2007
DOI: 10.1111/j.1095-9270.2007.00149.x
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Two Late Roman Wrecks from Southern Cyprus

Abstract: Two scattered Late Roman shipwrecks were discovered in the course of underwater survey at Cape Zevgari and Avdimou Bay off the southern coast of Cyprus. Each was transporting a primary cargo contained in amphoras, in one case either local or from nearby Syria or Cilicia, and the other certainly from the southern Levantine coast. The two wrecks offer insight into regional maritime exchange networks within the socio-economic context of late antique commerce around the island. Both sites also contribute to a grea… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…In late antique Cyprus small anchorages were connected with major ports and cosmopolitan cities via cabotage through local commercial maritime routes. This favoured a regional redistribution of goods as proved by shipwrecks along the coast of merchants boats (Leidwanger, 2007). Our findings may fit with this hypothesis as the Egyptian glasses show a larger share of the assemblage in Yeroskipou, while moving eastwards, we notice a drop of Egyptian glass in Maroni and Kalavasos (Fig.…”
Section: Glass Consumption In Cyprussupporting
confidence: 79%
“…In late antique Cyprus small anchorages were connected with major ports and cosmopolitan cities via cabotage through local commercial maritime routes. This favoured a regional redistribution of goods as proved by shipwrecks along the coast of merchants boats (Leidwanger, 2007). Our findings may fit with this hypothesis as the Egyptian glasses show a larger share of the assemblage in Yeroskipou, while moving eastwards, we notice a drop of Egyptian glass in Maroni and Kalavasos (Fig.…”
Section: Glass Consumption In Cyprussupporting
confidence: 79%
“…Additional wreck‐sites have been located during various surveys conducted in Cyprus, but most have been found in shallow waters, were heavily looted, and none was systematically excavated. At least three late Roman wrecks have been located at Cape Zevgari, Akrotiri, at Avdimou Bay and at Cape Andreas (Green, 1973: 161; Leidwanger, 2005; Leidwanger, 2007); a Hellenistic wreck was found at Xerolimni, Peyia (Giangrande et al ., 1987: 192); and a Classical wreck with roof‐tiles was surveyed at Cape Andreas (Green, 1973: 150–53). Because these fragmented data do not offer much potential for satisfactory comparisons between them, a coherent synthesis is difficult.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Two of the survey's goals were to restart the documentation of the island's maritime cultural resources and to aid local efforts to manage this material. In light of the ongoing application of the UNESCO mechanisms, however, it also 1 See, for example, Frost 1970;Engvig -Beichmann 1984;Leonard 1995;Leidwanger 2007;Demesticha 2011. 2 Taylor 1980Hirschfeld 2007. represented a rare opportunity to conduct maritime archaeological work under the aegis of UNESCO guidelines, testing their efficacy in the field.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%