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Antioch : the lost ancient city by Christine…
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Antioch : the lost ancient city (edition 2000)

by Christine Kondoleon

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This lavish exhibition catalog brings to life Antioch, the magnificent city known for its Hellenic culture and luxurious way of life, once ranking with Rome, Alexandria, and Constantinople as one of the great metropolises of the Roman and early Christian world. Located in what is now southern Turkey, Antioch was the capital of Ancient Syria, a vital marketplace at the crossroads between East and West. It was here that St. Paul preached to the first gentile community to be called "Christians" and where a Greek-speaking Jewish culture flourished alongside Roman, Egyptian, and Near Eastern cults. A large middle-class shared in the wealth and culture of the city, and art abounded in numerous forms, especially in beautiful mosaics depicting scenes from mythology and everyday life. Featuring 118 objects excavated from the city's ruins, all reproduced in full color, Antioch: The Lost Ancient City recreates the spatial sensation, visual splendor, and cultural richness of this urban center.Devastated by an earthquake in 526 C.E., as well as by fires, plagues and invasions by Persians, Antioch survived only in memory through ancient written accounts until the 1930s, when excavations revealed a wealth of finds from the private houses of its inhabitants, including a large cache of floor mosaics. In addition, archaeologists found several churches, a stadium, a circus, a theater, and several baths. This catalog displays and describes the excavated artifacts--mosaics, sculpture, glass, metalwork, coins--within their architectural and cultural contexts, thereby evoking the street life as well as the domestic lives of Antioch's citizens. Among the treasures are the mosaics "The Drinking Contest between Dionysos and Herakles" and "The Judgment of Paris," the Antioch chalice, gold jewelry from Syria, bronze tyche figurines, and mosaics of river and sea deities. Antioch emerges as a compelling model of a melting-pot city, one that challenges our own notions of civic community and diversity.The contributors are Susan Boyd, Bernadette Brooten, John J. Dobbins, Anna Gonosova, Susan Ashbrook Harvey, Florent Heintz, Sandra Knudsen, Christine Kondoleon, Michael Maas, William Metcalf, James Russell, Sarolta Takacs, Cornelius Vermeule III, and Fikret Yegul.EXHIBITION SCHEDULE: The Worcester Art Museum Worcester, MassachusettsOctober 7, 2000-February 4, 2001The Cleveland Art MuseumCleveland, OhioMarch 18, 2001-June 3, 2001The Baltimore Museum of ArtBaltimore, MarylandSeptember 16, 2001-December 30, 2001"… (more)
Member:commingledfibers
Title:Antioch : the lost ancient city
Authors:Christine Kondoleon
Info:Princeton, N.J. : Princeton University Press in association with the Worcester Art Museum, c2000.
Collections:Your library
Rating:
Tags:art, art history, travel, pattern

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Antioch: The Lost Ancient City by Christine Kondoleon

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Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Christine Kondoleonprimary authorall editionscalculated
Brooten, Bernadette J.Contributorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Dobbins, John J.Contributorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Foss, CliveContributorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Harvey, Susan AshbrookContributorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Maas, MichaelContributorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Metcalf, William E.Contributorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Najim, MichelAuthorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Russell, JamesContributorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Vermeule, CorneliusContributorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
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This lavish exhibition catalog brings to life Antioch, the magnificent city known for its Hellenic culture and luxurious way of life, once ranking with Rome, Alexandria, and Constantinople as one of the great metropolises of the Roman and early Christian world. Located in what is now southern Turkey, Antioch was the capital of Ancient Syria, a vital marketplace at the crossroads between East and West. It was here that St. Paul preached to the first gentile community to be called "Christians" and where a Greek-speaking Jewish culture flourished alongside Roman, Egyptian, and Near Eastern cults. A large middle-class shared in the wealth and culture of the city, and art abounded in numerous forms, especially in beautiful mosaics depicting scenes from mythology and everyday life. Featuring 118 objects excavated from the city's ruins, all reproduced in full color, Antioch: The Lost Ancient City recreates the spatial sensation, visual splendor, and cultural richness of this urban center.Devastated by an earthquake in 526 C.E., as well as by fires, plagues and invasions by Persians, Antioch survived only in memory through ancient written accounts until the 1930s, when excavations revealed a wealth of finds from the private houses of its inhabitants, including a large cache of floor mosaics. In addition, archaeologists found several churches, a stadium, a circus, a theater, and several baths. This catalog displays and describes the excavated artifacts--mosaics, sculpture, glass, metalwork, coins--within their architectural and cultural contexts, thereby evoking the street life as well as the domestic lives of Antioch's citizens. Among the treasures are the mosaics "The Drinking Contest between Dionysos and Herakles" and "The Judgment of Paris," the Antioch chalice, gold jewelry from Syria, bronze tyche figurines, and mosaics of river and sea deities. Antioch emerges as a compelling model of a melting-pot city, one that challenges our own notions of civic community and diversity.The contributors are Susan Boyd, Bernadette Brooten, John J. Dobbins, Anna Gonosova, Susan Ashbrook Harvey, Florent Heintz, Sandra Knudsen, Christine Kondoleon, Michael Maas, William Metcalf, James Russell, Sarolta Takacs, Cornelius Vermeule III, and Fikret Yegul.EXHIBITION SCHEDULE: The Worcester Art Museum Worcester, MassachusettsOctober 7, 2000-February 4, 2001The Cleveland Art MuseumCleveland, OhioMarch 18, 2001-June 3, 2001The Baltimore Museum of ArtBaltimore, MarylandSeptember 16, 2001-December 30, 2001"

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