Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 results
Gilgamesh—Like You’ve Never Seen Him Before
A New Translation by Stephen Mitchell
Gilgamesh is at once our newest and our oldest, most venerable epic poem. Unlike Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey, which have been broadly known since their composition around the late eighth century B.C. (except during the medieval Dark Age, when Greek learning was largely lost in the West), the first clay tablets inscribed with the Gilgamesh epic were found just 150 years ago, at the ancient Assyrian site of Nineveh in present-day northern Iraq.
Archaeology Odyssey, July/August 2005
Saved from Vesuvius
Rare Wooden Furniture from Pompeii and Herculaneum
Herculaneum and Pompeii were both destroyed by the same eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 A.D. For archaeologists, however, it must seem that they were leveled by different volcanoes entirely. Pompeii was smothered beneath a shallow blanket of...
Archaeology Odyssey, September/October 2005
Editors’ Page: We’ll Keep to the Mainstream
Exploring the Roots of Western Culture
Archaeology Odyssey, January/February 2005
Editors’ Page: Who Owns Archaeology?
Certainly not the “Professional Elite”
Archaeology Odyssey, May/June 2005
Editors’ Page: Archaeology Museums in Peril?
A Blow to the Universalist Ideal
Archaeology Odyssey, September/October 2005
Editors’ Page: Making the Book
How an Issue Falls into Place
Archaeology Odyssey, November/December 2005