Open Access Journal: Archaeological Survey of Nubia: Bulletin
↧
↧
Open Access Journal: Studia palmyreńskie
Studia palmyreńskie
ISSN: 0081-6787
ISSN: 0081-6787
Polish Centre of Mediterranean Archaeology, University of Warsaw
Etudes palmyréniennes
6-7.1975
8.1985
10.1997
11. (2010)
See the full List of Open Access Journals in Ancient Studies
↧
Recent Open Access Publications of The Polish Centre of Mediterranean Archaeology
Recent Open Access Publications of The Polish Centre of Mediterranean Archaeology
PCMA Archaeological Guides are concise, richly-illustrated overviews of the history and material culture of chosen sites, based on up-to-date research. They will satisfy the needs of students who look for a scholarly, yet user-friendly introduction to the site and its background and for enthusiasts of the history and archaeology of the region. Travelers planning a journey off the beaten track will find it a first-rate (and often the only available) source of information on the historical monuments they are about to visit. The series was established in 2013.
Miscellanea: occasional scholarly publications connected with PCMA research, such as jubilee volumes, exhibition catalogues, etc.
Popular publications are occasional publications (books and booklets) popularizing PCMA research.
↧
Open Access Monograph Series: Polymnia
[First posted in AWOL 20 May 2013, updated 27 October 2015]
Polymnia: Numismatica antica e medievale. Studi
Polymnia: Numismatica antica e medievale. Documenti
Polymnia: Numismatica antica e medievale. Studi
Gold Coin and Small Change: Monetary Circulation in Fifth-Seventh Century Byzantine Palestine [3] by Gabriela I. BijovskyLʼarchivio del museo Bottacin di Padova [1] di Nicola BoarettoLe “antiche Monete della Cirenaica”nella letteratura numismatica tra Ottocento e Novecento [1] di Michele AsolatiMonetazione del Patriarcato di Aquileia [2] di Giulio BernardiThe 2nd Simone Assemani Symposium on Islamic Coins [17] edited by Bruno Callegher and Arianna D'OttoneThe 3rd Simone Assemani Symposium on Islamic Coins [18] edited by Bruno Callegher and Arianna D'OttoneThe Julio-Claudian and Flavian Coins from Rome's Municipal Urban Excavations [16] edited by Maria Cristina Molinari
Polymnia: Numismatica antica e medievale. Documenti
Arabic Gold Coins di Giulio BernardiSylloge of Islamic Coins in the Ashmolean Concordance (and vice versa) Sylloge of Islamic Coins in the Israel Museum. The Paul Balog Collection. Egypt vol. III The Mamlūks 1248-1517
Hoc quoque laboris praemium. Scritti in onore di Gino Bandelli a cura di Monica ChiabàRoma e le priscae Latinae coloniae: ricerche sulla colonizzazione del Lazio... di Monica ChiabàTra duces e milites: forme di comunicazione politica al tramonto della Repubblica di Rita Mangiameli
Polymnia. Studi di Archeologia n.01 I culti isiaci nell'Italia settentrionale 1. Verona, Aquileia, TriestePolymnia. Studi di Archeologia n.02 Scritti di topografia e urbanistica: Tergeste e Friuli Venezia GiuliaPolymnia. Studi di Archeologia n.03 L’archeologia come mestiere. Dallo scavo al magazzino: i materialiPolymnia. Studi di Archeologia n.04 Culti e romanizzazione. Resistenze, continuità, trasformazioniPolymnia. Studi di Archeologia n.05 Sacrum facere : Atti del I Seminario di Archeologia del Sacro : Trieste, 17-18 febbraio 2012Polymnia. Studi di archeologia n.06 Sacrum facere. Atti del II Seminario di Archeologia del Sacro. Contaminazioni: forme di contatto, traduzione e mediazione nei sacra del mondo greco e romano. Trieste, 19-20 aprile 2013
01. Culture europee e tradizione latina. Atti del Convegno internazionale di studi, Cividale del Friuli, 16-17 novembre 2001 [9] a cura di Laura Casarsa, Lucio Cristante, Marco Fernandelli.03. Disciplinae cyclicae: l'organisation du savoir dans l'oeuvre de Martianus Capella [0] di Muriel Bovey08. Supplementum etymologicum Latinum I [1] di Claudio Marangoni11. Miti e note. Musica con antichi racconti [0] di Franco Serpa12. Nugis ignosce lectitans: studi su Marziano Capella [1] di Romeo Schievenin13. Il calamo della memoria. Riuso di testi e mestiere letterario nella tarda antichità. IV [19] a cura di Lucio Cristante e Simona Ravalico14. Dignum laude virum. Studi di cultura classica e musica offerti a Franco Serpa [0] a cura di Francesca Bottari, Laura Casarsa, Lucio Cristante, Marco Fernandelli15. Via Latina: studi su Virgilio e sulla sua fortuna [1] di Marco Fernandelli16. Il calamo della memoria. Riuso di testi e mestiere letterario nella tarda antichità. V [15] a cura di Lucio Cristante e Tommaso Mazzoli17. Il CVLEX trascritto e annotato da Giovanni Boccaccio [1] a cura di Angelo Floramo e Roberta Cervani18. Il calamo della memoria. Riuso di testi e mestiere letterario nella tarda antichità. VI [19] a cura di Lucio Cristante e Tommaso Mazzoli
↧
Dissertations wanted for the American Numismatic Society Digital Library
Archaeologists and Classicists: Please share this post!
The American Numismatic Society has created an Open Access digital library. One purpose is to host unpublished and/or orphaned MA and PhD theses/dissertations that have numismatic content. As a part of this library your thesis will be Open Access, full-text searchable, and http://schema.org properties will help Google relevance. If you (or someone you know) wants their research hosted for free (CC-BY license) alongside other numismatic work, email Andrew Reinhard at areinhard@numismatics.org.
Thanks!
The American Numismatic Society has created an Open Access digital library. One purpose is to host unpublished and/or orphaned MA and PhD theses/dissertations that have numismatic content. As a part of this library your thesis will be Open Access, full-text searchable, and http://schema.org properties will help Google relevance. If you (or someone you know) wants their research hosted for free (CC-BY license) alongside other numismatic work, email Andrew Reinhard at areinhard@numismatics.org.
Thanks!
↧
↧
Israel Antiquities Authority Scientific Archive 1919-1948
[First posted in AWOL 16 January 2013, updated 27 October 2015]
Israel Antiquities Authority Scientific Archive 1919-1948
Israel Antiquities Authority Scientific Archive 1919-1948
About the Archives
The archive of the Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA) is located in Jerusalem. It essentially continues the archive from the British Mandate era. Following the conquest of Palestine by British forces, headed by General Allenby in 1918, the documentation and data collecting of ancient and archaeological sites had begun. Once a civil government was established by the British Mandatory Authorities in 1920, the Department of Antiquities was created and the archive had become an integral part of it.
The Department of Antiquities of the State of Israel was founded on July 26, 1948, Its activities were based on British Mandate Antiquities ordinances. In 1978, the Mandate ordinances were superseded by the Law of Antiquities that was passed by the Knesset. In 1990, the Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA) was established and replaced the Department of Antiquities.
About the Project
The Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA) archive entered the government project of “intensifying national foundations and heritage”, with the aim of preserving and digitizing the British Mandatory section.
The purpose of the project is to enable the wide public in Israel and across the world accessing this unique data.
The digitations project includes, first and foremost, the physical preservation of the different files, which include hand and typewritten texts, photographs, maps and plans that appear on a variety of papers, including greaseproof, rice, stencils and others.
The process of digitations is done to preserve the original data for generations to come. The process prevents the physical deterioration of the material and its wear out, caused by the touch of human hands and the climatic changes. The process consists of digitizing the data and indexing it.
At this first stage, the digital archive includes the scientific Mandatory archive in English; accordingly, the site was developed in English, with a general explanation in Hebrew.
↧
Open Access Journal: Birmingham Egyptology Journal
Birmingham Egyptology Journal
ISSN: 2053-3586
ISSN: 2053-3586
Birmingham Egyptology Journal is a peer-reviewed scholarly journal available only online and free of charge.
The journal offers a platform for the presentation of research relating to ancient Egyptian culture, history, and archaeology from the Pre-dynastic to Graeco-Roman Periods.
The Journal officially launched on March 14, 2013 with the first articles being published online shortly thereafter. It is intended that articles will be presented as the review and publication processes are completed with the total submissions for each calendar year comprising one volume. Further information for prospective contributors to the Journal is available from the drop-down menu of the ‘Journal’ head on this page.
Birmingham Egyptology Journal, Department of Classics and Ancient History, Room 304, Arts Building, The University of Birmingham, Edgbaston, Birmingham B15 2TT.
Submissions and enquiries should be forwarded to: editor@birminghamegyptology.co.uk
Volume 3: 2015
1. Review
Review of S. Wachsmann 2013. The Gurob Ship-Cart Model and Its Mediterranean Context
Marsia Sfakianou Bealby
To reference this article we suggest:
Bealby, M. S. 2015. ‘Review of S. Wachsmann. The Gurob Ship-Cart Model and Its Mediterranean Context‘. Texas A & M University Press: College Station, Texas. 2013. Birmingham Egyptology Journal 3: 1-4
2. Review
Review of D. Gange 2013. Dialogues with the Dead: Egyptology in British Culture and Religion, 1822-1922
Steven R. W. Gregory
To reference this article we suggest:
Gregory, S. R. W. 2015. ‘Review of D. Gange. Dialogues with the Dead: Egyptology in British Culture and Religion, 1822-1922. Oxford University Press: Oxford. 2013. Birmingham Egyptology Journal 3: 5-8.
3. Article
The Two Inner Directions of the Ancient Egyptian Script
Carlos Gracia Zamacona
To reference this article we suggest:
Zamacona, C. G. 2015.’ The Two Inner Directions of the Ancient Egyptian Script. Birmingham Egyptology Journal 3: 9-23.
Occasional publication 1, 2014. Conference Proceedings
Proceedings of the First Birmingham Egyptology Symposium, University of Birmingham, 21st February 2014
Edited by Steven R. W. Gregory.
Simmance, E. ‘The significance of location for the mediating statues of Amenhotep son of Hapu’. 1-13.
Asbury, B. L. ‘Pitt-Rivers, the Painter and the Palaeolithic Period’. 14-22.
Godefroid, A. ‘Book of the Dead Chapter 182: a case of related structure between the text and its vignette’. 23-34.
Mushett Cole, E. ‘Did the political upheaval during the Late Bronze Age cause a change in the form of Egyptian control in the Levant? An analysis of the changes in the political landscape of the Levant during the late New Kingdom’. 35-44.
Volume 2: 2014
1. Article
The High Priests of Amun at the End of the Twentieth Dynasty
Jennifer Palmer
To reference this article we suggest:
Palmer, J. 2014. ‘The High Priests of Amun at the End of the Twentieth Dynasty’. Birmingham Egyptology Journal 2: 1-22.
2. Article
A map of Egypt reconstructed from the description of the country at Edfu
Gyula Priskin
To reference this article we suggest:
Priskin, G. 2014. ‘A map of Egypt reconstructed from the description of the country at Edfu’. Birmingham Egyptology Journal 2: 23-41.
3. Review
Review of J. A. Hill, P. Jones, and A. J. Morales (eds.) 2013. Experiencing Power, Generating Authority: Cosmos, Politics, and the Ideology of Kingship in Ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia
Steven R. W. Gregory
To reference this article we suggest:
Gregory, S. R. W. 2014. ‘Review of J. A. Hill, P. Jones, and A. J. Morales (eds.). Experiencing Power, Generating Authority: Cosmos, Politics, and the Ideology of Kingship in Ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia‘. University of Pennsylvania Press: Philadelphia. 2013. Birmingham Egyptology Journal 2: 42-46.
Volume 1: 2013
1. Object Highlight
Eton College Myers Collection of Egyptian Antiquities Object Highlight – ECM822, A Faience Nubian Head
Carl Graves
To reference this article we suggest:
Graves, C. 2013. ‘Eton College Myers Collection Object Highlight: A Faience Nubian Head’. Birmingham Egyptology Journal 1: 1-4.
2. Article
Piankh and Herihor: Art, Ostraca, and Accession in Perspective
Steven R. W. Gregory
To reference this article we suggest:
Gregory, S. R. W. 2013. ‘Piankh and Herihor: Art, Ostraca, and Accession in Perspective’. Birmingham Egyptology Journal 1: 5-18.
3. Review
Review of J. Padgham 2012. A New Interpretation of the Cone on the Head in New Kingdom Tomb Scenes.
Eleanor B. Simmance
To reference this article we suggest:
Simmance, E. B. 2013. ‘Review of J. Padgham. A New Interpretation of the Cone on the Head in New Kingdom Tomb Scenes. BAR International Series. Archaeopress: Oxford. 2012. Birmingham Egyptology Journal 1: 19-21.
4. Review
Review of Raven, Verschoor, Vugts and Walsem 2011. The Memphite Tomb of Horemheb. Commander in Chief of Tutankhamun. V. The forecourt and the area south of the tomb with some notes on the tomb of Tia.
Gabrielle Heffernan
To reference this article we suggest:
Heffernan, G. 2013. ‘Review of M. Raven, V. Verschoor, M. Vugts and R. Walsem. The Memphite Tomb of Horemheb. Commander in Chief of Tutankhamun. V. The forecourt and the area south of the tomb with some notes on the tomb of Tia. Brepols 2011. Birmingham Egyptology Journal 1: 22-24.
5. Article
Coffin Texts Spell 155 on the Moon
Gyula Priskin
To reference this article we suggest:
Priskin, G. 2013. ‘Coffin Texts Spell 155 on the Moon’. Birmingham Egyptology Journal 1: 25-63.
See the full List of Open Access Journals in Ancient Studies
↧
Aramaic Texts from Egypt (also including Phoenician and Hebrew)
Aramaic Texts from Egypt (also including Phoenician and Hebrew)
(currently 1299 records).An online metadata database project by A. Schütze
(Institut für Ägyptologie, Universität München)
in cooperation with Multilingualism and multiculturalism in Graeco-Roman Egypt (M. Depauw)
Data processing: A. Schütze General coordination: M. Depauw Database structure (Filemaker 7): B. Van Beek, S. Gülden Online version (PHP & MySQL): J. Clarysse, B. Van Beek
↧
EXARC Open Archaeology
EXARC Open Archaeology
Interested in archaeological open-air museums and experimental archaeology?
Explore over 425 museums, education centres and reconstructed buildings. Check out the range of events organised by EXARC members. Browse the very latest articles by experts in the field.
Pick your period and select your local area: Roman France, Viking Denmark or Iron Age Britain.
You'll find it all here.
This website has been produced with the support of OpenArch, an EU Culture Project.
↧
↧
Database “Images in Pausanias”
Database
“Images in Pausanias”
The Greek author Pausanias, who was active in the 2nd century CE in the intellectual atmosphere of the Second Sophistic, wrote his “Description of Greece” (perihegesis tes Hellados) with the aim of dealing with “all Greek things” (panta ta Hellenika). Under this classicist premise, he mentioned and described many things worth seeing (theoremata), not least being works of art, together with oral and literary narratives (logoi) associated with them which were collected by Pausanias in the cities and sanctuaries of Greece during the Roman era.
The purpose of the database “Images in Pausanias” is to register systematically all figurative works of art found in Pausanias and make them accessible for combined online research. Bibliographical notes are provided in order to facilitate access to the respective scholarship. Regarding bibliography, Book X is still a work in progress, due to the fact that the volume in question of the commented edition “Pausania, Guida della Grecia” has not yet appeared (August 2014), the latter being an important source for the database.
For original Greek works of art that have survived and have been plausibly identified, links are given to the meta-database “Arachne” (in progress). Roman works of art, which are considered by modern scholarship to be copies of Greek originals mentioned in Pausanias, have not been taken into consideration because of the hypothetical nature of the majority of these attributions and without a clear borderline between plausible and improbable identifications being present.
The content of the database for every work of art provides the text passage of Pausanias in question, together with a German translation of the text (E. Meyer, in some cases modified). Moreover, it contains information in the following categories: place and context of original setting (e.g. sanctuary, public space), function (e.g. cult statue, commemorative monument, honorary statue), genre (e.g. sculpture in the round, relief), theme, artist, commissioner, material, and date. A combined search is possible via the extended search function of “Arachne".
This project was realized under the direction of Tonio Hölscher at the Institute of Classical Archaeology of the University of Heidelberg. The task of compiling and processing the data was in the hands of Katharina Bolle, Gunnar Dumke, Johannes Fouquet, Werner Schneider and Nicolas Zenzen. All work in Heidelberg was financed by the Institute of Classical Archaeology and from funds of the Manfred Lautenschläger Research prize awarded to Tonio Hölscher.
The implementation of the database “Images in Pausanias” into the meta-database “Arachne” was initiated and supervised by Reinhard Förtsch. The data import was prepared and coordinated by Marcel Riedel. Benjamin Gelhaar and David Neugebauer executed the implementation. The present page was developed by Karen Schwane. To all sponsors and promoters as well as to all collaborators and contributors we express our warmest thanks.
↧
King Saud University Repository College of Tourism & Archaeology
King Saud University Repository
College of Tourism & Archaeology
Showing results 1 to 100 of 181
↧
Méditerranées - Antiquité
Méditerranées
Antiquité
↧
Open Access Journal: Sudan & Nubia: The Sudan Archaeological Research Society Bulletin
[First posted in AWOL 9 November 2012, updated 29 October 2015]
Sudan & Nubia: The Sudan Archaeological Research Society Bulletin
ISSN: 1369-5770
Sudan & Nubia: The Sudan Archaeological Research Society Bulletin
ISSN: 1369-5770
Sudan & Nubia is published each autumn. It contains much of interest on recent archaeological fieldwork in Sudan, including many articles on surveys and excavations only undertaken during the previous winter.
The bulletin is an ideal way to keep abreast of current British activities in Sudan, and also contains contributions by eminent foreign scholars. It is profusely illustrated with line drawings and monochrome and colour photographs.
Sudan & Nubia is free of charge to Society members, who receive it a year in advance of online release … JOIN THE SOCIETY >
Individual articles can be read (free) through the online reading service ISSUU by following the links below. If a download is preferred, sign up to ISSUU, which will then provide download links (free).
Sudan & Nubia : No. 16
Bulletin of the Sudan Archaeological Research Society, London, 2012168 pagesREAD ARTICLES ONLINE… issuu.com >
ARTICLES
— Abdelrahman Ali Mohamed. Quarrying for the King – the Sources of Stone for Kushite Royal Monuments… read now >
— Ahmed Hamid Nassr Hamd. Qalaat Shanan: a large Neolithic site in Shendi town… read now >
— Anderson, J., Salah Mohamed Ahmed and Sweek, T. Meroitic Building Techniques: a few observations from Dangeil… read now >
— Davies, V. Merymose and others at Tombos… read now >
— M. Drzewiecki and T, Stępnik. Fortresses of Sudan Project. Abu Sideir case study… read now >
— Flache, M. The round structures of Gala Abu Ahmed fortress in lower Wadi Howar, Sudan… read now >
— Francigny, V. Preparing for the afterlife in the provinces of Meroe… read now >
— Gascoigne, A.L. and Rose, P.J. The forts of Hisn al-Bab and the First Cataract Frontier from the 5th to 12th centuries AD… read now >
— Huber, R and Edwards, D.A. Gebel Adda Cemeteries 3 and 4 (1963-1964)… read now >
— Lohwasser, A. A Survey in the Western Bayuda: The Wadi Adu Dom Itinerary Project (W.A.D.I.)… read now >
— Mahmoud Suliman Bashir, Murtada Bushara Mohamed and Mohammed Saad Abdalah. Rosieres Dam Heightening Archaeological Salvage Project. The Excavations at Azaza Site ROSE 5, Preliminary Report… read now >
— Munro, R.N., Mohammed Abdel Mahmoud Ibrahim, Hussien Abuzied and Babiker el-Hassan. Aeolian sand landforms in parts of the Sudan and Nubia. Origins and impacts on past and present land use… read now >
— Rilly, C. and Francigny, V. Excavations of the French Archaeological Mission in Sedeinga, 2011 season… read now >
— Spencer, N., Macklin, M. and Woodward, J. Re-assessing the abandonment of Amara West: the impact of a changing Nile?… read now >
— Stevenson, A. Social Complexity Set in Stone? The A-Group Site of Afyeh… read now >
— Suková, L. and Varadzin, L. Preliminary report on the exploration of Jebel Sabaloka (West Bank), 2009-2012… read now >
— Welsby, D.A. The Kerma Ancien cemetery at site H29 in the Northern Dongola Reach… read now >
— Yahia Fadl Tahir. The Archaeological, Ethnographical and Ecological Project of El-Ga’ab Basin Western Dongola Reach: A Report on the First Season 2009… read now >
For all editions …
Sudan & Nubia : Nos. 1-16 : tables of contents
Bulletin of the Sudan Archaeological Research Society, London
FREE DOWNLOAD … PDF : 339k >
And see also AWOL's roundup: Open Access Ancient Nubia and Sudan
See the full List of Open Access Journals in Ancient Studies
↧
↧
Coming Soon: Archaeology and Text: A Journal for the Integration of Material Culture with Written Documents in the Ancient Mediterranean and Near East
Archaeology and Text: A Journal for the Integration of Material Culture with Written Documents in the Ancient Mediterranean and Near East
The study of the human past has conventionally been divided between two distinct academic disciplines depending upon the kind of evidence under investigation: “history”, with its focus on written records, and “archaeology”, which analyzes the remains of material culture. Archaeology and Text: A Journal for the Integration of Material Culture with Written Documents in the Ancient Mediterranean and Near East aims to bridge this disciplinary divide by providing an international forum for scholarly discussions which integrate the studies of material culture with written documents. Interdisciplinary by nature, the journal offers a platform for professional historians and archaeologists alike to critically investigate points of confluence and divergence between the textual and the artifactual. We seek contributions from scholars working in the ancient Mediterranean and Near East. Contributions with a theoretical or methodological focus on the interface between archaeology and text are especially encouraged. By publishing all of its articles online, the Archaeology and Text seeks to disseminate its published papers immediately after the peer-review and editorial processes have been completed, providing timely publication and convenient access.
See the full List of Open Access Journals in Ancient Studies
↧
Open Access Monograph Series: Trismegistos Online Publications Special Series (TOP SS)
[First posted in AWOL 30 October 2014, updated 29 October 2015]
Trismegistos Online Publications Special Series (TOP SS)
Trismegistos Online Publications Special Series (TOP SS)
Often a PhD thesis for some reason cannot be published immediately. In the years that follow, the authors do not find the time to revise the manuscript as they wanted. This in turn causes problems because new literature appears or the evidence of new sources needs to be incorporated. As a result, the manuscript often remains unpublished and the valuable insights risk to be inaccessible and thus lost for scholarship.
To prevent this, Trismegistos Online Publications have decided to open up a new 'Special Series', where valuable PhD theses or other scholarly manuscripts can be published with an ISBN number.
Contributors can send in manuscripts in Word or PDF format to mark.depauw@arts.kuleuven.be. The editor will consult experts about the quality of the manuscript without taking into account whether it is abreast of recent scholarly literature or developments.
TOP SS 1 (Click to download)
K. Geens
Panopolis, a Nome Capital in Egypt in the Roman and Byzantine Period (ca. AD 200-600)
Leuven 2014 [= Diss. Leuven 2007], xiii & 578 pp. (28.4 Mb).
ISBN: 978-94-9060-409-7
The TOP Special Series was created in 2014. Earlier manuscripts that have been made available in a similar way can be found below.
J. France
Theadelpheia and Euhemereia. Village History in Graeco-Roman Egypt
Leuven, 1999 (Click here; WARNING: large file 55 Mb !! ).
[Unpublished PhD thesis]
K. Vandorpe
Egyptische geografische elementen in Griekse transcriptie
In Dutch - (English title for reference only: Egyptian geographical elements in Greek transcription)
Leuven, 1988 (Click here; ZIP-file; after decompressing, you will get a folder containing the text itself - which has been split up in 2 parts – and an index to the text. All files are searchable PDF's. WARNING: large file 95,8 Mb !! ).
[Unpublished Master thesis, in Dutch]
H. Verreth
The northern Sinai from the 7th century BC till the 7th century AD. A guide to the sources
Leuven, 2006 (Click here).
ISBN: 978-9-490604-0-11
↧
Open Access Journal: Cahiers du Centre Gustave Glotz
[First posted in AWOL 15 November 2012, updated 30 October 2015]
Cahiers du Centre Gustave Glotz
eISSN - 2117-5624
Cahiers du Centre Gustave Glotz
eISSN - 2117-5624
Les Cahiers du Centre Gustave Glotz sont nés en 1990, sous la forme d’un recueil d’articles sur le thème « Du pouvoir dans l’antiquité », coordonné par Claude Nicolet. Dès l’année suivante, ils se transformèrent en une revue annuelle d’histoire de l’Antiquité, en grande partie spécialisée dans l’étude des institutions et des structures sociales des mondes hellénistique et romain. Les volumes rassemblent à la fois des dossiers thématiques et des articles de varia, rédigés le plus souvent en français, en anglais ou en italien.1991-1999
2000-2009
See the full List of Open Access Journals in Ancient Studies
↧
Open Access Publications of the Maison de l'Orient et de la Méditerranée at Persée
[First posted 2/14/10. Most recently updated (many new titles added) 30 October 2015]
Publications de la Maison de l'Orient et de la Méditerranée
Publications de la Maison de l'Orient et de la Méditerranée
Dès sa création en 1975, la Maison de l’Orient méditerranéen a souhaité avoir son propre Service des publications. Elle désirait en effet que le résultat des recherches pluridisciplinaires menées autour des thèmes communs fût connu autrement que par la littérature grise ou par des publications longues et coûteuses à élaborer. C’est ainsi que naquirent les collections de la Maison de l’Orient méditerranéen : TMO, CMO, DAA et récemment la série Akh Purattim.
La collection des Travaux de la Maison de l’Orient (TMO) publie les résultats des travaux réalisés dans le cadre des thèmes de la Fédération de Recherche. Mais elle accueille également d’autres ouvrages individuels ou collectifs en rapport avec les programmes de recherche développés au sein de la Maison de l’Orient et de la Méditerranée, en particulier les études archéologiques et géographiques dont l’illustration nécessairement abondante trouve sa place dans ce grand format (21 x 29,7).
À cette collection s’est ajoutée, dès l’origine, la Collection de la Maison de l’Orient (CMO), qui rassemble des monographies et des travaux collectifs liés aux disciplines représentées au sein de la Maison de l’Orient et de la Méditerranée. Elle comprend plusieurs « séries » : archéologique, épigraphique et historique, linguistique et philologique, littéraire et philosophique, géographique et préhistorique, et des hors séries.
Dans le cadre d’une diversification de sa politique éditoriale, le Service des Publications de la Maison de l’Orient et de la Méditerranée a fait le choix de s’engager dans la voie de l’édition en ligne en créant, pour la publication des colloques, journées d'études et autres recueils, une collection électronique. Ces ouvrages (dits « natifs de l'électronique »), traités en amont avec les mêmes normes et rigueurs scientifiques que ceux dits « imprimés » sont consultables gratuitement et par un large public dès leur mise en ligne. Les Actes des rencontres internationales « Broadening Horizons / Élargir les Horizons » constituent le premier volume de cette nouvelle collection.
Toutefois, pour garantir une subsistance papier, répondre à une demande et maintenir les échanges entre bibliothèques des exemplaires imprimés à la demande peuvent être commandés auprès du service.
Travaux de la Maison de l'Orient
Collection de la Maison de l'Orient
See also the
Open Access Books from the Library of the Maison de l’Orient et de la Méditerranée - Lyon
Open Access Books from the Library of the Maison de l’Orient et de la Méditerranée - Lyon
See the Maison de l'Orient's out of print publications in the series TMO - Travaux de la Maison de l'Orient, CMO : Collection de la Maison de l'Orient, and Figlina at Maison de l'Orient et de la Méditerranée Publications numérisée.
↧
↧
Newly Open Access Journal: Études d'Antiquités africaines
Études d'Antiquités africaines
La collection Études d'Antiquités africaines a été créée dès 1966 à Aix-en-Provence au sein du Centre de Recherche sur l'Afrique méditerranéenne (CRAM), devenu aujourd'hui le "Centre Camille Jullian. Histoire et archéologie de la Méditerranée et de l'Afrique du Nord de la Protohistoire à la fin de l'Antiquité" (UMR 7299 d'Aix Marseille Université et du CNRS).
Publiés par CNRS Éditions, les volumes sont consacrés à des études historiques et archéologiques portant sur l'Afrique du Nord, de la Préhistoire à la conquête arabe. La géographie historique côtoie les faits généraux de civilisation, l'organisation administrative et militaire, l'économie, la vie sociale, l'histoire religieuse, etc., thèmes abordés tant à partir des sources littéraires que des témoignages archéologiques (céramique, épigraphie, onomastique, mosaïques, architecture, urbanisme…).
La revue Antiquités Africaines créée en 1966, parallèlement à cette collection, est également disponible sur le portail Persée.
1966-1969
1970-1979
1980-1989
1990-1999
2000-2009
And see also: Antiquités africaines
See the full List of Open Access Journals in Ancient Studies
↧
The Cambridge Greek Play
The Cambridge Greek Play
The tradition of performing a Greek play in Cambridge goes back to 1882, when the very first production was of Sophocles’ tragedy Ajax. The two producers were not classicists in the strict sense: the first was John Willis Clark, superintendent of the Museum of Zoology who possessed a passionate interest in the theatre. The other was Charles Waldstein, a classical archaeologist.
Previous Productions
↧
Open Access Series: Varia Anatolica
Varia Anatolica
L'Institut Français d'Études Anatoliennes, fondé en 1930 sous le nom d'Institut Français d'Archéologie de Stamboul, se dota en 1933 d'une collection destinée à publier les travaux en archéologie de ses membres appelée Mémoires de l'Institut Français d'Archéologie de Stamboul. Doublée en 1935 par les Études orientales, qui accueillaient des travaux issus d'autres disciplines, ces deux collections fusionnèrent en 1959. La Bibliothèque Archéologique et Historique de l'Institut Français d'Archéologie de Stamboul perdura jusqu'en 1976, année où elle fut rebaptisée Bibliothèque de l'Institut Français d'Études Anatoliennes, s'adaptant ainsi à la nouvelle dénomination. Dans le courant des années 80, la diversité des recherches menées à l'IFEA liée au développement du département d'études contemporaines décide le directeur à (re)créer des collections à orientation disciplinaire. Successivement, Varia Turcica (1985) pour les études turques, Varia Anatolica et la revue Anatolia Antiqua (1988), pour l'archéologie anatolienne voient le jour et sont suivies en 1991 par la création d'Anatolia Moderna, revue annuelle d'histoire qui connut 10 numéros.Varia Anatolica publie monographies, catalogues, ouvrages collectifs ou actes de colloques en archéologie anatolienne, de la Préhistoire à l'époque seldjoukide. Sa version en ligne est diffusée en accès intégral sur le portail Persée avec un embargo de 2 ans et sa version imprimée est diffusée par la librairie De Boccard à Paris.
- 11 Chronologies des pays du Caucase et de l’Euphrate aux IVe-IIIe millénaires. From the Euphrates to the Caucasus: Chronologies for the 4th-3rd millennium B.C. Vom Euphrat in den Kaukasus: Vergleichende Chronologie des 4. und 3. Jahrtausends v. Chr. Actes du Colloque d’Istanbul, 16-19 décembre 1998 - 2000
↧
More Pages to Explore .....