Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 78
pro vyhledávání: '"Ian Haynes"'
Autor:
Rebecca Guiney, Elettra Santucci, Samuel Valman, Adam Booth, Andrew Birley, Ian Haynes, Stuart Marsh, Jon Mills
Publikováno v:
ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information, Vol 10, Iss 9, p 575 (2021)
Climate change poses an imminent physical risk to cultural heritage sites and their surrounding landscape through intensifying environmental processes such as damaging wetting and drying cycles that disrupt archaeological preservation conditions, and
Externí odkaz:
https://doaj.org/article/aefb81ac676a48d29734a2a05d682177
Publikováno v:
Peuce, Vol 10, Pp 101-144 (2012)
This paper presents lamps and selected vessels from Mahmudia. The pieces discussed come both from recent excavations at the site of Salsovia and from a collection held by the village school. The paper begins with a discussion of the written evidence
Externí odkaz:
https://doaj.org/article/9137becb5b9a4e8e8de0653e30d91ae4
Non-Intrusive Methodologies for Large Area Urban Research brings together contributions from a conference held in 2021 in association with the ERC-funded ‘Rome Transformed'research project. The papers address a major challenge in archaeology. Non-i
London's archaeology is as complex and varied as the city is today. These seventeen papers survey twenty-five years of London archaeology in the city and its environs from prehistory to 1800.
Autor:
Ian Haynes
Blood of the Provinces is the first fully comprehensive study of the largest part of the Roman army, the auxilia. This non-citizen force constituted more than half of Rome's celebrated armies and was often the military presence in some of its territo
Autor:
Ian Haynes
Publikováno v:
Scottish Archaeological Journal. 43:106-109
Publikováno v:
Papers of the British School at Rome. 88:350-354
Publikováno v:
Papers of the British School at Rome 88 (2020): 354–357. doi:10.1017/S0068246220000094
Papers of the British School at Rome
info:cnr-pdr/source/autori:Haynes, Ian (1); Liverani, Paolo (2); Kay, Stephen (3); Piro, Salvatore (4); Ravasi, Thea (1); Carboni, Francesca (1)/titolo:ROME TRANSFORMED: RESEARCHING THE EASTERN CAELIAN C1-C8 CE (ROME)/doi:10.1017%2FS0068246220000094/rivista:Papers of the British School at Rome/anno:2020/pagina_da:354/pagina_a:357/intervallo_pagine:354–357/volume:88
Papers of the British School at Rome
info:cnr-pdr/source/autori:Haynes, Ian (1); Liverani, Paolo (2); Kay, Stephen (3); Piro, Salvatore (4); Ravasi, Thea (1); Carboni, Francesca (1)/titolo:ROME TRANSFORMED: RESEARCHING THE EASTERN CAELIAN C1-C8 CE (ROME)/doi:10.1017%2FS0068246220000094/rivista:Papers of the British School at Rome/anno:2020/pagina_da:354/pagina_a:357/intervallo_pagine:354–357/volume:88
'Rome Transformed: Interdisciplinary analysis of political, military, and religious regenerations of the city's forgotten quarter C1-C8 CE' launched on 1 October 2019. The project is funded as an Advanced Grant by the European Research Council (ERC)
Autor:
Ian Haynes, Paolo Liverani, Francesca Carboni, Thea Ravasi, Stephen Kay, Salvatore Piro, Gianfranco Morelli
Publikováno v:
Papers of the British School at Rome (Online) 90 (2022): 337–341. doi:10.1017/S0068246222000058
Previous reports (Haynes et al., 2020; 2021) have summarised progress on ROMETRANS, the ERC-funded research project 'Rome Transformed: interdisciplinary analysis of political, military, and religious regenerations of the city's forgotten quarter C1-C
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::5c4b8ad6f378b25d3cd4e736d467d61d
https://openportal.ispc.cnr.it/doc?id=people______::0acaaa5f7d4c25d76da4e21083899a51
https://openportal.ispc.cnr.it/doc?id=people______::0acaaa5f7d4c25d76da4e21083899a51
Autor:
Andrew Birley, Rebecca Guiney, Jon P. Mills, Elettra Santucci, Samuel Valman, Ian Haynes, Stuart Marsh, Adam Booth
Publikováno v:
ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information
Volume 10
Issue 9
ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information, Vol 10, Iss 575, p 575 (2021)
Volume 10
Issue 9
ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information, Vol 10, Iss 575, p 575 (2021)
Climate change poses an imminent physical risk to cultural heritage sites and their surrounding landscape through intensifying environmental processes such as damaging wetting and drying cycles that disrupt archaeological preservation conditions, and
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::8984feae2275aa32d72433ae775eae79