settlement-modern
Creators:
Sean Gillies
Copyright © The Creators. Sharing and remixing permitted under terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License (cc-by).
Last modified
Sep 09, 2009 09:47 AM
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- Furfooz — by C. Haselgrove — last modified Dec 21, 2022 06:47 AM
- An ancient place, cited: BAtlas 11 E2 Furfooz
- Gabbutūnu — by Claudia Horst — last modified Aug 04, 2020 11:26 AM
- A town mentioned in Neo-Assyrian sources; the modern site is Gibbetôn. An alternative name is Raʾs Abī Ḥamīd.
- Gabia La Grande — by Jeffrey Becker — last modified Jan 03, 2025 02:13 PM
- Gabia La Grande (Granada, Spain) is the findspot of a subterranean nymphaeum approached by a dromos that may have dated to the fourth century CE.
- Gadara — by S.T. Parker — last modified Dec 27, 2024 12:54 PM
- Gadara (Tell Jadur) is located northeast of Jericho.
- Ǧalālābād — by B. Siewert-Mayer — last modified Nov 04, 2024 01:54 PM
- A place from the TAVO Index
- Gallese — by Jeffrey Becker — last modified Apr 02, 2022 05:20 PM
- Gallese is a settlement located about 14 km north of Civita Castellana. It was active especially in Faliscan times and again during late antiquity and the middle ages.
- Gallo-Roman fanum at Lapanouse-de-Cernon — by Jeffrey Becker — last modified Sep 20, 2024 08:22 PM
- The remains of a possible Gallo-Roman fanum were recovered, including an enclosure surrounding a rectangular structure along with terra sigillata from La Graufesenque.
- Gallo-Roman fanum at Recoules-Prévinquières — by Jeffrey Becker — last modified Oct 05, 2018 06:59 AM
- The fanum of a Gallo-Roman cult that was in use from the first century B.C. to the fourth century A.D.
- Gallo-Roman remains at La Tour, Sablé-sur-Sarthe — by Jeffrey Becker — last modified Apr 07, 2021 06:14 AM
- The remains of a Gallo-Roman sanctuary.
- Gallo-Roman settlement at Ceilhes-et-Rocozels — by Jeffrey Becker — last modified Feb 21, 2021 04:08 PM
- A Gallo-Roman settlement occupied from the late second century B.C. to the middle of the first century A.D.
- Gallo-Roman settlement, locality of Courac — by Jeffrey Becker — last modified May 18, 2021 08:09 PM
- Near the locality of Courac, just north of modern Tresques, are the remains of a diffuse Gallo-Roman settlement occupied from the first to fourth centuries A.D.
- Gallo-Roman sites at Érome, France — by Jeffrey Becker — last modified Nov 11, 2023 05:54 PM
- A pair of archaeological sites in Gallia Narbonensis. The site of Les Orpaillots shows traces of a sanctuary and a group of tombs while Notre-Dame-de-la-Mure showed traces of a late third century Gallo-Roman villa.
- Gallo-Roman villa at La Grande Terre, Chandon — by Jeffrey Becker — last modified Dec 23, 2020 11:00 AM
- A Gallo-Roman villa located in the Sornin valley, Loire, France.
- Gallo-Roman Villa at Saint-Paul-lès-Romans — by Jeffrey Becker — last modified Nov 27, 2020 11:49 AM
- The site of a Roman villa in Gallia Narbonensis.
- Garsaura/Col. Claudia Archelais/Koloneia — by S. Mitchell — last modified Nov 25, 2024 05:34 PM
- Originally known as Garsaura, this place was a key settlement of the strategia of Garsaouritis. King Archelaus refounded it and named it after himself. Under the Roman emperor Claudius the site received colonial status. The settlement is located at an oasis to the southeast of Tuz Gölü and some 225 km south of Ancyra.
- Gaurion — by J. Bennet — last modified Dec 03, 2024 10:34 AM
- An ancient place, cited: BAtlas 60 A4 Gaurion
- Gavar — by David Braund — last modified Apr 14, 2023 10:23 PM
- Refounded by Armenian refugees in the 19th century and renamed first Nor Bayаzet and then Kamo (1959-1995), the modern Armenian city of Gavar can trace occupation back to the Bronze Age.
- Gaza — by M.U. Erdosy — last modified Nov 16, 2024 07:07 PM
- Gaza was a city or strongly fortified place in Sogdiana, captured by Alexander the Great.
- Gazandži (Kazana) — by Birgit Christiansen — last modified May 22, 2023 10:59 PM
- Gazandži is a village at the Turkish-Armenian border location south of Armavir, on the right bank of the river Arasse, approximately 9 km northeast of Iğdir. Here a cylindrical stone with a building inscription of the Urartian king Argišti I., son of Minua (8th century BCE) was found.
- Gaziantep — by B. Siewert-Mayer — last modified Jan 11, 2021 02:22 PM
- Gaziantep, also referred to as Antep, is located in southeastern Turkey. The site has a long history of settlement that begins in the Neolithic period. The site has a significant Hittite presence. Some scholars suggest it is the site of the Hellenistic city of Antiochia ad Taurum.