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            <TitleText>Argos Through the Argive Lens</TitleText>
            <Subtitle textcase="1">A Reappraisal of an Ancient City </Subtitle>
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            <PersonNameInverted>Weber-Pallez, Clémence</PersonNameInverted>
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            <PersonNameInverted>Vance, Evan</PersonNameInverted>
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            <p>Argos was one of the most important cities in ancient Greece—if we follow Isocrates and Strabo. However, it has generally been studied as a secondary participant compared to its more important neighbours like Athens and Sparta. This work places Argos centre-stage and attempts to see the Greek world through Argive eyes. In this volume, top specialists of Argos analyse an array of evidence (including archaeological, epigraphic, and literary, among others) using new methodologies and recent research to grant Argos its full weight. Studies traverse the local, regional, and Mediterranean scales, from the Archaic to the Imperial period, and emphasize Argos’ interactions with different actors, from the small &lt;em&gt;komai&lt;/em&gt; (villages) of its territory to the greatest powers of the Mediterranean, such as the Macedonians and Romans, to ensure its hegemony over the northeast Peloponnese.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Clémence Weber-Pallez is an associate professor at Toulouse Jean Jaurès University, a member of the PLH laboratory (ARTEMIS team), and a former member of the French School at Athens. She is a specialist in Argos and the Argolid: she wrote her thesis on territorial representations of the Argolic peninsula in the Archaic and Classical periods (ENS de Lyon) and continued her research as member of the EFA with a dissertation on the integration of Argos into the Roman Empire.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Evan Vance is an assistant professor in History and Classical Studies at McGill University, where he holds the MacNaughton Chair in Classics. He received his PhD from the University of California, Berkeley in 2022 and subsequently spent two years as a post-doctoral fellow at the American School of Classical Studies at Athens. His dissertation studied sacred wealth and institutional development in the Argolid and adjacent regions, a research agenda that he now expands to the wider archaic Greek world.</p>
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            <p>Argos était une des plus importantes cités de la Grèce antique, si l’on en croit Isocrate ou Strabon. Pourtant, elle est toujours étudiée comme une actrice secondaire, au profit de ses grandes voisines d’Athènes ou de Sparte. Cet ouvrage a pour ambition de placer Argos au premier plan et d’envisager le monde grec à travers les yeux des Argiens. Les plus grands spécialistes de cette cité reprennent ici l’analyse des sources (archéologiques, épigraphiques, de la tradition manuscrite, etc.) grâce à de nouvelles méthodologies ou présentent le résultat de nouvelles recherches. Ce travail permet de redonner à Argos tout son poids à l’échelle locale, régionale et méditerranéenne, de l’époque archaïque à l’époque impériale, en insistant sur les interactions que la cité a mises en place avec différents acteurs, des petites&lt;em&gt; kômai&lt;/em&gt; de son territoire aux peuples dirigeant la Méditerranée (Macédoniens, puis Romains), afin d’assurer son hégémonie sur le nord-est du Péloponnèse.</p>
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        <ul><li>Acknowledgements</li><li>Introduction</li><ul><li>Argos and the Curse of History</li><li>From Local to Panhellenic History: Networks THrough the Argive Lens</li><ul><li>Local History (the Polis Scale)</li><li>Regional History</li><li>Global History (the Mediterranean World)</li><li>ARGOS: A LOCAL HISTORY</li><li>Glances into History: New Evidence from the Archives of Pallas from Argos</li></ul><li>A New Heraion (?) on the Aspis Hilltop at Argos</li><ul><li>The Evidence</li><li>The Old Evidence for the Sanctuary</li><li>The New Evidence for the Sanctuary</li></ul><li>The Temple and its Location</li><li>Identification of the Sanctuary</li><li>Conclusions</li><li>Archaic Construction and the Public Sphere: THe Contribution of the Epigraphic Sources from Aegina and Argos</li><li>The Problem: How Alcmaeonid Was the Alcmaeonid Temple?</li><li>Ownership of Materials</li><li>Intentional Anonymity</li><li>Conclusions</li><li>Ceramics and Argive History: Pottery Assemblages from the Agora and from the Aspis Hill of Argos</li><li>Introduction</li><li>The Agora</li><ul><li>The Dating of the Stoa P 97 The Dating of the Main Occupation Phase</li><li>Commercial Activities in the North Stoa</li></ul><li>The Aspis Hill</li><ul><li>The Nature of the Occupation</li><li>The Economic Context of Argos in the Early Hellenistic Period</li><li>Argive Material Culture and the Koine of the Hellenistic Period</li></ul><li>Research Perspectives</li><li>Archéologie et histoire : la fin de l’Agora d’Argos</li><li>Bref rappel des périodes précédentes (sols VII, VI, V)</li><li>Les bouleversements du Bas-Empire</li><li>Les derniers évergètes</li><li>L’abandon de l’Agora : vers une autre forme d’urbanisme</li><li>Conclusions</li><li>Appendice : données stratigraphiques</li><li>ARGOS AND THE ARGOLID</li><li>Regional Development of Architectural Styles: Polygonal Columns in Sanctuariesaround Argos</li><li>Introduction</li><li>A Votive Column from the Argive Heraion</li><li>16-Sided Polygonal Columns in the Argive Heraion and Nemea</li><li>A Regional Style of Octagonal Doric Columns</li><li>Continuation of the Use of Polygonal Columns in Nemea</li><li>Memory of the Past in Classical Argos: THe Archaic Border Wars with Sparta and Argos’ 5th-c. Foreign Policy</li><li>Remembering Victories and Defeats: some Argive Perspectives</li><li>(Memories of ) the Battle of Hysiae</li><li>Memories of ) the Battle of the Champions</li><li>(Memories of ) the Battle of Sepeia</li><li>Concluding Remarks</li><li>Argive Democracy Challenged: From Hegemonic Expectations to Civil Strife in the Peloponnesian War</li><li>Weaving the Argive Web: Local and Regional Proxenia in the Hellenistic Argolid</li><li>Local Proxenia and the Theorodokia</li><li>The Proxenic Networks of the Argolid</li><li>Argive Proxenia in Context: Local and Inter-Regional Ties</li><li>ARGOS AND THE MEDITERRANEAN NETWORKS</li><li>The Importance of Being Argos in the Hellenistic World</li><li>The Beneficial Results of the Syngeneia with the Argeads: Territorial Expansion,Prestige and Popularity for the Nemeia, and Clemency</li><li>Argive Relations with the Southern Aegean</li><li>Cyprus and Ptolemaic Egypt</li><li>Rhodes and Cities in Cilicia-Pamphylia: THe ‘Apoikoi’ of Argos</li><li>Mobilités et réseaux argiens dans le bassin Méditerranéen oriental dans le derniertiers du ive s. av. J.-C.</li><li>Alexandre, les mobilités argiennes en Méditerranée orientale et le réseau de la parenté</li><li>Sortir de la parenté : les autres réseaux économiques, diplomatiques et culturelsd’Argos au dernier tiers du ive s.</li><li>Conclusion</li><li>A Hellenistic Structure of Corinthian Order in the Centre of Doric Argos</li><li>Argos et l’Égypte</li><li>Argos, une ville au premier abord normale dans ses liens avec l’Égypte àl’époque hellénistique</li><ul><li>La présence égyptienne dans les environs d’Argos</li><li>L’Égypte partout en ville</li></ul><li>La concentration des trouvailles sous le Sérapieion, état 1 des Thermes A : unsanctuaire hellénistique antérieur</li><ul><li>La stèle à l’orant</li><li>La maquette ex-voto</li><li>Donation lagide et chypriote</li><li>Dédicace aux dieux égyptiens</li><li>Une bobine pour Isis ?</li><li>La statue d’Asclépios jeune</li><li>La base de l’archiprêtre de la Domus Augusta</li><li>Conclusion</li></ul><li>Le Sérapieion entre Théâtre et Agora vers 100 apr. J.-C. : une empreinte architecturaleremarquable</li><ul><li>Un signal urbanistique remarquable : « l’espace Delta »</li></ul><li>L’état thermal thérapeutique</li><ul><li>La crypte de la parodos Danaou et la salle D3 des thermes</li><li>Conclusion : tradition, politique, vie économique</li><li>Argos aux ier et iie s. apr. J.-C. et son intégration économique dans l’Empire romain</li></ul><li>Les céramiques fines importées</li><li>Les céramiques communes : un ensemble hétérogène, avec différentes fonctions et places dans les réseaux commerciaux </li><ul><li>Les amphores</li><li>La céramique commune de table et de cuisine</li></ul><li>Les lampes</li><li>Conclusions</li><li>Summaries</li><li>List of Contributors</li></ul>
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