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Academic literature on the topic 'Conditions économiques – Philippes (ville ancienne)'
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Conditions économiques – Philippes (ville ancienne)"
Peppa, Aikaterini. "La ville de Philippes de la période protobyzantine jusqu'au début de la période mésobyzantine : la contribution des données archéologiques de son théâtre après sa destruction." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Paris 1, 2022. http://www.theses.fr/2022PA01H140.
Full textThis study examines the transformation of the city of Philippi during the period which extends from the end of Late Antiquity until the beginning of the Middle Byzantine period (6th – 9th c.). It focuses on the Byzantine material culture, especially pottery, the settlement system patterns and the regional economic structures. Three levels of analysis are proposed to enable the study. Firstly, the analysis of pottery findings, one of the rare sources of information for this period, deepens substantially the understanding of the complex economic and social realities of that time. Secondly, special emphasis is put on the city itself. A synthesis of archaeological data from the Philippi site dated to the end of Late Antiquity provides new insights into the nature of the structures in the urban landscape. Finally, the topographic corpus of the region encompassing the rivers Strymon and Nestos allows for comparisons the phenomena observed in Philippi and those of the neighboring habitats
Laüt, Laure. "L'espace rural antique autour d'argentomagus (Indre) : approche d'une région agricole et métallurgique." Paris 1, 1994. http://www.theses.fr/1994PA010621.
Full textThis work deals with the arrangement of the rural ancient space. Within a radius of twenty kilometres around the small town of argentomagus (Saint-Marcel, Indre). Four elements of the landscape are studied: roads, networks of parcels, dwelling places and, iron and steel workshops, which are very numerous in this area. Several methods have been used: study of vertical aerial photographs of the national geographic institue (ign), aerial surveys, oral inquiries and ground focused and systematic surveys. 283 sites are known today, 40% of them were discovered between 1990 and 1993. Thanks to the comparison of the diverse types of settlements, the organisation of this rural area is nowadays better known; it is especially true for the links between agriculture and metallurgy, which can be mixed or not. Traces of several networks of parcels have also been found. During the whole roman period, the evolutions of argentomagus and of its surrounding area often appear linked. The local economy, especially the iron and steel industry, was certainly organised by the town, where a factory of weapons was established during the late roman empire
Monteix, Nicolas. "Les lieux de métier : boutiques et ateliers d'Herculanum." Aix-Marseille 1, 2006. http://www.theses.fr/2006AIX10043.
Full textSchoevaert, Julien. "Les boutiques d'Ostie du 1er siècle av. J-C au 5e siècle apr. J-C : l'économie urbaine au quotidien." Paris 7, 2013. http://www.theses.fr/2013PA070044.
Full textThis study deals with the shops of Ostia from the 1st c. B. C. To the 5th c. A. D. Our researches led us to have a reflexion about the part played by shops in the urban, social and economical transformation of Ostia during this period. Archaeological survey and archives bring us a lot of information on shops. They have been mainly built during the 2nd c. A. D. , after the building of the Trajan basin of Portus. This development is linked with the lot of insulae that have been built during this time. Shops decline begins during the middle of the 3rd c. A. D. Shops may be linked with other economical structures such as storehouses, markets, workshops. From the beginning of the 3rd c. A. D. , shops grew in importance while harbour activities were declining. At last, shops have played an important part in the shaping and the evolution of urban territories
Cayla, Jean-Baptiste. "Les inscriptions de Paphos : Corpus des inscriptions alphabétiques de Palaipaphos, de Néa Paphos et de la chôra paphienne." Paris 4, 2003. http://www.theses.fr/2003PA040163.
Full textThis work gathers, introduces and comments about three hundred and fifty texts of Hellenistic and Roman period. They consist mostly of honorific inscriptions or dedicaces engraved on the bases of statues erected in the sanctuary of the Paphian Aphrodite. They constituted an exhibition fot the elite as well as a conspicuous collection showing the prestige of the city. Other documents have been yielded during excavations in Nea Paphos, chief city of the island from the IInd century B. C. Until Imperial period, or have been found in different locations of the Paphian chôra. These inscriptions give an outline of the city, illustrating its ties with the Ptolemies and, later, with the Roman power. They give various information about Paphian society, about cults and local priests, about ptolemaic court and officers, about the numerous military troups of the IInd century B. C. Or about Roman administration. Focusing on cults and institutions, attempt is made to understand the links between local cults and the cult of the sovereigns and, also, to make clear the nature of Paphian polis and the modality of its romanization. Almost all the texts have been verified on stones or squeezes, which allowed the author not to be dependent upon previous works, especially those of T. B. Mitford. New readings and dates are suggested, leading sometimes to a new interpretation. Some inscriptions give particularly a new light on the first century B. C history of the island. At last, this corpus must be chiefly seen as a tool and includes precise indices and many photographs
Tsilogianni, Panagiota. "Le matériel amphorique du sud-ouest de la Grèce et le commerce maritime sans le Péloponèse à l'époque hellénistique et romaine." Paris 1, 2011. http://www.theses.fr/2011PA010538.
Full textColonna, d'Istria Laurent. "Evolution des traditions culturelles dans la vallée du moyen Euphrate de la fin du Bronze Ancien au début du Bronze Moyen." Thesis, Lyon 2, 2009. http://www.theses.fr/2009LYO20108.
Full textThe valley of the Middle Euphrates, hyphen between South Mesopotamia and Western Syria, was ruled by a šakkanakku lived in Mari (Tell Hariri, Syria) during the end of the third millennium and early second millennium. This time period named "šakkanakku-period" is particularly studied since twenty years An overview of archaeological and historical data from the Middle Euphrates valley during the time of šakkanakku suggest that the kingdom of Mari during that time has established itself as a power independent and prosperous until the 19th century (end of the time of šakkanakku) where data are less explicit historically. The new text data from Mari, and Terqa (north of Mari), of the most dated from the end of šakkanakku-period, shows continuance and ruptures between the end of šakkanakku-period and the next period ("Amorite-period"). This continuance and ruptures are examined in several areas such as language, "scribal tradition" or in the legal tradition. The dialect of this text (19th century) shows that linguistic tradition is deeply rooted in the universe Syria. After the advent of the Amorite Yahdun-Lim who ended the time of the šakkanakku the Syrian characteristics in the dialect remains present, but it is less important because a reform of writing modeled on southern Mesopotamia (Iraq current), probably due to the preponderance of political Ešnunna during the end of the 19th century. Finally, this new text has also allowed dealing the historical interaction of the last šakkanakku Mari with condottieri Amorite whose father Yahdun-Lim in the 19th century
Popova, Olga. "Étude d'une archive d'une famille de notables de la ville d'Ur du VIe au IVe siècle av. J.-C. : l'archive des Gallābu." Thesis, Paris 1, 2018. http://www.theses.fr/2018PA01H036.
Full textThis work presents the first complete and annotated edition of the texts from the Gallabu family archive, from the city of Ur in southern Babylonia. It is a family of prebendaries-barbers that left the longest known private archive in the first century BC. Documents of the archive cover over 260 years and include Neo-Babylonian, Achaemenid, and Hellenistic periods. The thesis provides an insight into the nature of the Gallabu archive and examines the history of the family and its heritage. The family of Gallabu is considered within a political and socio-economic context in order to study different aspects of the socio-economic life of the urban elite of the city of Ur in the first millennium BC, the second most important city in southern Babylonia at the time