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Abbreviations in Latin Inscriptions

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Abbreviations in Latin Inscriptions
Conceived and compiled by Tom Elliott (tom_elliott@unc.edu) for the ASGLE web site
Copyright 1998 by Tom Elliott

These lists may be used, reproduced and distributed for any academic purpose that does not generate profit so long as the title and authorship information, and the copyright notice, remain attached.
This page provides access to a series of lists containing abbreviations found in Latin inscriptions. The series represents a new compilation of such abbreviations, assembled from digital texts of all Latin inscriptions published in L’Année Épigraphique between 1888 and 1993. For a description of the methods used to compile these lists (and the limitations resulting therefrom) please see the Methods and Limitations section, below.

There are two sets of lists, one containing common abbreviations (those occurring more than 10 times in the inscriptions sampled), and another containing all the abbreviations that occur in the inscriptions sampled. Please note the file sizes listed next to each link; the complete listings in particular are quite large and may take a significant amount of time to download and format for viewing.

Open Access Journal: Frankfurter elektronische Rundschau zur Altertumskunde (FeRA)

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[First posted in AWOL 8 January 2010. Updated 5 May 2020]

Frankfurter elektronische Rundschau zur Altertumskunde (FeRA)
ISSN 1862-8478
http://s145739614.online.de/fera/images/headlogo.gif

Die Frankfurter elektronische Rundschau zur Altertumskunde(FeRA) ist ein open access online-journal für alle klassischen altertumskundlichen Fächer mit drei Ausgaben pro Jahr (April, August und Dezember). Obwohl am Frankfurter Institut für Archäologische Wissenschaften begründet und über den Server der Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universität operierend, versteht sich die Zeitschrift nicht als reine Seminarpublikation, sondern lädt ausdrücklich Nachwuchswissenschafter aller Universitäten ein, Fachbeiträge und Rezensionen einzureichen.

The Frankfurter elektronische Rundschau zur Altertumskunde (FeRA) is an open access online journal especially designed for subjects which study the antiquities, and is being published three times a year (April, August and December). Though established by the Frankfurter Institut für Archäologische Wissenschaften and operating via the Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universität server the journal is not intended to be a mere seminar publication, but explicitly invites qualified young researchers from universities all over the world to present their papers and reviews
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Res Difficiles: A Conference On Challenges and Pathways for Addressing Inequity In the Ancient Greek and Roman World

[VIRTUAL] The Dead Sea Scrolls in Recent Scholarship: A Public Conference, Day 1 [May 17 - 20, 2020]

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[VIRTUAL] The Dead Sea Scrolls in Recent Scholarship: A Public Conference, Day 1 [May 17 - 20, 2020]

Sunday

May. 17

1:00pm - 5:00pm
Webinar

New Open Access Journal: Нижневолжский археологический вестник - The Lower Volga Archaeological Bulletin

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ISSN (Print): 2587-8123
ISSN (Online): 2658-5995
DOI: 10.15688/nav.jvolsu 
Титульный









«Нижневолжский археологический вестник» издается с декабря 2016 года. Журнал создан на основе ежегодного сборника, первый выпуск которого был осуществлен в 1998 году. С 7 по 12 выпуски «Вестника» издавались под грифом Волгоградского государственного университета и Института археологии РАН.  
«Вестник» предназначен для публикаций результатов фундаментальных и прикладных научных работ отечественных и иностранных исследователей, преподавателей, научно-педагогических работников в виде научных статей, обзорных материалов, сообщений, библиографических обзоров, исторических справок. Основными темами журнала являются археология, история, функционирование и перспективы развития археологической науки в России и за рубежом. 
В нашем издании традиционно предлагаются следующие разделы: «Статьи», «Публикации», «Заметки», «Критика и дискуссии», «Научная жизнь», «Информация о полевых исследованиях», «Персоналии», «Сообщения».
 В социальной сети «ВКонтакте» существует группа «Нижневолжский археологический вестник», где можно задать вопросы ответственному секретарю. Аналогичная  группафункционирует в сети "Facebook".
The Lower Volga Archaeological Bulletin (Nizhnevolzhsky Arkheologichesky Vestnik)has been published since December 2016. The journal is based on annual reviews, first issued in 1998. Volumes 7–12 were published under the auspices of Volgograd State University and the Archaeology Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences. 
The Bulletin is aimed for the publication of results of fundamental and applied scientific research conducted by Russian and foreign researchers, professors and academics. The published materials are presented in the form of research articles, reviews, reports, bibliographical overviews on certain research topics, historical notes; and cover issues related to archaeology, history, development, problems and prospects of the archaeological science in Russian and overseas regions. 
Our journal traditionally includes the following sections: Articles, Publications, Notes, Criticism and Discussion, Academic Life, Information on Field Studies, Personalities, and Reports.
 
In our group in the Russian social network VKontakte namedНижневолжский археологический вестникand in the analogousFacebook groupyou can ask your questions to the executive secretary.
  • 2019 Vol. 18, No 2
    Date: 20 December 2019   Pages:  252  Articles: 17   Total circulation: 200
  • 2019 Vol. 18, No 1
    Date: 20 June 2019   Pages: 199    Articles: 16   Total circulation: 200
  • 2018 Vol. 17, No 2
    Date: 20 December 2018   Pages: 157   Articles: 12   Total circulation: 200
  • 2018 Vol. 17, No 1
    Date: 20 June 2018  Pages: 180   Articles: 9   Total circulation: 200
  • 2017 Vol.16, No 2
    Date: 20 December 2017   Pages: 132   Articles: 7   Total circulation: 200
  • 2017 Vol.16, No 1
    Date: 20 June 2017   Pages: 177   Articles: 12   Total circulation: 200
  • 2016 Vol.15, No 1
    Data: 20 December 2016   Pages: 147   Articles: 11   Total circulation: 200

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

Society of Assyriologists, Biblicists and Caucasiologists (SABC)

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Society of Assyriologists, Biblicists and Caucasiologists (SABC)
Society of Assyriologists, Biblicists and Caucasiologists (SABC) was founded in 2007 at the Iv. Javakhishvili Tbilisi State University, on basis of joint efforts of Department of Assyriology, Institute of Orientalistic, Faculty of Humanities and American-Georgian Institute of Biblical and Archaeological Studies (AGIBAS).

SABC aims:
  • Popularization the fields of Assyriology, Bibliology and Caucasiology; 
  • Uniting of World’s Assyriologists and Biblicists with Caucasian colleagues, affiliating their joint studies and collaboration in different fields of Assyriology, Bibliology, Archaeology and Anthropology of Caucasus;
  • Introducing artifacts from Caucasian archaeological excavations and museum collections to foreign members of the society;
  • Collecting and translating any type of information, that could become matter of interest for them (foreign members of  the society) e.g. archaeology, ethnology and history of Caucasus, etc.;
  • Inviting lecturers and scientists for giving workshops and seminars at the Tbilisi State University;
  • Affiliating Georgian and Foreign colleagues in joint scientific and educative programs and projects;
  • Initiating scientific conferences in Caucasian studies and participating in conferences all over the world. 
  • The society unites Assyriologists and Biblicists of Caucasus and world. This will become a center of joint research, collaboration, information exchange and studies of scientists form all over the world.



Open Access Journal: Hélade

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[First posted in AWOL  3 November 2009. Updated 7 May 2020]

Hélade
ISSN: 1518-2541
Héladeé uma publicação eletrônica semestral voltada para os estudos da Antiguidade Ocidental e Oriental. Fundada em 2000, época em que a maioria dos periódicos especializados adotava o suporte impresso, a revista se propunha a difundir as pesquisas acadêmicas de especialistas em Antiguidade exclusivamente através da internet. Após um período de inatividade, Hélade retorna em uma nova série, sob a responsabilidade do Núcleo de Estudos de Representações e de Imagens da Antiguidade (NEREIDA), vinculado ao Departamento de História e ao Programa de Pós-graduação em História (PPGH) da Universidade Federal Fluminense.
Nesta nova etapa, mantivemos a proposta original de reunir debates interdisciplinares com especialistas das áreas de História, Arqueologia, Antropologia, Filosofia e Filologia. Admite-se como norte a construção de um espaço de divulgação do saber acadêmico pautado pela isonomia, pelo respeito à diversidade teórico-metodológica e pela valorização de novos objetos e temas de pesquisa. Nossa proposta é ampliar o diálogo, criando um espaço que reúna pesquisadores brasileiros e estrangeiros, ultrapassando fronteiras. Mais do que divulgar novas pesquisas, desejamos buscar a integração de interessados no estudo da Antiguidade nessas diversas áreas, fomentando novos debates.


 
Volume 1 - Número 1 (2015)
 
Volume 1 - Número 2 (2015)
 
Volume 2 - Número 1 (2016)
 
Volume 2 - Número 2 (2016)
 
Volume 2 - Número 3 (2016)
 
Volume 3 - Número 1 (2017)
 
Volume 3 - Número 2 (2017)
 
Volume 3 - Número 3 (2017)
 
Volume 4 - Número 1 (2018) Volume 4 - Número 2 (2018) Volume 4 - Número 3 (2018) Volume 5 - Número 1 (2018)

Volume 1 - Número 1 (2000)
 
Volume 1 - Número 2 (2000)
 
Volume 2 - Número 1 (2001)
 
Volume 2 - Número 2 (2001)
 
Volume 2 - Número Especial
(2001)
 
Volume 3 - Número 1 (2002)
 
Volume 3 - Número 2 (2002)
 
Volume 4 - Número 1
(2003-2004)
 























Inscribe: The Invention of Scripts and Their Beginnings

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Inscribe: The Invention of Scripts and Their Beginnings
INSCRIBE - Invention of Scripts and Their Beginnings
We investigate one of the greatest inventions in history: Writing

INSCRIBE is a 5-year project funded by the European Commission under the ERC Consolidator grant program (2018-2023) and, at full capacity, will comprise a team of 19 researchers, each skilled in a different discipline.

INSCRIBE examines the factors that made the invention of writing possible, when this was done as an original creation, in different parts of the world. This question has never been approached through a comparative perspective that includes writing systems that we can read, but those whose languages are still unknown. There are about 12 scripts in the world that are still undeciphered.

The aim is this new approach, combining a study of the world’s first instances of writing, including the earliest in Europe, through the lens of archaeology, anthropology, cultural evolution, cognitive studies and decipherment strategies.

First, INSCRIBE will consider the original inventions, all of which are image-based, from Mesopotamia, Egypt, Mesoamerica and China, and other debated cases, such as the Rongorongo script of Easter Island and the Indus Valley script. The objective is to explain their inventon in terms of visual cognition (why are signs shaped as they are?), archaeological setting (what are the contextual preconditions, why does writing emerge when it does, and only four times in history?), application of use (what are its initial purposes?), and language notation (what are the paths to registering sound?).

Second, INSCRIBE explores the earliest scripts in Europe from the second millennium BC Aegean, whose initial phase is highly 'iconic' (broadly speaking, picture-based). The three undeciphered Aegean scripts (Cretan Hieroglyphic, Linear A and Cypro-Minoan) will be analyzed for the first time from a multistranded perspective that will shed unprecedented light on their creation and development. We want to analyze the relationship between these scripts and to apply a multi-stepped (and already successfully piloted) decipherment strategy.

Third, INSCRIBE will go beyond the traditional standards applied to the catalogues of inscriptions by producing the first complete digital corpus of all three Aegean undeciphered scripts, with 3D interactive models accompanied by a multidimensional interface tagging inscriptions, types of inscribed objects, provenance, archaeological contexts and functions.

Open Access Journal: Interactive Digs : Archaeological Institute of America and Archaeology magazine's

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Interactive Digs : Archaeological Institute of America and Archaeology magazine's

Past Digs



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

Lived Religion in the Ancient Mediterranean World

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Lived Religion in the Ancient Mediterranean World
Thumbnail
Contributor(s)
Rüpke, Jörg (editor)
Gasparini, Valentino (editor)
Patzelt, Maik (editor)
Raja, Rubina (editor)
Rieger, Anna-Katharina (editor)
Urciuoli, Emiliano (editor)
The Lived Ancient Religion project has radically changed perspectives on ancient religions and their supposedly personal or public character. This volume applies and further develops these methodological tools, new perspectives and new questions. The religious transformations of the Roman Imperial period appear in new light and more nuances by comparative confrontation and the integration of many disciplines. The contributions are written by specialists from a variety of disciplinary contexts (Jewish Studies, Theology, Classics, Early Christian Studies) dealing with the history of religion of the Mediterranean, West-Asian, and European area from the (late) Hellenistic period to the (early) Middle Ages and shaped by their intensive exchange. From the point of view of their respective fields of research, the contributors engage with discourses on agency, embodiment, appropriation and experience. They present innovative research in four fields also of theoretical debate, which are “Experiencing the Religious”, “Switching the Code”, „A Thing Called Body“ and “Commemorating the Moment”.
Keywords
Lived Religion Archaeology of Religion; History of Religion
DOI
10.1515/9783110557947
ISBN
9783110557596
Publisher
De Gruyter
Publication date and place
Berlin/Boston, 2020

Open Access Journal: Sociedad Española de Bizantinística Boletín

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[First poted in AWOL 6 January 2019, updated  8 May 2020]

 Sociedad Española de Bizantinística Boletín
Bizantinística
El Boletín de la Sociedad Española de Bizantinística, coordinado por Juan Signes Codoñer, es un instrumento de difusión del conocimiento de Bizancio y de las actividades de la Sociedad y sus socios. Además de las noticias académicas y las publicaciones de bizantinistas españoles, recoge breves estudios divulgativos sobre gran variedad de aspectos de la presencia de Bizancio en la Península ibérica y de las relaciones entre los reinos peninsulares y Bizancio, en parte organizado en secciones fijas como "Bizancio en la actualidad" o "Archivo gráfico de Bizancio y la península Ibérica".

Normativa para el envío de artículos.


Boletín 35 (2020) [Google Drive] [Dropbox] [archive.org] [zenodo]

  1. Procopius and the Plague in 2020.
  2. (Not) Learning from the Plague.
  3. The economic effects of the Justinianic Plague?
  4. L'impact de la maladie dans un monde en crise. Le cas de Byzance au temps de la peste noire.
  5. Chrétiens de Byzance au défi de la Peste noire. 
Boletín 34 (2020) [Google Drive][Dropbox] [archive.org]

  1. Acta de la asamblea ordinaria (21 de febrero de 2020).
  2. Premio de la Sociedad Española de Bizantinística a la mejor tesis doctoral.
  3. ¡Constantinopla no cayó en 1453! ¿Una ucronía bizantina o un disparate de historia?
  4. La falsificación en Bizancio: la cancillería patriarcal.
  5. Bibliografía.
Boletín 33 (2019) [Google Drive] [Dropbox] [archive.org]

  1. Sos Griego. Cómo salvar el griego en Secundaria.
  2. Mi gran boda bizantina. El epitalamio ilustrado del Vat. gr. 1851.
  3. III Coloquio bizantino de la Universidad de Buenos Aires.
  4. Memoria del 20th Annual Postgraduate Colloquium del Centre
    for Byzantine, Ottoman and Modern Greek Studies (1 de junio,
    Birmingham).
  5. Bizancio, Nostradamus... ¡y Donald Trump!
  6. Visita al yacimiento arqueológico de Noheda.
  7. Bibliografía.
Boletín 32 (2019) [Google Drive] [Dropbox] [archive.org]

  1. Acta de la asamblea ordinaria (1 de marzo de 2019).
  2. XVIII Jornadas de Bizancio en Barcelona y Terrassa.
  3. Archivo gráfico de Bizancio y la península ibérica XXII: la sede episcopal de Égara y su decoración pictórica.
  4. Pere Julià: historia y pervivencia de una tradición.
  5. Bibliografía. 
Boletín 31 (2018) [Google Drive] [Dropbox] [archive.org]

  1. Archivo gráfico de Bizancio y la península ibérica XX: ecos del arte ortodoxo en la costa alicantina. El templo del arcángel San Miguel en Altea.
  2. «Dinastías bizantinas», un juego de mesa basado en el mundo político bizantino del siglo XI.
  3. Kràzome Francisco, imme an tin Madrìdi, ce matthènno to greko (Me llamo Francisco, soy de Madrid y aprendo greko).
  4. Archivo gráfico de Bizancio y la Península Ibérica XXI: el museo de mosaicos romanos de Casariche (Sevilla).
  5. Crónica arqueológica I: Bizancio en su sitio. A propósito del Coloquio Internacional «El sitio de las cosas: la Alta Edad Media en contexto (siglos VIII-X)».
  6. Bibliografía.
Boletín 30 (2018) [Google Drive] [Dropbox] [archive.org]

  1. Carta a la Ministra de Educación Isabel Celáa.
  2. El Problema de los generales bizantinos.
  3. La Colección Ifergan de Málaga.
  4. Bizancio, el «influencer» marginado.
Boletín 29 (2018) [Google Drive]  [Dropbox] [archive.org]

  1. Acta de la asamblea ordinaria (16/02/2018).
  2. Bizancio ante el 8 de marzo: ¿merece la pena estudiar una sociedad patriarcal?
  3. Constantinopla en La Crónica de Leodegundo.
  4. Bizancio como excusa: la «etapa bizantina» de André Derain (1880-1954).
  5. En el umbral del Imperio. Crónica de la reunión científica Bizancio en Ceuta. Arqueología y comercio marítimo en el Fretum Gaditanum (siglos VI-VII d. C.).
  6. Bibliografía.

Boletín 28 (2017) [Google Drive] [Dropbox] [archive.org]

  1. Archivo gráfico de Bizancio y la península ibérica XVIII: Asturias y Bizancio.
  2. Archivo gráfico de Bizancio y la península ibérica XIX: San Mamas y el león — o los leones de San Mamés.
  3. Bizancio de actualidad: León VI el Sabio y Charlotte Brontë.
  4. Bibliografía.
Boletín 27 (2017) [Google Drive] [Dropbox] [archive.org]

  1. La sabiduría de los paganos: la representación de la Sibila y Platón en el arte bizantino y post-bizantino.
  2. Gibbon y Luis Antonio de Villena.
  3. El ojo bizantino VII: Oriente en Madrid a fines del XIV y principios del XV.
  4. El ojo bizantino VIII: la altura de los bizantinos.El ojo bizantino IX: el icono de Sant Jaume en Palma de Mallorca.
  5. Bibliografía.
Boletín 26 (2017) [Google Drive] [Dropbox] [archive.org]

  1. Asamblea anual de la SEB (24 de febrero de 2017).
  2. El futuro de la Bizantinística en España.
  3. Homenaje a Pedro Bádenas de la Peña (14 de enero de 2017).
  4. Malaca bizantina en el Museo de Málaga: un reencuentro con el pasado de la ciudad antigua.
  5. Cuestionario a los socios 1: Roberto Zapata Rodríguez.
  6. Bizancio en Playmobil.
  7. Bibliografía.
Boletín 25 (2016) [Boletín 25 (2016)] [Dropbox] [archive.org]

  1. XVII Jornadas de Bizancio (Málaga, 13-15 de octubre de 2016).
  2. Arqueología en Tierras de la Biblia: la Jerusalén bizantina de la Ciudad de David.
  3. La maqueta de Jerusalén en época bizantina.
  4. La verdadera última legión.
  5. El cuerpo de un savaran persa en Il sestiere di Castello.
  6. Bibliografía.
Boletín 24 (2016) [Google Drive] [Dropbox] [archive.org]

  1. El 23º Congreso Internacional de Estudios Bizantinos (Belgrado, 22-27 de agosto de 2016).
  2. El ojo bizantino V: el despacho de Georges Ostrogorsky.
  3. El ojo bizantino VI: especial Belgrado.
  4. XVII Jornadas de Bizancio (Málaga, 13-15 de octubre de 2016).
  5. Bizancio de actualidad: Literatura Medieval en la Universidad de York.
  6. Bibliografía.
Boletín 23 (2016) [Google Drive] [Dropbox] [archive.org]

  1. Acta de la asamblea anual de la Sociedad Española de Bizantinística (26 de febrero de 2016).
  2. Archivo gráfico de Bizancio y la península ibérica XVI: raíces orientales en el mudéjar castellano.
  3. Archivo gráfico de Bizancio y la península ibérica XVII: ¿cúpulas neobizantinas?
  4. El ojo bizantino IV: el momento «Suintila».
  5. Bibliografía.
Boletín 22 (2015) [Google Drive] [Dropbox] [archive.org]

  1. Bizancio como excusa: a propósito de los orígenes del Flamenco.
  2. El descubrimiento del galeón «San José» y la Lex Rhodia nautica.
  3. El ojo bizantino III: el Gallo en su atalaya.
  4. Debate bizantino: León VI versus morcilla.
  5. Bibliografía.
Boletín 21 (2015) [Google Drive] [Dropbox] [archive.org]

  1. Archivo gráfico de Bizancio y la península ibérica XV: el díptico bizantino de Cuenca y su préstamo para la exposición «Masterpieces of Byzantine Art» de Edimburgo 1958.
  2. Archivo gráfico de Bizancio y la península ibérica XVI:iconografía de Santa Elena y la Vera Cruz en iglesias españolas.
  3. Bizantinistas españoles por el mundo II: «Descendiente de El Greco».
  4. El ojo bizantino I: Papiro y Belisario en Siracusa; El ojo bizantino II: Justiniano en Coimbra.
  5. Bibliografía.
Boletín 20 (2015) [Google Drive] [Dropbox] [archive.org]

  1. Acta de la asamblea de la S.E.B. del 16 de enero de 2015.
  2. A propósito de las excavaciones arqueológicas en el cerro del Molinete de Cartagena. Dinámicas de reutilización en una ciudad hispana durante la época bizantina.
  3. Bizancio como escenario político romántico: el Belisario de Schenck y Donizetti.
  4. Bizancio de actualidad: la imagen de lo sagrado (a propósito de los atentados de París).
  5. Bibliografía.
Boletín 19 (2014) [Google Drive] [Dropbox] [archive.org]

  1. Bizancio de actualidad: Justiniano y la desheredación.
  2. Los yazidis: un grupo étnico-religioso kurdo.
  3. Bizantinistas españoles por el mundo I: ¿Qué hace un becario como tú en un país como éste?
  4. Bibliografía.
Boletín 18 (2014) [Google Drive] [Dropbox] [archive.org]

  1. Acta de la asamblea anual de la S.E.B.
  2. Haendel en Bizancio: la ópera barroca y la historia bizantina.
  3. La Bizantinística en la Universidad española.
  4. La Cantiga 28 de Alfonso X y el asedio de Constantinopla.
  5. Bibliografía.
Boletín 17 (2013) [Google Drive] [Dropbox] [archive.org]

  1. XVI Jornadas de Bizancio: el mundo bizantino y el Occidente europeo.
  2. Los mosaicos bizantinos del mihrab de Córdoba.
  3. El icono bizantino de Jaime I el Conquistador (Jaume el Conqueridor).
  4. Tesis doctorales y tesis de máster.
  5. Bibliografía.
Boletín 16 (2013) [Google Drive] [Dropbox] [archive.org]

  1. Rodríguez Adrados y Bizancio: una relación tormentosa.
  2. La guardia de «jenízaros» catalanes del emperador bizantino (segunda mitad del s. XVI - primera mitad del s. XV).
  3. Besarión en Roma.
  4. Bibliografía.
  5. Reforma de los estatutos de la A.I.E.B. (Association Internationale des Études Byzantines).
Boletín 15 (2013) [Google Drive] [Dropbox] [archive.org]

  1. Acta de la asamblea anual de la S.E.B.
  2. «Chipre, entre Bizancio y Occidente (siglos IV-XVI)», exposición en el museo del Louvre (28 octubre 2012 - 28 enero 2013).
  3. El culto a la Virgen en Constantinopla, Πόλις τῆς Θεοτόκου, según el Tarraconensis 55.
  4. Un plato del Louvre.
  5. Actividades bizantinas en el sureste peninsular.
  6. Bibliografía.
Boletín 14 (2013) [Google Drive] [Dropbox] [archive.org]

  1. Bizancio de actualidad: furia iconoclasta en Mali.
  2. Actividades divulgativas sobre la época bizantina en Cartagena.
  3. Un cinocéfalo egipcio en el corazón de Segovia.
  4. Efemérides olvidadas: 1800 años de romanidad.
  5. Un emperador deformado por la peste: Justiniano.
  6. Bibliografía.
  7. Proyectos en curso (IV).
Boletín 13 (2012) [Google Drive] [Dropbox] [archive.org]

  1. Bizancio de actualidad: Grecia hoy y Bizancio.
  2. La entrada de Roger de Flor en Constantinopla.
  3. Bibliografía.
  4. Proyectos en curso (III).
Boletín 12 (2012) [Google Drive] [Dropbox] [archive.org]

  1. Bizancio de actualidad: la polémica en la U.E. sobre los límites de Europa: el papel de Bizancio.
  2. Los frescos de la sala capitular del monasterio de Sigena (Huesca).
  3. Joan de Peralta: un catalán encargado de la restauración de Santa Sofía y gobernador de Constantinopla durante el reinado de Juan VI Cantacuzeno (1347-1354).
  4. Bibliografía.
  5. Proyectos en curso (II).
Boletín 11 (2012) [Google Drive] [Dropbox] [archive.org]

  1. Resumen de la asamblea general de la S.E.B.
  2. La Virgen del Perpetuo Socorro, el icono bizantino con más devoción en España.
  3. Griegos en la Barcelona medieval.
  4. Proyectos en curso (I).
  5. ¿Bizancio de actualidad?
  6. Premios.
  7. Bibliografía.
Boletín 10 (2011) [Google Drive] [Dropbox] [archive.org]

  1. XXII Congreso Internacional de Estudios Bizantinos (Sofia, 22-27 de agosto de 2011).
  2. Los últimos bizantinos en España y la fortaleza de Alaró.
  3. Bibliografía.
Boletín 9 (2011) [Google Drive] [Dropbox] [archive.org]

  1. Bizancio en el próximo congreso de la S.E.E.C.
  2. El periplo de un capitel bizantino en España.
  3. De digitalibus et in interrete mostratis imaginibus Graeocrum manuscriptorum.
  4. Sección de tesis.
  5. Bibliografía.
Boletín 8 (2011) [Google Drive] [Dropbox] [archive.org]

  1. Acta de la asamblea.
  2. Conferencia de Paolo Odorico.
  3. Los mosaicos de la villa de Noheda.
  4. Cómo una emperatriz de Bizancio acabó vestida de labradora valenciana.
  5. Bibliografía.
  6. Resolución del acertijo.
Boletín 7 (2010) [Google Drive] [Dropbox] [archive.org]

  1. Reunión de la directiva de la S.E.B.
  2. Heraclio y la recuperación de la Santa Cruz.
  3. Bibliografía.
  4. Crónica académica.
  5. Acertijo.
Boletín 6 (2010) [Google Drive] [Dropbox] [archive.org]

  1. La irradiación de la cultura bizantina.
  2. Περα Γαδειρας o los límites del conocimiento humano.
  3. Bibliografía.
  4. Tesis doctorales defendidas.
Boletín 5 (2010) [Google Drive] [Dropbox] [archive.org]

  1. Investigaciones recientes sobre Bizancio y España.
  2. Hallazgo de dos representaciones de acritas en Koron.
  3. Archivo gráfico de Bizancio y la península ibérica (IV).
  4. Lectura de tesis doctorales.
  5. Bibliografía.
Boletín 4 (2010) [Google Drive] [Dropbox] [archive.org]

  1. Balance del segundo año de la S.E.B.
  2. XV Jornadas de Bizancio en Ceuta.
  3. Archivo gráfico de Bizancio y la península ibérica (III).
  4. Tesis doctorales relacionadas con la Antigüedad Tardía y Bizancio.
  5. Bibliografía.
  6. Necrológica: Mark Lawrence Sosower (1949-2009).
Boletín 3 (2009) [Google Drive] [Dropbox] [archive.org]

  1. Actas de la asamblea.
  2. Excavaciones arqueológicas en el cerro del Molinete de Cartagena.
  3. Bibliografía.
Boletín 2 (2009) [Google Drive] [Dropbox] [archive.org]

  1. Anuncio de asamblea.
  2. Socios institucionales.
  3. Logos.
  4. Planes de estudio.
  5. Archivo gráfico de Bizancio y la península ibérica.
  6. Bizancio en pantalla.
Boletín 1 (2009) [Google Drive] [Dropbox] [archive.org]

  1. Bienvenida a los socios.
  2. Noticia sobre la exposición «Le Mont Athos et l'Empire Byzantin, Trésors de la Sainte Montagne», Petit-Palais (París, 10 abril - 13 julio 2009).
  3. Bibliografía.
  4. Logos.


Open Access Publications of the Institute of Classical Studies at the Humanities Digital Library

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 [First posted in AWOL 27 January 2019, updated 8 May 2020]

Institute of Classical Studies at the Humanities Digital Library, University of London

Cover for The Digital Classicist 2013 The Digital Classicist 2013
Stuart Dunn, Simon Mahony (eds)
December 2, 2019
This edited volume collects together peer-reviewed papers that initially emanated from presentations at Digital Classicist seminars and conference panels.
This wide-ranging volume showcases exemplary applications of digital scholarship to the ancient world and critically examines the many challenges and opportunities afforded by such research. The chapters included here demonstrate innovative approaches that drive forward the research interests of both humanists and technologists while showing that...
Cover for Marathon – 2,500 Years: Proceedings of The Marathon Conference 2010 Marathon – 2,500 Years: Proceedings of The Marathon Conference 2010
Christopher Carey, Michael Edwards (eds)
November 8, 2019
Some two and a half millennia ago, in the summer of 490 BC, a small army of 9,000 Athenians, supported only be a thousand troops from Plataea, faced and overcame the might of the Persian army of King Darius I on the plain of Marathon.

While this was only the beginning of the Persian Wars, and the Greeks as a while would face a far greater threat to their freedom a decade later, the victory at Marathon had untold effects on the morale, confidence, and self-esteem of the Athenians, who would commemorate their finest hour in art and literature for centuries to come.

This...
Cover for Creating Ethnicities & Identities in the Roman World Creating Ethnicities & Identities in the Roman World
Andrew Gardner, Edward Herring, Kathryn Lomas (eds)
October 25, 2019
Questions of ethnic and cultural identities are central to the contemporary understanding of the Roman world.
The expansion of Rome across Italy, the Mediterranean, and beyond entailed encounters with a wide range of peoples. Many of these had well-established pre-conquest ethnic identities which can be compared with Roman perceptions of them. In other cases, the ethnicity of peoples conquered by Rome has been perceived almost entirely through the lenses of Roman ethnographic writing and administrative structures.
The formation of such identities, and the shaping of these...
Cover for The BICS Mycenaean Seminar 2015-16 The BICS Mycenaean Seminar 2015-16
Editors: Greg Woolf (ed)
December 20, 2017
This annual publication contains summaries of the Mycenaean Seminar convened by the Institute of Classical Studies. The seminar series has been running since the 1950s, when it focused largely on the exciting new research enabled by the decipherment of Linear B. The series has now evolved to cover Aegean Prehistory in general, and is well known among subject specialists throughout the world. Taken together, the summaries provide a rich resource for Aegean Prehistory, and often provide the only citable instance of new research projects,...
Cover for The BICS Mycenaean Seminar 2016-17 The BICS Mycenaean Seminar 2016-17
Editors: Greg Woolf (ed)
December 20, 2017
This annual publication contains summaries of the Mycenaean Seminar convened by the Institute of Classical Studies. The seminar series has been running since the 1950s, when it focused largely on the exciting new research enabled by the decipherment of Linear B. The series has now evolved to cover Aegean Prehistory in general, and is well known among subject specialists throughout the world. Taken together, the summaries provide a rich resource for Aegean Prehistory, and often provide the only citable instance of new research projects,...
Cover for Profession and Performance: Aspects of oratory in the Greco-Roman World Profession and Performance: Aspects of oratory in the Greco-Roman World
Christos Kremmydas, Jonathan Powell, Lene Rubinstein (eds)
October 18, 2017
This volume brings together six papers relating to oratory and orators in public fora of Classical Greece and Rome. Edwards and Bers explore aspects of oratorical delivery in the Athenian courts and Assembly, including the demands placed on orators by the physical settings. Tempest examines the conceptions of oratorical competence and incompetence, particularly in respect of performance, as they are implied in Cicero’s criticisms of the rival prosecutor in the trial of Verres. Papers by Karambelas and Powell look at evidence for the importance of advocacy in the Second...
Cover for Persuasive Language in Cicero’s Pro Milone: A Close Reading and Commentary Persuasive Language in Cicero’s Pro Milone: A Close Reading and Commentary
Lynn S. Fotheringham
October 18, 2017
This innovative approach to Cicero’s persuasive language analyses the style and structure of one of his important speeches in more details than has ever been done before.
It applies ideas from modern linguistics (sentential topic, lexical patterning, interactional discourse), and explores the possibilities and limitations of quantitative analysis, made easier by modern computing power, in the areas of syntax and vocabulary.
The result is a reading of the Pro Milone as a unified text, whether aimed at persuading the jury to acquit Milo or at persuading...

Texts Added to the TLG on April 9, 2020

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Texts Added to the TLG on April 9, 2020
Fifty-eight new texts have just been added to the TLG. As of this release, the full LBG can be consulted online.

2115HIPPOLYTUS Scr. Eccl. ()
061 In Danielem
2741ISIDORUS Pelusiota Epist. et Scr. Eccl. ()
004 Epistulae (1701-2000)
3038EUTHYMIUS ZIGABENUS Scr. Eccl. ()
004 Commentarius in Pauli epistulam ad Romanos
005 Commentarius in Pauli epistulam i ad Corinthios
006 Commentarius in Pauli epistulam ii ad Corinthios
007 Commentarius in Pauli epistulam ad Galatas
3115SYMEON METAPHRASTES Biogr., Hagiogr. et Hist. ()
008 Martyrium Andreae, qui est in Crisi (e cod. Par. Coisl. gr. 145)
009 Martyrium sancti Vari et sociorum (e cod. Par. gr. 1480) (BHG 1863)
010 Martyrium sancti Artemii (e cod. Par. gr. 1480) (BHG 172)
011 Martyrium sanctorum Guriae, Samonae et Abibi (BHG 736-737)
012 Miraculum sanctorum Guriae, Samonae et Abibi (BHG 738)
3118Michael ANDREOPULUS Transl. ()
001 Liber Suntipae
002 Liber Suntipae (recensio altera)
3196Constantinus ACROPOLITES Hagiogr. et Rhet. ()
010 Laudatio sanctae Horeozelae (BHG 2180) (e cod. Ambros. H 81 sup.)
3353ECCLESIASTICA ANONYMA Eccl. et Theol. ()
004 Officia magni et parvi schematis monastici
4169DOMNINUS Math. et Phil. ()
001 Enchiridion introductionis arithmeticae
002 Πῶς ἔστι λόγον ἐκ λόγου ἀφελεῖν (= par operis Enchiridion introductionis arithmeticae)
003 Scholia in Nicomachum [Sp.]
4486CANONARIA Eccl. ()
001 Protocanonarion sive canonarion primitivum
002 Deuterocanonarion (sub auctore Basilio monacho)
5165MARTYRIUM SANCTI ANDREAE IN CRISI Hagiogr. ()
001 Martyrium sancti Andreae sub imperatore Constantino Copronymo (e cod. Par. Coisl. gr. 110)
5166MARTYRIUM SANCTI VARI ET SOCIORUM Hagiogr. ()
001 Martyrium sancti Vari et sociorum (e cod. Vat. gr. 866) (BHG 1862)
5167PASSIONES SANCTORUM GURIAE, SAMONAE ET ABIBI Hagiogr. ()
001 Martyrium sanctorum Guriae et Samonae (BHG 731 et 731b)
002 Martyrium sanctorum Guriae et Samonae (BHG 733)
003 Martyrium sancti Abibi (BHG 732 et 732b)
004 Martyrium sancti Abibi (BHG 734)
005 Martyrium sanctorum Guriae et Samonae (BHG 735)
006 Martyrium sancti Abibi diaconi (BHG 735b)
007 Miraculum sanctorum Guriae, Samonae et Abibi (BHG 739)
008 Translatio capitis sancti Abidi (e cod. Vatop. 456) (BHG 740m)
5168VITAE SANCTI ARTEMII Hagiogr. ()
001 Memoria seu historia martyris Artemii (sub auctore Joanne monacho)
5169PASSIONES SANCTORUM PHILETAERI ET EUBIOTI Hagiogr. ()
001 Passio sanctorum Philetaeri et Eubioti (BHG 1515a)
5170PASSIONES SANCTORUM ALPHII, PHILADELPHI ET CYRINI Hagiogr. ()
001 Passio sanctorum Alphii, Philadelphi et Cyrini (BHG 62e)
5171PASSIONES SANCTAE CICILIAE Hagiogr. ()
001 Vita et passio sanctae Ciciliae (BHG 283c) (e cod. Athon. Dochiarii 5)
5172PASSIONES SANCTI ARETHAE ET SOCIORUM Hagiogr. ()
001 Paraphrasis passionis sancti Arethae et sociorum (BHG 166) (e cod. Par. Coisl. 110)
5173PASSIONES SANCTORUM PROCLI ET HILARII Hagiogr. ()
001 Passio sanctorum Procli et Hilarii (BHG 2374) (e cod. Patm. 185)
5174PASSIONES SANCTORUM LUCIAE ET GEMENIANI Hagiogr. ()
001 Passio sanctorum Luciae et Gemeniani (BHG 224) (e cod. Vat. gr. 866)
5175PASSIONES SANCTI DOMNINI Hagiogr. ()
001 Passio sancti Domnini (BHG 2109) (e cod. Ambros. F 144 sup.)
5176PASSIONES SANCTORUM MARTHAE, MARIAE ET LUCARIONIS Hagiogr. ()
001 Passio sanctorum Marthae, Mariae et Lucarionis (BHG 2257) (e cod. Hierosol. 1)
5177PASSIONES SANCTI AGATHONICI Hagiogr. ()
001 Martyrium sancti Agathonici (e cod. Hierosol. Sab. 242)
5178PASSIONES SANCTI BASILISCI Hagiogr. ()
001 Martyrium sancti Basilisci (e cod. Mosq. 162)
5179PASSIONES SANCTORUM CAPITOLINAE ET EROTEIDIS Hagiogr. ()
001 Martyrium sanctorum Capitolinae et Eroteidis (BHG 292)
5180PASSIONES SANCTORUM EUGENII ET MACARII Hagiogr. ()
001 Martyrium sanctorum Eugenii et Macarii (e cod. Thessalonic. Monast. Blataeensis n. 4)
5181VITAE TIMOTHEI PRUSENSIS Hagiogr. ()
001 Vita Timothei Prusensis (BHG 2460)
5182PASSIONES SANCTI GORDIANI Hagiogr. ()
001 Passio sancti Gordiani (BHG 2165) (e cod. Vat. gr. 866)
5183VITAE ET MIRACULA SANCTORUM COSMAE ET DAMIANI Hagiogr. ()
001 Vita sanctorum Cosmae et Damiani (Versio Asiatica) (BHG 372)
002 Martyrium sanctorum Cosmae et Damiani (Versio Romana) (BHG 376)
003 Martyria sanctorum Cosmae et Damiani (Versio Arabica) (BHG 379)
004 Miracula sanctorum Cosmae et Damiani (BHG 385-392)
5359HOROLOGIUM Hymn. et Liturg. ()
001 Horologium (e cod. Sinaitico gr. 864)
9070NICODEMUS HAGIORITA Theol. ()
003 Scholia in canones apostolorum
004 Scholia in canones synodales
005 Scholia in concilia localia
006 Scholia in canones patrum sanctorum
007 Ἐξομολογητάριον
9074CALLINICUS III PATRIARCHA Epist. ()
001 Narratio brevis
002 Epistulae
9075ANANIAS Antiparius Biogr. ()
001 Vita Callinici III patriarchae (e cod. Zagor. 97)

AWOL News

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A few moments ago AWOL passed the ten million page views threshold. That seems like a lot. There has been increased interest since libraries worldwide have been closed with 8,189 subscribers to the daily digest, up about seventy in the last month.

I'd like to make it work better for you. If you have any ideas on that, I'm glad to hear them.

In the meantime I hope you all are safe and well. Everyone in this house is fine.

Index-Anatolicus: Türkiye yerlesim birimleri envanteri

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[First posted in AWOL 22 March 2018, updated 9 May 2020]

Index-Anatolicus: Türkiye yerlesim birimleri envanteri
Nişanyan Sözlük - Çağdaş Türkçenin Etimolojisi
Arama kutusundan güncel yer adı (ör: Yukarıakpınar), eski yer adı (ör: Gızu), veya il/ilçe (ör: Gökçeada) adıyla arama yapabilir veya sağdaki haritaya tıklayarak yer adı bulabilirsiniz.

Üye olmak koşuluyla düzeltme yapabilir ve yeni bilgi ekleyebilirsiniz. Üye olmak için geçerli bir e-mail adresi ile kullanıcı adı almanız yeterlidir.

Projenin amacı TC sınırları içerisinde halen var olan ve geçmişte kullanılmış tüm yer adlarını belgelemektir. Halen veritabanında 43934 güncel kayıt, 52845 eski yer adı mevcuttur. Kullanıcıların katkısıyla bu sayıların artacağını umuyoruz.

Son güncelleme: 8 Mayıs 2020

Sevan Nişanyan

Index Anatolicus on yılı aşkın yoğun bir emeğin ürünüdür. 2010 yılından beri internette ücretsiz olarak kullanıcıların hizmetine sunulmuştur. Hiçbir kurum ve kuruluş tarafından desteklenmemektedir. Ücretsiz hizmetin devamını istiyorsanız lütfen Patreon sayfamızı ziyaret ederek imkanınız ölçüsünde katkıda bulunun.

Open Access Journal: The American School of Classical Studies at Athens Newsletter [formerly: ákoue: Newsletter of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens]

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Galen of Pergamum: The Transmission, Interpretation and Completion of Ancient Medicine

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Galen of Pergamum: The Transmission, Interpretation and Completion of Ancient Medicine
BBAW-Logo 
Galen of Pergamum, who served in the Rome of the second century AD as a medical advisor to the emperor Marcus Aurelius, remained, with his vast oeuvre, the definitive authority on medicine from antiquity to the European and Islamic middle ages until well into the modern era. In addition to representing and completing Hippocratic medicine he also assimilated and enlarged upon the body of medical knowledge existing in his day through independent study. His works were translated into Latin, Syriac, Arabic and Hebrew, and formed the foundation of medical knowledge in both the Orient and Occident, while also serving as a source of inspiration for new developments. From the 6th century to the early 19th, without major interruptions, the analysis of Galenic texts served as an integral part of the study of medicine in the East and West. Galen was of particular importance in the formation of medical terminology, but also, and more generally, in defining the roles of medical practitioners and medicine, and in formulating all of the questions that arose regarding the health, composition and function of the human body, and concerning the philosophical and epistemological fundamental principles of medical theory and practice.
At the centre of the newly proposed project stands research on Galen’s works and their role as a decisive case of the transmission of medical knowledge from antiquity to the Middle Ages and the modern era, as well as between Europe and the Orient. The work to be performed by the proposed project will focus on several core issues for which the publication of critical editions of comprehensive key texts together with content-based analysis is envisaged.
Functioning as an independent research facility, the project involves edition, translation, commentary and historical contextualisation of Galen’s works. The edition series of the CMG and CML, which, as reference editions in the field of ancient medicine, have set a new standard for critical editions of ancient technical literature, continue to exist and will be issued in digital form to meet the needs of a broad readership not necessarily trained in philology. The project is understood to be a research institution rather than an editorial one. Where substantial points of contact exist, international cooperation will take place with other partners. However, the project has been planned in such a way as to ensure that goals can be attained independently of the contributions by external colleagues. External editions will be supervised by members of the advisory committee, which has yet to be established. Inclusion in the series will be determined by an anonymous peer review process. Furthermore, thanks to the use of suitable editing software, external staff will be able to perform much of the publishing work themselves.
In the future as well, cooperation with orientalists and classical philologists  will constitute an important element of the project. In order to guarantee external colleagues publication of their results, our intention is to publish, in the “Supplementum Orientale” of the CMG Series, Arabic translations also of those texts which have survived in Greek. On the one hand, this measure will make available additional, valuable sources for Arabic studies; on the other hand, it will render the evaluation of the Arabic tradition regarding the Greek texts more transparent by facilitating assessment of the value of various readings in context and in the original language. For the Latin translations that have been transmitted in a great number of manuscripts, only the main codices are to be consulted in the preparation of Greek editions; for the complete translated texts, a digital archive is envisaged.
The Galenic Corpus is by far the largest collection of extant writings by a single Greek author. But unlike the works of any other ancient author, a large part of Galen’s oeuvre has yet to be published in historico-critical editions. The sheer quantity of text and the frequent complexity of the manuscript tradition would seem to make it impossible for the project group to foresee a publication of a complete edition. This is why a selection has been made, on the basis of content-related criteria, of texts to be worked on by the project group. The project is consequently focused on influential texts and issues which are clearly located–as is wholly typical for ancient medicine–at the interface of fields which are today termed the natural sciences and the humanities, and which therefore have an interdisciplinary bearing on the questions at hand. These are:
  • Epistemology and the commentary as scientific form of expression
  • Nosology
  • Theory of the soul and topology of the body
  • Therapeutics
In this way, the project’s relation to ongoing debates in the relevant areas can be strengthened. At the same time, such a focus also promotes connectivity to rapidly developing Berlin projects in the fields of ancient philosophy, philosophical psychology and the history of science. Only through such an interdisciplinary embedding can sufficient light be cast on the Galenic writings, in which, alongside medical viewpoints, an important, often fundamental role is played by historical, natural historical philological, metaphysical, ethical, psychological and epistemological interests.
Within this project critical editions of the following works are in preparation:
  • Galeni Ad Glauconem de methodo medendi
  • Galeni De differentis morborum
  • Galeni De locis affectis
  • Galeni De morborum causis
  • Galeni De symptomatum causis
  • Galeni In Hippocratis Aphorismos commentaria (in cooperation)
  • Galeni In Hippocratis De aere aquis locis commentariorum versio Arabica
  • Galeni In Hippocratis De articulis commentaria
  • Galeni Methodus medendi
  • Galeni Quod animi mores corporis temperamenta sequantur
  • [Galeni] Definitiones medicae
  • [Galeni] De optima secta

The Academy research project "Galen of Pergamon: The Transmission, Interpretation and Completion oft Ancient Medicine" is part of the Academies’ Programme, a research funding programme co-financed by the German federal government and individual federal states. Coordinated by the Union of the German Academies of Sciences and Humanities, the Programme intends to retrieve and explore our cultural heritage, to make it accessible and highlight its relevance to the present, as well as to preserve it for the future.

Open Access Monograph Series: Internet Archaeology E-Monograph Series

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[First posted in AWOL 20 October 2016, updated 10 May 2020]

Internet Archaeology E-Monograph Series
http://intarch.ac.uk/logo/ia-logo.gif
Internet Archaeology is a journal but some articles are monograph length and they may contain 100s of images or link to or integrate large sets of data. These e-monographs have been brought together in one place to form an E-Monograph series. This is not a separate digital publication (all remain listed as articles in their respective issues) but our aim is to showcase and highlight these particularly large bodies of work and to remind potential authors of the publishing opportunities available via Internet Archaeology.


Monograph NumberAuthorTitle
1David DungworthIron Age and Roman copper alloys from northern Britain
2Christopher A. SnyderA gazetteer of Sub-Roman Britain (AD 400-600): The British sites
3Phil PerkinsEtruscan pottery from the Albegna Valley/Ager Cosanus Survey
4Caroline Wickham-Jones and Magnar DallandA small mesolithic site at Fife Ness, Fife, Scotland
5Dominic PowleslandThe West Heslerton Assessment
6Michael Walker et al.Two SE Spanish Middle Palaeolithic Sites with Neanderthal Remains: Sima de las Palomas del Cabezo Gordo and Cueva Negra del Estrecho del Río Quípar (Murcia province)
7Kurt Hunter-Mann et al.Excavations on a Roman Extra-Mural Site at Brough-on-Humber, East Riding of Yorkshire, UK
8Martin Millett et al.The Ave Valley, northern Portugal: an archaeological survey of Iron Age and Roman settlement
9Julian D. RichardsAnglian and Anglo-Scandinavian Cottam: linking digital publication and archive
10Damian Steptoe and W.B. WoodThe Human Remains from HMS Pandora
11Peter H.W. BristowBehaviour and belief in mortuary ritual: attitudes to the disposal of the dead in southern Britain 3500 BC-AD 43
12Jeremy HaslamExcavations at Cricklade, Wiltshire, 1975
13Karen Hardy and Paul SillitoeMaterial Perspectives: Stone Tool Use and Material Culture in Papua New Guinea
14Steven WillisSamian Pottery, a Resource for the Study of Roman Britain and Beyond: the results of the English Heritage funded Samian Project. An e-monograph
15Penelope M. Allison et al.Extracting the social relevance of artefact distribution in Roman military forts
16Gail FalkinghamA Whiter Shade of Grey: A new approach to archaeological grey literature using the XML version of the TEI Guidelines
17George GeddesVernacular Buildings of the Outer Hebrides 300 BC-AD 1930: Temporal comparison using archaeological analysis
18Michael Given et al.Joining the Dots: Continuous Survey, Routine Practice and the Interpretation of a Cypriot Landscape
19A. Clarke et al.Silchester Roman Town Insula IX: The Development of an Urban Property c. AD 40-50 - c. AD 250
20J.S. Carrión et al.Quaternary pollen analysis in the Iberian Peninsula: the value of negative results
21Julian D. Richards et al.Anglo-Saxon Landscape and Economy: using portable antiquities to study Anglo-Saxon and Viking Age England
22Tim WilliamsThe landscapes of Islamic Merv, Turkmenistan: Where to draw the line?
23John Creighton et al.Becoming Roman in southern Burgundy: A field survey between Autun and Bibracte in the Arroux Valley (Saône-et-Loire), 2000-2003
24Dominic Powlesland and Keith MayDigIT: Archaeological Summary Report and Experiments in Digital Recording in the Field
25Derek Hurst et al.Iron Age Settlement at Blackstone, Worcestershire: Excavations 1972, 1973 and 1977
26Katherine Baker et al.Archaeological Investigations at the Upper Chapel, Norfolk Street, Sheffield, UK
27Nicola Terrenato et al.The S. Omobono Sanctuary in Rome: Assessing eighty years of fieldwork and exploring perspectives for the future
28Emma DurhamDepicting the gods: metal figurines in Roman Britain
29Mark Atkinson and Stephen J. PrestonHeybridge: A late Iron Age and Roman settlement. Excavations at Elms Farm 1993-5. Volume 2
30Alison Cameron, Judith A. Stones and Chris Croly et al.Excavations at Aberdeen's Carmelite Friary, 1980-1994
Have you got an idea for an e-monograph? Visit our Guidelines for Authors for more information on how to submit a proposal.


Open Access Journal: The International Journal of Religious Tourism and Pilgrimage

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[First posted in AWOL  5 November 2016, updated 10 May 2020]

The International Journal of Religious Tourism and Pilgrimage
ISSN: 2009-7379
The International Journal of Religious Tourism and Pilgrimage is a high-quality, international, open access, online, double blind reviewed publication which deals with all aspects of Religious Tourism and Pilgrimage.

The International Journal of Religious Tourism and Pilgrimage (IJRTP) was founded in 2013 by an international group of researchers (the Religious Tourism and Pilgrimage Expert Group). The journal is published by the Dublin Institute of Technology, Cathal Brugha Campus, Dublin, Ireland. All articles in this journal are full text and available on open access.

Current Issue: Volume 8, Issue 3 (2020)

Editorial

Volume 8(iii) Table of Contents
Kevin A. Griffin, Carlos Fernandes, and Razaq Raj

Academic Papers

Current Research

Book Review

Volume 7 (2019)

Issue 1:
Pilgrim Bodies: An Anatomy of Christian and Post-Christian Intentional Movement

Issue 2:
Special Issue : Volume 1 of Papers Presented at 10th International Religious Tourism and Pilgrimage Conference 2018, Santiago de Compostela

Issue 3

Issue 4:
Special Issue : Volume 2 of Papers Presented at 10th International Religious Tourism and Pilgrimage Conference 2018, Santiago de Compostela

Issue 5:
Sacred Space, Time and New Secular Pilgrimages

Volume 6 (2018)

Issue 1:
Religion, Pilgrimage and Tourism in India and China

Issue 2:
What is Pilgrimage?

Issue 3

Volume 4 (2016)

Issue 1

Issue 2:
Special issue on Religious Events and their Impacts

Issue 3:
Special Issue : Information And Communication Technologies In Religious Tourism And Pilgrimage

Issue 4:
Motivation Issue

Issue 5:
Special Issue on Theology and Experiences

Issue 6:
Pilgrimages in India: Celebrating journeys of plurality and sacredness

Issue 7:
the Development of Religious Tourism and Pilgrimage

Volume 3 (2015)

Issue 1

Issue 2:
Selection of Papers from International Conference 2015 (V1)

Volume 2 (2014)

Issue 1:
Tourism and Terrorism

Issue 2

Volume 1 (2013)

Issue 1:
Inaugural Volume

The New Schoenberg Database of Manuscripts (Beta version)

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Schoenberg Database of Manuscripts
The SDBM continuously aggregates and updates observations of pre-modern manuscripts drawn from over 14,000 auction and sales catalogs, inventories, catalogs from institutional and private collections, and other sources that document the sales and locations of these books from around the world. 

We invite members of our user community to Log In and help us to build and maintain this resource.

Here's what you can do

  • Contribute Data, including your own personal observations of a manuscript or group of manuscripts.
  • Engage With Other Users to facilitate research and conversations about both the history of manuscript transmission and the data gathered in the process of recording this history.
  • Manage Your Contributions, track your search history, bookmark, tag and download your results.
  • Download Search Results for your own use under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 Unported License
  • Play the De Ricci Name Game.
  • Help us clean up the SDBM Name Authority.
  • Batch upload data via our customized data entry spreadsheet! Contact us for more information.

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