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Ancient Sardis, the capital of Lydia, was of outstanding
importance: in the Lydian period it held the residence of the kings
and subsequently, under Persian rule, the satraps. Throughout
antiquity it remained an administrative center. Travelers of modern
times and archaeological excavations have revealed, from the city
site and its surroundings, inscriptions written mostly in Greek,
some in Latin. Their texts deal with all kinds of subjects:
decrees, public honors, civil and sacred laws, letters, epitaphs,
and more. In the corpus "Sardis VII 1" (1932) W. H. Buckler and D.
M. Robinson published all inscriptions (228 items) known up to
1922, after which year excavation at Sardis came to a halt because
of the Greek-Turkish war. Since excavation resumed in 1958, a
portion of the Greek and Latin inscriptions has been published in
various, widely scattered places; another portion, containing
important texts discovered during the last ten years, was until now
unpublished. The aim of this monograph is to present in a
comprehensive corpus the entire epigraphic harvest (485 items) made
in Sardis and its territory since 1958. Each inscription is
accompanied by a description of the monument, bibliography,
translation, and commentary; indices, concordances, photographs,
and maps complement the collection.
The past few years have seen the release of "Twilight Zone" scripts
by principal writers Rod Serling, Charles Beaumont, Richard
Matheson, and Earl Hamner. With this publication, all but a few of
the scripts from the original series will be in print. This
distinguished pair of volumes also includes critical commentary and
biographical information about the writers of these marvelous old
tales. This volume contains: "The Incredible World of Horace Ford"
by Reginald Rose "What's In the Box" by Martin M. Goldsmith "The
Encounter" by Martin M. Goldsmith "Number 12 Looks Just Like You"
by John Tomerlin "Dreamflight" by William F. Nolan and George
Clayton Johnson (unproduced) "Come Wander With Me" by Anthony
Wilson
This much-anticipated publication of two major Lydian excavation
sectors at Sardis is the first in-depth presentation of the
architecture and associated pottery and other artifacts found in
the houses of inhabitants of this legendary city. It traces
continuous occupation outside the city walls from the Late Bronze
Age to the middle of the sixth century BC, when the Persians under
Cyrus the Great captured the capital city of King Croesus. This
book represents a remarkable synthesis of a vast quantity of
everyday materials into a vivid picture of daily life in early
Sardis in the period when the Lydians were conquering most of
western Turkey. The authors describe many small structures and a
wealth of artifacts that collectively document the lives of
ordinary Lydians, in what appear to be both domestic and craft
contexts. Because the Lydians maintained cultural and economic
contacts throughout the eastern Mediterranean and the Near East,
scholars working in Greece, Anatolia, and the Near East will find
this first presentation of Lydian pottery and other objects, as
well as vernacular architecture, of great interest and value. The
two-volume book discusses the chronology, history, and evidence of
everyday life, and catalogues nearly 800 objects, illustrated by
more than 300 color plates of photos and detailed drawings.
This generously illustrated volume, honoring Crawford H.
Greenewalt, Jr., field director of the Sardis Expedition for over
thirty years, and commemorating the fiftieth anniversary of the
Harvard- Cornell archaeological excavation, presents new studies by
scholars closely involved with Professor Greenewalt's excavations
at this site in western Turkey. The essays span the Archaic to the
Late Antique periods, focusing primarily on Sardis itself but also
touching on other archaeological sites in the eastern
Mediterranean. Three papers publish for the first time an Archaic
painted tomb near Sardis with lavish interior furnishings. Papers
on Sardis in late antiquity focus on domestic wall paintings,
spolia used in the late Roman Synagogue, and late fifth-century
coin hoards. Other Sardis papers examine the layout of the city
from the Lydian to the Roman periods, the transformation of Sardis
from an imperial capital to a Hellenistic polis, the reuse of
pottery in the Lydian period, and the history and achievements of
the conservation program at the site. Studies of an Archaic seal
from Gordion, queenly patronage of Hellenistic rotundas, and
ancient and modern approaches to architectural ornament round out
the volume.
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