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In addition to the featured hardcover releases, the Penn Press fall 2009 catalog announces many new paperbacks, among them: From Civil Rights to Human Rights; W.E.B. Du Bois, American Prophet; Visions of Progress; Mapping Decline; The Dynamics of Violence in Central Africa; Faculty Towers; Hitler's Face; Monsters; Used Books; Marriage and Violence; and The Crusades and the Christian World of the East.
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Sinop Landscapes
Exploring Connection in a Black Sea Hinterland

Owen P. Doonan

200 pages | 6 x 9 | 97 illus.
Cloth 2004 | ISBN 978-1-931707-65-7 | $39.95s | £26.00 | Add to shopping cart
A volume in the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology series

The Black Sea coast is different from the rest of Turkey. For more than 5,000 years Sinop, the central point on the Turkish coast, has seemed more remote from the rest of the Anatolian land mass than from Greece, Italy, Africa, the Crimea, Istanbul, and Rome. How was Sinop connected to them? The Black Sea Trade Project explores the perception of connectedness: how connected did people feel to those in other upland villages, coastal villages, ports, the big port of Sinop, and to distant shores? How did economic, infrastructural, and political institutions bind local populations to larger systems, and how were various institutional processes situated in landscapes?

In this first volume from the Sinop Regional Archaeological Project, Owen P. Doonan rigorously explores connection through Sinop and its hinterland, from precolonial Gree settlements through ages of empires, Roman, Russian, and Ottoman conquests to the present day.

Owen P. Doonan is Assistant Professor of Art History, California State University Northridge, and a Research Associate, Near Eastern Section, University of Pennsylvania Museum

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