Spolia Reincarnated

Afterlives of Objects, Materials, and Spaces in Anatolia from Antiquity to the Ottoman Era

At the cutting edge of spolia studies, the collected essays in this volume explore diverse forms and types of reuse in Anatolia over centuries through a cross-cultural lens. Gathered from the joining of disciplines—archaeology, art history, and the history of architecture and landscape—an exceptional array of examples is presented, including architectural elements and decoration, sculpture and statuary, space and buildings, and textiles and other objects. Most significantly, this ground-breaking work reveals how objects, materials, and spaces attained new meanings in their afterlives through various modes of reuse.

The scholarly contributions published here stem from the Tenth International ANAMED Annual Symposium “Spolia Reincarnated: Second Life of Spaces, Materials, Objects in Anatolia from Antiquity to the Ottoman Period” held at Istanbul’s Koç University Research Center for Anatolian Civilizations (ANAMED) in December 2015. This unique conference marked ANAMED’s tenth anniversary and brought together many prominent scholars and former research center fellows, including the volume’s editors.

BENZER KİTAPLAR

Spatial Webs charts the cultural heritage and identity of Anatolia, focusing on projects that incorporate Geographic Information Systems and other analytical […]

AUTHOR(S) Amy Singer, Anuja Dangol, Ayşe Nur Akdal, 250 TL

Spatial Webs: Mapping Anatolian Pasts for Research and the Public
Mapping Anatolian Pasts for Research and the Public

AUTHOR(S) Amy Singer, Anuja Dangol, Ayşe Nur Akdal,

Trebizond, that “long-anticipated city of the Komnenians with its soft and melodious name” to quote Jakob Fallmerayer, has long lured […]

AUTHOR(S) Annika Asp-Talwar, Antony Eastmond, Barbara Roggema, 111,11 TL

Byzantium’s Other Empire
Trebizond

AUTHOR(S) Annika Asp-Talwar, Antony Eastmond, Barbara Roggema,

As an extension of the exhibition “Picturing a Lost Empire: An Italian Lens on Byzantine Art in Anatolia, 1960–2000” which […]

AUTHOR(S) Alessandra Guiglia, Andrea Paribeni, Antonio Iacobini, 70 TL

Picturing a Lost Empire
An Italian Lens on Byzantine Art in Anatolia, 1960-2000

AUTHOR(S) Alessandra Guiglia, Andrea Paribeni, Antonio Iacobini,

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