Your search
Results 55 resources
-
London: Durham University has issued the following news release: Professor Anna Leone is a leading authority on North African archaeology and heritage protection. Her work is driven by her fascination with ...
-
Purchase online the PDF of Hunters of the mountain, Barich, Barbara E., editor -
-
This book provides an up-to-date account of the archaeology, history, economy, urbanism, art, and architecture of the North African region of Tripolitania during antiquity. The essays by international scholars outline current research and the most recent developments in the archaeology of this territory. The strong interdisciplinary character of the texts reflects the expertise of the different authors – from studies of the landscape and urban development, to funerary practices, architecture, military operations and food supply. This timely publication provides a much-needed new assessment of the evolution of this region throughout the Roman and Late Antique period.
-
Le Jebel Gharbi constitue la limite septentrionale du haut plateau tripolitain dont l’élément le plus significatif est son imposant escarpement qui, orienté au nord fait face à la plaine côtière de la Gefara. Depuis les années 90, la Mission Archéologique Italo–Libyenne dans le Jebel Gharbi, dirigée par Barbara Barich (Université de Rome « La Sapienza »), a entrepris un projet de recherche à long terme, destiné à l’élaboration de la séquence culturelle de la région. Pendant la campagne de fouilles 2000, une importante zone de sédentarisation, caractérisée par différents niveaux d’occupation anthropique et de nombreux matériels archéologiques a été reconnue immédiatement aux pieds du Jebel, à proximité du village actuel de Shakshuk, entre la plaine de la Gefara et les dépôts alluvionnaires. Ces réserves d’eau pérennes ont permis l’occupation du territoire même pendant les phases plus arides du Pléistocène.
-
The medieval town of Sharwas – sometimes written Sharūs or Sarūs – figures in the writings of Ibn al-Warrāq (10th century A.D.), Ibn Hauqāl (10th century), al-Bakri (11th century), al-Idrīsi (12th century) and the anonymous author of the Kitāb al-Istibṣār (12th century). All are agreed that it was an important place, the chief settlement (umm qura) of the Jebel Nefusa. It had no congregational mosque (jāmic), but was one of the two towns in the Jebel provided with a minbār or pulpit. The name Abū Macrūf, as applied to the mosque and the surrounding ruins, does not appear in the medieval sources but certainly goes back many centuries in oral tradition. It refers to Abū Macrūf Wiyār ibn Jawād, a famous religious figure of the later 9th century who lived a short distance to the south-east of Sharwas and who was present at the battle of Mānū in A.H. 283/A.D. 896 - 7.A preliminary note on Sharwas and its mosque has already appeared in the Second Annual Report of this Society (pp. 10 - 11). There are no less than sixteen monumental inscriptions carved on separate blocks of stone outside and inside the Mosque. Most important for the dating of the structure is the two line inscription (no. 1, pl. VIa) in the tympanum of the west doorway. This is in the ornamented variety of Kufic usually referred to as ‘floriated’ The style is decidedly ‘provincial’ and does little credit to the engraver. Nevertheless it is possible to discern, in such features as the trifoliate ending to the dāl of waḥdahu in the first line, points of resemblance to the later of the two monumental inscriptions from Ajdābiyah published in the Society's Third Annual Report (p. 5, Pl. VIIIb). This is dated A.H. 351/A.D. 962. If it is true, as there suggested, that the floriated style was introduced into Libya between c. 922 and 962 A.D., then the inscription over the doorway at Sharwas is unlikely to be earlier than the second half of the the 10th century, allowing for the town's somewhat isolated position in the Tripolitanian hinterland. It may, indeed, be as late as the 12th century, if the present Mosque postdates the destruction of Sharwas, c. 1100.
-
Pp. 141-182: site catalogue of the Jabal Nafūsa
-
In the Gebel Garian, about 20 kilometres south of Asabaa, the map-makers of 1964 indicated an ancient wall (Fig. 1) called Hadd Hajar (i.e. wall of stone) running south-west for six kilometres from Ras al Tays al Abyad (858 m; the Hill of the White Goat) on which stood a watch tower, to Ras al Said (764 m). The country crossed by Hadd Hajar is about 690-730 m above sea-level with a gently-undulating surface constituting a fairly open and level valley. The hills are covered with esparto-grass. On the west the Wadi Wamis winds among closely-set hills while, in the north-east, the wall is carried for a further three quarters of a kilometre across a narrow valley from Ras al Tays al Abyad to another hill Ras al Saqifah. An old track comes southwards down this valley flanked on the east side by a barrier of hills over 800 m high. Where the track crosses the wall there is a Roman building (Gasr al Saqifah) with traces of an archway for people and flocks to pass through. Two kilometres to the south is an old cistern (Majin Saqifah) presumably Roman. Beyond, the track continues about 25 kilometres to a large well, Bir al Shaqaykah (Sceghega), after which it is another 28 kilometres south-eastwards to Mizdah on the Wadi Sofeggin.
Explore
Topic
Resource type
- Blog Post (1)
- Book (3)
- Book Section (9)
- Document (1)
- Journal Article (40)
- Report (1)
Publication year
-
Between 1800 and 1899
(2)
-
Between 1860 and 1869
(1)
- 1861 (1)
-
Between 1890 and 1899
(1)
- 1890 (1)
-
Between 1860 and 1869
(1)
-
Between 1900 and 1999
(26)
-
Between 1900 and 1909
(1)
- 1908 (1)
- Between 1920 and 1929 (2)
-
Between 1930 and 1939
(2)
- 1931 (2)
-
Between 1940 and 1949
(1)
- 1949 (1)
- Between 1950 and 1959 (4)
- Between 1960 and 1969 (4)
-
Between 1970 and 1979
(1)
- 1973 (1)
- Between 1980 and 1989 (5)
- Between 1990 and 1999 (6)
-
Between 1900 and 1909
(1)
- Between 2000 and 2026 (26)
- Unknown (1)