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Local Responses to Colonization in the Iron Age Mediterranean



This book compares responses to colonization in the Iron Age Mediterranean. From North Syria to Sicily and North Africa, Tamar Hodos explores the responses to these colonies in areas where Greeks and Phoenicians were in competition with one another. She highlights the diversity of interest displayed by local populations in these foreign cultural offerings, charts their selective adaptation, modifi... more details
Key Features:
  • Provides a comparative analysis of the responses of populations in the Iron Age Mediterranean to Greek and Phoenician colonies
  • Highlights the diversity of interest displayed by local populations in these foreign cultural offerings
  • Charts their selective adaptation, modification and reinterpretation of Greek and Phoenician goods and ideas as their own cultures evolve


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Features
Author Tamar Hodos
Format Softcover
ISBN 9780415490986
Publisher Routledge
Manufacturer Routledge
Description
This book compares responses to colonization in the Iron Age Mediterranean. From North Syria to Sicily and North Africa, Tamar Hodos explores the responses to these colonies in areas where Greeks and Phoenicians were in competition with one another. She highlights the diversity of interest displayed by local populations in these foreign cultural offerings, charts their selective adaptation, modification and reinterpretation of Greek and Phoenician goods and ideas as their own cultures evolve. This book will be an essential resource for students of archaeology and history.

The first study to bring together such a breadth of data, this book compares responses to colonization in the Iron-Age Mediterranean. From North Syria to Sicily and North Africa, Tamar Hodos explores the responses to these colonies in areas where Greeks and Phoenicians were in competition with one another via the same local communities. Highlighting the diversity of interest displayed by local populations in these foreign cultural offering, Hodos charts their selective adaptation, modification and reinterpretation of Greek and Phoenician goods and ideas as their own cultures evolve. For students of archaeology and history, this will provide an essential resource for their degree course studies.
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