How to Cite

Kefalidou, Eurydice (Ed.): The Riverlands of Aegean Thrace: Production, Consumption and Exploitation of the Natural and Cultural Landscapes | River Valleys and Regional Economies: Panel 2.4 | Panel 2.7, Heidelberg: Propylaeum, 2022 (Archaeology and Economy in the Ancient World: Proceedings of the 19th International Congress of Classical Archaeology, Cologne/Bonn 2018, Volume 6). https://doi.org/10.11588/propylaeum.871

Identifiers

ISBN 978-3-96929-055-2 (PDF)
ISBN 978-3-96929-056-9 (Softcover)

Published

07/20/2022

Authors

Eurydice Kefalidou (Ed.)

The Riverlands of Aegean Thrace: Production, Consumption and Exploitation of the Natural and Cultural Landscapes | River Valleys and Regional Economies

Panel 2.4 | Panel 2.7

Rivers have always been vital supports for economies. They provided water for people and animals, irrigated the land, facilitated communication and trade through small vessels or rafts, aided industrial activities, formed rich hunting grounds for fishermen and hunters, and offered raw materials such as sand, gravel and placer deposits - including even gold. At the same time, the deltas and marshlands of rivers, created an inhospitable environment unsuitable for habitation, especially in periods of flood. Furthermore, rivers connected the sea and the littoral zone with the hinterland, and thus allowed the interaction between the populations which inhabited these areas, often locals and colonists/merchants. 
The papers address topics such as the reconfiguration of ancient river routes, the settlement and exploitation patterns that were formed around them, the boundaries of the chora of various cities, towns, villages and farmsteads, and the communication or the tensions between different groups that moved or expanded beyond their original habitation zone due to environmental and/or economic reasons.
Panels 2.4 and 2.7 explore multiple facets of some Central and Eastern Mediterranean riverlands. Panel 2.4 investigates Aegean Thrace, i.e. the Northeastern part of Greece and the European part of Turkey. Panel 2.7 looks at three river valleys in two different areas: Athens and Attica with the Ilissos River; and Northeastern Italy with the rivers that flow in the areas of Verona and Parma.

Eurydice Kefalidou is Ass. Professor of Classical Archaeology at the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Greece. She specializes in Greek Pottery and Iconography, Ancient Mythology, Athletics and Theatre, and Experimental Archaeology. In recent years she has become actively involved in the investigation of Aegean Thrace as director of the ‘TRAASH’ project (Tracing Re-cycling: Αn Archaeological and Anthropological Project in the Habitat of Xanthi-Thrace) and co-director of the ‘APAX” intensive survey program (Archaeological Project of Abdera and Xanthi). 

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