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    Making law grip: inequality, injustice, and legal remedy in Solonian Attica and ancient Israel by Lewis, David

    Published 2017
    “…This study examines problems to do with social justice and class relations in two societies of the archaic eastern Mediterranean: Attica and Israel. It shows that both societies faced similar social problems (predatory lending, enslavement for debt, corrupt judicial processes, violence); both societies produced legal responses to these problems, both in the area of substantive law, and in structural/procedural innovations. …”
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    Messinian age and savannah environment of the possible hominin Graecopithecus from Europe by Böhme, M., Spassov, N., Ebner, M., Geraads, D., Hristova, L., Kirscher, Uwe, Kötter, S., Linnemann, U., Prieto, J., Roussiakis, S., Theodorou, G., Uhlig, G., Winklhofer, M.

    Published 2017
    “…For the Graecopithecus-bearing Pikermi Formation of Attica/Greece, a saline aeolian dust deposit of North African (Sahara) provenance, we obtain an age of 7.37-7.11 Ma, which is coeval with a dramatic cooling in the Mediterranean region at the Tortonian-Messinian transition. …”
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    Wandering poets and the dissemination of Greek tragedy in the fifth and fourth centuries BC by Stewart, Edmund

    Published 2013
    “…In doing so, the thesis challenges the prevailing assumption that tragedy was, in its origins, an exclusively Athenian cultural product, and that its ‘export’ outside Attica only occurred at a later period. Instead, I argue that the dissemination of tragedy took place simultaneously with its development and growth at Athens. …”
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    Greek tragedy on the move: the birth of a panhellenic art form c.500-300 BC by Stewart, Edmund

    Published 2017
    “…In doing so, the thesis challenges the prevailing assumption that tragedy was, in its origins, an exclusively Athenian cultural product, and that its ‘export’ outside Attica only occurred at a later period. Instead, I argue that the dissemination of tragedy took place simultaneously with its development and growth at Athens. …”
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