Long-distance trade under Rome is well-understood. But the importance of local exchange has not been fully explored. The volume investigates how inland regions could become prosperous in late antiquit
Late antique sites are often excavated badly and are hardly ever published in full, especially in the East. This volume seeks to provide a critique of this situation and exemplars of best practice. It
From a 2005 conference in Leuven, the Netherlands, 18 papers cover publications on late antique pagan archaeology, the development of paganism in late antiquity, temples in the west, temples in the ea
Tthe contents, derived from an eponymous meeting at Oxford in May 2004, admirably promote the study of material spatiality in Late Antiquity, exploring the material world as it was lived, using a vari
Two 2003 colloquia are the source of the 19 selected papers: of architectural historians in Denver during April and of late antique archaeologists in Padova during May. They survey developments in Med
The cities of late antiquity get most of the attention today, as no doubt they did in their own time, so archaeologists and historians mostly from Europe, but also the US and Israel, beyond and betwee
This publication, volume four of the Late Antique Archaeology series, surveys the aspects of technology of the period and explores technological continuity, stagnation, and decline; the papers present
This new volume in the well-established Late Antique Archaeology series draws together recent research by archaeologists and historians to shed new light on the religious world of Late Antiquity. A de
Multilevel Modeling is a concise, practical guide to building models for multilevel and longitudinal data. Author Douglas A. Luke begins by providing a rationale for multilevel models; outlines the ba
Publish, market, and sell your own e-book Although creating an e-book seems fairly straightforward, it is not. You need to select and create a variety of formats that will be read on a variety of e-re
Jeff Luke's book is simply outstanding and a must read for those public leaders interested in advancing the common good.?John Bryson, professor of planing and public affairs in the Hubert H. Humphrey