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Pompeii Bibliography and Mapping Project

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Pompeii Bibliography and Mapping Project
The Pompeii Bibliography and Mapping Project is working to create a unique resource that binds two resources in a responsive online user interface. The first component is an exhaustive database of citations and full-text repository relating to the ancient city of Pompeii.  The second component is a Geographical Information System (GIS) map of that ancient city.  Both of these components are available in their beta formats. The online interface planned will allow a user to navigate the bibliographic database and repository via the GIS map or, conversely, to illustrate places in the GIS map found in a search of the database or repository. These components are described in greater detail in the following sections.

Bibliographic Database – Based on the 14,596 references detailed  in L. García y García’s landmark publication, Nova Bibliotheca Pompeiana, the bibliographic database is designed as an  exhaustive database of all works related to Pompeii. Although the Nova  Bibliotheca Pompeiana is the core of the database, works produced  after 1998 when the Nova Bibliotheca Pompeiana was published will also be incorporated. Automated means to capture future citations on Pompeii are also being developed.
Full-Text Repository – The PBMP’s full-text, text-searchable repository incorporates the extant digital resources in the public domain and builds upon them by capturing all other similarly available works. A census of the Internet Archive’s catalog combined with our own digitization efforts shows that as much as 25% of the out-of-copyright titles have already been digitized. The collections of the Hathi Trust and Google Books will raise the number of works initially available. While the project has already invested in its own digitization equipment and staff, partnerships with the groups just mentioned will be sought to fill the full-text repository. This means that only the smallest portion of the project’s efforts will involve digitization. Where possible, use of in-copyright works will be negotiated through the agreements and policies of the University of Massachusetts libraries. Full-Text documents are connected to citations in the bibliographic database and together form a full subject repository.

Geographical Information System (GIS) – The online GIS is a dynamic map of the places and objects in ancient Pompeii. Its most basic function is to allow a user to navigate the physical landscape of the ancient city. The current GIS is exceptionally robust: more than 15,000 objects and properties are contained in over 400 files. In the next iteration, ESRI’s ArcServer platform will be used to display and deliver these files online and its advanced functionalities – including an integrated timeline feature and the ability to check-out (download), check-in (upload) and track the changes to the map’s base files – make it an ideal choice for this project. Users will be able to download the base files and perform more advanced analyses and/or modify their geometry based on new archaeological interpretations and then upload those new files back into the versioning archive for the online GIS for use (navigation or download by others) of those alternate interpretations.
Interface – These components will be accessed via an online user interface. Users will be able to begin their search via the GIS map or the bibliographic database, a choice that will determine the search environment. For example, as the user selects a place or places in the map, the right side of the interface will display all available information for that place, from simple citations to full-text documents. In this way, using the GIS interface can be imagined as moving the map over the top of a pyramid, to the apex of a unique and structured set of citations and references that lead down to a vast repository of articles, books, and images. Should the user prefer to explore the bibliographic database and full-text repository, the interface will adjust to provide more space for standard bibliographic and full-text search tools. When a search is conducted and records are selected, relevant locations appear highlighted in the reduced sized GIS map. In this way, the metaphorical topical landscapes within the scholarship on Pompeii can be not only expressed as a list, but also can be visualized and given physical structure in the map. The act of searching the subject repository thus creates an instant gazeteer of the results that can be used with the list of citations.

Newly Open Access Journal: AnthroNotes

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AnthroNotes
Image result for smithsonian

AnthroNotes Editors Launch Searchable, Downloadable Digital Database

Interested in ancient Egypt, Native Americans, Arctic climate change, or archaeology? Thanks to a joint effort of the Smithsonian’s Department of Anthropology and Smithsonian Libraries, anyone now can download in-depth, research-based essays and classroom tested teaching activities on a wide range of topics through the AnthroNotes digital database.
The entire collection of 84 issues of AnthroNotes (1979-2012) and 263 selected individual AnthroNotes articles, each with a new abstract, can be downloaded from the Smithsonian Libraries’ Official Digital Repository. Individual articles are offered in three formats, designed for computers (PDF), mobile devices (mobi), and e-readers (E-Pub). Articles are free of copyright restrictions; photocopying for classroom use is permitted and encouraged. All 263 individual articles, as well as the 84 issues of AnthroNotes, are also searchable through Google and the Smithsonian Collections Database (search term: AnthroNotes).
The digital AnthroNotes project was completed in the fall of 2015. The database is searchable by author, title, and year, as well as major subfields such as archaeology or linguistics. Searches may be conducted in over 40 topics including geographic regions (Africa, the Middle East, Asia); contemporary issues (refugees, forensics, genetics); and education (teaching activities, teaching resources, careers in anthropology).
In addition, Amazon carries both the paperback and the e-book version of the second, expanded edition of Anthropology Explored, The Best of Smithsonian AnthroNotes, which includes 36 AnthroNotes articles along with abstracts and recent author updates. The book’s chapters are divided into three sections: Investigating Our Origins and Variation, Examining Our Archaeological Past, and Exploring Our Many Cultures. Also available is a free online Instructors’ Guide.
Originally part of the NSF-funded George Washington University-Smithsonian Institution Anthropology for Teachers Program, AnthroNotes includes research-based articles by leading scholars in the field as well as classroom-tested activities. The publication received the Society for American Archaeology’s 2002 Award for Excellence in Public Education for “presenting archaeological and anthropological research to the public in an engaging and accessible style and for encouraging the study of these disciplines in classrooms across the nation.”
Throughout its history, AnthroNotes was published by the National Museum of Natural History’s Department of Anthropology. The museum’s Office of Education and Outreach has a website (Qrius) where you can find webcasts, online collections, and teaching resources, as well as a sign up for an e-newsletter. Visit the Q?rius website at Qrius.si.edu
The AnthroNotes editors: Alison S. Brooks, Carolyn Gecan, P. Ann Kaupp, Colleen Popson, and Ruth O. Selig

Rubensohn-Sammlung - Rubensohn Collection

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Rubensohn-Sammlung - Rubensohn Collection
During the 5th century BCE, while Egypt stood under Persian sovereignty, an Aramaeo-Jewish community settled on an island in the Nile River called Elephantine, opposite the city Syene, today’s Aswan. The Hebrew Bible sources in Jeremiah 41 and 2 Kings 25 refer to the existence of this Jewish diaspora in Egypt; this description has been confirmed by a sensational discovery of Aramaic papyri on Elephantine Island itself, whose extra-biblical texts provide contemporaneous attestation to the community. By means of commercial trade, Aramaic papyri from Elephantine Island emerged early in the European antiquities market; in this way, Richard Lepsius would obtain an Aramaic papyrus for his Egyptian and Nubian collection. This papyrus was an Aramaic text from the Athanasi Collection, which Lepsius had purchased on behalf of the Museum in Berlin in 1842. In Syene, the city opposite Elephantine, a larger find of very well preserved papyri was acquired by Robert Mond, and equally as many by Lady William Cecil. These were published in 1906 by Sayce and Cowley. Subsequently, the desire arose to complete the new holdings through systematic archaeological excavation, and thereby recover additional papyri prior to their deterioration. Under orders from the Königliche Museen zu Berlin, three archaelogical campaigns on Elephantine Island were ultimately conducted by the German archaeologist Otto Rubensohn and the German papyrologist Friedrich Zucker between 1906 and 1908. Adolf Erman, the Director of the Egyptian Museum at the time, wrote concerning these events in his memoirs:
„Smaller excavations, which we had attempted at various Egyptian sites with city ruins in order to obtain papyri, caused us far fewer efforts and costs than these large excavations. Nevertheless, at least one of them produced outcomes that are of the greatest scholarly significance. It was known that the Fellahin had found papyrus in the old city of Elelphantine Island, and in 1904 a large find came to light there, which included Aramaic documents concerning Jewish soldiers; in the Persian era a garrison of all manner of foreigners had been situated in this border fortification. In order to follow this lead further, Otto Rubensohn went to Elephantine in 1906, and at the same time French scholars also went there with the same purposes. The general director Maspero divided the excavation site between both parties, but we were the ones who drew the better lot this time, because in our area, close to the boundary of the French area, Rubensohn came upon a simple house, and it turned out to contain the records of the Jewish community.“
Rubensohn also began his excavation report summary with a reference to the Aramaic document, stating:
„The Elephantine excavations are a result of the discovery of a few Aramaic papyri, which have been published by Sayce and Cowley as „Aramaic Papyri discovered at Assuan.“ Another visit to Aswan in the year of the discovery, 1904, allowed me to gain the acquaintance and the trust of those considered dealers and Sebakh diggers. At my request they led me to discovery site of the papyri. The site which they showed me did not lie in Aswan, but rather on the western edge of the koms of Elephantine. It was a spot about 1 meter north of the location at which we would later make the larger find of Aramaic papyri. At my proposal the general administration of the royal museums in Berlin shut down the work that had begun, and with customary courteousness Mr. Maspero in the name of the Service des Antiquités issued the requested permission to operate papyrus excavation on the western half of the Koms of Elephantine.“
On December 5, 1904 the excavation license was issued to „Monsineur le Docteur Rubensohn, in the name of the direction of the Royal Museums of Berlin“ for the duration of one year; on November 8, 1905 and again on December 10, 1906 additional one-year extensions were granted, and at last the license was transferred to Friedrich Zucker. […]
Today, the largest portion of the papyri, ostraca, and seal stamps that were granted via partage to the Berlin Museums on December 24, 1907 is found in the Ägyptisches Museum und Papyrussammlung Berlin.

Bibliographia Iranica

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Bibliographia Iranica
Bibliographia Iranica
Bibliographia Iranica is a collective effort, continuing the work that Arash Zeini started at his blog over atwww.arashzeini.com. This new website and connected social media share and distribute information on recent publications and events in Iranian Studies, understanding the field in its broadest sense from antiquity through to late antiquity and the early Islamic era with occasional excursions into neighbouring disciplines, geographies and eras.


In this newest manifestation the blog is operated by Sajad Amiri, Shervin Farridnejad, Yazdan Safaee and Arash Zeini (Learn more).

Banque de données des textes coptes documentaires - Brussels Coptic Database

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Banque de données des textes coptes documentaires - Brussels Coptic Database
Welcome to the site of the database of the Coptic documentary texts of the "Centre de Papyrologie et d'Épigraphie Grecque" of the Université Libre de Bruxelles.

This work, started early in 2000 and online since 2005, was conceived on the model of the Heidelberger Gesamtverzeichnis der Griechischen Papyrusurkunden Ägyptens , which had to be adapted to the specificities of the Coptic material. 

This project is also fully integrated with the Trismegistos plateform, which now numbers more than 100 000 records. 

The database regroups all the documentary Coptic texts published, i.e. more than 8000 documents. This database is updated periodically.

A card is devoted to each text. The information is recorded in the following fields : sigla, inventory number, support, origin, date, dialect, content, bibliography, remarks and Trismegistos number.
For a full description of the fields, click here. To start a research, click here.
Bienvenue sur le site de la banque de données des textes coptes documentaires du Centre de Papyrologie et d'Epigraphie Grecque de l'Université Libre de Bruxelles.
Ce travail, commencé au début de l'année 2000 et en ligne depuis 2005, a été conçu sur le modèle de la banque de données des papyrus grecs de Heidelberg ( Heidelberger Gesamtverzeichnis der Griechischen Papyrusurkunden Ägyptens ), qu’il a fallu adapter aux spécificités du matériel copte.
Le projet est intégré au sein de la plateforme Trismegistos, qui rassemble plusieurs banques de données partenaires et compte à présent plus de 100.000 fiches.
La banque de données contient l'ensemble des textes coptes documentaires publiés, soit à l'heure actuelle plus de 8000 documents. Elle est mise à jour périodiquement.
Une fiche est consacrée à chaque texte. Les informations sont enregistrées dans les champs suivants : sigle, numéro d'inventaire, support, provenance, date, dialecte, contenu, bibliographie, remarques et le numéro du texte dans la banque de données Trismegistos.
Pour une description complète des champs, cliquer ici. Pour lancer une recherche, cliquer ici.


Welcome
Fields description
Database

Version française

Open Access Journal: Newsletter of the Association for Coroplastic Studies

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[First posted in AWOL 19 March 2014, updated 10 December 2015]

Newsletter of the Association for Coroplastic Studies
The Association for Coroplastic Studies (ACoSt) has developed out of the former Coroplastic Studies Interest Group (CSIG). Originally organized in 2007 under the auspices of the Archaeological Institute of America (AIA), the CSIG was one of the 13 Interest Groups of the AIA that normally comprise AIA members. Although membership in the AIA was not a prerequisite for membership in the CSIG, CSIG members were encouraged to join the AIA.

2014-122014-112013-102013-092012-08
2012-072011-062011-052010-042010-03
2009-022009-01   
   

Cyrenaica Terracottas

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Cyrenaica Terracottas
Ensemble of terracotta figurines
This project focuses on the digital presentation of the Greek votive terracottas brought to light at the Extramural Sanctuary of Demeter and Persephone in the Wadi Bel Gadir at Cyrene, Libya, by the University Museum of the University of Pennsylvania from 1969 to 1979 (see above). This has lead to the inclusion of other corpora of terracottas, including those from Cyrene's Artemision and the sanctuary of the Chthonic Nymphs, as well as from the site of Apollonia.
While terracotta figurines have been found at Cyrene's Artemision, theater, agora, so-called Temple of the Divinity of Fecundity, Temple of Demeter, Sanctuary of the Chthonic Nymphs, and in tombs from Cyrene's necropoleis, those from the Extramural Sanctuary of Demeter and Persephone represent the largest extant corpus of figurines found to date anywhere in Cyrenaica. They complement the figurines discovered outside of Cyrene, at Tocra, Apollonia, Benghazi, Eusperides, El Gubba, and Budrasc, but far exceed these in number. 

A note on the photography.
All the images for the terracottas from the Extramural Sanctuary of Demeter and Persephone at Cyrene
have been scanned from the original black and white negatives that were made during the course of the 1969 to 1979 campaigns. No subsequent photographic documentation has been possible.

Open Access Journal: Ficheiro Epigráfico

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[First posted in AWOL 2 February 2014, updated 10 December 2015]

Ficheiro Epigráfico [Suplemento de Conimbriga]
ISSN: 0870-2004
Ficheiro Epigráfico é um suplemento da revista Conimbriga, destinado a divulgar inscrições romanas inéditas de toda a Península Ibérica, que começou a publicar-se em 1982. Dos fascículos 1 a 66, inclusive, se fez um CD-ROM, no âmbito do Projecto de Culture 2000 intitulado VBI ERAT LVPA, com a colaboração da Universidade de Alcalá de Henares.

Publica-se em fascículos de 16 páginas, cuja periodicidade depende da frequência com que forem recebidos os textos. As inscrições são numeradas de forma contínua, de modo a facilitar a preparação de índices, que são publicados no termo de cada série de dez fascículos.

Cada «ficha» deverá conter indicação, o mais pormenorizada possível, das condições do achado e do actual paradeiro da peça. Far-se-á uma descrição completa do monumento, a leitura interpretada da inscrição e o respectivo comentário paleográfico. Será bem-vindo um comentário de integração histórico-onomástica, ainda que breve.
552 -  554 - Dos inscripciones funerarias y una estela oikomorfa en Oña (Burgos)
           Marta Fernández Corral
555 - 556  - Dos nuevas inscripciones procedentes de Uxama (Soria)
           Javier Del Hoyo, Mariano Rodríguez Ceballos
548 -  550 - Inscrições de Olisipo identificadas na "Cerca Velha"
           José d'Encarnação, Manuela Leitão, Vasco Leitão
551 - Un nuevo miliario de Plasencia, Cáceres (Conventus Emeritensis)
           Julio Esteban Ortega
          Adenda et Corrigenda  |  Índice dos fascículos 120 a 129
547 -  Miliário de Constantino - Tejeda de Tiétar, Cáceres (Conventus Emeritensis)
           Julio Esteban Ortega
544 - Placa decorada cristiana
          Salvador Ordóñez Agulla, José Ildefonso Ruiz Cecilia
545 - Epígrafe funerária da Azinheira / Pedrógão / Penamacor (Conventus Emeritensis)
          Maria João Ângelo, Ana Lourenço, Nuno Gonçalves Pedrosa, Carla Alegria Ribeiro
546Nueva estela de Valverde del Fresno / Cáceres (Conventus Emeritensis)
          Julio Esteban Ortega
541 - Uma consagração aos Deuses Bons proveniente de Lisboa/Olisipo (Conventus Scallabitanus)
          Amílcar Guerra
542 - Nueva inscripción funeraria gaditana
          Antonio Ruiz Castellanos
543 -  Inscripciones funerarias romanas de Cádiz
          Antonio Ruiz Castellanos, Marcos A. Martelo Fernández
538 - Ara a Mercurio en Escurial / Cáceres (Conventus Emeritensis)
          Julio Esteban Ortega
539 - Epígrafe votiva do Olival Queimado (Conventus Emeritensis)
          Maria João Ângelo, Ana Lourenço, Nuno Gonçalves Pedrosa, Carla Alegria Ribeiro
540 - Un tonsor en Calderuela / Soria
          Joaquín L. Gómez-Pantoja, David Martino García
534 - Estela de Valverde del Fresno / Cáceres (Conventus Emeritensis)
          Julio Esteban Ortega
535 - Capitel con inscripción en Villamiel (Conventus Emeritensis)
          Julio Esteban Ortega
536 - Dos inscripciones de Tvrgalivm (Conventus Emeritensis)
          Julio Esteban Ortega
537 - Ara anepígrafa da Quinta de Antão Alves / Fundão (Conventus Emeritensis)
          Maria João Ângelo
531 - Epitafio de Duatia Y L. Goutina / Cuacos de Yuste-Cáceres (Conventus Emeritensis)
          Julio Esteban Ortega
532 - Ara romana da Quinta da Feijoeira, Torre dos Namorados (Conventus Emeritensis)
          Maria João Ângelo, Ana Lourenço, Nuno Gonçalves Pedrosa, Carla Alegria Ribeiro
533 - Dos inscripciones inéditas de Villamiel / Cáceres (Conventus Emeritensis)
          Julio Esteban Ortega
527 - Placa funerária romana da Herdade da Comenda Grande (Conventus Pacensis)
         Ruben Barbosa, José d'Encarnação
528 - Estela funerária da Herdade da Moita (Conventus Pacensis)
          José d'Encarnação, João Pedro Joaquim
529 - Estela de Jaraicejo, Cáceres (Conventus Emeritensis)
          Julio Esteban Ortega, José António Pajuelo Jiménez
530 - Cupa funerária anepígrafa em Veiros (Conventus Emeritensis)
          Francisco Bilou, José d'Encarnação
523 - Fragmento de estela en Abertura (Conventus Emeritensis)
         Julio Esteban Ortega
524 - Placa funeraria de Cilleros / Cáceres (Conventus Emeritensis)
         Julio Esteban Ortega
525 - Nueva inscripción funeraria en Peñalba de Castro / Burgos
          David Sevillano López, Mariano Rodríguez Ceballos
526 - Pendente com crísmon e inscrição
          António Sá Coixão, José d'Encarnação
517 -  522 - Nuevas inscripciones funerarias astigitanas
           Sergio García-Dils de la Vega, Salvador Ordóñez Agulla
513 -  Epitafio de M. Egnatius Maximus en Puerto de Santa Cruz / Cáceres (Conventus Emeritensis)
           Julio Esteban Ortega
514 -  515 - Nuevos datos para la epigrafia de Complutum en una obra de Capistrano de Moya
           Helena Gimeno Pascual, Silvia Tantimonaco
516Imbrex com inscrição paleocristã de Rio Maior (Conventus Scallabitanus)
           José d' Encarnação, José Beleza Moreira, Carlos Pereira
          Adenda et Corrigenda  |  Índice dos fascículos 110 a 119
512 -  Estela de Lancivs en  Cavrivm / Coria, Cáceres (Conventus Emeritensis)
           Julio Esteban Ortega, Juan Pedro Moreno Carrasco
509 -  Fragmento de placa funerária romana de Óbidos (Conventus Scallabitanus)
           José d' Encarnação, Carlos Pereira
510 -  A estela funerária de Capela, Penafiel (Conventus Bracaraugustanus)
           Maria João Correia Santos, Hugo Armando Miranda Pires
511 -  Ara a los dioses en Pozuelo de Zarzón (Caurium - Conventus Emeritensis)
           Julio Esteban Ortega
504 -  Epitafiode Caeno Doqvri F., Guijo de Granadilla, Cáceres
           Jaime Rio-Miranda Alcón
505 -  507 - Epigrafia votiva de Serradilla (Conventus Emeritensis)
           Julio Esteban Ortega
508 -  Peso de tear romano com inscrição de Arruda dos Vinhos (Conventus Scallabitanus)
           Guilherme Cardoso, José d'Encarnação
501 - 502 -  Duas epígrafes romanas do sítio fortificado do Castelinho (Cilhades, Felgar, Torre de Moncorvo)
           Filipe J. C. Santos, Fábio Rocha, Eulália Pinheiro
503 -  Grafito em imbrex de Freiria (Conventus Scallabitanus)
           Guilherme Cardoso, José d'Encarnação
496 - 500 -  Cinco estelas funerárias do Chão da Capela (Junqueira, Adeganha, Torre de Moncorvo)
           António José Marques da Silva
492 -  Marco de Teodósio em Coja, Arganil (Conventus Scallabitanus)
           José d'Encarnação, Maria Conceição Lopes
493 -  Grafito em tijolo, de Tróia (Conventus Pacensis)
           José d' Encarnação
494 -  Fragmento de placa com grafitos, de Tróia (Conventus Pacensis)
           José d' Encarnação
495 -  Ara a Júpiter en Cáparra, Oliva de Plasencia, Cáceres (Conventus Emeritensis)
           Julio Esteban Ortega
489 -  Inscrição votiva de Longroiva, (Conventus Scallabitanus)
           António N. Sá Coixão, José d'Encarnação
490 - Fragmento cerâmico com duplo grafito
           José d' Encarnação, Nuno Miguel C. Mourinha
491 -Estela de Maganvs, Berzocana - Cáceres (Conventus Emeritensis)
          Julio Esteban Ortega
486 -  Epígrafe de Jaraíz de La Vera, Cáceres (Conventus Emeritensis)
           David Serrano Lozano
487 - Una nueva inscripción de Villamiel, Cáceres (Conventus Emeritensis)
           Cristina Jimenez Cano, Elisa Gómez-Pantoja Guemes
488 -Fragmento de epígrafe romana de Miroiço / Alcabideche, Cascais (Conventus Scallabitanus)
          José d' Encarnação
483 -  Inscrição funerária romana nas muralhas de Beja (Conventus Pacensis)
           José d' Encarnação, Miguel Serra
484 -  Estela funerária romana de Cabeça Boa (Torre de Moncorvo)
           Susana Bailarim
485 -  Fragmento de ara (re)construída procedente de Clunia (Burgos)
           Mariano Rodríguez Ceballos, Javier Salido Domínguez
          Addenda et corrigenda Ad N. 460
482 -  Nuevo epígrafe romano en Madrigalejo, Cáceres (Conventus Emeritensis)
           José Vidal Madruga
          Addenda et corrigenda  |  Índice dos fascículos100 a 109
481 -  Estela de L. Goutius, Deleitosa - Cáceres (Conventus Emeritensis)
           Julio Esteban Ortega
479 -  Nueva estela vadiniense hallada en Riaño, León (Conventus Cluniensis)
          Mª Cruz González Rodríguez,  Joaquín Gorrochategui
480 - Inscrições na villa romana de Rio Maior (Conventus Scallabitanus)
          José d' Encarnação, José Beleza Moreira, Carlos Pereira
476 -  Inscripción de Zarza de Granadilla, Cáceres (Conventus Emeritensis)
          Julio Esteban Ortega
477 - Cupa funerária romana de Mértola (Conventus Pacensis)
          José d' Encarnação, Virgílio Lopes
478 - Nuevo fragmento de ara funeraria de Peñalba de Castro (Burgos) y un possible taller epigráfico en Clunia
          Paloma Balbín Chamorro, David Sevillano López, Mariano Rodríguez Ceballos
471 - 474 - Estelas funerarias de Plasenzuela (Cáceres)
          Julio Esteban Ortega, José Antonio Ramos Rubio
475 - Estela funeraria hallada en Baños de La  Encina (Jaen)
          Luis Arboledas Martínez, Miguel Ángel Novillo López, Juan Jesús Padilla Fernández, Linda Chapón
468 - Ara a Jupiter (Conventus Bracaraugustanus)
          Armando Redentor, Henrique Regalo
469 - Miliário da Cabida - Monte das Flores, Évora (Conventus Pacensis)
          Fernando Bilou, José d' Encarnação
470 -Ara Laribus Ceceaicis em Castelo de Paiva (Conventus Scallabitanus)
          Martinho da Costa Moreira da Rocha, Mário Gonçalves Pereira, Pedro Mendes, José d' Encarnação 
464 - Cupa de Eutiches, Beja (Conventus Pacensis)
          Manuela Alves Dias, Catarina Gaspar
465 - 466- Nuevas inscripciones latinas de Madrigalejo, Cáceres (Conventus Emeritensis)
          José-Vidal Madruga Flores
467 -Miliário da Quinta da Manizola, Évora (Conventus Pacensis)
          Francisco Bilou, José d' Encarnação
460 - Ara funerária romana de Moura (Conventus Pacensis)
          José d' Encarnação, José Gonçalo Valente, Vanessa Gaspar, Maria da Conceição Lopes,
Santiago Macias
461 - Estela funerária de Guijo de Granadilla, (Cáceres)
          Jaime Rio-Miranda Alcón, Mª Gabriela Iglesias Domínguez
462 -Fragmento de Estela de Oliva de Plasencia (Cáceres)
          Jaime Rio-Miranda Alcón, Mª Gabriela Iglesias Domínguez
463 -Placa funerária da Civitas Igaeditanorum (Conventus Emeritensis)
          José d' Encarnação, Raul Losada
456 -Ara a Júpiter de Açores - Celorico da Beira (Conventus Emeritensis)
          António Carlos Marques, João Carlos Lobão, Pedro C. Carvalho
457 -Placa funerária romana de Moura(Conventus Pacensis)
          José d' Encarnação, José Gonçalo Valente, Vanessa Gaspar, Maria da Conceição Lopes, Santiago Macias
458 - 459 - Epígrafes romanos de Ahigal - Cáceres
          Jaime Rio-Miranda Alcón, Mª Gabriela Iglesias Domínguez
451 -Estela funerária de Gouveia - Alfândega da Fé, Bragança (Conventus Emeritensis)
          Fernando Vaz, Sérgio Pereira, Armando Redentor
452 - Fragmento de inscrição funerária romana do Paço da Ega
         (Conimbriga - Conventus Scallabitanus)
         Ana Lima Revez, José d' Encarnação
453 - 455 - Inscripciones en el Monte de Ahigal (Cáceres)
         Jaime Rio-Miranda Alcón, Mª Gabriela Iglesias Domínguez
448 -Estela funerária de Tinhela - Valpaços, Vila Real (Conventus Bracaraugustanus)
          Armando Redentor
449 -Fragmento de inscrição funerária de Arruda dos Vinhos (Conventus Scallabitanus)
          José d' Encarnação
450 -Ara de São Pedro da Capinha - Fundão (Conventus Emeritensis)
          Elisa Albuquerque, Constança Guimarães dos Santos
          Addenda et corrigenda  |  Índice dos fascículos90 a 99
446 - Ara votiva a Tutela (Cilhades, Felgar, Torre de Moncorvo)
         Ségio Pereira, Jorge Feio, Filipe Santos, Jorge Pinho, Fábio Rocha, Eulália Pinheiro
447 -Árula funerária de Tróia (Conventus Pacensis)
         José d' Encarnação, Inês Vaz Pinto, Ana Patrícia Magalhães, Patrícia Brum
442 -444 - Inscrições romanas no Paço da Ega (Condeixa-a-Nova),
          (Conimbriga - Conventus   Scallabitanus)
          José d' Encarnação, Virgílio Hipólito Correia
445 -Árula anepígrafa
         José d' Encarnação
434 -441 - Estelas funerarias de Turgalium
          Julio Esteban Ortega, José Antonio Redondo Rodríguez
428 -433 - Estelas funerarias de Ibahernando  (Cáceres)
          José Antonio Redondo Rodríguez, Julio Esteban Ortega
424 - Estela hallada en el término de La Pesga (Cáceres)
          Jaime Rio-Miranda Alcón
425 -Inscripción funeraria romana de Saúca (Guadalajara)
          EmilioGamo Pazos
426 - Estela funeraria de Puerto de Santa Cruz (Cáceres)
          José Antonio Redondo Rodriguez, Julio esteban Ortega
427 -Nueva lectura del CIL II 843 (Oliva de Plasencia, Capera)
          Jaime Rio-Miranda Alcón
420 - Placa votiva a Bellona en Villamesías (Cáceres)
          Julio Esteban Ortega, José Antonio Redondo Rodríguez
421 -Um dollium epigrafado do Monte Aljão (Gouveia, Guarda)
          Catarina Tente, Adriaan de Man
422 - 423 - Estelas funerarias de Villamesías (Cáceres)
          Julio Esteban Ortega, José Antonio Redondo Rodríguez
416-Placa votiva de Salacia(Conventus Pacensis)
          José d' Encarnação, Marisol Ferreira
417-Fragmento de lápide funerária de Conimbriga (Conventus Scallabitanus)
          Virgílio Correia, José d' Encarnação
418-Peso de tear com inscrição indecifrada (Conventus Scallabitanus)
          António J. Nunes Monteiro, José d' Encarnação
419-Fragmento epigrafado de Alcácer do Sal (Salacia-Conventus Pacensis)
         José d' Encarnação, Marisol Ferreira
412-Marca grafitada Firmus do Ervedal (Conventus Emeritensis)
          João Mendes Rosa, Joana Bizarro
413-Ara funerária achada em Cantanhede (Conventus Scallabitanus)
          José d' Encarnação, João Reigota
414-Epitáfio de Lucretia Doqira em Alenquer (Conventus Scallabitanus)
          Cristina Vale, José d' Encarnação
415-Fragmento de estela de Oliva de Plasencia (Cáceres)
          Jaime Rio-Miranda Alcón
409-Ara a Iuppiter Capitolinus en Talaván (Cáceres)
          Julio Esteban Ortega
410-Estela funerária do Largo do Contador-Mor em Lisboa (Conventus Scallabitanus)
          Ana Caessa, Nuno Mota
411-Marca em peso de tear, em Aeminium (Conventus Scallabitanus)
          Raquel Santos
407-Stèle funéraire d'Adeganha, Moncorvo (Conventus Bracaraugustanus)
          Patrick Le Roux
408-Epitáfio de Caecilius Glaucus (Mértola) (Conventus Pacencis)
          Virgílio Lopes, Maria Manuela Alves Dias, Catarina Gaspar
403-Ara funerária de Melres (Gondomar, Porto) (Conventus Bracaraugustanus)
          Armando Redentor
404 - Marca de oleiro do Castelo dos Prados (Pinhel)
          Filipe Pina
405 - Inscripción funeraria de Acedera, Badajoz (Conventus Emeritensis)
          María del Rosario Hernando Sobrino
406 - Inscripción funeraria romana encontrada en Azuqueca de Henares, Guadalajara
          Elena Martin Bas, Joaquín Gómez-Pantoja.
400 -Epígrafe monumental ou funerária da Torre dos Namorados (Quintas da Torre,
         Vale Prazeres, Fundão) (Conventus Emeritensis)
          Maria João Ângelo, Carla Alegria Ribeiro
401 -Árula votiva de Alter do Chão
          Jorge António, José d' Encarnação
402 -Lápide funerária da Herdade da Torre do Lobo, Torre de Coelheiros, Évora
          (Conventus Pacensis)
          Francisco Bilou, José d' Encarnação
396 - 397- Duas aras da Aldeia Nova (Ramela, Guarda)
          Marcos Osório, António Sá Rodrigues
398 -Uma nova ara votiva do Sabugal
          Marcos Osório, Dário Neves
399 -Ara votiva de São Pedro da Capinha (Fundão), (Conventus Emeritensis)
          Elisa Albuquerque, Constança Guimarães dos Santos.
391 - Ara votiva de San Martin del Trevejo (Cáceres) dedicada a la diosa ILURBEDA
         Juan Carlos Olivares Pedreño
392 -Inscripción votiva en Montánchez (Conventus Emeritensis)
         José-Vidal Madruga Flores
393 - Ara votiva da Civitas Cobelcorum (Conventus Emeritensis)
         Elisa Albuquerque, Helena Frade
394-395 -Miliarios de la calzada de “La Plata” (Casas del Monte, Cáceres)
         Jaime Rio-Miranda Alcón, M.ª G.ª Iglésias Domínguez
382 - Ara votiva dedicada a Vordiaecio
         Jaime Rio-Miranda Alcón, M.ª G.ª Iglésias Domínguez
383 -Lápida funerária procedente de Cáparra (Cáceres)
         Jaime Rio-Miranda Alcón, M.ª G.ª Iglésias Domínguez
384 - 386 - Epigrafes funerárias de Zarza de Granadilla (Cáceres)
         Jaime Rio-Miranda Alcón, M.ª G.ª Iglésias Domínguez
387 - 390 - Epigrafes funerárias romanas de Albalá (Cáceres)
         Júlio Esteban Ortega
377 -Ara votiva de La Alberca (Salamanca) dedicada a ILURBEDA
         Juan Carlos Olivares Pedreño
378 -Nova inscrição de Salir de Matos (Caldas da Rainha)
         Maria Manuela Alves Dias, Catarina I. Sousa Gaspar, Carlos Marques Querido
379 -Estela funerária de Arroyomolinos de Montáchez (Cáceres)
         Jaime Rio-Miranda Alcón, M.ª G.ª Iglésias Domínguez
380 - 381 - Grafitos inéditos procedentes de la província de Palencia
         Libório Hernandez Guerra
368 - 369 -Duas epígrafes de Montalegre ( Conventus Bracaraugustanus)
         Carla Carvalho, José d’Encarnação
370 - 373 -Epigrafia funerária de Valdefuentes, Cáceres (Conventus Emeritensis)
         Júlio Esteban
374 -Miliário de Constâncio Cloro em Alter do Chão (Conventus Pacensis)
         José d’ Encarnação, João Rafael Nisa
375 - 376 -Dois miliarios de Narrillos del Álamo, Ávila (Conventus Emeritensis)
         Maria del Rosário Hernando Sobrino, José Luís Gamallo Barranco
364 - Ara Longroivense
         Susana Falhas
365 - Placa funerária de Aldeia de Santa Madalena (Guarda)
         Marcos Osório
366 - Estela funerária dos Mosteiros, S. Bartolomeu do Outeiro, Portel (Conventus Pacensis)
         Maria João Ângelo
367 - Placa dos Mosteiros, S. Bartolomeu do Outeiro, Portel (Conventus Pacensis)
         Maria João Ângelo
361 -Ara a Júpiter, de Idanha-a-Velha (Conventus Emeritensis)
         João Carlos Lobão, José Cristóvão
362 - Epitáfio de SENTIA LAVRILLA, de Alter do Chão(Conventus Pacensis)
         Jorge António, José d’Encarnação
363 -Mais um miliário de Constantino Magno na área limítrofe de Abrantes
         Joaquim Candeias da Silva
359 -Inscrição rupestre da Laje do Adufe, Ferro, Covilhã (Conventus Emeritensis)
         Armando Redentor, Marcos Osório, Pedro C. Carvalho
360 - Cipo funerário da Qtª das Lameiras, Aguiar da Beira
         Maria Alexandrina F. Tavares Frias
356 -Grafitos oficinais sobre talhas, de Conimbriga
          Virgílio Hipólito Correia
357 -Um fragmento de abecedário de Conimbriga
         Virgílio Hipólito Correia
358 -Cupa anepígrafa de Trevões
         Carla Sequeira, Natália Fauvrelle
351 - Marca grafitada de Arcea, sobre um peso de tear de Conimbriga
         José da Silva Ruivo
352 -Marca grafitada I A, sobre um peso de tear de Conimbriga
         José da Silva Ruivo
353 - Marca grafitada de Casa, sobre um peso de tear de Conimbriga
         Maria Pilar Reis
354 -Marca grafitada de Ivlia, sobre um peso de tear de Conimbriga
         José da Silva Ruivo
355 -Marca de L. Allivs Avitvs, impressa num tijolo de Conimbriga
         José da Silva Ruivo
347 -Ara votiva a Amma de Vale de Azares
         Maria do Céu Crespo Ferreira, Marcos Osório, Manuel Sabino G. Perestrelo
348 -Árula votiva de Quintela de Azurara, Mangualde
         Pedro Pina Nóbrega
349 -Bloco epigrafado de Tondela
          António J. Nunes Monteiro
350 -Ara votiva del templo romano de collado de “Piedras Labradas”, Jarilla, Cáceres
         Jaime Rio-Miranda Alcón, Maria Gabriela Iglesias Domínguez
336 - 346 -Un santuário romano en Narros del Puerto, Ávila (Conventus Emeritensis)
         Maria del Rosário Hernando Sobrino, José Luís Gamallo Barranco
330 -Stèle funéraire d’Eiras Velhas, Horta da Vilariça (Conventus Bracaraugustanus)
         P. Le Roux e A. Tranoy
331 -Ara da Ermida de Nossa Senhora de Mércoles, Castelo Branco
         F. Patrício Curado
332 -Placa funerária de S. Vicente da Beira, Castelo Branco
         Manuel Leitão, Sílvia Moreira
333 - Placa funerária de Castelo Branco
         F. Patrício Curado, Pedro Salvado, Sílvia Moreira
334 -Marco de propriedade (?), Castelo Branco
         F. Patrício Curado
335 -Ara votiva de Antas, Penalva do Castelo
         Pedro Pina Nóbrega
324 -Placa funerária de Duas Igrejas, Vila Verde
         Tarcísio Maciel
325 - 326 -Estelas de Malpartida de Cáceres, Cáceres
         José Salas Martín, Júlio Esteban Ortega
327 -Dedicación a Júpiter Óptimo Máximo en Cepeda, Salamanca
C. Mercado e E. Sánchez-Medina
328 -Estela funerária do Rosmaninhal
         Maria Cassilda Domingues Santos
329 -Ara votiva de São Vicente da Beira, Castelo Branco
         F. Patrício Curado, Manuel Leitão, Pedro Salvado, Sílvia Moreira
318 -Ara a uma divindade indígena na freguesia de S. Facundo, Abrantes
         J. Candeias da Silva
319 -Miliário de Constantino Magno do Vale da Lama, Bemposta, Abrantes
         J. Candeias da Silva, Álvaro Batista, Filomena Gaspar
320 -Epitáfio de C. Norbanus G. F. Rusticus
         José-Vidal Madruga Flores
321 -Lápida de C. Sempronius Niger
         José-Vidal Madruga Flores
322 -Lápida de Firmila, M. Grani serva
         José-Vidal Madruga Flores
323 - 1 a 7 -Pesos de tear com marca da villa de Cardais, Tomar ( Conventus Scallabitanus)
         Luís da Silva Fernandes
315 -Ara a Bando Vordeaico, da Meda
         Manuel Sabino G. Perestrelo
316 -Ara aos Lares proveniente da Meda
         Manuel Sabino G. Perestrelo
317 -Mercurius Supernus en un epígrafe inédito de la província de Badajoz
         Maria del Rosário Hernando Sobrino
313 - 314 -Aras a Júpiter procedentes del Museo de Cáceres
         Júlio Esteban Ortega
309 -Ara votiva encontrada no Sabugal
         Marcos Osório
310 -Duas aras da Quinta de São Domingos, Pousafoles do Bispo, Sabugal
         (Conventus Emeritensis)
         Marcos Osório
311 -Placa funerária de Capinha, Fundão
         Sara Oliveira Almeida, Pedro C. Carvalho, Carla Alegria Ribeiro, Ricardo Costeira da Silva
312 -Estela funerária da Quinta da Erva, Santana da Azinha, Guarda (Conventus Emeritensis)
          Marcos Osório
305 -Estela funerária de Santiago dos Velhos (Conventus Scallabitanus)
         Guilherme Cardoso, José d’ Encarnação
306 -Inscrição funerária da Serra de S. Julião (Conventus Scallabitanus)
         Guilherme Cardoso, José d’ Encarnação, Isabel Luna
307 -Estela das Ferrarias, Torres Vedras (Conventus Scallabitanus)
         Guilherme Cardoso, José d’ Encarnação, Isabel Luna
308 -Ara anepígrafa de Monsanto (Civitas Igaeditanorum)
         Rogério P. Carvalho, José d' Encarnação
300 -Dedicatória a Júpiter, de Torre de Moncorvo
         Susana Bailarim
301 -Árula votiva encontrada em Abrantes(Conventus Scallabitanus)
         Joaquim Candeias Silva, José d’ Encarnação
302 -Inscrição funerária romana de Covelo, Valadares, S. Pedro do Sul
         António J. Nunes Monteiro
303 -Uma estela funerária de Ammaia
          José d’Encarnação e José Rafael Correia da Silva
304 -Cupa anepígrafa da Ermida de São Bartolomeu, Cuba (Conventus Pacensis)
          A. M. Dias Diogo, Laura Trindade, Jorge Feio
296 -Árula votiva de Escalos de Cima
         Rogério Carvalho, José d?Encarnação
297 -Árula votiva de Miranda (Conventus Bracaraugustanus)
         José d’Encarnação, T. Daniel Maciel, M. Justino Maciel
298 -Paca funerária de Santa Maria, Beja (Conventus Pacensis)
         José d’ Encarnação, M. Conceição Lopes
299 -Inscrição rupestre de Cinfães (Conventus Scallabitanus)
         José d’ Encarnação, L. M. da Silva Pinho
293 - Cipo funerário romano do Cadaval (Conventus Scallabitanus)
          Gulherme Cardoso, José d’Encarnação
294 - Un nuevo epitafio de San Esteban de Gormaz, Soria, España
          J. Gomez-Pantoja, F. García Palomar
295 - Cupa de Ferreira do Alentejo (Conventus Pacensis)
         José d’ Encarnação, M. J. Pina

The British Academy Sir Aurel Stein Archive

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The British Academy Sir Aurel Stein Archive
https://c2.staticflickr.com/6/5337/buddyicons/36925516@N05_l.jpg?1369186144#36925516@N05
696 photos·1,039 views

Open Access Journal: KUSH : Journal of the National Corporation for Antiquities and Museums (NCAM)

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KUSH: Journal of the National Corporation for Antiquities and Museums (NCAM)
ISSN: 0454-6989 [Formerly Kush : journal of the Sudan Antiquities Service ISSN: 0075-7349]

sfdas : Section française de la direction des antiquités du Soudan

Published by the National Corporation for Antiquities and Museums Ministry of Culture, Youth and Sports, The Republic of the Sudan
Founded in 1967 at the initiative of Jean Vercoutter, the SFDAS was officially created in 1969. It was successively run by André Vila (1969-1975), Francis Geus (1975-1984), Jacques Reinold (1984-2000), Francis Geus (2000-2004), Vincent Rondot (2005-2009), Claude Rilly (2009-2014) and, since September 2014, by Vincent Francigny. In charge of cooperating with the Sudanese Department of Antiquities in its field activities (excavations and prospection), the SFDAS took part in the last rescue operations of the Nubian campaign which preceded the water impoundment in the Aswan dam reservoir. It then pursued the systematic inventory of the sites of the Nile Valley south of the lake. It has also conducted several planned excavations, namely on the sites of Missiminia (Napatan, Meroitic, X-group and Christian necropolis), Kadada (Neolithic, Meroitic and post-Meroitic necropolis), Kadruka (Neolithic funeral mound) and El-Hobagi (post-Meroitic burial mound).

Kush I :PDF - 32.5 MbKush II :PDF - 24.9 MbKush III :PDF - 36.9 Mb

Open Access Monograph Series: The Royal Cemeteries of Kush

antiquist: a heritage computing community

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antiquist: a heritage computing community

About

Welcome to Antiquist.
We are an online community of people working with computing in the heritage sector.
Antiquist is primarily a communication network - a way for us all to talk, argue, experiment, share ideas, and solve common problems.

Who is Antiquist?

Antiquist members include archaeologists, museum professionals, historians, and other interested people.

How do we communicate?

We communicate primarily via a Google Groups email list. We also have a wiki, a blog, and some server space to try out new ideas and build new resources.
We also meet from time to time at events known as ArchCamp. The format of these meetings is open, allowing for demonstrations, discussion, and practical sessions.

Joining

If you’d like to join the conversation, head over to the Antiquist Google Group to sign up. You don’t need to work in the heritage sector, just a healthy interest in computing and heritage, and the will to get involved.

Open Access Monograph Series: Archaeological Survey of Nubia

CORPUS CORPORUM: repositorium operum Latinorum apud universitatem Turicensem

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[First posted in AWOL 3 February 2014, updated 11 December 2015]

CORPUS CORPORUM: repositorium operum Latinorum apud universitatem Turicensem
http://www.mlat.uzh.ch/MLS/pictures/CC.png
The site mlat.uzh.ch is a Latin text (meta-)repository and tool under way of development. Users should take into account that some functions do not yet work satisfactorily. This Corpus Córporum is being developed at the University of Zurich under the direction of Ph. Roelli, Institute for Greek and Latin Philology. The project uses exclusively free and open software and is non-commercial. Our main goals are:
  • To provide a platform into which standardised (TEI) xml-files of Latin texts can be loaded (if you would like to share your texts, please contact us) and downloaded (unless copyrights or the texts' providers restrict this). 
  • To make these texts searchable in complex manners (including proximity search and lemmatised search). Search results, wordlists and concordances can be generated for the current text level at the bottom left of the page (we use the open-source software Sphinx). 
  • To be able to use the platform to publish Latin texts online (cf. the Richard Rufus Project's corpus). 
  • Texts may be downloaded as TEI xml or txt-files for non-commercial use (in snippets also as pdf) and can thus be reused by other researchers.
The texts are divided into corpora on a specific topic that can be searched and studied separately: the first such corpus consists of ten translations of Aristotle's Physica into Latin. They were used to study how technical Greek language could be translated into Latin. Word frequency lists are also on the server. This study was published in two papers.
Dictionaries
In order to facilitate online reading, Latin words in the text can be resolved to their lemma form by clicking them (powered by Perseus and TreeTagger with Gabriele Brandolini's Latin data [here the tag-set used], additionally also by the Comphistsem's [University of Frankfurt, led by Prof. Bernhard Jussen] wordlist). Entries in the following dictionaries are then displayed: Georges (Latin-German), Lewis and Short (Latin-English), Du Cange (mediaeval Latin), Schütz (scholastic Latin), Graesse (toponomastics); within University of Zurich's IP range also Niermeyer can be consulted. For Greek LSJ (1940) and Pape are available but do not yet work very well.
These dictionaries may be used as a search engine in your internet browser. In order to do this right click in Chromium (and Google Chrome) the URL box and choose "edit search engines". There add a new engine by filling in: Corpus Corporum / cc (or another shortcut of your choice) / http://mlat.uzh.ch/MLS/info_frame.php?w=%s In Firefox this can only be done by adding an add-on that allows users to add custom search engines.
License
The data we transcribed ourselves (including three editions by Philipp Roelli) is published under Creative Commons Share-Alikeand may thus be reused freely (but non-commercially) as long as the source is indicated. Most of the texts present here, however, stem from various online sources. As far as we could determine they are either in the public domain or their use was granted us by their owners. If you believe to have rights on a text erroneously published here, please contact us and we will delete it or restrict its access. A short presentation of this project's goals and plans can be downloaded here as a pdf containing a demonstration video (11MB). An article in Archivum Latinitatis Medii Aevi (ALMA) 72 (2014) explains the project and its background more fully.
Administrator of this server is Dr. Philipp Roelli, the application code is being developed by Max Bänziger. To contact us write to turicense@gmail.com. Last updated June 2015.

Open Access Journal: Institute of Archaeology Horn Archaeological Museum Newsletter

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[First posted in AWOL 19 January 2010, updated 12 December 2015]


Institute of Archaeology Horn Archaeological Museum Newsletter
ISSN: 1095-2837
The Institute of Archaeology, through the Horn Archaeological Museum, publishes a quarterly newsletter. Museum members and other interested individuals find a broad spectrum of valuable notes and announcements: activities of personnel, research reports, schedules of future events and projects, and notices of publications, as well as a variety of short notes.

(available in Adobe Acrobat PDF format)

Volume

Date

35.2 viewSpring 2014
35.1 viewWinter 2014
34.4 viewFall 2013
34.3 viewSummer 2013
34.2 viewSpring 2013
34.1 viewWinter 2013
33.4 viewFall 2012
33.3 viewSummer 2012
33.2 viewSpring 2012
33.1 viewWinter 2012
32.4 viewFall 2011
32.3 viewSummer 2011
32.2 viewSpring 2011
32.1 viewWinter 2011
31.4 viewFall 2010
31.3 viewSummer 2010
31.2 viewSpring 2010
31.1 viewWinter 2010
30.4 viewFall 2009
30.3 viewSummer 2009
30.2 viewSpring 2009
30.1 viewWinter 2009
29.4 viewFall 2008
29.3 viewSummer 2008
29.2 viewSpring 2008
29.1 viewWinter 2008
28.4 viewFall 2007
28.3 view Summer 2007
28.2 view Spring 2007
28.1 view Winter 2007
27.4 view Fall 2006
27.3 view Summer 2006
27.2 view Spring 2006
27.1 view Winter 2006
26.4 view Fall 2005
26.3 view Summer 2005
26.2 view Spring 2005
26.1 view Winter 2005
25.4 view Fall 2004
25.3 view Summer 2004
25.2 view Spring 2004
25.1 view Winter 2004
24.4 view Fall 2003
24.3 view Summer 2003
24.2 view Spring 2003
24.1 view Winter 2003
23.4 view Fall 2002
23.3 view Summer 2002
23.2 view Spring 2002
23.1 view Winter 2002
22.4 view Fall 2001
22.3 view Summer 2001
22.2 view Spring 2001
22.1 view Winter 2001
21.4 view Fall 2000
21.3 view Summer 2000
21.2 view Spring 2000
21.1 view Winter 2000
20.4 view Fall 1999


Open Access Journal: Erga-Logoi: Rivista di storia, letteratura, diritto e culture dell'antichità

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[First posted in AWOL 15 May 2013, updated 14 December 2015]

Erga-Logoi: Rivista di storia, letteratura, diritto e culture dell'antichità
Online ISSN: 2282-3212
Print ISSN: 2280-9678
http://www.ledonline.it/Erga-Logoi/immagini/Erga-Logoi-title.jpg
Erga-Logoiè una rivista, soggetta a peer-review, di storia, letteratura, diritto e culture dell'antichità; un concetto, quest'ultimo, da intendere in senso ampio sul piano dell'estensione geografica e cronologica. Il titolo è stato scelto per sottolineare, evocando il proemio metodologico di Tucidide - benché la contrapposizione abbia ovviamente, in quel contesto, valore diverso -, l'intento di guardare al mondo antico prestando attenzione sia al "fatto" (gli eventi storici, la produzione artistica, la cultura materiale), sia al "detto" (il discorso poetico, letterario, storico, normativo nella sua forma orale e scritta). 

Di conseguenza, la Rivista propone con convinzione un approccio unitario al mondo antico, respingendo prospettive settoriali in favore di un'impostazione fortemente interdisciplinare: l'unica che può consentire un'adeguata comprensione della civiltà complessa e articolata, sul piano cronologico, geografico e soprattutto contenutistico, che il mondo antico ha espresso.
La Rivista, che esce con cadenza semestrale, è dunque aperta a contributi di carattere storico, filologico, letterario, archeologico, artistico, giuridico; ha carattere multilingue e intende con ciò contribuire allo sviluppo di un dibattito internazionale sul mondo antico e sulla sua eredità.

Erga-Logoi is a peer-reviewed journal of ancient history, literature, law and culture, as broadly conceived in geographical and chronological terms. Evoking Thucydides' methodological exordium (although in that context the opposition obviously has a different value), the name of the Journal was chosen to reflect its intention of looking at the ancient world paying attention to both “facts” (historical events, artistic production, material culture) and “words” (literary, historical, legal production in its oral and written forms).
On these bases, the Journal embraces a unified approach to the ancient world, rejecting sectional perspectives for an interdisciplinary focus, reflecting these complex articulated civilizations. 

The Journal, published every six months, is open to contributions of a historical, philological, literary, archaeological, artistic, and legal nature. It is multilingual, thereby aiming to foster the development of international debate on the ancient world and its legacy.






New Open Access Journal: Polymnia

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Polymnia
http://polymnia.recherche.univ-lille3.fr/revue/eng/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/polymnia-banner.jpg
The international network Polymnia, created in 1999 by Jacqueline Fabre-Serris and Françoise Graziani to promote the study of the mythographical tradition in Europe from Antiquity to the 17th Century has developed two types of activities: a programme of conferences in the various partner institutions and the publications of bilingual texts with translations and notes in the series Mythographes (Presses Universitaires du Septentrion).

The journal Polymnia continues the research programme of the network. It offers a space for interdisciplinary and diachronic reflection and debate about mythographical texts in Antiquity, in the Middles Ages, and in the Renaissance.

Le réseau de recherche international Polymnia, créé en 1999 par Jacqueline Fabre-Serris et Françoise Graziani pour promouvoir l’étude de la tradition mythographique de l’Antiquité au 17° siècle, a développé deux sortes d’activités: des colloques entre les universités partenaires et une collection de textes bilingues, la collection « Mythographes », publiée aux Presses Universitaires du Septentrion.

La revue électronique Polymnia poursuit le programme de recherche du réseau. Elle propose un espace de réflexion et de débat, interdisciplinaire et diachronique, spécifiquement consacré aux textes mythographiques de l’Antiquité à la Renaissance.

Issue 1 | 2015

Avant-Propos [Text]

Minerva Alganza Roldán
¿Historiadores, logógrafos o mitógrafos? (Sobre  la recepción de Hecateo, Ferécides y Helánico) [Abstract][Full text]

David Bouvier
Palaiphatos ou le mythe du mythographe [Abstract][Full text]

Jacqueline Fabre-Serris
La pratique mythographique de Parthénius de Nicée et l’usage des Ἐρωτικὰ Παθήματα chez Gallus, Properce et Ovide [Abstract][Full text]

Arnaud Zucker
Hygin et Ératosthène. Variation mythographique ou restitution d’un original perdu [Abstract][Full text]

Etienne Wolff
Les spécificités de Fulgence dans les Mitologiae [Abstract][Full text]

Franck Collin
L’inscription mythographique dans le projet encyclopédiste du De Naturis rerum d’Alexandre Neckam [Abstract][Full text]

Gisèle Besson
Pseustis avait-il une chance contre Alithia ? Le regard porté sur la mythologie païenne dans l’Ecloga Theoduli [Abstract][Full text]

Consuelo Álvarez Morán & Rosa Iglésias Monteil
Los Diez libros de la Mitologia de Natale Conti en su segunda redacción [Abstract][Full text]

Françoise Graziani
La confabulation poétique de Boccace [Abstract][Full text]

Program in Aegean Scripts and Prehistory (PASP) in Texas ScholarWorks

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Program in Aegean Scripts and Prehistory (PASP) in Texas ScholarWorks
The Program in Aegean Scripts and Prehistory (PASP) was founded in 1986 by Thomas G. Palaima as a research center pertaining to the use of writing in Minoan Crete (Cretan Hieroglyphic and Linear A ca. 1850-1450 BCE), Mycenaean Greece and Mycenaeanized Crete (Linear B ca. 1450-1200 BCE) and the island of Cyprus (Cypro-Minoan in the Bronze Age and Cypriote Syllabic script in the historical period ca. 1500-1200 BCE and 750-225 BCE respectively). PASP was supported by the Comité International pour les Études Myceniennes, the governing international body for work on these writing systems, their texts and their cultures. A strength of PASP is that it is part of a graduate research program in the Department of Classics at University of Texas at Austin (PASP does not grant its own degrees).

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Oracc: The Open Richly Annotated Cuneiform Corpus Projects List

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[First posted 1 July 2010. Most recently updated 14 December 2015]

Oracc: The Open Richly Annotated Cuneiform Corpus Projects List
 Oracc banner
Oracc is a collaborative effort to develop a complete corpus of cuneiform whose rich annotation and open licensing support the next generation of scholarly research. Created by Steve Tinney, Oracc is steered by Eleanor Robson, Tinney, and Niek Veldhuis.

Idrimi: Statue of Idrimi

The statue of Idrimi in the British Museum (detail)
An up-to-date, searchable edition of the Idrimi inscription together with numerous annotations and bibliography. By Jacob Lauinger at Johns Hopkins University.

AMGG: Ancient Mesopotamian Gods and Goddesses

Detail of Old Babylonian clay plaque, known as the Burney Relief or the "Queen of the Night" showing a naked goddess, perhaps Inana or Ereškigal. © The British Museum.
Offers information about the fifty most important Mesopotamian gods and goddesses and provides starting points for further research.
Directed by Nicole Brisch and funded by the UK Higher Education Academy, 2011.

blms: Bilinguals in Late Mesopotamian Scholarship

Long after Sumerian had died out as a spoken language, bilingual (Sumerian - Akkadian) texts still played a prominent role in the scholarly culture of Babylonia and Assyria. BLMS provides editions of bilingual narrative texts, hymns, proverbs, prayers, rituals, and incantations dating to the first millennium BCE.
Project Director: Steve Tinney; Editor: Jeremiah Peterson. With the assistance of Niek Veldhuis, Jamie Novotny, Joshua Jeffers, and Ilona Zsolnay. BLMS is supported by the National Endowment for the Humanities.

CAMS: Corpus of Ancient Mesopotamian Scholarship

Three clay figurines of protective apkallu-sages dressed in fish-cloaks, from 7th-century Nineveh (BM ME 91837)
Editions and translations of a wide range of Mesopotamian scholarly writings, contributed by many different people and projects.

CAMS/Anzu

Front cover of State Archives of Assyria, vol. 3
Composite transliterations of the Epic of Anzu, prepared by Amar Annus for the book The Standard Babylonian Epic of Anzu (State Archives of Assyria, Cuneiform Texts 3), Helsinki: The Neo-Assyrian Text Corpus Project, 2001. Lemmatisation by Philip Jones.
Buy the book from Eisenbrauns.

CAMS/Barutu

The obverse of the Old Babylonian liver model BM 92668.
Texts on extispicy (divination by the entrails of sacrificed animals). Currently contains only the Old Babylonian liver model BM 92668. The ordering of the omens was determined by Ruth Horry, the transliteration and translation made by Eleanor Robson.

CAMS/Etana: The Standard Babylonian Epic of Etana

Provides fully searchable manuscript transliterations of the Old Babylonian, Middle Assyrian and Neo-Assyrian versions of the Etana epic, prepared by Jamie Novotny for the book The Standard Babylonian Etana Epic (State Archives of Assyria, Cuneiform Texts 2), Helsinki: The Neo-Assyrian Text Corpus Project, 2001.
Buy the book from Eisenbrauns

CAMS/GKAB: CAMS Geography of Knowledge Corpus

Drawing of a detail from a tablet describing how to make a ritual kettle drum from a bull's hide, Uruk c.200 BC (TCL 6, 47)
Editions of scholarly tablets from Huzirina, Kalhu, and Uruk for the Geography of Knowledge project, comprising editions and translations of a wide range of Mesopotamian scholarly writings.
Project directed by Eleanor Robson at the University of Cambridge and funded by the UK Arts and Humanities Research Council, 2007-12.

CAMS/Ludlul

Front cover of State Archives of Assyria, vol. 7
Score and manuscript transliterations of Ludlul bēl nēmeqi, prepared by Amar Annus and Alan Lenzi for the book Ludlul Bēl Nēmeqi: The Standard Babylonian Poem of the Righteous Sufferer(State Archives of Assyria, Cuneiform Texts 7), Helsinki: The Neo-Assyrian Text Corpus Project, 2010.
Buy the book from Eisenbrauns.

CAMS/SelBI: CAMS/Seleucid Building Inscriptions

Close-up of lapis-coloured glazed bricks in the remains of the Irigal temple in Uruk, 2001. Photo by Eleanor Robson.
Third-century BC building inscriptions, from Borsippa and Uruk. Edition of the Antiochus (Borsippa) Cylinder by Kathryn Stevens; edition of the Anu-uballiṭs' inscriptions from Uruk by Eleanor Robson.

CCPo: Cuneiform Commentaries Project on ORACC

Provides fully searchable, annotated editions of text commentaries written by Assyrian and Babylonian scholars between the eighth and second centuries BCE. The texts commented on include literary, magical, divinatory, medical, legal, and lexical works.
Project Director: Eckart Frahm; Senior Editor: Enrique Jiménez.

CDLI: The Cuneiform Digital Library Initiative

CDLI image of Proto-Cuneiform tablet from Uruk, W20367
The foundational online cataloging and archiving project for the cuneiform corpus, directed by Bob Englund at UCLA. The Oracc presentation is based directly on public CDLI data which is updated nightly.

CKST: Corpus of Kassite Sumerian Texts

Votive eye dedicated by the Kassite king Kurigalzu to the god Zababa. (Louvre, AO 23994)
Editions of Sumerian Kassite texts: Royal Inscriptions, Literary, and Lexical texts.

CMAwRo: Corpus of Mesopotamian Anti-witchcraft Rituals

Head of an Assyrian woman (© Trustees of the British Museum)
CMAwRo presents online critical editions of Mesopotamian rituals and incantations against witchcraft. The text editions and translations are derived from the Corpus of Mesopotamian Anti-witchcraft Rituals (CMAwR; vol. 1, Brill: 2011).
The DFG-funded research project "Corpus babylonischer Rituale und Beschwörungen gegen Schadenzauber: Edition, lexikalische Erschließung, historische und literarische Analyse" is directed by Daniel Schwemer (University of Würzburg).

Contrib: Contributions

Data contributed to Oracc for reuse by others, normally under the CC BY-SA license.

Amarna: The Amarna Texts

Shrine-stela of Amenhotep III and queen Tiye (detail), Amarna c.1340 BC. (British Museum EA 57399)
Contributed by Shlomo Izre'el, the Amarna corpus comprises transliterations of the 380 cuneiform tablets found at Tell el-Amarna (ancient Akhetaten) in Egypt. It contains diplomatic correspondence and Akkadian scholarly works from the mid-14th century BC.

contrib/lambert: The Notebooks of W.G. Lambert

Image of part of Lambert Folio 9034, the first page of Notebook 2
W. G. Lambert (1926-2011) was an Assyriologist who spent much of his research time transliterating and copying cuneiform tablets in museums, especially the British Museum. His Nachlass included eight notebooks filled with handwritten transliterations of Babylonian and Assyrian texts. The notebooks contain more than five thousand transliterations, spread over nearly fifteen hundred pages. They are an astonishing record of sustained first-hand engagement with cuneiform tablets.

CTIJ: Cuneiform Texts Mentioning Israelites, Judeans, and Other Related Groups

Judean captives leaving the city of Lachish to exile, ca. 701 BC.
Cuneiform texts and onomastic data pertaining to Israelites, Judeans, and related population groups during the Neo-Assyrian, Neo- and Late Babylonian, and Achaemenid Periods (744-330 BCE).
Project directed by Ran Zadok and Yoram Cohen, and funded by the "Ancient Israel" (New Horizons) Research Program of Tel Aviv University.

DCCLT: Digital Corpus of Cuneiform Lexical Texts

Drawing of a list of vessels from Archaic Uruk, circa 3500 BCE
Editions and translations of lexical texts (word lists and sign lists) from all periods of cuneiform writing
Project directed by Niek Veldhuis at UC Berkeley and supported by the National Endowment for the Humanities.

DCCLT/Nineveh: DCCLT/Lexical Texts in the Royal Libraries at Nineveh

Horned bull and archaizing sign list.
Nineveh provides editions of the lexical texts in the royal tablet collections discovered in the Assyrian capital. The project is supported by the NEH and was carried out in cooperation with the British Museum.

DCCLT/signlists: DCCLT/Reading the Signs

Editions and translations of all cuneiform sign lists from the middle of the third millennium B.C.E. until the end of cuneiform culture. The project is supported by the NEH.
Project directed by Niek Veldhuis. Editions by C. Jay Crisostomo.

DCCMT: Digital Corpus of Cuneiform Mathematical Texts

Photo of an Old Babylonian school exercise on calculating the area of a triangle (Ashmolean 1931.91)
Catalogue of around a thousand published cuneiform mathematical tablets, with several hundred transliterations and translations.
Project run by Eleanor Robson at the University of Cambridge.

ETCSRI: Electronic Text Corpus of Sumerian Royal Inscriptions

Sculpted head of Gudea of Lagash with turban in the Louvre (AO 13). Photo by Gábor Zólyomi
An annotated, grammatically and morphologically analyzed, transliterated, trilingual (Sumerian-English-Hungarian), parallel corpus of all Sumerian royal inscriptions.
Directed by Gábor Zólyomi at Eötvos Loránd University, Budapest and funded by the Hungarian Scientific Research Fund (OTKA).

HBTIN: Hellenistic Babylonia: Texts, Iconography, Names

   A personal seal stamped into a cuneiform tablet from Hellenistic Uruk (BM 105203, detail).
Cuneiform texts, iconography and onomastic data from Hellenistic Babylonia, primarily from Uruk. HBTIN texts form the demonstrator corpus of the Berkeley Prosopography Service (BPS).
Directed by Laurie Pearce at UC Berkeley.

ISSL: The Index to the Sumerian Secondary Literature

Over 70,000 references to the Sumerian secondary literature which also indexes all of the transliterations of word writings in ePSD.

Nimrud: Nimrud: Materialities of Assyrian Knowledge Production

The Assyrian city of Nimrud, as re-imagined by its first excavator, Austen Henry Layard (detail).
A portal to all things related to the ancient Assyrian city of Nimrud (Kalhu/Calah), on Oracc and beyond. Explores how scientific and historical knowledge is made from archaeological objects.
Directed by Eleanor Robson at the University of Cambridge and funded by the UK Arts and Humanities Research Council.

OBMC: Old Babylonian Model Contracts

OBMC Logo
Edition of the Corpus of Old Babylonian Model Contracts by Gabriella Spada.

OBTA: Old Babylonian Tabular Accounts

Photo of southern Iraqi farm by ER
A catalogue and corpus of Old Babylonian tabular accounts by Eleanor Robson at University College London. Additions and corrections welcome.

OGSL: Oracc Global Sign List

LAK 25, from A. Deimel, Liste der Archaische Keilschriftzeichen.
Provides a global registry of sign names, variants and readings for use by Oracc.
Managed by Niek Veldhuis at UC Berkeley.

Qcat: The Q Catalogue

The letter Q; icon of the Orac Qcat project.
Provides a global registry of compositions rather than objects, supporting the creation of scores on Oracc.
Managed by Eleanor Robson at the University of Cambridge.

Rīm-Anum: The House of Prisoners

Rīm-Anum, king of Uruk (ca. 1741–1739 BC) revolted against Samsuiluna of Babylon, son of Hammurapi, and enjoyed a short-lived independence. The archive edited in this project derives from the house of prisoners (bīt asiri) that kept the prisoners of war. The editions and translations were prepared by Andrea Seri and accompanies her book "The House of Prisoners" (2013).
Buy the bookfrom Harrassowitz.

RINAP: Royal Inscriptions of the Neo-Assyrian Period

Excavating the Ninurta temple at Kalhu (Nimrud). Watercolor by F.C. Cooper.
Presents fully searchable, annotated editions of the royal inscriptions of Neo-Assyrian kings Tiglath-pileser III (744-727 BC), Shalmaneser V (726-722 BC), Sargon II (721-705 BC), Sennacherib (704-681 BC), and Esarhaddon (680-669 BC).
Directed by Grant Frame at the University of Pennsylvania and funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities.

RINAP 1: Tiglath-pileser III and Shalmaneser V

Cover image of RINAP 1
The official inscriptions of Tiglath-pileser III (744-727 BC) and Shalmaneser V (726-722 BC), kings of Assyria, edited by Hayim Tadmor and Shigeo Yamada.
Buy the book from Eisenbrauns.

RINAP 3: Sennacherib

Cover image of RINAP 3
The official inscriptions of Sennacherib (704-681 BC), king of Assyria, edited by A. Kirk Grayson and Jamie Novotny.
Buy Part 1 from Eisenbrauns and/or Part 2 from Eisenbrauns.

RINAP 4: Esarhaddon

Cover of RINAP 4, published by Eisenbrauns
The official inscriptions of Esarhaddon, king of Assyria (680-669 BC), edited by Erle Leichty.
Buy the book from Eisenbrauns.

RINAP Scores

This sub-project of RINAP Online includes all fifty-five of the score transliterations published by the RINAP Project (2011-14).

RINAP Sources

This sub-project of RINAP Online includes transliterations of the available sources of the editions published by the RINAP Project (2011-14).

SAAo: State Archives of Assyria Online

A pair of Assyrian scribes filing reports after the conquest of a Babylonian city, Nimrud, 8th century BC (BM ANE 118882)
The online counterpart to the State Archives of Assyria series, released with the kind permission of The Neo-Assyrian Text Corpus Project and its director Professor Simo Parpola.
Associated portal sites include Knowledge and Power and Assyrian Empire Builders.

Knowledge and Power

An Assyrian king with his scribes and scholars, as imagined    in the mid-19th century. (A.H. Layard, A Second Series of the Monuments    of Nineveh, London 1853, pl. 2 detail, after a sketch by J.    Fergusson).
Presents Neo-Assyrian scholars' letters, queries, and reports to their kings in seventh-century Nineveh and provides resources to support their use in undergraduate teaching.
Directed by Karen Radner at University College London and Eleanor Robson at the University of Cambridge; funded by the UK Higher Education Academy, 2007-10.

SAAo/SAA01: The Correspondence of Sargon II, Part I: Letters from Assyria and the West

Cover of published volume S. Parpola, The Correspondence of Sargon II, Part I: Letters from Assyria and the West (1987)
The text editions from the book S. Parpola, The Correspondence of Sargon II, Part I: Letters from Assyria and the West (State Archives of Assyria, 1), 1987.
Out of print.

SAAo/SAA02: Neo-Assyrian Treaties and Loyalty Oaths

Cover of published volume S. Parpola and K. Watanabe, Neo-Assyrian Treaties and Loyalty Oaths (1988)
The text editions from the book S. Parpola and K. Watanabe, Neo-Assyrian Treaties and Loyalty Oaths (State Archives of Assyria, 2), 1988.
Out of print.

SAAo/SAA03: Court Poetry and Literary Miscellanea

Cover of published volume A. Livingstone, Court Poetry and Literary Miscellanea (1989)
The text editions from the book A. Livingstone, Court Poetry and Literary Miscellanea (State Archives of Assyria, 3), 1989.
Out of print.

SAAo/SAA04: Queries to the Sungod: Divination and Politics in Sargonid Assyria

Cover of published volume I. Starr, Queries to the Sungod: Divination and Politics in Sargonid Assyria (1990)
The text editions from the book I. Starr, Queries to the Sungod: Divination and Politics in Sargonid Assyria (State Archives of Assyria, 4), 1990.
Out of print.

SAAo/SAA05: The Correspondence of Sargon II, Part II: Letters from the Northern and Northeastern Provinces

Cover of published volume G. B. Lanfranchi and S. Parpola, The Correspondence of Sargon II, Part II: Letters from the Northern and Northeastern Provinces (1990)
The text editions from the book G. B. Lanfranchi and S. Parpola, The Correspondence of Sargon II, Part II: Letters from the Northern and Northeastern Provinces (State Archives of Assyria, 5), 1990.
Out of print.

SAAo/SAA06: Legal Transactions of the Royal Court of Nineveh, Part I: Tiglath-Pileser III through Esarhaddon

Cover of published volume T. Kwasman and S. Parpola, Legal Transactions of the Royal Court of Nineveh, Part I: Tiglath-Pileser III through Esarhaddon (1991)
The text editions from the book T. Kwasman and S. Parpola, Legal Transactions of the Royal Court of Nineveh, Part I: Tiglath-Pileser III through Esarhaddon (State Archives of Assyria, 6), 1991.
Out of print.

SAAo/SAA07: Imperial Administrative Records, Part I: Palace and Temple Administration

Cover of published volume F. M. Fales and J. N. Postgate, Imperial Administrative Records, Part I: Palace and Temple Administration (1992)
The text editions from the book F. M. Fales and J. N. Postgate, Imperial Administrative Records, Part I: Palace and Temple Administration (State Archives of Assyria, 7), 1992.
Out of print.

SAAo/SAA08: Astrological Reports to Assyrian Kings

Cover of published volume H. Hunger, Astrological Reports to Assyrian Kings (1992)
The text editions from the book H. Hunger, Astrological Reports to Assyrian Kings (State Archives of Assyria, 8), 1992.
Out of print.

SAAo/SAA09: Assyrian Prophecies

Cover of published volume S. Parpola, Assyrian Prophecies (1997)
The text editions from the book S. Parpola, Assyrian Prophecies (State Archives of Assyria, 9), 1997.
Out of print.

SAAo/SAA10: Letters from Assyrian and Babylonian Scholars

Cover of published volume S. Parpola, Letters from Assyrian and Babylonian Scholars (1993)
The text editions from the book S. Parpola, Letters from Assyrian and Babylonian Scholars (State Archives of Assyria, 10), 1993.
Out of print.

SAAo/SAA11: Imperial Administrative Records, Part II: Provincial and Militar Administration

Cover of published volume F. M. Fales and J. N. Postgate, Imperial Administrative Records, Part II: Provincial and Military Administration (1995)
The text editions from the book F. M. Fales and J. N. Postgate, Imperial Administrative Records, Part II: Provincial and Military Administration (State Archives of Assyria, 11), 1995.
Buy the book from Eisenbrauns.

SAAo/SAA12: Grants, Decres and Gifts of the Neo-Assyrian Period

Cover of published volume L. Kataja and R. Whiting, Grants, Decrees and Gifts of the Neo-Assyrian Period (1995)
The text editions from the book L. Kataja and R. Whiting, Grants, Decrees and Gifts of the Neo-Assyrian Period (State Archives of Assyria, 12), 1995.
Buy the book from Eisenbrauns.

SAAo/SAA13: Letters from Assyrian and Babylonian Priests to Kings Esarhaddon and Assurbanipal

Cover of published volume S. W. Cole and P. Machinist, Letters from Assyrian and Babylonian Priests to Kings Esarhaddon and Assurbanipal (1998)
The text editions from the book S. W. Cole and P. Machinist, Letters from Assyrian and Babylonian Priests to Kings Esarhaddon and Assurbanipal (State Archives of Assyria, 13), 1998.
Out of print.

SAAo/SAA14: Legal Transactions of the Royal Court of Nineveh, Part II: Assurbanipal Through Sin-šarru-iškun

Cover of published volume R. Mattila, Legal Transactions of the Royal Court of Nineveh, Part II: Assurbanipal Through Sin-šarru-iškun (2002)
The text editions from the book R. Mattila, Legal Transactions of the Royal Court of Nineveh, Part II: Assurbanipal Through Sin-šarru-iškun (State Archives of Assyria, 14), 2002.
Buy the book from Eisenbrauns.

SAAo/SAA15: The Correspondence of Sargon II, Part III: Letters from Babylonia and the Eastern Provinces

Cover of published volume A. Fuchs and S. Parpola, The Correspondence of Sargon II, Part III: Letters from Babylonia and the Eastern Provinces (2001)
The text editions from the book A. Fuchs and S. Parpola, The Correspondence of Sargon II, Part III: Letters from Babylonia and the Eastern Provinces (State Archives of Assyria, 15), 2001.
Buy the book from Eisenbrauns.

SAAo/SAA16: The Political Correspondence of Esarhaddon

Cover of published volume M. Luukko and G. Van Buylaere, The Political Correspondence of Esarhaddon (2002)
The text editions from the book M. Luukko and G. Van Buylaere, The Political Correspondence of Esarhaddon (State Archives of Assyria, 16), 2002.
Out of print.

SAAo/SAA17: The Neo-Babylonian Correspondence of Sargon and Sennacherib

Cover of published volume M. Dietrich, The Neo-Babylonian Correspondence of Sargon and Sennacherib (2003)
The text editions from the book M. Dietrich, The Neo-Babylonian Correspondence of Sargon and Sennacherib (State Archives of Assyria, 17), 2003.
Out of print.

SAAo/SAA18: The Babylonian Correspondence of Esarhaddon and Letters to Assurbanipal and Sin-šarru-iškun from Northern and Central Babylonia

Cover of published volume F. S. Reynolds, The Babylonian Correspondence of Esarhaddon and Letters to Assurbanipal and Sin-šarru-iškun from Northern and Central Babylonia (2003)
The text editions from the book F. S. Reynolds, The Babylonian Correspondence of Esarhaddon and Letters to Assurbanipal and Sin-šarru-iškun from Northern and Central Babylonia (State Archives of Assyria, 18), 2003.
Out of print.

SAAo/SAA19: The Correspondence of Tiglath-Pileser III and Sargon II from Calah/Nimrud

Cover of published volume SAA 19
The text editions from the book Mikko Luukko, The Correspondence of Tiglath-Pileser III and Sargon II from Calah/Nimrud (State Archives of Assyria, 19), 2013.

SAAo/SAAS2: SAAo/Assyrian Eponym List

Cover of published volume A. Millard, The Eponyms of the Assyrian Empire, 910-612 BC (1994)
The text editions and composite translation from the book A. Millard, The Eponyms of the Assyrian Empire, 910-612 BC (State Archives of Assyria Studies 2), 1994.
Out of print.

Xcat: The X Catalogue

The X logo of XCat
Provides a global registry of cuneiform manuscripts, supplementary to CDLI.
Managed by Eleanor Robson at the University of Cambridge.

A Comprehensive Introduction to Nostratic Comparative Linguistics

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A Comprehensive Introduction to Nostratic Comparative Linguistics (2nd edition — revised as of October 2015) (4 volumes, 2,562 pages, combined into a single PDF).

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The latest in-depth treatment by Allan R. Bomhard of the Nostratic Hypothesis (2nd edition 2015). All aspects (phonology, morphology, vocabulary, homelands, etc.) of Nostratic are covered. Voluminous references are given to the relevant literature.

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