Zobrazeno 1 - 3
of 3
pro vyhledávání: '"Amphores gréco-italiques"'
Autor:
Sabastia, Alex
The Grande Passe 1 shipwreck lies 45 m deep off the coast of Porquerolles Island, Hyères, southern France. Discovered in 1975, new fieldwork campaigns in 2017 and 2018 brought to light a part of the hull (keel, planking, frames), indications of its
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=openedition_::00a141c12dafb39358f7f3c60eb94843
http://journals.openedition.org/archaeonautica/1323
http://journals.openedition.org/archaeonautica/1323
Autor:
Alex Sabastia
Publikováno v:
Open sea, closed sea: local and inter-regional traditions in shipbuilding proceedings of the fifteenth International symposium on boat and ship archaeology, Marseilles, [22-27 October] 2018
Boetto Giulia; Pomey Patrice; Poveda Pierre. Open sea, closed sea: local and inter-regional traditions in shipbuilding proceedings of the fifteenth International symposium on boat and ship archaeology, Marseilles, [22-27 October] 2018, CNRS Editions, pp.161-166, 2021, Archaeonautica, 978-2-271-12972-7
HAL
Open sea, closed sea: local and inter-regional traditions in shipbuilding proceedings of the fifteenth International symposium on boat and ship archaeology (ISBSA 15), Marseilles, [22-27 October] 2018
Boetto Giulia; Pomey Patrice; Poveda Pierre. Open sea, closed sea: local and inter-regional traditions in shipbuilding proceedings of the fifteenth International symposium on boat and ship archaeology (ISBSA 15), Marseilles, [22-27 October] 2018, CNRS Editions, pp.161-166, 2021, Archaeonautica, 978-2-271-12972-7
Open Sea | Closed Sea Local and Inter-Regional Traditions in Shipbuilding : Proceedings of the Fifteenth International Symposiumon Boat and Ship Archaeology, Marseilles, Oct. 2018
Boetto Giulia; Pomey Patrice; Poveda Pierre. Open Sea | Closed Sea Local and Inter-Regional Traditions in Shipbuilding : Proceedings of the Fifteenth International Symposium on Boat and Ship Archaeology, Marseilles, Oct. 2018, 21, CNRS Editions, pp.161-166, 2021, Archaeonautica, 978-2-271-12972-7
Boetto Giulia; Pomey Patrice; Poveda Pierre. Open sea, closed sea: local and inter-regional traditions in shipbuilding proceedings of the fifteenth International symposium on boat and ship archaeology, Marseilles, [22-27 October] 2018, CNRS Editions, pp.161-166, 2021, Archaeonautica, 978-2-271-12972-7
HAL
Open sea, closed sea: local and inter-regional traditions in shipbuilding proceedings of the fifteenth International symposium on boat and ship archaeology (ISBSA 15), Marseilles, [22-27 October] 2018
Boetto Giulia; Pomey Patrice; Poveda Pierre. Open sea, closed sea: local and inter-regional traditions in shipbuilding proceedings of the fifteenth International symposium on boat and ship archaeology (ISBSA 15), Marseilles, [22-27 October] 2018, CNRS Editions, pp.161-166, 2021, Archaeonautica, 978-2-271-12972-7
Open Sea | Closed Sea Local and Inter-Regional Traditions in Shipbuilding : Proceedings of the Fifteenth International Symposiumon Boat and Ship Archaeology, Marseilles, Oct. 2018
Boetto Giulia; Pomey Patrice; Poveda Pierre. Open Sea | Closed Sea Local and Inter-Regional Traditions in Shipbuilding : Proceedings of the Fifteenth International Symposium on Boat and Ship Archaeology, Marseilles, Oct. 2018, 21, CNRS Editions, pp.161-166, 2021, Archaeonautica, 978-2-271-12972-7
The Grande Passe 1 shipwreck lies 45 m deep off the coast of Porquerolles Island, Hyères, southern France. Discovered in 1975, new fieldwork campaigns in 2017 and 2018 brought to light a part of the hull (keel, planking, frames), indications of its
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::a6926df167885d85b85d4fc0517740f3
https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03381855
https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03381855
Autor:
André Tchernia
Publikováno v:
Pallas. 50:101-105
A new interpretation is here suggested for the inscriptions in Iberian writing painted on Greco-italic amphorae found at Vieille-Toulouse (Haute- Garonne) in several funerary wells dating to the second quarter of the second century BC. The names ment