Students interested in Archaeology should check out the lecture - TopicsExpress



          

Students interested in Archaeology should check out the lecture tomorrow by a distinguished archaeologist working in the Aegean: Colloquium TUESDAY 21 October 4:30pm in Seminar Room (3059 Faner) Dr. Alexander Herda is Lecturer at Humboldt University in Berlin He is also a member of the Deutsches Archäologisches Institut Athen [DAI Athen] He has been excavating with the DAI more than 20 years, especially focused on Miletus in the west coast of turkey. Thales or Hippodamos? Agora and Town Planning Before and After the Persian Wars The polis state was thecharacteristic ancient Greek way of life, consisting of a religious and political center, and the chora as its surrounding territory, which included villages, farmhouses, cemeteries, and sanctuaries. The manifold process of its development covers the period from the downfall of the Mycenaean palaces around 1200 BCE to the 8th cent. By Homer’s time, around 700 BCE, the polis state was fully developed. The agora as open common space for religious and political meetings, formed a vital part of this rising urbanism. The other vital part was the organization of housing. Following the theories of Gregory and Urry on ‘social space’, we can understand the spatial structure of a polis as “a medium through which social relations are produced and reproduced”. This theory enables us to interpret archaeologically detected spatial structures and its changes in a historical sense. In other words, to write history, where literary sources are missing or are at least very sparse. In a recent paper on the Greek Polis, therefore, John Nicolas Coldstream rightly criticized “the hardened sceptic(s) among ancient historians, who may doubt whether archaeological discoveries could possibly throw any light whatever on the genesis of a polis.” As a concrete case study, I will focus in my lecture on the prominent Ionian harbour city of Miletos, to prove that the spatial development of a city and its centre can help to write its history. In order to do so, I will concentrate on the implementation of the orthogonal grid-system, which despite the general opinion, is neither democratic nor an invention of the famous Milesian town planner Hippodamos. Instead, it can be dated to the first half of the 6th century BCE, and attributed to the allround genius Thales and his ‘Milesian School’ of philosophers, who may have created scientific town planning for the first time in western history.
Posted on: Mon, 20 Oct 2014 13:39:28 +0000

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