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Thomas A. Holland. Excavations at Tell Es-Sweyhat, Syria, volume 2. Archaeology of the Bronze Age, Hellenistic, and Roman remains at an ancient town on the Euphrates River. Part 1: Text; Part 2: Figures & Plates (Oriental Institute Publications 128). lx+620 pages, 335 figures, 340 plates, 3 maps, 108 tables. 2006. Chicago (IL): Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago; 1-885923-33-3 hardback 2 volumes £90.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2015

Joan Oates*
Affiliation:
McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, University of Cambridge, UK (Email: jlo29@cam.ac.uk)

Abstract

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Type
Review
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd 2009

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References

Danti, M.D. & Hafford, M. B. . 2008. The city of Sweyhat: a Mesopotamian mystery, Current World Archaeology 30(6): 3440.Google Scholar
Oates, J. 2003. A note on the early evidence for horse and the riding of equids in Western Asia, in Levine, M., Renfrew, C. & Boyle, K. (ed.) Prehistoric steppe adaptation and the horse. Cambridge: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research.Google Scholar
Wilkinson, T. J. 2004. Excavations at Tell es-Sweyhat, Syria, volume 1. On the margin of the Euphrates: settlement and land use at Tell es-Sweyhat and in the Upper Lake Assad Area, Syria (Oriental Institute Pu blications 124). Chicago: Oriental Institute of the Unive rsity of Chicago.Google Scholar
Zettler, R.L. 1997. Subsistence and settlement in a marginal environment: Tell es-Sweyhat 1989-1995 Preliminary Report (MASCA Research Papers in Science and Archaeology 14). Philadelphia: University of Pe nnsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology.Google Scholar