Papers by Jennifer P. Moore
L’iconographie et Religions dans le Maghreb antique et médiéval. Actes du 1er colloque international organise par L’Institut Supérieur des Métiers du Patrimoine, Tunis 21-23 février 2008, ed. L. Ben Abed Saadallah (Tunis: L’Institut Supérieur des Métiers du Patrimoine), 7-18., 2011
Descriptions of certain events in the Punic Wars suggest that Roman ignorance of Punic culture ma... more Descriptions of certain events in the Punic Wars suggest that Roman ignorance of Punic culture may have been directly responsible for occasions on which, according to the Romans, the Carthaginians acted contrary to expectations or perfidiously. One probable source of confusion was the caduceus, which bore a superficial resemblance to the Graeco-Roman version, but may have served as a symbol of divine authority that underlay Carthaginian culture and protected its people. Several incidents from the time of the Second Punic War can be attributed to confusion between the two symbols.
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Les ateliers de sculpture régionaux : techniques, styles et iconographie. Actes due Xe colloque international sur l’art provincial romain, Arles et Aix-en-Provence, 21-23 mai 2007, eds. V. Gaggadis-Robin, A. Hermany, M. Reddé, and C. Sintes , 2009
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Antiquites africaines, 1999
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L'Africa romana, 2010
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L'Africa romana
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MBAH, 2010
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Books by Jennifer P. Moore
Leptiminus 4 presents a comprehensive suite of artifacts, ecofacts, and stratigraphy largely f... more Leptiminus 4 presents a comprehensive suite of artifacts, ecofacts, and stratigraphy largely from the ‘pagan’ sector of the cemetery (mostly 2nd-3rd c.), supplemented by a report on the exquisite tomb mosaics of the Christian sector (4th and 5th c.). Moreover, extensive synthesis ties the findings into broader social and archaeological issues and situates the burial practices at this cemetery within Roman North Africa on a comprehensive scale. What emerges is a multi-faceted image of ordinary people who were very much tied into both their own region and the broader Roman empire, all the while developing distinctive ways of responding to death.
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Journal of Roman Archaeology suppl. 110, 2021
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Papers by Jennifer P. Moore
Books by Jennifer P. Moore