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         Albanian Archaeology:     more detail
  1. New Directions in Albanian Archaeology: Studies Presented to Muzafer Korkuti (International Centre for Albanian Archaeology Monograph) (International Centre for Albanian Archaeology Monograph Series) by Lorenc Bejko, 2006-10-01
  2. New Directions in Albanian Archaeology by Lorenc (EDT)/ Hodges, Richard (EDT) Bejko, 2006-10-30
  3. New directions in Albanian archaeology; studies presented to Muzafer Korkuti. (I by Ed. by Lorenc Bejko and Richard Hodges.,
  4. The Albanian-American Odyssey: A Pilot Study of the Albanian Community of Boston, Massachusetts (Immigrant Communities and Ethnic Minorities in the United States and Canada) by Dennis L. Nagi, 1989-10
  5. Archaeological Guide to Albania: Butrint and the Saranda Region by Oliver J. Gilkes, 2009-12-01
  6. Out of Albania: From Crisis Migration to Social Inclusion in Italy by Russell King, Nicola Mai, 2008-10-01

41. ScienceDaily News Release: Amid Albanian Turmoil, UC Archaeologists Glean Secret
archaeologist Jack L. Davis, codirector of the UC-albanian team, traveled 50th anniversaryof the Academy of Science's Institute of archaeology, UC's partner
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/1998/12/981207072433.htm
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Shop Our stuff Browse books Magazines Software Contribute Register free Post release Edit profile Review hits Advertise Media kit Traffic stats Contact us Previous Story ... Related Stories Next Story Source: University Of Cincinnati Date:
Amid Albanian Turmoil, UC Archaeologists Glean Secrets Of The Stone Age
Cincinnati Despite U.S. State Department warnings against unnecessary travel in Albania, a team led by University of Cincinnati and Albanian archaeologists launched a field study about 60 miles south of Tirana in summer 1998. Their quest is to learn more about a Greek colony that flourished at the end of the second century B.C., but the team instead has found an unexpected abundance of artifacts left from another era: the Stone Age, the period associated with the earliest known chipped stone tools plus a possible Neanderthal site. Davis and project co-director Muzafer Korkuti of the Institute of Archaeology in Tirana led a 14-member team in the Mallakastra Regional Archaeological Project (MRAP), using an archaeological technique called field surface survey. This approach records and collects artifacts found as team members walk along the ground in rows. Far less expensive than excavation, a survey allows archaeologists to gain an understanding of a larger region over a vast span of time.

42. Albania Archaeological Resources
English. Shekulli Online edition of the albanian daily paper; in albanian. Archaeologyat About.com Europe Page Index of Countries Homepage. Email this page!
http://archaeology.about.com/library/atlas/blalbania.htm
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Albania Sites Research Institutions Researchers Culture History ...
Albania's Historical Setting

Map of Albania (CIA FactBook) Archaeological Sites Butrint
Field survey and excavations from the University of Sheffield at the classical and Byzantine occupations.
In the Footsteps of Aeneas
From Richard Hodges and Archaeology magazine, a visit to Butrint Konispol Cave Holocene occupation, investigations into paleoclimatic shifts shown in the deposits, an abstract from the Journal of Field Archaeology. Research Institutions École Française d'Athènes Excavations in Greece, Cyprus, Albania, Bulgaria, and Russia. Current Researchers Cultural History Albania, Land of the Eagles - Shqiperia

43. Trivial Pursuits? - Archaeology
Presto, instant ethnic identity. Funny, you don’t look albanian. Mexico in the 16thcentury. You think that has nothing to do with archaeology? Think again.
http://archaeology.about.com/library/weekly/aa041899.htm
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Trivial Pursuits?
A couple of months ago at the conference, I fell into a rather surprising discussion with a fellow archaeologist from the United Kingdom. She argued that the relative importance of archaeology is essentially unchanged from its first days, that it still is, and always will be no more than an entertaining pastime. She said she felt fortunate to be making a living in such an entertaining way, but essentially, she feels that archaeology is a triviality in the greater scheme of things. Because I have always secretly believed this to be the case, I was vehement in my denial, ranting on for an extended period on the importance of preserving the past, and eventually proclaiming in a loud voice that "If I felt that way, I’d never be able to write a single column!" I think archaeologists are reaching a critical point of awareness right now. I think that for the last

44. British Archaeology, No 50, December 1999: Features
One was designed in such a way that the two burnt houses the Serbian and the albanian- appear to be one single Return to the British archaeology homepage.
http://www.britarch.ac.uk/ba/ba50/ba50feat.html
ISSN 1357-4442 Editor: Simon Denison
Issue no 50, December 1999
FEATURES
Dancing with the dead in a mass grave
Neolithic communities repeatedly handled the decaying bodies of their dead, writes Mary Baxter Every society must dispose of its dead in one way or another. The taboos surrounding death, however, are so deep-seated that any methods of disposal that differ from the norm are viewed by many today with a peculiar mixture of horror and fascination. For at least 3,000 years in Europe, and perhaps longer, the norm has been to dispose of the dead by either cremation or inhumation in a single grave. In the Neolithic period, however, from around 6,500-4,000 years ago, a completely different practice took place - disposal of the body first in one place, followed by a `secondary burial' of the whole body, or part of it, somewhere else. The great communal tombs of the Neolithic - earthen or stone long barrows, or passage graves - typically contain an apparently jumbled mass of bones from numerous bodies. The skeletons are often disarticulated (that is, the bones have been moved out of their natural skeletal positions), and frequently bones are missing. In short, Neolithic communities did not simply dispose of their dead; they handled them repeatedly and shifted them about. Antiquaries of the last century interpreted the sight of massed, disarticulated bone as the sign of lack of respect for the dead, or worse: cannibalism and ritual sacrifice, supported by written evidence from classical authors. More recent analysis has shown that the reordering of human remains was not random but often the result of careful arrangement. Examples include skeletons of men separated from women, and adults from children.

45. British Archaeology, No 24, May 1997: Interview
Byzantine ruins were looted last month during the albanian civil unrest. Moreover,architecture is `far more important than archaeology', and any archaeologist
http://www.britarch.ac.uk/ba/ba24/ba24int.html
British Archaeology , no 24, May 1997: Interview
The Prince's new man in architecture
Simon Denison talks to Richard Hodges When an archaeologist, and a former Director of the British School at Rome to boot, was asked to head the Prince of Wales's troubled Institute of Architecture last year, most people probably thought the Institute was entrenching itself even more deeply in its perceived role of advocate for reactionary classicism in architecture. At a time when its degree courses were failing to receive validation from the RIBA, and the entire governing council was asked by the Prince to step down, you could imagine the smirks of modernists in every architect's office in the land. Yet meeting the Institute's new Director, the Anglo-Saxonist Richard Hodges, it becomes clear that the Institute is bent on a new course. Design, apparently, is no longer the main issue. Hodges does not even, as one might expect, emphasise the `archaeological' aspects of the Prince's vision - the desirability, for example, of conserving locally-distinct building styles and materials and fostering traditional craft skills. Instead, all the talk is of energy-efficiency, the sustainable use of materials, and the `sustainability of communities', meaning (I think) the creation of settlements, often with community involvement, that are somehow complete in themselves, providing both work and recreation for their inhabitants. The details of how these ideals might be achieved are still fuzzy, but there is a great air of new beginnings at the five-year-old Institute's rather dowdy neo-classical HQ in Regent's Park, London. Hodges talks of the Institute's plans to `bring people together' to work out, for example, how new developments can be both sustainable and cost-effective, or both eco-friendly and enhancing of the spirit of place. My impression is the educational side of the Institute will begin to take second place to its new role of think-tank and publicist for any new ideas that emerge. The construction company Tarmac, apparently, has shown an interest, but there are still many seemingly intractable problems to solve and no guarantee of the Institute's ultimate influence on a market still largely driven by the need to keep costs down.

46. New Page 1
Heritage; IIIEconomy; IV-Premises in the following order History (from ancienttimes to date), archaeology, Religious Creeds, albanian Language, Fine Arts
http://www.albanianculturalheritage.com/homepresrelise.htm
Introduction Press Release Project Task Force Note ... www.albanianculturalheritage.com opened by two Albanian NGO-s, Sustainable Economic Development Agency (SEDA) and Foundation for Free Information and Democracy (FILD) is the first complete web page about a unique volume of guide to Albanian cultural heritage. The book is compiled and published in the frame of the project ‘Albania a Patrimony of European Values’, financed by European Union and United Nations Development Program This is the the way how Balkan Politicians should start to negotiate Foreign Minister of Yugoslavia (Serbia),Mr.Goran Silanovic reading the Guide “Albania a Patrimony of European Values ” on 16 of May 2001, in Tirana, Albania, in the premises of Tirana International Hotel , while attending the Stability Pact Meeting.
The Guide “Albania a Patrimony of European Values A. Babani published in the cover of Albanian newspaper “Korieri” 17 May 2001 This brief and comprehensive encyclopedia consists of a full set of layers of Albanian Cultural Heritage written and revised by renown senior personalities in related fields such as Prof. Kristo Frasheri, Prof. Jorgo Bulo, Prof. Muzafer Korkuti, Prof. Seit Mansaku, Prof. Andromaqi Gjergji, Prof. Petrika Thengjilli, Prof. Abdurrahim Myftiu, Prof. Zana Shuteriqi, Dr. Shaban Sinani, Dr. Hamid Borici, Dr. Andon Cesari as well as other senior researchers and experts.

47. Christian Answers Network: Answers, Ministry Tools, And More! [Home]
to keep upto-date on Bible archaeology discoveries and research albanian / ARABIC/ BULGARIAN / CEBUANO / DANISH / FARSI / HEBREW / HUNGARIAN / ITALIAN / KAZAK
http://www.christiananswers.net/home.html
33 languages... Click for complete list Albanian Amharic Arabic Bulgarian Cebuano Chinese (simplified) Chinese (traditional) Danish Dutch English Esperanto Farsi French German Hebrew Hindi Hungarian Indonesian Italian Japanese Korean Kurdish Lithuanian Magyar Norwegian Persian Portuguese Romanian Russian Spanish Swedish Tagalog Tongan Turkish Vietnamese Videos and books
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... Problems (technical) is a nonprofit, donor-based ministry - dependent on volunteers and visitor contributions for its operation and support. Please help if you can Comments What people are saying 10 Common Questions... Is the Bible true? Where did Cain get his wife? Why do innocents suffer? Am I good enough to go to Heaven? ... Videos Personal issues Abortion Depression Family Finances ... Race MORE topics (click on arrow) Site DIRECTORY 60 sec. devotional

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49. Travel: Albania Travel Notes -- Albanian Culture
archaeology in Albania Research in Durres and Apolonia, Butrint andArdenitza verify the Illyrian existence in albanian territories.
http://www.travelnotes.org/Europe/Albania/albanian_culture.htm

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Albanian Culture Albanian language and culture were suppressed for almost 400 years during Ottoman rule, although the Turks were never able to totally control the Albanian people. Albania underwent a cultural revolution in the mid-1960s, when Western influences were scorned, Soviet and Chinese systems were followed, and hardly anyone could enter the country. Albanian Daily News
The latest news from Albania, in English. Archaeology in Albania
Research in Durres and Apolonia, Butrint and Ardenitza verify the Illyrian existence in Albanian territories. Learn more about Albania's ancient culture at this Geocities homepage. Butrint Foundation
The Butrint Foundation aims to rediscover the history of ancient Buthrotum; once an important Mediterranean port. Land of Eagles
Comprehensive information relating to Albania.

50. Activities
Netherlands (Loes VanWilligen). • International Centre for albanian Archaecology,albanian Rescue archaeology Unit,. Tirana, Albania (Lorenc Bejko).
http://luka.inantro.hr/Collabor_Institut.htm
Institute for Anthropological Research Collaborating Institutions • Antropologische Abteilung, Naturhistroisches MuseumWien,Wien, Östereich (Maria Teschler-Nicola) • Cell and Molecular Genetics Section, Medical Research Council, Human Genetics Unit, Western General Hospital, Edinburgh, UK (AlanWright) • Center for Genome Information, Department of Environmental Health, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, USA (Marshall Anderson, Ranjan Deka) • Departimento di Biologia, Universita degli Studi di Roma »Tor Vergata«, Roma, Italia (Gian Franco De Stefano, Olga Rickards, Andrea Novelletto) • Departimento di Genetica, Biologia e Chimica Medica, Sezione di Genetica, Universita di Torino, Torino, Italia (Alberto Piazza) • Departimento di Scienze Statistiche, Universita degli Studi di Bari, Bari, Italia (Amelia de Lucia) • Department for Interdisciplinary Studies of the Human Condition, Environment and Health Unit – Koster Health Project, University of Göteborg, Göteborg, Sweden (Guy Heyden) • Department of Anatomy and Anthropology, Sackler Faculty of Medicine, Tel Aviv

51. KULTURE
and technical resources continues to hamper the growth of albanian film. Librariesand Museums Albania is home to many museums of archaeology; local, military
http://www.albinfo.com/travel1.html
English [Francais] [Italiano]
Art, culture, literature
Culture
Albania’s distinctive culture also borrows from the Greeks, Romans, Byzantines, Turks, Slavs, and Italians, who conquered the Balkans. Despite the foreign influences, Albanian culture retains a remarkable degree of homogeneity (sameness in composition).
Literature
Art and Architecture
Painting in Albania was strongly influenced by Byzantine art in the Middle Ages (5th century to 15th century), although by the end of the early Renaissance (15th century to 17th century) Italian influence was strong. The painting of icons (religious symbols) grew as a form of both public, or displayed, art and folk art. The style of icon painting, created in the mid-18th century, remained virtually unchanged through the early 20th century. Notable Albanian artists of the 20th century include Vangjush Mijo and Androniqi Zenge, both of whom are credited with introducing Western-style impressionism to Albania in the mid-1930s. Odhise Paskal, another 20th-century artist, sculpted Albanian heroes. Folk arts today include clothing decorated with delicate silver ornaments, wood-crafted items for the home, and woolen rugs.
The oldest architectural monuments in Albania date from the 1st millennium BC and were constructed by the Illyrians. From the middle of the 1st millennium BC through the middle of the 1st millennium AD, the Greeks and Romans who occupied Albania built structures still visible in urban and rural landscapes. In the Middle Ages, Christian religious architecture emerged in Albania’s Christian north while Islamic and Turkish-style architecture emerged in the south. Until the mid-20th century, most Albanian cities were dominated by two-story stone residences with tiled roofs. In wooded regions, houses were made of boards rather than stone; in coastal regions, they were clay, adobe, or reed with coatings of clay. Today, mass-produced Soviet-style housing predominates in urban and suburban settings while traditional architecture predominates in rural and mountainous regions.

52. 2000 Reconnaissance Project In Butrint, Albania - Elizabeth Greene
The Center also houses a newly established rescue archaeology unit that works withthe albanian Institute of archaeology to protect and record the nation's
http://www.princeton.edu/~esgreene/albania2000/
2000 Reconnaissance Project in Butrint, Albania
Elizabeth Greene
Department of Classics
, Princeton University and
Research Associate, Institute of Nautical Archaeology
Illyrian woodlands, echoing falls Of water, sheets of summer glass The long divine Peneian pass, The vast Akrokeraunian walls... Tennyson, To E.L., On his travels in Greece FOLLOWING IN THE FOOTSTEPS of Edward Lear, who painted the scenic region around Butrint in 1857, the Institute of Nautical Archaeology conducted a brief reconnaissance project there in June 2000 (Fig. 1: Edward Lear watercolor of Butrint dated 7 March 1857). The project, which was included in the protocol for the Anglo-Albanian excavations of the Late Antique and Byzantine phases at Butrint, was designed with three primary goals: to support the Byzantine Butrint project by investigating underwater areas of archaeological interest to the team; to investigate reported shipwreck sites and artifact scatters in the coastal region from Dema Wall to Cuka e Aitoit; and to determine the logistics for future underwater survey efforts in this area (Fig. 2 left: Map of Southern Albania from the Dema Wall to Cuka e Aitoit, the parameters of the 2000 Reconaissance Project).

53. UK Directory: Europe/Albania/Arts And Entertainment
famous albanian composer has won two song contests in Albania and several internationalones. Read about his career and listen to his music. archaeology of
http://www.dotukdirectory.co.uk/global/Europe/Albania/Arts_and_Entertainment/
Albania World Web
Home Europe Albania : Arts and Entertainment Albanian Music History pop
The history of Albanian music. From early days to the end of this century
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Albanian Musicians pop
Information and biographies of Albanian musicians including pieces of their works.
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Archaeology of Albania pop
Art and archaeology of ancient Albania (Illyria).
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Ralf Gjoni - Composer's Homepage pop
A brief biography of Ralf Gjoni, a young composer currently living in France. His works have been performed by the Bochman String Quartet, The Colchester Institute Choir, and others.
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Valentin Veizaj pop
This famous Albanian composer has won two song contests in Albania and several international ones. Read about his career and listen to his music. Bid Drita Albanian Folk Orchestra Drita announces new CD release. This folk orchestra presents traditional and popular music of Albania and Kosova performed on authentic Albanian instruments. Bid Elvira Dones: Albanian writer Her books, short stories, and work in progress Bid • Find products related to Arts and Entertainment @ Amazon.com

54. Information At Frosina
King Zog in America; Mehmet Ali albanian Founder of Modern Egypt; The Story ofAli Pasha Tepelena. archaeology of Albania Recent Research in the Stone Age.
http://www.frosina.org/infobits/infobits.shtml

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var site="sm2frosina" Welcome to Frosina's Infobits section. Here you will find a wealth of information related to Albania.

55. ALBANIAN ALBUM: Courage And Compassion In The Holocaust
Recently an Israeli archaeology team has sought to definitively determine the exact WhenCommunist rule collapsed in 1991, about 400 albanian Jews emigrated to
http://www.frosina.org/articles/albalbum.shtml
By permission of New Jersey Jewish News, 4/8/99) ALBANIAN ALBUM: Courage and Compassion in the Holocaust by Jack Goldfarb The pumpkin-colored bus in the main square of Tirana, capital of Albania, is about to burst from the overload of passengers jammed inside. Two Albanian friends Refik Veseli, a professional photographer and Sirgen, his English-speaking nephew have been waiting with me over an hour for this bus. We plead with the driver to let us squeeze aboard. When the scowling busman shakes his head for the third time, Refik and Sirgen shout, "But there's a foreigner here an American!" Suddenly the door springs open. The compacted passengers squash each other still tighter as we shoehorn ourselves inside. I hand the driver three 100-lekke fares. He waves the money away and smiles. A small incident but it exemplifies the legendary Albanian regard for foreigners. The Kanun, the traditional "code of honor," obliges Albanians not only to be hospitable to "guests," (read"foreigners") but to be responsible for their safekeeping. The Kanun largely explains why the Albanian people in anextraordinary demonstration of national courage and compassion provided a safe haven for hundreds of Jewish refugees who fled Jugoslavia, Germany, Austria and Bulgaria to this little Balkan land during the Hitlerian Holocaust. This predominantly Moslem country, where religious differences have always been played down, shielded its own Jewish community so vigilantly that not one single Jew, foreign or Albanian, fell into the hands of the Nazi occupiers.

56. WebGuest - Open Directory : Regional : Europe : Albania : Arts And Entertainment
works. AlboDJ MP3s of modern albanian Music. photos. archaeologyof Albania - Art and archaeology of ancient Albania (Illyria).
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57. SearchUK - Finds It Fast!
archaeology of Albania Art and archaeology of ancient Albania (Illyria). ElviraDones albanian writer - Her books, short stories, and work in progress
http://www.searchuk.com/Top/Regional/Europe/Albania/Arts_and_Entertainment/
Home Top Regional Europe ... Albania > Arts and Entertainment ADULT SHOPPING FINANCE GAMBLING ...
Archaeology of Albania
- Art and archaeology of ancient Albania (Illyria).
Elvira Dones: Albanian writer
- Her books, short stories, and work in progress
Shaban's Albanian Music Site
- Dedicated to music and entertainment from this country, including singers like Nikoll Nikprelaj and Adelina.
Valentin Veizaj
- Presentation page of this famous Albanian composer who won two song contests in Albania and several international ones.
Beajo
- A little bit of blues, with a twist of funk, plus a hard rocking guitar, then add in Dharma with her powerful vocals.
Albanian Music and Art
- Information and biographies of Albanian musicians and artists including pieces of their works.
Drita Albanian Folk Orchestra
- Drita announces new CD release. This folk orchestra presents traditional and popular music of Albania and Kosova performed on authentic Albanian instruments.
AlboDJ
- MP3s of modern Albanian Music.
Fantasy Art by Genci Rexhepaj
- Featuring three galleries of airbrush paintings from Genci.
Alternative Music
- Plastic Music Farm based in Prishtina; Kosova.

58. Archaeology - University Of Wales, Lampeter, Mark Pluciennik's Home Page
Agriculture and the vanishing archaeology of central Sicily. (In prep.)Boundaries, contexts and networks in southern albanian fieldwork.
http://www.lamp.ac.uk/archaeology/amarkp/MARKPLU.HTM
Mark Pluciennik m.pluciennik@lampeter.ac.uk My main research interests are broadly archaeological theory and philosophy, and the transition to farming in Europe. My interests relate to the ways in which archaeological interpretations are structured by theoretical, representational and methodological frameworks, as well as the uses made of archaeology, particularly within contemporary Europe. Recently this has led to a focus on genetics and archaeology, archaeological aspects of European Union cultural policy, and the role of narrative structures in archaeological texts. My fieldwork is in southern Europe, and my doctoral research (completed in 1994) concerned the transition to farming in southern Italy. Other fieldwork in Italy has included a project investigating a late Roman and early medieval rural site under the directorship of John Moreland. Until recently I was also involved in an excavation and survey project around the Byzantine city of Butrint in southern Albania relating to late Antique and early Medieval settlement and landscape in the region, but political circumstances have led to this being put on hold. I am involved in a second survey project, in collaboration with Enrico Giannitrapani, looking at the archaeology of the Torcicoda valley near Enna, central Sicily . Students have opportunities to join both these projects. Recent and forthcoming publications are listed below. Publications
    Body, vision and representation in archaeology. (For Internet Archaeology)

59. Albanian Islamic World
Museum; the Museum of the Struggle for National Liberation, with displays on thehistory of the albanian people; the Museum of archaeology and Ethnography; the
http://salam.muslimsonline.com/~albanian/tirana.html
a Index Regions
Albania

Kosova

Macedonia

Chameria
...
Montenegro
History
Ancient Times

Middle Ages

Present Days
Literature
In Albanian
Qur'an
In English
Links Islamic Pages Albanian.com Kosova Crisis Shqiperia.com ... ZIK Tirana (The name Tirana comes from the Albanian word "tjer one" which is one medival practise of local Albanian ladies on the wool production Tirana, the capital of Albania is a city in central Albania, part of the District of Tirana, on the Ishm River. It is the largest city and the commercial, manufacturing, and cultural centre of the Albania. Tirana is connected by rail to the port city of Durrës, on the Adriatic Sea. Ethem Beu Mosque in the middle of Tirana It is very important to be mentioned that Tirana is the center of the Albanian World. It's importance is historical and religious as well. Thus the main Islamic bodies of Albania are located in Tirana, and the World Center of Bektashis Sect is also settled on the corners of Tirana.

60. Athens, Archaeology And The Ottomans
vision of their awkward position in the world of NearEastern archaeology. for thefirst time, available Ottoman documents and used her albanian informers, to
http://www.swan.ac.uk/cssee/cnfrencs/gregynog/speakrs1.htm
Centre for the Study of South Eastern Europe Anafi Members Links CSSEE Homepage ... Publications Conferences: Gregynog, 2001 - Other Speakers Follow the accompanying links for a short abstract or click here to download a printable Adobe Acrobat PDF file (84 Kb)
Other Speakers By Subject
Athens, Archaeology and the Ottomans:
The Life and Times of F.W. and Margaret Hasluck
Professor Ethem Eldem (Bosphorus University, Istanbul) 'Power, Politics, and Science: Archaeology in the Ottoman Empire (1880-1914)' Dr David Gill (UW Swansea) Dr Birgit Olsen (University of Copenhagen) 'R.M. Dawkins and Greece' Dr Eyal Ginio (University of Haifa) Mr Roderick Bailey (St Antony's College, Oxford), 'The Odd Couple: Margaret Hasluck and the Special Operations Executive, 1942-44' Professor Alexandre Popovic (CNRS) 'The local impact of Hasluck and his translation into Serbian' (no abstract) Dr Andrietta Stathi-Storell 'The Excavations of Hasluck and Wace at Geraki (East Central Laconia)' Professor Aynur Durukan (University of Izmir) 'Hasluck and research into Turkish Art in Anatolia' Dr David Shankland (UW Lampeter) 'Scepticism and Continuities: An Intellectual Portrait of Hasluck'.

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