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Regional exchange of ceramics – case studies and methodology

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Regional exchange of ceramics – case studies and methodology
Verena Gassner (Hrsg.) 
Archaeology and Economy in the Ancient World – Proceedings of the 19th International Congress of Classical Archaeology, Cologne/Bonn 2018
 Regional exchange of ceramics – case studies and methodology
Gefäße und andere Objekte aus Keramik stellen eine wichtige Quelle für die Rekonstruktion von Tausch und Handel in antiken Gesellschaften dar, da sie in großen Mengen verfügbar sind und ihre Herkunft oft mit archäologischen und archäometrischen Methoden bestimmt werden kann. Studien zum Handel mit Keramik konzentrieren sich jedoch zumeist auf den Fernhandel, da die Unterschiede von Waren und Formtypen zwischen Produkten aus weit auseinanderliegenden Gebieten leichter erkannt werden können. Das hat gemeinsam mit dem psychologischen Faktor, dass Gegenstände des Fernhandels oft größere Aufmerksamkeit finden, dazu geführt, dass Objekte des Fernhandels in der archäologischen Forschung eine überdimensionale Aufmerksamkeit gefunden haben, während der regionale Austausch von Gütern zwischen benachbarten Städten bisher wenig erforscht wurde, obwohl er wichtige Einblicke in die Beziehungen zwischen diesen Städten ermöglichen würde.
Einer der Gründe dafür liegt sicherlich in der Schwierigkeit, dass Keramikprodukte aus benachbarten Regionen häufig nur schwer unterschieden werden können, da sie oft dasselbe Formenrepertoire sowie Dekorationsstile aufweisen.

Dieses Panel stellt Fallstudien aus unterschiedlichen Perioden und Regionen des Mittelmeerraums vor, die sich mit der Problematik der Rekonstruktion von Netzwerken des regionalen Austausches beschäftigen, aber auch ihre Bedeutung für die Wirtschaft der antiken Städte zeigen.


Verena Gassner, a.o. Prof. am Institut für Klassische Archäologie, Universität Wien, Forschungsschwerpunkte in der Archäologie Unteritaliens und Kleinasien sowie den römischen Donauprovinzen mit zahlreichen Grabungen. Spezialisiert auf Keramikbearbeitung mit besonderer Berücksichtigung der interdisziplinären Zusammenarbeit mit der Archäometrie.

ISBN 978-3-947450-83-1 (PDF)
Veröffentlicht am 28.05.2020.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
PDF
Titelei
Contents
Martin Bentz, Michael Heinzelmann
Preface
Segolene Segolene
The regional Scale: a new Perspective on Ceramic Exchanges in Campania (8th–6th centuries BC)
Nora Voss
Trade in the Decapolis-Region (Jordan)
P. Vivacqua, M. T. Iannelli
Ports and trades in central-Tyrrhenian Bruttium between II BC and II AD: the case of Vibo Valentia (Calabria/Italy)
Barbara Borgers
Roman cooking vessels as indicator for regional trade in the Pontine region, Central Italy
Antonella Mandruzzato, Martina Seifert, Debora Oswald
Roman Pottery from Lilybaeum
Some remarks on imported products and transmarine contacts
Petya Ilieva
Between Therme and Troy: the ceramic exchange in the regional network of the northern Aegean in the late 8th and early 7th c. BC
Torben Keßler
Reading connectivity on decorative grounds
A statistics-based approach to investigate interregional relations in early Iron Age Greece

Open Access Journal: Philía. Jornal informativo de história antiga

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[First posted in AWOL 9 October 2018, updated 28 May 2020]

Philía. Jornal informativo de história antiga
ISSN: 1519-6917
e-ISSN: 2595-3583
Jornal Informativo de História Antiga Philía
O Jornal Philia alcança a sua 50ª edição e para nós editores coordenadores que compõem a equipe do NEA/UERJ, este é um motivo de jubilo, congratulação e reflexão visando analisar a  trajetória da publicação do informativo de História Antiga que tem priorizado as pesquisas de alunos de graduação em sociedades antigas. O jornal Philia teve inicio no ano de 1999, quando era produzido em parceria com os alunos de graduação e pós-graduação em História Antiga da UERJ, UFRJ e da UFF. A missão do jornal consistia em abrir espaço para publicação de artigos  e reflexões de alunos de graduação com pesquisas em sociedades antigas. Em geral, os alunos pesquisadores publicavam o estado atual de suas pesquisas resultado de  Projetos de Iniciação Cientifica, Projeto de Extensão, alguns eram bolsistas da CAPES, outros do CNPq e atualmente, muito deles se tornaram professores universitários.

Philía 63 - Março | Abril | Maio | Junho 2019

EDITORIAL

Reflexões Metodológicas acerca da História das Mulheres, das Relações Sociais de Gênero, História Comparada e Técnicas no Auxílio do Corpus Documental
Maria Valdiza Rogério da Silva | PDF

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Artigos

O Povo Núbio: O Egito Antigo E Suas Faces Caroline Costa MaiaPDF
10 - 14
Do divino ao civilizado: o processo de legitimação de governos que surge na antiguidade e suas projeções na França da Era Moderna
Hudson Louback C. da Silva / Luiz Felipe FlorentinoPDF
15 - 29
Ritos E Festividades Religiosas Na Grécia Antiga
Lennyse BandeiraPDF
30 - 34


Martyrium: A Reconstrução Da Paisagem Religiosa No Cenário Urbano Romano
Uiara Barros OteroPDF
35 - 43

Philía 62 Jan/Fev/Mar/Abril 2018


Editorial
A deusa da feitiçaria Hécate e as práticas hipocráticas no Período Clássico entre os atenienses
Doutoranda Tricia Magalhães Carnevalehtml - PDF
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Artigos

Questões de gênero nos ritos fúnebres dedicados aos Heróis no período homérico: ações desenvolvidas por homens e mulheres nas próthesis e ekphorá
Lennyse Bandeira html - PDF
1-2
Navas de Tolosa, uma Cruzada na Península Ibérica Medieval
Manoela de Gusmão Boareto | html - PDF
3-4
Os Persas e a Intercultural Cultural com os Gregos
Maria Clara Storino html - PDF
5-6
Um novo caminho para o estudo da Pérsia Antiga
Pierre Romana Fernandes | html - PDF
7-8
A Vila dos Papiros de Herculano e a Renovação do Estudos Epicuristas
Rodrigo Conçole Lage | html - PDF
9-10

Ano 2017Edição 59 - Edição 60 - Edição 61Ano 2016Edição 57 - Edição 58Ano 2015Edição 53 - Edição 54Ano 2014Edição 49 - Edição 50 - Edição 51 - Edição 52Ano 2013Ano 2012Ano 2011Edição 38Ano 2010Ano 2009Edição 29 - Edição 30 - Edição 31 - Edição 32Ano 2008Edição 27 - Edição 28Ano 2007Edição 23 - Edição 24Ano 2006Edição 21 - Edição 22Ano 2005Edição 19Ano 2004Edição 17 - Edição 18Ano 2003Edição 15 - Edição 16Ano 2002Edição 12 - Edição 13Ano 2001Edição 09Ano 2000Edição 06 - Edição 07 - Edição 08Ano 1999Edição 01 - Edição 02 - Edição 03 - Edição 04 - Edição 05


Codex Sarravianus Online

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Codex Sarravianus Online
Internet Archive has a full-text PDF of Codex Sarravianus, a 5th-century majuscule witness to the Septuagint. The text contains A. W. Sijthoff’s 1897 photographic reproduction of the manuscript.
For reader’s convenience, the bottom of each page indicates the portion of the biblical text covered in that page’s facsimile, with hand-written notes over the facsimiles to indicate the starts of chapters.
The quality of the scan seems to be quite good. Below is an excerpt from Deut 30:2 (on pg. 248) showing the asterisks and metobelus used to mark what seems to be a revision toward the text represented in the MT.


Landscape History of Hadramawt: The Roots of Agriculture in Southern Arabia (RASA Project 1998-2008)

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Landscape History of Hadramawt: The Roots of Agriculture in Southern Arabia (RASA Project 1998-2008) 
Editor(s): McCorriston, Joy, Harrower, Michael J.
2020
Cover page of Landscape History of Hadramawt: The Roots of Agriculture in Southern Arabia (RASA Project 1998-2008)
The rugged highlands of southern Yemen are one of the less archaeologically explored regions of the Near East. This final report of survey and excavations by the Roots of Agriculture in Southern Arabia (RASA) Project addresses the development of food production and human landscapes, topics of enduring interest as scholarly conceptualizations of the Anthropocene take shape. Along with data from Manayzah, site of the earliest dated remains of clearly domesticated animals in Arabia, the volume also documents some of the earliest water management technologies in Arabia, thereby anchoring regional dates for the beginnings of pastoralism and of potential farming.
 The authors argue that the initial Holocene inhabitants of Wadi Sana were Arabian hunters who adopted limited pastoral stock in small social groups, then expanded their social collectives through sacrifice and feasts in a sustained pastoral landscape. This volume will be of interest to a wide audience of archaeologists including not only those working in Arabia, but more broadly those interested in the ancient Near East, Africa, South Asia, and in Holocene landscape histories generally.
Series: Monumenta Archaeologica 43

Early Athens: Settlements and Cemeteries in the Submycenaean, Geometric, and Archaic Periods

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(2019)

 Cover page of Early Athens: Settlements and Cemeteries in the Submycenaean, Geometric, and Archaic Periods
This volume is one of the most important works on ancient Athens in the last fifty years. The focus is on the early city, from the end of the Bronze Age—ca. 1200 BCE—to the Archaic period, when Athens became the largest city of the Classical period. From a systematic study of all the excavation reports and surveys in central Athens, the author has synthesized a detailed diachronic overview of the city from the Submycenaean period through the Archaic. It is a treasure-trove of information for archaeologists who work in this period. Of great value as well are the detailed maps included, which present features of ancient settlements and cemeteries, the repositories of the human physical record. Over eighty additional large-scale...

Boundaries Archaeology: Economy, Sacred Places, Cultural Influences in the Ionian and Adriatic Areas

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Boundaries Archaeology: Economy, Sacred Places, Cultural Influences in the Ionian and Adriatic Areas
Enrico Giorgi , Giuseppe Lepore , Anna Gamberini (Hrsg.)
ISBN 978-3-947450-79-4 (PDF)

Panel 7.3

Archaeology and Economy in the Ancient World – Proceedings of the 19th International Congress of Classical Archaeology, Cologne/Bonn 2018
 Boundaries Archaeology: Economy, Sacred Places, Cultural Influences in the Ionian and Adriatic Areas 
Die Gebiete des adriatisch-ionischen Raums waren sowohl aus politischer als auch aus kultureller Sicht voneinander abgegrenzt, sodass sie einen hervorragenden Raum für das Studium antiken wirtschaftlichen und kulturellen Austauschs darstellen. Dieses Aufeinandertreffen von Kulturen führte zu wechselseitigen Einflüssen und zu kultureller Osmose auf verschiedenen Ebenen und zu verschiedenen Zeiten. Unterschiedliche historische und geographische Rahmenbedingungen führten hierbei oftmals zu ähnlichen Ergebnissen.

Jüngste archäologische Forschungen lassen dabei vermuten, dass Heiligtümer und heilige Orte geeignete Kontexte sind, in denen diese Phänomene analysiert werden können, da sie in ihrer Rolle als Begegnungsorte und Stätten kultureller Unterweisung besonders von wirtschaftlichen und politischen Interessen geprägt wurden.

Die in diesem Buch gesammelten Beiträge behandeln diese Themen aus verschiedenen Blickwinkeln, einschließlich Studien zur Geschichtsschreibung, zur materiellen Kultur und zur Numismatik. Die Fallstudien des adriatischen Raumes konzentrieren sich auf die Westküste und insbesondere auf den Bereich des Ager Gallicus und Picenum, wobei hier ein besonderer Schwerpunkt auf jenen Zeiten liegt, welche der Etablierung der römischen Herrschaft in diesem Gebiet vorausgehen und diese mit einschließen (3. / 2. Jh. v. Chr.). Die Fallstudien des südadriatischen und ionischen Raumes konzentrieren sich hingegen auf Apulien und das Gebiet von Illyrien und Epirus von archaischer Zeit bis zum Beginn der Römerzeit (4. – 1. Jh. v. Chr.).


Enrico Giorgi ist Professor am Institut für Geschichte und Kulturen der Universität Bologna und lehrt Methodologie der Archäologischen Forschung.
Giuseppe Lepore ist Professor am Institut für Geschichte und Kulturen der Universität Bologna und lehrt Klassische Archäologie.
Anna Gamberini ist Professorin am Institut für Kulturerbe an der Universität Bologna und lehrt Archäologie der römischen Provinzen.

Inhaltsverzeichnis
PDF
Titelei
Contents
Martin Bentz, Michael Heinzelmann
Preface
Enrico Giorgi, Giuseppe Lepore, Anna Gamberini
Boundaries Archaeology: Economy, Sacred Places, Cultural Influences in the Ionian and Adriatic Areas
Introductory Notes
Francesco Belfiori
Roman colonization, sanctuaries and cult in the middle-Adratic area between the 3rd and 2nd centuries BC
Enrico Giorgi, Filippo Demma, Stephen Kay
Monte Rinaldo. A Roman Sanctuary in the middle of Picenum
Maria Cecilia D′Ercole
Cults, Navigation and Maritime Practices in the Middle and Southern Adriatic (6th–2nd century BC)
Nadia Aleotti, Anna Gamberini, Lorenzo Mancini
Sacred places, territorial economy and cultural identity in northern Epirus (Chaonia)
Atalanti Betsiou
Marcus Antonius and the negotiatores of Dyrrhachium

OI Online Ancient Language Workshops

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OI Online Ancient Language Workshops


4.1K views5 days ago
In our third ancient languages seminar, Ella Karev, PhD student, discusses ancient Greek in Egypt. **This is an at home seminar, please excuse the audio and video quality. Each Sunday in May, we ... 
2.4K views1 week ago
In our second ancient languages seminar, Brian Muhs, associate professor of Egyptology, discusses Meroitic. **This is an at home seminar, please excuse the audio and video quality. Each Sunday in...
4.6K views2 weeks ago
In our first ancient languages seminar, Foy Scalf, head of the OI Research Archives, discusses ancient Egyptian languages and the Hieroglyphic writing system. **This is a new link to a video that ...

Open Access Journal: New Voices In Classical Reception Studies

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[First posted in AWOL  26 September 3013, updated 29 May 2020]

New Voices In Classical Reception Studies
ISSN 1750-6581
Classical Reception Studies is a rapidly developing field of research. There is a growing number of new scholars investigating issues of reception of classical texts, ideas, performance, and material culture across different cultural contexts and in different media.
This ejournal site aims to provide a showcase for scholars who have reached the stage where they wish to publish the results of their research. We particularly encourage research that crosses discipline boundaries.
Papers contributed to the site will be subject to peer review before they can be accepted for publication. Comments from the anonymous reviewers and editors will be made available to authors whether or not their papers are accepted for publication. Refereed publications are of course of particular importance to those starting out on an academic career or those feeling their way in an academic area of research outside their usual discipline.
Readers' responses will be welcomed and will be passed to the originating author
We aim to publish annually in the Summer
Issue 12 (2018)
Table of Contents: pdf
About the Authors: pdf
Subjectivity and Ambiguity in Two Verse Translations of the Aeneid
Melanie Fitton-Hayward, University of Nottingham
Abstract:   pdf
Full Article:   pdf
Nero Revised and Seneca Reviled: Edmund Bolton’s Nero Caesar or Monarchie Depraved
Celia Goodburn, Independent Scholar
Abstract:   pdf
Full Article:   pdf
Horus and Zeus Are Playing Tonight – Classical Reception in Heavy Metal Band Names
Martin Lindner and Robert Wieland, Georg-August-Universität Göttingen, Germany
Abstract:   pdf
Full Article:   pdf
Homeric Voices at Gallipoli: A New Zealand Perspective
Gary Morrison, University of Canterbury, New Zealand
Abstract:      pdf
Full Article:   pdf
Thermae Romae Manga: Plunging into the Gulf between Ancient Rome and Modern Japan
Ayelet Peer, Bar-Ilan University, Israel
Abstract:   pdf
Full Article:   pdf
Hippolytus’ Neglect of Eros: A Dialogue between Euripides’ Drama and Sarah Kane’s Phaedra’s Love
Anastasia-Stavroula Valtadorou, University of Edinburgh
Abstract:   pdf
Full Article:   pdf
Sophocles’ Antigone Reworked in the Twentieth Century: the Case of Walter Hasenclever’s Antigone (1917)
Rossana Zetti, University of Edinburgh
Abstract:   pdf
Full Article:   pdf





Open Access Journal: Lettre d’information de l’IFAO

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[First posted in AWOL 25 February 2016, updated 29 May 2020]

Lettre d’information de l’IFAO
Pour vous abonner à notre lettre d’information, envoyez un email vide à …
Subscribe to our newsletter: send an empty email to …
 
Vous receverez alors un email pour reconfirmer votre demande.
You will then receive a email to confirm of your demand.

        GrEpiAbbr: Liste des abréviations des éditions et ouvrages de référence pour l’épigraphie grecque alphabétique - List of Abbreviations of Editions and Works of Reference for Alphabetic Greek Epigraphy

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        GrEpiAbbr: Liste des abréviations des éditions et ouvrages de référence pour l’épigraphie grecque alphabétique - List of Abbreviations of Editions and Works of Reference for Alphabetic Greek Epigraphy
        On trouve ici la version 01 de la Liste des abréviations des éditions et ouvrages de référence pour l’épigraphie grecque alphabétique telle qu’elle a été proposée en mai 2020, par une commission composée d’A. Chaniotis, Th. Corsten, D. Feissel, P.-L. Gatier, Kl. Hallof, M. Hatzopoulos, S. Orlandi, R. Parker, D. Rousset et Chr. Schuler.
        L’ensemble des abréviations proposées est désormais en usage entre autres dans le Bulletin épigraphique et le Supplementum epigraphicum graecum.
        Pour contacter la commission, écrire à Thomas Corsten et Denis Rousset.
        La liste (donnée ici à la fois en .docx et .pdf) est accompagnée d’une présentation, actuellement disponible en 8 langues (allemand, anglais, espagnol, français, grec, italien, russe, turc), qui explique les règles et les propositions retenues:

        Open Access Journal: ACOR Newsletter

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        [First posted in AWOL 12 November 2009. Updated 30 May  2020]]

        ACOR Newsletter
        ISSN: 1023-1196
        ACOR's first newsletter was issued in November, 1989 by Dr. Bert de Vries, who served as Director of ACOR between 1988-1991. The goal of the newsletter remains to keep friends and alumni informed of major developments and events at the institute. ACOR's newsletter is published twice a year. Below is the complete set of newsletters.
        2019 Winter ACOR Newsletter Vol. 31.2
        2019 Summer ACOR Newsletter Vol. 31.1
        2018 Winter ACOR Newsletter Vol. 30.2
        2018 Summer ACOR Newsletter Vol. 30.1
        2017 Winter ACOR Newsletter Vol. 29.2
        2017 Summer ACOR Newsletter Vol. 29.1
        2016 Winter ACOR Newsletter Vol. 28.2
        2016 Summer ACOR Newsletter Vol. 28.1
        2015 Winter ACOR Newsletter Vol. 27.2
        2015 Summer ACOR Newsletter Vol. 27.1
        2014 Winter ACOR Newsletter Vol. 26.2
        2014 Summer ACOR Newsletter Vol. 26.1
        2013 Winter ACOR Newsletter Vol. 25.2
        2013 Summer ACOR Newsletter Vol. 25.1
        2012 Winter ACOR Newsletter Vol. 24.2
        2012 Summer ACOR Newsletter Vol. 24.1
        2011 Winter ACOR Newsletter Vol. 23.2
        2011 Summer ACOR Newsletter Vol. 23.1
        2010 Winter ACOR Newsletter Vol. 22.2
        2010 Summer ACOR Newsletter Vol. 22.1
        2009 Winter ACOR Newsletter Vol. 21.2
        2009 Summer ACOR Newsletter Vol. 21.1
        2008 Winter ACOR Newsletter Vol. 20.2
        2008 Summer ACOR Newsletter Vol. 20.1
        2007 Winter ACOR Newsletter Vol. 19.2
        2007 Summer ACOR Newsletter Vol. 19.1
        2006 Winter ACOR Newsletter Vol. 18.2
        2006 Summer ACOR Newsletter Vol. 18.1
        2005 Winter ACOR Newsletter Vol. 17.2
        2005 Summer ACOR Newsletter Vol. 17.1
        2004 Winter ACOR Newsletter Vol. 16.2
        2004 Summer ACOR Newsletter Vol. 16.1
        2003 Winter ACOR Newsletter Vol. 15.2
        2003 Summer ACOR Newsletter Vol. 15.1
        2002 Winter ACOR Newsletter Vol. 14.2
        2002 Summer ACOR Newsletter Vol. 14.1
        2001 Winter ACOR Newsletter Vol. 13.2
        2001 Summer ACOR Newsletter Vol. 13.1
        2000 Winter ACOR Newsletter Vol. 12.2
        2000 Summer ACOR Newsletter Vol. 12.1
        1999 Winter ACOR Newsletter Vol. 11.2
        1999 Summer ACOR Newsletter Vol. 11.1
        1998 Winter ACOR Newsletter Vol. 10.2
        1998 Summer ACOR Newsletter Vol. 10.1
        1997 Winter ACOR Newsletter Vol. 9.2
        1997 Summer ACOR Newsletter Vol. 9.1
        1996 Winter ACOR Newsletter Vol. 8.2
        1996 Summer ACOR Newsletter Vol. 8.1
        1995 Winter ACOR Newsletter Vol. 7.2
        1995 Summer ACOR Newsletter Vol. 7.1
        1994 Winter ACOR Newsletter Vol. 6.2
        1994 Summer ACOR Newsletter Vol. 6.1
        1993 Winter ACOR Newsletter Vol. 5.2
        1993 Summer ACOR Newsletter Vol. 5.1
        1992 Winter ACOR Newsletter Vol. 4.2
        1992 Summer ACOR Newsletter Vol. 4.1
        1991 November ACOR Newsletter No. 5
        1991 May ACOR Newsletter No. 4
        1990 November ACOR Newsletter No. 3
        1990 May ACOR Newsletter No. 2
        1989 November ACOR Newsletter No. 1

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

        WikiArc: Archaeological and Palaeoecological Reference Collections Online

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        ARCHAEOMETALLURGICAL
        HMSGoTo Databases - UK, from the Historical Metallurgy Society
        CERAMIC
        The National Roman Fabric Collection: a handbook - UK, from the Museum of London
        FUNERARY
        TOMBA - Tombs of Bronze Age and Early Iron Age Europe
        PALAEOANTHROPOLOGICAL
        PALAEOECOLOGICAL - PLANTS
        PaleoBot.org - Macrofossils, Pollen, Phytoliths, Starch and Isotopes
        Seed Herbarium Image Project - Arnold Arboretum, Harvard University
        Seed ID Workshop - from Ohio State University
        PALAEOECOLOGICAL - INVERTEBRATES
        PALAEOECOLOGICAL - VERTEBRATES
        Anàlisi de FORmes d'Otòlits (AFORO) - Shape analysis of fish otoliths
        Aves 3D - a three dimensional database of avian skeletal morphology
        Avian Osteology - from the Royal BC Museum
        Fish: Comparative Osteology - from NABO Zooarchaeology Working Group
        MCPA2 - Mammalian Crania Photographic Archive
        Morphosource - three dimensional scans of various taxa
        Osteobase - Web interactive exploration for osteology
        Pictorial Skeletal Atlas of Fishes - from Environmental Archaeology at the Florida Museum of Natural History
        Skullsite - avian skulls
        PALAEOECOLOGICAL - TESTATE AMOEBAE
        PALAEOPATHOLOGICAL
        PETROLOGICAL
        VARIOUS
        Linnean Society Collections Online - various biological collections

        Le tombeau des trois frères à Palmyre

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        Le tombeau des trois frères à Palmyre
        Mission archéologique franco-syrienne 2004-2009
        Le tombeau des trois frères à Palmyre
        Objet de fascination pour les voyageurs et les savants, l’oasis de Palmyre a livré, outre ses ruines monumentales, des nécropoles riches en sculptures. Dans l’une d’elles, au sud-ouest de la ville, la peinture murale a été privilégiée comme en témoigne le célèbre tombeau des Trois Frères. Daté des IIe-IIIe s. ap. J.-C., il a été découvert à la fin du XIXe siècle. Son plan en T renversé à trois exèdres caractérise ces tombeaux hypogées qui recueillaient des centaines de corps. Une inscripti...

        Lire la suite
        • Éditeur : Presses de l’Ifpo
        • Collection : Bibliothèque archéologique et historique | BAH215
        • Lieu d’édition : Beyrouth
        • Année d’édition : 2019
        • Publication sur OpenEdition Books : 26 mai 2020
        • EAN (Édition imprimée) : 9782351597538
        • EAN électronique : 9782351595510
        • DOI : 10.4000/books.ifpo.14176
        • Nombre de pages : 416 p.
        Mamoun Abdoulkarim
        Préface
        Michel Espagne
        Préface
        Hélène Eristov et Claude Vibert-Guigue
        Avant-propos

        II - Construction des connaissances

        (Cl. Vibert-Guigue)
        F. État du tombeau

        Rôle des prises de vues 

        III - Données archéologiques, iconographiques et épigraphiques

        Michał Gawlikowski
        A. La nécropole sud‑ouest
        Hélène Eristov et Claude Vibert‑Guigue
        B. Description architecturale de l'hypogée
        Hélène Eristov et Claude Vibert‑Guigue
        C. Description de l'exèdre peinte
        Hélène Eristov et Claude Vibert‑Guigue
        D. Analyse iconographique du décor peint
        Jean‑Baptiste Yon
        E. Inscriptions araméennes

        IV - Reconsidérer l'axe de l'entrée vers l'exèdre peinte

        Claude Vibert-Guigue
        Introduction
        Claude Vibert-Guigue
        A. Méandre
        Claude Vibert-Guigue
        B. Fascinum
        Claude Vibert-Guigue
        C. Décor végétal
        Claude Vibert-Guigue
        G. Essai de synthèse

        VII - État du tombeau durant le conflit

        Hélène Eristov et Claude Vibert-Guigue
        Conclusion générale

        Planches

        Hélène Eristov et Claude Vibert-Guigue
        Résumé
        هيلين إريستوڤ et كلود ڤيبر-غيغ
        مُلَخَّص

        ARCHIBAB News

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        ARCHIBAB News:
        Pour tous ceux qui n'ont pas accès à une bibliothèque en ces temps de
        confinement, deux volumes de textes de textes de Mari épuisés sont
        désormais accessibles en téléchargement via ARCHIBAB (ou en utilisant
        l'URL ci-dessous) :

        ARM 26/1 (J.-M. Durand) :  <http://www.archibab.fr/archidoc/ARM_26_1.pdf>
        ARM 26/2 (D. Charpin, F. Joannès, S. Lackenbacher & B. Lafont) :
        <http://www.archibab.fr/archidoc/ARM_26_2.pdf>
        Merci à Juliette Mas pour son soigneux travail de scan (avec OCR et indexation).

        La table BIBLIO compte désormais 5304 fiches (+116). On compte
        désormais 34593 textes intégralement publiés.

        La table TEXTES compte désormais 21135 fiches, soit 61 % du corpus.

        Nouveautés (93 textes)
        – A. Al-Hussainy, R. de Boer & J. Jawdat, RA 113, 2019 [14, auteurs et DC]
        – M. Béranger, RA 113, 2019 [3, MB]
        – J. Brinkman, OIP 143/1, 2019 [1, AJ]
        – A. Cavigneaux & E. Clevenstine NABU 2020/12 [1, auteurs + DC]
        – D. Charpin Mél. Neumann, 2018 [6, DC]
        – L. Colonna d'Istria, NABU 2020/10 [3, LCI + DC]
        – L. Feliu RSO 92, 2019 [1, LF + DC]
        – M. Guichard, JA 307, 2019 [21, MG et DC]
        – C. Janssen, Akkadica 140, 2019 [4, CJ et DC]
        – G. Chambon, M. Guichard & A.-I. Langlois (éd.), avec la
        participation de Th. Römer et N. Ziegler, Mél. Charpin, PIPOAC 3, 2019
        [39 textes] :
        – contribution de M. Béranger (3) [MB] ; F. Nebiolo (1) [FN] ; A.
        Jacquet et H. Reculeau (19) [AJ et HR] ;
        – contributions de R. de Boer (1), G. Chambon & M. Guichard (5), J.-M.
        Durand (1), M. Jursa (1), A.-I. Langlois (1), M. Stol (1), F. van
        Koppen (1), K. Van Lerberghe (1), M. Weszeli (3), N. Ziegler (2)
        [auteurs et DC].
        Sans compter les textes tout récemment publiés en cours de traitement :
        – M. Sigrist & T. Ozaki, CUSAS 40, 2019 (+8)
        – A. Azzoni, A. Kleinerman, D. A. Knight & D. Owen (éd.), From Mari to
        Jerusalem and Back. Assyriological and Biblical Studies in Honor of
        Jack Murad Sasson, Philadelphie, 2020 [+5]

        Travail rétrospectif
        Dans le cadre du projet « EcritUr » (210 textes transcrits + 40 textes
        catalogués) :
        – Archives du Quartier AH, No. 1 Broad Street (67 textes [MB])
        – Archives du Ganun-mah : textes de la 1ère campagne, TTB et
        extensions (21 textes) ; textes de la 3e campagne, TTB 34/R 32 (7
        textes) ; textes de la 5e campagne, TTB TTB 5/R 5 (15 textes) ; textes
        non localisés (40 textes) [BF et AJ].
        – Archives diverses : Adad-gugal (8 textes : UET 5 108, 144, 145, 146,
        152, 181, 253 et 183 [FN]) ; Ali-nišua (2 textes : UET 5 138 et 422
        [FN]).
        – Textes divers liés à la gestion des troupeaux (44 textes [MB]).
        – Textes divers du quartier CLW (2 textes : UET 5 703 et 802 [FN]).
        – Textes divers (6 textes : UET 5 129, 464, 507, 537, 857, Liu &
        Nielsen Akkadica 140 no 13 [BF]).
        – BBVO 12 (21 textes inédits mentionnés par M. Van De Mieroop
        catalogués : U.2581, U.2582, U.2584, U.2586, U.2587, U.2593, U.2596,
        U.2601, U.2603, U.2615, U.2622, U.2629, U.2647, U.2680, U.2687,
        U.2688, U.2697, U.2703, U.4309, U.5604, U.16042 [MB]).
        – Nisaba 5 (19 textes paléo-babyloniens catalogués : I 392, I 504, I
        533, I 564, I 566, I 567, I 568, I 569, I 570, I 571, I 581, I 583, I
        585, I 592, I 597, I 608, I 612, II 88, II 257 [MB]).

        Autres textes (389 textes transcrits + 526 textes catalogués) :
        – AbB 13 (200 textes : transcriptions électroniques W. Sommerfeld ;
        mise au normes (transcr. et trad.) et lemmatisation I. Arkhipov).
        – Al-A'adami Sumer 23 (12 textes, désormais en accès libre ; MB).
        – AS 22 (55 lettres de Tell Asmar, désormais en accès libre ; MB).
        – Goetze Sumer 14 1-50 (50 textes, désormais en accès libre ; MB).
        – Kienast FAOS 2 148-178 (31 textes, désormais en accès libre ; MB et
        I. Arkhipov).
        – Richardson JCS 69 (14 textes, désormais en accès libre ; AJ).
        – Van Lerberghe MHET 1/1 68-93, 100 (27 textes, désormais en accès libre ; MB).
        – Mustafa Me-Turan (31 textes catalogués ; N. Ziegler).
        – OBTIV, UCP 10/1 et BiMes 19 (270 textes catalogués ; N. Ziegler).
        – TIM 7 // Edzard ed-Der [= ABAW NF 72] (225 textes catalogués ; N. Ziegler).
        – Mari : les références aux traductions de J. Sasson dans From the
        Mari Archive (FM

        Open Access Journal: Annales du Service des antiquités de l'Egypte [ASAE] (Backlist)

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        [First posted in AWOL 18 May 2014, updated 131May 2020]

        Annales du Service des antiquités de l'Egypte [ASAE][vols 1-22 at Internet Archive]
        Annales du Service des antiquités de l'Egypte [ASAE][vols 1-19 at Gallica]

        And courtesy of the EEF, a breakdown of the individual volumes:
        vols. 1-22 (1900-1922), vols. 52-63 (1952-1979)
        -- vols. 1-19 (1900-1920) - URL
        -- vol. 1 (1900) - URL
        -- vol. 2 (1901) - URL
        -- vol. 3 (1902) - URL
        -- vols. 2-3 (1901-1902) - URL
        -- vol. 4 (1903) - URL
        -- vol. 5 (1904) - URL
        -- vol. 6 (1905) - URL
        -- vols. 5-6 (1904-1905) - URL
        -- vol. 7 (1906) - URL
        -- vol. 8 (1907) - URL
        -- vols. 7-8 (1906-1907) - URL
        -- vol. 9 (1908) - URL
        -- vol. 10 (1910) - URL
        -- vols 9-10 (1908-1920) - URL
        -- vol. 11-12 (1911-1912) - URL
        -- vol. 12 (1912) - URL
        -- vol. 13 (1914) - URL
        -- vol. 14 (1914) - URL
        -- vols. 13-14 (1914) - URL
        -- vol. 15 (1915) - URL
        -- vol. 16 (1916) - URL
        -- vols. 15-16 (1915-1916) - URL
        -- vols. 17-18 (1917-1919) - URL
        -- vol. 19 (1920) - URL
        -- vol. 20 (1920) - URL
        -- vols. 19-20 (1920) - URL
        -- Index des tomes XI-XX (1921) - URL
        -- vol. 21 (1921) - URL
        -- vol. 22 (1922) - URL
        -- vols. 21-22 (1921-1922) - URL
        -- vols. 23-51 (1923-1951) - not available
        -- vol. 52, fascile 1 (1952) - URL
        -- vol. 52, fascile 2 (1954) - URL
        -- vol. 53, fascile 1 (1955) - URL
        -- vol. 53, fascile 2 (1955) - URL
        -- vol. 54, fascile 1 (1956) - URL
        -- vol. 54, fascile 2 (1957) - URL
        -- vol. 55, fascile 1 (1958) - URL
        -- vol. 55, fascile 2 (1958) - URL
        -- vol. 56 (1959) - URL
        -- vol. 57 (1962) - URL
        -- vol. 58 (1964) - URL
        -- vol. 59 (1966) - URL
        -- vol. 60 (1968) - URL
        -- vol. 61 (1973) - URL
        -- vol. 62 (1977) - URL
        -- vol. 63 (1979) - URL
        -- vol. 64 (1981) - URL
        -- vol. 65 (1983) - URL
        -- vol. 66 (1987) - not available
        -- vol. 67 (1988) - URL
        -- vol. 68 (1982) - URL
        -- vol. 69 (1983) - URL
        -- vol. 70 (1984-1985) - URL
        -- vol. 70 Supplément (1984-1985) - URL
        -- vol. 71 ff. - not available

        List of Open Access Student Journals

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         [First posted in AWOL 17 October, 2013, updated 31 May 2020]

        This is a list of the Antiquity focused open access student journals I know about. I am sure there are more, please comment and let me know what I have missed.

        49 titles to date.

                            LatinOWL

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                             [First posted in AWOL 31 March 2013, updated 1 June 2020]

                            LatinOWL
                            The Latin Online Word Lookup (LatinOWL) is an iOS app that, by using data from the Perseus Latin Word Tool, allows a user to lookup any Latin word, locate the root (i.e. nominative noun/adjective or the 1st person singular present active indicative for verbs), and parse the entered form. It gives all possible forms for the word entered. This tool also links the roots to the online Lewis & Short dictionary from Perseus, and also from that dictionary, provides links to all the works in the Perseus database that are quoted in the dictionary.
                            The program is copyright 2013 Scot Mcphee.
                            ##Notice
                            • Many thanks must go to Matt Gallagher of CocoaWithLove for the 'XPathQuery' class used in this project. I am very glad he built that wrapper around libxml2 and not me.
                            • This project also uses the 'Reachability' class from Apple.
                            ##Open Source Licence
                            Creative Commons Licence
                            This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Australia License.
                            Important legal information follows. You are legally obligated to obey these license terms:
                            1. You must credit the software to me, i.e. Scot Mcphee or http://github.com/scotartt or something similar.
                            2. Your derivate source code must be in a public git repository.
                            3. It must have these same licence conditions attached to it (this includes your 'derivate works' i.e. modification that you make - they must also carry this same licence).
                            4. Please note that the 'non commercial' aspect of this licence means that you cannot sell a binary based on a derivate of this source code in the iTunes App Store (free is fine).
                            5. This licence does not apply to source files I have included from other sources (see Notice). Those sources have copyright and licence conditions which are individually indicated at the top of the relevant file. It also obviously doesn't apply to Apple components which are linked to the binary at the compilation/linking build stage (etcetera), or anything else of that nature which I have no legal right to impose this licence on.
                            6. This text does not supercede the legalese in the linked licence detail; it's just a plain-English explanation of it's implications.
                            http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/au/

                            Teaching Classics in the Digital Age

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                            Teaching Classics in the Digital Age
                            Teaching-Classics_Programme
                            About the Congress
                            Digital media provide new possibilities for teaching and outreach in Classics. But how can we best make use of the new technologies, both at university and in communicating with the broader public? ​
                            The conference Teaching Classics in the Digital Age aims at presenting current approaches to digital teaching and sharing best practices by bringing together different projects and practitioners from all fields of Classics (including Classical Archaeology, Greek and Latin Studies and Ancient History).
                            Furthermore, it aims at starting a discussion about principles, problems and the future of teaching Classics in the 21st century within and beyond its single fields.
                            We consider the following as key questions:
                            ​ - How can digital methods and research approaches be implemented in teaching at university level? - Which technical possibilities are suitable for digital teaching and how can they be used successfully?
                            - What are the limitations of and obstacles for applying digital teaching methods in Classics?
                            - How can digital methods help us to reach out to teachers and students at primary and secondary schools as well as to the broader public?
                            - How can digital methods contribute to the dissemination of Classics as part of a lifelong education?
                            ​ The virtual meeting room is accessible under: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/82377778816 (ZOOM Meeting-ID: 823 7777 8816) by entering the password 150620.
                            Participation in the conference is free. In order to estimate the required technical capacities, please register at: feuser@klassarch.uni-kiel.de and/or kwesselmann@email.uni-kiel.de.

                            Filming Antiquity

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                            [First posted in AWOL 21 February 2017, updated 2 June 2020]

                            Filming Antiquity
                            Filming Antiquity is an interdisciplinary collaboration and digitisation project initially funded by a grant from the Centre for Humanities Interdisciplinary Research Projects (CHIRP) at University College London (UCL).  Between 2014 and 2016, Filming Antiquity digitised excavation films from the Harding archive held in the UCL Institute of Archaeology and continues to make these films accessible through this project website.  The project team members came from three different UCL departments: Archaeology, English and Information Studies.

                            The project had three main objectives: a) the digitisation of excavation films currently held in the UCL Institute of Archaeology (IoA), b) an interdisciplinary symposium with screenings of a sample of the digitised films and discussion and c) the construction of an online archive of these films and supporting materials.

                            The films we digitised feature excavations and local context in 1930s British Mandate Palestine.  The early 20th century saw radical developments in technologies of transmission and mass communication.  In this period archaeology gradually shifted from amateur to professional practice, as the first generations of trained archaeologists solidified their techniques in the field.  Supported by the industrialists and museums who funded their work, these archaeologists embraced moving image technology to record life and work on site.  These amateur productions were sometimes shown alongside public exhibitions of artefacts as cinematic proof of the spadework tackling the problems of ancient civilisations within a changing modern context.

                            The collection of these artefacts into an online archive will contribute to dialogues on information storage and knowledge production through digital resources.  Filming Antiquity provides a model for making excavation films accessible and inviting public discussions and interdisciplinary scholarship through online platforms.

                            Excavation Films Online

                            There are a growing number of organisations putting archive excavation films online.  Some of the footage we have been looking at in the context of Filming Antiquity is listed below. This list will be added to as new footage is put online.

                            Stonehenge Panorama (1900) - British Film Institute

                            A History of Pathe Baby films, and digitised Pathe Baby films, including travelogues and documentaries (not excavation, but some feature archaeological sites) - Princeton University Special Collections.

                            A Day at Jebel Moya: Part Three’ (1912-1913) – Wellcome Library
                            In two parts:  Part 1; Part 2.  For further details, see Angela Saward’s Filming Antiquity guest post.

                            'Luxor at Wembley' (1924) film on the reconstruction of Tutankhamun's tomb at the British Empire Exhibition at Wembley, London - British Pathe

                            Petrafilmen (1924) film of the ancient city of Petra, in Jordan -  via Danish Film Institute on European Film Gateway

                            Elinor Gardner's Excavations in Greece (1926) - British Film Institute

                            'Baskett-Lowke in Egypt' (c. 1927) - Huntley Film Archive

                            Excavation films from Tell en-Nesbeh (1926, 1935) - Bade Museum

                            ‘Digging Into the Past: Egyptian Excavations of the Metropolitan Museum of Art’(c. 1930) – Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.  Read more about the history of the Met's educational "Cinema Films"here.

                            Tell el-Amarna (1930-33) in two parts: Part 1; Part 2 - Hilary Waddington for the Egypt Exploration Society. Further details can be found in our Media section.

                            Libyan Desert(1930) Ralph Alger Bagnold & friends explorations of the prehistoric landscape and art of the Sahara by car - British Film Institute

                            Excavations at Mount Carmel, filmed by archaeologist Dorothy Garrod, 1931 - Pitt Rivers Museum

                            Excavations at Nineveh, c. 1931-1933, thought to have been filmed by archaeologist Reginald Campbell Thompson – Royal Asiatic Society. Further information here and here.

                            ‘The Human Adventure’(1932-1936) – Charles Breasted & James Henry Breasted for the Oriental Institute, Chicago (with sound)

                            Early 20thC films relating to the ancient city of Petra, Jordan, listed at the Petra1929 website.

                            Biskupin Pomnik Historii (2014). Incorporates 1930s excavation footage of Iron Age settlement remains and excavation in Poland - English language version here. Polish language version here.

                            Newsreel footage of Mortimer Wheeler at Verulamium (St Albans, Hertfordshire, UK): ‘Roman Bathroom is Found At St Albans’; ‘Old Roman City Excavated Near St Albans’- British Movietone

                            Newsreel footage of excavations at Maiden Castle (Dorset, UK): "Picture Paragraphs in the Week's News: First Snapshot is digging at historic Maiden Castle site, which dates back to 4th Century B. C."- British Movietone

                            Sutton Hoo excavations, 1939 - British Museum.

                            Films in the collection of the University of Pennsylvania Museum, c. 1930s/1940s including travels to archaeological sites around the world, and episodes of 1950s CBS archaeology game show What in the World? (hosted on Internet Archive).

                            "Triumph Ovre Time"(1947) - Margaret Thompson (prod.); Oscar Broneer (dir.). More information here and here.

                            To Work’ (1950) – M. R. Apted for the Egypt Exploration Society.

                            "Archaeology Archives" - a collection of British Pathe newsreels featuring archaeology.

                            Roman Law Resources

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                            [First posted in AWOL 12 August 2011, updated 2 June 2020]

                            Roman Law Resources
                            Ernest Metzger, University of Glasgow School of Law
                            http://iuscivile.com/img/banner.gif
                            This site provides information on Roman law sources and literature, the teaching of Roman law, and the persons who study Roman law. The site is available in English and German. Users are invited to submit to this site any materials or information which might interest other users. 
                            notices
                            Call for Submissions: Roman Legal Tradition. The Editor and Board of Roman Legal Tradition welcome submissions for the forthcoming issue. Roman Legal Tradition is a peer-reviewed journal dedicated to the civilian tradition in ancient, medieval, and modern law. It is published by the Ames Foundation at the Harvard Law School and the Alan Rodger Endowment at the University of Glasgow.
                            Idem ...
                            Society for Classical Studies/Archaeological Institute of America Annual Meeting, Washington, DC. 2-5 i 2020.
                            Idem ...
                            Association of Ancient Historians Annual Meeting, Iowa City, Iowa. 23-25 iv 2020.
                            Idem ...
                            European Society for Comparative Legal History. 6th Biennial conference, Lisbon. 'Professions and Methods in Comparative Legal History'. 1-3 vii 2020.
                            Idem ...
                            LXXIVème Session de la Société Internationale Fernand de Visscher pour l'Histoire des Droits de l'Antiquité, 5-9 i 2021, Santiago.
                            Idem ...
                            Deutsche Rechtshistorikertag. 7-11 ix 2020, Zurich.
                            Idem ...
                            American Society for Legal History Annual Meeting 2019. Boston, Massachusetts. 21-24 xi 2019.
                            Idem ...
                            XXIVth Annual Forum of the Association of Young Legal Historians. 'Identity, Citizenship and Legal History'. 5-8 vi 2019, Brussels.
                            Idem ...
                            materials
                            Abbreviations
                            A list of abbreviations that are common in Roman law literature.
                            Bibliographies
                            An index to relevant bibliographies and catalogues of materials available over the Internet.
                            Justinian's Codex in English: corrections and comments
                            Users may consult the corrections submitted by contributors, and may submit corrections themselves.
                            Justinian's Digest in English: corrections and comments
                            Users may consult the corrections submitted by contributors, and may submit corrections themselves.
                            Literature
                            An index of literature collections on Roman, civil, and ancient law, available over the internet.
                            Rescripta
                            193-305 AD: from the Accession of Pertinax to the Abdication of Diocletian. Prepared to accompany Emperors and Lawyers, 2nd ed. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1994), by Tony Honoré.
                            Sources
                            An index to relevant primary sources available over the Internet.
                            Teaching Materials
                            An index to relevant teaching materials available over the Internet.
                            information
                            Blogs and Discussion Forums
                            A directory of sites where subjects of interest to users of this site are discussed.
                            Journals
                            An index to websites of relevant journals.
                            Portals
                            An index of internet portals for Roman, civil, and ancient law.
                            Societies and Projects
                            An index of societies and projects relating to Roman, civil, and ancient law.
                            people
                            In Memoriam
                            We remember.
                            legacy pages
                            Electronic Reprints
                            A small number of articles, which have been published elsewhere, are reprinted at this site.
                            Directory of Legal Historians
                            Links to directories of legal romanists and other legal historians.

                            See also AWOL's list of Open Access Ancient Law Journals
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