153 research outputs found

    Gâtinais de l’Est

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    Date de l'opération : 1988 (PI) Inventeur(s) : Buchez Nathalie Cette opération de prospection-inventaire s'est principalement concentrée sur les secteurs géographiques susceptibles d'être touchés par la future autoroute A 67. Elle a permis d'évaluer le potentiel archéologique du Néolithique à la fin du Moyen Âge dans la région du Gâtinais de l'Est grâce à la mise en place d'un programme alliant recherches bibliographiques et cartographiques, études d'archives, enquêtes auprès des collectionne..

    Bussy-Saint-Georges (Seine-et-Marne). « Les Dix-Huit Arpents ».

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    Buchez Nathalie. Bussy-Saint-Georges (Seine-et-Marne). « Les Dix-Huit Arpents ».. In: Archéologie médiévale, tome 20, 1990. pp. 352-353

    Bussy-Saint-Georges (Seine-et-Marne). « Les Dix-Huit Arpents ».

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    Buchez Nathalie. Bussy-Saint-Georges (Seine-et-Marne). « Les Dix-Huit Arpents ».. In: Archéologie médiévale, tome 20, 1990. pp. 352-353

    Chalcolithique final (ou Moyen ?), Nagada IIC-D/IIIA

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    This contribution proposes an overview of the chronological systems and the terminologies used for the relative chronology of the second half of the 4th millennium BC in the Nile valley as well as the methods used for their establishment.Cette contribution propose un tour d’horizon sur les systèmes chronologiques et les terminologies employées ainsi que sur les méthodes mises en oeuvre dans l’établissement de la chronologie relative de la seconde moitié du 4e millénaire dans la vallée du Nil.Buchez Nathalie. Chalcolithique final (ou Moyen ?), Nagada IIC-D/IIIA. In: Archéo-Nil. Revue de la société pour l'étude des cultures prépharaoniques de la vallée du Nil, n°21, 2011. La chronologie relative de la Basse Vallée du Nil jusqu’au 3e millénaire BC (coord. E.C. Köhler) pp. 51-64

    Bussy-Saint-Georges (Seine-et-Marne). Les Dix-Huit-Arpents

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    Buchez Nathalie. Bussy-Saint-Georges (Seine-et-Marne). Les Dix-Huit-Arpents. In: Archéologie médiévale, tome 23, 1993. pp. 315-316

    Adaïma (Upper Egypt), the stages of the state development from the point of view of a “village community"

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    International audienceThe site of Adaïma, located in Upper Egypt, 25 km north of Hierakonpolis, was excavated from 1989 to 2005. Based on the study of the pottery and an analysis of the structural transformations of the settlement and its cemeteries, this paper re-evaluates the stages of state development from the view point of a ‘village’ community’. The settlement at Adaïma was at its maximum extent from Naqada I until Naqada IIC. Later, from Naqada IID onwards, a decrease in settlement size and the gradual abandonment of several sectors of the cemeteries were observed. Re-examination of the data gathered from the Armant region reveals the same phenomena as seen at Adaïma, which may reflect an ‘exodus’ of the population towards major cities such as Hierakonpolis

    Retour à Adaïma pour un point de chronologie

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    A reconsideration of predynastic chronology : the contribution of Adaïma

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    International audienceThe necropoleis of Adaïma (Upper Egypt), excavated between 1989 and 2005, were in use from the end of Naqada I into Dynasty 3. The technique used to establish the chronological sequence of these cemeteries was based on the seriation process. This analysis was undertaken with a view towards providing new insights into current relative chronologies, which are based upon spatial distribution, as well as a new outlook on Predynastic necropoleis and their development. Seriation has previously been applied to Predynastic cemeteries, but earlier studies encountered major methodological problems arising from the validity of the typologies they employed. These studies, using old data and with no possibility of recourse to the original material, had to rely on typologies that were distorted by the heterogeneity of and lack of rigour in the first classification established by W.M.F. Petrie. The approach undertaken at Adaïma was built upon a completely new corpus based on first-hand examination of the material. As a result, the new data from Adaïma are somewhat discordant with the existing chronology established by W. Kaiser’s important work and refined by S. Hendrickx. For example, at the transition from the Naqada IIC to the Naqada IID period, no consistent group of tombs can be found to justify the existence of the sub-phase Naqada IID1 that appears in the traditional chronology. A critical survey of other cemeteries indicates that the existence of sub-phase IID1 cannot be supported and that it is a construct resulting from a methodological fla

    Retour à Adaïma pour un point de chronologie

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