Marine Lechenault
Université Lyon, UMR 5189-HiSoMA, Department Member
- Cultural Anthropology, Experimental Archaeology, Paleoanthropology, Technology And Culture, Mediterranean archaeology, Bronze Age (Archaeology), and 25 moreArchaeology of Mediterranean Trade, Cross-cultural interaction (Archaeology), Technology & Culture, âge du Fer en Corse, Corsican Iron Age, Geography, Humanities, Archaeological Method & Theory, Human Geography, Economic Anthropology, Nuragic Archaeology, Sardinian Nuragic, Corsican archaeology, History Research Paper, Ethnicity, Classical Archaeology, Greek and Roman History, Economic History, Colonization studies, Maritime Studies, Keynesian Economics, Iron Age, Archaeology, Computer Science, and Bletchley Parkedit
- I am interested in trade and crosscultural exchanges between the Western Mediterranean islands and Greek, Etruscan an... moreI am interested in trade and crosscultural exchanges between the Western Mediterranean islands and Greek, Etruscan and Phoenician cities during the first Millennium BC. Corsica is the main target of my research. The PhD survey has shown an intensive dialogue between the Northern Corsican communities and Etruria since the IXth century BC. It has also permitted some clarifications about Corsican material culture during the First Iron Age (IXth-Vth BC).
I'm also currently working for the Museum of Fine Arts, Lyon.
Ma recherche porte sur les aspects économiques et culturels des échanges entre les îles de Méditerranée occidentale et les sociétés grecques, étrusques et phéniciennes au cours du Premier Millénaire avant notre ère. La Corse occupe une place centrale au sein de l'enquête. La thèse a montré l'existence d'un dialogue soutenu entre les communautés septentrionales corses et l'Étrurie dès le IXe s. av. J.-C. Elle a également permis une meilleure perception de la culture matérielle au cours du Premier âge du Fer corse (IXe-Ve s. av. J.-C.).
Mi occupo degli aspetti economici e culturali degli scambi fra le isole del Mediterraneo occidentale e le società greche, etrusche e fenicie nel Primo Millennio a. C. La Corsica occupa il posto principale dell'indagine. Il dottorato di ricerca ha messo in luce un intenso dialogo fra le communità della Corsica settentrionale e l'Etruria a partire dal IX s. a. C. Ha anche permesso qualche osservazione per quanto concerne la cultura materiale protostorica nel Primo Ferro corso (IX-V s. a. C.).
Lavoro anche per il Museo delle Belle Arti di Lione.edit
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in: La Corsica e Populonia/La Corse et Populonia, Atti del XXVIII Convegno di Studi Etruschi ed Italici (Bastia · Aléria / Piombino · Populonia, 25-29 ottobre 2011), in corso di stampa
