Archaeology Odyssey, January/February 2000

Volume3Number1

Special Section

Digs 2000

Join Up Now!

It’s 102 degrees under the hot Mediterranean sun. Your neck aches and your back feels like it’s breaking as you squat, knee deep in dirt, in a narrow rocky ditch. For the hundredth time, you find yourself wondering why you decided against a vacation in the south...Read more ›

Features

No Guts, No Glory

Inside the Roman arena

By Donald G. Kyle

When we confront the strange allure, or even at times the banality, of violence, the road often leads back to Rome. For centuries, blood sports and other deadly spectacles were central to the social life and public space of the Roman world.1 Rome’s violent...Read more ›

The Roman Amphora

Learning from storage jars

By Elizabeth Lyding Will

I have spent the better part of my professional life studying the lowly Roman amphora—a two-handled clay jar used by the Canaanites, Phoenicians, Greeks and Romans to ship goods. What would Harvard professor Charles Eliot Norton, who founded the Archaeological Institute of America in...Read more ›

Canceled!

A new traveling exhibition of 5,000 years of Georgian art is already ancient history

By Jack Meinhardt

Look at this crucifix,” said Gary Vikan, the director of the Walters Art Gallery in Baltimore. He pushed a book across the table and pointed to a photograph of a silver sculpture of Jesus nailed to the cross. The statuette was made in tenth-century...Read more ›

Departments