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Journal of archaeology and ancient architecture

Tag Archives: Segesta

Elementi di un modellino architettonico in pietra dal Santuario di Contrada Mango a Segesta

Authors: M. de Cesare, G. Montali

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In 1957, during an excavation campaign in Contrada Mango of Segesta, Vincenzo Tusa found two lithic fragments of miniaturistic architectural elements, belonging to a Doric frieze and a Doric horizontal geison. In this contribution, as well as offering a detailed analysis of the two fragments, we will try to put forward some hypotheses on the context of their production, on their function and on their reference monument, with a rapid examination of the problems linked to the architectural paradeigmata in the antiquity.

Segesta e il mondo greco coloniale attraverso lo studio delle anfore greco-occidentali da aree sacre: primi dati

Authors: M. de Cesare, B. Bechtold, P. Cipolla, M. Quartararo

Download article as .pdf: Segesta e il mondo greco coloniale attraverso lo studio delle anfore greco-occidentali da aree sacre: primi dati

 

This research focuses on western Greek wine amphorae found in Segesta, in two Archaic-Classical sanctuaries which have provided still unpublished archaeological data: the sacred area of the Northern Akropolis documented by the so-called Grotta Vanella dump and the extra-urban sanctuary of Contrada Mango. The amphorae fragments have been studied according to the standardised methods implemented for the data base of FACEM and attributed to more or less-known typologies and provenances. The study of these finds has been accompanied by a systematical review of all published western Greek amphorae yielded by the stratigraphical excavations undertaken in the 1990ties in some urban areas of Segesta. This analysis has led to a better understanding of the commercial vectors and the mechanisms of purchase of these vessels in the Elymian town against the background of the circulation of this class in Sicily and southern-central Mediterranean. Furthermore, the contextualisation of the new data within the frame of the two sanctuaries has allowed for a more precise and diachronic definition of the containers’ role and their contents in the ritual practices. It has also clarified certain dynamics of contact between Segesta and the Greek milieu and the cultural interaction between the Greek and the ‘Indigenous’ population, ritualised within the two sacred areas.