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CWA 63

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CWA issue 63Little is known of the fierce warrior nomads who occupied the southern region of the Ural Mountains in modern-day Russia about 2,500 years ago. But their graves have yielded spectacular finds of gold objects, fine jewellery, and weapons. Now recent discoveries that follow a decade of excavation at Filippovka’s royal burial mounds are revealing the sophisticated culture of the Sarmatians who once dominated the steppes of Eastern Europe and Central Asia.

A section of the Roman frontier on the fringes of Eastern Europe has long been overlooked. So we take to the skies to trace three linear fortifications through Romania to the Danube Delta, two of which have the tell-tale signs of Roman military limes. Then we stop off at Salsovia, a Roman fort on one of the lines, where the remains of an unfortunate leopard hint at the exotic lifestyle some at this military base once enjoyed.

On the opposite side of Europe, we visit the Balearic island of Mallorca to discover what has been revealed of more than 1,300 years of occupation at Pollentia, from Roman prosperity to Byzantine faded splendour.

Current Publishing’s editor in chief Andrew Selkirk is intrigued by the way ‘democratic’ market economies stand up to those of totalitarian societies, pitting, for example, the Greco-Roman world against Ancient Egypt. The publication of a splendid book on the abandoned city of Amarna in Egypt has provoked him to compare Amarna with the Roman city of Pompeii. What has he found?

It’s hard not to admire the Vikings – unless you’re an Ionian monk, of course. Their daring adventures, their vivid sagas, and their stunning artefacts have captured the imaginations of young and old alike. But who were these seafaring explorers who raided, traded, and settled so far afield? Gareth Williams, curator of the British Museum’s upcoming exhibition, confronts the popular stereotypes to reveal the truth behind the myth.

In this issue:

FEATURES

Spain, Pollentia: Tracing 1300 years of tumultuous occupation
Spain, Pollentia: Tracing 1300 years of tumultuous occupation

RUSSIA: Glorious Warriors
Discovering the nomadic tribes of the southern Ural Steppes

ROMANIA: Valu lui Traian 
Rediscovering a ‘lost’ Roman frontier

ROMANIA: Roman Salsovia
Leopards and legions at the edge of Empire

SPAIN: Pollentia
Tracing 1,300 years of tumultuous occupation

EGYPT AND ITALY: Amarna vs Pompeii
A tale of two cities 

NEWS

Special report: Saving Egypt's past
Special report: Saving Egypt’s past
  • Rising Star early ancestors
  • Moche sacrifice victims
  • Rare swords in Finland
  • Metropolis corridors
  • Early date for the Buddha
  • Ancient DNA
  • Turning Neolithic
  • Oldest wine cellar

SPECIAL REPORT
Saving Egypt’s past
CHARLES HIGHAM
Latest from the trenches at Non Ban Jak 

TRAVEL

Travel: Albania, along the mighty Vjosa
Travel: Albania, along the mighty Vjosa

SOUTH KOREA
The petroglyphs of Bangudae
SPAIN
Richard Hodges travels to the Basque Country
ALBANIA
Along the mighty Vjosa

 

CULTURE

MUSEUM
The Viking enigma: raiders, traders or both?
REVIEWS
The latest book releases
CHRIS CATLING
Roaming under Rome and across oceans
GREAT EXCAVATIONS
Zammit at the Ħal Saflieni Hypogeum

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