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Front Matter

Source: Anatolian Studies, Vol. 59 (2009)


Published by: British Institute at Ankara
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I ANATOLIAN
Journal of the British Institute at Ankara

Volume 59 2009

I Published annually by
! THE BRITISH INSTITUTE AT ANKARA
I 10 Carlton House Terrace, London SW1Y 5AH

; ISSN

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BRITISH INSTITUTE AT ANKARA

The objectives of the British Institute at Ankara are to enable UK scholars across the hum

to undertake world-class original research and fieldwork focused on Turkey and the Blac
encourage and facilitate collaborative research with other UK institutions and with scho

Turkey and the Black Sea littoral region; and to maintain a centre of research excellence
archaeology, history and related subjects of Turkey.

A small staff at the Institute's premises in Ankara conduct their own research, assist scholars

of research excellence. The centre houses a library of over 50,000 volumes, research collec

epigraphic and pottery material, together with collections of maps, photographs and fie

laboratory and computer services. Access to these resources is available free of charge to m

The Institute is able to offer to members, for a reasonable charge, the use of accommod

photographic equipment, and a four-wheel-drive vehicle.

The Institute encourages as wide a scope of high-quality research as can be supported wit

and administrative resources. The Institute supports a small number of thematically focus

stimulated by current concerns of academic research in the UK as well as internationall

Strategic Research Initiatives. In 2009 the following initiatives were supported: Climate Hi

Black Sea; Frontiers of the Ottoman World; and Settlement History of Anatolia. A diver

projects, which were funded and/or facilitated by the Institute, operated within the Strate

scheme during 2009; these include a study of climate, vegetation and landscape change in

by Warren Eastwood of the University of Birmingham, the historical-archaeological inve

fortress, Ukraine, directed by Caroline Finkel, Svitlana Bilyayeva and Victor Ostapchuk

disciplinary research project at Qatalh?y?k directed by Ian Hodder via University College

Institute is conducting a major British Academy-funded international research project in c

Association for South East Asian Studies UK investigating links between the Ottoman
Southeast Asia between the 16th and 20th centuries. The Institute also offers a range of
fellowships to support undergraduate to post-doctoral research.

Subscription to the Institute costs ?35 per annum (?17.50 for students and those who ar

entitled to copies of the Institute's annual journal, Anatolian Studies, and of its annual p

research, Anatolian Archaeology, a discount on other Institute publications, notification of


and access to the centre of research excellence, accommodation and other services

To join the Institute, or for further information about its work, please contact u

British Institute at Ankara

10 Carlton House Terrace, London SW1Y 5AH


Email: biaa@britac.ac.uk
Web site: www.biaa.ac.uk

Back copies of Anatolian Studies are available from

Oxbow Books, Park End Place, Oxford OX1 1HN


www. oxbo wbooks. com

Cover photo: Akhiza fortress, general view from the east. See 'The apse decoration oftheA

and materials in the museums of Georgia' by Zaza Skhirtladze

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ANATOLIAN
STUDIES
Journal of the British Institute at Ankara

Volume 59 2009
Contents
The treasure deposits of Troy: rethinking crisis and agency on the Early Bronze

Age citadel, Christoph Bachhuber 1

Trading implements in early Troy, A. Bobokhyan 19


The historical geography of north-central Anatolia in the Hittite period: texts and

archaeology in concert, Roger Matthews and Claudia Glatz 51

A new dated coin of Tarkondimotos II from Anazarbos, Nicholas L. Wright 73


Three inscriptions from Konya in the epigraphic collections of the British Institute

at Ankara, M. Metcalfe 77

Artemidi to ichnos: divine feet and hereditary priesthood in Pisidian Pogla,

Georgia Petridou 81

The local pottery production of Kibyra, Sarah Japp 95


The invention of history in the later Roman world. The conversion of Isauria in

The Life of Conon, Philip Wood 129

The apse decoration of the Akhiza cathedral: documents and materials in the
museums of Georgia, Zaza Skhirtladze 139
The hidden material culture of the Dark Ages. Early medieval ceramics at
Sagalassos (Turkey): new evidence (ca AD 650-800), Athanasios K. Vionis,
Jeroen Poblome and Marc Waelkens 147
Silivri and the Thracian hinterland of Istanbul: an historical landscape,

Jim Crow and Sam Turner 167

Published annually by
THE BRITISH INSTITUTE AT ANKARA
10 Carlton House Terrace, London SW1Y 5AH

ISSN 0066-1546

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ACADEMIC EDITOR
Professor Roger Matthews (University College London)

EXECUTIVE EDITOR
Gina Coulthard (British Institute at Ankara)

EDITORIAL BOARD
Dr JJ. Coulton (University of Oxford, retired)
Dr Warren Eastwood (University of Birmingham)

Shahina Farid (Qatalh?y?k Research Project)


Dr Alexandra Fletcher (The British Museum)
Dr Tamar Hodos (University of Bristol)
Dr Andrew Peacock (British Institute at Ankara)
Dr Lutgarde Vandeput (British Institute at Ankara)
Anatolian Studies is a refereed journal

Articles for publication, requests for Notes for Contributors


and other correspondence should be addressed to

The Executive Editor, Anatolian Studies


British Institute at Ankara

10 Carlton House Terrace, London SW1Y 5AH

Email: biaapub@britac.ac.uk

With acknowledgements to The Society of Dilettanti

? British Institute of Archaeology at Ankara 2009

ISSN 0066-1546

All rights reserved. No parts of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system,

or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording,


or otherwise, without the prior permission of the British Institute of Archaeology at Ankara.

Printed by Stephen Austin & Sons Ltd, Hertford

Published annually by

THE BRITISH INSTITUTE AT ANKARA


10 Carlton House Terrace, London SW1Y 5AH

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