Authors: Sean Kingsley
Holliday, P. J.
The Origins of Roman Historical Commemoration in the Visual Arts.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002.
Humphrey, J. H.
Roman Circuses: Arenas for Chariot Races.
Berkeley: University of California Press, 1986.
Kleiner, F. S. “The Arches of Vespasian in Rome,”
Mitteilingen des Deutschen Archäologischen Instituts Romische Abteilung 97
(1990): 127â136.
âââ. “The Study of Roman Triumphal and Honorary Arches 50 Years After Kaehler,”
Journal of Roman Archaeology
2 (1989): 195â206.
Leon, H. J.
The Jews of Ancient Rome.
Peabody, Mass.: Hendrickson Publishers, 1995.
Olsson, B., D. Mitternacht, and O. Brandt, eds.,
The Synagogue of Ancient Ostia and the Jews of Rome: Interdisciplinary Studies.
Stockholm: Paul Ã
ströms Förlag, 2001.
Pfanner, M.
Der Titusbogen.
Mainz: P. von Zabern, 1983.
Richardson, L., Jr.
A New Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome.
Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1992.
Versnel, H. S. Triumphus:
An Inquiry into the Origin, Development, and Meaning of the Roman Triumph.
Leiden: E. J. Brill, 1970.
VANDAL CARTHAGE ââââââââââââââ
Cameron, A., B. Ward-Perkins, and M. Whitby.
The Cambridge Ancient History XIV: Late Antiquity: Empire and Successors, AD 425â600.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000.
Clover, F. M. “Carthage and the Vandals,” in J. H. Humphrey, ed.,
Excavations at Carthage 1978 Conducted by the University of Michigan, Volume VII.
Tunis: Cérès Productions, 1982.
âââ.
The Late Roman West and the Vandals.
Aldershot, Hampshire, UK: Variorum, 1993.
Ellis, S. “Dining: Architecture, Furnishings and Behaviour,” in R. Laurence and A. Wallace-Hadrill, eds.,
Domestic Space in the Roman World: Pompeii and Beyond.
Portsmouth, R. I.: Journal of Roman Archaeology, Supplement 22, 1997.
Ennabli, A.
Pour Sauver Carthage: Exploration et Conservation de la Cité Punique, Romaine et Byzantine.
Tunis: Ministère et Institut, 1971.
Ennabli, L.
Carthage: Une Métropole Chrétienne du IVe à la Fin du VIIe Siècle.
Paris: CNRS, 1997.
Humphrey, J. “Vandal and Byzantine Carthage: Some New Archaeological Evidence,” in J. G. Pedley,
New Light on Ancient Carthage: Papers of a Symposium.
Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1980
Hurst, H. R.
Excavations at Carthage: The British Mission. Volume II, 1: The Circular Harbour, North Side. The Site and Finds Other Than Pottery.
Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1994.
Lancel, S.
Byrsa I: Rapports Préliminaires des Fouilles (1974â1976).
Rome: Ãcole Française de Rome, 1979.
âââ.
Carthage: A History.
Oxford: Blackwell, 1995.
Lézine, A.
Carthage: Utique: Ãtudes d'Architecture et d'Urbanisme.
Paris: CNRS, 1968.
Mattingley, D. J. “Oil for Export? A Comparison of Libyan, Spanish, and Tunisian Olive Oil Production in the Roman Empire,”
Journal of Roman Archaeology
1 (1988): 33â56.
Merrills, A. H., ed.
Vandals, Romans and Berbers: New Perspectives on Late Antique North Africa.
Aldershot: Ashgate, 2004.
Sintes, C., and Y. Rebahi.
Algérie Antique.
Marseille: Musée d'Arles et de la Provence Antique, 2003.
Van Mater Dennis, H.
Hippo Regius from the Earliest Times to the Arab Conquest.
Amsterdam: Hakkert, 1970.
CONSTANTINOPLEâNEW ROME âââââââââââ
Allen, P. “The âJustinianic' Plague,”
Byzantion
49 (1979): 5â20.
Bassett, S.
The Urban Image of Late Antique Constantinople.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004.
Cameron, A.
Procopius and the Sixth Century.
London: Routledge, 1985.
Harrison, M.
A Temple for Byzantium: The Discovery and Excavation of Anicia Juliana's Palace Church in Istanbul.
London: Harvey Miller, 1989.
Jobst, W., B. Erdal, and C. Gurtner.
Istanbul: The Great Palace Mosaic; The Story of Its Exploration, Preservation and Exhibition, 1983â1997.
Istanbul: Arkeoloji ve Sanat Yayinlan, 1997.
Maas, M., ed.
The Cambridge Companion to the Age of Justinian.
Cambridge: 2005.
âââ.
Readings in Late Antiquity: A Sourcebook.
London: 2000.
Maclagan, M.
The City of Constantinople.
London: 1968.
Mango, C. “The Triumphal Way of Constantinople and the Golden Gate,”
Dumbarton Oaks Papers
54 (2000): 173â188.
Mango, C., ed.
The Oxford History of Byzantium.
Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002.
Stathakopoulos, D.
Famine and Pestilence in the Late Roman and Early Byzantine Empire: A Systematic Survey of Subsistence Crises and Epidemics.
Aldershot: Ashgate, 2004.
THE HOLY LAND âââââââââââââââââ
Gibson, S., and J. E. Taylor.
Beneath the Church of the Holy Sepulchre Jerusalem: The Archaeology and Early History of Traditional Golgotha.
London: Palestine Exploration Fund, 1994.
Hirschfeld, Y.
The Judean Desert Monasteries in the Byzantine Period.
New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1992.
Isaac, B.
The Invention of Racism in Classical Antiquity.
Princeton, N. J.: Princeton University Press, 2004.
Kaegi, W. E.
Byzantium and the Early Islamic Conquests.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1992.
Ovadiah, A. “Early Churches,” in E. Stern, ed.,
The New Encyclopedia of Archaeological Excavations in the Holy Land, Volume 2.
Jerusalem: Israel Exploration Society and Carta, 1993.
Patrich, J. “Monasteries,” in E. Stern, ed.,
The New Encyclopedia of Archaeological Excavations in the Holy Land, Volume 3.
Jerusalem: Israel Exploration Society and Carta, 1993.
Schick, R.
The Christian Communities of Palestine from Byzantine to Islamic Rule.
Princeton, N. J.: Darwin Press, 1995.
The pagination of this electronic edition does not match the edition from which it was created. To locate a specific passage, please use the search feature of your e-book reader.
Aaron, Israelite priest
Aaron of Levi
Abraham
Absalom
Achor, Vale of
Acra fortress
Adler, Marcus N.
Agrippa, Marcus
Alaric, Visigoth
Alexander, Governor of Judaea
Alexander the Great
Alexander III, Pope
Alexandria
Alföldy, Géza
Algeria: Hippo Regius
Allegro, John Marco: Copper Scroll as taxation
The Dead Sea Scrolls: A Reappraisal
opens Copper Scroll in Manchester
search for treasure
Treasure of the
Copper Scroll
Almonds
Almsgiver, John the
Amar, Shlomo
Ananias, High Priest
Anastasius I, Emperor
anti-Semitism, in ancient Rome
Antigonos, the Hasmonean
Antioch: Council of Elders
Publius Petronius, governor of Syria
theater of Daphne
Antiochus IV Epiphanes, King: quarrels with
Ptolemy VI ransacks Jerusalem
Antipater of Idumaea
antiquities: fakes
Antonia fortress, Jerusalem
Antonius, Felix
Apollonia (Arsuf): captured by King Chosroes
Patriarch Modestus poisoned
Apries, Pharaoh
al-Aqsa mosque
Arafat, Yasser
Aramaic
Arcadius
Arch of Titus, x; base
eagles menorah monument in Rome, ix, xi
Table of the Divine
Presence Tower of the Seven Lamps trumpets
Arianism
Ariel, Rabbi Yisrael
Aristeas
Arius, deacon
Ark of the Covenant: cherubim destroyed by
Nebuchadnezzar history, x looted by Parker Expedition in St.
John the Lateran
Asclepius
Ataulphus, King
Atlantis, x
Atum-Ra
Augustine, Saint
Augustus, Emperor: altar of Peace
completes Rome's Senate House
donations to Herod's Temple
establishes province of Judaea
Forum of games in Circus Flaminius
library at Carthage names Theater of
Marcellus port of Caesarea
refurbishes Porticus of Octavia statue in
Constantinople statues in Rome
Avigad, Nachman
Azmey Bey, Ottoman governor
Â
Babylon
Baghdad
Baiae
balsam
Bar-Kokhba, Simon
BBC
Bedouin
Beirut
Bekri, El
Belisarius, General: captures Carthage
captures the Vandal palace
fame imprisoned by Justinian
prepares to invade North Africa
recovers Temple treasure at Hippo
Regius respect for enemy
Benjamin, Israel Joseph (Benjamin II)
Benvenisti, Meron
Berlusconi, Prime Minister
Bernini, Gian Lorenzo
Bethlehem
Beth Shearim: ancient Jewish town
Aramaic inscription Besara
catacombs eagles
Gamaliel, Rabbi glassworks
Judah Ha-Nassi, Rabbi Lion of
Judah menorah Nike
sarcophagi Sanhedrin synagogue
Black Eyed Peas
Blühmel, Friedrich
Boaz
Boniface
Book of Nahum
Boqeq, En
Borsippa
British Mandate
Brown, Dan
Bush, George
Butrint
Byblos
Byzantium: letters origins recycling
Â
Caesar, Julius: builds the Senate House
expands the Circus Maximus
Forum of Magna Carta of the
Jews statue of statue of, in
Constantinople
Caesarea: aqueducts Byzantine
Esplanade city, xii Eusebius
harbor of Sebastos
Herod's lighthouse Roman
warehouses royal palace
Temple of Augustus
Cage, Nicolas, x
Cairo Museum, xi
Calacte, Caecilius of
Caligula, Emperor Gaius
candelabrum
see
menorah
Capernaum
carabinieri
Carmel
Carthage: Antonine Baths Byrsa
Hill Byzantine esplanade
Cathedral of St. Louis
Circular (Military) Harbor
La Malga water cisterns
Misuas shipyards Mandracium
nineteenth-century spoliation
Odeon Ottoman customs
prison (Ancon) relocation of
Temple treasure Roman theater
Vandal palace
Castor and Pollux statuary
Ãelebi, Hizir Bey
Cestius Gallus
Chagall, Marc
Chaldeans
Chigi, Pope Alexander VII
Choniates, Niketas: statue of Helen of Troy in
Constantinople
Chrestus
Chosroes I, King
Christ, True Cross of
Church of Scientology
Cicero: domination of Israel
political power of Rome's Jews
Cinq Années en Orient
Circus Maximus: Arch of Titus
chariot races
Consualia festival
expanded under Julius Caesar
founded by King Tarquin
model for Constantinople's hippodrome
spina triumphs
Claudius, Emperor
Clement of Alexandria
Cleopatra of Egypt
Colosseum, Rome: Amphitheatrum
Flavium architrave based on
Theatre of Marcellus cost of
building
manubiae
(spoils)
masonry used for Basilica of St. Peter
phantom inscription
Commodus, Emperor
Constans I, Emperor
Constantine I, Emperor: builds Church of the Holy Sepulchre
founds Constantinople history of Rome
Constantinople: Baths of Zeuxippos
capital of Byzantine Empire
Chalke (Bronze Gate) Church of
St. Irene Church of St. Polyeuktos
Church of St. Sophia
Convent of
Repentance Forum of
Golden Gate Justinian's Palace the
Mese Milion Nika Revolt
Ottoman palace of Justinian
Senate House Serpent Column
silk production Theodosius's
Column
Constantius II, Emperor
Copper Scroll, x
Corbu, Noel
Corneille, Pierre
corona Etrusca
Crassus, Governor of Judaea
Cross, Professor Frank
Crusaders
Ctesiphon
Cyril of Jerusalem: on True Cross of Christ
Cyrila, Bishop
Cyrus of Persia, King
Â
Da Vinci Code
Damascus
Daniel and the Lion's Den
Dark Ages
David, City of
David, King
Dayan, Moshe
Dead Sea: economic base
scrolls, geography
Delphi
Dilmun
Dio, Cassius: burning of Temple of Peace
Diocles, Gaius Appuleius
Diocletian, Emperor
Diodorus Siculus
Dome of the Rock, x
Domitian, Roman emperor
Dor: archaeology
architecture port city shipwrecks
Dracontius
Dragobert II, King, 75dromones
Drusilla, Princess
Dura Europos
Â
Ecole Biblique et Archéologique de Saint-
Etienne
Edom
Egypt: Alexandria
Aswan balsam
Exodus Lake Mareotis
mines obelisks Sais
Temple of Amon
Ein Gedi: Essenes
Galen synagogue
Eisenberg, Jerome
Eleazor, Priest
Elijah
Elizabeth I, Queen
Ephesus, John of: Justinianic plague
Essenes: bank Bannus Ein Gedi
monastic settlement personal
possessions renounced ritual purity
Ethiopia
Euagees
Eudocia, Empress
Eudoxia, Empress
Eugenius, Bishop
Euphrates, River
Eusebius Pamphilius, Bishop of Caesarea
Exodus: God's protection of Israelites on
manufacture of the menorah Table of
the Divine Presence
Exodus, from Egypt
Expositio Totius Mundi et Gentium
Ezekiel: face of God
Â
Fabricius, Lucius
fasces
Felix, Pope
Festus
Field of Mars
Fifth Legion
Fine, Steven
Firatli, Nezih
Fiscus judaicus
Flaccus, Lucius Valerius
Flavian Dynasty: economics
T. Flavius Petro
T. Flavius Sabinus propaganda
Flavius Josephus: Agrippa freed by Caligula
Antiochus IV ransacks Jerusalem
background, xi; Caligula demands
pagan worship in Jerusalem causes of
First Jewish Revolt
construction of Temple of Peace
death of Simon
Ben Giora in Rome
Gate of the
Pomp Gessius Florus seizes Jerusalem's
sacred money golden eagle
hyperbole Jesus son of
Gamala denounces Jewish revolutionaries
Judas Maccabeus restores the Second
Temple Mary of Bethezuba roasts
child menorah outer surface of
Temple Pompey violates the Temple
Pontius Pilate prayer book burned at
Beth-Horen as Roman informer
Sabinus seizes Temple treasury Simon
Ben Giora held at Caesarea Table of the
Divine Presence Titus refuses to burn
the Temple on Triumph of Vespasian
and Titus Vespasian
and Titus serve dinner at triumphal dinner
Foster, Norman
Frangipani
Frazer, Sir James
Â
Gaiseric, King: atrocities against Catholic
Church captures Eudoxia
invades Rome
Galati, statues
Galba, Servius Sulpicius
Galilee, xi
Gamala, Jesus son of
Gamaliel, Rabbi
Ganges
Ganymede of Leochares
Garden of Eden
Garmu, House of
Gaster, T. H.
Gaza
Gela
Gelimer, King: character flees into
Numidia palace of Carthage
paraded in Triumph of Constantinople
surrenders from Mt. Papua
geniza
Germanicus, Aulus Vitellius
Gessius Florus, Procurator of Judaea
Gilgamesh, King of Uruk
Giora, Simon Ben: capture death in Rome
faction of paraded in Rome
seizes imperial baggage
sent severed hands
Gischala, John of: capture loots the Temple
sent severed hands
Golan Heights
Golden Bough
Golgotha
Goths, xii
Gounod, Charles
Granicus, Battle of
Greek fire
Gregory the Great, Pope
Gulf War
Gunthamund, King
Gush Katif
Â
Haaretz
Hadrian
Hadrumetum
Haifa
Halicarnassus, Dionysius of
Hamas
Hannibal
Hanukkah, Festival of Lights
Haram
Haram al-Sharif
Harding, Lankester
Hareuveni, David
Harrison, Martin
Hasmonean dynasty
Hawara
Helena
Helen of Troy
Helena, Queen
Helios
Heraclius, Emperor
Hercules
Herod Agrippa
Herod, King: builds the Temple of Jerusalem
client king of Rome
date plantations
golden eagle on Temple
harbor of Caesarea
Herodium
Herodotus, xiii
Herzog, Isaac
Hesse-Wartegg, Ernest
Hilderic, King
Hilkiah
Hippicus
Hippodrome, of Constantinople: chariot rivalry
founded by Severus
kathisma
(royal box)
Serpent Column
sphendone
spina
statue collection
Theodosius's Column
topography
Hiram of Tyre, king
Hirschfeld, Yizhar
Hispania Tarraconensis
Hispanus, Gnaeus Cornelius
Hitler, Adolf, ix
Hoamer
Hodges, Richard
Holme-next-the-sea
Holy Grail, x
Holy Land
Holy Sepulchre, Church of: Anastasis
Chamber of Relics
dedicated under
Constantine restored after Persian
Invasion Temple treasure
Humbert, Jean-Baptiste
Huneric, King: atrocities against the Church
toleration of Catholicism
Honorius
Hunzinger, Hunno
Hussein of Jordan, King
Hussein, Saddam
Â
idolatry: in Deuteronomy
Intifada
Isaac
Isis
Israel: accusations against the Vatican
Antiquities Authority (IAA)
Department of Culture Embassy
London Ministry of Education
Israelites
Istanbul: Blue Mosque
Bosphorus development of the dome
Galatasaray Golden Horn
Saraçhane Sea of Marmara
Sehzade Camii (Mosque of the Prince) Town Hall university
Itinerary of Rabbi Benjamin of Tudela
Â
Jachin
Jehoash, King
Jeremiah
Jericho
Jerusalem: Acra Benjamin Mazar
excavations captured by Antiochus IV
Epiphanes Church of Eleona
Church of Gethsemane Church of
Holy Zion
Church of the Ascension
Church of St. John the Baptist
City of David
Convent of St.
Melania David's Citadel
destroyed by Nebuchadnezzar
destroyed by Rome
El Azariah end-times
Hezekiah's Tunnel
Hill of Ophel golden eagle
Jewish Quarter
Kidron Valley
mikvaot,
Mount of Olives
Nachman Avigad excavations
Robinson's Arch Solomon's city
restored by Judas Maccabeus
restored by King Cyrus
siege of Titus
Temple Mount and Land of Israel Faithful