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Open Access Journal: Annuaire de l'École pratique des hautes études, section des sciences religieuses

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 [First posted in AWOL 9 July 2009. Updated 20 March 2014]

Annuaire de l'École pratique des hautes études, section des sciences religieuses
ISSN électronique: 1969-6329
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L'Annuaire de l'École pratique des hautes études, section des sciences religieuses, est une publication annuelle qui regroupe principalement les comptes rendus des conférences des enseignants-chercheurs de la s
Lire la suite (...)


Collection rétrospective – Digital archive

La collection rétrospective des Annuaires de l'École pratique des hautes études (1872-2006) a été entièrement numérisée ; elle est accessible sur le portail Persée (Publications & séries). 
See the full List of Open Access Journals in Ancient Studies

Hesperia News

Open Access Journal: Studia Orientalia Electronica

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Studia Orientalia Electronica
ISSN: 2323-5209 
Welcome to the website of Studia Orientalia Electronica (StOrE)! StOrE is a peer-reviewed multidisciplinary journal publishing original research articles and reviews in all fields of Asian and African studies. It is an offshoot of Studia Orientalia, an internationally recognized publication series (see http://www.suomenitamainenseura.org/studiaorientalia/ for further information on Studia Orientalia and the publisher, Finnish Oriental Society). StOrE was established in 2013 to keep up the fine publishing tradition of Studia Orientalia. The new journal publishes high quality articles in a more modern and accessible format.
Downloadable list of all Studia Orientalia publications (pdf).


Open Access Journal: IBAM Newsletter The Institute of Archaeological and Monumental Heritage. The National Research Council - Italy

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IBAM Newsletter The Institute of Archaeological and Monumental Heritage. The National Research Council - Italy
L’IBAM è una struttura scientifica multidisciplinare con competenze altamente specializzate nel settore della conoscenza, documentazione, diagnosi, conservazione, valorizzazione, fruizione e comunicazione del patrimonio archeologico e monumentale. Queste competenze si esprimono grazie al team multidisciplinare dell’Istituto che comprende archeologi, storici, architetti, geologi, ingegneri, chimici, fisici ed informatici. L’IBAM esprime le sue competenze mediante lo sviluppo, la sperimentazione e l'applicazione di indagini metodologiche con attività legate al territorio in Italia (centro-meridionale e Sicilia), in Turchia, a Creta, in Spagna, in Iraq, in Perù, in Albania etc.

Internazionalizzazione delle ricerche, potenziamento della multidisciplinarietà e interdisciplinarietà, integrazione di competenze tra le sedi, eccellenza nei progetti di ricerca europea proposti ed investimento su giovani forze costituiscono i principali impegni della nuova direzione dell'Istituto.


Il 16 novembre 2011 è stato nominato Direttore, per il quadriennio 2011- 2015, Daniele Malfitana, archeologo classico. 



The Institute of Archaeological and Monumental Heritage. The National Research Council - Italy

BAM is a multidisciplinary research institute with highly expertise in the specialized skills in the fields of knowledge, documentation, diagnosis, preservation, enhancement, enjoyment and communication of the archaeological and monumental heritage. These skills are expressed through the Institute's multidisciplinary team that includes archaeologists, historians, architects, geologists, engineers, chemists, physicists and ICT specialists. IBAM expresses its expertise through the development, testing and application of methodological investigations with activities related to the territory landscape in Italy (center, south and Sicily) and in Turkey, Crete, Spain, Iraq, Peru, etc. and Albania and elsewhere.

Internationalization of research, strengthening of multidisciplinary and interdisciplinary activities, integration of expertise among the its four headquartersoffices, excellence in European research projects proposed and, finally, investment on in youth young researchers are the main goals of the new directorshipate of the Institute.


On 16 November 2011, the classical archaeologist Daniele Malfitana was appointed Head Director of the Institute, for the years 2011 to 2015, Daniele Malfitana, classical archaeologist. 

IBAM Newsletter no. 1 March - May 2013
IBAM Newsletter no. 2 June - August 2013
IBAM Newsletter no. 3 September - December 2013

Announcing the Perseus Lexical Inventory

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Announcing the Perseus Lexical Inventory – an open linked data set
Many different linguistic services and tools are dependent on lexical information as it is commonly found in Latin and Greek dictionaries. Most of these applications rely on their own implementation of dictionaries, stem databases etc. but there is no centralized open-access resource on which these services can draw for supporting data. The Perseus Digital Library is releasing its lexical data as an open linked data set, starting with Latin and to be followed by Greek,  in the hopes that it may eventually become such a resource. Work on producing this data set has been a collaborative effort, and would not have been possible without the guidance of Neel Smith of Holy Cross and Helma Dik of the University of Chicago.

The core of the Perseus Lexical Inventory is a CITE collection of Lexical Entity URIs. Each Lexical Entity identifier has associated properties including a normalized form of the lexical entity (or lemma) and a short definition.   The accompanying linked data set includes links between the Lexical Entity URIs, morpheus lemmas, and entries in the Lewis and Short lexicons on Perseus, Alpheios and Logeion.  A VOID file describing the data set is available at http://data.perseus.org/ds/lexical/void and a SPARQL endpoint for querying the data set is at http://services.perseus.tufts.edu/fuseki/sparql.html.   There is also a simple demonstration query form that looks up entries based upon the Latin form at http://perseids.org/tools/lexical/query.html.  The Tufts Morphology Service (currently available at http://services.perseids.org/bsp/morphologyservice ) also supplies the corresponding Lexical Entity URIs for lemmas returned by Morpheus.

Subsequent updates to the data set will include links to ontologies and other collections of uniquely identifiable entities, including part of speech, lexical tokens or forms, stems, prefixes and suffixes, morphological analyses, metrical data, orthographical variants, and named entities.  The lexical entities and tokens will also be linked to their occurrences in dictionaries and other lexica, texts (i.e. of the Perseus corpus, among others), treebanks, etc. Finally we expect to link to other established and emerging data sets, including the Pleiades Gazetteer and the SNAP dataset of ancient prosopography, among others.

Our ultimate goal is for the lexical data sets to be completely open with various channels, including both user interfaces and service-based APIs, through which people and systems can contribute new data and corrections.
In keeping with the approach we have been taking with the release of our data (see the Perseus Catalog’s Roadmap towards Linked Data standards compliance) we are releasing the data knowing we have much work to do still, and will make progress towards the larger vision in incremental steps.  Our next steps will include release of a companion Greek Lexical Inventory, followed by the addition of the stem and lexical token data sets and development of APIs and interfaces for using and contributing to the data.

Ancient History Teachers’ Notes

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Ancient History Teachers’ Notes
These teachers’ notes are intended to prepare teachers for the new OCR specification by covering the main aspects of each of the optional subjects. They contextualise the prescribed sources and identity which issues and sources are most relevant to the individual bullet points of the specification. They will also give relevant extra background information.
They are designed to complement, rather than replace, the materials provided by OCR. The format of the notes varies depending on their authors. Those for AH2 options 2 and 3 are set out as schemes of work, while the others address the specific bullet points identified in the specification. For other week by week lesson plans/schemes of work, please see the support material booklets provided by OCR. Bibliographies for each of the options are in the Teacher support booklet.
JACT Ancient History Committee
Sept 2008

AH1

AH1 option 1 DemocracyAH1 option 2 Delian LeagueAH1 option 3 Sparta

AH2

AH2 option 1 CiceroAH2 option 2 AugustusAH2 option 3 Roman Britain

AH3

AH3 option 2 ConflictAH3 option 3 Culture of Athens

AH4

AH4 option 1 RepublicAH4 option 2 Imperial RomeAH4 option 3 Empire
 

New Open Access Journal: Nailos: Estudios Interdisciplinares de Arqueologia

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Nailos: Estudios Interdisciplinares de Arqueologia
ISSN: 2340-9126
e-ISSN: 2341-1074
http://nailos.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/02/cropped-cabecera-Nailos-Web-e1393443510986.jpg
Nailos admite para su publicación estudios relacionados directamente con la Arqueología, entendida esta como la disciplina científica que estudia las sociedades a partir de sus restos materiales, independientemente del periodo cronológico al que pertenezcan. También acepta colaboraciones relativas a temas como la epistemología y metodología arqueológica, historia de la ciencia arqueológica, geoarqueología, paleoantropología, arqueometría, estudios de paleoambiente, museología y didáctica de la Arqueología, gestión del patrimonio arqueológico o etnoarqueología.

2014 Nailos Volumen 1

The Musawwarat Graffiti Archive: Exploring Pictures in Place

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The Musawwarat Graffiti Archive: Exploring Pictures in Place
http://musawwaratgraffiti.mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de/images/MUS_HeaderBarMain1.jpg
The Musawwarat Graffiti Archive was developed in a collaborative effort by the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science and Humboldt University Berlin. Its first phase of development during 2011 was financed by the Golden Web Foundation. The Musawwarat Graffiti Archive serves as a case study for the development of a work-bench environment allowing the online publication of large image collections together with related extensive and varied data sets. These data sets are made available for scholarly analysis as well as public appreciation via in an easily accessible web interface.

With the ‘Graffiti in Place Database’ a solution was developed especially for the integration of systematic graffiti-focussed information and of data on the exact spatial contexts in which the pictorial and inscriptional graffiti were created and used. Such space-related data sets are difficult to publish in traditional paper format and thus often neglected in research and publication. The Musawwarat Graffiti Archive thus presents a multi-facetted approach to the open access publication of intricate visual data. In an ongoing process it aims at making accessible the full corpus of graffiti at Musawwarat, thus providing an exemplary platform for barrier-free research into an extensive collection of primary sources on Africa’s past.


Online Photographs: Breasted's 1919-1920 Expedition to the Near East

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 [First posted in AWOL 26 May 2010, updated 23 March 2014]

Breasted's 1919-1920 Expedition to the Near East
These 1,875 photographs chronicle Illinois native James Henry Breasted's daring travels through Egypt and Mesopotamia in the unstable aftermath of World War I. Breasted, a leading Egyptologist, was the founder of the Oriental Institute at the University of Chicago, and this journey was the first Oriental Institute project. The goals of his ambitious expedition were to acquire artifacts for the new Institute and to select sites for later excavation.
Our Museum's companion exhibit, Pioneers to the Past: American Archaeologists in the Middle East 1919-20, is open to the public from January 12 through August 29, 2010.
This photographic exhibit is the third major installment of the Oriental Institute's on-line Photographic Archives. It joins PERSEPOLIS AND ANCIENT IRAN: CATALOG OF EXPEDITION PHOTOGRAPHS (967 Photographs from the Oriental Institute's expedition to Iran in the 1930s) and THE 1905-1907 BREASTED EXPEDITIONS TO EGYPT AND THE SUDAN: A PHOTOGRAPHIC STUDY (1055 Photographs from Breasted's travels in Nubia during the years 1905-1907.


And for an up to date list of all Oriental Institute publications available online see


Oriental Institute Nippur Excavations Publications

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Oriental Institute Nippur Excavations Publications
http://oi.uchicago.edu/i/Nippur_from_east.gif
In the desert a hundred miles south of Baghdad, Iraq, lies a great mound of man-made debris sixty feet high and almost a mile across. This is Nippur, for thousands of years the religious center of Mesopotamia, where Enlil, the supreme god of the Sumerian pantheon, created mankind.
Although never a capital city, Nippur had great political importance because royal rule over Mesopotamia was not considered legitimate without recognition in its temples. Thus, Nippur was the focus of pilgrimage and building programs by dozens of kings including Hammurabi of Babylon and Ashurbanipal of Assyria. Despite the history of wars between various parts of Mesopotamia, the religious nature of Nippur prevented it from suffering most of the destructions that befell sites like Ur, Nineveh, and Babylon. The site thus preserves an unparalleled archaeological record spanning more than 6000 years.

Settled around 5000 B.C., Nippur played an important role in the development of the world's earliest civilization. The city, with its many temples, government buildings, and important family businesses, was probably more literate than other towns, and the scribes have left thousands of Sumerian and Akkadian documents written on clay tablets. Included among this extraordinary body of texts are the oldest versions of literary works, such as the Gilgamesh Epic and the Creation Story, as well as administrative, legal, medical and business records, and school texts.

Objects can often tell us things that were not written down. Elaborately designed items made of precious metals, stones, exotic woods, and shell allow us to reconstruct the development of ancient Mesopotamian art, as well as the far-flung trading connections that brought the materials to Babylonia. Egyptian, Persian, Indus Valley, and Greek artifacts also found their way to Nippur.

Even after Babylonian civilization was absorbed into larger empires, such as Alexander the Great's, Nippur flourished. In its final phase, prior to its abandonment around A.D. 800, Nippur was a typical Muslim city, with minority communities of Jews and Christians. At the time of its abandonment, the city was the seat of a Christian bishop, so it was still a religious center, long after Enlil had been forgotten.

The Nippur Expedition



And for an up to date list of all Oriental Institute publications available online see

Azoria Project Archive Online

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Azoria Project Archive
Creators: Donald C. Haggis, Azoria Project staff
The Azoria Project Archive is a collection of original documents and publications generated from fieldwork and research of the Azoria Project, an excavation of the Department of Classics and the Research Laboratories of Archaeology at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Azoria is an Early Iron Age and Archaic site in eastern Crete, originally explored by Harriet Boyd Hawes for the American School of Classical Studies at Athens in 1900. Subsequent work at the site (the Azoria Project) has been conducted annually since 2001, including phases of topographical survey (2001); excavation (2002-2006); site conservation (2003-2008); and study and publication (2007-2012). The documents in this collection comprise an archive of original field notes, excavation notebooks, stratigraphic sections, manuscript drafts, artifact catalogs, and illustrations (plans, drawings, maps, and photographs) produced by this research project.

Online Corpus der minoischen und mykenischen Siegel

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 [First posted in AWOL 20 December 2011, updated 23 March 2014]

Corpus der minoischen und mykenischen Siegel 
http://arachne.uni-koeln.de/drupal/sites/default/files/imagecache/project_node/logo_offiziell.jpg
Digitalisierung des Corpus der minoischen und mykenischen Siegel.

Das Projekt wird in Kooperation mit der Forschungsstelle CMS der Akademie der Wissenschaften und der Literatur Mainz unter wissenschaftlicher Betreuung der Kommission für Archäologie der Mainzer Akademie durchgeführt.

Das 1958 begründete und bisher ausschließlich in gedruckter Form veröffentlichte Corpus der minoischen und mykenischen Siegel (CMS), das die wissenschaftliche Edition sämtlicher aus der ägäischen Bronzezeit überlieferter Siegel und antiken Abdrücke in Ton zum Ziel hat, soll bis zum Abschluss des Vorhabens Ende 2011 in seinen wesentlichen Teilen digitalisiert, aktualisiert und kostenfrei im Internet zur Verfügung gestellt werden. Die CMS-Datenbank liefert den digitalisierten Index des 30-bändigen Werkes und dient der Siegelforschung als Instrument zur umfassenden Erschließung des mit vereinheitlichten Begriffen erfassten Fundmaterials. Im Sinne der Nachhaltigkeit, Migration und Vervollständigung soll das Corpus in ein modernes und international gut sichtbares Informationsnetzwerk zur Klassischen Archäologie (Arachne) integriert werden, um die Verstetigung der Arbeitsmöglichkeiten mit dem Material zu sichern, etwa durch die Hinzufügung neuer Funde und die Eröffnung neuer Forschungsperspektiven.


Die von Walter Müller geleitete CMS-Datenbank befindet sich noch in einer Testphase, da die erforderlichen Korrekturen und Nachträge erst bis zum Abschluss des Vorhabens Ende 2011 abgeschlossen sein werden. Im gleichen, noch verbleibenden Zeitraum werden die digitalisierten Abbildungen von Ingo Pini in ehrenamtlicher Tätigkeit überarbeitet und Abdrücke in großer Zahl photographisch neu aufgenommen. Außerdem werden von vielen Siegeln Neuzeichnungen angefertigt.

Das Projekt wird mit finanzieller Unterstützung des Institute of Aegean Prehistory, Philadelphia und der Deutschen Forschungsgemeinschaft durchgeführt.
zum Corpus der minoischen und mykenischen Siegel
CMS I - Athen, Nationalmuseum (517 Siegel)
CMS IS - Athen, Nationalmuseum Supplementum (205 Siegel)
CMS II,1 - Iraklion, Siegel der Vorpalastzeit (503 Siegel)
CMS II,2 - Iraklion, Siegel der Altpalastzeit (335 Siegel)
CMS II,3 - Iraklion, Siegel der Neupalastzeit (390 Siegel)
CMS II,4 - Iraklion, Siegel der Nachpalastzeit (239 Siegel)
CMS II,5 - Iraklion, Siegelabdrücke von Phästos (327 Siegel)
CMS II,6 - Iraklion, Siegelabdrücke von Aj. Triada (289 Siegel)
CMS II,7 - Iraklion, Siegelabdrücke von Kato Zakros (262 Siegel)
CMS II,8 - Iraklion, Siegelabdrücke von Knossos (731 Siegel)
CMS III - Iraklion, Sammlung Giamalakis (532 Siegel)
CMS IV - Iraklion, Sammlung Metaxas (382 Siegel)
CMS V - Griechenland, Kleinere Sammlungen (751 Siegel)
CMS VS1A - Griechenland, Neufunde (407 Siegel)
CMS VS1B - Griechenland, Neufunde (482 Siegel)
CMS VS2 - Lamia, Nekropole von Elatia (121 Siegel)
CMS VS3 - Griechenland, Neufunde (483 Siegel)
CMS VI - Oxford, Ashmolean Museum (515 Siegel)
CMS VII - Englische Museen (264 Siegel)
CMS VIII - Englische Privatsammlungen (158 Siegel)
CMS IX - Paris, Cabinet des Médailles (228 Siegel)
CMS X - Schweizer Sammlungen (323 Siegel)
CMS XI - Kleinere europäische Sammlungen (354 Siegel)
CMS XII - New York, Metropolitan Museum (325 Siegel)
CMS XIII - Nordamerika (166 Siegel)

Open Access Journal: The Ostracon: The Journal of the Egyptian Study Society

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[First listed in AWOL 5 November 2009. Updated 24 March 2014]

The Ostracon: The Journal of the Egyptian Study Society
The Ostracon is the official research publication of the Egyptian Study Society. It contains articles by ESS members and papers by archaeologists and Egyptologists documenting their research, special areas of interest, and personal experiences. Regular features also include reviews of lectures, books, and exhibits.

Current and back issues

PHILOCTETES - ΦΙΛΟΚΤΗΤΗΣ

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PHILOCTETES - ΦΙΛΟΚΤΗΤΗΣN
Notre site met progressivement en ligne des textes qui fondent notre culture. Il s'agit d'oeuvres qui sont à l'origine de la science, de la politique et de la littérature. Nous publions les textes originaux en grec et en latin avec leurs traductions françaises, anglaises et allemandes.
This site gives reference texts in their original languages (Greek and Latin) and in English and French translations. On the screen the original texts and translations are shown simultaneously.


In English :
THALES : (Greek, English, French)
ANAXIMANDER : (Greek, English, French)
HERACLITUS : (Greek, English, French)
PARMENIDES : (Greek, English, French)
ZENO : (Greek, English, French)
EMPEDOCLES : (Greek, English, French) New
In French :
EUCLID : Elements
HOMER : Iliad
HOMER : Odysseus
AESCHYLUS : Persians (interlinear)
PLATO : Phaidrus
Dictionary of Greek Gods

Open Access Journal: ArqueoWeb: Revista sobre Arqueología en Internet

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ArqueoWeb: Revista sobre Arqueología en Internet
ISSN: 1139-9201
ArqueoWeb, la primera revista electrónica española especializada en investigación arqueológica, surgió en 1998 de la mano de Ana Piñón Sequeira, óscar López Jiménez, Beatriz Díaz Santana e Ignacio Prieto Vilas, entonces estudiantes de Doctorado del Departamento de Prehistoria de la Universidad Complutense de Madrid (UCM), a los que posteriormente se unió Antonio Uriarte González. Ellos mismos cuentan que fue en el transcurso de un curso impartido por el Dr. D. Gonzalo Ruíz Zapatero, en el que los cuatro primeros coincidieron, donde surgió la idea de crear esta revista y que sin el asesoramiento de dicho profesor todo habría sido mucho más difícil. 



Newly Open Access Journal: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft

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Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft
ISSN: 0342-118X
Die Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft zu Berlin ist das offizielle Organ der Deutschen Orientgesellschaft (DOG). In ihr werden Berichte zu Ausgrabungen und deren Auswertung publiziert, die von der Gesellschaft durchgeführt und gefördert werden. Die Beiträge behandeln neben den überwiegenden archäologischen Berichten auch Beiträge zu philologischen, historischen, religiösen und kulturellen Fragen des altorientalischen Raumes.

1: Mittheilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1898
1: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1898
2: Mittheilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1899
3: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1899
4: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1900
5: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1900
6: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1900
7: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1900
8: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1901
9: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1901
10: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1901
11: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1901
12: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1902
13: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1902
14: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1902
15: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1902
16: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1902
17: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1903
18: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1903
19: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1903
20: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1903
21: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1904
22: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1904
23: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1904
24: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1904
25: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1904
26: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1905
27: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1905
28: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1905
29: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1905
30: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1906
31: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1906
32: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1906
33: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1907
34: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1907
35: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1907
36: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1908
37: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1908
38: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1908
39: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1908
40: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1909
41: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1909
42: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1909
43: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1910
44: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1910
45: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1911
46: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1911
47: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1911
48: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1912
49: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1912
50: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1912
51: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1913
52: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1913
53: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1914
54: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1914
55: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1914
56: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1915
57: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1917
58: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1917
59: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1918
60: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1920
61: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1921
62: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1923
63: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1924
64: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1926
65: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1927
66: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1928
67: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1929
68: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1930
69: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1931
70: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1932
71: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1932
72: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1933
73: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1935
74: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1936
75: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1937
76: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1938
77: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1939
78: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1940
79: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1942
80: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1943
81: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1949
82: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1950
83: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1951
84: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1952
85: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1953
86: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1953
87: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1955
88: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1955
89: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1957
90: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1958
91: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1958
92: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1960
93: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1962
94: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1963
95: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1965
96: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1965
97: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1966
98: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1967
99: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1968
100: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft.1968

Archive of Ancient Greek and Latin inscriptions from Upper Macedonia, Aegean Thrace and Achai

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 [First posted in AWOL 16 June 2012, updated 24 March 2014]

Ancient Greek and Latin inscriptions from Upper Macedonia, Aegean Thrace and Achaia
This collection of epigraphic texts represents part of the epigraphic archives of the Institute for Greek and Roman Antiquity (KERA), which were progressively constituted since 1980 with permission and in collaboration with the corresponding Department of Antiquities of the direction of Antiquities of the Greek Ministry of Culture, to promote the systematic study and scientific exploitation of epigraphic texts as primary sources for the history, institutions, language, religion and culture of specific Greek regions in Greek and Roman Antiquity.
The collection comprises three sets of published ancient inscriptions on stone (the lower limit being the 7th century AD):
  1. from the Achaean city of Patras (Prof. A Rizakis)
  2. from Upper Macedonia (prefectures of Grevena, Kozani, Kastoria and Florina, Prof. A. Rizakis and Dr. J. Touratsoglou)
  3. from Aegean Thrace (prefectures of Xanthi, Rhodopi and Hebros: KERA researchers Drs. L. Loukopoulou, M.-G. Parissaki, S. Psoma and A. Zournatzi in collaboration with the archaeologists of the 19th Ephoria of Prehistoric and Classical Antiquities D. Triantaphyllos, K. Kallintzi, K. Koutsoumanis, Ch. Karadima, E. Skarlatidou, D. Terzopoulou and P. Tsatsopoulou)
Supplements to the collection of inscriptions from Upper Macedonia, its bibliographical update, the creation of all digital entries, as well as partial additions and corrections throughout the collection have been undertaken by the Institute’s collaborator K. Lembidaki, with the assistance of K. Ananiadis, A. Vourgali, M. Stavrou, D. Stathaki and V. Psilakakou, under the supervision of P. Paschidis.
A component of Pandektis

ARCHIBAB News

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ARCHIBAB Archives babyloniennes (XXe-XVIIe siècles av. J.C.)

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Actualités Mars 2014
Communiquer avec ARCHIBAB:
Sur la page d'accueil, un nouveau module permet de nous communiquer des suggestions (avec un dispositif anti-spam) : soyez nombreux à l'utiliser !
Bilan:
La table BIBLIO compte désormais 4210 fiches, avec références au total à 32402 textes intégralement publiés (l'élimination de doublons explique que le chiffre ait légèrement diminué depuis décembre 2013).
La table TEXTES compte désormais 15922 fiches (soit 49,13% du corpus).
Nouveautés (87 textes):
– Voet & Van Lerberghe Mél. Sjöberg 2, 2014 (5 textes)
– Hussein KASKAL 9, 2012 (82 textes [+ concordance avec les copies de 48 de ces textes publiées dans Mohammad & Ismaeel Sumer 53, 2005-6])
Travail rétrospectif: 
– suite du catalogage des textes administratifs de Mari : ARM 31 [290 textes] (F. Nebiolo) ;
– Mayer Or 72 et Mayer Or 74 (8 tablettes conservées au Musée du Vatican, collationnées par D.
Charpin)
– CMET 9 (= A. Archi, F. Pomponio & M. Stol, Testi cuneiformi di vario contenuto NN. 0724 - 0793, Catalogo del Museo Egizio di Torino, Serie Seconda - Collezioni 9, Turin, 1999 [= TCVC]) (46 textes,
DC)
– Peters ARRIM 4, 1986 (6 textes, DC)
– quelques compléments au catalogue des lettres
– ca. 70 textes divers N.B. Deux opérations de caractère plus général ont également été menées pendant ce trimestre :
– Le glossaire a été vérifié (corrections et harmonisations) ; quand c'était nécessaire, la lemmatisation des lignes correspondantes a été refaite. On a introduit un certain nombre de renvois internes (halâlum : cf. alâlum ; nikurtum : cf. nukurtum, etc.).
– La gestion des datations par éponymes a été modifiée : voir la note de D. Charpin & N. Ziegler dans NABU 2014-1.

The Rock Inscriptions Project (Sinai Peninsula)

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The Rock Inscriptions Project


This site presents the data gathered by the Rock Inscription and Graffiti Project at the Institute of Asian and African Studies. 

These photographs were assembled before the reversion of the Sinai Peninsula to Egyptian sovereignty in 1982. The collection is designed to make available images of inscriptions, rock drawings, Beduin markings and other epigraphs and to organize them including descriptions, coordinates, and locations. In order to facilitate research into the human traffic in the Wilderness of Sinai, inscriptions in major published corpora have been included, as will be evident. 

To the material from Sinai, we have added epigraphs from the Christian Holy Places and also from the Negev desert.

The collection does not claim to be exhaustive in any way.

The images belong to the Rock Inscriptions and Graffiti project and high resolution images for study and eventual publication will be made available to scholars on request sent to: michael.stone@huji.ac.il.


Three volumes of a catalogue have been published:
Michael E. Stone, The Rock Inscriptions and Graffiti Project: Catalogue of Inscriptions. 3 volumes. SBLRBS 28, 29, 31. Atlanta: Scholars Press, 1992–94.
The Armenian and Georgian inscriptions have been published:
Michael E. Stone, The Armenian Inscriptions from the Sinai with Appendixes on the Georgian and Latin Inscriptions by M. van Esbroeck and W. Adler. Harvard Armenian Texts and Studies 6. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1982.
The Ethiopic Inscription has been published:
Emile Puech, 'Une Inscription Ethiopienne ancienne au Sinai (Wadi Hajjaj)', Revue Biblque, 87 (1980) 597-600. 

A journal of the Expeditions to the Sinai is currently being edited: Michael E. Stone, A Sinai Diary (forthcoming).
You may view the individual inscription records in one of the following methods:
  • Browse Inscriptions
  • Browse Sites
  • Search Inscriptions and Sites
  • Home
  • About / אודות
  • Selected Bibliography / ביבליוגרפיה נבחרת
  • Useful Links

Pontificia Commissione di Archeologia Sacra: Archivio

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Pontificia Commissione di Archeologia Sacra: Archivio
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Istituita da papa Pio IX (6 gennaio 1852) "per custodire i sacri cemeteri antichi, per curarne preventivamente la conservazione, le ulteriori esplorazioni, le investigazioni, lo studio, per tutelare inoltre le più vetuste memorie dei primi secoli cristiani, i monumenti insigni, le Basiliche venerande, in Roma, nel suburbio e suolo romano e anche nelle altre Diocesi d'intesa con i rispettivi Ordinari", fu dichiarata pontificia da Pio XI (Motu Proprio, dell'11 dic. 1925) con ampliamento di poteri.
 
L' Archivio Storico Documenti della Pontificia Commissione di Archeologia Sacra è composto da 236 buste e 97 tra registri volumi e quaderni, per un totale di 333 pezzi, cui si aggiungono 29 buste e 4 scatole degli Archivi personali e 10 buste e 9, tra volumi e registri, di altri Archivi in deposito presso la Commissione. L'Archivio è relativo al periodo 1851-1993, ma copre un arco cronologico che precede la creazione della Commissione (1851).
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