Noé Conejo
Noé Conejo is a Postdoctoral Researcher of the Programa Atracción Talento - César Nombela of the Comunidad de Madrid in the Department of Humanities of the Universidad Carlos III de Madrid. He is the PI of the project 2023-T1/PH-HUM-29289 (BOCM 08/01/2024, ORDEN 4974/2023, 19 December 2023) which studies the use and circulation of coinage in the central Iberian Peninsula from Roman-Republican to medieval times. Between 2021 and 2023 he has developed the MORTI Project (Money, Rituality and Tombs in northern Italy during Late antiquity) through a Marie Sklodowska Curie Individual Fellowship (Nº101025031 H2020-MSCA-IF-2020) at Università degli Studi di Padova (It). Conejo has a degree in History from the University of Extremadura, a Master's degree in Archeology from the Universities of Seville and Granada (with an extraordinary award) and a PhD in History, specializing in Archeology, from the Universities of Seville and Lisbon. His main line of research is ancient economics, focusing on the use and circulation of coins from the Roman, medieval and modern times. He has studied important monetary collections from various archaeological excavations and has collaborated with numerous Spanish and Portuguese museums. He is a member of the group “De la Turdetania a la Bética” (HUM-152) of the Department of Prehistory and Archeology of the University of Seville and a researcher at the Center of Archeology of the University of Lisbon (Uniarq)
Noé Conejo es Investigador Postdoctoral del Programa Atracción Talento - César Nombela de la Comunidad de Madrid en el Departamento de Humanidades de la Universidad Carlos III de Madrid. Es el IP del proyecto 2023-T1/PH-HUM-29289 (BOCM 08/01/2024, ORDEN 4974/2023,de 19 de diciembre de 2023) el cual tiene por objetivo estudiar el uso y circulación de moneda en el centro de la peninsula Ibérica desde época romano-republicana a tiempos medievales. Entre 2021 y 2023 ha desarrollado el Proyecto MORTI "Money, Rituality and Tombs in northern Italy during Late antiquity" a través de un contrato Marie Sklodowska Curie Individual Fellowship (Nº101025031 H2020-MSCA-IF-2020) en la Università degli Studi di Padova (It). Conejo es licenciado en Historia por la Universidad de Extremadura, Máster en Arqueología por las Universidades de Sevilla y Granada (con premio extraordinario) y Doctor en Historia, especialidad en Arqueología, por las Universidades de Sevilla y Lisboa. Su principal línea de investigación es la economía de época antigua, centrándose principalmente en el uso y circulación de la moneda de época romana, medieval y moderna. Ha estudiado importantes conjuntos monetarios procedentes de diversas excavaciones arqueológicas y ha colaborado con numerosos museos españoles y portugueses. Es miembro del grupo “De la Turdetania a la Bética” (HUM-152) del Departamento de Prehistoria y Arqueología de la Universidad de Sevilla e investigador del Centro de Arqueología de la Universidade de Lisboa (Uniarq)
Address: Facultad de Humanidades, Comunicación y Documentación
Instituto de Cultura y Tecnología
Calle Madrid 128,
28903 Getafe (Madrid, España)
Noé Conejo es Investigador Postdoctoral del Programa Atracción Talento - César Nombela de la Comunidad de Madrid en el Departamento de Humanidades de la Universidad Carlos III de Madrid. Es el IP del proyecto 2023-T1/PH-HUM-29289 (BOCM 08/01/2024, ORDEN 4974/2023,de 19 de diciembre de 2023) el cual tiene por objetivo estudiar el uso y circulación de moneda en el centro de la peninsula Ibérica desde época romano-republicana a tiempos medievales. Entre 2021 y 2023 ha desarrollado el Proyecto MORTI "Money, Rituality and Tombs in northern Italy during Late antiquity" a través de un contrato Marie Sklodowska Curie Individual Fellowship (Nº101025031 H2020-MSCA-IF-2020) en la Università degli Studi di Padova (It). Conejo es licenciado en Historia por la Universidad de Extremadura, Máster en Arqueología por las Universidades de Sevilla y Granada (con premio extraordinario) y Doctor en Historia, especialidad en Arqueología, por las Universidades de Sevilla y Lisboa. Su principal línea de investigación es la economía de época antigua, centrándose principalmente en el uso y circulación de la moneda de época romana, medieval y moderna. Ha estudiado importantes conjuntos monetarios procedentes de diversas excavaciones arqueológicas y ha colaborado con numerosos museos españoles y portugueses. Es miembro del grupo “De la Turdetania a la Bética” (HUM-152) del Departamento de Prehistoria y Arqueología de la Universidad de Sevilla e investigador del Centro de Arqueología de la Universidade de Lisboa (Uniarq)
Address: Facultad de Humanidades, Comunicación y Documentación
Instituto de Cultura y Tecnología
Calle Madrid 128,
28903 Getafe (Madrid, España)
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relacionado con el valor dado por las elites del momento a la formación intelectual como elemento de distinción social: una educación rigurosa y ecléctica basada en el estudio de las ciencias, de la diplomacia, de la literatura, del arte y de las corrientes estéticas.
group. Some theories study consumption as a social fact in modern societies. The same theories can be used to study groups from the past. Since the end of the 3rd century AD, and during the 4th
century, the Hispanic rural world has experienced a period of splendor, due to the good economic situation of the Spanish Empire and the emergence and consolidation of rural elites. The social group of rural elites used the villa as a sort of social window. They showed their economic power and social status through the wealth of their villas and the consumption of some types of products.
The journal contains articles in Italian and foreign languages (English, French, Spanish and German) by Authors of various nationalities from the academic and research world, museums and institutions involved in the cultural heritage protection.
The journal covers a wide range of fields in Archaeology, History and Art History of the Etruscan-italic, Greek and Roman societies, from the Proto-historic period up to Late Antiquity, which are investigated through archaeological, epigraphic, literary and iconographic sources. Furthermore, it is distinguished for the attention to the History of Archeology.
The journal is divided in three sections: articles, notes and discussions, and book reviews. At the end of each volume, a list of received books is provided.
Thanks to the exchange programmes with several research institutions and universities, Italian and foreign, we receive books and journals which enrich the Department’s Library. Archeologia Classica is present, with different consistency and continuity, in more than two-hundred institutions all over the world.
Archeologia Classica is a classe A journal according to the ANVUR classification system.
The articles submitted by the Authors are first examined by the journal’s Scientific Direction and then anonymously reviewed by two experts in the field, in all to comply with peer-review criteria.
ISBN: 9788891321121
Rilegatura: Brossura
Pagine: 828
ISSN 0391-8165
http://www.lerma.it/index.php?pg=SchedaTitolo&key=00013878
of the ancient Roman province of Lusitania.
de servicios
The monetary registry of several rural archaeological sites (7) located in the territorium of the ancient city of Olisipo (Lisbon, Portugal), his has helped us to know the uses and forms of the Roman currency in a rural space influenced by communication routes and the most important port in the Lusitania province. We have carried out a currency circulation study where we have also included other interesting data such as the consumption of import ceramics and / or the demand for architectural and decorative services.
relacionado con el valor dado por las elites del momento a la formación intelectual como elemento de distinción social: una educación rigurosa y ecléctica basada en el estudio de las ciencias, de la diplomacia, de la literatura, del arte y de las corrientes estéticas.
group. Some theories study consumption as a social fact in modern societies. The same theories can be used to study groups from the past. Since the end of the 3rd century AD, and during the 4th
century, the Hispanic rural world has experienced a period of splendor, due to the good economic situation of the Spanish Empire and the emergence and consolidation of rural elites. The social group of rural elites used the villa as a sort of social window. They showed their economic power and social status through the wealth of their villas and the consumption of some types of products.
The journal contains articles in Italian and foreign languages (English, French, Spanish and German) by Authors of various nationalities from the academic and research world, museums and institutions involved in the cultural heritage protection.
The journal covers a wide range of fields in Archaeology, History and Art History of the Etruscan-italic, Greek and Roman societies, from the Proto-historic period up to Late Antiquity, which are investigated through archaeological, epigraphic, literary and iconographic sources. Furthermore, it is distinguished for the attention to the History of Archeology.
The journal is divided in three sections: articles, notes and discussions, and book reviews. At the end of each volume, a list of received books is provided.
Thanks to the exchange programmes with several research institutions and universities, Italian and foreign, we receive books and journals which enrich the Department’s Library. Archeologia Classica is present, with different consistency and continuity, in more than two-hundred institutions all over the world.
Archeologia Classica is a classe A journal according to the ANVUR classification system.
The articles submitted by the Authors are first examined by the journal’s Scientific Direction and then anonymously reviewed by two experts in the field, in all to comply with peer-review criteria.
ISBN: 9788891321121
Rilegatura: Brossura
Pagine: 828
ISSN 0391-8165
http://www.lerma.it/index.php?pg=SchedaTitolo&key=00013878
of the ancient Roman province of Lusitania.
de servicios
The monetary registry of several rural archaeological sites (7) located in the territorium of the ancient city of Olisipo (Lisbon, Portugal), his has helped us to know the uses and forms of the Roman currency in a rural space influenced by communication routes and the most important port in the Lusitania province. We have carried out a currency circulation study where we have also included other interesting data such as the consumption of import ceramics and / or the demand for architectural and decorative services.
che non possono passare inosservati. Negli ultimi anni, molti ricercatori che si dedicano all’archeologia della morte hanno concentrato la loro attenzione sulla traccia di questi comportamenti, analizzando in dettaglio molti dei materiali rinvenuti nelle sepolture. Monete, gioielli, ceramiche, ossa, cibo e fiori sono alcuni degli oggetti che venivano frequentemente utilizzati per dare l’addio al defunto. L’analisi dettagliata di questi materiali in ampi contesti funerari dimostra che la loro scelta e collocazione nelle tombe era ricca di significati che variavano a seconda delle epoche, delle regioni e delle comunità. Questo volume riflette proprio su questi ultimi aspetti, studiando in dettaglio la scelta, la collocazione e il valore ideologico di piccoli oggetti tradizionalmente associati a concetti ormai
superati. È per questo motivo che gran parte dei lavori presenti in questo volume sono dedicati all’analisi delle monete nelle tombe, poiché si tratta di un oggetto utilizzato con una certa frequenza nei riti funerari di varie culture. Accanto a questi studi numismatici, altri contributi sono dedicati all’esame, secondo approcci aggiornati, degli elementi di decorazione e consumo personale in contesti funerari, fornendo così nuovi dati che permettono di ricostruire e di ripensare con maggiore precisione le concezioni della morte in epoca antica e medievale.
(Full volumen in: https://www.insegnadelgiglio.it/prodotto/il-valore-dei-gesti/)
The dactyliothec by the Italian artist Pietro Bracci included in the Museu-Biblioteca da Casa de Bragança’s collections illustrates the 1700’s and 1800’s taste, shared by the last generations of the Portuguese Royal House. The set presented is composed of 38 boxes, which gather a total of 2350 casts of gems and cameos, of various themes. Dated between the end of the 18th century and the first quarter of the 19th century, it reflects the importance that this sort of pieces have assumed, especially as a souvenir of Classical Art and History, for collectors and travellers; as well as an educational resource in the academic training of young aristocrats.
After its foundation in 1540 until its abandonment in 1835, the Convent of the Mother of God of Valverde de Leganés has maintained an important relationship with the Kingdom of Portugal. Contemporary Franciscan chronicles express these connections in detail, which, when analyzed carefully, can offer us a large number of data on the historical development of this community. These data are reinforced by the documentation kept in the National Historical Archive of Spain, which has remained unpublished until today and is of great interest to deepen the relationships between the Convent of Madre de Dios, the town of Valverde de Leganés and the Portuguese territory.
Recover memory: Valverde de Leganés (Badajoz, Extremadura, Spain) and the conservation of transhumant heritage Abstract: The industrialization of the livestock sector has limited the practice of transhumance, a millenary livestock activity. This office is the basis of a material and immaterial heritage that is in danger of extinction due to the abandonment of these practices. The territory of Valverde de Leganés (a small town located in the province of Badajoz, Autonomous Community of Extremadura, Spain) is quite rich in transhumant heritage. The work of the Council of Valverde de Leganés, the Diputación de Badajoz, the local associations and people dedicated to transhumant work is fundamental to recover and protect this heritage. In this work we expose the responsibility of the Institutions and the collectives in preserving the memory of the transhumant and their heritage, and an archaeological characterization of these evidences (cattle routes, water troughs and livestock pens); and a reflection on the importance of transhumant work in the socioeconomic development of Valverde de Leganés and the environment.
de la Junta de Extremadura y las del Gobierno de España para la recuperación y puesta en valor de las Cañadas Reales. En dichas jornadas, aparte de realizarse una promoción de los recursos propios trashumantes y la conservación de un patrimonio público, muy ligado a la historia de los municipios extremeños, se ha buscado que los principales
objetivos sean la potenciación, difusión y sensibilización con el patrimonio cultural y natural que gira en torno a la historia de las Cañadas Reales, por ser vías singulares y ejes vertebradores del territorio a lo largo de la Historia.
Video completo en :
https://canal.uned.es/video/5dd244d65578f275007ca9f0?track_id=5dd249c05578f2753c0239d2
Partindo de um estudo de caso - a escavação da villa romana da Horta da Torre, no concelho de Fronteira - pretendemos analisar estas tendências, bem como a desestruturação da exploração económica rural que se torna bem evidente com o abandono do local durante o século V.
Anche lo studio delle monete in contesti funerari classici e medievali ha subito una costante revisione negli ultimi decenni, aprendo a molteplici interpretazioni di questo uso rituale tradizionalmente legato al mito di Caronte. Diversi congressi convocati negli ultimi anni (Neuchâtel nel 1995, Salerno nel 1997, Atene nel 2017) hanno fornito molte prospettive sulla varietà di circostanze che circondano il gesto di depositare una o più monete in una tomba. Lo studio sistematico e dettagliato di questo piccolo dettaglio, che può passare inosservato agli archeologi e agli storici, ci aiuta a comprendere una moltitudine di rituali legati a periodi specifici, aree geografiche, etnie, famiglie, età e sesso delle persone sepolte. Come per le monete, anche l'esame e lo studio dettagliato di altri piccoli oggetti depositati con il defunto in epoca romana e medievale fornisce informazioni fondamentali per comprendere la mentalità degli individui attraverso i riti legati al mondo della morte. Gioielli, elementi decorativi, ceramiche, alimenti, resti faunistici, resti floreali e persino elementi epigrafici fanno parte della moltitudine di gesti che amici e parenti compivano al momento di dare l'addio ai rispettivi defunti; la loro analisi è quindi fondamentale per entrare in contatto con il complesso mondo delle idee, che in molte occasioni sfugge alle evidenze documentate nella documentazione materiale.
Nell'ambito del progetto MORTI "Money, Rituality and Tombs in northern Italy during Late antiquity" (n. 101025031 H2020-MSCA-IF-2020), sviluppato presso il Dipartimento di Beni Culturali dell'Università di Padova, è stata organizzata una giornata di studio dal titolo "Piccoli dettagli: monete e altri oggetti in contesti funerari". L'intento è quello di riunire diversi ricercatori per fornire nuove letture su quei piccoli dettagli realizzati, e/o oggetti depositati, sulle tombe di epoca classica e medievale; e di aprire nuovi dibattiti su alcune pratiche funerarie, ruoli di genere e segmenti di popolazione che sono stati poco studiati.