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New book on Dura Europos by Simon James
#1
Just saw this on Oxbow. "A complete catalog of military finds" looks fascinating but the price is $170! Has anyone seen this book yet to say if it's worth it?<br>
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Excavations at Dura Europos: Final Report VII: Arms and Armour and other Military Equipment by Simon James<br>
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The ancient city of Dura-Europos, destroyed by a Sasanian Persian siege in the AD 250s, was an important regional centre of commerce, government and military control under the Seleucid, Parthian and Roman empires. During excavations in the 1920s and 1930s it became famous for finds such as a painted synagogue and early Christian chapel. Not the least spectacular of the discoveries in this 'Pompeii of the Syrian Desert' were the remains of the town's garrisons and siegeworks and massive quantities of military artefacts. The latter comprise perhaps the most important single collection of arms, armour and other equipment to survive from the Roman period, a collection which is exceptional in its size, diversity and state of preservation. Its colourful painted shields and horse armour, for example, are unequalled in the vast Roman empire or in neighbouring lands. It also holds vital importance for our knowledge of the material culture of the military in the eastern frontier lands of the Roman world. This book provides a complete catalogue of the military artefacts, most of which are now housed in Yale University Art Gallery, and analyses and assesses their cultural affiliations and uses. The archaeological evidence from the site is combined with the equally rich and rare textual and representational evidence in the form of papyri, graffiti and wall-paintings, not to mention the buildings of the city themselves, to examine the ways in which material culture actively creates and expresses identity, in this case of Roman soldiers of Syrian origin. 456p, 141 b/w & 13 col illus (British Museum Press 2004)<br>
ISBN 0714122483. Paperback. Price US $170.00 <p>Legio XX<br>
Fortius Conamur<br>
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Richard Campbell
Legio XX - Alexandria, Virginia
RAT member #6?
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#2
Has it been already released? I've pre-ordered it (six months without dessert, sigh ) and I'll tell you if it is as good as it is expensive when I get it!<br>
Can you tell us something on its availability, Mike?<br>
<br>
Aitor <p></p><i></i>
It\'s all an accident, an accident of hands. Mine, others, all without mind, from one extreme to another, but neither works nor will ever.

Rolf Steiner
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#3
I will not be able to afford the book for the moment and some time will pass before I will be able to see it in a library or bookshop.<br>
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I already know they found colored shields and horse armour. But what about swords, helmets, body armour? Tell us more. I read that one of the towers that collapsed, due to persian mines, contained a arms deposit. I also know that there was an underground battle (that the romans lost) so when the mine was made to collapse corpses of romans and persians were covered to delight of archeologists.<br>
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Tell us more <p></p><i></i>
Jeffery Wyss
"Si vos es non secui of solutio tunc vos es secui of preciptate."
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#4
Well, wherever you buy it, pay for it in Pounds Sterling, as GBP 95 is only $ 163.3...<br>
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Also available from [url=http://www.britishmuseum.co.uk/product.asp?cat=159&product=775" target="top]the British Museum.[/url]<br>
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Valete,<br>
Valerius/Robert<br>
<p></p><i></i>
Robert Vermaat
MODERATOR
FECTIO Late Romans
THE CAUSE OF WAR MUST BE JUST
(Maurikios-Strategikon, book VIII.2: Maxim 12)
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#5
<em>Can you tell us something on its availability, Mike?</em><br>
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Well I haven't seen a copy yet, so I suspect at the moment it is still 'vapourware'. This is BM Publications we are talking about, after all ;-)<br>
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Mike Bishop <p></p><i></i>
You know my method. It is founded upon the observance of trifles

Blogging, tweeting, and mapping Hadrian\'s Wall... because it\'s there
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#6
Mmmmmh , I guessed that... <br>
<br>
Aitor <p></p><i></i>
It\'s all an accident, an accident of hands. Mine, others, all without mind, from one extreme to another, but neither works nor will ever.

Rolf Steiner
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