Turkish village Beyözü, in the province of Çorum (in the subprovince of Mecitözü), partly lies on the ruins.
New English Paperback. Roy. 8vo. (23 x 16,5 cm). In English. 94 p. The Hittites: The story of a forgotten Empire. Recent discoveries have retorted the critic's objections upon himself. It is not the Biblical writer but the modern author who is now proved to have been unacquainted with the contemporaneous history of the time. The Hittites were a very real power. Not very many centuries before the age of Elisha they had contested the empire of Western Asia with the Egyptians, and though their power had waned in the days of Jehoram they were still formidable enemies and useful allies. They were still worthy of comparison with the divided kingdom of Egypt, and infinitely more powerful than that of Judah.
Examines the textual and archaeological evidence for a reconstruction of Hittite history and geography, and suggests economic reasons which may have provided the dynamics for the internal organization and the imperial expansion of the Hittite empire.daily life in Late Bronze Age Anatolia, warfare, politics and religion, administration, literature, art, and architecture. His survey covers the cultures of other Anatolian peoples who came into contact with the Hittites-notably the Arzawans, whose kingdom in western Turkey was for much of the period a formidable obstacle to Hittite aspirations."206p. illus index. maps on end papers. Previous owner's card taped inside front cover Book
New New English Original bdg. Dust wrapper. 4to. (31 x 26,5 cm). In English. 184 p., 270 color ills. "In addition to the Hittite capital Hattusa the book includes detailed study, pictures and plans of some other sites like Yazilikaya, Alaca Höyük, Kanes/Nesa (Kültepe) and Sarissa(Kusakli Höyük). The Neo-Hittite sites like Karkamis, Azatiwataya or Yesemek and some rarely-visited Hittite reliefs are also included. Sometime in the 1650s BC, a noble clan, who would in our time be named Hittites, making Hattusa its capital, brought together the small independent Anatolian city kingdoms. In a short period and for the first time in the history of the peninsula, it became a kingdom strong enough to challenge the other world kingdoms of the Late Bronze Age, namely Mycenaeans, Egypt, Mitanni/Hanigalbat, Babylonia and the later Assyria. The difficulty of bringing together so many principalities of different size, ethnicity and language under the same flag and competing with well-established sophisticated cultures of the time is evident in the Hittite history and culture. Centred in the large curve of the Halys, which they called the Marasantiya, they had loose frontiers, their longest extending from the Aegean to the other side of the Euphrates (Hittite Mala) and from the Pontic Mountains to the Mediterranean and the source of the Orontes River. The rock-reliefs, which are still spread all around the country, show the routes by which their armies campaigned. The artifacts of their unsophisticated material culture are among the most interesting items of many museums. In Turkey, even if the traveller may not have the chance to visit their capital Hattusa, the name of the Hittites greets him at every turn.". ARCHEOLOGY Anatolian civilizations Hittites Hittite Empire Capital of Hittites Hattusas.
A clean, unmarked book with a tight binding. 240 pages. In Near Fine maroon slipcase. Cover shows gilt decoration on full brown cloth boards. Map endpapers. Contents: Intoduction: The Discovery of the Hittites; Outline of History; Hittite State and Society; Life and Economy; Law and Institutions; Warfare; Language and Races; Religion; Literature; Art; Conclustion. Black and white photos.
New English Original bdg. HC. 4to. (28 x 20 cm). In English and Turkish. 169 p., color ills. The history of Phokaia.= Foça tarihi. The elderly king of Tartessos regarded the Phokaians with so much favour as, to beg them to quit Ionia and settle in whatever part of his country they liked. HerodotosThe Phokaians escaping the Persian invasion laid the heaviest curses on the man who should draw back and forsake the armament; and having dropped a heavy mass of iron into the sea, swore never to return to Phokaia till that mass reappeared upon the surface. Nevertheless, as they were preparing to depart for Cyrnus, more than half of their number were seized with such sadness and so great a longing to see once more their city and their ancient homes, that they broke the oath by which they had bound themselves and sailed back to Phokaia. HerodotosIt was possible to find any kind of job, there was bread there (.) Nobody knew what poverty meant. A Greek citizen of FocaPhokaia, having really fascinating natural formations, was no doubt, the most alluring and beautiful city of antiquity. Ord. Prof. Dr. Ekrem Akurgal. Foça for them was the blissful country of happy times in the past. Dr. Herkul Millas. Foça is a passion. Ahmet Vasfi Pekin.
New English Paperback. Pbo. Large roy. 8vo. (24 x 21 cm). In English. 273, [2] p., color ills. Contents: Ates Kadioglu, Messages from the President of Turkish Society of Andrology; The Editors, How was this book prepared?; Sengul Aydingün, The defication of female sexuality before written history (9000-2000 B.C.); Gaye Sahinbas Erginöz, The Hittites' knowledge of genital anatomy in the light of cuneiform tablets; Muammer Kendirci and Ates Kadioglu, Andrology on the Hittite cuneiform tablets"; Seda Karaöz Arihan, Female sexuality and fertility in ancient Asia Minor; Özgen Acar, Anatolia: The land of the 'Father God'; Muammer Kendirci, Ugur Boylu, Cengiz Miroglu, Andrologic surgery of the 15th century in Cerrhiyyetü'l Haniyye: Deniz Ozden, Human sexuality in Ottonam miniatures; Nil Sari and Bedüzel Zülfikar, Hubanname: The book of male beauties; Muammer Kendirci and Eyüp Gümüs, Bahname: Sex compendia of the Ottoman times; Muammer Kendirci and Cengiz Miroglu, The surgical and traditional history of circumcision in Anatolia; Muammer Kendirci and Kaya Horasanli, The prescriptions for the treatment of erectile dysfunction and loss of libido in the Ottoman period; Muammer Kendirci and Bulent Atay, The secrets of human sexuality in Marifetname. HISTORY OF MEDICINE Ottoman culture Medical Andrology Fertility Sexuality History of art Miniature.
Very Good Very Good English Original bdg. Duust wrapper. 4to. (33 x 24 cm). In English. 175 p., color photos and maps. The history in our seas. Sunken treasures of Turkey. Contents: Introduction / The beginnings of seafaring / The stories of two wrecks from the bronze age / Seafaring in ancient Greece / Roman seafaring / Byzantine seafaring / Seafaring from the Ottoman Empire to modern times / The mysterious disappearance of the Atilay / Virazon surveys / Institutions influential in the development of nautical archaeology in Turkey / The future of nautical archaeology in Turkey / The names of underwater equipment and other terms appearing in this book / Bibliography.
vi + 495pp. illustrated with 6 folding maps and 8 tables (of which 5 folding), 1st edition, 25cm., publisher's hardcover in blue cloth with gilt lettering on spine (few traces of use at ends), in the series "Royal Geographical Society. Supplementary Papers" volume IV, copy from the collection of the Belgian byzantinist prof. Justin Mossay (with stamp on t.p. and ex-librs), text clean and bright, good condition, X103396
New English Paperback. Pbo. 4to. (28 x 20 cm). In Turkish and abstract in English. [viii], 88 p., b/w and color ills. The historical development of coppersmithing in Trabzon.= Trabzon'da Türk bakircilik sanatinin tarihsel gelisimi.
New English Paperback. Pbo. Cr. 8vo. (21 x 12 cm). In English. 111, [2] p., color ills. A Diyarbakir City guide. The heart of Anatolia: Diyarbakir. Churches, inns, castles, houses, mosques, Turkish baths, caves, mandrasahs, prophet tombs etc.
New English Paperback. Pbo. Roy. 8vo. (24 x 17 cm). In English. [xii], 300 p. 230 b/w plts. The Hattian and Hittite civilizations.
Fine English Paperback. Demy 8vo. (21 x 15 cm). Edition in English. 173 p., 73 color plates. A capital of Lycia, Xanthos, and the federal sanctuary at Letoon have been under excavation by the French since 1951. On the 50th anniversary of the excavations an exhibition was held and these guides have been prepared by the head of the project, bringing together the results of the excavations at both sites. Designed for the visitors as well as those interested in archaeology - especially of Lycia with a peculiar culture of its own, it is a comprehensive guide covering both sites.
New English Paperback. Roy. 8vo. (24 x 17 cm). In English. 400 p., color ills. The guide to iconography in the rock-cut churches of Cappadocia. Cappadocia, the vast stretch of land located in central Turkey is home to surreal landscapes and a rich history of tribes and peoples making this unique land their own for more than 4000 years, starting with the assyrians. For decades, travelers and scholars have made their way to Cappadocia to enjoy the fantastic rock formations, explore underground cities and experience the many rock-cut cave churches revealing exquisitely-painted frescoes depicting scenes from the old and new testaments. This book describes and explains the iconography located within these spectacular ancient cave churches as well as a general reference guide to iconography.
New English Paperback. Pbo. Oblong small 4to. (19 x 30 cm). In English, Russian, and Ukrainian. 91 p. Color ills. Exhibition catalogue of Chersonesos grave steles. The gravestones of Chersonesos. Research and conservation.