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Open Access Oriental Institute Nubian Expedition Publications

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 [First posted in AWOL 31 March 2014, updated 25 September 2018]

 Oriental Institute Nubian Expedition Publications

The Oriental Institute Nubian Expedition

The Oriental Institute has had a long history of research in ancient Nubia.Oriental Institute Founder, James Henry Breasted traveled to southern Egypt and northern Sudan in 1905-07, to document ancient Egyptian and Nubian monuments. A selection of the Breasted Expedition photographs was exhibited in the Oriental Institute Museum in 2006. In addition to this early work by our founder, between 1960 and 1968 the Oriental Institute participated in the international archaeological campaign organized by UNESCO in the areas threatened by the construction of the Aswan High Dam. Nine volumes of final reports have been published. The Robert F. Picken Family Nubia Gallery, which opened in 2006, displays some of the approximately 15,000 objects brought back to the Oriental Institute as a result of the work in the 1960s.
The return of the Oriental Institute to Nubia began in 2006 with a preliminary reconnaissance trip to evaluate the possibility of participating in an archaeological salvage project in Sudan. The Merowe Dam Project at the 4th Cataract of the Nile, upon its completion in 2008, flooded an area of approximately 100 miles in the Nile Valley. Between January and March 2007, the Oriental Institute joined international teams in the 4th Cataract region in archaeological investigation of the area, an area that had, prior to the salvage project, received virtually no attention.
Oriental Institute excavations in the 4th Cataract were supported by the Packard Humanities Institute and National Geographic.

The Nubia Salvage Project





INTRODUCTION

The Oriental Institute participated in the UNESCO international salvage excavation project in the reservoir area of the Aswan High Dam in Upper Egypt in 1960-64. The project was directed by Keith Seele, Professor of Egyptology at the Institute. The expedition was based on the former Cook tourist boat "Fostat", accompanied by another houseboat, the "Barbara", a tug boat, and a motor launch, all purchased and modified to provide mobile housing, laboratories and storage space. In the first season the project produced an epigraphic record of the Beit El-Wali Temple, near the High Dam. In subsequent seasons the expedition moved its little fleet up the Nile to a new concession between the temples at Abu Simbel and the border of the Sudanese Republic. Excavations were conducted in a monastery, at habitation sites, and in a number of cemeteries extending for miles along both banks of the Nile. These excavations contributed information on every period of Egyptian Nubia from the Old Kingdom through Coptic times.
After the death of Professor Seele in 1971, the Institute initiated a project to complete the publication of the results of the Egyptian Nubia excavations. The publication project was entrusted to Bruce Williams, Ph.D., a graduate of the University of Chicago in Egyptology. The first two volumes were published before Williams was assigned to the project. Since then Williams has completed eight monumental monographs (1986-93) that will stand as the fundamental sources for the archaeology and history of Egyptian Nubia. Williams is currently working on two additional volumes. Another two volumes are also in preparation by collaborators, including one Ph.D. dissertation. Williams has devoted his entire academic career to the Nubia publications. His dedication is admirable and the Institute takes pride in the fact that the Nubia publication project is near completion.
Because the Nubian expedition was a part of the UNESCO salvage project, the Egyptian Government granted export license for a large collection of objects recovered by the expedition. These artifacts are now a part of the perminent collection of the Institute and will serve as a valuable resource for generations of scholars as new questions are raised and new techniques of analysis are introduced. Two museum exhibitions of Nubian materials from the collection have been mounted; one of magnificent textiles at the Art Institute, and a fine educational exhibition in the Oriental Institute Museum. The exhibit in our museum, Vanished Kingdoms of the Nile: The Recovery of Ancient Nubia, attracted many enthuiastic new visitors to the museum and received a "Superior Achievement" award from the Congress of Illinois Historical Societies and Museums in 1992, as well as considerable press coverage, including a favorable review in the New York Times.
The Oriental Institute has had a long history of research in ancient Nubia.Oriental Institute Founder, James Henry Breasted traveled to southern Egypt and northern Sudan in 1905-07, to document ancient Egyptian and Nubian monuments. A selection of the Breasted Expedition photographs was exhibited in the Oriental Institute Museum in 2006. In addition to this early work by our founder, between 1960 and 1968 the Oriental Institute participated in the international archaeological campaign organized by UNESCO in the areas threatened by the construction of the Aswan High Dam. Nine volumes of final reports have been published. The Robert F. Picken Family Nubia Gallery, which opened in 2006, displays some of the approximately 15,000 objects brought back to the Oriental Institute as a result of the work in the 1960s.

The return of the Oriental Institute to Nubia began in 2006 with a preliminary reconnaissance trip to evaluate the possibility of participating in an archaeological salvage project in Sudan. The Merowe Dam Project at the 4th Cataract of the Nile, upon its completion in 2008, flooded an area of approximately 100 miles in the Nile Valley. Between January and March 2007, the Oriental Institute joined international teams in the 4th Cataract region in archaeological investigation of the area, an area that had, prior to the salvage project, received virtually no attention.

Oriental Institute excavations in the 4th Cataract were supported by the Packard Humanities Institute and National Geographic.

2007 Excavations

2008 Excavations

Reports in the Oriental Institute Annual Report
2016-2017
Oriental Institute Nubian Expedition (OINE). Lisa Heidorn, Bruce B. Williams and Artur Obłuski
2015-2016
Oriental Institute Nubian Expedition (OINE). Lisa Heidorn, Artur Obłuski, Alexandros Tsakos, Dobrochna Zielińska, Grażyna Zofia Żukowska, Barbara Wagner, Olga Syta, Bruce Williams, Donald Whitcomb, Tasha Vorderstrasse, and Carol Meyer
2014-2015
Oriental Institute Nubian Expedition (OINE). Bruce B. Williams, Lisa Heidorn, Alexander Tsakos, and Joanna Then-Obłuska
2013-2014
Oriental Institute Nubian Expedition (OINE). Bruce B. Williams and Lisa Heidorn
2012-2013
Oriental Institute Nubian Expedition (OINE). Bruce B. Williams
2011-2012
Oriental Institute Nubian Expedition (OINE). Bruce Williams
Oriental Institute Nubian Expedition (OINE) [All available for open access download]
 
And for an up to date list of all Oriental Institute publications available online see

Peshdar Plain Project Publications

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Peshdar Plain Project Publications
Radner, Karen; Kreppner, Florian Janoscha; Squitieri, Andrea (eds.) (September 2018): The Dinka Settlement Complex 2017: The Final Season at Gird-i Bazar and First Work in the Lower Town.Peshdar Plain Project Publications, Vol. 3. Gladbeck: PeWe-Verlag. [PDF, 180MB]

Radner, Karen; Kreppner, Florian Janoscha; Squitieri, Andrea (eds.) (August 2017): Unearthing the Dinka Settlement Complex: The 2016 Season at Gird-i Bazar and Qalat-i Dinka.Peshdar Plain Project Publications, Vol. 2. Gladbeck: PeWe-Verlag. [PDF, 158MB]

Radner, Karen; Kreppner, Florian Janoscha; Squitieri, Andrea (eds.) (August 2016): Exploring the Neo-Assyrian Frontier with Western Iran: The 2015 Season at Gird-i Bazar and Qalat-i Dinka.Peshdar Plain Project Publications, Vol. 1. Gladbeck: PeWe-Verlag. [PDF, 10MB]







Open Access Journal: Amirani: Journal of the International Caucasological Research Institute

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 [First posted in AWOL 21 January 2010, Updated 26 September 2018]

Amirani: Journal of the International Caucasological Research Institute
(= Amirani : Kavkasiologiis Saert'ašoriso Samec'niero-Kvlevit'i Sazogadoebrivi Institutis moambe = Amirani : Mitteilungsblatt des Internationalen Kaukasiologischen Gesellschaftlichen Forschungsinstitutes)
ISSN: 1512-0449
The ICRI publishes the journal of Caucasology, entitled Amirani. Articles concerning the peoples, cultures and languages of the Caucasus, from the perspective of any of the humanities or social sciences, will be considered for publication. The articles may be written in English, French, Georgian, German, Russian, or any other language accessible to a significant number of Caucasologists.
There is Thousands of years of history to this region, with further studies continuously taking place which concern its people and culture. This journal aims to be a useful source for anyone looking to pursue an online education in the field of Caucasology. Through the Institutes commitment to establishing international and academic contacts, we are able to collate some of the most valuable articles on this subject.
By having each volume of Amirani available online, it vastly increases the accessibility of these materials to those who are interested in this particular topic. Its also invites those who have already gained completed significant studies on the Caucasus region to submit relevant and scholarly articles for publication. Archived articles are also available on this website, as is information on events of interest and other information-sharing activities.

Piggin's Library of Latin Diagrams

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Piggin's Library of Latin Diagrams

Presentation Rules

This style guide is all about how visual browsers can display different genres of text for the greatest readability. Its focus is on the architecture of information, and useful ways to categorize and label it as early as possible when building a site.
The emphasis here is on the macro-typography, the sort of thing that people who code HTML call "block-level" content, such as paragraphs, lists, tables and headings, but some attention will also be paid to micro-typography.
The distinction between micro- and macro-typography was popularized by the book designer Jost Hochuli and is now a commonplace in the German-speaking countries. Whereas micro-typography involves lettering— designing, choosing and mixing fonts, spacing letters and punctuating words— macro-typography is the business of laying out bodies of text in logical and pleasing patterns: distributing blank space, choosing colours and conveying meaning by proper arrangement.
We rarely give thought to the role of presentation as a conveyor of meaning, yet we expect in almost every act of reading that certain rules will be respected: that paragraphs will group together ideas; that a change of speaker in a dialogue will be marked by starting on a new line; that items in a list will be logically parallel to one another.
We see and draw meaning from presentation before our eyes can even resolve the individual words. Cast onto a table, a letter is usually recognizable from 10 metres away for what it is: the salutation and signature have a certain standard location, and when we pick up the letter in our hands, they provide the entry points with which we usually begin: to whom? from whom?
12345

Introduction
Poetry
Footnotes
Glosses
Deeds
History

Antiquity

Open Access Journal: Bulletin of the Israeli Academic Center in Cairo

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Bulletin of the Israeli Academic Center in Cairo
In 1982, following the Israel-Egypt peace treaty signed three years earlier, the Academy established the Israeli Academic Center in Cairo, an initiative of Israeli universities and the Israel Oriental Society, in a bid to advance bi-national cultural and academic ties. 
 The Academy is responsible for the Center’s operation, which is financially supported by the Planning and Budgeting Committee (PBC) of Israel’s Council for Higher Education.
 
The Center’s primary mission is to strengthen connections between universities and scholars in Egypt and Israel, assist scholars from each country to access sources in the other, and foster joint research. It offers Egyptian scholars and students, mainly in the fields of Hebrew language and literature and Judaic studies, use of its library and lectures by Israeli academics and is a point of contact for Israeli researchers of Arab and Egyptian history and culture. The library is being continuously expanded by the Center’s staff. Researchers from both countries have also received scholarships to enable visits to the other country.
 
Great efforts have been invested to keep the Center operational regardless of the region’s current tumultuous political climate.
Publication ceased. Thew following issues remain accessible.


See AWOL's full List of Open Access Journals in Ancient Studies






Open Access Journal: L’Année épigraphique

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L’Année épigraphique
ISSN: 0066-2348
ISSN en ligne: 2492-0509 
L’Année épigraphique (citée AE) est une publication annuelle qui fournit une analyse critique des inscriptions grecques et latines et des études fondées sur l’épigraphie relatives à l’Antiquité romaine, publiées au cours de l’année de référence de la publication. Ces inscriptions (développées et restituées) et ces études y sont présentées sous une forme ordonnée (selon la géographie administrative de l’empire romain) et sont assorties d’indices hiérarchisés. Ainsi AE 2011 a été imprimée en août 2014 et AE 2012 en août 2015. AE 2013 est en préparation. 

L’Année épigraphique est un instrument de travail mis à la disposition de la communauté scientifique internationale depuis plus d’un siècle. Fondée en effet en 1888 par René Cagnat et dirigée depuis février 1992 par Mireille Corbier, L’Année épigraphique est rédigée et mise au point par une équipe internationale de chercheurs, philologues et historiens, recrutés pour leurs compétences et pour la complémentarité de leurs spécialisations, qui produisent un ouvrage original, dans lequel ils investissent un savoir accumulé en épigraphie et en histoire des sociétés anciennes (voir le site www.anneeepigraphique.msh-paris.fr). 

Depuis AE 1991 (publiée en 1994) L’Année épigraphique fait une plus large place que par le passé aux inscriptions grecques relatives au monde romain (dont elle propose pour les plus longues d’entre elles une traduction), aux inscriptions chrétiennes et aux inscriptions liées à la vie quotidienne (graffiti, textes sur instrumentum). L'indexation des données, réalisée par les rédacteurs des notices, facilite leur identification et leur utilisation. 

Le volume annuel, imprimé et diffusé par les PUF, propriétaires de l’entière collection, est vendu par abonnement ou à l’unité. Des versions numériques sont proposées sur les plateformes JSTOR et CAIRN.INFO. 

Liste des numéros


couverture de L'Année épigraphique 2014
2017/1 (année 2014)

L'Année épigraphique 2014

Sommaire

Page 5 à 5

Ce fascicule a été rédigé et mis au point par…

Page 7 à 8

Avant-propos

Page 15 à 15

Signes diacritiques

Notices 1 à 114
Page 17 à 101

Généralités

Notices 115 à 250
Page 103 à 146

Rome

Notices 251 à 531
Page 147 à 245

Italie

Notices 532 à 548
Page 247 à 254

Îles tyrrhéniennes

Notices 549 à 777
Page 255 à 347

Provinces ibériques

Notices 778 à 823
Page 349 à 358

Bretagne

Notices 824 à 824
Page 359 à 360

Provinces alpines

Notices 825 à 895
Page 361 à 391

Gaules

Notices 896 à 952
Page 393 à 411

Germanies

Notices 953 à 1163
Page 413 à 489

Provinces danubiennes

Notices 1164 à 1216
Page 491 à 519

Provinces balkaniques

Notices 1217 à 1372
Page 521 à 602

Asie mineure

Notices 1373 à 1452
Page 603 à 642

Proche Orient

Notices 1453 à 1593
Page 643 à 712

Afrique

Notices 1594 à 1661
Page 713 à 747

Provenance inconnue

Page 749 à 752

Rédacteurs des notices

Page 753 à 768

Table des abréviations des recueils épigraphiques

Tables analytiques de L’Année épigraphique 2014

Page 769 à 769

Tables analytiques de L’Année épigraphique 2014

1° Périodiques, ouvrages, auteurs modernes

Page 770 à 772

A. — Périodiques

Page 773 à 782

B. — Ouvrages

Page 783 à 795

C. — Auteurs

2° Table des provenances

Page 796 à 805

Table des provenances et des sites étudiés

3° Table des matières

Page 806 à 826

I. — Noms (gentilices)

Page 826 à 847

II. — Surnoms (cognomina, noms uniques)

Page 847 à 848

III. — Tribus

Page 848 à 852

IV. — Dieux, déesses, héros

Page 852 à 860

V. — Prêtres et choses religieuses

Page 860 à 872

VI. — Noms géographiques

Page 872 à 886

VII. — Rois, empereurs, princes, princesses

Page 886 à 896

VIII. — Pouvoirs publics et administration romaine

Page 896 à 905

IX. – Corps de troupes

Page 905 à 915

X. — Administration provinciale et municipale

Page 915 à 918

XI. — Collèges et métiers

Page 918 à 922

XII. — Auteurs anciens

Page 923 à 965

XIII. — Particularités dignes d’être mentionnées

Page 965 à 997

XIV. — Concordances et références


couverture de L'Année épigraphique 2013
2016/1 (année 2013)

L'Année épigraphique 2013

couverture de L'Année épigraphique 2012
2015/1 (année 2012)

L'Année épigraphique 2012


couverture de L'Année épigraphique 2011
2014/1 (année 2011)

L'Année épigraphique 2011

couverture de L'Année épigraphique 2010
2013/1 (année 2010)

L'Année épigraphique 2010


couverture de L'Année épigraphique 2009
2012/1 (année 2009)

L'Année épigraphique 2009

couverture de L'Année épigraphique 2008
2011/1 (année 2008)

L'Année épigraphique 2008

couverture de L'Année épigraphique 2007
2010/1 (année 2007)

L'Année épigraphique 2007


Open Access Journal: News in Conservation

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[First posted in AWOL 7 April 2013, updated 27 September 2018]

News in Conservation
https://www.iiconservation.org/sites/default/themes/iic_main_dark/logo.png
News in Conservation (NiC) is the e-paper from IIC. Published electronically six times per year, it is delivered via an email alert to members and freely downloadable from the IIC website in open access. Together with delivering worldwide conservation and preservation news to our community, NiC is a vehicle to keep members informed of IIC activities and other news to share. NiC is an evolving project, one that exists thanks to the support of authors and writers that contribute articles and other informative material guaranteeing a steady flow of relevant content.
News in Conservation, Issue 67, August 2018
contributors, S. Grow; Vari, "News in Conservation, Issue 67, August 2018", News in Conservation, vol. 67, London, News in Conservation, International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works, 08/2018.
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News in Conservation, Issue 66, June 2018
Grow, S., and V. contributors, "News in Conservation, Issue 66, June 2018", News in Conservation, vol. 66, London, News in Conservation, International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works, , 06/2018.
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News in Conservation, April 2018
"News in Conservation, Issue 65 April 2018", News in Conservation, vol. 65, London, International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works, 04/2018.
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News in Conservation, February 2018
"News in Conservation, Issue 64 February 2018", News in Conservation, vol. 64, London, International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works, 02/2018.
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News in Conservation, December 2017
"News in Conservation", News in Conservation, vol. 63, London, International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works, 12/2017.
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News in Conservation, October 2017
"News in Conservation, October 2017", News in Conservation, vol. 62, London, International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works, 10/2017.
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News in Conservation, August 2017
"News in Conservation, August 2017", News in Conservation, vol. 61, London, International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works, 08/2017.
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News in Conservation, June 2017
"News in Conservation, June 2017", News in Conservation, vol. 60, London, International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works, 06/2017.
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"News in Conservation, April 2017", News in Conservation, vol. 59, London, International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works, 04/2017.
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News in Conservation, February 2017
"News in Conservation, February 2017", News in Conservation, vol. 58, London, International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works, 02/2017.
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News in Conservation, December 2016
"News in Conservation, December 2016", News in Conservation, vol. 57, London, International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works, 12/2016.
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News in Conservation, October 2016
"News in Conservation, October 2016", News in Conservation, vol. 56, London, International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works, 10/2016.
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News in Conservation, August 2016
"News in Conservation, August 2016", News in Conservation, vol. 55, London, International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works, 08/2016.
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News in Conservation, June 2016
"News in Conservation, June 2016", News in Conservation, vol. 54, London, International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works, 06/2016.
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News in Conservation, April 2016
"News in Conservation, April 2016", News in Conservation, vol. 53, London, International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works, 04/2016.
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News in Conservation, February 2016
"News in Conservation, February 2016", News in Conservation, vol. 52, London, International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works, 02/2016.
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News in Conservation, December 2015
"News in Conservation, December 2015", News in Conservation, vol. 51, London, International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works, 12/2015.
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News in Conservation, October 2015
"News in Conservation, October 2015", News in Conservation, vol. 50, London, International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works, 10/2015.
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News in Conservation, August 2015
"News in Conservation, August 2015", News in Conservation, vol. 49, London, International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works, 08/2015.
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News in Conservation, June 2015
"News in Conservation, June 2015", News in Conservation, vol. 48, London, International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works, 06/2015.
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News in Conservation, April 2015
"News in Conservation, April 2015", News in Conservation, vol. 47, London, International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works, 04/2015.
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News in Conservation, February 2015
"News in Conservation, February 2015", News in Conservation, vol. 46, London, International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works, 02/2015.
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News in Conservation, December 2014
"News in Conservation, December 2014", News in Conservation, vol. 45, London, International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works, 12/2014.
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News in Conservation, October 2014
"News in Conservation, October 2014", News in Conservation, vol. 44, London, International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works, 10/2014.
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News in Conservation, August 2014
"News in Conservation, August 2014", News in Conservation, vol. 43, London, International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works, 08/2014.
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News in Conservation, June 2014
"News in Conservation, June 2014", News in Conservation, vol. 42, London, International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works, 06/2014.
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News in Conservation, April 2014
"News in Conservation, April 2014", News in Conservation, vol. 41, London, International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works, 04/2014.
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"News in Conservation, February 2014", News in Conservation, vol. 40, London, International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works, 02/2014.
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Front page of December 2013 News in Conservation
"News in Conservation, December 2013", News in Conservation, vol. 39, London, International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works, 12/2013.
Front page of October 2013 News in Conservation
"News in Conservation, October 2013", News in Conservation, vol. 38, London, International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works, 10/2013.
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Front page of August 2013 News in Conservation
"News in Conservation, August 2013", News in Conservation, vol. 37, London, International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works, 08/2013.
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Front page of June 2013 News in Conservation
"News in Conservation, June 2013", News in Conservation, vol. 36, London, International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works, 06/2013.
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Front page of April 2013 News in Conservation
"News in Conservation, April 2013", News in Conservation, vol. 35, London, International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works, 04/2013.
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Front page of February 2013 News in Conservation
"News in Conservation, February 2013", News in Conservation, vol. 34, London, International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works, 02/2013.
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"News in Conservation, December 2012", News in Conservation, vol. 33, London, International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works, 12/2012.
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Front page of October 2012 NiC
"News in Conservation, October 2012", News in Conservation, vol. 32, London, International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works, 10/2012.
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Front page of August 2012 NiC
"News in Conservation, August 2012", News in Conservation, vol. 31, London, International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works, 08/2012.
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Front page of June 2012 NiC
"News in Conservation, June 2012", News in Conservation, vol. 30, London, International Institute for Historic and Artistic Works, 06/2012.
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Front page of April 2012 NiC
"News in Conservation, April 2012", News in Conservation, vol. 29, London, International Institute for Historic and Artistic Works, 04/2012.
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Front page of February 2012 NiC
"News in Conservation, February 2012", News in Conservation, vol. 28, London, International Institute for Historic and Artistic Works, 02/2012.
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Front page of December 2011 NiC
"News in Conservation, December 2011", News in Conservation, vol. 27, London, International Institute for Historic and Artistic Works, 12/2011.
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Front page of October 2011 NiC
"News in Conservation, October 2011", News in Conservation, vol. 26, London, International Institute for Historic and Artistic Works, 10/2011.
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Front page of August 2011 NiC
"News in Conservation, August 2011", News in Conservation, vol. 25, London, International Institute for Historic and Artistic Works, 08/2011.
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Front page of June 2011 NiC
"News in Conservation, June 2011", News in Conservation, vol. 24, London, International Institute for Historic and Artistic Works, 06/2011.
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Front page of April 2011 NiC
"News in Conservation, April 2011", News in Conservation, vol. 23, London, International Institute for Historic and Artistic Works, 04/2011.
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Front page of February 2011 NiC
"News in Conservation, February 2011", News in Conservation, vol. 22, London, International Institute for Historic and Artistic Works, 02/2011.
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Front page of December 2010 NiC
"News in Conservation, December 2010", News in Conservation, vol. 21, London, International Institute for Historic and Artistic Works, 12/2010.
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Front page of October 2010 NiC
"News in Conservation, October 2010", News in Conservation, vol. 20, London, International Institute for Historic and Artistic Works, 10/2010.
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Front page of August 2010 NiC
"News in Conservation, August 2010", News in Conservation, vol. 19, London, International Institute for Historic and Artistic Works, 08/2010.
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Front page of June 2010 NiC
"News in Conservation, June 2010", News in Conservation, vol. 18, London, International Institute for Historic and Artistic Works, 06/2010.
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Front page of April 2010 NiC
"News in Conservation, April 2010", News in Conservation, vol. 17, London, International Institute for Historic and Artistic Works, 04/2010.
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Front page of February 2010 NiC
"News in Conservation, February 2010", News in Conservation, vol. 16, London, International Institute for Historic and Artistic Works, 02/2010.
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Front page of December 2009 NiC
"News in Conservation, December 2009", News in Conservation, vol. 15, London, International Institute for Historic and Artistic Works, 12/2009.
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Front page of October 2009 NiC
"News in Conservation, October 2009", News in Conservation, vol. 14, London, International Institute for Historic and Artistic Works, 10/2009.
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Front page of August 2009 NiC
"News in Conservation, August 2009", News in Conservation, vol. 13, London, International Institute for Historic and Artistic Works, 08/2009.
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Front page of June 2009 NiC
"News in Conservation, June 2009", News in Conservation, vol. 12, London, International Institute for Historic and Artistic Works, 06/2009.
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Front page of April 2009 NiC
"News in Conservation, April 2009", News in Conservation, vol. 11, London, International Institute for Historic and Artistic Works, 04/2009.
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Front page of February 2009 NiC
"News in Conservation, February 2009", News in Conservation, vol. 10, London, International Institute for Historic and Artistic Works, 02/2009.
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Front page of December 2008 NiC
"News in Conservation, December 2008", News in Conservation, vol. 9, London, International Institute for Historic and Artistic Works, 12/2008.
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Front page of October 2008 NiC
"News in Conservation, October 2008", News in Conservation, vol. 8, London, International Institute for Historic and Artistic Works, 10/2008.
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Front page of August 2008 NiC
"News in Conservation, August 2008", News in Conservation, vol. 7, London, International Institute for Historic and Artistic Works, 08/2008.
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Front page of June 2008 NiC
"News in Conservation, June 2008", News in Conservation, vol. 6, London, International Institute for Historic and Artistic Works, 06/2008.
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Front page of April 2008 NiC
"News in Conservation, April 2008", News in Conservation, vol. 5, London, International Institute for Historic and Artistic Works, 04/2008.
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Front page of February 2008 NiC
"News in Conservation, February 2008", News in Conservation, vol. 4, London, International Institute for Historic and Artistic Works, 02/2008.
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Front page of December 2007 NiC
"News in Conservation, December 2007", News in Conservation, vol. 3, London, International Institute for Historic and Artistic Works, 12/2007.
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Front page of October 2007 NiC
"News in Conservation, October 2007", News in Conservation, vol. 2, London, International Institute for Historic and Artistic Works, 10/2007.
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Front page of August 2007 NiC
"News in Conservation, August 2007", News in Conservation, vol. 1, London, International Institute for Historic and Artistic Works, 08/2007.
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The Open Digital Archaeology Textbook

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The Open Digital Archaeology Textbook

notice

This volume goes hand-in-glove with a computational environnent that uses Jupyter Notebooks coupled with the Binder service as a way of serving and running the notebooks online in a browser. This relieves both instructors and students of the problems of installing software in different environments and the troubleshooting that this entails. Instead, students and instructors can concentrate on the learning and writing literate code that explores archaeological issues. To launch the ODATE notebooks, please go to the list of notebooks and hit the launch binder button. To examine or download the code, click the repository links instead.

THIS IS A DRAFT VERSION. The ‘Live’ version (or latest version) will always be at https://o-date.github.io/live/

Open Access Journal: Archaeologik

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[First posted in AWOL 1 December 2013, updated 27 September 2018]

Archaeologik
ISSN 2197-7283
Archaeologik ist ein Wissenschaftsblog zu Themen der Archäologie und des Kulturgutschutzes. Er zielt auf eine kritische Archäologie, die sich mit methodisch-theoretischen, wissenschaftspolitischen und gesellschaftlichen Aspekten der Archäologie auseinandersetzt und die alltägliche Forschungspraxis reflektiert.

Archaeologik is a science blog contributing to various aspects of critical archaeology and cultural heritage including methodology, theory and daily archaeological practice.

PADIS: Palestine Archaeological Databank and Information System

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[First posted in AWOL 10 August 2011. Updated 27 June 2018]

PADIS:  Palestine Archaeological Databank and Information System

http://www.lasapienzatojericho.it/padis/templates/68portal/images/topmod.png

A tool for protection, study and valorization of the Archaeological Heritage of Palestine

  • A coherent organization of archaeological and topographical data from Palestine.
  • An interactive databank created to prompt the safeguard of archaeological and historical sites and as scientific and practical tool for the protection, study and cultural valorization.
  • A database including satellite images, aerial photos, excavation photos, topographic maps, and updated bibliographic references, expandable with the cooperation of Palestinian scholars and institutions.

Hittite Divine Names. Version 0.2

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Hittite Divine Names

Version 0.2

Concept:

Hittite Divine Names (HDN) is an open, collaborative, flexible, and in-progress digital database of the divine names attested in the Hittite written sources. The database pursues two goals. On the one side, it aims at providing an update to van Gessel’s Onomasticon of the Hittite Pantheon (1998, 2001). On the other side, it is conceived as a tool for quantitative analysis in the frame of a broader study on selected aspects of Hittite religion. Together with the related database Hittite Personal Names, HDN has been conceived and initiated by M. Cammarosanoin 2016 within the DFG-funded research project Hittite Local Cults.

Now available: Corpus Scriptorum Ecclesiasticorum Latinorum (CSEL)

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Corpus Scriptorum Ecclesiasticorum Latinorum (CSEL)
This repository hosts digital versions of the public-domain volumes of the Corpus Scriptorum Ecclesiasticorum Latinorum (CSEL).
These XML files were produced by data entry company Jouve, who OCR'd, corrected and encoded each volume of CSEL in accordance with the latest EpiDoc standards. While adequate, more can and should be done to improve the XML (the -dev(elopment) suffix indicates the repository is open to improvement).
A Wikipedia link to this repository can be viewed here.
All the works in the repository for which we have added metadata are listed below, organized by author, with links to the individual files. If you see any problems with this list, please start an issue on the main repository page. At this time, the repository contains 6,055,446 words of CTS-compliant Latin.
The list below also includes the unique identifiers that we use for every author, work, and edition. We use standard identifiers to name our texts, including references to the numbers adopted by the canons of the TLG and (for Latin) PHI. The final element in the URN identifies the edition. See the TEI headers of the individual files to find all information about the origin of the file.
How to download individual files from this page
Clicking on the file's link will take you to the file in the repository. If you wish to download the TEI-XML of the file, right click on the link and choose "Save link as..."

This project is maintained by OpenGreekAndLatin

Open Access Journal: The Ostracon: The Journal of the Egyptian Study Society

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[First listed in AWOL 5 November 2009. Updated 28 September 2018]

The Ostracon: The Journal of the Egyptian Study Society
The Ostracon is published annually by members of the Egyptian Study Society. The ESS is a non-profit organization whose purpose is to study Ancient Egypt. It is an associate group of the Denver Museum of Nature and Science. Articles are contributed by members and scholars on a voluntary basis. Member participation is encouraged. Nothing may be reprinted in whole or part without written permission of the author. The opinions expressed in The Ostracon do not necessarily represent the views of The Ostracon staff, the Egyptian Study Society, or the Denver Museum of Nature and Science.

Ostracon Volume 25-1 | Fall 2014

  • Tausert Temple Project: 2014 Season University of Arizona Egyptian Expedition by Pearce Paul Creasman, Rebecca Caroli, Tori Finlayson, and Bethany Becktell p. 3
  • Nefertiti’s Left Eye: An Enigma by Stephanie Denkowicz p. 12
  • Ostracon Volume 24-1 | Fall 2013

  • Tausert Temple Project: The 2013 Season and Other Notes p. 3 by Pearce Paul Creasman
  • Did the May Kamil Meteorid Contribute to the Downfall of the Old Kingdom? p. 12 by Aly Barakat
  • The Meidum Pyramid: Clues for an Undiscovered Chamber p. 21 by Charles Rigano
  • Ostracon Volume 22-1 | Fall 2011

  • Tausert Temple Project: 2010 - 11 Season p. 3 by Richard H. Wilkinson
  • Preliminary Report on the Discovery of the Lost Ancient Copper Mines of Gebel Safariat, Southwest Sinai, Egypt p. 11 by Aly A. Barakat
  • An "Unknown Weapon" of Ancient Egypt: Identifying a Mystery Weapon in a Work by Sir Francis Burton p. 17 by Don Arp, Jr.
  • Ostracon Volume 21-1 | Fall 2010

  • The Tausert Temple Project: Report for the 2009-10 Season p. 3 by Richard H. Wilkinson
  • The Invasions of Egypt by the Sea Peoples and the End of the Bronze Age p. 12 by Dennis Pricolo
  • The 'Rectangle-Half' in Egyptian Mathematics p. 24 by George Hollenback
  • Ostracon Volume 20-1 | Fall 2009

  • The Tausert Temple Project: 2009 Season p. 3 by Richard H. Wilkinson
  • Attica Mines, Breece: A Possible Twelfth Century BCE Reference p. 14 by Aly Barakat
  • Executing the Will of Pharaoh: The Roots of Performance Measurement in Ancient Egypt p. 22 by Steven L. Krahn
  • Ostracon Volume 18-1 | Fall 2007

  • The Tausert Temple Project: 2007 Season p. 3 by Richard H. Wilkinson
  • Book Review: The Middle Kingdom of Ancient Egypt: History, Archeology, and Society p. 11 by Wolfram Grajetzki reviewed by Jane Bigelow
  • The Phoenix and the Benben: The Start of the Egyptian Calendar as the First Time p. 12 by James R. Lowdermilk
  • Ostracon Volume 17-2 | Fall 2006

  • Private Tombs in the New Kingdom: The Creation of Sacred Space p. 3 by Ashleigh Goodwin
  • The Tausert Temple Project: 2006 Season p. 9 by Richard H. Wilkinson
  • Bahariya Oasis: In the Footsteps of Dinosaur Hunters p. 13 by Bonnie M. Sampsell
  • House of Scrolls: Book Review p. 18 The Lost Dinosaurs of Egypt by Josh Smith reviewed by Bonnie M. Sampsell
  • Ostracon Volume 17-1 | Spring 2006

  • How Pyramids Were Built: Where the Evidence and Lack of Evidence Leads p. 3 by Charles Rigano
  • The Tausert Temple: An Additional Feature Discovered in the 2005 Season p. 9 by Richard H. Wilkinson
  • The Mortuary Temple of Hatshepsut at Deir El-Bahri: The Construction and Restoration of a Masterpiece - Part II p. 10 by Bonnie M. Sampsell
  • A Continuous Thread: Flax Spinning in Ancient Egypt p. 14 by Rhonda K. Hageman
  • Coloring the Ancient Egyptian World p. 17 by Heather Van Benthem
  • Pages

    Article 1

    Open Access Journal: Museum Helveticum

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    [First posted in AWOL 6 August 2009. Updated 29 September 2018]

    Museum Helveticum
    ISSN: 0027-4054
    ISSN 0027- 4054 MUSEUM HELVETICUM Schweizerische Zeitschrift für klassische Altertumswissenschaft Revue suisse pour l’étude de l’antiquité classique Rivista svizzera di filologia classica SCHWABE VERLAG BASEL Mus. Helv. Vol. 71 Fasc. 1 p. 1– 128 Juni 2014
    Das Museum Helveticum ist die einzige Schweizer Zeitschrift, die Beiträge aus der gesamten klassischen Altertumswissenschaft veröffentlicht, einschliesslich der Papyrologie, Epigraphik und (mit Einschränkungen) Archäologie. Es will nicht nur die Schweizer Forschung fördern und repräsentativ darstellen, sondern auch die Kontakte mit der internationalen. Forschergemeinschaft pflegen und vertiefen. Entsprechend steht die Zeitschrift zum einen den in der Schweiz Lehrenden und Lernenden offen und versteht sich auch als Mittel der Nachwuchsförderung, zum anderen ist sie seit ihren Anfängen auch Publikationsorgan der internationalen Forschergemeinschaft; dementsprechend ist neben den drei Landessprachen Englisch häufige Publikationssprache. Entstanden ist das Museum Helveticum während des Zweiten Weltkrieges aus der Zusammenarbeit einiger damals führender altertumswissenschaftlicher Lehrstuhlinhaber, die, abgeschnitten von den bisherigen europäischen Publikationsorganen, der schweizerischen Altertumswissenschaft ein Diskussionsforum schaffen und gleichzeitig die Zusammengehörigkeit betonen wollten; die erste Nummer erschien 1944. Nach Kriegsende wurde die Zeitschrift zum Organ der schweizerischen altertumswissenschaftlichen Forschung.
    All issues are published online 20 months after print publication.


    PagePDF
    Volume 72 (2015)_
    Issue 1_
    Front matter_Download as PDF
    Table of Contents_Download as PDF
    Obituary: Walter Burkert (2. Februar 1931-11. März 20151Download as PDF
    Article: Complément à l'article "Les Metageitnia : réflexions sur 35 ans d'histoire", Museum Helveticum 71, décembre 2014, p. 206-2124Download as PDF
    Article: La poesia come enigma : le vie della notte e del giorno in Od. 10,82-865Download as PDF
    Article: Virgilio, Licofrone e la tradizione su Alessandro Magno21Download as PDF
    Article: Notes critiques sur l'élégie 4,3 de Properce34Download as PDF
    Article: Corippo Ioh. 7,108 : appunti su recalescere49Download as PDF
    Article: Bedrohungskommunikation und der Faktor Zeit : Überlegungen zu den christenfeindlichen Äusserungen des Porphyrios55Download as PDF
    Article: Spätantike Bischofsbilder im Vergleich : Vorstellungen zum Episkopat bei Ambrosius und Johannes Chrysostomos76Download as PDF
    Article: Un'eco di Seneca prosatore nel Paradiso di Dante93Download as PDF
    Rubric: Epigraphica Helvetica95Download as PDF
    Rubric: Archäologische Berichte106Download as PDF
    Advertising129Download as PDF
    Issue 2_
    Front matter_Download as PDF
    Table of Contents_Download as PDF
    Article: The new Sappho Papyrus of Cologne or the eternal youth of poetry130Download as PDF
    Article: Sphinx, chérubins et "gardiens" orphiques142Download as PDF
    Article: Pisistrate à l'heure d'Isocrate ou les vertus de l'histoire pseudologique171Download as PDF
    Article: Le déplacement de Picéniens dans le golfe de Paestum (Strab. 5,4,13) : une analyse philologique et historique190Download as PDF
    Article: ut Homerus, sic Vergilius : zur Vergil-Zuschreibung der im 1. Jh. n. Chr. bezeugten Gedichte aus der Appendix Vergiliana207Download as PDF
    Book review: Buchbesprechungen = Comptes rendus220Download as PDF
    Advertising257Download as PDF

    1. Volume 73 (2016)
    2. Volume 72 (2015)
    3. Volume 71 (2014)
    4. Volume 70 (2013)
    5. Volume 69 (2012)
    6. Volume 68 (2011)
    7. Volume 67 (2010)
    8. Volume 66 (2009)
    9. Volume 65 (2008)
    10. Volume 64 (2007)
    11. Volume 63 (2006)
    12. Volume 62 (2005)
    13. Volume 61 (2004)
    14. Volume 60 (2003)
    15. Volume 59 (2002)
    16. Volume 58 (2001)
    17. Volume 57 (2000)
    18. Volume 56 (1999)
    19. Volume 55 (1998)
    20. Volume 54 (1997)
    21. Volume 53 (1996)
    22. Volume 52 (1995)
    23. Volume 51 (1994)
    24. Volume 50 (1993)
    25. Volume 49 (1992)
    26. Volume 48 (1991)
    27. Volume 47 (1990)
    28. Volume 46 (1989)
    29. Volume 45 (1988)
    30. Volume 44 (1987)
    31. Volume 43 (1986)
    32. Volume 42 (1985)
    33. Volume 41 (1984)
    34. Volume 40 (1983)
    35. Volume 39 (1982)
    36. Volume 38 (1981)
    37. Volume 37 (1980)
    38. Volume 36 (1979)
    39. Volume 35 (1978)
    40. Volume 34 (1977)
    41. Volume 33 (1976)
    42. Volume 32 (1975)
    43. Volume 31 (1974)
    44. Volume 30 (1973)
    45. Volume 29 (1972)
    46. Volume 28 (1971)
    47. Volume 27 (1970)
    48. Volume 26 (1969)
    49. Volume 25 (1968)
    50. Volume 24 (1967)
    51. Volume 23 (1966)
    52. Volume 22 (1965)
    53. Volume 21 (1964)
    54. Volume 20 (1963)
    55. Volume 19 (1962)
    56. Volume 18 (1961)
    57. Volume 17 (1960)
    58. Volume 16 (1959)
    59. Volume 15 (1958)
    60. Volume 14 (1957)
    61. Volume 13 (1956)
    62. Volume 12 (1955)
    63. Volume 11 (1954)
    64. Volume 10 (1953)
    65. Volume 9 (1952)
    66. Volume 8 (1951)
    67. Volume 7 (1950)
    68. Volume 6 (1949)
    69. Volume 5 (1948)
    70. Volume 4 (1947)
    71. Volume 3 (1946)
    72. Volume 2 (1945)
    73. Volume 1 (1944)


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    Open Access Journal: Bulletin for Biblical Research (BBR)

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    [First posted in AWOL 1 November 2009. Updated 29 September 2018]

    Bulletin for Biblical Research (BBR)
    ISSN: 1065-223X
    https://www.ibr-bbr.org/sites/www.ibr-bbr.org/files/ibr_logo_header.png
     For over 30 years, the Institute for Biblical Research has offered to evangelical biblical scholars and Ph.D. students a venue for creative, reflective and serious biblical scholarship. One might not have suspected such an auspicious outcome back in 1970, when a few biblical scholars gathered for lunch during the SBL meeting in New York. The meeting was called by E. Earle Ellis, the founding visionary behind IBR. He dreamed of a North American based residential reference library (non-lending) similar to that of the Tyndale Fellowship for Biblical Research, Tyndale House Library, Cambridge, England. For the following three years, a small group calling themselves the Tyndale Committee discussed the viability of creating a residential library. In the end, they were persuaded that the library vision required a societal matrix to realize its goal, and thus in 1973 was birthed the Institute for Biblical Research...

    ...Publications were a primary concern for IBR. In 1989 it launched the Bulletin for Biblical Research (BBR) under the editorship of Bruce Chilton, published by Eisenbrauns. The first journal was published in 1991. In 1994, Craig Evans continued as editor and advanced BBR to a bi-annual journal. In 2005, Richard S. Hess took over editorial responsibilities, significantly enlarging the journal. The BBR Supplement Series began in 2007 with the appearance of its first monograph.
    Despite there being no landing page, the following volumes are accessible:

    BBR Volume 24 (2014)

    BBR 24:1
    BBR 24:2
     
     
    BBR 24:3
     
    BBR 24:4

    BBR Volume 23 (2013)

    BBR 23:1
     
    BBR 23:2
     
    BBR 23:3
     
    BBR 23:4

    BBR Volume 22 (2012)

    BBR 22:1
    BBR 22:2
    BBR 22:3
    BBR 22:4
    See the full List of Open Access Journals in Ancient Studies

    The Digital Archaeological Atlas of the Holy Land

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    [First posted in AWOL 11 August 2011, updated 30 September 2018]

    The Digital Archaeological Atlas of the Holy Land










    Coming Soon: Virtual Reality on the Web! VR Walk-throughs of Archaeological Sites in the Lower Kidron Valley!
    The Digital Archaeological Atlas of the Holy Land (DAAHL) is an international project that brings together experts in information technology including Geographic Information Systems (GIS) and the archaeology of the Holy Land (modern Israel, Palestine, Jordan, southern Lebanon, Syria and the Sinai Peninsula) to create the first on-line digital atlas of the region held sacred to the three great monotheistic faiths - Judaism, Christianity and Islam. Using the power of spatial information systems such as Google Maps and Google Earth, GIS, the tens of thousands of recorded archaeological sites for the region - from the remote prehistoric periods to the early 20th century - will be entered into a comprehensive database along with site maps, photographs and artifacts. The historical and archaeological content for this project will be developed by a team of over 30 international scholars working in the region, helping to provide the data used to create the Atlas. This website and its content will serve as the prototype "knowledge node" of a more comprehensive Digital Archaeological Atlas Network for the Mediterranean region.


    The site now contains a variety of Google Maps interfaces that let you explore the region and the archaeological resources it contains. The link bar under the DAAHL header provides access to the main functions currently available in the website. These include:

    The Mediterranean Archaeological Network or MedArchNet is one of the first attempts to create 'Portal Science' for archaeologists and the interested public. Consequently, a major goal of MedArchNet is to make archaeological data from the Mediterranean lands accessible to various communities, including school teachers, tourists and travel agents, university students and professors, researchers, and public policy makers. MedArchNet taps into the fast-growing field of 'portal science' and will serve researchers and explorers as a platform for international collaboration, while also allowing the general public to share in the excitement of archaeology and discovery. This link takes you to the MedArchNet homepage.
    Empires presents one set of examples of Global Moments in the Levant. On this page the DAAHL includes an interactive Google Maps interface that presents the rise and fall of empires in the ancient world. The map can be animated to display the empires across time; individual empires can be selected to display summary information, and archaeological sites extant during the empire's time span can be displayed and queried on the map.
    Archaeological Periods organize over 17,000 sites in the DAAHL database by more than 60 time periods from the Lower Paleolithic, more than 2 million years ago, to the Late Ottoman period, which ended in 1918. A Google Maps interface lets the user animate site clusters through time, and explore the distribution of archaeological sites in the Levant during any of these periods. Short introductions to the time periods are included as well.
    Shishak's Campaign presents information related to the Egyptian Pharoah Sheshonq I (known in the Hebrew Bible as Shishak) and his military expedition into southwestern Asia. His invasion of Judah and Israel is documented on the south wall of the Temple of Amun Ra at Karnak, and described in the Bible (1 Kings 11:40; 14:25; 2 Chronicles 12:2-9). The DAAHL uses the latest "tour" capability in the Google Earth API to track some of the movements of Shishak's army.
    Case Studies are specialized, in depth explorations of different subjects in the atlas. Tom Levy's exploration of the Edomite Lowlands during the Iron Age, which is accompanied by an interactive Google Maps display, is a prime example. Other case studies are presented as online Powerpoint or HTML presentations.
    About the Atlas displays information about the main research partners who are developing the atlas. The Atlas is an international project that brings together experts in information technology and Levantine archaeology to create the first on-line digital atlas of the region held sacred to the three great monotheistic faiths - Judaism, Christianity and Islam.
    PEF Maps are maps produced for the Palestine Exploration Fund by Claude R. Conder of the British Ordanace Survey in the 1870s and 1880s. These classic maps contain more than 10,000 place names, and are an important resource for Late Ottoman period Palestine. The GAIA Lab at Arizona State University converted the map sheets into more than 50,000 tiles in an interactive Google Maps display that can be zoomed and panned to show the maps in the background, with the DAAHL archaeological sites superimposed.
    Search Database opens a page in the website where users can query the database by such things as site name, time period, site type, site conditions, etc. Queries are submitted to the DAAHL web server and the results are returned to the user as dynamic kml, which opens on the user's computer in Google Earth. All sites displayed in the result sets are "backlinked" to the DAAHL database, so they can be explored indiviually by following their links. See the video below for an example of a time period search.
    The Spatial Search link opens a page with in interactive Google Maps display. The user can draw an irregular region of interest on the map and perform a search for all the sites in the DAAHL database that fall within one kilometer of the search region. Like the database search, results are displayed as points in Google Earth; the user can determine the point display style, and all search results are back-linked to the Atlas.
    Use the Make Maps function to make queries of sites by time period and/or site/feature type, and display the results on a Google Maps interactive map that includes site clusters and individual sites. Clusters can be clicked to zoom to the next level, displaying smaller clusters and individual sites.  Hover over site points to see the site name.  Use your computer's screen copy function to copy the map; then paste it into a graphics editing program and crop it to the map--then you can use the map in presentations or documents.
    Site Preservation links to a page in the DAAHL website that displays two film clips. The first shows how the Spatial Search is done, and illustrates how this function can be used to help preserve archaeological sites by minimizing the impact of development projects through avoiding sites. The second film clip is a trailer to a movie that discusses the danger to one of Jordan's most significant Early Bronze Age sites posed by expanding gravel quarries.
    Contributors to the DAAHL project have come from many countries, universities, and research institutions. All sites and project data that are contributed to the DAAHL are "branded" with the contributor's information and cross-linked to their websites. The DAAHL database safeguards our contributor's information and drives website traffic to their research projects.

    Open Access Journal: Jordan Journal for History and Archaeology (JJHA) - المجلة الأردنية للتاريخ والآثار

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    [First posted in AWOL 17 November 2013, updated 30 September 2018]

    Jordan Journal for History and Archaeology (JJHA) -  المجلة الأردنية للتاريخ والآثار
    ISSN: 1996-9546
    Jordan Journal for History and Archaeology (JJHA) is an International Quarterly, Refereed Research Journal. It is concerned with publishing refereed scientific papers by local and international authors. Issued quarterly, the journal sets itself to publishing original topics whose scientific and practical value is concerned with history and archaeology. Manuscripts are published mainly in Arabic or English. However, other languages approved by the Editorial Board may be considered as well. Submitted papers are evaluated anonymously by specialists in their field.















    Open Access Journal: Veleia: revista de prehistoria, historia antigua, arqueología y filología clásicas

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    [Frst posted in AWOL 26 February 2012. Updated 30 September 2018]

    Veleia: revista de prehistoria, historia antigua, arqueología y filología clásicas
    ISSN: 0213-2095
    Logotipo de la cabecera de la página
    Revista anual del Instituto de Ciencias de la Antigüedad dedicada al estudio de la Prehistoria, Historia Antigua y Filología y Arqueología Clásicas. Sin descartar la publicación de artículos genéricos sobre la antigüedad, otorga especial relevancia a los temas concernientes al País Vasco y zonas en contacto.

    Open Access Journal: E-Sylum: An Electronic Publication of the Numismatic Bibliomania Society

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     [First posted in AWOL 27 November 2011, updated 1 October 2018]

    E-Sylum: An Electronic Publication of the Numismatic Bibliomania Society
    http://www.coinbooks.org/global/images/layout/esylum_masthead.gif
    On the morning of Friday, September 4, 1998, the Numismatic Bibliomania Society's Internet email list was inaugurated with the following message:
    This message is being sent to members and friends of the Numismatic Bibliomania Society (NBS)
    In a Press Release going out soon to the numismatic press, we describe the purpose of the mailing list as follows: 
     

    Numismatic Bibliomania Society Vice President Wayne Homren is collecting email addresses for NBS members,  a process which began at the national meeting at the Portland  ANA convention.

    The resulting mailing list will be used to keep members and interested parties updated on NBS events and  changes to the NBS web site (http://www.money.org/club_nbs.html). 
     
    A number of folks signed up at the meeting in Portland.  To that initial group we've added the addresses of other current and former members that the Board is aware of, plus a few numismatic pen pals we thought might be interested. 
    This is intended to be a moderated, low-volume mailing list, with no more than one message every week or so.  Its purpose and use will evolve over time - please send us your comments and suggestions. 
    In the meantime, please visit our web site, and forward this  note to any other email pen-pal you think might have an interest. Remember, the list isn't limited to only NBS members.  Don't assume they're already on the list;  we're starting small, but with your help we can grow.  
    The E-Sylum Volume Index
    Volume #YearTotal Issues by YearTotal Issues to Date
    Volume 119981212
    Volume 219995264
    Volume 3200054118
    Volume 4200153171
    Volume 5200252223
    Volume 6200355278
    Volume 7200452330
    Volume 8200554384
    Volume 9200653437
    Volume 10200753490
    Volume 11200852542
    Volume 12200952594
    Volume 13201052646
    Volume 14201153699
    Volume 15201254753
    Volume 16201353806
    Volume 17201453859
    Volume 18201552911
    Volume 19201653964
    Volume 202017541018
    Volume 212018391057

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