The American Research Center in Egypt,
Northern California Chapter, and the Near Eastern
Studies Department, University of California,
Berkeley, invite you to attend a lecture by Dr. Caroline Sauvage,
Loyola-Marymount University
Prestige
From Overseas:
Maritime Trade
and Seafaring Ventures
In the Late
Bronze Age Mediterranean
Sunday, March 18, 3 pm
Room 20 Barrows Hall
UC Berkeley Campus
(Near the intersection
of Bancroft Way
and Barrow Lane)
A reconstruction
of the interior of the Bronze Age Uluburun
shipwreck, 1330-1300 BCE. Published here
unchanged under the terms of this Creative
Commons License.
About
the Lecture:
The eastern
Mediterranean Late Bronze Age (1550-1180 BC) was a
period of intense exchanges of goods, ideas, and
people who were traversing the sea and contributed to
the creation of an international culture along its
shores. The silent role of the sea, a connective
tissue allowing for fast, high-volume transport of
goods, as testified by the Uluburun shipwreck, was the
driving force behind coastal prosperity. Elites of
small city-states and large empires were competing for
imported goods and the prestige associated with
far-reaching seafaring ventures. The involvement of
the rulers in maritime affairs denotes the importance
of, if not the prestige associated with, seafaring
activities.
This talk will present a broad overview of the
Maritime sphere in the Late Bronze Age Eastern
Mediterranean and will address diverse aspects of
trade and seafaring activities, from shipbuilding,
seafaring ventures and shipwrecks, to traders and
mariners.
About the Speaker:
Caroline
Sauvage is an assistant professor in the Department
of Classics and Archaeology at Loyola Marymount
University. She received her BA in Art History and
Archaeology as well as her MA and PhD in Archaeology
of the Ancient World from the Université Lumière
Lyon 2 in France. Her research interests include
trade and maritime exchanges in the eastern
Mediterranean, as well as the development and use of
textile tools during the Late Bronze Age and early
Iron Age. Her main focus is on exchanges, the status
of objects, and their representations and use as
identity markers across the eastern Mediterranean.
Her work as an archaeologist is based on the study
of material artifacts and their interconnections.
She has been conducting extensive fieldwork in
Cyprus, Egypt and Syria since 2002.
Her book “Routes maritimes et systèmes d’échanges
internationaux au Bronze récent en Méditerranée
orientale” was published in 2012. Her professional
honors include the young researcher award in
Humanities from the city of Lyon, France (2007), and
the “Prix Louis de Clerc” from the Académie des
Inscriptions et Belles Lettres (Paris) in 2011. She
was recently a Scholar at the Getty Research
Institute and received, in 2014, a Marie Curie
Experienced Researcher Fellowship to work in
collaboration with the Center for Textile Research
in Copenhagen.
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Parking is
available in U.C. lots after 5 p.m. on weekdays and
all day on weekends for a fee. Ticket dispensing
machines accept either $5 bills or $1 bills, and debit
or credit cards. The Underhill lot can be entered from
Channing way off College Avenue. Parking is also
available in lots along Bancroft, and on the circle
drive in front of the Valley Life Sciences building.
A map of the campus is available online at http://www.berkeley.edu/map/
For more
information about Egyptology events, go to http://www.facebook.com/NorthernCaliforniaARCE
or http://www.arce-nc.org.
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