Details
Table of Contents
Part 1: History, Archaeology and the Mycenaean-Anatolian Interface
Troy as a "Contested Periphery": Archaeological Perspectives on Cross-Cultural and Cross-Disciplinary Interactions Concerning Bronze Age Anatolia (Eric Cline)
Purple-Dyers in Lazpa (Itamar Singer)
Multiculturalism in the Mycenaean World (Stavroula Nikoloudis)
Hittite Lesbos? (Hugh Mason)
Part 2: Sacred Interactions
The Seer Mopsos as a Historical Figure (Norbert Oettinger)
Setting up the Goddess of the Night Separately (Jared Miller)
The Songs of the Zintuhis: Chorus and Ritual in Anatolia and Greece (Ian Rutherford)
Part 3: Identity and Literary Traditions
Homer at the Interface (Trevor Bryce)
The Poet's Point of View and the Prehistory of the Iliad (Mary Bachvarova)
Hittite Ethnicity? Constructions of Identity in Hittite Literature (Amir Gilan)
Part 4: Identity and Language Change
Writing Systems and Identity (Annick Payne)
Luwian Migration in Light of Linguistic Contacts (Ilya Yakubovitch)
"Hermit Crabs," or New Wine in Old Bottles: Anatolian-Hellenic Connections from Homer and Before to Antiochus I of Commagene and After (Calvert Watkins)
Possessive Constructions in Anatolian, Hurrian and Urartean as Evidence for Language Contact (Silvia Luraghi)
Greek mólybdos as a Loanword from Lydian (H Craig Melchert)
Part 5: Anatolia as Intermediary: The First Millennium
Kybele as Kubaba in a Lydo-Phrygian Context (Mark Munn)
King Midas in Southeastern Anatolia (Maya Vassileva)
The GALA and the Gallos (Patrick Taylor)
Patterns of Elite Interaction: Animal-Headed Vessels in Anatolia in the Eighth and Seventh Centuries BC (Susanne Ebbinghaus)
"A Feast of Music": The Greco-Lydian Musical Movement on the Assyrian Periphery (John Franklin)
General Index
Reviews & Quotes
"An important collection of scholarship related to a broad topic of Aegean-Anatolian interconnectivity.. The conference organizers, volume editors and contributors are to be congratulated for their stimulating research.'"
Brendan Burke
Bryn Mawr Classical Review (December 2009)
"This book offers many windows on, and many paths into, the world of Hittites, Greeks, and their neighbors. It will doubtless be of interest to all classicists, as to all scholars concerned with Anatolia and the ancient Near East, and should be a required addition to any academic library concerned with the ancient world. The editors are to be congratulated for the conference and the volume it produced. Both classical and Anatolian studies are enriched by this eminently successful model of cross-disciplinary exchange on cross-cultural interaction in first- and second-millennium Anatolia and the eastern Aegean.'"
Annette Teffeteller, Concordia University
Mouseion vol. 8, no. 2
(2008)
"A strong and exciting read... deserves attention from scholars of both Anatolia and the Aegean, and from specialists in both the first and the second millennium BCE.'"
Naoise Mac Sweeney
Scholia, vol 19
(2010)
