Brill’s New Pauly Supplements I - Volume 3 : Historical Atlas of the Ancient World Related publications

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Subject: Classical Studies
Edited by: Anne Wittke, Eckhart Olshausen and Richard Szydlak
This new atlas of the ancient world illustrates the political, economic, social and cultural developments in the ancient Near East, the Mediterranean world, the Byzantine Empire, the Islamic world and the Holy Roman Empire from the 3rd millennium BC until the 15th century AD.
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This new atlas of the ancient world illustrates the political, economic, social and cultural developments in the ancient Near East, the Mediterranean world, the Byzantine Empire, the Islamic world and the Holy Roman Empire from the 3rd millennium BC until the 15th century AD.
Subscriptions: See Brill.com
- Historical Atlas of the Ancient World
- The Egyptian and Ancient Near Eastern concepts of the world
- The world through the eyes of ancient authors
- Exploration in the ancient world
- Mesopotamia in the 2nd half of the 3rd millennium BC
- The Ancient Near East in the 17th and 16th centuries BC
- The Ancient Near and Middle East in the 15th to 13th centuries BC
- Egypt in the Old Kingdom and the 1st Intermediate Period
- Egypt in the Middle Kingdom and the 2nd Intermediate period
- Egypt in the New Kingdom
- The Hittite Empire, ‘Ḫattusa’, in the 13th cent. BC
- The Aegean area in the Bronze Age
- The extent of Mycenaean culture in the Aegean area (17th to 11th cents. BC)
- The Eastern Mediterranean in the Late Bronze Age (c. 1400–1200 BC) – political and cultural interconnections
- Late Bronze Age/transitional Iron Age (c. 1400 BC – 10th cent. BC) Mycenaean and Italo-Mycenaean central Mediterranean find sites
- The eastern Mediterranean and Near East (12th – mid 10th cent. BC)
- Greece, the Aegean and western Asia Minor from the 12th to the 9th cents.
- Greece, the Aegean and western Asia Minor, late 9th – c. mid 6th cents. BC
- Anatolia, 10th–7th cents. BC
- Urarṭu and eastern Anatolia c. 700 BC
- The Luwian-aramaic principalities c. 900 BC
- Palestine from the 10th to the 6th cents. BC
- Mesopotamia and the Levant in the 10th and 9th cents. BC
- Mesopotamia and neighbouring regions (819–746 BC)
- Mesopotamia and neighbouring regions (745–711 BC)
- Mesopotamia and neighbouring regions in the late 8th and 7th cents. BC
- Mesopotamia and neighbouring regions in the late 7th and 6th cents. BC
- Bābilu (‘gate of God’)/Babylon at the time of the Neo-Babylonian Empire (7th/6th cents. BC)
- Egypt in the 3rd Intermediate Period and the Late Dynastic Period (c. 1080–332 BC)
- The approximate core areas of distribution of hieroglyphic, cuneiform, alphabetic and syllabic scripts in the Eastern Mediterranean area (c. 12th to 7th cents. BC)
- The Iberian Peninsula and its contacts in the Late Bronze Age and in the Early Iron Age (c. 13th to 7th/6th cents. BC)
- Italy from the 10th to the 8th cents. BC
- Languages in ancient Italy before the spread of Latin
- Colonization: Phoenicians, Greeks and Etruscans in the Mediterranean area (c. 11th–6th cents. BC)
- The Phoenician and West Phoenician/Carthaginian world in the western Mediterranean area (9th–2nd cents. BC)
- Carthage
- The Etruscan core territory: emergence of the Etruscan cities (8th to 7th/6th cents. BC), as well as their heyday and crisis (6th to 4th/3rd cents. BC)
- The conflicts of the Etruscans and West Phoenicians with the Greeks (6th cent. to c. 400 BC)
- The Hallstatt Culture (c. 800-450 BC)
- The La Tène Culture (c. 450 BC – c. AD 1)
- Trading relations between the Mediterranean world and north of the Alps (8th–5th cents. BC)
- Commerce and trade in the Mediterranean world, 7th/6th cents. – 4th cent. BC
- The Achaemenid Kingdom (6th to 4th cents. BC)
- The Persian Wars (c. 500–478/449 BC)
- City development and town planning in Greece
- Tyrannis in the Archaic and Classical Periods
- The Delian League (478-404 BC)
- The Peloponnesian War (431– 404 BC)
- League formations with hegemonic tendencies in the Greek world, 4th cent. BC
- The Greek leagues
- The development of the Macedonian Kingdom from the 7th cent. until 336 BC
- Populus Romanus: the 4 urban and 31 rural tribus in Italy (c. 500–241 BC)
- Roman colonial foundations in Italy before the Gracchi
- The expansion of Rome into Etruria and Umbria up to the lex Iulia (4th cent. to 90/88 BC)
- The campaigns of Alexander the Great (336–323 BC)
- The kingdoms of the Diadochi (c. 303 BC)
- The Hellenistic world in the 3rd cent. BC
- City foundations and educational establishments in the Hellenistic period (4th–2nd cents. BC)
- Egypt from the 4th to 1st cents. BC
- The six Syrian Wars (275/74 –168 BC)
- The Pergamene kingdom of the Attalids (241 to c. 185 BC)
- The Bosporan Kingdom from the 5th cent. BC to the 1st cent. AD
- The Hellenistic world in the 2nd cent. BC
- Syria and Palestine, 2nd and 1st cents. BC
- The Hellenistic kingdoms of Indo-Bactria in the 2nd and 1st cents. BC
- Trading routes in the Hellenistic period (4th–1st cents. BC)
- Italy under Roman rule: the Social system (338–89/82 BC)
- The First and Second Punic Wars
- The territorial development of the Imperium Romanum in the Republican Period
- The development of the Roman provinces of Sardinia, Corsica and Sicilia (3rd cent. BC to 5th/6th cents. AD)
- The development of the Roman provinces on the Iberian Peninsula (2nd cent. BC – 5th cent. AD)
- The development of the Roman provinces in North Africa (146 BC – AD 395)/Rome’s war against Jugurtha (112–105 BC)
- Rome’s wars in the west (206 –101 BC)
- Rome’s wars in the east I (214–129 BC)
- Rome’s wars in the east II (214–129 BC)
- Roman colonization
- The Roman Social War (91 – 87 BC)
- The three Roman wars against Mithridates VI (89–85, 83/82, 74–63 BC)
- Pompey’s reorganization of the Near East (67– 59 BC)
- Administrative history of Crete and the Cyrenaica in the Roman period (96 BC – 6th cent. AD)
- Caesar’s proconsulship in Gaul (58–50 BC)
- The development of the Roman provinces in Gaul (1st cent. BC – 4th cent. AD)
- The Roman Empire in the Civil War 49–45 BC
- The Roman Empire in the Civil War, 44-30 BC
- The city of Rome
- The Augustan division of Rome and Italy into regions
- The provinces of the Imperium Romanum from Augustus to Septimius Severus (27 BC to AD 211)
- The development of the Roman provinces in Egypt and Arabia (1st cent. BC – 6th cent. AD)
- The development of the Roman provinces in the Levant (1st cent. BC to 4th cent. AD)
- The development of the Roman provinces in Asia Minor (2nd cent. BC to 5th cent. AD)
- The development of the Roman provinces in the northern Balkan Peninsula (1st cent. BC to 4th cent. AD)
- The development of the Roman provinces in the southern Balkan Peninsula
- The development of the Roman provinces on the middle Danube (1st cent. BC – 3rd/4th cents. AD)
- The so-called Batavian Revolt and the Roman civil war of AD 69/70
- The development of the Roman provinces in Britain (1st cent. AD – AD 410)
- Roads and routes in the Imperium Romanum
- Important agricultural areas of the Mediterranean (1st and 2nd cents. AD)
- Trade routes in the Roman Empire (1st–3rd cents. AD)
- From the Mediterranean to India. Overland and maritime routes in the 1st/2nd cents. AD
- The imperium Romanum in the reign of Septimius Severus (AD 193–211)
- Distribution of the legions and the frontiers of the Roman Empire
- The limites in Britannia, Germania and Raetia
- The eastern and southern frontiers of the Roman Empire, 1st–3rd cents. AD
- The Arsacid kingdom in the 1st and 2nd cents. AD (to AD 224)
- The Sassanid Empire (AD 224–651)
- Romans and Sassanids in the Soldier-Emperors period (3rd cent. AD)
- The ‘Palmyrene Empire’ (AD 250–272)
- Imperium Galliarum – the ‘Gallic Empire’ (AD 260–274)
- The provincial administration of the Roman Empire in the 4th cent. AD
- The growth of Christian congregations, 1st-4th cents. AD
- The organization of the Christian church after the Synod of Chalcedon (AD 451)
- Cultural developments in the regions of Germanic settlement
- Germanic migrations and invasions of the Roman Empire
- The Germanic successor-states to the Western Roman Empire
- The Roman Empire under Justinian (527–565)
- The Byzantine theme system (7th – 9th cents. AD)
- Byzantine-Sassanid conflicts in the 6th and 7th cents. AD
- The unification and expansion of the Arabs under the first four caliphs (632–661)
- The Byzantine Empire under Basil II (976–1025)
- The economy of the Middle Byzantine Empire
- The first three Crusades (1096–1192)
- The eastern Mediterranean at the time of the Imperium Romaniae (1204–1261)
- The Byzantine Empire under the Palaeologi (1261–1453)