Search results for "département"
showing 10 items of 65 documents
Transition démocratique, restauration républicaine, violence politique et populaire à la Libération : le rôle des comités départementaux de Libératio…
2022
National audience
Virlet – Abbaye de Bellaigue
2021
Büttner S. 2020 : Étude archéologique du chevet et du transept de l’abbatiale de Bellaigue (Virlet – 63), rapport d’étude archéologique du bâti, Auxerre, Centre d’études médiévales Saint-Germain.
Victor Schoelcher, un républicain acharné
1998
Du Bronze moyen à l’Antiquité, un lieu de culte inscrit dans la longue durée : Mez-Notariou - Ouessant
2005
In the heart of the island of Ushant, the protohistoric site of Mez-Notariou reveals remains of Early and Middle Bronze Age and Early Iron Age settlements. Traces of religious activity have also been discovered extending from the Middle Bronze Age to the end of Roman Antiquity. They are exemplified in particular by organized deposits of bones of mammals, fish and limpets. For 2000 years the right shoulders of mammals were chosen (60 to 80 %). Deposits of metallic objects are also connected with these practices which only ceased at the beginning of the High Middle Ages after the destruction of the site. It is possible that, beginning with La Tène, practices linked to a protohistoric settleme…
Situation démographique de la Bourgogne et de ses départements, Atelier de réflexion : Entre inadaptations et innovations, le logement social face au…
2014
International audience
An antique lead coffin discovered in Évreux (Eure): a multidisciplinary study
2013
The Roman cemetery of le Clos au Duc in Évreux (Eure) lasted from the 1st to the 4th c. AD. The most common funerary practice in the 1st c. AD was cremation. From the beginning of the 2nd c. AD this rapidly gave place to inhumation burials. By the end of the 3rd c. lead coffins could be found in burials, but it remained a minority practice reserved for an elite. The 2010 excavation in Évreux allowed the recovery of an example of these. It was incomplete, but the good preservation of its remains made a multidisciplinary study possible. Apart from the bones of a young woman, the lead coffin contained coins, textile, fur, calcite (CaCO3) and insects. These results make it possible to retrace t…
A monumental schola discovered on the Boulevard Frédéric-Latouche in Augustodunum/Autun (Saône-et-Loire)
2013
In 2011, an archaeological evaluation was carried out in the centre of the Roman city of Augustodunum (Autun) on a plot of over 1 ha. This operation afforded the opportunity to explore parts of two insulae along the main street, the so-called cardo maximus, an area that has benefited from recent advances in knowledge. The first insula hosts a high-status domus strongly resembling those of "Balbius Iassus" and the "Étui d’Or", excavated in the vicinity in the 1970s; the second, addressed in this paper, contains the remains of a vast monumental complex covering approximately 900 m2. Most probably built at the beginning of the 2nd c. on the ruins of earlier houses, it was thoroughly restructur…
Du clou à la charpente : fabrication, mise en oeuvre et tracéologie des clous de murus gallicus. L’exemple de Boviolles
2021
The use of iron nails is a hallmark of Celtic military architecture. These large nails have a particular interest for a technological approach to fortificationwalls with internal frame. Their method of manufacture may vary from case of the most strict economy to a disproportionate investment as raw material as in manufacturing time. Beyond the morphological analysis, a sustained attention to the traces of implementation readable on these nails bring additional informations. The woody traces fossilized by corrosion and the folds related to the driving of the nails make it possible to restore the dimensions of the beams, the assemblies and the methods of implementation.
Compte rendu de : Anne Both, Le Sens du temps. Le quotidien d’un service d’archives départementales, préface de Christian Hottin, Toulouse, Anacharsi…
2017
International audience
Ancient architecture in Provence between the Iron Age and the Imperial era: the pillars of the Château-Bas site in Vernègues
2013
The site of Château-Bas (Vernègues, Bouches-du-Rhône), famous above all for its Augustan Roman temple, has yielded a set of pillars decorated either with writhing snakes or with straight rods. As yet there are no known parallels to such pillars. The discovery of a fragment of a pillar reused in a 1st c. AD structure demonstrates that these carvings are ancient. The architectural study of the fragments and comparison with other sculptural elements from southern Gaul suggest they date approximately to the turn of the millenium. The originality of these pieces should perhaps be sought in the copying and adaptation of Italic architectural features (Attic base, Tuscan capital) to a particular fo…