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Open Access Journal: Digital Archive of Brief notes & Iran Review (DABIR)

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Digital Archive of Brief notes & Iran Review (DABIR)
Dabir Journal
The Digital Archive of Brief notes & Iran Review (DABIR) is an open access, peer-reviewed online journal published by the Dr. Samuel M. Jordan Center for Persian Studies and Culture at the University of California, Irvine. DABIR aims to quickly and efficiently publish brief notes and reviews relating to the pre-modern world in contact with Iran and Persianate cultures. The journal accepts submissions on art history, archaeology, history, linguistics, literature, manuscript studies, numismatics, philology and religion, from Jaxartes to the Mediterranean and from the Sumerian period through to and including the Safavid era (3500 BCE-1500 CE). Work dealing with later periods can be considered on request.


Issue 02


I Articles


  1. Victorious: The “Arrogance” of Šāhānšah Xusrō Parvīz
    Keenan Baca-Winters
  2. Whipping the Sea and the Earth: Xerxes at the Hellespont and Yima at the Vara
    Touraj Daryaee
  3. Dancing in Middle & Classical Persian
    Touraj Daryaee & Nina Mazhjoo
  4. The Niyāyišn and the bagas (Brief comments on the so-called Xorde Avesta, 2)
    Götz König
  5.  Jamshīdī Nō-Rūz : Facts v/s Myth
    Dastur Firoze M. Kotwal
  6. An orgy of Oriental dissipation? Some thoughts on the ‘Camel lekythos’
    Lloyd Llewellyn-Jones
  7. The Turkish Iranian emigration as perceived by the Maathir al-Umara (1544-1629)
    Marc Morato
  8. Survey of Šāhnāme sources. 1. The so-called *Paykār and *Sagēsarān
    Mohesn Zakeri

II Reviews


  1. Asatrian, Garnik S. & Viktoria Arakelova. 2014. The religion of the Peacock Angel: the Yezidis and their spirit world.
    Vahé S. Boyajian
  2. Shahbazi, A. Shapur, Tārīḫ-e sāsānīān. Tarjome-ye baḫš-e sāsānīān az ketāb-e tārīḫ-e Ṭabarī va moqāyese-ye ān bā tārīḫ-e Bal’amī [Sasanian History. Translation of the Sasanian Section from the History of Ṭabari and its Commparission with the History of Bal’ami], Tehran, Iran University Press, 1389š/2010.
    Touraj Daryaee
  3. Timuş, Mihaela. 2015. Cosmogonie et eschatologie: articulations conceptuelles du système religieux zoroastrien. (Cahiers de Studia Iranica 54). Paris: Peeters Press.
    Shervin Farridnejad
  4. Briant, Pierre. 2015. Darius in the shadow of Alexander. (Trans.) Jane Marie Todd. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press.
    Lloyd Llewellyn-Jones
  5. Bridges, Emma. 2014. Imagining Xerxes: ancient perspectives on a Persian king. (Bloomsbury Studies in Classical Reception). New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
    Lloyd Llewellyn-Jones

III Obituary


  1. Malek Iradj MOCHIRI (1927–2015)
    Ehsan Shavarebi

Issue 01


I Articles


  1. A re-examination of two terms in the Elamite version of the Behistun inscription
    Saber Amiri Pariyan
  2. Alexander and the Arsacids in the manuscript MU29
    Touraj Daryaee
  3. Take care of the xrafstars! A note on Nēr. 7.5
    Shervin Farridnejad
  4. The kings of Parthia and Persia: Some considerations on the ‘Iranic’ identity in the Parthian Empire
    Leonardo Gregoratti
  5. Brief comments on the so-called Xorde Avesta (1)
    Götz König
  6. Some thoughts on the rock-reliefs of ancient Iran
    Ali Mousavi
  7. A note on the Alkhan coin type 39 and its legend
    Khodadad Rezakhani
  8. Relieving monthly sexual needs: On Pahlavi daštān-māh wizārdan
    Shai Secunda
  9. Preliminary observations on word order correspondence in the Zand
    Arash Zeini

II Reviews


  1. Smith, Kyle. 2014. The Martyrdom and History of Blessed Simeon bar Sabba’e
    Sajad Amiri Bavandpoor
  2. Mayor, Adrienne. 2014. The Amazons. Lives and Legends of Warrior Women Across the Ancient World
    Lloyd Llewellyn-Jones
  3. Llewellyn-Jones, Lloyd & James Robson. 2010. CTESIAS’ History of Persia: Tales of the Orient
    Yazdan Safaee

III Special Issue


  1. Of dirt, diet, and religious others: A theme in Zoroastrian thought
    Bruce Lincoln


New in JSTOR: Qedem: Monographs of the Institute of Archaeology

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Qedem: Monographs of the Institute of Archaeology = monografiyot shel ha-malchon lĕʻarkheologya ha-'Universiṭa ha-ʻivrit birushalayim
ISSN: 0333-5844 
Qedem
Coverage: 1975-2013 (Vol. 1 - Vol. 55)

These monographs are the main venue of publication for reports on the Institute of Archaeology of the Hebrew University’s excavations, their finds, and other research topics. Qedem is published in English and appears in two formats: Qedem and Qedem Reports. 

All Issues

2010s
2000s
1990s
1980s
1970s
And see also:
AWOL's full list of journals in JSTOR with substantial representation of the Ancient World

New in JSTOR: Yediot Bahaqirat Eretz-Israel Weatiqoteha /ידיעות בחקירת ארץ-ישראל ועתיקותיה

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Yediot Bahaqirat Eretz-Israel Weatiqoteha /ידיעות בחקירת ארץ-ישראל ועתיקותיה
ISSN: 2312-0061
EISSN: 2410-7123

All Issues


1950s
1940s
1930s
And see also:
AWOL's full list of journals in JSTOR with substantial representation of the Ancient World

DICTIONARY OF ART HISTORIANS: A Biographical Dictionary of Historic Scholars, Museum Professionals and Academic Historians of Art

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DICTIONARY OF ART HISTORIANS: A Biographical Dictionary of Historic Scholars, Museum Professionals and Academic Historians of Art
A biographical and methodological database intended as a beginning point to learning the background of major art historians of western art history. A free, copyrighted, scholarly database for the use of researchers, students and the public.
The Dictionary of Art Historians is a free, privately funded biographical dictionary of historians of western art written and maintained by scholars for the benefit of the public. It became associated with the Department of Art, Art History, and Visual Studies of Duke University in January of 2010. Initially conceived as a methodologic tool for English-language readers, it seeks to compile the documented facts of an historian's life in order to serve as a background for understanding a specific text and the historiography of art. As stipulated under the Creative Commons license agreement, of which it is a part, users are required to site this source (see how-to-site link) in all publications.
The DAH was begun in the fall of 1986 as a notecard project by indexing the historians cited in Eugene Kleinbauer's Research Guide to the History of Western Art (1982) and his Modern Perspectives in Western Art History (1971), Heinrich Dilly's Kunstgeschichte als Institution (1979) and some of Kultermann's Geschichte der Kunstgeschichte (1966). In 1996 it was input electronic and in 2002 migrated to the internet.
HOME      HOW TO CITE DAH    COMPLETE LIST     EXPLANATION      RECENT ENTRIES     BIBLIOGRAPHY          | |         DEUTSCH    FRANCAIS    NEDERLANDS    ITALIANO


Open Access Journal: Athens Journal of History

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Athens Journal of History 
e-ISSN: 2407-9677 
his
The Athens Journal of History (AJH) is a quarterly double blind peer reviewed journal and considers papers from all areas of history. Many of the papers published in this journal have been presented at the various conferences sponsored by the History Research Unit of the Athens Institute for Education and Research (ATINER).

GOSHEN-GOTTSTEIN, The Bible in the Syropalestinian version

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

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Commentaria Classica: Studi di filologia greca e latina
ISSN: 2283-5652
http://w.commentariaclassica.altervista.org/Commentaria_Classica/Home_files/shapeimage_2.png

Ecco il primo numero di Commentaria Classica. Studi di filologia greca e latina. Il campo di indagine della serie è rappresentato dai testi greci e latini dall’età arcaica fino all’umanesimo. L’approccio è prevalentemente filologico e critico-testuale e, naturalmente, può essere dato ampio spazio anche alla storia degli studi classici.
Commentaria Classica si avvale di un qualificato comitato scientifico internazionale e mette in atto un’attenta selezione del materiale sottoposto per la pubblicazione mediante il sistema di peer review anonimo.
La serie è diffusa esclusivamente online (in formato .pdf).
Le lingue accettate per la pubblicazione sono l'italiano, l'inglese, il francese, il tedesco, lo spagnolo e il latino.
Trovate le norme editoriali da seguire in un’apposita sezione nella pagina principale.
Chi fosse interessato alla pubblicazione può inviare il proprio contributo in formato .doc o .docx all'indirizzo commentaria.classica@gmail.com
Volumipubblicati
II - 2015

Volumein preparazione
III - 2016

Open Access Journal: Routes de l'Orient: Revue d'Archéologie de l'Orient Ancien

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Routes de l'Orient: Revue d'Archéologie de l'Orient Ancien
ISSN: 2272-8120
http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-94s9VkIHdAA/UzWB0eZbunI/AAAAAAAAAbo/0mEUglb1nWU/s1238/Couv.jpg
Routes de l'Orient est une association étudiante à but non lucratif ayant pour objectif principal de promouvoir la recherche en archéologie orientale grâce à la participation active d'étudiants et au soutien d'enseignants et de chercheurs. Elle regroupe des étudiants provenant de différentes universités telles que Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, Paris 4 Sorbonne, l'Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes (EPHE) et tend à s'ouvrir à d'autres universités françaises et étrangères.
N° 2 - "Actualité des recherches archéologiques"



N° 1 - "Actualités de la recherche archéologique" 


Cliquez sur l'image pour ouvrir le document




In Memory of Elaine Fantham 1933–2016

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In Memory of Elaine Fantham 1933–2016
This website is dedicated to the memory of Elaine Fantham, renowned and much missed professor of Latin at Princeton and the University of Toronto, known to colleagues around the world as a brilliant and path-breaking scholar, to students as a wise and devoted mentor, to NPR audiences as a witty and inspiring guide to the classical world.
 
We invite all who have benefited from her friendship and her learning to share their memories and photos of her in the comments...
Here are links to remembrances of her produced by Princeton University, its Classics Department, and that of the University of Toronto. Elaine’s personal website, which includes her CV, can be reached here. Her appearances on NPR’s Weekend Edition are also available via this link.

Open Access Journal: Gorffennol: The Swansea University History and Classics Online Journal and Blog

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Gorffennol: The Swansea University History and Classics Online Journal and Blog
Gorffennol is the Welsh for Past. It is the online student journal of the History and Classics Department at Swansea University. It will produce two journal issues a year as well as regular blog posts. It is run by an editorial team consisting of 10 students and two members of staff from the Department.

The online journal will be published biannually and will showcase outstanding student assignments from all subject areas in our Department (hence ‘Past’ as this includes everything from ancient Egypt, Greece, and Rome through the Medieval period to the early modern and modern periods).
There will also be regular blog posts by students and staff on module-specific research. There will be links to it from module Blackboard sites, so our Departmental students can look at what excellent work in particular modules looks like.

We are grateful for the funding this project has received from the Swansea Academy of Learning and Teaching (SALT). It will work as a pilot project not only to display  excellent student work, but also to help our students increase their career skills by providing them with editorial experience. We hope to open up the journal to all Arts and Humanities students once the pilot stage of this project is over.
The editorial team are being guided by Dr Evelien Bracke on a weekly basis and have also received a talk by Prof Thomas Jansen (TSD) who coordinates the Student Journal at Trinity Saint David.
Issue 1: January 2015
Issue 2: April 2015
Issue 3: January 2016
The third issue of Gorffennol can now be accessed by clicking on this link: Gorffennol issue 3.

Articles can also be accessed individually:
Year One
Oliver Garbett, ‘Is Horace Ode 1.37 pro-Augustan, anti-Augustan, both, or neither?’, written for Augustan Rome(CLH112)
Access: Oliver Garbett
Stephanie Brown, ‘What did Medieval people think caused the Black Death, and how did they respond accordingly?’, written for Medieval Europe: an introduction (HIH117)
Access: Stephanie Brown
Eugenia Gower, ‘Write your own Heracles myth’, written for Of Gods and Heroes – Greek Mythology(CLC101)
Access: Eugenia Gower

Year Two
Laura Bailey, ‘How important was farming (socially, economically, politically, culturally) for a Greek polis?’, written for Greek City States (CLH264)
Access: Laura Bailey
Bronwen Swain, ‘What was the league of German girls?’, written for The Practice of History (HIH237)
Access: Bronwen Swain
Dale Cutlan, ‘How useful is Domesday Book as a source for understanding the impact of the Norman Conquest on England?’, written for War and Society in the Anglo-Norman World(HIH252)
Access: Dale Cutlan

Year Three
Charlotte Morgan, ‘How important was it for Alexander to be recognized as pharaoh and what did it involve?’, written for Alexandria: Multicultural Metropolis of the Ancient World (CLE334)
Access: Charlotte Morgan
Jed Rual, ‘Masculine iconography of 18th dynasty royal women and its influence on the perception of their role as queen’, written for Ancient Egyptian and Ptolemaic Queens (CLE342)
Access: Jed Rual
Andre Chavez, ‘To what extent did British success in Europe during the Seven Years War depend on the strength of the Fiscal-Military state?’, written for The Great War for Empire II, 1754-1764: Europe (HIH-3306)
Access: Andre Chavez

MA Level
Andrew Morel-du-Boil, ‘A public space of varying suffering: Public lavatory provision in Victorian Bury-St-Edmunds’, written for Directed Reading in History (HI-M80)
Access: Andrew Morel-du-Boil
 

One Off Journal Issues: Special issue on mummy studies (Papers on Anthropology, Vol 23, No 1 (2014))

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Special issue on mummy studies (= Papers on Anthropology [ISSN 1406-0140 (print), ISSN 1736-7646 (online), Vol 23, No 1 (2014)])
Page Header

Editorial

Dario Piombino-Mascali, Rimantas Jankauskas
5

Articles

Stephanie D. Atherton-Woolham, Lidija M. McKnight
9-17
Janet Davey, Pamela J. G. Craig, Olaf. H. Drummer
18-28
Jasmine Day
29-44
Alison Marissa Brooks Garcia, Ronald G. Beckett, James T. Watson
45-62
Heather Gill-Frerking
63-75
Guinevere Granite, Andreas Bauerochse
76-86
Anastasia Karamanou, Maria Stefanidou
87-96
Lidija M. McKnight, Natalie C. McCreesh, Andrew Gize
97-107
Lidija M. McKnight, Robert D. Loynes
108-117
Dario Piombino-Mascali, Justina Kozakaitė, Algirdas Tamošiūnas, Ramūnas Valančius, Stephanie Panzer, Rimantas Jankauskas
118-126
Dario Piombino-Mascali, Lidija M. McKnight, Rimantas Jankauskas
127-134
Mi Kyung Song, Dong Hoon Shin
135-151


Open Access Journal: Hellenistic Poetry Newsletter: Lettre d'information sur la poésie hellénistique

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Hellenistic Poetry Newsletter: Lettre d'information sur la poésie hellénistique
Le carnet de recherche Hellenistic Poetry Newsletter, qui fait suite à la lettre électronique de diffusion créée par Christophe Cusset en 2005, à la suite d'une demande qui s'était manifestée lors d'un Workshop sur la Poésie Hellénistique à Groningen, entend offrir une information régulière de toute l'activité de recherche dans le domaine de la poésie hellénistique (et impériale). Il s'agit d'apporter une information brute sur les nouvelles parutions (ouvrages, articles, communications), sur les colloques, conférences, congrès et journées d'études, sur les nouvelles thèses, sur les offres de poste (post-doc, allocations de thèse etc.) liées à la poésie hellénistique, sur les appels à communication ou toute manifestation scientifique en lien avec ce domaine de recherche.

The Hellenistic Poetry Newsletter, which follows the electronic mailing list created by Christophe Cusset in 2005, following a request which was manifested in a Workshop on Hellenistic Poetry in Groningen, intends to offer regular reporting of all research activity in the field of Hellenistic (and Imperial) poetry. This is to provide raw information on new publications (books, articles, papers) on seminars, conferences, congresses and workshops, on new theses on this topic, on offers of positions (post-doc, allowances thesis etc.). related to Hellenistic poetry, on calls for papers or scientific event in connection with this research field. 

Open Access Journal: Thersites: Journal for Transcultural Presences & Diachronic Identities from Antiquity to Date

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Thersites: Journal for Transcultural Presences & Diachronic Identities from Antiquity to Date
ISSN: 2364-7612
http://www.thersites.uni-mainz.de/public/journals/1/homeHeaderTitleImage_de_DE.png
thersites is an international open access journal for innovative transdisciplinary classical studies founded in 2014 by Christine Walde, Filippo Carlà and Christian Stoffel.
  • thersites expands classical reception studies by reflecting on Greco-Roman antiquity as present phenomenon and diachronic culture that is part of today’s transcultural and highly diverse world. Antiquity, in our understanding, does not merely belong to the past, but is always experienced and engaged in the present.
     
  • thersites contributes to the critical review on methods, theories, approaches and subjects in classical scholarship, which currently seems to be awkwardly divided between traditional perspectives and cultural turns.
     
  • thersites brings together scholars, writers, essayists, artists and all kinds of agents in the culture industry to get a better understanding of how antiquity constitutes a part of today’s culture and (trans-)forms our present.


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

Cappelli Online

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Cappelli Online

 
Die Daten des  Cappelli online wurden durch Crowdsourcing unter Einsatz vieler freiwilliger Helferinnen und Helfer aufgenommen. Trotz sorgfältiger Kontrolle durch eine Expertengruppe können vereinzelt Fehler vorkommen. Schreibweisen und somit auch allfällige Unstimmigkeiten wurden exakt nach gedrucktem Cappelli in die Online-Version übernommen. Für jedes Abkürzungsbild steht das Digitalisat der entsprechenden Cappelli-Seite zur Verfügung (durch Klick auf die neben dem Bild stehende Seitenzahl in der Auswahlliste). Somit kann direkt aus Ad fontes zitiert werden.

Der Cappelli zum Durchblättern und Durchsuchen ist noch im Beta–Test!

Das nach seinem Autor Adriano Cappelli benannte Standardwerk «Lexicon abbreviaturarum» enthält lateinische und italienische Abkürzungen mittelalterlicher Texte. 

Lexicon abbreviaturarum. Dizionario di abbreviature latine ed italiane. Mailand 6. Aufl. 1961 (ND: Mailand 1990).
Der Cappelli lässt sich online in Ad fontes (Ressourcen, Abkürzungen) durchsuchen.

Notice via DM-L
 In October 2015, the University of Zurich hosted the Cappelli-Hackathon, a very successful crowd sourcing project, during which all 14'357 abbreviations collected in Adriano Cappellis'«Lexicon abbreviaturarum» were digitally registered and systematised through a specifically for the task designed web interface. Since then, the registered abbreviations have been checked and – where necessary – corrected through expert validation. They are as of now freely available, either as part of the Ad fontes platform (Cappelli online) or through the new app, App fontes.
The search interface not only allows to search by the readable letters, with the possiblity to set wildcards for non-identifiable characters, but also to search by visual criteria. Through the use of a 3x3 grid, the abbreviations have been systematised by the placement of abbreviation marks and other visual features; user may now use this grid in the search interface to help them find results.
Thus, the project allows a better and easier way to access the «Cappelli», an invaluable tool for everyone working with handwritten sources. Since «Ad fontes» offers also a link to the digitised original page, it is even possible to cite from the «Lexicon abbreviaturarum» using the project.

P.S.: The data as well as the pictures can be downloaded (http://www.adfontes.uzh.ch/5232.php)

Open Access Monograph Series: Agora Picture Books

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Agora Picture Books











The primary purpose of the Agora Picture Book series is to enliven the experience of a visitor to the Athenian Agora, excavated by the American School since 1931. While drawing on the object and monuments that can be viewed on a visit to the site, these well-illustrated guides attempt to add some human color to the dry material remains. A number of the concise guides have become popular supplementary texts for undergraduate and graduate classes in classical civilization. Since 1998 the Picture Books have been published in color.

1: Pots and Pans of Classical Athens - by Brian A. Sparkes and Lucy Talcott
2: The Stoa of Attalos II in Athens - by Homer A. Thompson
3: Miniature Sculpture from the Athenian Agora - by Dorothy B. Thompson
4: The Athenian Citizen: Democracy in the Athenian Agora - by Mabel Lang, revised by John McK. Camp II
4: The Athenian Citizen: (Modern Greek Edition) - by Mabel Lang, revised by John McK. Camp II, translated by Irini Marathaki
5: Ancient Portraits from the Athenian Agora - by Evelyn B. Harrison
6: Amphoras and the Ancient Wine Trade - by Virginia R. Grace
7: The Middle Ages in the Athenian Agora - by Alison Frantz
8: Garden Lore of Ancient Athens - by Dorothy B. Thompson and Ralph E. Griswold
9: Lamps from the Athenian Agora - by Judith Perlzweig
10: Inscriptions from the Athenian Agora - by Benjamin D. Meritt
11: Waterworks in the Athenian Agora - by Mabel Lang
12: An Ancient Shopping Center: The Athenian Agora - by Dorothy B. Thompson
13: Early Burials from the Agora Cemeteries - by Sara A. Immerwahr
14: Graffiti in the Athenian Agora - by Mabel Lang
15: Greek and Roman Coins in the Athenian Agora - by Fred S. Kleiner
16: The Athenian Agora: A Short Guide to the Excavations - by John McK. Camp II
16: The Athenian Agora: A Short Guide to the Excavations (Modern Greek) - by John McK. Camp II
17: Socrates in the Agora - by Mabel Lang
18: Mediaeval and Modern Coins in the Athenian Agora - by Fred S. Kleiner
19: Gods and Heroes in the Athenian Agora - by John McK. Camp II
20: Bronzeworkers in the Athenian Agora - by Carol C. Mattusch
21: Ancient Athenian Building Methods - by John McK. Camp II and William B. Dinsmoor Jr.
22: Birds of the Athenian Agora - by Robert D. Lamberton and Susan I. Rotroff
23: Life, Death, and Litigation in the Athenian Agora - by Mabel Lang
24: Horses and Horsemanship in the Athenian Agora - by John McK. Camp II
25: The Games at Athens - by Jenifer Neils and Stephen V. Tracy
26: Women in the Athenian Agora - by Susan I. Rotroff and Robert D. Lamberton
27: Marbleworkers in the Athenian Agora - by Carol L. Lawton


Open Access Monograph Series: Estudos de Egiptologia

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Estudos de Egiptologia
http://www.seshat.com.br/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/cropped-topo-seshat31.png
O Laboratório de Egiptologia do Museu Nacional é o primeiro Laboratório no Brasil dedicado ao estudo da arqueologia do Egito antigo. Ligado ao Museu Nacional da UFRJ, o Laboratório tem como foco a pesquisa arqueológica da coleção egípcia do museu, a maior da América Latina, e a arqueologia do Egito antigo.

Sob coordenação do Prof. Dr. Antonio Brancaglion, o Laboratório desenvolve diferentes linhas de pesquisa que objetivam a análise dos objetos arqueológicos egípcios, bem como a compreensão da sociedade egípcia em diversos períodos.
Publicações
1) Semna – Estudos de Egiptologia I (2014), orgs. Antonio Brancaglion Jr., Thais Rocha da Silva, Rennan de Souza Lemos e Raizza Teixeira dos Santos, Prefácio: Dr. Chris Naunton, Seshat/Editora Klínē.

Capa Estudos de Egiptologia I SEMNA
(clique na imagem para fazer download)
Sumário
Trabalhos apresentados na I SEMNA não incluídos neste volume
Equipe organizadora da I SEMNA
Lista de autores
Apresentação, os organizadores
Prefácio/Foreword, Chris Naunton (Egypt Exploration Society, Londres)
Auxiliares para o renascimento: estátuas funerárias de Osíris e Ptah-Sokar-Osíris da coleção do Museu Nacional/UFRJ, Simone Bielesch
Para falar aos deuses: estudo das estatuetas votivas da coleção egípcia do Museu Nacional, Cintia Prates Facuri (Museu Nacional, UFRJ)
Tecnologias tridimensionais aplicadas em pesquisas arqueológicas de múmias egípcias, Simonte Belmonte (INT), Jorge Lopes (PUC-Rio/INT) e Antonio Brancaglion Jr (Museu Nacional, UFRJ)
Amarna: pintando uma nova paisagem, Rennan de Souza Lemos (Museu Nacional, UFRJ)
As representações da família real amarniana e a consolidação de uma nova visão de mundo durante o reinado de Akhenaton (1353-1335 a. C.), Gisela Chapot (UFF)
Hierarquia e mobilidade social no antigo Egito do Reino Novo, Nely Feitoza Arrais (UNILASALLE-RJ)
Implicações econômicas dos templos egípcios e a constituição de poderes locais: um estudo sobre o Reino Antigo, Maria Thereza David João (USP)
Sobre a importância da teoria social na egiptologia econômica, Fábio Frizzo (UFF)
Identidade, gênero e poder no Egito Romano, Marcia Severina Vasques (UFRN)
“E me traga essa carta de volta”. As cartas aos deuses e os estudos de gênero no Egito Ptolomaico. Contribuições da antropologia, Thais Rocha da Silva (USP/Museu Nacional, UFRJ)
As estelas funerárias com o morto reclinado em uma cama funerária: etnia, identidade emaranhamento cultural no Baixo Egito durante o Período Romano, Pedro Luiz Diniz von Seehausen (Museu Nacional, UFRJ)
Adriano e o Egito: a construção de um modelo egipcianizante para a Villa Adriana, Evelyne Azevedo (Museu Nacional, UFRJ)

2) Semna– Estudos de Egiptologia II (2015), orgs. Antonio Brancaglion Jr., Rennan de Souza Lemos e Raizza Teixeira dos Santos, Seshat/Editora Klínē.
CAPA SEMNA II(clique na imagem para fazer download)
Sumário
Des hommes et des dieux : une approche anthropologique de la religion Egyptienne, Christiane Zivie-Coche
Homens e deuses: uma abordagem antropológica da religião egípcia, Chistiane Zivie-Coche (tradução: C. A. Gama-Rolland)
Agindo como deuses: um olhar sobre a família real nos relevos amarnianos (1353-1335 a. C.), Gisela Chapot
A divindade Serápis: cultura, religião e sincretismo na Alexandria greco-romana, Joana Campos Clímaco
Expressões materiais da devoção pessoal no Egito antigo, Cintia Prates Facuri
Egipcianização e resistência na Núbia da XVIII Dinastia, Fábio Frizzo
Narrativas da restauração: referências sobre a Reforma Amarniana nos governos sucessores, Vanessa Fronza
A representação real nos shabtis do Novo Império, Cintia A. Gama-Rolland
Amenemope, o coração e a filosofia, ou a cardiografia (do pensamento), Renato Noguera
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Hale and Buck: A Latin Grammar

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Hale and Buck: A Latin Grammar

Introduction

Hale and Buck's A Latin Grammar was first published by Ginn and Company in 1903. This edition is a collation of the two different versions of the original that I am aware of, hereafter referred to as versions A and B.

The Scans

Corrections and bug reports

If you notice any errors, please enter them in the issue trackeror via email to haleandbuck@gmail.com.

Editorial practices

Throughout I have tried to emulate the typographical conventions of the original fairly closely, but I have not hesitated to depart from them where convenient. Most such changes can pass without comment, but one perhaps requires some justification. In the original, there are many instances of paragraphs that are set in a smaller type than the main text, for example, 269 a and 270 a, b. An examination of the changes made in version B reveals that many of them are similarly reduced in size, which makes me think that most if not all such passages represent changes made in galleys. In other words, I believe the smaller typeface was used solely (or at least primarily) in order to make room for late additions to the page rather than to indicate that this material is somehow of less importance. Especially in view of the absence of any indication by the authors that they attach any such meaning to variation in type size, I have not tried to preserve such variations. (It's possible, of course, that the smaller type size does carry meaning in some cases, and there is sufficient variation in style to foster doubt. But if so, I'm unable to distinguish the cases.)

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