How Long to Read Our Cups are Full

By Walter Gauss

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Description

A collection of papers presented to Jeremy Rutter to mark his 65th Birthday. 1) The LH IIIA2-IIIB Transition: The Gurob and Saqqara Evidence Reassessed (David A. Aston); 2) Daskalio (Vathy), Kalymnos: A Late Bronze I Sacred Cave in the East Aegean (Mario Benzi); 3) The Diagonal Line Class Juglets: New Evidence from Hagios Charalambos (Philip P. Betancourt); 4) In Search of the Upper Story of LM I House A.1 at Papadiokampos: An Integrated Architectural and Ceramic Perspective (T.M. Brogan, Ch. Sofianou, and J.E. Morison); 5) Minding the Gaps in Early Helladic Laconia (William Cavanagh and Christopher Mee); 6) Subminoan: A Neglected Phase of the Cretan Pottery Sequence (Anna Lucia D''Agata); 7) Spoons to Fill the Cups (Jeannette Forsen); 8) The Stirrup Jar: Does the West House Evidence Help or Complicate the Problems? (Elizabeth French); 9) The Middle Helladic Large Building Complex at Kolonna. A Preliminary View (Walter GauSS, Michael Lindblom, and Rudolfine Smetana); 10) Cretan Perfumed Oils at Enkomi (Cyprus) in the 13th Century B.C.' (Giampaolo Graziadio); 11) Early Helladic Vases from Zygouries in the Metropolitan Museum of Art: Cultural Ambassadors of an Early Age (Sean Hemingway); 12) Palm and Altar (Stefan Hiler); 13) The Cypriot Ceramic Cargo of the Uluburun Shipwreck (N. Hirschfeld); 14) Mycenaean Vending Cups in Syria? Thoughts about the Unpainted Mycenaean Pottery from Tell Kazel (Reinhard Jung); 15) Preliminary Remarks about the Pottery from the So-called Grande Frana at Phaistos (V. La Rosa); 16) The Chronology of the Lerna Shaft Graves (Michael Lindblom and Sturt W. Manning); 17) Our Storerooms Are Full. Impressed Pithoi from Late Bronze/Early Iron Age East Lokris and Phokis and their Socio-economic Significance (Bart'omiej Lis and t'pan Ruckl); 18) Contested Pasts-The Society of the 12th c. B.C.E. Argolid and the Memory of the Mycenaean Palatial Period (Joseph Maran); 19) An Update on the Provenance by Neutron Activation Analysis of Near Eastern Mycenaean IIIC Pottery Groups with Particular Reference to Cyprus (P. A. Mountjoy); 20) Once More with Feeling: Jeremy Rutter''s Plea for the Abandonment of the Term Submycenaean Revisited (John K. Papadopoulos, Brian N. Damiata, and John M. Marston); 21) Fragments of the Pottery Equipment of an Early Middle Helladic Household from Aspis, Argos (A. Philipa -Touchais and G. Touchais); 22) Picking out Pots in Patterns: Feasting in Early Helladic Greece (Daniel J. Pullen); Early Helladic Peak Sanctuaries in Attica? (Florian Ruppenstein); 23) Vox Clamantis in Campo: Further Thoughts on Ceramics and Site Survey (Robert Schon); 24) A Decorated Minoan Pyxis from House X at Kommos (Maria C. Shaw); 25) The ''Friendly Krater'' from Iklaina (Cynthia W. Shelmerdine); 26) Learning to Learn from Bronze Age Pots: A Perspective on Forty Years of Aegean Ceramic Studies in the Work of J.B. Rutter (Susan Sherratt); 27) A Unique Late Minoan III Ring-shaped Vase from the Myrsini Aspropilia Cemetery (R. Angus K. Smith); 28) The Cyclades and Pylos: An Early Bronze Age Stone Pyxis from Ali Chodza (Sharon R. Stocker and Jack L. Davia); 29) An Aegean Glance at Megiddo (Philip W. Stockhamer); 30) Mycenaean Tablewares and the Curious Careers of the Angular Kylix and Shallow Angular Basin (Patrick M. Thomas); 31) The Phaistos Palace and the Kamares Cave: A Special Relationship (A. Van de Moortel); 32) Seats of Power? Making the Most of Miniatures-The Role of Terracotta Throne Models in Disseminating Mycenaean Religious Ideology (Melisa Vetters); 33) The Late Helladic IIIA2 Pottery from Mitrou and its Implications for the Chronology of the Mycenaean Mainland (Salvatore Vitale); 34) "Ceremonial Lerna" (Martha Heath Wiencke); 35) Conical Cups: From Mystery to History (Malcolm H. Wiener); 36) Interpreting Quantitative Analyses of Mycenaean Pottery (James C. Wright and Mary K. Dabney); 37) Our Cups Overfloweth: "Kabri Goblets" and Canaanite Feasts in the Middle Bronze Age Levant (Assaf Yas ur-Landau, Eric H. Cline, and Inbal Samet).

How long is Our Cups are Full?

Our Cups are Full by Walter Gauss is 0 pages long, and a total of 0 words.

This makes it 0% the length of the average book. It also has 0% more words than the average book.

How Long Does it Take to Read Our Cups are Full Aloud?

The average oral reading speed is 183 words per minute. This means it takes to read Our Cups are Full aloud.

What Reading Level is Our Cups are Full?

Our Cups are Full is suitable for students ages 2 and up.

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