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         Italy Archaeology:     more books (100)
  1. Patterns of Imports in Iron Age Italy (British Archaeological Reports International Series) by R. N. Fletcher, 2008-01-15
  2. The City and Complexity: Volterra, Italy: Pottery Production During the Hellenistic Etruscan Period and the Late Roman to Late Antique Period (Bar International) by Rae Ostman, 2004-01
  3. Sunken cities and temples of Baia (Underwater archaeology in Naples exploration series) by Raul Botello, 1988
  4. Mycenean Pottery in Italy and Adjacent Areas (Museum of Archaeology) by William Taylour, 1958-01-02
  5. Papers in Italian Archaeology VI: Communities and Settlements from the Neolithic to the Early Medieval Period: Proceedings of the 6th Conference of It (British Archaeological Reports International S.)
  6. The Forum Romanum,: And the Via Sacra, (His Archaeology of Rome) by John Henry Parker, 1876
  7. Roman archaeology (Science program) by Felix Barker, 1967
  8. Roman Italy (Exploring the Roman World, Vol 1) by T. W. Potter, 1987-07-29
  9. Domestic Space in the Roman World: Pompeii & Beyond (Journal of Roman Archaeology Supplementary Series #22) by R. Laurence, 1997-04
  10. The Nile Mosaic of Palestrina: Early Evidence of Egyptian Religion in Italy (Religions in the Graeco-Roman World) (Religions in the Graeco-Roman World) by P. G. P. Meyboom, 1997-08-01
  11. Roman Children's Sarcophagi: Their Decoration and Its Social Significance (Oxford Monographs on Classical Archaeology) by Janet Huskinson, 1996-07-25
  12. Recent Social Trends in Italy, 1960-1995: Alberto Martinelli, Antonio M. Chiesi, and Sonia Stefanizzi (Comparative Charting of Social Change) by Alberto Martinelli, Antonio M. Chiesi, et all 1999-09
  13. Ancient Italy
  14. The Monuments of Italy: A Regional Survey of Art, Architecture and Archeology from Classical to Modern Times by Michael Oppenheimer, 2002-05-03

101. Odessa Museum Of Archaeology. Archaeological Sites Of Ancient Italy.
• Official Home Page the Odessa State Archaeologic Museum• • HOSTE D B Y FARLEP . NET • • Pagemaster designDVGstudio •.
http://www.arhaeology.farlep.odessa.ua/menuen/italyen/

designDVGstudio

designDVGstudio

102. Sicily Archaeological Tour: Sicily, Italy, Europe, Mediterranean, Archaeology, H
You are here Home » Europe » italy » Sicily Archaeological Tour, Trip Listing Service,
http://www.infohub.com/TRAVEL/SIT/sit_pages/7042.html
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Weekend Getaways Backroad CityEscape Unique Stays Castle Hotel Eco Lodge Outdoors Fishing Lodge Guest Ranch Hunting Lodge Resorts Diving Golf Naturist Spa Are you interested? This is tour is no longer offered by InfoHub. To find similar tours or other tours available, click for more information.
Sicily Archaeological Tour
Please, note! This Tour is no longer offered by InfoHub. Find similar tours here
A 15 day archaeological tour exploring Sicily
Your Itinerary
Day 1:
1st Day /Saturday : PALERMO: Transfer on your own to your hotel. Welcome cocktail and orientation meeting with your tour escort. Dinner and overnight at your hotel. D
Day 2:
2nd Day/Sun : PALERMO – SEGESTA – ERICE – MARSALA After breakfast, depart for Segesta to visit the Doric Temple of the 5th century BC. and the Greek Theater. Lunch on your own in Erice and visit the medieval town. Proceed to Trapani stopping for wine tasting and a visit in Trapani to the Salt Museum with its mines and ancient windmills. Dinner and overnight at your hotel in Marsala. B D
Day 3:
3rd Day/Mon : MARSALA – MOTHIA – SELINUNTE – AGRIGENTO: After breakfast depart by boat to Mothia Island, the most important Phoenician colony in Sicily. Then continue to Cusa quarry. Lunch in Selinunte in a typical seafood restaurant. Visit the Acropolis and proceed to Agrigento. Dinner at your hotel and visit by coach to the lighted Temples.

103. Archaeological And Artistic Sites Of Sardinia - Encyclopedia Article About Archa
Suelli; Su Mulinu; Su Pranu; Su Tempiesu; Tamuli; Tergu; Tharros; Thiesi; Thomes; Tiscali Archaeological village of Nuragici people, in Sardinia, italy.
http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/Archaeological and artistic sites of S
Dictionaries: General Computing Medical Legal Encyclopedia
Archaeological and artistic sites of Sardinia
Word: Word Starts with Ends with Definition Archaeological and artistic sites of Sardinia Sardinia Sardigna Sardinna or Sardinnia in the Sardinian language, Sardegna in Italian, Sardenya in Catalan), is an island in the Mediterranean Sea, between Italy, France and Tunisia, south of Corsica. Sardinia has an area of 24,090 km and a population of 1.65 million. It was called "Ichnusa" by the Phoenicians and "Sandalyon" by the Greeks because of its shape, recalling a footprint.
Click the link for more information.
  • Acquafredda near Siliqua The siliqua is the modern name given to small, thin, Roman silver coins produced from 4th century AD and later. The term siliqua comes from the siliqua graeca , the seed of the carob tree, which in the Roman weight system is equivalent to 1/6 of a scruple (1/1728 of a Roman pound or about 0.19 grams). The term has been applied to the various silver coins on the premise that the coins
    Click the link for more information.

104. Sicily Archaeological Tour - Italy Tours
Sicily Archaeological Tour Land Only package 15 days / 14 nights valid for travels between April - October 2004. Itinerary Visit the Archaeological Museum.
http://www.academictours.com/sicily/arch.html
Contact Us About Us
Tel: (212) 430-6387 or (800) 875-9171 Special Offers Sicily Archaeology Tour Sicilian Fantasy Tour Sicilian Carousel Tour ... Contact Us Sicily Archaeological Tour: Land Only package - 15 days / 14 nights:
valid for travels between April - October 2004 Itinerary: Day One Saturday - PALERMO : Transfer on your own to your hotel. Welcome cocktail and orientation meeting with your tour escort. Dinner and overnight at your hotel. (D)
Day Twon Sunday - PALERMO, SEGESTA, ERICE, MARSALA: After breakfast, depart for Segesta to visit the Doric Temple of the 5th century BC. and the Greek Theater. Lunch on your own in Erice and visit of the medieval town. Proceed to Trapani stopping for wine tasting and a visit in Trapani to the Salt Museum with its mines and ancient windmills. Dinner and overnight at your hotel in Marsala. (B, D)
Day Three Monday - MARSALA, MOTHIA, SELINUNTE, AGRIGENTO: After breakfast depart by boat to Mothia Island; the most important Phoenician colony in Sicily. Then continue to Cusa quarry. Lunch on your own in Selinunte. Visit the Acropolis and proceed to Agrigento. Dinner at your hotel followed by a visit to the lighted Temples. Return to your hotel. (B, D)
Day Four Tuesday - AGRIGENTO, PIAZZA ARMERINA, CALTAGIRONE, S.M. GANZARIA:

105. Directory Of Historical Holidays And Archaeological Tours
From cookery, preserving mushrooms or experiencing rural life to exclusive escorted archaeological tours and creative short breaks in italy and the UK.
http://www.travel-quest.co.uk/tqsinterest-hist.htm
..... historical tours and archaeological holidays and vacations .....
Historical tours and archaeological courses, holidays and vacations Ð archaeological tours, digs, genealogy and family history, battlefield and war tours, historical tours and vintage events.
Main search page
Latest travel news
New additions

Editorials
... Contact travel-quest
HISTORICAL / ARCHAEOLOGICAL
archeological digs

archaeological tours

battlefield tours / war graves tours

genealogy / family history
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vintage events
ALSO TRY: geological if you want to go way back in history sacred sites native peoples Return to full list
archaeological digs
Lindum Heritage based: Lincolnshire, UK website: www.lindumheritage.co.uk Quality short breaks focused on archaeology and history, small groups, practical activities.
archaeological tours
Ancient World Tours Ltd based: London, UK

106. TAY-Hello
The TAY Project, The Archaeological Settlements of Turkey, has won the Counts in Sustainable Development , 47 October 1999, Florence, italy, organized jointly
http://www.tayproject.org/enghome.html
This site designed by
Irfan Sayar
Today:
Last update:
v.7.6
We have settled down...
o 03' 44.8" N – 29 o 02' 24.5" E

TAY Project Visual Archive presents;
Ten thousand and thirty photographs…
Now TAY website,
hosts 10,030 photographs
linked to 2036 settlements.
…new server The Inventory of the Archaeological Settlements of Turkey is from now on being published and updated with our new server. "The C Database of Archaeological Settlements in Turkey", which has been out for two months in print, is now also available for use online. To reach the dates from the settlements or vice versa just click on the Database link... TAYEx TV Only in Turkish) Marmara Aegean Mediterranean SE Anatolia ... Eastern Anatolia Destruction on Field Only in Turkish) Informant Line Only in Turkish) The TAY Archeological Settlements of Turkey Project has been designed to build a chronological inventory of findings about the cultural heritage of Turkey - an important component of the world cultural heritage - and to share this information with the international community. Although Anatolia and Thrace hold cultural traces dating back at least 400,000 years, neither the results of early investigations that started in the first half of the 19th century, nor the data generated by current surveys and excavations are well organized or easily accessible. Locations of many sites are unknown, and many of them have been destroyed or are being destroyed at this very moment. The most important step we have to take to stop this process is to collect and compile cultural heritage information to establish a central inventory: if we can not document, we can not protect. With this project, all archaeological settlements of Turkey (mounds, monuments, tumuli, cemeteries, etc.) are being thoroughly documented.

107. Untitled Document
Maps and images from this Bronze Age through Archaic Period site.
http://www.arts.usyd.edu.au/departs/archaeology/Projects/Robinson/Fani/

108. ROMARCH: Roman Art And Archaeology

http://www.umich.edu/~pfoss/ROMARCH.html
The ROMARCH pages are the original crossroads for Web resources on the art and archaeology of early Italy and the Roman world, from the earliest settlements to Late Antiquity. ROMARCH is now hosted by DePauw University, at: http://acad.depauw.edu/romarch/ . The site originated in the Department of Classics and the Interdepartmental Program in Classical Art and Archaeology (IPCAA) at the University of Michigan, and grew at the Department of Classics at the University of Cincinnati, and at Stanford University (see credits I. TABLE OF CONTENTS material updated March 5, 1999
  • Information about how to join and use the new Internet listserv
    'rome-arch', now at ONElist from April 1, 2000 onwards
    • Backlist of electronic discussions (from April 1, 1995 - April 1 2000) Threads of bibliographies, discussions, conference, job and fieldwork announcements (from April 1, 1995 - May 1 1998)
    Geographic list and clickable map of Internet resources, including:
    • News of recent discoveries in Roman art and archaeology The Journal of Roman Archaeology Ethics Learn about archaeological ethics, and what you can do to preserve our historical heritage
  • 109. Museo Civico Archeologico

    http://www.comune.bologna.it/bologna/Musei/Archeologico/
    Attenzione, fra cinque secondi verrete indirizzati verso il nuovo indirizzo del Museo Civico Archeologico: http://www.comune.bologna.it/museoarcheologico/

    110. Le Radici Della Memoria
    Archaeological Resources in Sardinia page. Le radici della memoria. Presentazione.
    http://www.crs4.it/HTML/RUGGIERO/MUSEO/mus_ind.html
    Museo Archeologico
    Nazionale di Cagliari
    Check also the new "Archaeological Resources in Sardinia" page
    Le radici della memoria
    Presentazione
    Le prime tracce della presenza umana in Sardegna, costituite da strumenti realizzati su grandi schegge, risalgono al Paleolitico Inferiore (500.000 - 100.000). Si conoscono anche materiali del Paleolitico Superiore (35.000-10.000 a.C.) mentre mancano, ad oggi, testimonianze del Paleolitico Medio.
    cardiale , dall'uso ricorrente di decorare i vasi prima della cottura con il bordo di una conchiglia ( cardium edule Nel Neolitico Recente si inquadra la cultura di Ozieri (3.500-2.700 a.C. ) documentata in insediamenti in grotta, in villaggi all'aperto e in tombe scavate nella roccia ( domus de janas ). Nell'Eneolitico Antico (2.700-2.500 a.C.), oltre agli esiti finali di cultura Ozieri si collocano gli aspetti culturali di Filigosa e Abealzu, caratterizzati rispettivamente da tazze carenate a profilo rigido e da vasi a fiasco e con bozze mammillari. L'Eneolitico Evoluto (2.500 - 2.000 a.C.) vede il diffondersi della cultura di Monte Claro che si ritrova in villaggi in necropoli a domus de janas e in grotte funerarie. Nell'Eneolitico Finale (2.000-1800 a.C.) si diffonde la corrente culturale Campaniforme nota esclusivamente da contesti funerari, soprattutto

    111. Welcome, Aosta, Hotel Aosta, Hotels Aosta, Hospitality Aosta, Lodge Aosta, Lodge
    Aosta.
    http://www.italyone.com/Welcome/Valdaosta/Monteemilius/Aosta/index.uk.html

    Aosta Valley
    Aosta
    Accommodation Restaurants Museums Train Timetable Aosta, heart of the region of Aosta Valley, regional capital, institutional centre, cultural and touristic centre.
    Roman town, medieaval, neo-classicist, but also a modern town, it lives in the present and looks forward to the future at the same time clinging on to its solid roots.
    Hier to a great artistic heritage and knows how to combine tourism with culture, giving the correct value to its architectural patrimony, its particularities and its humane resources. It is lively during the day whilst looking towards the "Valdosane" mountains at dusk there is a touch of romanticism.
    Aosta, a town to discover.
    Datatravel Srl

    112. UBVU

    http://www.ubvu.vu.nl/afdeling/geschied/archeol/netarch.htm

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