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17 result(s) for "Bahrain Antiquities"
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Archaeology, Artifacts and Antiquities of the Ancient Near East
Archaeology, Artifacts and Antiquities of the Ancient Near East follows the evolution of Oscar White Muscarella's scholarly work and interests and is divided into several categories of interrelated fields.
Leaving No Stones Unturned
A fitting tribute to the life and achievements of Donald P. Hansen, this collection includes contributions by Z. Bahrani, R. A. Fazzini, R. E. Freed, P. O. Harper, J. and D. Oates, D. O'Connor, E. L. Ochsenschlager, E. Holmes-Peck, W. H. Peck, H. Pittman, M. Van de Mieroop, M. S. Venit, K. Wilson, I. J. Winter, and many others.
ARAB SPRING OR ISLAMIST WINTER? Three Views
The phrase Arab Spring is a misnomer. The political upheavals sweeping Tunisia, Egypt, Libya, and Syria are concurrent yet different phenomena, and it's premature to assume that any of them, let alone all of them, will bring their respective countries out of the long Arab winter of authoritarian rule. In the medium term, the number of genuinely liberal democracies to emerge in the Arab world is likely to be one or zero. Large parts of Tunisia appear so Westernized, at least on the surface, that visitors might think they're in Greece or even in France if they didn't know better. Egypt is an ancient and crushingly poor nation ruled, as it has been more often than not, by a military dictatorship. Tunisia signed an association agreement with the European Union seventeen years ago, the first in the region ever to do so. It is an Arab country, but it is just as much, and perhaps more importantly, a Mediterranean country, in look, feel, and to some extent in cultural values.
Early Islamic Bahrain
Many facets of early Islamic Bahrain can be reconstructed on the basis of the archaeological evidence recovered already. The focus of this research has been the investigation of the early Islamic period (mid seventh to 12th centuries).