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Forthcoming Open Access Journal: The Bulletin of the Munich Open-Access Cuneiform Corpus Initiative

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The Bulletin of the Munich Open-Access Cuneiform Corpus Initiative
Kopfzeile
This occasional open-access publication is intended to correct, supplement, and update information published by the Neo-Assyrian Text Corpus (NATC) Project (directed by Simo Parpola; University of Helsinki), Royal Inscriptions of Mesopotamia (RIM) Project (directed by A. Kirk Grayson; University of Toronto), and Royal Inscriptions of the Neo-Assyrian Period (RINAP) Project (directed by Grant Frame; University of Pennsylvania). Contributions to the Bulletin are primarily intended to highlight both important and minor differences between the freely accessible online version of a text hosted on the Open Richly Annotated Cuneiform Corpus (Oracc) Project and its original publication.

The notes, the corrigenda and addenda, corrected reprints of published pages, and original studies published here will mainly serve as platform for the LMU-based Official Inscriptions of the Middle East in Antiquity (OIMEA) and Archival Texts of the of Middle East in Antiquity (ATMEA) Projects to disseminate relevant information about variety of ancient texts. BMOCCI is not intended to only include material written by the OIMEA and ATMEA staff. Scholars and students interested in contributing a note or article on official inscriptions and archival texts are encouraged to submit a contribution.

InsAph: Inscriptions of Aphrodisias Online

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InsAph: Inscriptions of Aphrodisias Online
The aim of this project is to build on the experience gained on the EPAPP project. That project, funded by the Leverhulme trust, allowed us to develop a volume of some 250 inscriptions, using the Epidoc markup principles; the Inscriptions of Aphrodisias grant allowed us to further refine the volume and publish it as http://insaph.kcl.ac.uk/ala2004/.

In the course of that process we learned a great deal about how to develop and apply the guidelines; we also established some very good relationships with other scholars in the field. Our intention now is to develop the use of Epidoc markup not only for the eventual publication of inscriptions, but also as a tool for editing them and preparing them for publication. We also intend to work closely at every stage with other colleagues and other projects, so that we can support one another in developing our approaches to electronic publication, and achieve a reasonable level of compatibility between projects.
On this site we intend to publish more material from Aphrodisias, as it becomes ready for publication. At the same time, the editors of the inscriptions, Angelos Chaniotis (in Heidelberg) Joyce Reynolds (in Cambridge) and Charlotte Roueche (in London) together with the excavators, Christopher Ratte (in New York) and Bert Smith (in Oxford) intend to use the web as a work area for preparing increasing amounts of material for publication. We may well not be able to publish all the inscriptions of Aphrodisias in this way before the end of the project: but we should by then have established the guidelines and the protocols for doing so.

Standards for Networking Ancient Prosopographies (SNAP:DRGN)

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Standards for Networking Ancient Prosopographies (SNAP:DRGN)
SNAP:DRGN is building a virtual authority list for ancient people through Linked Data collection of common information from many collaborating projects. The graph will provide: 1. identifiers for all persons who appear in one or more corpora and catalogues; 2. gold standard normalization data for parsing and proofing tools; 3. visualization of ancient persons, names, titles and relationships; 4. research tools for historians; 5. standards and software contributing to the Linked Ancient World Data community.

Open Access Monograph Series: Classics Textbooks

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Classics Textbooks
Series Consultant: John Henderson


Ideal for school-level and University students of Latin, and for anybody studying the language for the first time, these Open Access textbooks present extracts from major works including Ovid’s Metamorphoses, Virgil’s Aeneid and Tacitus’s hair-raising descriptions of the excesses of the Emperor Nero in the Annals

The Latin is accompanied by extensive commentary that explores the meaning and context of the works, while interpretative essays serve as a model for students developing their own critical writing. Many of our engaging and lucid textbooks also offer study questions and background information as well as the latest scholarship. Also available in free interactive editions with teachers’ comments, they are vital resources for all students of Latin.

Dickinson College Commentaries
OBP and Dickinson College partnered to create books that offer enhanced key texts in Latin in Open Access format. Our joint Series appears as both free web resources hosted on the DCC website and as interactive texts released in a variety of formats.
 

Paratexts of the Bible

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Paratexts of the Bible
http://paratexbib.eu/images/header.jpg

Analysis and Edition of the Greek Textual Transmission
This project takes a new look at an old text. The Bible is a fundamental book for the history of religious beliefs, cultural history, art history as well as many other fields. For centuries it has been read and copied multiple times. Thousands of medieval manuscripts survive. The process of transmission is con¬sidered here from a totally new perspective. While biblical manuscripts have so far been largely ana¬lysed as witnesses to an original text (“Urtext”), this project approaches each manuscript as a single witness to an act of reading and re-interpreting the text. In recent literary theory, attention has been drawn to “paratexts”, i.e. all material accompanying a main text. Virtually all biblical manuscripts have some of these features. Examples include brief introductions, biographies, tables of contents, poems, cross-references, prayers, and indexes.

However, these paratexts have been neglected by scholars for two reasons: firstly because biblical studies traditionally concentrate on the “inspired text” itself; secondly because of the sheer amount of available material, which far exceeds the capacities of a single scholar. Moreover, being very short, these paratexts have often remained below the detection threshold, and since we are dealing with a rich and “liquid” transmission, many of them also present a methodological challenge. 

The project therefore adopts a new approach. Firstly, it catalogues all available material in an e Clavis, taking into account recent developments in the fields of structural codicology and digital technology. Secondly, it develops a set of categories according to which each paratext of the New Testament is edited according to internal criteria. This is done with a view to the intrinsic value of each manuscript witness. The final result will be a comprehensive and totally new picture of the Biblical text’s “journey” through the centuries.

The Association for the Protection of Syrian Archaeology

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 [First posted in AWOL 27 June 2013, updated 19 July 2018]

The Association for the Protection of Syrian Archaeology
APSA
The Association for the protection of Syrian Archaeology (or APSA) has been first a Facebook page and a YouTube channel. It is now a Website in order to facilitate browsing and list a greater number of news items. It is intended above all to inform, that is, to gather and publish news about the threats and damages currently suffered by the Syrian archaeological and historical heritage. It is also designed to alert the scientific community and international authorities, either cultural or political. Its content is made of wires, press articles and videos. Wires are authored by the administrators of the page. They disclose information that have been verified beforehand. Sources remain confidential for security reasons. Members of the APSA are primarily voluntary people who are eager to contribute their skills (in the domains of science, journalism, web technology etc.) in safeguarding the Syrian heritage. They are Syrian citizens and also nationals of other countries.

The Homer Multitext Microservice

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The Homer Multitext Microservice
The Homer Multitext produces integrated data on Greek Epic poetry, its language, its evolution over time, the traditions of scholarship surrounding it, and the physical artifacts, manuscripts and papyri, that are our only evidence. For a concise explanation of what the HMT publishes, please see https://github.com/homermultitext/hmt-archive/blob/master/overview.md.
At the same time, we Project Architects of the HMT, Neel Smith and Christopher Blackwell, are interested in making this data as widely accessible as possible. The data is released in CEX Format, a plain-text serialization of data organized according to defined abstract data models. We have developed code libraries in Scala implementing these abstract data models. These libraries provide the greatest flexibility in manipulating, locating, aggregating, and transforming the data of the Homer Mulititext.
For users who may not want to write code directly, we have provided an online application offering a graphical user interface for interacting with HMT data using the Cite Architecture’s Scala libraries.
For those who might want to write their own applications that interact with the HMT data, we provide a collection of microservices.
The examples below demonstrate the Scala Cite Services (Akka) application, SCS-Akka, running at beta.hpcc.uh.edu/scs/, and (as of July 19, 2018) serving data from the 2018g Release of the Homer Multitext Data.
The service accepts requests via HTTP, and returns JSON expressions of CITE objects. We have published a library in Scala for de-marshalling those JSON expressions into CITE data objects.
The CiteApp web-based application for the Homer Multitext gets its data from this service, and indeed the web-application and the microservice were developed jointly.
This collection of microservices is serving current data from the Homer Multitext, edited by Casey Dué and Mary Ebbott, a project of the Center for Hellenic Studies of Harvard University.
For more information on this service, please see https://github.com/cite-architecture/scs-akka.
For information on the CITE Architecture, please see https://cite-architecture.github.io.
Report bugs by filing issues on GitHub.

Texts

About the Service’s Catalog

See the Text Catalog

Get the First Valid Reference in a text

Get Valid References

All references for a version of a text:
Valid references for parts of a text:

Get Passages

Passages for a specific version of a text:
Passages for all versions of a text:

NGrams

NGrams in works present in the library:
Find citations to NGrams:
Returning a Corpus of Passages containing an NGram:

String Searches

Token Searches

Collections of Objects

Catalog

Objects

Get objects from multiple collections:

Finding Objects

urn-match
regexmatch
stringcontains
valueequals
numeric less-than
numeric less-than-or-equal
numeric equals
numeric greater-than
numeric greater-than-or-equal
numeric within

Data Models

Images

Basic Image Retrieval
Defining a width
Defining MaxWidth and MaxHeight
Embedding
  • 12-recto
  • 12-recto-detail

Relations

CITE Relations are associations of URN to URN, with the relationship specified by a Cite2 URN.

Commentary Data Model

If a library includes CiteRelations and implements the Commentary datamodel, comments associated with passages of text can (optionally) be attached to replies for a corpus of texts.

Documented Scholarly Editions (DSE) Data Model

The DSE Data model consists of a CITE Collection of objects, each documenting a three-way relationship between (a) a text-bearing artifact, (b) a documentary image (ideally with a region-of-interest defined), and © a citable passage of text.
(The dse=true parameter is valid for all object-searching, as well as for retrieval of individual objects or ranges of objects.)

ΠΕΠΡΑΓΜΕΝΑ: ΙΑ΄ ΔΙΕΘΝΟΥΣ ΚΡΗΤΟΛΟΓΙΚΟΥ ΣΥΝΕΔΡΙΟΥ

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ΠΕΠΡΑΓΜΕΝΑ 
ΙΑ΄ ΔΙΕΘΝΟΥΣ ΚΡΗΤΟΛΟΓΙΚΟΥ ΣΥΝΕΔΡΙΟΥ 
(Ρέθυμνο, 21-27 Οκτωβρίου 2011)
ΤΟΜΟΣ Α1.1 ΤΜΗΜΑ ΑΡΧΑΙΟΛΟΓΙΚΟ
Μεσόγειος – Αιγαιακός Κόσμος – Κρήτη
Πολιτισμικοί Ορίζοντες – Οικιστική – Αρχιτεκτονική
ΙΣΤΟΡΙΚΗ ΚΑΙ ΛΑΟΓΡΑΦΙΚΗ ΕΤΑΙΡΕΙΑ ΡΕΘΥΜΝΗΣ Ρέθυμνο 2018
ΠΕΠΡΑΓΜΕΝΑ ΙΑ΄ ΔΙΕΘΝΟΥΣ ΚΡΗΤΟΛΟΓΙΚΟΥ ΣΥΝΕΔΡΙΟΥ
(Ρέθυμνο, 21-27 Οκτωβρίου 2011)
Louise A. Hitchcock, “All the Cherethites, and all the Pelethites, and all the Gittites”: A Current Assessment of the Evidence for the Minoan Connection with the Philistines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9-28
Anna Klys, The Afiartis Project: Current Survey Results from Karpathos with Special Reference to Minoan Penetration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29-41
Manolis Melas, The Politics of “Colonization”. Continuity, Change and Acculturation in the Minoan Periphery – New evidence . . . . . . . . . . 43-56
Δήμητρα Κρίγκα, Η ΥM Ι εισηγμένη κεραμική στο Ακρωτήρι Θήρας και η ΥK Ι εισηγμένη κεραμική στην Κρήτη κατά τη Νεοανακτορική περίοδο. Νέα στοιχεία για τις περιοχές της Κρήτης, με τις οποίες είχαν εμπορικές σχέσεις οι Θηραίοι . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57-73
Σταύρος Οικονομίδης, Κρήτη και μεταλλουργικά κέντρα της βόρειας Ιταλίας κατά την ύστερη Χαλκοκρατία . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 75-85
Katrin Bernhardt, Mycenaean Imports to Crete: Some Thoughts on the Interrelations between the Greek Mainland and Crete . . . . . . . . . . . 87-100
Maria Mina,MinoanMetalObjectsinPrehistoricCyprus:Evidence andImplications forthe Construction and Performance of SocialIdentity . . . . . . . . . . . 1. . . . . . . . . . 101-120
Thomas F. Strasser, Eleni Panagopoulou, Curtis Runnels, Karl Wegmann, The Palaeolithic and Mesolithic Periods on Crete. Chronostratigraphical Evidence from the Plakias Survey . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123-133
Μαρiνα Γκιάστα, Βάσω Λίπα, Ιωάννης Γκιάστας, Από το παρελθόν στο μέλλον μιας κοινωνίας σε κρίση. Αρχιτεκτονικές εκφάνσεις, ερμηνευτικές προτάσεις . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 135-152
Göran Henriksson, Mary Blomberg, Summary of the Archaeoastronomical Study of Minoan sites . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 153-171
Ρένα Βεροπουλίδου, Αντώνης Βασιλάκης, Η κατανάλωση των μαλακίων στην πρωτομινωική Τρυπητή: στοιχεία από την οστρεοαρχαιολογική μελέτη . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 173-195
Martin Hoffmeister, Early Minoan II Construction Technology: Vasiliki and Myrtos Fournou Koryphi . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 197-207
Maia Pomadère, Thibaut Gomrée, Building Pi and the Neopalatial Period at Malia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 209-220
Charlotte Langohr, Emanuella Alberti, The Neopalatial Pottery from the Pi Area at Malia: A Preliminary Examination . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 221-240
Αλεξάνδρα Σαλίχου, Αρχιτεκτονικού χαρακτήρα επεμβάσεις σε κτήρια του ανακτορικού οικισμού της Κάτω Ζάκρου . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 241-258
Μιχάλης Ζωιτόπουλος, Ο μινωικός οικισμός της Ζάκρου έπειτα από την καταστροφή στο τέλος της Νεοανακτορικής περιόδου . . . . . . . . . . . 259-274
Λευτέρης Πλάτων, Καινούργιες ενδείξεις για τον κνωσιακό χαρακτήρα του ΥΜΙ ανακτόρου της Ζάκρου . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 275-292
Todd Whitelaw, Andonis Vasilakis, Maria Bredaki, Prehistoric Knossos: Tracing its Long-term History through its Surface Record . . . . . . 293-307
Nicola Cucuzza, The Minoan Villa at Kannia: Preliminary Report on a New Project . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 309-318
Colin F. Macdonald, The Period XV (later 14th century BC) Pottery of Building 4 at Palaikastro, East Crete . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 319-334
Melissa Eaby, A Preliminary Report on Unit A.2 at Chalasmenos . . . 335-350 Carol Hershenson, The Expression of Social Differentiation across Time: A Diachronic Study of Minoan Halls . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 351-364
Andrea Vianello, Minoan foundation deposits of palatial period . . . 365-373
Χριστίνα Παπαδάκη, Αποθέτες θεμελίωσης: εννοιολογικός προσδιορισμός και σημασία για τη λειτουργία της ζωής των κοινοτήτων κατά τη 2η χιλιετία π.Χ., στην Κρήτη . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 375-385
Φλάβιο Ζανόν, Οι κλίμακες σχεδιασμού στο «Μινωικό Ανάκτορο» και στα περιφερειακά μνημεία του αρχαιολογικού χώρου της Κνωσού . . . . . 387-396
Ιωάννα Σερπετσιδάκη, Νεότερη ανασκαφική έρευνα στον νεολιθικό Κατσαμπά . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 397-409

Newly added to Orbis Biblicus et Orientalis Online, 20 July 2018

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Newly added to Orbis Biblicus et Orientalis Online. There are 268 volumes of this series now online open access.  
Mohamed, Zeinab Sayed (2004). Festvorbereitungen: Die administrativen und ökonomischen Grundlagen altägyptischer Feste. Fribourg, Switzerland / Göttingen, Germany: Academic Press / Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht.
Flückiger-Hawker, Esther (1999). Urnamma of Ur in Sumerian Literary Tradition. Fribourg, Switzerland / Göttingen, Germany: University Press / Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht.
Lafont, Sophie (1999). Femmes, Droit et Justice dans l'Antiquité orientale: Contribution à l'étude du droit pénal au Proche-Orient ancien. Fribourg, Switzerland / Göttingen, Germany: Éditions Universitaires / Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht.

 



Open Access Journal: The Silk Road: The journal of the Silk road Foundation

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[First posted in AWOL  11 December 2009. Updated 20 July 2018]

The Silk Road: The journal of the Silk road Foundation
ISSN: 2153-2060
http://www.silk-road.com/newsletter/vol10/images/coverforvol10thumb.jpg
Our journal is dedicated to public education about the history and cultures of Eurasia, especially in pre-modern times. While we invoke the historic "Silk Road" in our title, our view of the Silk Roads is an expansive one, encompassing pre-history, the era beginning with the establishment of trans-Eurasian trade and cultural interaction some two millennia ago, and the subsequent history of those interactions down through the centuries. Modern evocations of cultural traditions are of interest, especially in the areas which historically have been the domain of pastoral nomads. We publish articles by well known scholars and those who have other expertise on the regions and material of interest. Where possible we are communicating the results of the latest research, including new archaeological investigations. The journal also serves as the means to alert readers about upcoming programs connected with Silk Road topics.
Note: Volume 15 (2017) of The Silk Road is the last one that will be printed in hard copy at the same time it is posted on-line at the Silkroad Foundation website. The electronic publication of the journal will continue at The Silk Road , which already has an archive of all the volumes of the journal to date and links to all the individual articles. All future submissions for the journal should be sent to the new editor, Prof. Justin Jacobs, whose contact information is posted on that website.
All the earlier volumes of the journal are now archived, with links to individual articles, at Issues. All future numbers of the journal will be found there.

    Open Access Journal: Ancient Narrative

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    [First posted in AWOL 11 March 2013, updated 20 July 2018]

    Ancient Narrative
    Online ISSN: 1568-3532
    Print ISSN: 1568-3540

     Page Header
    As the name Ancient Narrative indicates, the areas of interest of the new journal are: Greek, Roman, Jewish novelistic traditions, including novels proper, the "fringe", as well as the fragments; narrative texts of the Byzantine age, early Christian narrative texts - and the reception of these works in modern literature, film and music. Ancient Narrative encourages approaches which range from editorial and philological work on these texts, and literary-theoretical studies, to theological, sociological, cultural and anthropological approaches. No particular area or methodology is preferred. The audience of our journal will thus comprise not only those who are working mainly in classical or religious studies, but all those who are interested in the birth and development of narrative fiction in all its aspects, from antiquity to the modern times.

    Ancient Narrative (AN) is first and foremost an electronic journal, in which selected articles will be discussed during a period of several months. At the end of the year the authors have the opportunity to revise their articles. A volume containing all revised articles of the past year will appear both in print and on the website.
    AN also publishes special, theme-oriented issues. Your suggestions for such issues are very welcome.

    AN is the electronic continuation of the Petronian Society Newsletter (ed. Gareth Schmeling) and the Groningen Colloquia on the Novel (eds. Heinz Hofmann and Maaike Zimmerman). Therefore, AN will, besides full articles, publish bibliographical information as well as brief notes on relevant subjects. The editors will also invite specialists for reviews, which will be published in the electronic journal and in the annual printed volume of AN.

    2018


    2017

    ANS 22 Xenophon’s Ephesiaca

    Xenophon’s EphesiacaA Paraliterary Love-Story from the Ancient World
    Ancient Narrative Supplements 22
    Aldo Tagliabue

    2016

    ANS 21 From Bedroom to Courtroom

    From Bedroom to Courtroom
    Law and Justice in the Greek Novel
    Ancient Narrative Supplements 21
    Saundra Schwartz

    2015

    ANS 20 Philosophy and the Ancient Novel

    Philosophy and the Ancient Novel
    Ancient Narrative Supplements 20
    Edited by Marí­lia P. Futre Pinheiro and Silvia Montiglio

    ANS 19 Holy Men and Charlatans in the Ancient Novel

    Holy Men and Charlatans in the Ancient Novel
    Ancient Narrative Supplements 19
    Edited by Stelios Panayotakis, Gareth Schmeling, and Michael Paschalis

    2014

    ANS 18 The Ancient Novel and the Frontiers of Genre

    The Ancient Noveland the Frontiers of Genre
    Ancient Narrative Supplements 18
    Edited by Marí­lia P. Futre Pinheiro, Gareth Schmeling, and Edmund P. Cueva

    2013

    ANS 17 The Construction of the Real and the Ideal…

    The Construction of the Real and the Ideal in the Ancient Novel
    Ancient Narrative Supplements 17
    Edited by Michel Paschalis and Stelios Panayotakis

    2012

    ANS 16 The Ancient Novel and Early Chr. and Jewish Narrative

    The Ancient Novel and Early Christian and Jewish Narrative: Fictional Intersections
    Ancient Narrative Supplements 16
    Marí­lia P. Futre Pinheiro, Judith Perkins, Richard Pervo (Eds.)

    ANS 15 The Alexander Romance in Persia and the East

    The Alexander Romance in Persia and the East
    Ancient Narrative Supplements 15
    Richard Stoneman, Kyle Erickson, Ian Netton (Eds.)

    2011

    ANS 14.2 Fictional Traces 2

    Fictional Traces: Receptions of the Ancient Novel Volume 2
    Ancient Narrative Supplements 14.2
    Marí­lia P. Futre Pinheiro and Stephen J. Harrison (eds.)

    ANS 14.1 Fictional Traces 1

    Fictional Traces: Receptions of the Ancient Novel Volume 1
    Ancient Narrative Supplements 14.1
    Marí­lia P. Futre Pinheiro and Stephen J. Harrison (eds.)

    ANS 13 Echoing Narratives

    Echoing Narratives: Studies of Intertextuality in Greek and Roman Prose Fiction
    Ancient Narrative Supplements 13
    Konstantin Doulamis (ed.)


    2009

    AN 7

    2009

    ANS 12 Readers and Writers in the Ancient Novel

    Readers and Writers in the Ancient Novel
    Ancient Narrative Supplements 12
    Michael Paschalis, Stelios Panayotakis, Gareth Schmeling (eds.)FREE

    2008

    ANS 11 Paideia at Play

    Paideia at Play: Learning and Wit in Apuleius
    Supplements 11
    Werner Riess (ed.)FREE

    2007

    ANS 10 Philosophical Presences in the Ancient Novel

    Philosophical Presences in the Ancient Novel
    Ancient Narrative Supplements 10
    J.R. Morgan, Meriel Jones (eds.)FREE

    ANS 9 Greek Identity and the Athenian Past in Chariton

    Greek Identity and the Athenian Past in Chariton:
    The Romance of Empire
    Ancient Narrative Supplements 9
    Steven D. SmithFREE

    ANS 8 The Greek and the Roman Novel: Parallel Readings

    The Greek and the Roman Novel: Parallel Readings
    Ancient Narrative Supplements 8
    Michael Paschalis, Stavros Frangoulidis, Stephen Harrison, Maaike Zimmerman (eds.)FREE

    ANS 7 Seeing Tongues, Hearing Scripts

    Seeing Tongues, Hearing Scripts: Orality and Representation in the Ancient Novel
    Ancient Narrative Supplements 7
    Victoria Rimell (ed.)FREE

    2006

    ANS 6 Lectiones Scrupulosae

    Lectiones Scrupulosae: Essays on the Text and Interpretation of Apuleius' Metamorphoses in Honour of Maaike Zimmerman
    Ancient Narrative Supplements 6
    W.H. Keulen, R.R. Nauta, S. Panayotakis (eds.)FREE

    ANS 5 Authors, Authority, and Interpreters in the Ancient Novel

    Authors, Authority, and Interpreters in the Ancient Novel: Essays in Honor of Gareth L. Schmeling
    Ancient Narrative Supplements 5
    Shannon N. Byrne, Edmund P. Cueva, Jean Alvares (eds.)FREE

    2005

    ANS 4 Metaphor and the Ancient Novel

    Metaphor and the Ancient Novel
    Ancient Narrative Supplements 4
    Stephen Harrison, Michael Paschalis, Stavros Frangoulidis (eds.)FREE

    ANS 3 The Bakhtin Circle and Ancient Narrative

    The Bakhtin Circle and Ancient Narrative
    Ancient Narrative Supplements 3
    R. Bracht Branham (ed.)FREE

    2004

    ANS 2 The Recollections of Encolpius

    The Recollections of Encolpius: The Satyrica of Petronius as Milesian Fiction
    Ancient Narrative Supplements 2
    Gottskálk JenssonFREE


    2002

    PSN 31

    ANS 1 Space in the Ancient Novel

    Space in the Ancient Novel
    Ancient Narrative Supplements 1
    Michael Paschalis, Stavros Frangoulidis (eds.)FREE



    Open Access Monograph Series: Ancient Narrative Supplementum

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    [First posted in AWOL 18 June 2015, updated 20 July 2018] 


    Ancient Narrative Supplementum
    ISSN: 1568-3540
    Page Header
    Ancient Narrative publishes regular volumes and supplements, which appear both in print and online. AN is published continuously, not in separate issues, but after the end of the year a volume containing all articles of the past year will appear simultaneously in print and on this website.
    Fully open access volumes 1-10, partially open access volumes 11 ff.

    2017

    ANS 22 Xenophon’s Ephesiaca

    Xenophon’s EphesiacaA Paraliterary Love-Story from the Ancient World
    Ancient Narrative Supplements 22
    Aldo Tagliabue

    2016

    ANS 21 From Bedroom to Courtroom

    From Bedroom to Courtroom
    Law and Justice in the Greek Novel
    Ancient Narrative Supplements 21
    Saundra Schwartz

    2015

    ANS 20 Philosophy and the Ancient Novel

    Philosophy and the Ancient Novel
    Ancient Narrative Supplements 20
    Edited by Marí­lia P. Futre Pinheiro and Silvia Montiglio

    ANS 19 Holy Men and Charlatans in the Ancient Novel

    Holy Men and Charlatans in the Ancient Novel
    Ancient Narrative Supplements 19
    Edited by Stelios Panayotakis, Gareth Schmeling, and Michael Paschalis

    2014

    ANS 18 The Ancient Novel and the Frontiers of Genre

    The Ancient Noveland the Frontiers of Genre
    Ancient Narrative Supplements 18
    Edited by Marí­lia P. Futre Pinheiro, Gareth Schmeling, and Edmund P. Cueva

    2013

    ANS 17 The Construction of the Real and the Ideal…

    The Construction of the Real and the Ideal in the Ancient Novel
    Ancient Narrative Supplements 17
    Edited by Michel Paschalis and Stelios Panayotakis

    2012

    ANS 16 The Ancient Novel and Early Chr. and Jewish Narrative

    The Ancient Novel and Early Christian and Jewish Narrative: Fictional Intersections
    Ancient Narrative Supplements 16
    Marí­lia P. Futre Pinheiro, Judith Perkins, Richard Pervo (Eds.)

    ANS 15 The Alexander Romance in Persia and the East

    The Alexander Romance in Persia and the East
    Ancient Narrative Supplements 15
    Richard Stoneman, Kyle Erickson, Ian Netton (Eds.)

    2011

    ANS 14.2 Fictional Traces 2

    Fictional Traces: Receptions of the Ancient Novel Volume 2
    Ancient Narrative Supplements 14.2
    Marí­lia P. Futre Pinheiro and Stephen J. Harrison (eds.)

    ANS 14.1 Fictional Traces 1

    Fictional Traces: Receptions of the Ancient Novel Volume 1
    Ancient Narrative Supplements 14.1
    Marí­lia P. Futre Pinheiro and Stephen J. Harrison (eds.)

    ANS 13 Echoing Narratives

    Echoing Narratives: Studies of Intertextuality in Greek and Roman Prose Fiction
    Ancient Narrative Supplements 13
    Konstantin Doulamis (ed.)


    2009

    ANS 12 Readers and Writers in the Ancient Novel

    Readers and Writers in the Ancient Novel
    Ancient Narrative Supplements 12
    Michael Paschalis, Stelios Panayotakis, Gareth Schmeling (eds.)FREE

    2008

    ANS 11 Paideia at Play

    Paideia at Play: Learning and Wit in Apuleius
    Supplements 11
    Werner Riess (ed.)FREE

    2007

    ANS 10 Philosophical Presences in the Ancient Novel

    Philosophical Presences in the Ancient Novel
    Ancient Narrative Supplements 10
    J.R. Morgan, Meriel Jones (eds.)FREE

    ANS 9 Greek Identity and the Athenian Past in Chariton

    Greek Identity and the Athenian Past in Chariton:
    The Romance of Empire
    Ancient Narrative Supplements 9
    Steven D. SmithFREE

    ANS 8 The Greek and the Roman Novel: Parallel Readings

    The Greek and the Roman Novel: Parallel Readings
    Ancient Narrative Supplements 8
    Michael Paschalis, Stavros Frangoulidis, Stephen Harrison, Maaike Zimmerman (eds.)FREE

    ANS 7 Seeing Tongues, Hearing Scripts

    Seeing Tongues, Hearing Scripts: Orality and Representation in the Ancient Novel
    Ancient Narrative Supplements 7
    Victoria Rimell (ed.)FREE

    2006

    ANS 6 Lectiones Scrupulosae

    Lectiones Scrupulosae: Essays on the Text and Interpretation of Apuleius' Metamorphoses in Honour of Maaike Zimmerman
    Ancient Narrative Supplements 6
    W.H. Keulen, R.R. Nauta, S. Panayotakis (eds.)FREE

    ANS 5 Authors, Authority, and Interpreters in the Ancient Novel

    Authors, Authority, and Interpreters in the Ancient Novel: Essays in Honor of Gareth L. Schmeling
    Ancient Narrative Supplements 5
    Shannon N. Byrne, Edmund P. Cueva, Jean Alvares (eds.)

    2005

    ANS 4 Metaphor and the Ancient Novel

    Metaphor and the Ancient Novel
    Ancient Narrative Supplements 4
    Stephen Harrison, Michael Paschalis, Stavros Frangoulidis (eds.)FREE

    ANS 3 The Bakhtin Circle and Ancient Narrative

    The Bakhtin Circle and Ancient Narrative
    Ancient Narrative Supplements 3
    R. Bracht Branham (ed.)

    2004

    ANS 2 The Recollections of Encolpius

    The Recollections of Encolpius: The Satyrica of Petronius as Milesian Fiction
    Ancient Narrative Supplements 2
    Gottskálk JenssonFREE

    2002

    ANS 1 Space in the Ancient Novel

    Space in the Ancient Novel
    Ancient Narrative Supplements 1
    Michael Paschalis, Stavros Frangoulidis (eds.)FREE

      Open Access Journal: The Petronian Society Newsletter

      Open Access Journal: Acta Centri Lucusiensis

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      Acta Centri Lucusiensis 
      ISSN: 2343-8266
      ISSN-L: 2343-8266
      Acasă
      Revista Acta Centri Lucusiensis (ACL) este publicaţia ştiinţifică de prezentare în formulă editorială a activităţii de cercetare desfăşurate, cu prioritate, în cadrul şi/sau sub sigla CSDR Lucus. Revista poate găzdui şi articole ale unor colaboratori externi, la propunerea acestora sau la solicitarea redacţiei, în condiţiile de abordare tematică, redactare şi deontologie ştiinţifică stabilite pentru toţi autorii.

      Ritmul de editare al revistei este semestrial – pentru versiunea electronică, respectiv, anual - pentru versiunea print, care reuneşte şi dezvoltă cele două ediţii electronice ale anului. Pentru numărul aferent semestrului I, termenul de apariție este 15-31 iulie, iar pentru numărul aferent semestrului II, termenul de apariție este 15-31 ianuarie al anului următor. Subiectele generice pentru modulele tematice (valabile pentru toate ediţiile revistei din anul următor) vor fi anunţate de secretariatul redacţional până la 1 decembrie. Modulele tematice nu sunt exclusive, fiind admise spre publicare şi articole cu subiecte terţe.
      ACL nr. 5B/2017

      ACL nr. 5B/2017

      Numărul 5B/2017 al revistei științifice Acta Centri Lucusiensis, editată de Centrul de Studii DacoRomanistice Lucus, a fost validat în ședința Colegiului de redacție din 28 ianuarie 2018, desfășurată sub prezidiul prof. univ. dr. Dan Negrescu.
      Detalii »



      Open Access Journal: Agora: Les comptes rendus de Gaia


      Open Access Journal: Auster

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      Auster

      ISSN 2346-8890



      Número actual

      Núm. 22 (2017)


      Open Access Journal: BYZANTINA: Annual review of the Centre for Byzantine Research, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki

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      BYZANTINA: Annual review of the Centre for Byzantine Research, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki
      ISSN: 1105-0772
      Byzantina is a scientific journal published annually since 1969 by the Centre for Byzantine Research of the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki. Members of the Editorial Board are the members of the Administrative Board of the Centre. Byzantina will be also published on-line beginning from 2012. The journal publishes original essays on Byzantine Litterature, History, Archaeology and History of Art, Theology and Roman and Byzantine Law, in Greek, English, French, German and Italian.
      The papers submitted will be reviewed by a Scientific Committee. Authors must submit their contributions in accordance to the regulations established by the Editorial Board. Those which will be approved will be uploaded as pdf-files.































      Open Access Journal: Vetus Testamentum et Hellas

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      Vetus Testamentum et Hellas 
      e-ISSN: 2459-2552
      Journal Homepage Image
      VTeH is the first academic journal in Greece focused on Οld Testament and Septuagint Studies and their interaction with Ancient Greek language and thought. It publishes lectures of international scholars given at the School of Pastoral and Social Theology, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, as well as peer-reviewed contributions to the Septuagint in relation to pre- and post-septuagintal Greek literature and culture. It also aims to challenge original research and to contribute to the international discussion on the method of Old Testament and Septuagint Exegesis and Theology.



      2014

      Vol 1 (2014)

      Open Access Journal: Commentaria Classica: Studi di filologia greca e latina

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       [First posted in AWOL 20 July 2016, updated 23 July 2018]

      Commentaria Classica: Studi di filologia greca e latina
      ISSN: 2283-5652

      “Commentaria Classica” persegue una politica di Open Access: tutti i suoi contenuti sono liberamente e gratuitamente disponibili. Senza richiedere il permesso all’editore o all’autore, gli utenti possono leggere, scaricare, copiare, distribuire o stampare i testi integrali degli articoli; possono compiervi delle ricerche, creare dei collegamenti a essi o usarli per qualsiasi altro scopo che non sia a fini di lucro. Ciò è in accordo con la definizione BOAI di accesso aperto.
       
      “Commentaria Classica” non richiede il pagamento né per l’accettazione degli articoli né per la loro revisione e pubblicazione.

      Gli studiosi che pubblicano in questo periodico mantengono i propri diritti d’autore.

      Scopo del periodico è la pubblicazione di contributi originali nel campo della filologia greca e latina.
      Volumipubblicati
      I - 2014
      II - 2015
      III - 2016
      IV - 2017

      Open Access Journal: Dionysius

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      Dionysius
      ISSN: 0705-1085
      Dionysius is the journal of Dalhousie University's Department of Classics and reflects the established character of its work. It publishes articles on the history of ancient philosophy and theology, including Patristic theology, and their nachleben. It has a special interest in the Aristotelian and Neoplatonic traditions.
      Dionysius considers philosophy's relation, both negative and positive, to Christian belief in both ancient and modern times. As well as philosophical articles, Dionysius will publish articles on Classical and later literature and history, and on Hellenic, Christian, Jewish and Islamic religion, especially when they have a connection to philosophical questions.
      The current five years (2012-2016) are available by subscription only.  Please contact the Department of Classics (claswww@dal.ca) to subscribe.  Previous issues may be read without subscription simply by registering and then logging in.


      2015

      Cover Page

      Vol 33 (2015)

      The Creation of Pandora
      http://www.theoi.com/Gallery/T22.1.html































      1977

      Vol 1 (1977) 


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