Hi there
Some items of possible interest from the Academia.edu Weekly Digest [noreply@academia-mail.com]
I have no idea if people can easily access these or already know about them.
I'll stop posting these if this is a nuisance.
Regards
David F Brown
>>>>>>>>>>
TOP PAPERS FROM YOUR NEWSFEED
Lorenzo Nigro
Sapienza University of Rome - Italy, Dip. Istituto Italiano di Studi Orientali, Faculty Member
JAMAAN AT THE PASS OF BI'REIN AN IRON AGE IIB-C AMMONITE STRONGHOLD IN CENTRAL JORDAN
In years 2015-2016 the Zarqa Directorate of the Department of Antiquities of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan carried out a rescue excavation at the site of Jamaan, an Iron Age IIB-C Ammonite stronghold 16 Km north of 'Amman. The site survey and limited soundings allow to plot a plan of the structure, comprising an outer enclosure with a casemate wall, two cisterns, and a square podium tower, and to collect ceramic material dating from Iron Age IIB-C (c. 840-580 BC), as well as the head of a soft limestone statue, possibly depicting a local chief or an official. The latter adds to the...
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David L Kennedy
Bookmarked by John MacGinnis
Parthian Regiments in the Roman army
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Leonardo Gregoratti
Durham University, Classics and Ancient History, Post-Doc
A Tale of two Great Kings: Artabanus and Vologaeses in A. KRASNOWOLSKA and R. RUSEK-KOWALSKA, Studies on the Iranian World I, Before Islam, Cracow, Jagellonian University Press, 2015, pp. 203-210
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Leonardo Gregoratti
Durham University, Classics and Ancient History, Post-Doc
The Kings of Parthia and Persia, Some Considerations on the "Iranic" Identity in the Parthian Empire, «DABIR», 2015, I, Nr. 1, pp. 14-16
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Thanks for posting, David: it is all grist to the mill. I can see a few people being interested in the article on Parthian 'regiments' in the Roman army, for example.
yes thanks, a lot of interesting stuff there
The key to this for those members who aren't already signed up to academia.edu is that you customise your news notifications. David has obviously a Middle Eastern theme. Mine are European Medieval and therefore look totally different. So, even if you don't find David's selection grabs your interest, get over there and set up your own preferences and by all means share anything you find particularly interesting with the rest of us.
it is an excellent site for articles and as stated, set up your preferences to what you want. I tend to dip in and out when something catches my eye and there is literally a ton of stuff posted there