Jump to Content
Brill Logo Brill Logo Brill Logo Brill Logo Brill Logo Brill Logo
  • 中文
  • Deutsch
Access via:
Dar Hadith al Hassania
Login to my Brill account Create Brill Account
Browse Our Titles
African Studies
American Studies
Ancient Near East and Egypt
Art History
Asian Studies
Biblical Studies
Biology
Book History and Cartography
Classical Studies
Education
History
Human Rights and Humanitarian Law
International Law
International Relations
Jewish Studies
Languages and Linguistics
Life Sciences
Literature and Cultural Studies
Media Studies
Middle East and Islamic Studies
Musicology
Philosophy
Religious Studies
Slavic and Eurasian Studies
Social Sciences
Theology and World Christianity

Becoming a Brill Author

Publishing Ethics & AI Policy

Publishing Guides

General Open Access Information

For Authors

For Academic Societies

For Librarians

Research Funding

Open Access Pricing

Books

Journals

Specialty Products

Metadata: Title Lists, MARC & KBART Files

Catalogs, Flyers and Price Lists

Accessing Brill Products

About Brill & its History

Imprints

Careers

Organization

Corporate Social Responsibility

News Archive

Sales Contacts

Ordering from Brill

Editorial Contacts

Offices Worlwide

Press & Reviews

Rights & Permissions

Course Adoption

Contact Form

Help
Brill Logo Brill Logo Brill Logo Brill Logo Brill Logo Brill Logo
Access via:
Dar Hadith al Hassania
Login to my Brill account Create Brill Account
  • 中文
  • Deutsch
Browse Our Titles
African Studies Education Media Studies
American Studies History Middle East and Islamic Studies
Ancient Near East and Egypt Human Rights and Humanitarian Law Musicology
Art History International Law Philosophy
Asian Studies International Relations Religious Studies
Biblical Studies Jewish Studies Slavic and Eurasian Studies
Biology Languages and Linguistics Social Sciences
Book History and Cartography Life Sciences Theology and World Christianity
Classical Studies Literature and Cultural Studies  

Becoming a Brill Author

Publishing Ethics & AI Policy

Publishing Guides

General Open Access Information

For Authors

For Academic Societies

For Librarians

Research Funding

Open Access Pricing

Books

Journals

Specialty Products

Metadata: Title Lists, MARC & KBART Files

Catalogs, Flyers and Price Lists

Accessing Brill Products

About Brill & its History

Imprints

Careers

Organization

Corporate Social Responsibility

News Archive

Sales Contacts

Ordering from Brill

Editorial Contacts

Offices Worlwide

Press & Reviews

Rights & Permissions

Course Adoption

Contact Form

Help

Acknowledgements

In: Building between Eastern and Western Mediterranean Lands
Access via:
Dar Hadith al Hassania
  • Full Text

Acknowledgements

Piero Gilento

The present volume brings together scholars working in different areas of the Mediterranean basin with the main objective of demonstrating and comparing their ongoing research, creating a fertile and collaborative background in which to exchange data and create a concrete contact point between different work experiences.

This was possible thanks to the project known as ACTECH (Ancient Construction TECHniques. Building Traditions, Technological Innovations and Workmanship Circulation: From Roman Arabia to Medieval Europe, G.A. 703829), founded with a Marie Skłodowska-Curie Individual Fellowship (Horizon 2020). The project was developed from 2017 to 2019 at the University of Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne; I thank the Directorate of Research and Valorisation (Direction de la recherche et de la valorisation – Éric Zyla and Sandra Mereu) for the great support provided. I also thank Prof. François Villeneuve for having constantly supervised the progress of the project. The University itself made an important contribution to the realisation of the workshop with the Bonus Qualité Recherche (BQR) 2018. Another fundamental support for the success of the three-day international workshop was granted by the DIM-MAP (Domaine d’Intérêt Majeur-Materiaux Anciennes et Patrimoniaux) of the Île-de-France Region, for which I thank Sophie David and Anne-Fleur Barfuss. The APOHR (Archéologie du Proche-Orient Hellénistique et Romain) laboratory contributed significantly, with the full support of its director Pierre-Marie Blanc, to both the realisation of the workshop and the development of the fieldwork, opening a fruitful new research season in northern Jordan, and particularly at the Umm as-Surab site. Currently the archaeological mission in northern Jordan benefits from the support of the French Ministry of Europe and Foreign Affairs and the CNRS. Fieldwork continues with the support of the Department of Antiquities (DoA) of Jordan (thanks to Aktham Oweidi) and the DoA territorial office of Mafraq (thanks to Ismaeel Ahmad Deeb Melhem, Jamil al-Qutaish and Mohammad Al-Zuhd). The ACTECH Project also opened an international scientific partnership with Yarmouk University thanks to the availability and interest of its President, Prof. Zeidan Kafafi, and of Profs. Hani Hayajneh, Khaled al-Bashaireh, Maher Tarboush and Maen Omoush. I would also like to thank Roberto Parenti, who inspired my interest in important issues related to the world of building which were in part the foundation on which this workshop was conceived and realised. Finally, I would like to thank the three reviewers for their precious contribution, Teddi Dols for her constant engagement during the entire process of preparing the book and the editorial committee (Margaret Graves, Marcus Milwright and Mariam Rosser-Owen) of the Arts and Archaeology of the Islamic World – AAIW series for their belief in this project. This book is dedicated to our friend and brilliant colleague Daniela Moser and to my father Domenico, who both left us to soon. Chadi Hatoum took care of the translations of the Arabic texts and Alberto Prieto of the translations and revisions of the English language for the Introduction and Chapters 2, 6, 7 and 11. I would like to thank both of them for their invaluable support.

Citation Info

  • Save
  • Cite
  • Email this content

    Share link with colleague or librarian


    You can email a link to this page to a colleague or librarian:
    Email this content
    or copy the link directly:
    The link was not copied. Your current browser may not support copying via this button.
    Link copied successfully

  • Collapse
  • Expand

Building between Eastern and Western Mediterranean Lands

Construction Processes and Transmission of Knowledge from Late Antiquity to Early Islam

Series:  Arts and Archaeology of the Islamic World, Volume: 18
Cover Building between Eastern and Western Mediterranean Lands
E-Book ISBN:
9789004516458
Publisher:
Brill
Print Publication Date:
21 Jul 2022
  • Subjects
    • Art History
      • Architecture
      • Archaeology
    • Middle East and Islamic Studies
      • Archaeology, Art & Architecture
Front Matter
Preliminary Material
Copyright page
Acknowledgements
Note on Arabic Transliteration and Translation
Figures and Tables
Notes on Contributors
Introduction
Part 1 Built Heritage and Historical Archives
Chapter 1 The Contribution of Historical Archives to Jordan Archaeology
Chapter 2 The Study of Near Eastern Building Techniques and the Legacy of Howard Crosby Butler
Part 2 Building in the Eastern Mediterranean between the End of the Roman World and the First Centuries of Islam
Chapter 3 Aperçu des processus de construction en pierre au Proche-Orient entre le IIe siècle et le début du Moyen Âge : l’exemple de Jérash
Chapter 4 Techniques de construction en Syrie du Sud à l’époque Romano-Byzantine
Chapter 5 The ‘Palace of Trajan’ at Bosra
Chapter 6 The Building Techniques of Byzantine and Early Islamic Fortifications in Northern Syria
Chapter 7 Building Techniques and Village Society: A Diachronic Perspective from Northern Jordan (2nd–16th c. AD)
Chapter 8 The Conversion of Urban Landscape in Early Medieval Syria
Chapter 9 A Reappraisal for Domestic Architecture in the Near East after the Islamic Conquest
Chapter 10 New Building Infrastructures Found at Quṣayr ʿAmra
Part 3 Building in the Western Mediterranean during the First Centuries of Islam
Chapter 11 Echoes of Empire. Building Materials and Technical Systems in Ifrīqīya in Aghlabid and Fatimid Times (9th–10th Centuries)
Chapter 12 Islamic Building Techniques in al-Andalus from the 8th to the 10th Century
Chapter 13 Early Medieval Hispanic Churches (8th–10th c.)
Back Matter
Index
Arabic Texts

النصوص العربية

Metrics

All Time Past 365 days Past 30 Days
Abstract Views 0 0 0
Full Text Views 68 13 4
PDF Views & Downloads 0 0 0

Product Information

Books

Journals

Specialty Products

Metadata: Title Lists, MARC & KBART Files

Catalogs, Flyers & Price Lists

Accessing Brill Products

Authors

Becoming a Brill Author

Publishing Ethics & AI Policy

Publishing Guides

Contact & Info

Sales Contacts

Ordering

Editorial Contacts

Press & Reviews

Contact Form

Stay Updated

Blog

News Archive

Newsletters

Social Media Overview

Investors

Resources Center

General Resources

For Authors

For Librarians

Rights & Permissions

FAQ

Terms and Conditions 

Privacy Statement 

Cookie Settings 

Accessibility

Legal Notice

Sitemap

Terms and Conditions  |  Privacy Statement  |  Cookie Settings |  Accessibility  |  Legal Notice  |  Sitemap  |  Copyright © 2016-2026

 

 

Access via:
Dar Hadith al Hassania
Powered by PubFactory
  • [216.73.216.164|92.112.192.157]
  • 92.112.192.157
Close
Edit Annotation

Character limit 500/500

@!

Character limit 500/500