Three hundred years of Palmyrene history. Unlocking archaeological data for studying past societal transformations.

While archaeological sciences have made great advances over the last decades through combining archaeological evidence and natural sciences in order to push borders for the understanding of archaeological contexts, traditional archaeology still holds an immense latent potential. Such potential can b...

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Autores principales: Rubina Raja, Olympia Bobou, Iza Romanowska
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Publicado: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2021
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/07e0c673f5e047339ede0cb8e4bf17f6
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:07e0c673f5e047339ede0cb8e4bf17f62021-12-02T20:04:31ZThree hundred years of Palmyrene history. Unlocking archaeological data for studying past societal transformations.1932-620310.1371/journal.pone.0256081https://doaj.org/article/07e0c673f5e047339ede0cb8e4bf17f62021-01-01T00:00:00Zhttps://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0256081https://doaj.org/toc/1932-6203While archaeological sciences have made great advances over the last decades through combining archaeological evidence and natural sciences in order to push borders for the understanding of archaeological contexts, traditional archaeology still holds an immense latent potential. Such potential can be realized through baseline projects that pull together unexplored bodies of material culture and study these in detail in order to investigate their significance for the understanding of the human past. This paper presents such a large-scale baseline study and focuses on the presentation of the results emerging from the recently compiled corpus of more than 3700 funerary portraits stemming from one location in the ancient world, Roman Palmyra, an oasis city in the Syrian Desert. The analysis of the chronological development of the numerous portraits allows us to follow the fluctuations in the production of these portraits over approximately 300 years. Here we discuss and review the developments in connection with historical sources and discuss until now unknown events, which have emerged through the data analysis. The paper brings to the forefront the significance of social science baseline projects, which often do not receive enough attention or funding, but which in fact are fundamental for furthering our understanding of the human past and push borders for the directions in which we can take such studies in the future.Rubina RajaOlympia BobouIza RomanowskaPublic Library of Science (PLoS)articleMedicineRScienceQENPLoS ONE, Vol 16, Iss 11, p e0256081 (2021)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic Medicine
R
Science
Q
spellingShingle Medicine
R
Science
Q
Rubina Raja
Olympia Bobou
Iza Romanowska
Three hundred years of Palmyrene history. Unlocking archaeological data for studying past societal transformations.
description While archaeological sciences have made great advances over the last decades through combining archaeological evidence and natural sciences in order to push borders for the understanding of archaeological contexts, traditional archaeology still holds an immense latent potential. Such potential can be realized through baseline projects that pull together unexplored bodies of material culture and study these in detail in order to investigate their significance for the understanding of the human past. This paper presents such a large-scale baseline study and focuses on the presentation of the results emerging from the recently compiled corpus of more than 3700 funerary portraits stemming from one location in the ancient world, Roman Palmyra, an oasis city in the Syrian Desert. The analysis of the chronological development of the numerous portraits allows us to follow the fluctuations in the production of these portraits over approximately 300 years. Here we discuss and review the developments in connection with historical sources and discuss until now unknown events, which have emerged through the data analysis. The paper brings to the forefront the significance of social science baseline projects, which often do not receive enough attention or funding, but which in fact are fundamental for furthering our understanding of the human past and push borders for the directions in which we can take such studies in the future.
format article
author Rubina Raja
Olympia Bobou
Iza Romanowska
author_facet Rubina Raja
Olympia Bobou
Iza Romanowska
author_sort Rubina Raja
title Three hundred years of Palmyrene history. Unlocking archaeological data for studying past societal transformations.
title_short Three hundred years of Palmyrene history. Unlocking archaeological data for studying past societal transformations.
title_full Three hundred years of Palmyrene history. Unlocking archaeological data for studying past societal transformations.
title_fullStr Three hundred years of Palmyrene history. Unlocking archaeological data for studying past societal transformations.
title_full_unstemmed Three hundred years of Palmyrene history. Unlocking archaeological data for studying past societal transformations.
title_sort three hundred years of palmyrene history. unlocking archaeological data for studying past societal transformations.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
publishDate 2021
url https://doaj.org/article/07e0c673f5e047339ede0cb8e4bf17f6
work_keys_str_mv AT rubinaraja threehundredyearsofpalmyrenehistoryunlockingarchaeologicaldataforstudyingpastsocietaltransformations
AT olympiabobou threehundredyearsofpalmyrenehistoryunlockingarchaeologicaldataforstudyingpastsocietaltransformations
AT izaromanowska threehundredyearsofpalmyrenehistoryunlockingarchaeologicaldataforstudyingpastsocietaltransformations
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