Nova York (EUA)
Lídia Colominas, investigadora Ramón y Cajal al grup GIAP de l’ICAC, paticipa al congrés internacional ‘Caesarea Maritima International Conference MMXXII’, que se celebra a Nova York (EUA) els dies 23 a 26 d’octubre de 2022 i on es presentaran diferents estudis que s’han fet sobre el jaciment de Caesarea maritima (Israel).
Dilluns, 24 d’octubre, Sessió 5
2:30 – 3:00 p.m. “Archaeozoology of Caesarea: a window to animal husbandry and meat diet in the Fatimid and Crusader periods”, Lídia Colominas (ICAC) i Nimrod Marom (NYU Tel Aviv, Haifa University).
La comunicació presenta els resultats que es van obtenir en el marc del projecte de recerca Archaeozoology of Caesarea Maritima: Animal Interactions in an Imperial Port City on the Mediterranean, liderat per la Dra. Colominas (2020 – 2022). Actualment, aquesta recerca té continuïtat en el projecte Roman expansion and acculturations at both sides of the Mediterranean: searching for patterns, rates and singularities through archaeozoology. (RYC-2019-026732-I), 2021-2026.
The talk will present the results of the project “Archaeozoology of Caesarea Maritima: Animal Interactions in an Imperial Port City on the Mediterranean”, which is being built up in the context of the project “Roman expansion and acculturations at both sides of the Mediterranean: searching for patterns, rates and singularities through archaeozoology. (RYC-2019-026732-I)”.
This project aims to examine the Roman expansion and the subsequent acculturations as social processes and from a local perspective. It examines in detail the patterns of interaction between Roman imperialism and the native population in two specific areas, each located at the ends of the Mediterranean, Catalonia and Israel, in order to search for timings, rates and singularities. It applies an archaeozoological approach that allow to investigate key aspects of the Roman economy and society, such as dietary patterns, livestock practices or animal trade.
#Animal_Husbandry, #Animal_Trade, #Livestock_Practices, #Roman_Expansion
Organtiza:
Edmond de Rothschild Foundation, NYU Tel Aviv, Israel Antiquities Authority, Tel Aviv University, en col·laboració amb NYU College of Arts and Science, Skirball Department of Hebrew and Judaic Studies, i Center for Ancient Studies.