000 03163cam a2200301 i 4500
999 _c181807
_d181807
001 18849658
003 GR-PaULI
005 20220301131604.0
008 210209s2016 nyuabe g b 001 0 eng d
010 _a 2015030331
020 _a9780195170474
020 _a9780190887131
020 _z9780199721559
_q(e-book)
040 _aDLC
_bgre
_cDLC
_eAACR2
_dDLC
_dGR-PaULI
082 0 0 _a937.802
_223
100 1 _aDe Angelis, Franco,
_eσυγγραφέας
245 1 0 _aArchaic and classical Greek Sicily :
_ba social and economic history /
_cFranco De Angelis.
260 _aNew York :
_bOxford University Press,
_c2016.
300 _axviii, 437 σ. :
_bεικ., χάρτες ;
_c25 εκ.
490 0 _aGreeks overseas
504 _aΠεριλαμβάνει βιβλιογραφία (σ. 329-418) και ευρετήριο.
505 0 _aThe geographical and historical setting -- Settlement and territory -- Societies -- Economics -- Conclusions.
520 _a"Ancient Greek migrants in Sicily produced societies and economies that both paralleled and differed from their homeland. Since the nineteenth century explanations for these similarities and differences have been heavily debated, with attention focusing in particular on the roles played on this frontier by locals and immigrants in Greek Sicily's remarkable cultural efflorescence. Polarized positions have resulted. On one side, scholars have viewed the ancient Greeks as one of a long line of incomers whom Sicily and its inhabitants shape. On the other side, the ancient Greeks have been viewed in a hierarchical manner with the Sicilian Greeks acting as the source of innovation and achievement in shaping their Sicily, while at the same being lesser to homeland Greece, the center of their world. Neither of these two extremes is completely satisfactory. What is lacking in this debate is a basic work on social and economic history that gathers the historical and archaeological evidence and deploys it to test the various historical models proposed over the past two hundred years. This book represents the first ever such systematic and comprehensive endeavor. It adopts a broadly based interdisciplinary approach that combines classical and prehistoric studies, texts, and material culture, and a variety of methods and theories to put the history of Greek Sicily on a completely new footing. While Sicily and Greece had conjoined histories right from the start, their relationship was not one of center and periphery or "colonial" in any sense, but of an interdependent and mutually enriching diaspora. At the same time, local conditions and peoples, including Phoenician migrants, also shaped the evolution of Sicilian Greek societies and economies. This book reveals and explains the similarities and differences with developments in Greece and brings greater clarity to the parts played by locals and immigrants in ancient Sicily's impressive achievements"--
650 4 _aΈλληνες
_zΙταλία
_zΣικελία
_9185228
651 4 _aΣικελία (Ιταλία)
_xΙστορία
_yΜέχρι το 800.
_9185229
942 _2ddc
_cBK15
998 _cΜΑΝΙΑ
_d2021-02