The Italic people of ancient Apulia : new evidence from pottery for workshops, markets, and customs

2014 
Part I. General Introduction Part II. Time and Place: History and Geography: 1. Pots, peoples, and places in fourth-century Apulia Alastair Small 2. Iapygians: the indigenous populations of ancient Puglia in the fifth and fourth centuries BCE Mario Lombardo Part III. Pottery Production: Red-Figure Workshops: 3. Production and functions of Apulian red-figure pottery in Taras: new contexts and problems of interpretation Didier Fontannaz 4. Red-figure vases from Metapontion: the evidence from the necropoleis along the coast road Francesca Silvestrelli 5. Hands working in Magna Graecia: the Amykos Painter and his workshop Martine Denoyelle Part IV. Pottery in Context: Italic Sites: 6. Apulian and Lucanian pottery from coastal Peucetian contexts Ada Riccardi 7. The diffusion of middle and late Apulian vases in Peucetian funerary contexts: a comparison of several necropoleis Angela Ciancio 8. Red-figure vases from elite contexts in the city of Canusium, Apulia: a selection of images and repertoires of the first half of the fourth century BCE Marisa Corrente 9. Apulian pottery in Messapian contexts Maria Teresa Giannotta Part V. Pottery Interpreted: Approaches to Pottery Studies: 10. Native shapes in Southern Italian red-figure pottery Fabio Colivicchi 11. Archeometric analysis of Apulian and Lucanian red-figure pottery E. G. D. Robinson 12. A case for Greek tragedy in Italic settlements in the fourth century BCE T. H. Carpenter Part VI. Pottery as Art: Collections: 13. Apulian and Lucanian red-figure pottery in eighteenth-century collections Maria Emilia Masci.
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