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Crowdsourcing Excavation Records from Ur

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[First posted on AWOL 14 October 2012, updated 20 August 2015]

UrCrowdsource
http://urcrowdsource.org/omeka/files/theme_uploads/b892365629d6891b68cda0d209654e16.jpg
UrCrowdsource is asking for public assistance in transcribing thousands of documents related to the excavations of the ancient city of Ur in Mesopotamia. These excavations were conducted under the auspices of the Iraqi Department of Antiquities from 1922-1934 by the joint expedition of the British Museum and the University of Pennsylvania Museum.

By participating in this project, you will be helping to gather data that will eventually be featured on an open-source, public, and free website with all known data from the ancient site of Ur. Anyone will be able to search the data, enjoy, and learn from it. We are particularly interested in having educators and students of all ages involved. Anyone can use the data for educational purposes under Creative Commons share alike license. This means that any data you acquire here must be made available to others free of charge with attribution to the Ur Project as the source of the data. If a commercial concern wishes to use data or images on this site, it will need permission from the museums, who are the official copyright holders.

Naturally, creating a comprehensive site of this magnitude takes time and money. We have completed our first year wherein we have assessed the amount of material to be made digital, and we have secured a two-year continuation with lead funding from the Leon Levy Foundation. A test site featuring data from archives and artifacts should appear in 2014 with a more refined version in 2015. Meanwhile, documents will continue to appear here for transcription and inclusion until all have been converted.

A variety of documents can be found on this site. They include typewritten reports, accounts, and letters from the field or between the museums, as well as handwritten notes taken at the site as artifacts were coming out of the ground and the remains of architecture were being assessed for the first time in thousands of years.

Optical Character Recognition can be used on the typewritten documents but not the handwritten ones and around half of the documents we have are handwritten. Furthermore, the typewritten ones are often on wrinkled paper with faded typeface, and are often annotated by hand. People are much better transcribers of all of this material and gain the added benefit of observing history in a unique way.

The field notes are particularly difficult to read because of the handwriting, the scan quality, the original quality of the notes, and the graph background on most of the cards themselves. We will eventally rescan at higher resolution, but it will take time. The scans we have now are readable, however, and no matter how good the scan, transcribers must accustom themselves to Woolley's handwriting and his use of abbreviations. Help with this process appears in the pages under "Terminology" on this crowdsrouce site.

Thanks to everyone taking part and we hope this explains some of the issues. Any questions or concerns can be addressed to the project manager, Dr. William B. Hafford: whafford(at)sas.upenn.edu

UrCrowdsource is a part of the larger project entitled Ur of the Chaldees: A Virtual Vision of Woolley's Excavations, funded by the Leon Levy Foundation and conducted by the original excavating museums in Philadelphia and London.

Propylaeum-DOK - Digital Repository Classical Studies

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Propylaeum-DOK - Digital Repository Classical Studies
http://archiv.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/propylaeumdok/images/propylaeumdok_header_label_en.gif
Propylaeum-DOK - Digital Repository Classical Studies is the full-text server of the Virtual Library of Classical Studies and is made available by the University Library of Heidelberg. It offers members of the academic community worldwide the opportunity to publish their texts in electronic format on the internet at no charge. All kinds of publications (like monographs, articles, lectures) in the fields of Classical Studies can be stored on "Propylaeum-DOK". The standard of these publications should not fall below that of traditional printed ones. The documents will be stored and their long-term availability guaranteed by using standardized addresses (URN) and metadata (OAIPMH). They are accessible through the German union catalogues and search engines, too.

As for now, Propylaeum-Dok provides free full-text access to 2,493 publications.

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Architecture and Asceticism: Cultural Interaction between Syria and Georgia in Late Antiquity

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Architecture and Asceticism
http://architectureandasceticism.exeter.ac.uk/themes/seasons_modified/images/banner.jpg
Architecture and Asceticism: Cultural Interaction between Syria and Georgia in Late Antiquity is a five-year research project funded by the European Research Council.

The aim of the project is to explore the Georgian belief that monasticism was brought to the country by the "Thirteen (As)Syrian Fathers" in the sixth century. As there is no textual evidence still extant from this early period, the project is evaluating the surviving material culture in both countries in order to identify any common movements in architecture and art, as well as to study the ecclesiastical history of both countries in order to pinpoint similarities in liturgy, pilgrimage or any other area of historical ritual practice. It is hoped that data from further afield will be contributed in the future, but the parameters of the current project (which will run until November 2017) encompass the modern countries of Georgia, Turkey, Syria, Lebanon, Israel and the Palestinian Territories.

The outbreak of the Syrian Civil War in 2011 has meant that no new field work can be undertaken for this project in that country, but this has been largely overcome by making use of a large archive of site images taken by the principal investigator in Syria from 1997 until 2010. Therefore this resource also incorporates material from earlier research, including data from two archaeological excavations. We are aware that the ongoing looting and destruction of Syrian archaeological sites places a moral duty on academics to make available their unpublished material to the wider research community in order to create a common resource for those seeking to safeguard Syrian Cultural Heritage. This web resource is intended as a contribution to this process.

Much of this information is being made available to the public for the first time. We have endeavoured to publish as many papers written by team members as possible, but where prevented by copyright restrictions from including articles and monographs we have added links to the websites where there are abstracts and purchase details of these items.

Please look at the Contact Us section if you have any comments or suggestions for the improvement of this resource. This site is still evolving and we hope that it will ultimately become a valuable repository for the Late Antique and Early Medieval material culture of the Levant, Asia Minor and Caucasus regions.

Open Access Journal: Journal of Open Archaeology Data (JOAD)

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[First posted in AWOL 20 April 2012. Updated 21 August 2015]

Journal of Open Archaeology Data (JOAD)
ISSN: 2049-1565
http://openarchaeologydata.metajnl.com/local/images/header_middle.png
The Journal of Open Archaeology Data (JOAD) features peer reviewed data papers describing archaeology datasets with high reuse potential. We are working with a number of specialist and institutional data repositories to ensure that the associated data are professionally archived, preserved, and openly available. Equally importantly, the data and the papers are citable, and reuse will be tracked. While still in beta phase, the journal is now accepting papers. We will also be adding new functionality over the next few weeks, and refining the look and feel.
Vol 4 (2015)

Data papers


Open Access Journal: Bulletin of the History of Archaeology

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[First posted in AWOL 10 December 2011. Updated 21 August 2015]

Bulletin of the History of Archaeology
ISSN: 2047-6930 (online)
ISSN: 1062-4740 (print)
http://www.archaeologybulletin.org/local/images/bha_header_middle.png
The Bulletin of the History of Archaeology (BHA) was inaugurated nearly 19 years ago as a forum to exchange research, information on on-going projects, and resources solely devoted to the history of archaeology. Since that time it has become global in its reach and interests, but retains its focus on exchanging knowledge about the history of archaeology.


Open Access Journal Backlist: Studi Micenei ed Egeo-Anatolici

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Studi Micenei ed Egeo-Anatolici
ISSN: 1126-6651
http://smea.isma.cnr.it/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/logo_blu_45.png
Founded in Rome in 1966 at the Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche (CNR), Studi Micenei ed Egeo-Anatolici (SMEA) is the most important Italian journal, and one of the most important at an international level, for the history and archaeology of the Aegean basin and the Eastern Mediterranean in the Bronze and the Early Iron Age. While originally part of the Incunabula Graeca series, since 1992 SMEA has acquired an autonomous status.

As a result of a major restructuring at the Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche, in 2015 SMEA Nuova Serie has become a journal of Istituto di Studi sul Mediterraneo Antico. Its format has been redesigned and its content has become accessible online. SMEA Nuova Serie is a peer-reviewed journal. It appears annually in printed and digital forms, and is produced and distributed by Edizioni Quasar. Occasionally SMEA Nuova Serie publishes supplementary volumes. Anna Lucia D’Agata is the Editor, and the journal has an Editorial Board and an Advisory Editorial Board including scholars of international repute.

Access to the digital content is through individual subscription and institutional subscription. Some past articles are available for download in the archives section of this website.
All the volumes are in the process of being digitized. Once completed, by the end of September 2015, all the articles included in the Archives will be available for free download.

Open Access Journal: Rocznik Orientalistyczny

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Rocznik Orientalistyczny 
ISSN: 0080-3545
Rocznik Orientalistyczny (Lwów-Kraków-Warszawa od 1915) to najstarsze polskie i jedno z najstarszych w Europie czasopismo orientalistyczne założone we Lwowie przez grupę uczonych lwowskich, krakowskich i warszawskich. W latach 1923-1952 był organem Polskiego Towarzystwa Orientalistycznego, później PAN (początkowo wydawany przez Zakład Orientalistyki, a po jego likwidacji przez Komitet Nauk Orientalistycznych). 

Obecnie funkcję redaktora naczelnego sprawuje arabista prof. M. Dziekan. Do 2012 r. ukazało się 65 tomów czasopisma, od wielu lat w formie dwóch zeszytów rocznie. Obecny nakład wynosi 200 egzemplarzy.


Rocznik Orientalistyczny znajduje się w zasobach wszystkich najważniejszych bibliotek światowych w ośrodkach prowadzących badania na krajami Azji Afryki. Rocznik Orientalistyczny publikuje studia polskich i zagranicznych orientalistów z różnych dziedzin: literaturoznawstwa, językoznawstwa, historii, antropologii kulturowej itp. Publikacje ukazują się w językach obcych (angielski, niemiecki, francuski, rosyjski) ze streszczeniami w języku angielskim. Niektóre tomy Rocznika Orientalistycznego mają charakter monodyscyplinarny lub monotematyczny i poświęcone są np. wybitnym polskim orientalistom, przez co zawierają szczególnie wartościowe z punktu widzenia tej nauki materiały. 

Zespół redakcyjny Rocznika Orientalistycznego składa się z grupy wybitnych polskich i zagranicznych badaczy z rozmaitych dziedzin (arabistyka, japonistyka, sinologia, tybetologia, afrykanistyka, indologia). Czasopismo dysponuje obecnie strona internetową, której zawartość jest stale uzupełniana.

Open Access Les Travaux de Karnak - Karnak Activity Reports - اعمال الكرنك

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[First posted in AWOL 7 June 2010. Updated 23 August 2015]

Les Travaux de Karnak - Karnak Activity Reports - اعمال الكرنك

2015


2014


2013

BORAIK (M.), THIERS (Chr.), <i>Centre Franco-Égyptien d’Étude des Temples de Karnak. Rapport 2012</i>Centre Franco-Égyptien d’Étude des Temples de Karnak. Rapport 2012, Rapport d’activité du CFEETK, Louqsor, 2013.

2012

BORAIK (M.), THIERS (Chr.), <i>Centre Franco-Égyptien d’Étude des Temples de Karnak. Rapport 2011</i>Centre Franco-Égyptien d’Étude des Temples de Karnak. Rapport 2011, Rapport d’activité du CFEETK, Louqsor, 2012.

2011

BORAIK (M.), THIERS (Chr.), <i>Centre Franco-Égyptien d’Étude des Temples de Karnak. Rapport 2010</i>Centre Franco-Égyptien d’Étude des Temples de Karnak. Rapport 2010, Rapport d’activité du CFEETK, Louqsor, 2011.

2010

LAROZE (E.), VALBELLE (D.), <i>Travaux du CFEETK entre 2005 et 2007</i>Travaux du CFEETK entre 2005 et 2007, Rapport d’activité du CFEETK, Louqsor, 2010.

2009

BORAIK (M.), THIERS (Chr.), <i>Centre Franco-Égyptien d’Étude des Temples de Karnak. Rapport 2009</i>Centre Franco-Égyptien d’Étude des Temples de Karnak. Rapport 2009, Rapport d’activité du CFEETK, Louqsor, 2009.

2008

BORAIK (M.), THIERS (Chr.), <i>Centre Franco-Égyptien d’Étude des Temples de Karnak. Rapport 2008</i>Centre Franco-Égyptien d’Étude des Temples de Karnak. Rapport 2008, Rapport d’activité du CFEETK, Louqsor, 2008.

2007

GRIMAL (N.), LARCHE (Fr.), « Karnak, 1998-2004 »« Karnak, 1998-2004 », Karnak 12, 2007, p. 7-60.

2003

GRIMAL (N.), LARCHÉ (Fr.), « Karnak 1994-1997 »« Karnak 1994-1997 », Karnak 11, 2003, p. 7-64.

1995

GRIMAL (N.), LARCHÉ (Fr.), « Karnak, 1992-1994 »« Karnak, 1992-1994 », Karnak 10, 1995, p. vii-xxxii.

1993

GRIMAL (N.), LARCHÉ (Fr.), « Karnak, 1989-1992 »« Karnak, 1989-1992 », Karnak 9, 1993, p. v-xx.

1988


1987


1982


1981


1980


1975


1973


1971

LAUFFRAY (J.), SAAD (R.), SAUNERON (S.), « Rapport sur les travaux de Karnak. Activités du Centre Franco-Égyptien des temples de Karnak (Campagne de travaux 1969-70) », Kêmi 21 (= Karnak 4), 1971, p. 54-76.

1970

ANUS (P.), LAUFFRAY (J.), SAAD (R.), « Rapport sur les travaux de Karnak. Activités du Centre franco-égyptien en 1968-1969 », Kêmi 20 (= Karnak 3), 1970, p. 57-99.

1969

ANUS (P.), LAUFFRAY (J.), SAUNERON (S.), « Rapport sur les travaux de Karnak. Activités du Centre franco-égyptien en 1967-1968 », Kêmi 19 (= Karnak 2), 1969, p. 111-135.

1968

LAUFFRAY (J.), SAUNERON (S.), « Mission à Karnak (mars-juillet 1967) », Kêmi 18 (= Karnak 1), 1968, p. 93-97.
SAUNERON (S.), « Le Centre Franco-Égyptien d’Étude des Temples de Karnak 1968-1969 »« Le Centre Franco-Égyptien d’Étude des Temples de Karnak 1968-1969 », Note d’Information du Centre Franco-Égyptien d’Étude des Temples de Karnak 1, 1968.
SAUNERON (S.), « Travaux à Karnak 1967-1968 »« Travaux à Karnak 1967-1968 », Note d’Information du Centre Franco-Égyptien d’Étude des Temples de Karnak 2, 1968, p. 1-7.

1959


1955


1952

CHEVRIER (H.), « Rapport sur les travaux de Karnak, 1951-1952 »« Rapport sur les travaux de Karnak, 1951-1952 », ASAE 52, 1952, p. 229-242.

1951

CHEVRIER (H.), « Rapport sur les travaux de Karnak 1950-1951 »« Rapport sur les travaux de Karnak 1950-1951 », ASAE 51, 1951, p. 549-572.

1950

CHEVRIER (H.), « Rapport sur les travaux de Karnak, 1949-1950 »« Rapport sur les travaux de Karnak, 1949-1950 », ASAE 50, 1950, p. 429-442.

1949

CHEVRIER (H.), « Rapport sur les travaux de Karnak, 1948-1949 »« Rapport sur les travaux de Karnak, 1948-1949 », ASAE 49, 1949, p. 241-267.

1947

CHEVRIER (H.), « Rapports sur les travaux de Karnak »« Rapports sur les travaux de Karnak », ASAE 46, 1947, p. 147-161.

1942


1940


1939


1938


1937


1936


1935


1934


1933


1932


1931


1930


1929

CHEVRIER (H.), « Rapport sur les travaux de Karnak »« Rapport sur les travaux de Karnak », ASAE 29, 1929, p. 133-149.

1928

CHEVRIER (H.), « Rapport sur les travaux de Karnak (1927-1928) »« Rapport sur les travaux de Karnak (1927-1928) », ASAE 28, 1928, p. 114-128..

1927


1926


1925


1924


1923

PILLET (M.), « Rapport sur les travaux de Karnak (1922-1923) »« Rapport sur les travaux de Karnak (1922-1923) », ASAE 23, 1923, p. 99-138.

1922

PILLET (M.), « Rapport sur les travaux de Karnak (1921-1922) »« Rapport sur les travaux de Karnak (1921-1922) », ASAE 22, 1922, p. 235-260.

1909

LEGRAIN (G.), « Excavations and Explorations »« Excavations and Explorations », EEFR, 1909, p. 14-16.

1908


1907

LEGRAIN (G.), « Excavations and Explorations »« Excavations and Explorations », EEFR, 1907, p. 19-23.

1906

LEGRAIN (G.), « Fouilles et recherches à Karnak »« Fouilles et recherches à Karnak », BIE 6/4e série, année 1905, 1906, p. 109-127.
LEGRAIN (G.), « Excavations and Explorations »« Excavations and Explorations », EEFR, 1906, p. 21-23.

1905

LEGRAIN (G.), « Les récentes découvertes de Karnak »« Les récentes découvertes de Karnak », BIE 5/4e série, année 1904, 1905, p. 109-119.
LEGRAIN (G.), « Excavations and Explorations »« Excavations and Explorations », EEFR, 1905, p. 22-24.

1904

LEGRAIN (G.), « Les travaux de 1903 à Karnak »« Les travaux de 1903 à Karnak », BIE 4/4e série, année 1903, 1904, p. 447-451.
LEGRAIN (G.), « Excavations and Explorations »« Excavations and Explorations », EEFR, 1904, p. 25-27.

1903

LEGRAIN (G.), « Les nouvelles découvertes de Karnak »« Les nouvelles découvertes de Karnak », BIE 3/4e série, année 1902, 1903, p. 153-167.

1901


1900





POTSHERD - Atlas of Roman Pottery

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[First posted in AWOL 3 June 2011. Updated 23 August 2015]

POTSHERD - Atlas of Roman Pottery
http://potsherd.net/atlas/gallery/img/potsherd.gif
This is a collection of pages on pottery and ceramics in archaeology, principally of the Roman period (1st cent. BC - 5th cent. AD) in Britain and western Europe.
  • The pages include an introductory Atlas of Roman Pottery, containing descriptions and distribution maps of types of Roman pottery (particularly types found in Britain).
  • The pages of the Atlas describing the individual wares can be accessed through the main menu, which lists the wares by CLASS (table wares, cooking wares, transport amphoras etc) or SOURCE (by province of origin). Links to these indices will also be found in the main menu bar.
Potsherd Roman Pottery in Britain
  • The site includes a companion to Roman Pottery in Britain, a survey of pottery made or used in Britain during the Roman period published in 1996. The pages include an additional index of non-UK sites and a list of errata.
Additional datasets
  • Central Gaulish granite-tempered wares: database, images etc to accompany paper published in the journal Nord-Ouest Archéologie12 (2001). This ware includes some of the moulded-rim jars classified in French ceramic reports as le type Besançon.

New Open Access Journal: MNAR Digital (Museo Nacional de Arte Romano)

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MNAR Digital (Museo Nacional de Arte Romano)
ISSN: 2341-1554
  
MNAR digital es una publicación on line dedicada a la divulgación de temas de museología y museografía, que pretende dar a conocer al público en general la actividad cotidiana del Museo. Su objetivo es llenar el vacío existente en las publicaciones de difusión científica dedicadas a la Museología. Las secciones en las que se articula permiten descubrir los entresijos del Museo: nuevas piezas que se incorporan a la colección, proyectos de renovación museográfica, experiencias vividas por usuarios del centro, agenda y actualidad, planes de colaboración institucional…todos estos aspectos tendrán cabida en sus contenidos.

MNAR digital tiene una periodicidad trimestral. Con un formato digital, la accesibilidad a los contenidos de la publicación es abierta y total, haciéndose realidad a través de la Web del MNAR o suscribiéndose a la misma, solicitándolo mediante un correo electrónico a la dirección mnar.digital@gmail.com.

MNARdigital, 2014, Nº0
MNARdigital, 2014, Nº1
MNARdigital, 2014, Nº2
MNARdigital, 2014, Nº3
MNARdigital, 2015, Nº4 

Open Access Journal: El Futuro del Pasado

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[First posted in AWOL 21 June 2010. Updated 23 August 2015]

El Futuro del Pasado. Revista electrónica de Historia
ISSN: 1989-9289
http://www.elfuturodelpasado.com/elfuturodelpasado/Numeros_anteriores_files/Cabecera.jpg
El Futuro del Pasado. Revista electrónica de Historia pretende ser un espacio abierto para el diálogo y el debate entre investigadores de diferentes áreas de conocimiento que tienen como objeto de estudio el pasado en sus diferentes vertientes. Se trata de una herramienta para la investigación, la divulgación y la crítica, ajena a cualquier tipo de partidismo ideológico o clientelismo de cualquier signo.

El Futuro del Pasado busca ayudar a superar los muros que separan a los historiadores, tratando de romper barreras entre las diferentes áreas afines de conocimiento y estableciendo lazos para la colaboración en un mundo en el que se da cada vez más importancia a la competencia.

Las nuevas tecnologías permiten, a quienes saben hacer de ellas un aliado, superar las barreras económicas y difundir gratuitamente la cultura por todo el territorio nacional y más allá de nuestras fronteras. Se muestra como una evidencia que cada vez es más importante la generación y comunicación académica del conocimiento científico a través de la Red. El Futuro del Pasado pretende contribuir a esta transmisión libre y gratuita del conocimiento científico.

2014


Vol. 5 (2014): Cine e Historia: revisiones metodológicas y críticas

El Futuro del Pasado, n.º 5 (2014)
enero-diciembre 2014
Coord. Beatriz Leal Riesco


2013

Vol. 4 (2013): La Infancia: Historia y Representación

El Futuro del Pasado, n.º 4 (2013)
enero-diciembre 2013
Coord. Laura Sánchez Blanco


2012

Vol. 3 (2012): Historia y Género: Nuevas perspectivas

El Futuro del Pasado, n.º 3 (2012)
enero-diciembre 2012
Coord. Iván Pérez Miranda


2011

Vol. 2 (2011): Razón, Utopía y Sociedad

El Futuro del Pasado, n.º 2 (2011)
enero-diciembre 2011


2010





Vol. 1 (2010): El Futuro del Pasado


El Futuro del Pasado, n.º 1 (2010)
enero-diciembre 2010

Ancient Locations:Database of Archaeological Sites

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Ancient Locations:Database of Archaeological Sites
http://www.ancientlocations.net/WebImg/HeaderCaptionBright.png
ANCIENT LOCATIONS is my collection of Placemarks of archaeologically interesting locations of the ancient world.
The list is continuously updated and expanded to give anyone with an interest in archaeology and history the possibility to look up the coordinates of relevant sites.
Locations are included if they existed prior to 476 CE in the Old World (end of the West-Roman Empire) and prior to 1492 CE in the New World (re-discovery of the New World).
There are currently 25248 placemark entries in the database. 3753 are shown on Ancient Locations (14.9 %). There are currently 129 overlay and map entries in the database. 41 are shown on Ancient Locations. (31.8 %) Those entries not shown are either under review or are not assigned to appear on Ancient Locations.
The number of database entries increases when placemarks are imported or manually added, and it decreases when duplicates or invalid enties are removed. Reviewing all the placemarks and ascertaining accurate coordinates is a slow process...
For the task of managing my Placemarks I have implemented a program, a screeshot of which you can see on the right.

This website has had 245612 visitors since June 6, 2008, which was the day it was set up.



El conflicto armado en Siria y su repercusión sobre el Patrimonio Cultural, Anas Al Khabour

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El conflicto armado en Siria y su repercusión sobre el Patrimonio Cultural, Anas Al Khabour
Volumen I. Deir ez-Zor.
El conflicto armado en Siria y su repercusión sobre el Patrimonio Cultural Vol. I: Inventario del Patrimonio Cultural afectado en la provincia de Deir Ez-Zor (marzo 2011-mazro 2015)
Anas Al Khabour
Dirección General de Antigüedades y Museos, 2015
ISBN 978-84-606-7735-2
ISBN978-84-606-9619-3
Volumen II. Raqqa.
El conflicto armado en Siria y su repercusión sobre el Patrimonio Cultural Vol. II: Inventario del Patrimonio Cultural afectado en la provincia de Raqqa (marzo 2011-marzo 2015)
AnasAl Khabour
Dirección General de Antigüedades y Museos, 2015
ISBN 978-84-606-7735-2
ISBN978-84-606-9962-0
Volumen III. Hasakeh.
El conflicto armado en Siria y su repercusión sobre el Patrimonio Cultural Vol. III: Inventario del Patrimonio Cultural afectado en la provincia de Hasakeh (marzo 2011-marzo 2015) 
Anas Al Khabour 
Dirección General de Antigüedades y Museos, 2015
ISBN: 978-84-606-7735-2 
ISBN: 978-84-608-1623-2

Imperium Latin – free of charge to all

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Imperium Latin – free of charge to all
By On
I have just made Books 1, 2 and 3 of my Imperium Latin course available free of charge to all via TES Resources, in the form of downloadable pdf files. I have done this so that:
  1. more teachers and students will become aware of Imperium Latin, which is already attracting some very positive reactions in a wide variety of schools.
  2. these materials will help schools and individuals whose budgetary pressures are making it difficult to learn and teach Latin, especially those who find it hard to find money to buy books and startup resources.
  3. using Imperium will help with recruitment to Latin and to classical studies generally, especially as it moves so quickly and adds so much humour to the process.
The link for downloading the pdf files can be found here:
https://www.tes.com/member/imperiumlatin
Here you will also find translations of four Greek plays, which have also been posted there to be downloaded free of charge.
All of these files are restricted against copying and pasting but in other ways, their use is governed by the Creative Commons NoDerivatives licensing system, which says that if you remix, transform, or build upon the material, you may not distribute the modified material.

Some background for those who are new to Imperium…
I started work on Imperium Latin in 2007 and it is now in use in around 30-40 schools, some in the UK, some in the rest of Europe and a few in the USA. It has had a couple of terrific reviews from the American Classical League and JACT. The course follows the life of the Emperor Hadrian, an intellectual of the first rank, an architect without parallel and a traveller who made many fascinating journeys across the empire. The story becomes a potent mix when you throw in his dubious relationship with Trajan, a wife who hated him, the dark business of Antinous and his strange and obsessional behaviour in later life.
Imperium Latin was written to be delivered via screens, using data projectors or smartboards. Early on, I hit on a box-based approach, which has proved very successful in classes. No single exercise in the course ever spills over beyond one page, and no page has more than 10 boxes in any exercise.
The linguistic sequence was designed to rely on the present tense for as long as possible, a technique which has been found successful by many modern language teachers. The hardest clauses and constructions are kept back until later, so the exercises remain accessible. Imperium is rigorous and includes exercises of English into Latin in every chapter, though there is often an overlap between the Latin to English and English to Latin, which makes it possible to lift some of the answers, as well as a full set of MP3 exercises, which can equip either student or teacher to prepare for a class.
When there is something to laugh about, learning often becomes more motivational and it is a central pillar of the course that the material shouldn’t take itself too seriously. Books 1 and 2 are filled with my own jokes, whereas in Book 3, the focus shifts onto Latin witticisms, through a collection of more than 50 poems of Martial.
In addition to the books, the Imperium Word Tools App is a unique system which supports the Latin to English exercises. It draws on the models of open-ended systems such as Perseus and Nodictionaries but is carefully matched to this course and the needs of its students. It runs on Mac, PC, Linux, Android and iOS devices, so it is a complete solution for use at home as well as in the classroom.
All the printed books can be bought via Amazon (simply enter Imperium Latin), and the Apps can be bought from the App Store, Google Play, or the project’s website. It should be noted that for schools wanting to implement the course, the Site Support Pack should be regarded as a basic essential. This includes printable pdf files of all the materials, the Apps for Mac and PC, lots of teaching notes and details, MP3 files, correct answers, tests, unseens, and lots more besides.
In addition to three main coursebooks the Imperium Latin Grammar and Syntax Guide has been designed for use by any student of Latin. There is also a second range of resources called Imperium Latin Unseens, designed for more advanced students. This includes a book, MP3 files and the Imperium Unseen Tools App, as well as a Site Support Pack.
If you want to know more, please visit: www.imperiumlatin.com and/or email: julian@imperiumlatin.com
Julian Morgan







Open Access Journal: Bulletin de l'AFAV (Association Française pour l’Archéologie du Verre)

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Bulletin de l'AFAV (Association Française pour l’Archéologie du Verre)
L’AFAV organise des rencontres annuelles au cours desquelles sont présentés l’actualité de la recherche sur le verre et divers travaux scientifiques.  Les communications faites lors de ces journées d’étude sont publiées dans le Bulletin de l’AFAV.

Les anciens numéros sont mis en ligne progressivement dans cette rubrique.

Les bulletins des années 1997 à 2010 sont d’ores et déjà consultables.

Accès par année : 1997-1998, 19992000, 2001, 2002-2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010

Open Access Journal: La lettre du Collège de France

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La lettre du Collège de France
ISSN: 2109-9219
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La lettre du Collège de France, créée en janvier 2001, paraît trois fois par an. Ses articles reflètent la vie de l’institution et les manifestations qui s’y déroulent. On y trouve de nombreuses annonces et informations concernant les chaires et les professeurs du Collège de France, des compte rendus de conférences et de colloques, des interviews de professeurs présentant leur parcours et leurs recherches, des dossiers de fond consacrés à des débats actuels, la présentation des ouvrages publiés par les professeurs ou par le Collège de France.

Collège de France Newsletter

  

Image Database: MédiHAL: Archive ouverte de photographies et d'images scientifiques

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MédiHAL: Archive ouverte de photographies et d'images scientifiques
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MédiHAL est une archive ouverte qui permet de déposer des données visuelles et sonores (images fixes, vidéos et sons), produites dans le cadre de la recherche scientifique.

Ces données sont stockées dans un dépôt sécurisé, avec copies de sécurité des fichiers et de leurs métadonnées.

Dans l'esprit du mouvement international en faveur du libre accès aux données scientifiques, les médias déposés dans MédiHAL sont accessibles en ligne soit immédiatement après le dépôt, soit après une barrière mobile (qui reste modifiable), dans le respect de la propriété intellectuelle des auteurs.

Comme l'archive ouverte HAL, MédiHAL est fondé sur le dépôt volontaire par les scientifiques (chercheurs, enseignants-chercheurs) et personnels d'accompagnement de l'enseignement supérieur et de la recherche.

MédiHAL, créé et lancée le 3 février 2010, est une réalisation du Centre pour la communication scientifique directe (CCSD) en coopération avec le Centre national pour la numérisation de sources visuelles (CN2SV) du CNRS et avec le soutien du TGE Adonis.

Dans le cadre de la mise en place de l'archivage à long terme des données déposées dans HAL (réalisé par le CCSD dans le cadre des actions d'archivage d'Huma-Num), les données déposées dans MédiHAL (les fichiers et leurs métadonnées) sont archivés à long terme au Centre Informatique National de l’Enseignement Supérieur (CINES) selon les principes du modèle OAIS.
MédiHAL includes 21,007 images, many of them of archaeological sites. Among these are 1946 images of the site of Palmyra, most of them supplied by Ifpo Institut Français Du Proche-Orient.

Open Access Journal: Talanta: Proceedings of the Dutch Archaeological and Historical Society

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Talanta: Proceedings of the Dutch Archaeological and Historical Society
ISSN: 0165-2486
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TALANTA is an Amsterdam based, peer-reviewed journal for the study of Antiquity. It is published by the Dutch Archaeological and Historical Society, an independent body of Dutch scholars in the field of Mediterranean archaeology, Classical and Ancient Near Eastern philology and Ancient History.

The journal focuses on the study of the Ancient world in its widest sense, including Classical and Near Eastern philology, art history and the archaeology and ancient history of the Mediterranean world and the Near East. The supplementum ponticum and the supplementum epigraphicum mediterraneum offer a range of studies in the archaeology and history of the Black Sea region and the various languages of the Ancient Mediterranean.



Recently Published at Archaeopress: Open Access

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Recently Published at Archaeopress: Open Access
Bronze Age Tell Communities in Context – An Exploration Into Culture, Society and the Study of European PrehistoryPart 1 – Critique: Europe and the Mediterranean by Tobias L. Kienlin. vi+168 pages; illustrated throughout in colour and black & white.Book contents pageDownload
This study challenges current modelling of Bronze Age tell communities in the Carpathian Basin in terms of the evolution of functionally-differentiated, hierarchical or ‘proto-urban’ society under the influence of Mediterranean palatial centres. It is argued that the narrative strategies employed in mainstream theorising of the ‘Bronze Age’ in terms of inevitable social ‘progress’ sets up an artificial dichotomy with earlier Neolithic groups. The result is a reductionist vision of the Bronze Age past which denies continuity evident in many aspects of life and reduces our understanding of European Bronze Age communities to some weak reflection of foreign-derived social types – be they notorious Hawaiian chiefdoms or Mycenaean palatial rule. In order to justify this view, this study looks broadly in two directions: temporal and spatial. First, it is asked how Late Neolithic tell sites of the Carpathian Basin compare to Bronze Age ones, and if we are entitled to assume structural difference or rather ‘progress’ between both epochs. Second, it is examined if a Mediterranean ‘centre’ in any way can contribute to our understanding of Bronze Age tell communities on the ‘periphery’. It is argued that current Neo-Diffusionism has us essentialise from much richer and diverse evidence of past social and cultural realities. Instead, archaeology is called on to contribute to an understanding of the historically specific expressions of the human condition and human agency, not to reduce past lives to abstract stages on the teleological ladder of social evolution.
This book is also available in paperback, priced £38.00. Click here for more information.
 
Ostentazione di rango e manifestazione del potere agli albori della società micenea by Federica Gonzato. 262 pages; black & white illustrations. Italian text. 4 2012. ISBN 9788876992278. Download
Le manifestazioni materiali del potere sono una caratteristica fondamentale delle società umane e costituiscono pertanto, per lo studioso delle culture antiche, una delle chiavi di lettura più ricche e promettenti. In questo volume, l’autrice propone una interpretazione delle prime fasi di formazione (XVII-XV secolo a.C.) dell’organizzazione sociale della cultura micenea attraverso l’esame degli attributi di potere (insignia dignitatis) trovati nelle sepolture di questo periodo in Argolide, culla della civiltà micenea in Grecia. Lo sviluppo della realtà micenea precedente la grande fase palaziale del XIV-XIII secolo a.C. viene analizzato da un punto di vista etnoantropologico e storico, introducendo una fondamentale distinzione fra beni di prestigio ed attributi di potere (spesso effimeri e polisemantici, in quanto soggetti ad una continua variazione della nozione di valore), ma ponendo anche attenzione alle storia delle dinamiche sociali e alle strategie per il mantenimento della leadership attraverso la manipolazione di una ideologia di cui gliinsignia dignitatis rappresentano la materializzazione.
 
Site, Artefacts and LandscapePrehistoric Borġ in-Nadur, Malta by Davide Tanasi and Nicholas C. Vella. 450 pages; illustrated throughout in black & white. 3 450. ISBN 9788876992230. Download
The Bronze Age of the Maltese archipelago has long been overlooked by archaeologists whose attention has mostly been focused on the Late Neolithic temples. This book attempts to understand the islands’ Bronze Age society in the course of the second millennium BC by exploring the history of Borg in-Nadur in south-east Malta. The site of a megalithic temple and re-used in later periods when a fortified settlement was built on the plateau, Borg in-Nadur was visited by travellers and antiquarians in the course of the Early Modern period, and was investigated by archaeologists in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. This collection of essays discusses the early attempts to understand the site, and presents a comprehensive catalogue of the finds that have never been properly published. It also considers the site in its local landscape setting and in its regional south-central Mediterranean context, and explores issues related to past and present public outreach and site management.
 
La necropoli protostorica di Montagna di Caltagirone by Davide Tanasi. 451 pages; illustrated throughout in black & white. 1 2008. ISBN 9788876991158. Download
Il sito della Montagna di Caltagirone (CT), indagato per la prima volta in modo sistematico da Paolo Orsi nel 1903, rappresenta un importante caso studio per la pre e protostoria siciliana e costituisce un osservatorio privilegiato per un’analisi delle problematiche legate all’interrelazione tra popolazioni autoctone e straniere. Dalla metà del II millennio a.C. fino alla colonizzazione greca, infatti, la Montagna ha svolto un ruolo fondamentale nei fenomeni d’aggregazione della popolazione del territorio calatino. Nell’età del Bronzo Tardo (XIII-XI secolo a.C.), il suo insediamento ha raggiunto il momento di maggiore splendore, con l’impianto della grande necropoli, ponendosi, insieme a Pantalica, come principale centro produttore di cultura della Sicilia Orientale.

 
Found: the Palaeolithic of QatarTaken from Proceedings of the Seminar for Arabian Studies 45 (2015) by Julie E. Scott-Jackson, Jeffrey I. Rose, William Scott-Jackson & Faisal al-Naimi. Pages 329–336; colour and black & white illustrations. PSAS. Download
The seeming lack of evidence for a Palaeolithic presence in Qatar has been enigmatic. This has now changed. Here we report on discoveries made by the PADMAC Unit during 2013/2014 and the far-reaching implications of these findings. Our preliminary analysis of the Qatar lithic assemblages — QSS25, QSS29 (PADMAC Unit collection) and A-group Site I and A-group Site III (Kapel collection) — revealed the presence of large chopping tools and crude ‘Abbevillian’ cores, both indicative of an early stage within the lower Palaeolithic period, while the absence of classic Acheulean hand axes might even suggest a date exceeding one million years. Furthermore, the particular suite of technological traits we identified in Umm Taqa ‘B-group’ Site XXXIV (Kapel collection) lithic assemblage, are characteristic of middle–upper Palaeolithic transitional industries found in the Levant, Nile Valley, and southern Arabia. Hence, we tentatively assign the ‘Taqan’ industry to the upper Palaeolithic. Specific lithics from the QSS32 (PADMAC Unit collection) assemblage, allude to further ‘Taqan’ sites in southern Qatar.
 
Generosity, gift giving, and gift avoiding in southern OmanTaken from Proceedings of the Seminar for Arabian Studies 45 (2015) by Marielle Risse. Pages 289–296. PSAS. Download
Gibali (Jibbali/Shahri) is a Modern South Arabian language spoken in the coastal plain and mountains of the Dhofar region of southern Oman. Although there are researchers actively documenting Gibali, there has been little anthropological work on the speakers of this non-written language. Building on nine years of research about, and interactions with, Gibali speakers the author describes the concept of the gift in the Arab, Muslim, tribal culture of Gibali speakers. This article tries to form an appreciation of Gibalis by explaining their understanding of the definition of gifts as well as gift giving, receiving, reciprocating, and avoiding. From the field of gift theory, the author draws on Mauss, Godelier, Bourdieu, Appadurai, and Godbout and Caillé, to create a framework for the ‘what’, ‘when’, ‘why’, and ‘how’ of gifts. From the fields of travel writing and history, examples from Wilfred Thesiger and the memoirs of soldiers from the Dhofar War (1965–1975) are used to provide a historical perspective. The result is an insight into a culture in which gifts are, for the most part, not necessary as there are many limits placed on who can give/receive, the time to give/receive, and the kind of object that is considered a gift. 
 
To See the InvisibleKarelian Rock Art by Arsen Faradzhev. iv+19 pages; illustrated throughout in colour and black & white.ISBN 9781784911249. Book contents pageDownload
This contribution considers 25 years of discovery of the possible origins and development of the Rock Art Tradition to create Karelian Rock Art images under the open sky through the analysis of different types of intercessions into the horizontal surface of granite rocks.

Karelian petroglyphs are located-at the eastern bank of the Onega Lake and 300 km to the north, close to the southern bank of the White Sea. One of them, the “New Zalavruga,” was discovered by the expedition of U.Savvateev under the Neolithic cultural layer and sterile sand layer in 1963-1968. This is a great and very rare opportunity to obtain direct dating of the end of the tradition to create Karelian Rock Art images around 5-6 ka ago. Therefore, the task was to find the “Invisible” evidences of the tradition’s origins and development similar to both regions via the different use of context.
And See also here, and here.

Moldovan Family Holy Land Map Collection

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Moldovan Family Holy Land Map Collection
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The Moldovan family Holy Land Map Collection was built over several decades by Dr. Alfred Moldovan and his family. It consists of 94 discrete maps dating from 1480-1797, printed in 23 distinct locations across Europe. The majority of the maps were printed in the 17th and 18th centuries in Amsterdam, Antwerp, Basel, Lyon, Paris, Rome, Strassburg, Tuebingen, and Venice. There are over fifty cartographers and engravers represented, including Adrichem, Bunting, Calmet, Hole, Mercator, Munster, Ortelius, Visscher, Wit, and Ziegler. It also features the unique surviving copy of Antonio De Angelis’s map of Jerusalem, printed in Rome in 1578. The map, the first view of Jerusalem based on direct observation and a key source for subsequent Holy Land cartography, was discovered by Dr. Moldovan and subsequently published in a study by him in 1983 in an article entitled “The Lost De Angelis Map of Jerusalem, 1578" in The Map Collector vol. 24 (1983), 17-25,
http://www.artwis.com/articles/the-lost-de-angelis-map-of-jerusalem-1578/ )

These digital facsimiles were presented to the Penn Libraries in 2009 by Dr. Alfred Moldovan, one of the world’s foremost Judaica collectors over the last half-century and an expert on the authentici­ty of Jewish ceremonial art. He was born on the East side of New York in 1921 to immigrant, Yiddish-speaking parents.  During World War II, he served in Italy as a Captain and a Radar Officer in the 455th Bom­bardment Group of the Fifteenth Air Force. On returning to the United States, he attend­ed medical school on the G.I. Bill, joined the Communist Party and received permission to fulfill his mobilization service as a fam­ily doctor in East Harlem, which kept him busy for over fifty years.
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