1,893,154 research outputs found

    Roman-Lopes, A.

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    Lopes' lullaby /

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    Brasil precisa de estratégia nacional para a bioeconomia, diz Maurício Antônio Lopes.

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    O engenheiro agrônomo, pesquisador e ex-presidenta da Embrapa, Maurício Antônio Lopes, defende que o Brasil, país com a maior diversidade biológica do planeta, adote uma estratégia de longo prazo para a bioeconomia, área em que a nação pode se tornar uma potência global.Entrevista

    After Sulla: study in the settlement and material culture of the Piraeus peninsula in the Roman and Late Roman period

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    Modem text-based and ancient historical accounts take the sack of Piraeus, the port of Athens in Greece, by the Romans under Sulla in 86 ВС as the terminal point of the history of the area in antiquity. Archaeological work on the town has tended so far to regard the post-Classical phases of the settlement as less interesting than those marking the 'heyday' of the port in the Classical period. This thesis explores the nature and scale of settlement in the area in the centuries spanning the town's destruction by the Romans in 86 ВС and the Late Roman period. The study is based on a re-assessment of archaeological data from old and recent rescue excavations in the modem town up to 1997. It also presents and discusses in detail the results of post-excavation work by the author on unpublished material from an extensive site excavated in the early 1980s, These results are compared to and synthesized with epigraphic and other testimonies to answer questions about the nature of settlement and the degree of social and cultural change in the area during the period in focus. The discussion focuses in particular on; 1) exploring continuity and change in the settlement patterns, demography and topography of the town, 2) the changing nature of domestic space and its organization, and 3) investigating patterns of pottery consumption and trade. These issues are examined in the context of the social, economic and cultural changes documented for the Roman imperial and Late Roman period by previous archaeological fieldwork and excavations in the region of southern Greece and the Aegean

    A re-examination of the evidence for parade-grounds at auxiliary forts in Roman Britain

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    This Thesis examines the underlying evidence for parade-grounds at auxiliary forts in Roman Britain. Firstly by examining the evidence supporting forts with actual physical remains, such as the altars and the tribunal at Maryport and the artificially levelled area at Hardknott, and those with flagged areas which have been interpreted as parade-grounds, such as Ambleside and Gelligaer. The literary evidence of ancient authors is examined with particular reference to training and exercising and where this might have been undertaken. The occasions when a parade might have been appropriate in Roman times are examined, as is the possibility of a modem concept being superimposed on an ancient action

    Roman Bridge

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    general view, Roman bridge crossing a modern bridge, (which represents one of the dominant characters of Lebanon, a marriage of the past and present) , 198

    Roman road system in Portugal

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    <p>This dataset is a compilation of data collected by Soutinho, P. (2019).</p> <p>Road network used in the Roman period. Dataset includes roads/ways but also information about milestones, bridges, vici, villae, etc. </p> <p><em>Roman road system in Portugal</em> by Nelson Gonçalves (Alfobre.com), available under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0) at A-GeoCat (https://projetoalfobre.github.io/a-geocat/). This work is based on data by Soutinho, P. (2019), Vias Romanas em Portugal; available at <a href="https://viasromanas.pt/">www.viasromanas.pt</a></p><p>This data was harvested a while ago (12/4/2019). Meanwhile, the original data has been updated several times but there’s no free/open access, you need to contact the original author.</p> <p> </p> <h3>Original sources</h3> <p>Original data was harvested from website <a href="https://viasromanas.pt/">Vias Romanas em Portugal (Portuguese roman ways)</a>.</p> <p>Original datasets by Soutinho, P. (2019), Vias Romanas em Portugal; available at <a href="https://viasromanas.pt/">www.viasromanas.pt</a> (Retrieved 12-04-2019)</p> <p> </p&gt

    "Fred Riley Pick-Up"

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    "Fred Riley Pick-up"- J. A. Lopes describes Air America operations in Thailand and the retrieval of Fred Riley from hostile territory

    Vaison-la-Romaine [Roman site]

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    View of a niche with statue of Hadrian; Vaison-la-Romaine (Latin: Vasio Vocontiorum) is a small town and former bishopric in Provence. After the Roman conquest (125-118 BCE) the Vocontii retained a certain degree of autonomy; they had two capitals, Luc-en-Diois (in modern Drôme département), apparently the religious center, and Vaison. Their continued authority in the gradual Romanization of the Celtic oppidum meant that the city plan incurred no disruptive re-founding along rigid Roman orthography. The city's modern archaeologist Christian Goudineau has suggested that early examples were set by Vocontian aristocrats who moved down from the oppidum and established villas along the river, around which the Gallo-Roman city accreted. In the Roman period it became one of the richest cities of Gallia Narbonensis, with numerous geometric mosaic pavements, a fine small theatre on a rocky hillslope, probably built during the reign of Tiberius, whose statue was found in a prominent place on its site. The Polyclitan Diadumenos now in the British Museum was discovered in the theatre in the nineteenth century. The barbarian invasions were presaged by a pillaging and burning in 276, from which Roman Vasio recovered, but in the fifth century the benches of the theatre began to be reused as Christian tombstones Source: Wikipedia; http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page (accessed 7/17/2008
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