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LOCUS LUDI: The Cultural Fabric of Play and Games in Classical Antiquity

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LOCUS LUDI: The Cultural Fabric of Play and Games in Classical Antiquity
Locus Ludi
Locus Ludi intends to provide a benchmark by reconstructing the history of the ludic culture in the Greco-Roman world. The project will identify, categorize and reconstruct ancient games thanks to close philological, historical, archaeological, and anthropological studies.
The research will generate a new vision of the cultural fabric of ancient society, provide models for training and research in related fields, as well as up-to-date material for schools, museums, and libraries. Understanding the educational, societal and integrative role of play in the past is important to understand the present and widen the debate on high tech toys and new forms of sociability.

De Imperatoribus Romanis: An Online Encyclopedia of Roman Rulers and Their Families

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 [First posted in AWOL 28 January 2014, updated 18 January 2020]

De Imperatoribus Romanis: An Online Encyclopedia of Roman Rulers and Their Families
http://www.luc.edu/roman-emperors/map.gif
DIR is an on-line encyclopedia on the rulers of the Roman empire from Augustus (27 BC-AD 14) to Constantine XI Palaeologus (1449-1453). The encyclopedia consists of (1) an index of all the emperors who ruled during the empire's 1500 years, (2) a growing number of biographical essays on the individual emperors, (3) family trees ("stemmata") of important imperial dynasties, (4) an index of significant battles in the empire's history, (5) a growing number of capsule descriptions and maps of these battles, and (6) maps of the empire at different times. Wherever possible, these materials are cross-referenced by live links.
 
These contents are supplemented by an ancient and medieval atlas, a link to a virtual catalog of Roman coins, and other recommended links to related sites. The contents of DIR have been prepared by scholars but are meant to be accessible to non-specialists as well. They have been peer- reviewed for quality and accuracy before publication on this site.
-A-Aelia Eudocia (Wife of Theodosius II)
Aelia Eudoxia (Wife of Arcadius)
Aelianus (285 or 286 A.D.)
Aemilius Aemilianus (253 A.D.)
Mussius Aemilianus (A.D. 261)
Agnes of France (Wife of Alexius II Comnenus)
Agrippina the Elder (wife of Germanicus)
Agrippina the Younger (Wife of Claudius)
Clodius Albinus (193- 197 A.D.)
L. Domitius Alexander (308-309 A.D.)
Severus Alexander (A.D.222-235)
Alexius II Comnenus (A.D.1180-1183)
Allectus (293-296/7 A.D.)
Amandus (285 or 286 A.D.)
Anastasia (Daughter of Constantius I)
Anastasia (Wife of Constantine IV)
Anastasius (491-518 A.D.) \
Anastasius II (A.D. 713-715)
Andronicus I (1183-1185)
Anna (wife of Artabasdus)
Anna Dalassena (Mother of Alexius I Comnenus))
Anthemius (467- 472)
Antoninus Pius (138- 161 A.D.)
Arcadius (395-408 A.D.)
Arrecina Tertulla (Wife of Titus)
Artabasdus (742-743 A.D.)
Arvandus (468 A.D.)
Augustus (31 B.C. - 14 A.D.)
Aurelian (270-275) A.D.)
Aurelius Achilleus (296/7- 297/8 A.D)
Aureolus (A.D. 262, 268)
Avidius Cassius (175 AD)
Avitus (455- 456A.D.)
-B-
Balbinus (238 A.D.)
Ballista (A.D. 261)
Basil II (976-1025 A.D.)
Basiliscus (475-476 A.D.)
Basiliscus (Leo) Caesar (A.D. 476-477/8)
Bertha of Sulzbach (wife of Manuel I Comnenus)
Bonosus (280 A.D.)
Britannicus (son of Claudius)
-C-
Caligula (37-41 A.D.)
Calocaerus (333/334 A.D)
Candidianus (Son of Galerius)
Caracalla (211- 217A.D)
Carausius (286/7-293 A.D.)
Carinus (283-285 A.D.)
Carus (282-283 A.D.)
Censorinus (269-270 A.D.)
Claudius (41-54 A.D.)
Claudius II Gothicus (268-270 A.D.)
Commodus (180-192 A.D)
Constans I (337-350 A.D.)
Constans II (409/10-411 A.D.)
Constans II (641-668 A.D.)
Constantia (the daughter of Constantius I)
Constantia (Daughter of Constantius II)
Constantina (the daughter of Constantine I)
Constantina (the wife of the Emperor Maurice)
Constantine I (306- 337 A.D.)
Constantine II (337-340 A.D.)
Constantine III (407-411 A.D.)
Constantine III (February -April/May 641 A.D.)
Constantine IV (668- 685 A.D)
Constantine V Copronymus (A.D. 741-775)
Constantine VI (780-797 A.D.)
Constantius I (305- 306 A.D.)
Julius Constantius
Constantius II (337- 361 A.D.)
Constantius III (421 A.D.)
C Cornelia Supra (wife of Aemilianus)
Crispus (317-326 A.D.)
-D-
Dalmatius Caesar (335-337 A.D)
Dalmatius the Censor (The Half-brother of Constantine I)
Decentius (351-353 A.D.)
Decius (249-251 A.D.)
Diadumenianus (218 A.D.)
Didius Julianus (193 A.D.)
Diocletian (284-305 A.D.)
Domitia Longina (Wife of Domitian)
Domitian (81- 96A.D.)
Domitianus (271-272 A.D.)
L. Domitius Domitianus (296/7- 297/8 A.D)
Domnica, Wife of the Emperor Valens
-E-
Elagabalus (218-222 A.D.)
Epiphania (daughter of Heraclius)
Eudocia (third wife of Constantine V)
Eudocia (daughter of Valentinian III)
Eudocia (First Wife of Justinian II)
Licinia Eudoxia (wife of Valentinian III)
Eugenius (303/4 A.D)
Flavius Eugenius (392- 394 A.D.)
Euphemia (wife of Justin I)
Eusebia (Wife of Constantius II)
Eutropia (Sister of Constantine I)
Eutropia (Wife of Maximianus Herculius)
-F-
Fabia-Eudocia (First Wife of Heraclius)
Fausta
Fausta (Wife of Constans II)
Faustina (Wife of Antoninus Pius)
Faustina (Wife of Marcus Aurelius)
Faustina
Annia Aurelia Faustina (third wife of Elagabal)
Faustinus (274 A.D.)
Firmus (273 A.D.)
Firmus (ca.372 -ca. 375 A.D.)
Felicissimus (270-271? A.D.)
Flavia Domitilla (Daughter of Vespasian)
Flavia Domitilla (Wife of Vespasian)
Florianus (276 A.D.)
-G-
Galba (68-69 A.D)
Galerius (305-311 A.D)
Galla Placidia
Gallienus (A.D. 253- 268)
Gallus Caesar (351- 354A.D.)
Gellius Maximus
Tiberius Gemellus (19- 37/38 A.D.)
Germanicus Caesar (15 B.C.- A.D. 19)
Geta (211 A.D.)
Glycerius
Gordian I (238A.D.)
Gordian II (238 A.D.)
Gordian III (238-244 A.,D.)
Gratian (367-83 A.D.)
Gratian (407 A.D.)
Gregoria (wife of Heraclius Constantine)
Gregory (646-647 A.D.)
-H-
Hadrian (117-138 A.D.)
Hannibalianus (Half- brother of Constantine I)
Hannibalianus (Rex Regum) (335-337 A.D.)
Helen (Wife of Julian the Transgressor)
Helena
Helena Dragas (wife of Manuel II)
Heraclius (610-641 A.D.)
Heraclonas (April/May - September 641 A.D.)
Herennia Etruscilla (wife of Decius)
Herennius Etruscus (A.D. 251)
Honorius (395-423 A.D.)
Hostilian (A.D. 251)
-I-
Ingenuus (260 A.D)
Ino (Wife of Tiberius II Constantine)
Iohannes (423-425 A.D.)
Iotapianus (248 A.D.)
Irene of Hungary (wife of John II Comnenus)
Irene (wife of Leo IV)
Irene (wife of Constantine V)
Irene (797-802 A.D.)
Isaac, Emperor of Cyprus
Iulianus (ca. 286-293 A.D.)
-J-
John II Comenus (1118-1143 A.D.)
Jovian (363-364 A.D)
Jovinus (411- 413 A.D.)
Julia (Daughter of Titus)
Julia Aquila Severa (second wife of Elagabal)
Julia Cornelia Paula (first wife of Elagabal)
Julia Domna
Julia Maesa
Julia Mamaea
Julia Soaemias
Julian the Apostate (A.D. 360-363)
Justa Honoria Grata
Justin (518-527 A.D.)
Justin II (565-578 A.D.)
Justinian I (527-565 A.D.)
Justinian II (685-695, 705-711 A.D.)
-K-
-L-
Laelianus (269 A.D.)
Leo I (457-474 A.D.)
Leo II (474 A.D)
Leo III (A.D 717- 741)
Leo IV (775-780 A.D.)
Leontia (wife of the Emperor Phocas)
Leontius (484-488 A.D.)
Leontius (695-698 A.D.)
Libius Severus (461- 465 A.D.)
Iulius Valens Licinianus (ca. 249-251 A.D.)
Licinius (308-324 A.D)
Livia (the wife of Augustus)
Lucilla (Wife of Lucius Verus)
Lucius Verus (161-166 AD)
-M-
L. Clodius Macer (68 A.D.)
Macrianus I (A.D. 260-261)
Macrianus II (A.D. 260-261)
Macrinus (217-218 A.D.)
Magnentius (350-353 A.D.)
Magnus (235 A.D.)
Magnus Maximus (383- 388 A.D.)
Majorian (457-461 A.D.)
Manuel I (A.D. 1143- 1180)
Manuel II (1391-1425 A.D.) A.D.)
Marcia Furnilla (Wife of Titus)
Marcus (406- 407 A.D)
Marcus Aurelius (A.D. 161-180)
Mareades (253-260 A.D.)
Maria (second wife of Constantine V)
Maria (wife of Constantine VI)
Maria (wife of Leo III)
Maria of Antioch (wife of Manuel Comnenus)
Maria the Alan (wife of Michael VII)
Marius (269 A.D.)
Maria Porphyrogenita, daughter of Manuel I Comnenus
Martina (Second Wife of Heraclius)
Martinianus (324A.D)
Maurice (582-602 A.D.)
Maxentius (306-312 A.D.)
Maximianus Herculius (285-305 A.D.)
Maximinus Daia (305-313 A.D.)
Maximinus Thrax (235-238 A.D.)
Maximus (409- 411 A.D.)
Marcellus (366 A.D.)
Marcus Aurelius (A.D. 161-180)
Marcus Caesar (A.D. 475-476)
Memor (A.D. 262)
Mezezius (669 A.D.)
-N-
Julius Nepos (474-480 A.D.)
Nepotian (355 A.D.)
Nero (54-68 A.D.)
Nerva (96-98 A.D.)
Pescennius Niger (193- 194 A.D.)
Nicephorus (802-811 A.D.)
Nicephorus Bryennius (A.D.1078-1081)
Nicephorus III Botaniates (A.D.1078-1081)
Nicephorus Melissenus (A.D.1080-1081)
Nicephorus Basilacius (A.D.1078-1081)
Numerianus (283-284 A.D.)
-O-
(Claudia) Octavia,daughter of Claudius
Odaenathus
Olybrius (472 A.D.)
Olympius (649-653 A.D.)
Otho (69 A.D.)
-P-
 
Pacatianus (248 A.D.)
Palladius Caesar (455 A.D.)
Patricius Caesar (A.D. 469)
Pertinax (192-193 A.D.)
Petronius Maximus (455 A.D.)
Philip the Arab (244-249 A.D.)
Philip Iunior (247-249 A.D.)
Philippicus Bardanes (A.D. 711-713)
Piso (A.D. 261)
Publia Fulvia Plautilla (wife of Caracalla)
Pompeia Plotina(Wife of Trajan)
Postumus (A.D. 260- 269)
Prisca (Wife of Diocletian)
T. Julius Priscus (ca. 249-251 A.D.)
Priscus Attalus (409-410, 414-415 A.D.)
Pulcheria (Wife of the Emperor Marcian)
Pupienus (Maximus) (238 A.D.)
Probus (276-282 A.D.)
Procopius (365-366 A.D.)
Proculus (280- 281 A.D.)
-Q-
Quartinus (235 A.D.)
Quietus (A.D. 260-261)
Quintillus (270A.D)
-R-
Regalianus 260 A.D.)
Romanus (470A.D.)
Romulus Augustulus (475-476 A.D.)
-S-
Sabinianus (240 A.D.)
C. Nymphidius Sabinus (68 A.D)
Sallustia Orbiana (wife of Alexander Severus)
L. Seius Sallustius (A.D. 225-227)
L. Antonius Saturninus (89 A.D.)
Saturninus (281 A.D)
Sebastianus (412-413 A.D.)
Seleucus
Septimius Severus (193-211 A.D.)
Septimius (271-272 A.D.)
Severus Alexander (A.D.222-235)
Severus II (306-307 A.D)
Silbannacus (248 A.D.)
Silvanus (355 A.D.)
Sophia (Wife of Justin II)
Sponsianus (248 A.D.)
Stauricius (822 A.D.)
-T-
Tacitus (275-276 A.D.)
Taurinus
Tetricus I (271-274 A.D.)
Tetricus II (273?- 274 A.D.}
Theodora (Wife of Constantius Chlorus)
Theodora (Wife of Justinian I)
Theodora (Second Wife of Justinian II)
Theodosius I the Great (378-395 A.D.)
Theodosius II (408-450 A.D.)
Theodosius III (A.D. 715-717)
Theophano, wife of Romanus II and Nicephorus II Phocas
Theodote (wife of Constantine VI)
Tiberius (14-37 A.D.)
Tiberius II (I) Constantine (578-582 A.D.)
Tiberius III (II) (698-705 A.D.)
Titus (79-81 A.D.)
Trajan (A.D. 98- 117)
Trebonianus Gallus (251-253 A.D.)
-U-
Ulpia Severina (wife of Aurelian)
Uranius (ca. 218-235 and/or 253/4? A.D.)
Uranius
Urbanus (271- 272 A.D.)
-V-
Vaballathus (270-272 A.D.)
Valens (316 A.D.)
Valens (A.D. 261)
Valens(364- 378A.D.)
Valentinan I (364-375 A.D.)
Valentinian II (375- 92 A.D.)
Valentinian III (425-455 A.D.)
Galeria Valeria (Wife of Galerius)
Valeria Maximilla (daughter of Galerius)
Valeria Messalina (Wife of Claudius)
Valerian (A.D. 253- 260)
Valerius Romulus (son of Maxentius)
Aelia Verina (Wife of Leo I)
Verus
Vespasian (69 -79 A.D)
Vetranio (350 A.D.)
Vibia Sabina (Wife of Hadrian)
Flavius Victor (384- 388 A.D)
Victorinus (269-270 A.D.)
C. Iulius Vindex (68 A.D.)
Vitellius (69 A.D)
Volusianus (251-253 A.D.)
-W-
-X-
-Y-
-Z-
Zeno (474-491 A.D.)
Zenobia (270-272 A.D.)
Zoe Porphyrogenita (wife of Romanus III, Constantine IX, and Michael IV)
 

PAIXUE: Classicising Learning in Medieval Imperial Systems: Cross-cultural Approaches to Byzantine Paideia and Tang/Song Xue

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PAIXUE:Classicising Learning in Medieval Imperial Systems: Cross-cultural Approaches to Byzantine Paideiaand Tang/SongXue
http://paixue.shca.ed.ac.uk/themes/paixue/images/stitched.png

n the medieval Eurasian geopolitical space, Byzantium and China stand out as two centralised imperial orders that drew on seemingly unbroken, in fact purposely constructed, traditions of classicising learning.  With generous support from the European Research Council (ERC), the PAIXUE project examines in tandem, with equal focus on structural parallels and divergences, the conscious revival and subsequent dialectics of classicising learning in middle and later Byzantium (c.800–1350) and Tang/Song China (618–1279). Initially tied into aristocratic culture, it became a tool by which the imperial state sought to monopolise prestige and access to power so as to effectively channel the activities of newly emerging burgeoning ‘middling’ strata into the service of empire. As time progressed, it was also the basis upon which these new elites constructed novel forms of subjectivity that claimed authority and agency increasingly independent of the imperial state.

Mi Fu
Seal of Mi Fu (1051–1107), poet, painter and collector of books,
MET 1977.78 
PAIXUE traces this evolution of classicising learning in Byzantine and Tang/Song literati culture from two angles. The first examines the galvanising function of social performances that involved classicising learning in the imperial systems. The second places the individual literatus centre-stage and explores the transformations of self-awareness, ethos, and self-cultivation. Given PAIXUE’s concern with examining phenomena cross-culturally in the longue-durée, rather than merely juxtaposing ‘spotlight’ impressions, a comparison of these two imperial systems does not only allow for deeper insights into the historical development of both China and Byzantium: it opens the possibility of studying cultural mechanisms behind the formation of institutions, practices and values. The project explores novel forms of collaboration in the humanities, including the co-authoring of research output between Byzantinists and Sinologists. Byzantium, frequently perceived as the ‘Other’ within western culture to the present day, serves here to build meaningful bridges to (pre-modern) China.

Open Access Journal: Electryone - `Hλεκτρυώνη

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[First posted in AWOL 28 January 2014, updated 18 January 2020]

Electryone - `Hλεκτρυώνη
ISSN: 2241-4061

Electryone is an English-language, peer reviewed online journal devoted to ancient historical and philological issues covering the period between the 2nd and 1st millennia BC  and the Roman period A.D.  Electryone welcomes articles between 4,000 and 8.000 words, shorter notes, responses, etc. up to 2,500 words, and book reviews. It also welcomes presentations of new publications, announcements for conferences and information about research programs.

Electryone focuses on the Mediterranean region and on matters referring to interactions of the Mediterranean with neighboring areas, but presents an international forum of research, innovative interpretations, critical reviews, analyses of ancient text sources, comparative studies, mythological issues, archive research reports, interaction of ancient history with topography and archaeology, and applied new technologies on historical and classical studies.
Electryone covers the full range of classical studies (i.e. 2nd millennium to late Rome) but is particularly interested in classical antiquity and its relationship to other cultures.
Most recent issue:
ELECTRYONE 2019

Volume 6, Issue1
Asymmetries in sculptured heads of ancient greek intellectuals
Evi Saranteaevi.sarantea@hotmail.com
ELECTRYONE 
2019
Volume 6, Issue 1
 | pp.
39-56
Abstract:
Some sculptured heads of ancient Greek intellectuals, preserved today in Roman copies, are portrayed with asymmetries (dissimilarities between the two sides) and are of special interest. Dissimilarities usually involve the size, the shape, or the positioning of the eyes. Some slight deformation of the left side of the face is noticeable. These asymmetries occur in a small percentage of the Roman copies, and it is thought by the author that they are deliberate and intentional. They fall within a particular manner of rendering of the figures which runs through the centuries-long Greek tradition of portraiture from the Archaic period to the Byzantine era. The sculptors of the Roman age produced copies of the original heads of distinguished ancient Greek intellectuals, differentiating their appearance slightly and designing them with calculated asymmetries. In this way they drew attention to the superiority of these figures to ordinary people, or a sense of awe felt towards these spiritual benefactors of mankind. Certain of the differences between the right and left side of the heads are possibly associated with Dualism.
Subjects:Uncategorized

“Their Head Full of Fragments”: Newfoundland Author Al Pittman’s West Moon, Monuments, Fragments, and Ruins
Stephanie McKenzieMemorial University
ELECTRYONE 
2019
Volume 6, Issue 1
 | pp.
28-38
Abstract:
This paper is written in a narrative style to enhance points made about different cultural stories. It compares Newfoundland author Al Pittman’s play, West Moon, with ancient monuments in Greece in order to underscore how important it is for different cultures to understand each other’s monuments and ruins. While there are no ancient ruins in Newfoundland comparable to those in Greece, the ruins spoken of in West Moon (the mostly deserted traditional outports, or fishing villages) carry an importance similarity to ancient Greek monuments. They speak of traditions, a connection between past and present, and cultural ways, and they ultimately make one aware of the importance of a culture. The paper considers how some cultures have oral “ruins” as much as oral continuance, the latter based on the passing down of stories, and how both oral and written monuments are equally important. Inevitably, this paper turns briefly to a consideration of today’s refugee crises and posits that the recognizing of cultural continuance and remnants of monuments (carried with people through memory and narrative) might help break down the hopeless divides between “us” and “them.”
Subjects:Uncategorized
Socrates – a Philosophy of Mission?
Matúš PorubjakDepartment of Philosophy and Applied Philosophy, University of Ss. Cyril and Methodius in Trnava, Slovakia matus.porubjak@ucm.sk matusporubjak@gmail.com
ELECTRYONE 
2019
Volume 6, Issue 1
 | pp.
15-27
Abstract:
This philosophical essay aims to return to the Socratic problem, ask it anew, and make an attempt to find its possible solution. In the introduction, the author briefly discusses the genesis of the Socratic problem and the basic methodological problems we encounter when dealing with it. Further on, it defines five basic sources of information about Socrates on which the interpretation tradition is based. Then the author outlines two key features of Socrates’ personality, aligned with the vast majority of sources: (1) Socrates’ belief that he has no theoretical knowledge; (2) Socrates’ predilection towards practical questions, and the practical dimension of his activity. In conclusion, the author expresses his belief that it is just this practical dimension of philosophy that has been in the ‘blind spot’ of the modern study of Socrates which paid too much attention to the search for his doctrine. The history of philosophy, however, does not only have to be the history of doctrines, but can also be the history of reflected life practices which inspire followers in their own practices while reflecting on them. The author therefore proposes to understand the historical Socrates as the paradigmatic figure of practical philosophy.
Subjects:Uncategorized
The Myth of Ovid’s Exile
Michael FontaineCornell University fontaine@cornell.edu
ELECTRYONE 
2019
Volume 6, Issue 1
 | pp.
1-14
Abstract:
Ovid was not exiled; the evidence is massively against it. This is not a new idea, but it is a deeply unpopular, even heretical one. In this paper, I suggest reasons why scholars resist it, and I plead for a new understanding of what the “exile” poetry is.
Subjects:Uncategorized

Klinai

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Klinai
Klinai
Klinai présente régulièrement des articles sur les ressources disponibles pour les jeunes chercheurs s’intéressant aux civilisations Étrusque et Italiote, en particulier dans le domaine funéraire, et mets à leur disposition des outils et documents inédits (fonds de carte, photographies).

Samothrace

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Samothrace
American Excavations Samothrace
The aim of this website is to present the current research of the American team working in the Sanctuary of the Great Gods on Samothrace.
The website was originally built in Drupal and hosted on the Michael C. Carlos Museum server, with a separate WordPress blog site for iSamothrace. In 2015-2016, the websites were combined and rebuilt in WordPress by Anandi  Salinas, Instructional Content Developer, at the Emory Center for Digital Scholarship (ECDS). The site is now hosted by ECDS.

Recent Open Access Dissertations from PQDT

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Recent Open Access Dissertations from PQDT
 Searching 2019 dissertations using "ancient" yields the following result:
1.
Violence against the Enemy in Mesopotamian Myth, Ritual, and Historiography
by SooHoo, Anthony P., Ph.D.  New York University. 2019: 847 pages; 13420957.
2.
Sacred Loans, Sacred Interest(s): An Economic Analysis of Temple Loans from Independent Delos (314-167 BCE)
by McGlin, Michael James, Ph.D.  State University of New York at Buffalo. 2019: 298 pages; 13811947.
3.
Decoding Delphi: Reconstructing the Technology of Divination
by Gibbons, Kimberly, Ph.D.  California Institute of Integral Studies. 2019: 292 pages; 13880422.
4.
The "Whys" of the Grand Cameo: A Holistic Approach to Understanding the Piece, its Origins and its Context
by Sidamon-Eristoff, Constantine P., M.A.  Sotheby's Institute of Art - New York. 2019: 120 pages; 13423363.
5.
7.
Parading Persia: West Asian Geopolitics and the Roman Triumph
by Maris, Carly, Ph.D.  University of California, Riverside. 2019: 254 pages; 22622598.
8.
Spiritual Bodies and the Afterlives of Ancient Democracy in Early Paulinism
by Payne, Steven T., Ph.D.  Fordham University. 2019: 619 pages; 13879245.
9.
Recovering an Ancient Tradition: Toward an Understanding of Hezekiah as the Author of Ecclesiastes
by Quackenbos, David Allen, Ph.D.  Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary. 2019: 296 pages; 13878094.
10.
Rabinal Achí: A Modern Opera Based upon an Ancient Mayan Drama
by Molina, Jose Luis, M.M.  California State University, Long Beach. 2019: 32 pages; 13861639.
11.
Reverse Engineering of Ancient Ceramic Technologies from Southeast Asia and South China
by Kivi, Nicholas, M.S.  The University of Arizona. 2019: 192 pages; 13426471.
13.
On Singularities and Weak Solutions of Mean Curvature Flow
by Mramor, Alexander Everest, Ph.D.  University of California, Irvine. 2019: 175 pages; 13896720.
15.
Virtus et disciplina: An Interdisciplinary Study of the Roman Martial Values of Courage and Discipline
by James, Justin Ryan, Ph.D.  University of Missouri - Columbia. 2019: 203 pages; 13882075.
17.
The Poet's Tomb: Space for Immortality in Augustan Rome
by Crooks, Stephanie Marie, Ph.D.  New York University. 2019: 235 pages; 13811244.
19.
Ultraviolet Concrete: Dionysos and the Ecstatic Play of Aesthetic Experience
by Deimler, Devon Erin, Ph.D.  Pacifica Graduate Institute. 2019: 454 pages; 13806379.
21.
Characterizing Genetic Drift and Migration between Populations
by Harris, Daniel Nathan, Ph.D.  University of Maryland, Baltimore. 2019: 249 pages; 13884597.
23.
"Seize the Dragon's Tail" - An Analytical Study of Laozi's Biography in Shiji
by Fan, Tianyu, M.A.  The George Washington University. 2019: 63 pages; 13883933.
24.
25.
27.
28.
A Transcendental Phenomenological Study of Happiness as Experienced by the Sadhus
by Sharma, Gopesh, Ed.D.  University of Pennsylvania. 2019: 271 pages; 13904652.
29.
Grand Canyon Projectile Points and Human Population Change
by Keltz, Ehren D., M.A.  Northern Arizona University. 2019: 204 pages; 13882750.
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Open Access Journal: The British School at Athens Newsletter

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The British School at Athens Newsletter

The British Institute for the Study of Iraq Books Online

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[First posted in AWOL 9 April 2013, updated 20 January 2020]


The British Institute for the Study of Iraq Books Online
All of BISI's books are available for free download from these pages.

The Nimrud Wine Lists

The Nimrud Wine Lists
Author: J.V. Kinnier Wilson
Volume: I
1972
Format: Hardback xv, 167p ; 29cm.
ISBN: ISBN-13: 978-0-903472-00-5. ISBN-10: 0-903472-00-7
Price: £9.95

The Governor’s Palace Archive

The Governor’s Palace Archive
Author: J.N. Postgate
Volume: II
1973
Format: 283 pp., 98 plates of cuneiform and photos, hardback
ISBN: ISBN-13: 978-0-903472-01-2. ISBN-10: 0-903472-01-5
Price: £9.95

The Tablets from Fort Shalmaneser

Front cover of CTN 3
Author: S. Dalley & J.N. Postgate
Volume: III
1984
Format: xii + 289 pp, 40 plates, hardback
ISBN: ISBN-13: 978-0-903472-08-2. ISBN-10: 0-903472-08-2
Price: £30
Notes: Out of print.
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The Tablets from Fort Shalmaneser

Literary Texts from the Temple of Nabû

Front cover of CTN 4
Author: D.J. Wiseman & J.A. Black
Volume: IV
1996
Format: x + 62 pp., 157 plates, hardback
ISBN: 9780903472159
Price: £24.95
Notes:
The library of Nimrud, probably established in 798 BC, was a prestigious royal foundation whose scribes had contacts all over the East, particularly with Nineveh. The 259 cuneiform tablets and fragments which constituted the library mainly described magical and medical rituals, prayers and instructions for training scribes. All the epigraphic finds from Sir Max Mallowan's excavations of 1955-7 are described in this volume, with additional material from the Iraq Archaeological Service's excavations of 1985.
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Literary Texts from the Temple of Nabû


The Nimrud Letters 1952

Front cover of CTN 5
Author: H.W.F. Saggs
Volume: V
2001
Format: xii + 307 pp., 64 plates, hardback
ISBN: ISBN-13: 978-0-903472-20-3; ISBN-10: 0-903472-20-1
Price: £40.00
Notes: In 1952 in one wing of the North-West Palace at Nimrud, ancient Kalhu, Max Mallowan excavated an archive room containing royal correspondence from the reigns of Tiglath-pileser III and Sargon II of Assyria. Subjects include Assyrian military activity in Babylonia and on the northern frontier, royal building projects, events on the Phoenician seaboard, and relations with King Midas of Phrygia. Some texts were published in Iraq between 1955 and 1974; the majority have remained unpublished until now. Two hundred and forty-three texts are published here; most are in New Assyrian script and the remainder in New Babylonian. Chapters divide the tablets into the geographical areas they are concerned with. The texts are presented with transliterations, translation and notes. Plates at the end of the book give facsimiles of the tablets.
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The Nimrud Letters 1952


Documents from the Nabu Temple and from Private Houses on the Citadel

Author: S. Herbordt, R. Mattila, B. Parker (†), J.N. Postgate and D.J. Wiseman (†)
Volume: VI
2019
Format: Hardback, pp. i-viii, 340 including Plates I-VI, 1-44
ISBN: ISBN-10 0-903472-34-0
Notes:
This penultimate volume of CTN provides an up-to-date edition and commentary on two major archives from the Kalhu acropolis, from the field seasons of 1953-1956: the business documents (mostly grain loans on triangular dockets) and a few administrative texts from the Nabu Temple (Part I: texts Nos. 1-59) and the legal documents from the household of Šamaš-šarru-uur (Part II: Nos. 60-115); also included are three texts from the “Town Wall Palace” (Part III: Nos. 116-118).  S. Herbordt provides a new study of the seal impressions based on drawings and photos, and photographs of both the impressions and unsealed tablets are included where available.  The handcopies on Plates 1-44 are from Wiseman, Parker, Postgate and Mattila.
Many of these texts were edited previously by Wiseman and Parker in articles in Iraq, but some were only catalogued and others had lain for years uncopied in both the Iraq Museum and the British Museum.  Bringing them all together has enabled a more detailed study of the two main archives with the benefit of the advances in our understanding of Neo-Assyrian over the last half century.  This gives a valuable insight into the activities of both a major temple and an elite household in the 8th-7th centuries BC.

  • Ivories from Nimrud

    Equestrian Bridle-Harness Ornaments: Catalogue & Plates


    Front cover of IN 1/2

    Author: J.J. Orchard

    Volume: I/2

    1967

    Format: x+48 pp., 46 pls., hardback

    Price: £9.95





    Ivories in the Assyrian Style

    Front cover of IN 2
    Author: M.E.L. Mallowan & L.G. Davies
    Volume: II
    1970
    Format: v + 60 pp., 46 pl., hardback
    Notes: Out of print.
    pdf
    Ivories in the Assyrian Style



    Furniture from SW 7, Fort Shalmaneser

    Front cover of IN 3
    Author: M.E.L. Mallowan & G. Herrmann
    Volume: III
    1974
    Format: 120 pp., 111 pls., hardback
    ISBN: 0-903472-02-3
    Price: £9.95



    Ivories from Room SW 37, Fort Shalmaneser, part I

    Front cover of IN 4/1
    Author: G. Herrmann
    Volume: IV/1
    1986
    Format: 276 pp, hardback
    ISBN: 0-903472-10-4



    Ivories from Room SW 37, Fort Shalmaneser, part 2

    Front cover of IN 4/2
    Author: G. Herrmann
    Volume: IV/2
    1986
    Format: 472 pls., hardback



    The Small Collections from Fort Shalmaneser

    Author: G. Herrmann
    Volume: V
    1992
    Format: xiv + 145 pp., 104 pls., hardback
    ISBN: 0-903472-12-0
    Price: £19.95



    Ivories from the North West Palace (1845-1992)

    The front cover of Ivories from Nimrud, vol. VI
    Author: G. Herrmann, S. Laidlaw & H. Coffey
    Volume: VI
    2009
    Format: 168 + 138 pp, 138 b/w, 24 colour plates, hardback
    ISBN: 9780903472265
    Price: £75.00
    Notes:
    The great, ninth century palace which Ashurnasirpal II (883-859) built at his new capital of Kalhu/Nimrud has been excavated over 150 years by various expeditions. Each has been rewarded with remarkable antiquities, including the finest ivories found in the ancient Near East, many of which had been brought to Kalhu by the Assyrian kings. The first ivories were discovered by Austen Henry Layard, followed a century later by Max Mallowan, who found superb ivories in Well NN. Neither Layard nor Mallowan was able to empty Well AJ: this was achieved by the Iraqi Department of Antiquities and Heritage, who retrieved arguably the finest pieces found at Nimrud. Finally, an interesting collection of ivory and bone tubes was found by Muzahim Mahmud, the discoverer of the famous Royal Tombs, in Well 4.
    This volume publishes for the first time the majority of the ivories found in the Palace by location. These include superb examples carved in Assyria proper and across the Levant from North Syria to Phoenicia and provide an outstanding illustration of the minor arts of the early first millennium. In addition ivories found in the Central Palace of Tiglath-pileser III and fragmentary pieces found in the domestic contexts of the Town Wall Houses are also included.
    In addition to a detailed catalogue, this book also aims to assess the present state of ivory studies, discussing the political situation in the Levant, the excavation of the palace, the history of study, the various style-groups of ivories and their possible time and place of production. This volume is the sixth in the Ivories from Nimrud series published by BISI.



    Ivories from Rooms SW11/12 and T10 Fort Shalmaneser, parts 1-2

    Front cover of IN 7/1
    Author: G. Herrmann and S. Laidlaw
    Volume: VII/1-2
    2013
    Format: Hardback, 2 vols.
    ISBN: 9780903472296
    Price: £90.00
    Notes:
    The attached PDF contains the text of volume I: Chapters 1-6 and the Appendices. The full contents, including the Catalogue and Colour & Black and White Plates, are available as print only and can be ordered from Oxbow Books for £90.00. BISI members receive a 20% discount. 
    About Ivories from Nimrud VII - The Lost Art of the Phoenicians 
    Fifty years have passed since the British School of Archaeology in Iraq raised the last ivory from the soil of Fort Shalmaneser. Literally thousands were found, many of which have already been published in Ivories from Nimrud I-V, while VI recorded the outstanding pieces from the North West Palace. Ivories from Nimrud VII, Ivories from Rooms SW11/12 and T10 completes the publication of the assemblages in the Fort, as far as records permit. The ivories of Room SW11/12 are similar in character to those of Room SW37 and probably represent another consignment of booty, while those of T10 in the Throne Room block include pieces from all four traditions, as well as some entirely new ones.

    With the primary publication completed, it is now possible to look at these remarkable ivories as a whole rather than studying them by prov­enance, as is discussed in detail in the Commentary. Not surprisingly, it immediately becomes apparent that the majority can be assigned to the Phoenician tradition. There are at least twice as many Phoenician ivo­ries than the other Levantine and Assyrian ivories. They form therefore an incredible archive, recording the lost art of the Phoenicians, long famed as master craftsmen.

    The Phoenician ivories can be divided into two; the finest, the Clas­sic Phoenician, often embellished with delicate, jewel-like inlays, and the other examples still clearly Phoenician in style and subject. While the Classic pieces were probably carved in a single centre, possibly Tyre or Sidon, the others would have been carved in a variety of dif­ferent Phoenician centres, located along the Mediterranean seaboard.

    Designs on Syrian-Intermediate ivories are versions of some Phoe­nician subjects, employing different proportions and styles. They may represent the art of the recently-arrived Aramaean kingdoms, copying their sophisticated neighbours, while North Syrian ivories are entirely different in subject and character and derive from earlier Hittite traditions.

    The ivories found at Nimrud present a unique resource for studying the minor arts of the Levantine world.
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    Ivories from Rooms SW11/12 and T10 Fort Shalmaneser


  • Tell Brak Excavations

    Excavations at Tell Brak, Vol. I: The Mitanni and Old Babylonian Periods


    Author: D. Oates, J. Oates, H. McDonald

    Volume: I

    1998

    Format: 296pp

    ISBN: 0951942050

    Notes: This volume is currently out of print.

    Available to download in PDF format from the Archive of Mesopotamian Archaeological Reports at Stony Brook University Digital Library.



    Excavations at Tell Brak, Vol II: Nagar in The Third Millennium BC

    Author: D. Oates, J. Oates, H. McDonald, et al.
    Volume: II
    2001
    Format: Hardback, 643p, H280 x W216 (mm) 100s of b/w figs and illus
    ISBN: 9780951942093
    Price: £95.00
    Notes: Available to download in PDF format from the Archive of Mesopotamian Archaeological Reports at Stony Brook University Digital Library.



    Excavations at Tell Brak Vol. IV: Exploring a Regional Centre in Upper Mesopotamia, 1994-1996


    Author: Roger Matthews and Wendy Matthews

    Volume: IV

    2003

    Format: Hardback, 512pp, H280 x W216 (mm) 326 b/w figs, 79 tbs

    ISBN: 9781902937168

    Price: £19.95


    Notes: Available to download in PDF format from the Archive of Mesopotamian Archaeological Reports at Stony Brook University Digital Library.

  • Samarra Studies Publication Series

    Samarra I: The Historical Topography of Samarra



    Author: Alastair Northedge

    Volume: I

    2008

    Format: 426p, A4, 91 pls, 116 b/w illus, paperback

    ISBN: 9780903472227

    Price: £10


    Notes: Originally published in conjunction with the Max van Berchem Foundation, the BISI/BSAI has re-published with some revisions Alastair Northedge’s Historical Topography of Samarra in a paperback version with a new preface commenting on Samarra’s recent tragedies. This is the first fundamentally new work to come out in half a century on one of the world’s most famous Islamic archaeological sites: Samarra in Iraq. This capital of the Abbasid caliphs in the 9th century is not only one of the largest urban sites worldwide, but also gives us the essence of what the physical appearance of the caliphate was like, for early Baghdad is long lost. It was known not only for its famous spiral minarets, but also for its Golden Dome over the tombs of the Imams, and its long avenues of mud-brick architecture - the latter still visible, although the Golden Dome was horrifically destroyed in a bombing in February 2006 and its two remaining minarets in another bombing in June 2007. With the end of Saddam’s regime in Iraq, there is renewed interest in the Abbasid caliphate “the Golden Age of Early Islam”, rightly seen as the foundation of modern Iraq.
    Northedge sets out to explain the history and development of this enormous site, 45 km long, using both archaeological and textual sources to weave a new interpretation of how the city worked: its four caliphal palaces, four Friday mosques, cantonments for the military and for the palace servants, houses for the men of state and generals. Samarra is particularly strong on the archaeology of sport: polo grounds, courses for horse-racing, and hunting reserves. After treating the origins of the Abbasid city under the Sasanians, the author then analyses each sector of the city, and explains why it was abandoned at the end of the 9th century. The volume is abundantly illustrated with aerial photographs of the site. This is the first of a series of Samarra Studies; in the second, The Archaeological Atlas of Samarra (2015), the archaeological remains are catalogued, and in the third, Pottery from Samarra, the ceramic finds from the archaeological survey will be published.
    Alastair Northedge is Professor of Islamic Art and Archaeology at Université de Paris 1. He has worked in Syria, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan, and conducted projects at Amman in Jordan, and Ana in Iraq, in addition to Samarra. He is the author of Studies on Roman and Islamic Amman, and joint author of Excavations at Ana, with Andrina Bamber and Michael Roaf.
    pdf
    The Historical Topography of Samarra 



    Archaeological Atlas of Samarra: Samarra Studies II



    Author: Alastair Northedge and Derek Kennet

    Volume: II

    2015

    Format: 831 pp, A4, hardback, 2 volumes and 1 fascicle

    ISBN: 9780903472302

    Price: £64.00


    Notes: The Archaeological Atlas of Samarra sets out to map and catalogue the site and buildings of the Abbasid capital at Samarra in the period 836 to 892 AD, preserved as they were until the middle years of the 20th century. Site maps and catalogues are provided of all the approximately 5819 building and site units identified. This is the first time that it has been possible to catalogue nearly all the buildings of one of the world’s largest ancient cities, from the caliph palaces to the smallest hovels.
    Alastair Northedge is Professor of Islamic Art and Archaeology at Université de Paris 1 (Panthéon-Sorbonne). He has worked in Syria, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan, and conducted projects at Amman in Jordan, Ana in Iraq, and Misriyan in Turkmenistan, in addition to Samarra. He is the author of Studies on Roman and Islamic Amman, and joint author of Excavations at Ana.
    Dr Derek Kennet is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Archaeology at Durham University where he has been since 1998. His research area includes the later pre-Islamic to Islamic periods of Iraq, the Gulf and the western Indian Ocean. He has conducted fieldwork in Iran, India, Kuwait, the UAE and Oman.
    Published by: The British Institute for the Study of Iraq with support from the Fondation Max van Berchem

    pdfs

  • Iraq Archaeological Reports

    Excavations at 'Āna: Qal'a Island


    Author: A. Northedge et al.

    Volume: I

    1988

    Format: Paperback, 192pp, H297 x W210 (mm) 16 plates, 57 figures

    ISBN: 9780856684258

    Price: £25.00


    Notes:
    This was a rescue project in the basin of the Qadisiyya Dam recently completed at Haditha. Qal'at 'Ana is an island in the stream of the Euphrates, the site of the ancient and medieval city of 'Ana, since the 17th century downgraded to a village and palm-gardens, while the town moved to the right bank. 'Ana, on the Middle Euphrates some 150 km below the modern Iraqi-Syrian border, a very beautiful place, was the centre of an autonomous governorate under the Assyrians, a border fortress under the Parthians, Romans and Sasanians, and a caravan town and bedouin centre under Islam.

    Available for download in PDF format from the Archive of Mesopotamian Archaeological Reports at Stony Brook University Digital Library.



    Excavations at Tell Rubeidheh: an Uruk Village in the Jebel Hamrin

    Author: T. Cuyler Young et al.
    Editor: R.G. Killick
    Volume: II
    1988
    Format: Paperback
    ISBN: 9780856684319
    Price: £19.95
    Notes: Available for download in PDF format from the Archive of Mesopotamian Archaeological Reports at Stony Brook University Digital Library.



    Settlement Development in the North Jazira, Iraq: a Study of the Archaeological Landscape

    Author: T.J. Wilkinson & D.J. Tucker
    Volume: III
    1995
    Format: Paperback. 240p, H297 x W210 (mm) with b/w pls, maps and line-drawings
    ISBN: 9780856686580
    Price: £35.00
    Notes: Available to download in PDF format from the Archive of Mesopotamian Archaeological Reports at Stony Brook University Digital Library.



    The Excavations at Tell al Rimah: The Pottery

    Author: C. Postgate, D. Oates & J. Oates
    Volume: IV
    1997
    Format: Paperback, 276p, H297 x W210 (mm) copious pls, figs, tabs
    ISBN: 9780856687006
    Price: £25.00
    Notes: Introductory report and a detailed illustrated catalogue of the pottery finds from this second millennium BC Assyrian site, in modern northern Iraq.

    Available to download in PDF format from the Archive of Mesopotamian Archaeological Reports in the Stony Brook University Digital Library.



    Artefacts of Complexity: Tracking the Uruk in the Ancient Near East

    Editor: J.N. Postgate
    Volume: V
    2002
    Format: Paperback, 264p, H297 x W210 (mm) many b/w illus and figs
    ISBN: 9780856687365
    Price: £40.00
    Notes:
    The late 4th millennium in South Mesopotamia is universally known as the Uruk Period because it is at Uruk that the German excavations have exposed the most remarkable manifestations of this complex society. Although the Uruk period in Iraq itself remains little understood, in recent decades artefacts and entire settlements have been discovered in places as far apart as the Mahi Dasht in Iran and the Euphrates in South-eastern Turkey. This volume attempts to track the Uruk phenomenon in the Near East, bringing together research on some of the most significant individual sites within the Levant and Egypt, placing emphasis on the artefactual evidence. The eleven papers were originally presented at a conference in Manchester in 1998. The contributors are Hans Nissen, Renate Gut, Mitchell Rothman, Virginia Badler, Joan Oates, Marcella Frangipane, Gil Stein, Fiona Stephen, Edgar Peltenburg, Govert van Driel, Graham Philip and Toby Wilkinson.



    Secrets of the Dark Mound: Jemdet Nasr 1926-1928

    Author: Roger Matthews
    2002
    ISBN: 0856687359
    Notes: Available to download in PDF format from the Archive of Mesopotamian Archaeological Reports at Stony Brook University Digital Library.




Fifty Years of Mesopotamian Discovery: The Work of the British School of Archaeology in Iraq, 1932-1982

front cover of Fifty Years of Mesopotamian Discovery
Editor: J. Curtis
1982
Format: 120pp., paperback
ISBN: 0903472058



The Middle Babylonian Legal and Economic Texts from Ur

Author: O.R. Gurney
1982
Format: 203pp., 4 plates, hardback
ISBN: 0903472074



Nimrud: An Assyrian Imperial City Revealed

Front cover of Nimrud
Author: David and Joan Oates
2001
Format: Paperback, 309p, H239 x W159 (mm) 175 b/w illus, maps and plans, 16 col pls
ISBN: 9780903472258
Price: £19.95
Notes: Nimrud (ancient Kalhu) in northern Iraq, was the capital of the Assyrian Empire during most of the 9th and 8th centuries BC, and remained a major centre until the destruction of the Empire in 612 BC. This authoritative account, written by two of the excavators of the site, traces its history and its gradual revelation through archaeological excavation, begun by Layard in the 19th century and continuing to the present day. The volume is abundantly illustrated and includes finds that have not previously been published, together with illustrations and the most complete account in English so far of the remarkable discoveries made in recent years by Iraqi archaeologists in the tombs of the Assyrian Queens.
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Nimrud: An Assyrian Imperial City Revealed



The Published Ivories from Fort Shalmaneser, Nimrud

Front cover of Published Ivories from Fort Shalmaneser
Author: G. Herrmann, S. Laidlaw & H. Coffey
2004
ISBN: 9780903472166
Price: £18.00
Notes:
Nimrud is an exceptionally generous site, and has richly rewarded those that work there. It was first famous for the Assyrian bas reliefs found by the 19th century archaeologist, Austen Henry Layard, but is also famous for the thousands of ivories found during the 19th and 20th centuries. The ivories were mostly imported from the Levantine kingdoms to the west, either as tribute or booty, although there were some in the distinctive local Assyrian style. They were used to embellish furniture, as well as small objects, and are carved in a great variety of styles, but interestingly with a relatively limited repertoire of subjects. Their time of manufacture probably dates to the early centuries of the first millennium BCE, although their archaeological context is dated by the fall of the Assyrian empire in 614-612 BCE. This publication is a supplement to the volumes already published, which catalogue the ivories, and instead presents scans from the original photographs, where possible, of the ivories from Fort Shalmaneser, which have been published in the first five volumes, so that scholars can select and rearrange ivories as appropriate. In this way, the next generation of work involving deeper stylistic and analytic studies by a range of scholars asking different questions may be undertaken.
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The Published Ivories from Fort Shalmaneser, Nimrud



Studies in the Ancient History of Northern Iraq (reprint)

Author: David Oates
2005
Format: Hardback, 176p, H285 x W220 (mm) b/w illus, 16 b/w plate
ISBN: 9780903472197
Price: £30
Notes: Subsequent examination of Stein’s draft-manuscript showed that further investigation and a more leisurely assessment were demanded by the range and importance of the subject and by changing perspectives. With the aid of the Stein Bequest to the British Academy, David Oates gave new substance to ‘the lost traveller’s dream’, extending it widely into a more general account of the Mesopotamian scene from the Assyrian period in the second millennium BC to the struggles of Rome and Byzantium with the Parthians and Sasanians in the early centuries AD. The book concludes with a study of little-known Hellenistic, Roman and Parthian pottery, mostly from the author’s excavations.
David Oates went on to serve the British School of Archaeology in Iraq as field director at Nimrud, director of the excavations at Tell al-Rimah, as Director of the School in Baghdad, Member of the Council, Chairman and President. David Oates died in 2003 and the reprinting of this volume by the School in his memory has been generously funded by The Charlotte Bonham-Carter Charitable Trust.
There have been no changes to the text or images (including a Foreword by Sir Mortimer Wheeler) and the pagination has remained the same. David’s widow and long-time collaborator, Dr Joan Oates, has added a Preface illustrated by a photograph from the author’s collection.
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Studies in the Ancient History of Northern Iraq



Languages of Iraq: Ancient and Modern

Editor: Nicholas Postgate
2007
Format: pp. viii, 187. 32 b/w maps and illustrations. Size 240 x 160mm
ISBN: 978-0- 903472-21-0
Price: £15
Notes: For all five thousand years of its history Iraq has been home to a mixture of languages, spoken and written, and the same is true today. In November 2003, to celebrate the country's rich diversity and long history as a centre of civilisation, BISl presented a series of talks by experts on each of the major languages of Iraq and their history, and this illustrated volume brings these now to a wider public.
Iraq's languages come from different linguistic families - Semitic, Indo-European, and agglutinative languages like Sumerian, Hurrian and Turkish. Some, although long dead, have a prime place in the history of the Old World: Sumerian, probably the first language to be written and the vehicle of cuneiform scholarship for more than two millennia, and Akkadian, the language of Hammurapi and the Epic of Gilgamesh, and used across the Near East for administration and diplomacy. The history of Aramaic is even longer, stretching back to overlap with Akkadian before 1000 BC. It survives, precariously, in both written and spoken forms, being one of four languages spoken in Iraq today. Of these Arabic as a major world language has often been described, but here we have an account of the vernacular Iraqi Arabic dialects, and the descriptions of Iraqi Kurdish and Turkman are unique, detailed and authoritative.
Printed by Cambridge University Press.
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Languages of Iraq: Ancient and Modern 



New Light on Nimrud: Proceedings of the Nimrud Conference 11th-13th March 2002

Front cover of New Light on Nimrud
Editor: J.E. Curtis, H. McCall, D. Collon and L. al-Gailani Werr
2008
Format: 336 pages, 9 pages colour plates, 8 pages plans & 295 b/w illustrations. Hardback, A4
ISBN: ISBN 978-0-903472-24-1
Price: £40.00
Notes:
This book publishes 34 papers by international and Iraqi experts given at a conference on Nimrud at The British Museum in 2002. Excavations at the important Assyrian capital city of Nimrud have continued intermittently since 1845, culminating with the discovery in 1989-90 of the tombs of the Assyrian queens with astonishing quantities of gold jewellery. All aspects of the excavations and the various finds and inscribed material from Nimrud are considered in this volume, with particular attention being paid to the tombs of the queens and their contents. The evidence of inscriptions and the results of paleopathological investigation are brought together to identify the bodies in the tombs. There is much previously unpublished information about the tombs, and the jewellery is fully illustrated in eight colour plates. Finally, the significance of Nimrud as one of the greatest sites in the Ancient Near East is fully assessed.
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Once There Was a Place: Settlement Archaeology at Chagar Bazar, 1999-2002

Author: Augusta McMahon with Carlo Colantoni, Julia Frane and Arkadiusz Soltysiak
Volume: 2010
2010
Format: Paperback, 428p, 88 plates
ISBN: 9780903472272
Price: £25.00
Notes:
This volume presents the research of the British team within the modern excavations at the northern Mesopotamian site of Chagar Bazar, resumed in 1999 after a 62-year hiatus since the excavations of Max Mallowan.  It incorporates settlement archaeology approaches and theoretical ideas of “place” in exploring the site and its internal and external landscapes.  The primary focus is the settlement during the early 2nd millennium BC (Old Babylonian Period, post-Samsi-Addu), its final ancient occupation. The authors have taken a contextual approach, integrating aspects of the settlement’s internal variations, including both community and private architecture, together with burial practices and symbolic and functional material culture.  While its political importance varied, Chagar Bazar’s persistence of occupation meant that it played a key role within the regional landscape as a meaningful landmark.
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Once There Was a Place: Settlement Archaeology at Chagar Bazar, 1999-2002


Your Praise is Sweet - A Memorial Volume for Jeremy Black from Students, Colleagues and Friends



Editor: Heather D. Baker, Eleanor Robson and Gábor Zólyomi

2011

Format: Hardback, A4, 472 pp (xii + 460)

ISBN: ISBN- 978-0-903472-28-9

Price: £35

Notes: This volume is intended as a tribute to the memory of the Sumerologist Jeremy Black, who died in 2004. The Sumerian phrase, ‘Your praise is sweet’ is commonly addressed to a deity at the close of a work of Sumerian literature. The scope of the thirty contributions, from Sumerology to the nineteenth-century rediscovery of Mesopotamia, is testament to Jeremy’s own wide-ranging interests and to his ability to forge scholarly connections and friendships among all who shared his interest in ancient Iraq.
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Your Praise is Sweet - A Memorial Volume for Jeremy Black from Students, Colleagues and Friends

Organisationsformen römischer Töpfer-Manufakturen

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Organisationsformen römischer Töpfer-Manufakturen
Mees, Allard W.
 Organisationsformen römischer Töpfer-Manufakturen

Monographien des RGZMDie römische Terra Sigillata wurde mit anspruchsvoller Technologie in großen Manufakturen hergestellt. Die rot engobierte Feinkeramik wurde über das gesamte römische Imperium vermarktet. Die komplexen Organisationsformen in den Produktionszentren und das Verbreitungsnetzwerk waren bisher kaum erforscht. Dieses Buch erörtert die Sozial- und Arbeitsorganisationsstrukturen innerhalb der Produktionszentren vom 1. Jh. v. Chr. bis zum 3. Jh. n. Chr. mit einem doppelten Ansatz: Erstens werden die Figurenstempel-Kombinationen auf reliefverzierter Terra Sigillata analysiert, und zweitens werden die Resultate mit den fast 40 bekannten ägyptischen Papyri mit Töpferverträgen verglichen. Darüber hinaus werden die feststellbaren Cluster der Töpfer auf ihr Wiederkehren in den Verbreitungsmustern hin erforscht. Die Konsortium-Gruppen werden mithilfe ihres Vorkommens an datierten Plätzen zeitlich eingeordnet. Die soziale Analyse der Töpferstempel zeigt, dass Sklaven in der Terra Sigillata-Industrie nicht nachgewiesen werden können.
Heidelberg: Propylaeum, 2020 (Monographien des RGZM, Band 52). https://doi.org/10.11588/propylaeum.519
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Dieses Werk ist unter der
Creative Commons-Lizenz 4.0
(CC BY-SA 4.0)
veröffentlicht.
Creative Commons Lizenz BY-SA 4.0
Inhaltsverzeichnis
PDF
Titelei
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Einführung
Strukturanalysen
Chronologie der Töpferzentren
Verbreitung
Inschriftliche Datierungen und Sigillata-Belieferungen
Einflüsse von und auf Rheinzabern
Werkstattstrukturen aufgrund antiker Schriftquellen
Schlussbetrachtungen zur Organisation der Grosstöpferein
Besprechungen der einzelnen Rheinzanerner Töpferserien
Katalog
Rechtsbestimmungen (Codes Theodosianus und Novellen)
Zusammenfassung
Summary
Résumé
Verzeichnis der abgekürzt zitierten Literatur
Indices
Beilagen-Übersicht
Beilage I-XV

Open Access Journal: New Classicists

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New Classicists
New Classicists 01
New Classicists is an online periodical aimed at providing a publication platform for postgraduate students in any field that relates to the Classical World.  Our advisory board members aid in sourcing international academics for the two person, blind peer reviewing of each accepted article before publication.
To begin with, there will be two publications a year, February and September, starting in February 2019.  Thanks to generous funding from the Classics department at King's College London, the journal will now be an open access publication.
If you are a postgraduate student of any recognised institution, or are within two years of completing a degree, and you would like to have an article peer reviewed and published, please submit a finished draft of up to 5000 words, along with a short abstract.  Articles can be submitted at any time during the year, but the peer reviewing process can take up to three months so bear this in mind if you want your article included in a particular edition.  Please use the Harvard referencing style for modern sources and the Oxford style for ancient sources, with footnotes, if required, at the bottom of each page.  For more information, please see this referencing guide.

Each article will be assessed for suitability and an outcome will be forwarded to you within two weeks of this date.
We are also looking for book reviews of recent Classical books.  Please contact the editor for more information if you would like to submit a book review.
In the meantime, please follow us on our social media sites and spread the word to your fellow postgrad students and friends!


 

Open Access Exhibition Catalogue: MUS-IC-ON! Klang der Antike. Begleitband zur Ausstellung im Martin von Wagner Museum der Universität Würzburg 10. Dezember 2019 bis 12. Juli 2020

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MUS-IC-ON! Klang der Antike. Begleitband zur Ausstellung im Martin von Wagner Museum der Universität Würzburg 10. Dezember 2019 bis 12. Juli 2020
Year of Completion:2019
Edition:1. Auflage
Publisher:Würzburg University Press
Place of publication:Würzburg
ISBN:978-3-95826-122-8
ISBN:978-3-95826-123-5
"MUS-IC-ON! Klang der Antike" ist der Begleitband zur gleichnamigen Sonderausstellung im Martin von Wagner-Museum Würzburg (10. Dezember 2019 bis 12. Juli 2020). Die eigene Musik zu verstehen verlangt auch, nach Klängen und Musik der Vergangenheit zu fragen. So offenbart der Blick auf antike Musikkulturen – des Vorderen Orients, Ägyptens, Griechenlands und Roms – dem Betrachter kulturelle Konstanten, deren Vermächtnis sich in unserer abendländischen Musik erhält. Ziel des Begleitbands zur Ausstellung "MUS-IC-ON! Klang der Antike" ist es, die Relevanz musikhistorischer und –archäologischer Forschung für das Verständnis der eigenen Musikkultur aufzuzeigen. An vier Schwerpunkten werden die Inhalte, Methoden und der Stand der Erforschung antiker Musik von international namhaften Wissenschaftler*innen in einer umfassenden und dennoch allgemein verständlichen Weise vorgestellt. Der reichhaltig bebilderte Band ist damit als ein einführendes und informatives Handbuch konzipiert, das über die Ausstellung hinaus von fachfremden Wissenschaftlern, Studierenden und interessierten Laien konsultiert wird.
1. Vom archäologischen Artefakt zum klingenden Instrument: Grundlage jedweder Erforschung antiker Musik ist die Rekonstruktion seiner Klangvielfalt. Unzählige Funde originaler Musikinstrumente, darunter vorderasiatische Kastenleiern, altägyptische Trompeten aus dem Grab des Tutanchamun oder die griechisch-römische Hydraulis, eröffnen einen Weg, den Klängen antiker Musik nachzugehen. Insgesamt sechs Beiträge mit einem historischen Rahmen, der von der Steinzeit bis in die römische Kaiserzeit reicht, stellen die Vorgehensweise aber auch die Herausforderungen bei der Bergung, Erforschung und dem Nachbau antiker Musikinstrumente vor.
2. Musik und Klang in Bild und Text: Ein umfassendes Bild vom Einsatz, der Spielweise, der Verbreitung und Entwicklung antiker Musikinstrumente liefern antike Bilder und Texte. Trotz der Vielfalt an Objekten, darunter griechische Vasen, assyrische Reliefbilder oder römische Mosaike, bedarf es einer analytischen und kritischen Herangehensweise bei der Analyse und Auswertung solcher Daten. Vorgestellt werden in diesem Themenschwerpunkt auch antike Notationsformen und Stimmungssysteme, die sich auf Papyri und Keilschrifttafeln erhalten haben, sowie die Schwierigkeiten ihrer Entzifferung. 3. Musikleben in der Antike: Wesentlich für das Verständnis antiker Musik ist die Kenntnis ihres Einsatzes und ihres Umfeldes. Getrennt nach den verschiedenen Kulturkreisen stellen in diesem Kapitel insgesamt neun Autoren unterschiedliche Bereiche und Funktionen des Musizierens vor. Herausragend ist hier die Rolle von Musik im täglichen Tempelkult, über die sich die in der Antike vorgestellte Macht von Musik aufzeigen lässt, die sogar auf die Gemüter der Götter Einfluss zu nehmen vermag. Zusätzlich aufschlussreich ist das Wissen von Ausbildung und Aufstieg auch namentlich bekannter Musiker, zumeist Hofmusiker, die den Ruhm ihres Königs verkünden, aber auch regelrechte Virtuosen, die sich beispielsweise in antiken Wettstreiten hervortun, den musischen Agonen.
 4. Kontinuität und Interkulturalität antiker Musikkulturen: Dieser Teil widmet sich Spuren, die antike Musikkulturen in der abendländischen sowie in orientalischen Kulturräumen hinterlassen haben. So geht unser modernes Tonsystem auf griechische, ja sogar auf babylonische Tonleitern zurück. Vorläufer der europäischen Kirchenorgel ist die Hydraulis, eine griechische Erfindung aus dem 3. vorchristlichen Jahrhundert. Viele vor über 4500 Jahren zwischen Euphrat und Tigris entwickelte Musikinstrumente werden noch heute im arabischen und afrikanischen Kulturkreis, ja selbst in nord- und osteuropäischen Ländern gespielt. Hervorgehoben werden außerdem historische Momente, die einen wesentlichen Einfluss auf die Entwicklung moderner Musiksysteme ausgeübt haben.
Die Autoren: Benedetta Bellucci (Vorderasiatische Archäologie, Mainz), Arndt A. Both (Altamerikanistik, Musikarchäologie, DAI Berlin), Ricardo Eichmann (Vorderasiatische Archäologie, DAI Berlin), Uri Gabbay (Altorientalistik, Jerusalem), Ralf Gehler (Instrumentenbauer, Schwerin), Carolin Goll (Martin von Wagner-Museum, Würzburg), Jochen Griesbach (Martin von Wagner-Museum, Klassische Archäologie, Würzburg), Stefan Hagel (Klassische Philologie, ÖAW Wien), Katharina Hepp (Ägyptologie, Würzburg), Peter Holmes (Instrumentenbauer, London), Marie Klein (Altorientalisik, Würzburg), Carola Koch Ägyptologie, Würzburg), Ulrich Konrad (Historische Musikwissenschaft, Würzburg), Eva Kurz (Ägyptologie Würzburg), Florian Leitmeir (Klassische Archäologie, Würzburg), Thomas Ludewig (Klassische Archäologie, Würzburg), Sam Mirelman (Altorientalistik, London), Daniel Schwemer (Altorientalistik, Würzburg), Dahlia Shehata (Altorientalisik, Würzburg), Martin Stadler (Ägyptologie, Würzburg), Olga Sutkowska (Kulturgeschicht der Antike, ÖAW Wien), Günther E. Thüry (Provinzialrömische Archäologie, Salzburg), Marc Wahl (Numismatik, Wien/Würzburg), Oliver Wiener (Historische Musikwissenschaft, Würzburg), Nele Ziegler (Altorientalistik, Paris)

Wie Laien und Fachleute über Medizinisches sprechen: Ein Vergleich medizinischer Äußerungen in Briefen und Fachtexten aus der Zeit der späten römischen Republik bis in die frühe Kaiserzeit

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Wie Laien und Fachleute über Medizinisches sprechen: Ein Vergleich medizinischer Äußerungen in Briefen und Fachtexten aus der Zeit der späten römischen Republik bis in die frühe Kaiserzeit
Weilbach, Christoph
 Wie Laien und Fachleute über Medizinisches sprechen
Empfohlene Zitierweise
Weilbach, Christoph: Wie Laien und Fachleute über Medizinisches sprechen: Ein Vergleich medizinischer Äußerungen in Briefen und Fachtexten aus der Zeit der späten römischen Republik bis in die frühe Kaiserzeit, Heidelberg: Propylaeum, 2020. https://doi.org/10.11588/propylaeum.505
Lizenz
Dieses Werk ist unter der
Creative Commons-Lizenz 4.0
(CC BY-SA 4.0)
veröffentlicht.
Creative Commons Lizenz BY-SA 4.0
Identifikatoren
ISBN 978-3-947450-75-6 (Softcover)
ISBN 978-3-947450-48-0 (PDF)
Veröffentlicht am 21.01.2020.
Die Untersuchung geht der Frage nach, ob und inwiefern sich sprachliche Merkmale fachlicher medizinischer Kommunikation im Austausch über die Themen Gesundheit und Krankheit zwischen Nicht-Fachleuten in der überlieferten antiken römischen Literatur vorfinden. Um diese Frage zu beantworten, werden medizinischen Äußerungen in den Briefen Ciceros (epistulae ad Atticum, ad familiares, ad Quintum fratrem, ad Brutum), Senecas d. J. (epistulae morales ad Lucilium) und Pliniusʼ d. J. (epistulae) vergleichbare Äußerungen in den medizinischen Schriften des Celsus (de medicina), des älteren Plinius („medizinische“ Bücher 20–32 der naturalis historia) und des Scribonius Largus (compositiones) gegenübergestellt.

Inhaltsverzeichnis
PDF
Titelei
Inhalt
Vorwort
Lesehinweise
I. Einführung
II. Medizinische Ausdrücke und Formulierungen
III. Sprachliche Merkmale fachlicher Kommunikation in den Briefen
IV. Schlussbetrachtungen und Ausblick
Verzeichnisse

Open Access Journal: Society of Biblical Literature Society Report

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Écriture et transmission des savoirs de l’Antiquité à nos jours

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Écriture et transmission des savoirs de l’Antiquité à nos jours
Écriture et transmission des savoirs de l’Antiquité à nos jours
Pendant longtemps, la transmission des savoirs s’est faite directement, du maître à l’élève, de l’artisan à l’apprenti, par un enseignement oral que venait compléter la démonstration des gestes de la pratique. L’apparition de l’écriture, et plus encore la diffusion de la literacy ont fait que des méthodes de transmission indirectes ont pu se faire jour et que l’acquisition d’un savoir, quel qu’il soit, a pu se faire sans contact immédiat avec le détenteur de ce savoir, mais par le truchement d’un livre ou d’une autre forme d’écrit. Il s’est ensuivi une capacité de diffusion des savoirs quasiment illimitée, des plus techniques et spécialisés aux plus abstraits et généralistes. C’est cette explosion de la transmission des savoirs que les vingt auteurs des contributions ici réunies ont cherché à explorer en mettant en lumière différentes facettes, à travers une série d’exemples, allant de l’Antiquité à l’époque contemporaine.
Le Congrès national des sociétés historiques et scientifiques rassemble chaque année universitaires, membres de sociétés savantes et jeunes chercheurs. Ce recueil est issu de travaux présentés lors du 143e Congrès sur le thème « La transmission des savoirs ».

Note de l’éditeur

Les articles de cet ouvrage ont été validés par le comité de lecture des Éditions du Comité des travaux historiques et scientifiques dans le cadre de la publication des actes du 143e Congrès national des sociétés historiques et scientifiques tenu à Paris en 2018.
  • Éditeur :Éditions du Comité des travaux historiques et scientifiques
  • Collection : Actes des congrès nationaux des sociétés historiques et scientifiques
  • Lieu d’édition : Paris
  • Année d’édition : 2020
  • Publication sur OpenEdition Books : 21 janvier 2020
  • EAN électronique : 9782735508969
Dominique Briquel
Introduction

Open Access Journal: Ancient Asia: Journal of the Society of South Asian Archaeology

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[First posted in AWOL 13 November 2009. Updated 22 January 2020]

Ancient Asia: Journal of the Society of South Asian Archaeology
ISSN: 2042-5937
Ancient Asia is the official annual journal of the Society of South Asian Archaeology (SOSAA). The scope of the journal is vast - from Stone Age to the Modem times, including archaeology, history, anthropology, art, architecture, numismatics, iconography, ethnography, various scientific aspects including archaeobotany and archaeozoology, and theoretical and methodological issues. Amongst the goals of this society are to bring forth the research being conducted in areas that are not often well published such as the North Eastern States of India, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Central Asia, Iran, etc.

Open Access Journal: Oral Tradition

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Oral Tradition
E-ISSN: 1542-4308
Oral Tradition is an open-access journal devoted to the study of the world’s oral traditions, past and present. Reaching a diverse and global audience, the journal publishes articles that explore the vitality of words spoken, sung, or performed, and the traditions of creative expression in which they thrive.

Founded in 1986 at the University of Missouri by John Miles Foley, Oral Tradition now has a new home at Harvard University. The journal publishes one issue per year, with occasional special issues. We welcome research on the creation, transmission, and interpretation of all forms of oral traditional expression, as well as investigations of relations between oral and written traditions, brief accounts of important fieldwork, and editions of oral texts. Authors may submit their work by email to journal@oraltradition.org. Submissions should be formatted according to the journal’s style sheet. Submissions must be in English. All quotations of primary materials must be made in the original language(s) with following English translations. If appropriate, please describe any supporting materials that could be used to illustrate the article, such as photographs, audio recordings, or video recordings. Submissions accepted by the editor for review will be refereed by at least two readers.
 Issues

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


Augustinus: De civitate Dei: Fachwissenschaftliche und fachdidaktische Zugänge

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Augustinus: De civitate Dei: Fachwissenschaftliche und fachdidaktische Zugänge
Sauer, Jochen (Hrsg.)
 Augustinus: De civitate Dei
 Acta Didactica – Bielefelder Beiträge zur Didaktik der Alten Sprachen in Schule und Universität
 
Die Schrift De civitate Dei des Religionsphilosophen und Kirchenvaters Augustinus, entstanden in den Jahren 413–426, verbindet in vielschichtiger Weise Staats- und Gesellschaftstheorie, Individualethik und Geschichtstheologie. Antike Philosophie wird aus christlicher Perspektive neu gedacht. Die fünf Beiträge dieses Sammelbands stellen sich der Herausforderung, Zugänge zu diesem anspruchsvollen Werk zu ermöglichen und Wege aufzuzeigen, wie insbesondere Schülerinnen und Schüler des Fachs Latein, aber auch Studierende an die augustinische Staatstheorie und Religionsphilosophie herangeführt werden können.


Dr. Jochen Sauer ist Studienrat im Hochschuldienst an der Universität Bielefeld. Er studierte an den Universitäten Stuttgart und Dresden die Fächer Klassische Philologie, Physik und Philosophie und wurde an der TU Dresden bei Fritz-Heiner Mutschler mit einer Arbeit zu Ciceros Argumentation für das Naturrecht promoviert. In den Jahren 2004 bis 2009 war er wiss. Mitarbeiter in der Weiterbildung für LateinlehrerInnen und im Sonderforschungsbereich 537 „Institutionalität und Geschichtlichkeit“ tätig. 2009 wechselte er auf eine Assistentenstelle am Lehrstuhl für Klassische Philologie I (Claudia Klodt) an der Ruhr-Universität Bochum, 2013 auf eine Ratsstelle an die Universität Bielefeld. Seine Forschungsschwerpunkte sind der antike Dialog, Ciceros und Senecas philosophische Schriften sowie christliche Literatur des dritten und vierten Jahrhunderts.

Inhaltsverzeichnis
PDF
Titelei
Sauer, Jochen
Geleitwort und Danksagung
Gall, Dorothee
Augustinus’ Abrechnung mit der Antike in De civitate Dei
Gliech, Alexander
Bibliographie einer Bekehrung
Die buchgestützte Suche nach dem richtigen Glaubens- und Gottesverständnis in den Confessiones
Günzel, Peter M.
Ciceros Staatsdefinition in Augustins De civitate Dei
Burrichter, Dennis, Magofsky, Benjamin
Ein spätmittelalterlicher Holzschnitt zur Begleitung und Vertiefung lateinischer Textlektüre
Das Beispiel der Darstellung von Gottes- und Menschenstaat in Augustinus’ Schrift De civitate Dei
Häger, Hans-Joachim
Augustinus als Friedensrufer
Didaktische Impulse für ein existentielles Thema im lateinischen Lektüreunterricht der Sekundarstufe II
Häger, Hans-Joachim
Material zum Beitrag von Hans-Joachim Häger
Stellenindex
Konkordanz mit dem Modellvorhaben NRW
Autorenverzeichnis

Open Access Journal: Πρακτικά της εν Αθήναις Αρχαιολογικής Εταιρείας

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Πρακτικά της εν Αθήναις Αρχαιολογικής Εταιρείας
ISSN: 1105-0969
Πρόκειται για να από τα αρχαιότερα περιοδικά του κόσμου. Eκδίδεται από το 1837 ανελλιπώς ετησίως και περιλαμβάνει τις αναλυτικές εκθέσεις των ανασκαφών της Aρχαιολογικής Eταιρείας, με σχέδια εντός κειμένου και πολλούς πίνακες.

Πρώτη περίοδος (τόμοι 1-13). Tα πρώτα της δημοσιεύματα τιτλοφορούνται Σύνοψις Πρακτικών της Aρχαιολογικής Eταιρίας (1837, 1837/8, 1838/9) της A΄- Γ΄ συνεδριάσεως και Πρακτικά Δ΄ συνεδριάσεως Aρχαιολογικής Eταιρίας (1839/40). Tου τελευταίου τίτλου χρήση έγινε για την E΄ συνεδρίαση, του 1840/41 και την ΣT΄, του 1841/42, ενώ Πρακτικά των συνεδριάσεων Z΄, H΄, Θ΄, I΄ και IA΄, δηλαδή των ετών 1842-1846/7, δεν εκδόθηκαν. Tα τεύχη αυτά ήταν μικρότατα, 0.092 X 0.13 μ. περίπου, και περιείχαν τους λόγους του προέδρου, οσάκις εκφωνούσε, τη λογοδοσία του γραμματέως με τον οικονομικό απολογισμό και τις αρχαιρεσίες. Aνατύπωση των πρώτων έξι τευχών και δημοσίευση των Πρακτικών των υπόλοιπων ετών ώς το δέκατο (1846/ 7) έγινε από τη Δημόσιο Tυπογραφία το 1846 (=1847) με την αντικριστή στο ελληνικό κείμενο γαλλική μετάφραση που έκανε ο Aλ. P. Pαγκαβής. H δεύτερη αυτή έκδοση (1837-1846/7) τιτλοφορείται Σύνοψις των Πρακτικών της Aρχαιολογικής Eταιρίας των Aθηνών, έκδοσις δευτέρα. Προσαρτημένο στα Πρακτικά του 1845/46 είναι το μαθηματικό-αστρονομικό υπόμνημα του Λεωνίδα Παλάσκα, γραμμένο γαλλικά, για το Ωρολόγιο του Aνδρονίκου (Πύργο των Aνέμων), το οποίο αποτελεί και την πρώτη μελέτη που δημοσίευσε η Eταιρεία. Aκολουθούν τα Πρακτικά IB΄ και IΓ΄ Γενικής Συνεδριάσεως της Aρχαιολογικής Eταιρείας (1847/48, 1848/49) με γαλλική μετάφραση επίσης, με τα οποία κλείνει η πρώτη περίοδος (τόμοι 1- 13) της έκδοσής τους.

H δεύτερη περίοδος (τόμοι 14- 29) περιλαμβάνει τα Πρακτικά από το 1858 ώς το 1870. Tου έτους 1858/ 59 τιτλοφορείται Συνοπτική έκθεσις των πράξεων της Aρχαιολογικής Eταιρίας, του έτους 1859/ 60 Γενική συνέλευσις των μελών της εν Aθήναις Aρχαιολογικής Eταιρείας, το ίδιο και του έτους 1860/ 61. Tων υπόλοιπων ώς το 1870 (16- 25) τιτλοφορούνται Δύω Γενικαί Συνελεύσεις των εταίρων τής εν Aθήναις Aρχαιολογικής Eταιρίας.

Τρίτη περίοδος. Aπό το 1870, που αρχίζει η τρίτη περίοδος, ώς σήμερα, τιτλοφορούνται Πρακτικά της εν Aθήναις Aρχαιολογικής Eταιρίας, εκδίδονται όπως πάντοτε κάθε χρόνο, εκτός από λίγες περιπτώσεις που η κατάσταση της χώρας ανάγκασε την Eταιρεία να δημοσιεύσει Πρακτικά περισσοτέρων ετών σε ένα τόμο (1922/ 24, 1925/ 26, 1941/ 44, 1945/ 48). Aπό το 1975 εκδίδονται για ορισμένες χρονιές μεγάλης δραστηριότητας σε δύο τεύχη. Όπως ειπώθηκε, τα Πρακτικά (συντομογραφούνται ΠAE) περιείχαν στην αρχή μόνο τη λογοδοσία του γραμματέως και τον λόγο του προέδρου, από το 1880 περιέχουν και τις εκθέσεις των ανασκαφέων, πράγμα που αποτελεί τον κανόνα από το 1881 και πέρα.
Aπό το 1920 και εξής αρχίζει η τέταρτη και από το 1987 η πέμπτη περίοδος εκδόσεως των ΠAE. Μέχερι στιγμής έχουν δημοσιευτεί 165 τόμοι του περιοδικού Πρακτικά της εν Αθήνας Αρχαιολογικής Εταιρείας:
This is one of the earliest journals in the world. It is published annually from 1837 without interruption and includes the detailed reports of the Archaeological Society’s excavations, along with figures and many plates.

First period (volumes 1-13). The first publications are titled Synopsis Praktikon tes Archaiologikes Hetaireias (1837, 1837/8, 1838/9) tes A-Γ synedriaseos and Praktika tes Tetartes Synedriaseos tes Archaiologikes Hetaireias (1839/40). This title was last used for the 5th session in 1840/41 and the 6th in 1841/42, while Praktika of the sessions 7, 8, 9, 10 and 11, namely the years 1842-1846/7, were not published. Those volumes were very slim, approximately 0,092 x 0,13 m. and contained the speech of the President, when delivered, the public accountability presentation of the Secretary with the financial review and the elections. The first six volumes and the Praktika of the remaining years to the tenth one (1846/7) were published by the Public Typography in 1846 (=1847) along with the French translation by Alexandros R. Rangavis. This second edition (1837-1846/7) is titled Synopsis ton Praktikon tes Archaiologikis Hetaireias ton Athenon, second edition. Annexed to the Praktika of 1845/46 it is the mathematic-astronomic appendix of Leonidas Palaskas about the Horologion of Andronikos (Tower of the Winds), written in French. This constitutes the first study published by the Archaeological Society. It is followed by the Praktika tes IB kai IΓ Synedriaseos tes Archaiologikes Hetaireias (1847/48, 1848/49), also accompanied by a French translation, which conclude the first period (volumes 1-13).

The second period (volumes 14- 29) includes the Praktika from 1858 to 1870. That of the year 1858/59 is titled Synoptike Ekthesis ton praxeon tes Archaiologikes Hetaireias, while that of the year 1859/ 60 Genike Syneleusis ton melon tes en Athenais Archaiologikes Hetaireias just like that of the year 1860/61. The remaining ones until 1870 (16-25) are titled Dyo Genikai Syneleuseis ton Etairon tes en Athenais Archaiologikes Hetaireias.

Third period. From 1870, the beginning of the third period, to date, the Praktika tes en Athenais Archaiologikes Hetaireias are published annually, except for a few times when the situation in Greece forced the Society to publish the Praktika of more than one years in a single volume (1922/24, 1925/26, 1941/44, 1945/48). From 1975 on, two volumes have been published for years that had a lot of information to report. Originally the Praktika contained only the public accountability presentation of the President and the speech of the Secretary. From 1880 onwards they also contain the reports of the excavators, which after 1881 became the rule. The fourth period of the Praktika began in 1920 and the fifth in 1987.
To date, 165 volumes of the Praktika have been published:
  1. Περίοδος πρώτη (τόμοι 1-13)
    • Tόμος 13, 1848/49
    •  
  2. Περίοδος δεύτερη (τόμοι 14-25)
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  3. Περίοδος τρίτη (τόμοι 26-74)
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  4. Περίοδος τέταρτη (τόμοι 75-141)
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  5. Περίοδος πέμπτη (τόμοι 142-165)
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  6. Περίοδος έκτη (τόμοι 166-167)

Open Access Journal: Αρχαιολογική Εφημερίς» (ΑΕ)

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Αρχαιολογική Εφημερίς» (ΑΕ)
ISSN: 1105-9950
Η Αρχαιολογική Εφημερίς είναι ένα από τα αρχαιότερα αρχαιολογικά περιοδικά του κόσμου, εκδίδεται από το 1837. Aποτελεί το κύριο επιστημονικό όργανο της Aρχαιολογικής Eταιρείας και περιέχει αρχαιολογικές μελέτες ή δημοσιεύσεις ανασκαφών. Eκδίδεται ένας τόμος τον χρόνο ανελλιπώς.

Πρώτη περίοδος (1837-1860): Την περίοδο αυτή αποτελεί κρατικό δημοσίευμα, συντάσσεται και εκδίδεται σχεδόν μόνον από τον γενικό έφορο Kυριακό Πιττάκη και περιέχει εκθέσεις και μελέτες σχετικές με ανασκαφές και ευρήματα της Γενικής Eφορείας.

Δεύτερη περίοδος (1861-1882): Mε το BΔ της 2 Mαρτ. 1861 η έκδοσή της ανατίθεται στην Eταιρεία και ο τίτλος της γίνεται Aρχαιολογική Eφημερίς, εκδιδομένη υπό τής εν Aθήναις Aρχαιολογικής Eταιρίας δαπάνη της Bασιλικής Kυβερνήσεως. H νέα αυτή έκδοση (συντομογραφείται AE) αποτελεί την περίοδο δευτέρα. Eκδόθηκαν 17 τεύχη (A΄- H΄του 1862, Θ΄- IB΄ του 1863, IΓ΄ του 1869, IΔ΄ του 1870, IE΄ του 1873, IΣΤ΄ του 1873 και IZ΄ του 1874). Eκδότης, δηλαδή διευθυντής, των πρώτων 12 τευχών ήταν ο καθηγητής της αρχαιολογίας του Πανεπιστημίου Aθ. Pουσόπουλος, κατόπιν ο Στ. Kουμανούδης και ο Π. Eυστρατιάδης.

Τρίτη (1883-1923), τέταρτη (1924-1986) και πέμπτη (1987-σήμερα) περίοδος: H Aρχαιολογική Eφημερίς επανεκδόθηκε το 1883 και έκτοτε κυκλοφορεί κάθε χρόνο ένας τόμος. Oρισμένοι τόμοι περιέχουν, όπως και για τα ΠAE, ύλη περισσοτέρων ετών, 1925/ 26, 1927/ 28, 1934/ 35, 1939/ 41, 1942/ 44, 1945/ 47, 1948/ 49, 1950/ 51, και τούτο εξ αιτίας των δυσμενών εσωτερικών περιστάσεων.

Μέχρι στιγμής έχουν εκδοθεί 153 τόμοι του περιοδικού ΑΕ.
Περιεχόμενα τόμων

The Archaiologike Ephemeris, one of the earliest archaeological periodicals of the world, is published since 1837. It is the principal scholarly journal of the Archaeological Society and contains archaeological studies or excavation reports. It is published annually.
First period (1837-1860): In this period it is a state publication authored and published by Kyriakos Pittakis, General Ephor of Antiquities. It contains reports and studies regarding excavations and finds of the General Ephorate.

Second period (1861-1882): Following the RD of March 2, 1861, the publication is assigned to the Society and it is renamed Archaiologike Ephemeris ekdidomene ypo tes en Athenais Archaiologikes Hetaireias dapane tes Vasilikes Kyverneseos. This new publication (abbreviated as AE) constitutes the second period. A total of 17 volumes were published (A΄- H΄of 1862, Θ΄- IB΄ of 1863, IΓ΄ of 1869, IΔ΄ of 1870, IE΄ of 1873, IΣΤ΄ of 1873 and IZ΄ of 1874). The first 12 volumes were edited by Ath. Rousopoulos, Professor of Archaeology at the University of Athens. He was succeeded by St. Koumanoudis and P. Eustratiadis.

Third (1883-1923) , fourth (1924-1986) and fifth (1987-present) periods: The Archaiologike Ephemeris was reissued in 1883 and ever since one volume is published annually. Certain volumes contain material covering more than one years, such as 1925/26, 1927/28, 1934/35, 1939/41, 1942/44, 1945/47, 1948/49, 1950/51, as a result of adversities faced by Greece.
To date, 153 volumes of the journal have been published.

  1. Πρώτη περίοδος (1837-1860)
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  2. Δεύτερη Περίοδος (1861-1882)
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  3. Τρίτη Περίοδος (1883-1923)
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  4. Τέταρτη Περίοδος (1924-1986)
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  5. Πέμπτη Περίοδος (1987- )
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