Sunday, July 31, 2016

Open Access Journal: Archaeological Discovery

Archaeological Discovery
ISSN Print: 2331-1959
ISSN Online: 2331-1967
 http://file.scirp.org/image/AD2013100711015401.jpg
Archaeological Discovery (AD) is an international journal dedicated to the latest advancement of the study of Archaeology. The goal of this journal is to provide a platform for scientists and academicians all over the world to promote, share, and discuss various new issues and developments in different areas of Archaeological studies.

All manuscripts must be prepared in English and are subject to a rigorous and fair peer-review process. Accepted papers will immediately appear online followed by printed hard copy. The journal publishes original papers covering a wide range of fields but not limited to the following:


Soraya Estavi, Zahra Asghari, Ali Aarab, Reza Rezaloo, Aliye Amirinejad
Abstract | References Download PDF (661 K) HTML XML   Pub. Date: June 9, 2016

Saturday, July 30, 2016

4889 DAYS: The Iliad, one sentence per day

4889 DAYS
On Thursday, August 4, my new website 4889 DAYS will start reading the Iliad, one sentence per day, for the next thirteen years. Or until something breaks!

Friday, July 29, 2016

Pleiades Help: Getting Coordinates for a Place

Getting Coordinates for a Place
Creators: Tom Elliott Copyright © The Contributors. Sharing and remixing permitted under terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License (cc-by).
Last modified Jul 27, 2016 06:00 PM

Coordinate information is stored in Pleiades "location" resources, which are grouped inside the "place" resources. We also calculate "representative points" (centroids) for each place on the basis of the associated locations. You can get whichever of these values is best for your purposes.
Portion of a place page, showing the location of the representative point and the clickable list of locations. 
Pleiades "place resources", e.g. http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/108882, are essentially containers for information about notional places (see further our Conceptual Overview). The maps on each place pull their coordinates from any "location resources" that have been assigned to that place. You'll see links to these under the "Locations" heading. If you click on a location there, you'll see information about the associated coordinates (points, lines, polygons), displayed in GeoJSON format.

For each Pleiades place resource, we calculate a "representative point" as well. This point -- which is the centroid of all associated locations -- is prominently displayed on the place page and rendered in the map on the place page with a distinctive orange circle. You can easily copy the representative point coordinates by selecting the "copy-to-clipboard" icon that appears immediately after the latitude and longitude coordinate pair under the "Representative Point" heading on the place page.

You can also download all of our data here: http://pleiades.stoa.org/downloads. The places tables include "reprLong", "reprLat" and "reprLatLong" columns which hold the coordinates of a single representative point (centroid) for a place. If you'd just like the agreed upon, single representative latitude and longitude pair for a place, that's the best data source.

greek-accentuation 1.0.0 Released

greek-accentuation 1.0.0 Released
greek-accentuation has finally hit 1.0.0 with a couple more functions and a module layout change.
The library (which I’ve previously written about here) has been sitting on 0.9.9 for a while and I’ve been using it sucessfully in my inflectional morphology work for 18 months. There were, however, a couple of functions that lived in the inflectional morphology repos that really belonged in greek-accentuation. They have now been moved there.

There is syllabify.debreath which removes smooth breathing and replaces rough breathing with an h. And there is syllabify.rebreath which reverses this.

The other big change made is there are no-longer three top-level modules—everything is enclosed in a greek_accentuation package so instead of from syllabify import * you say from greek_accentuation.syllabify import *.

You can pip install greek-accentuation==1.0.0. The repo is at https://github.com/jtauber/greek-accentuation.

greek-accentuation is made available under an MIT license.

Thanks to Kyle Johnson of the wonderful Classical Language Toolkit project for encouraging me to finally do the 1.0.0 release.

Thursday, July 28, 2016

Milestone: five million page views

At about 8:30 this morning AWOL surpassed five million page views. One million of these have come since mid October 2015.

In the right hand side bar of AWOL is a form allowing you to receive notifications of updates to AWOL by email. This seems useful for those for whom news feeds and their syndications to Facebook and Twitter are not. Your address will be safe. Neither AWOL nor feedburner will send spam. Since I announced this feature in June 2009, 7,714 e-mail addresses have subscribed to AWOL.

If you are reading this in a newsreader or on facebook or twitter (or other social media) you will have to click through to see the form in the sidebar. If you are reading this by email you have already done what's required. The software requires a confirmation of your request to join. If you don't see such a confirmation request, check your spam folder.

Instructions for unsubscribing from the email list are at the bottom of each message from AWOL.

If you are not reading this on on facebook or twitter you are welcome to join in there.

You are invited to visit The AWOL Index
This publication systematically describes ancient-world information resources on the world-wide web. The bibliographic data presented herein has been programmatically extracted from the content of AWOL - The Ancient World Online (ISSN 2156-2253) and formatted in accordance with a structured data model. In continuous operation since 2009, AWOL is a blog authored by Charles E. Jones, Tombros Librarian for Classics and Humanities at the Pattee Library, Penn State University

This publication, The AWOL Index, is an experimental project, developed jointly by Jones and Tom Elliott, the Associate Director for Digital Programs at New York University's Institute for the Study of the Ancient World (ISAW), with the assistance of Pavan Atri, Roger Bagnall, Dawn Gross, Sebastian Heath, Gabriel McKee, Ronak Parpani, David Ratzan, and Kristen Soule.

Creation of The AWOL Index was made possible by a grant from the Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation.
Finally. Please use the comment function available on each posting if you have something to say. And if you have comments or know of something I should consider including, please contact me directly (cejo at uchicago dot edu) 

Wednesday, July 27, 2016

Open Access Journal: Journal of Archaeology

Journal of Archaeology
ISSN 2090-4061
E-ISSN 2090-407X

http://images.hindawi.com/journals/jarchae/jarchae.banner.jpg

Journal of Archaeology is a peer-reviewed, Open Access journal that publishes original research articles as well as review articles in all areas of archaeology.
Table of Contents
Table of Contents for Year 2016
Antikythera Mechanism and the Ancient World, A. N. Safronov
Volume 2016 (2016), Article ID 8760513, 19 pages
Table of Contents for Year 2014
X-Ray Fluorescence Analysis of XII–XIV Century Italian Gold Coins, Monica Baldassarri, Gildo de Holanda Cavalcanti, Marco Ferretti, Astrik Gorghinian, Emanuela Grifoni, Stefano Legnaioli, Giulia Lorenzetti, Stefano Pagnotta, Luciano Marras, Eleonora Violano, Marco Lezzerini, and Vincenzo Palleschi
Volume 2014 (2014), Article ID 519218, 6 pages
Lanthanides Revealing Anthropogenic Impact within a Stratigraphic Sequence, Gianni Gallello, Agustín Pastor, Agustín Diez, and Joan Bernabeu
Volume 2014 (2014), Article ID 767085, 8 pages
Nondestructive Analysis of Silver Coins Minted in Taras (South Italy) between the V and the III Centuries BC, Alessandro Buccolieri, Giovanni Buccolieri, Emanuela Filippo, Daniela Manno, Giuseppe Sarcinelli, Aldo Siciliano, Rosa Vitale, and Antonio Serra
Volume 2014 (2014), Article ID 171243, 12 pages
Analysis of the Quintilii’s Villa Bronzes by Spectroscopy Techniques, Fabio Stranges, Mauro La Russa, Antonino Oliva, and Giuliana Galli
Volume 2014 (2014), Article ID 312981, 7 pages
Chirping for Large-Scale Maritime Archaeological Survey: A Strategy Developed from a Practical Experience-Based Approach, Ole Grøn and Lars Ole Boldreel
Volume 2014 (2014), Article ID 147390, 11 pages
Table of Contents for Year 2013
Nonlinear Systems Theory, Feminism, and Postprocessualism, Suzanne M. Spencer-Wood
Volume 2013 (2013), Article ID 540912, 15 pages
Stone Tool Manufacture Strategies and Lithic Raw Material Exploitation in Coastal Patagonia, Argentina: A Multivariate Approach, Marcelo Cardillo and Jimena Alberti
Volume 2013 (2013), Article ID 128470, 12 pages
The Visual Brain, Perception, and Depiction of Animals in Rock Art, Derek Hodgson
Volume 2013 (2013), Article ID 342801, 6 pages
Rock Art Dating and the Peopling of the Americas, David S. Whitley
Volume 2013 (2013), Article ID 713159, 15 pages
Neolithic LBK Intrasite Settlement Patterns: A Case Study from Bylany (Czech Republic), Petr Květina and Markéta Končelová
Volume 2013 (2013), Article ID 581607, 7 pages 

Online Catalogue of the Listed Archaeological Sites and Monuments of Greece

 [First posted in AWOL 26 February 2012, updated 27 July 2016]

Ongoing Catalogue of the Listed Archaeological Sites and Monuments of Greece

The Ongoing Catalogue of the Listed Archaeological Sites and Monuments of Greece is compiled and published since 1993 by the Directorate of the National Archive of Monuments of the Hellenic Ministry of Culture and Tourism. Part of the greater project for the creation of an all-inclusive National Inventory of Monuments, it is a codification of all the official acts by which archaeological sites and monuments of the country have been designated and listed as such in the Government Gazette since 1921. Only immoveable monuments, archaeological sites and historic places that required a specific legal act of designation, demarcation and protection are included, as the Greek Law (3028/2002 “On the protection of antiquities and cultural heritage in general”) places all monuments and sites dating before 1830 under the protective auspices of the State automatically and without further legislative procedures. From its original printed form (more than 120 volumes), the Ongoing Catalogue has now developed into a modern digital database updated regularly and accessible over the Internet at http://listedmonuments.culture.gr. The database holds more than 10.000 entries related to over 18.000 sites and monuments designated by the Ministry of Culture and Tourism. Visitors of the Ongoing Catalogue’s web site can search (in Greek) specific acts of designation, monuments or sites by name, geographical location, and state of ownership or administrative authority. Free keyword search is also available. All content is intended merely for informational purposes; only the original statutes published in the corresponding Issues of the Government Gazette have legal value.
Διαρκής Κατάλογος

Tuesday, July 26, 2016

Recent Open Access Dissertations in Classics from Columbia University

Recent Open Access Dissertations in Classics from Columbia University

Quintilian's Theory of Certainty and Its Afterlife in Early Modern Italy


Author(s):
McNamara, Charles Joseph
Date:
2016
Subject:
Classical studies
Content Type:
Dissertations
Permanent URL:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7916/D8KP8293


Author(s):
Hanses, Mathias
Date:
2015
Subject:
Classical literature
Content Type:
Dissertations
Permanent URL:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7916/D81V5D18

Author(s):
Dance, Caleb
Date:
2014
Subject:
Classical literature
Content Type:
Dissertations
Permanent URL:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7916/D81R6NP1

Author(s):
Webster, Colin
Date:
2014
Subject:
Classical studies, History of science
Content Type:
Dissertations
Permanent URL:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7916/D8J101B7

Author(s):
Martinez, Susana Isabel
Date:
2013
Subject:
Classical studies, Ethics, Philosophy
Content Type:
Dissertations
Permanent URL:
http://hdl.handle.net/10022/AC:P:15780

Author(s):
Papathanasopoulou, Evgenia
Date:
2013
Subject:
Classical literature
Content Type:
Dissertations
Permanent URL:
http://hdl.handle.net/10022/AC:P:22011

Author(s):
Halim, Ian
Date:
2012
Subject:
Classical literature, Philosophy
Content Type:
Dissertations
Permanent URL:
http://hdl.handle.net/10022/AC:P:18861

Author(s):
Chen, Howard Shau-Hao
Date:
2012
Subject:
Classical studies, Classical literature
Content Type:
Dissertations
Permanent URL:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7916/D8833Q3Q

Author(s):
Tan, James
Date:
2011
Subject:
Ancient history, Classical studies, Sociology
Content Type:
Dissertations
Permanent URL:
http://hdl.handle.net/10022/AC:P:10257

Author(s):
Ratzan, David Martyn
Date:
2011
Subject:
Classical studies, Ancient history, Economic history
Content Type:
Dissertations
Permanent URL:
http://hdl.handle.net/10022/AC:P:20899

Author(s):
Myers, Tobias Anthony
Date:
2011
Subject:
Classical studies, Classical literature
Content Type:
Dissertations
Permanent URL:
http://hdl.handle.net/10022/AC:P:10593

Author(s):
Glauthier, Patrick
Date:
2011
Subject:
Classical studies
Content Type:
Dissertations
Permanent URL:
http://hdl.handle.net/10022/AC:P:11114



Author(s):
Uden, James
Date:
2011
Subject:
Classical studies
Content Type:
Dissertations
Permanent URL:
http://hdl.handle.net/10022/AC:P:10339

THV (Thesaurus Herculanensium Voluminum) (new-beta_01)

 [First posted in AWOL 3 August 2014, updated 26 July 2016]

THV (Thesaurus Herculanensium Voluminum)  (new-beta_01)
Il progetto THV (Thesaurus Herculanensium Voluminum) è nato con lo scopo di creare uno strumento informatico per la ricerca sui testi custoditi nei papiri greci ercolanesi.

Sarà possibile effettuare ricerche di parole o parte di esse per opera, per autore o su tutto il corpus che verrà, periodicamente, arricchito e aggiornato. Per gli studiosi, inoltre, sarà possibile intervenire direttamente sui testi aggiungendo le nuove letture.
Ogni volta che saranno disponibili nuovi testi da consultare verrà data notizia della immissione su questo stesso sito, sul sito del CISPE “Marcello Gigante” e nella Papy-List.

Testi immessi:
PHerc. 182, 1005, 1027, 1065, 1507 sono a cura di Matilde Fiorillo
PHerc. 1055, 1251, 1425, 1418, 1431 (coll.1-10), 1021 sono a cura di Antonio Parisi
PHerc. 336/1150 è a cura di Mariacristina Fimiani
Il progetto è stato ideato e realizzato da Gianluca Del Mastro col sostegno del Centro Internazionale per lo studio dei Papiri Ercolanesi "Marcello Gigante" a cui si deve il finanziamento del software.
L'immissione dei dati è curata e finanaziata dal CISPE in collaborazione con la cattedra di Filologia Classica I dell'Università di Würzburg
Realizzazione del software a cura di ARCA di Luciano Fattore e Luca Pelella
Direzione immissione testi: Gianluca Del Mastro (Napoli) e Holger Essler (Würzburg)
Revisione e verifica dei dati: Gianluca Del Mastro e Antonio Parisi (Napoli); Holger Essler (Würzburg)

Papiri Inseriti

Papiro Autore/Titolo Libro
124 Demetrius Laco - De anthropomorphia deorum
163 Philodemus - De divitiis I
182 Philodemus - De Ira
336 Polystratus - De contemptu
463 Philodemus - De rhetorica IV
468 Philodemus - De rhetorica III
1001 Philodemus - De rhetorica
1004 Philodemus - De rhetorica IX
1005 Philodemus - Ad contubernales I
1006 Demetrius Laco - Nonnullae quaestiones de diaeta
1008 Philodemus - De vitiis X I
1012 Demetrio Lacone - Aporie testuali ed esegetiche in Epicuro
1014 Demetrius Laco - De poematis II
1021 Philodemus - Historia Academicorum
1027 Carneiscus - Philistas II
1050 Philodemus - De morte IV
1055 Demetrius Laco - De forma dei
1065 Philodemus - De signis
1113 Demetrius Laco - De Poematis
1251 Philodemus - De electionibus et fugis
1418 Philodemus - Pragmateiai
1425 Philodemus - De poematis V
1431 Epicurus - De natura XXXIV
1507 Philodemus - De bono rege secundum Homerum
1636 Philodemus - De rhetorica
1675 Philodemus - De vitiis (De adulatione)

News from the Corpus of Mesopotamian Anti-witchcraft Rituals Project (CMAwR)

News from the Corpus of Mesopotamian Anti-witchcraft Rituals Project (CMAwR)
This year two volumes of Mesopotamian anti-witchcraft lore have appeared:
- Tzvi Abusch, The Magical Ceremony Maqlû (Ancient Magic and Divination 10), Leiden – Boston: Brill, 2016.
- Tzvi Abusch – Daniel Schwemer – Mikko Luukko – Greta Van Buylaere, Corpus of Mesopotamian Anti-witchcraft Rituals, vol. 2 (Ancient Magic and Divination 8/2), Leiden – Boston: Brill, 2016.

Respecting Brill’s moving wall, all the texts edited in these volumes will eventually be presented online within the framework of Oracc.

At present, CMAwRo (http://oracc.museum.upenn.edu/cmawro/corpus) comprises the texts edited in Tzvi Abusch - Daniel Schwemer, Corpus of Mesopotamian Anti-witchcraft Rituals, vol. 1 (Ancient Magic and Divination 8/1), Leiden - Boston: Brill, 2011. A pdf-file with corrections and additions to this volume can be found at: http://www.cmawro.altorientalistik.uni-wuerzburg.de/cmawr_corrections/. On this page you can also consult a list of additional manuscripts to previously edited texts. The addenda to texts from vol. 1 are being integrated online at Oracc’s CMAwRo.

In 2017, the texts of vol. 2 and their addenda will become available in the same place. The additional manuscripts to volumes 1 and 2 will be included in the final volume of Anti-witchcraft Rituals (CMAwR 3; AMD 8/3) that we are currently working on. It will be published in 2019.

At the moment, the Critical Catalogue of Mesopotamian Anti-witchcraft Rituals (CCMAwR; http://www.ccmawr.altorientalistik.uni-wuerzburg.de/ccmawr/index.php) encompasses information on the tablets published in CMAwR vol. 1 and 2 and in Tzvi Abusch’s Maqlû. Especially worth noting is the recent online prepublication of Daniel Schwemer’s hand-copies of most of the Maqlû manuscripts as part of the Critical Catalogue.

General information on Mesopotamian witchcraft, including information on the use of CMAwRo and the Bibliography of Mesopotamian Magic, can be found at http://www.cmawro.altorientalistik.uni-wuerzburg.de/startseite/.

Acknowledgements
CCMAwR, CMAwRo, and CMAwR, vol. 2, were created as part of the DFG-funded project Corpus babylonischer Rituale und Beschwörungen gegen Schadenzauber: Edition, lexikalische Erschließung, historische und literarische Analyse, directed by Daniel Schwemer at the University of Würzburg.
 

Monday, July 25, 2016

Karnak (v 0.1.5): Projet d'index global des inscriptions des temples de Karnak

[First posted in AWOL 9 June 2013, updated 25 July 2016]

Karnak (v 0.1.5)  
Projet d'index global des inscriptions des temples de Karnak
Karnak

3676 documents accessibles sur 7654 documents uniques dans le projet.
1676 scènes, 14 stèles, 114 éléments statuaires

Télécharger l’Inventaire des monuments, objets, scènes et inscriptions des temples de Karnak.

Lancé en janvier 2013, le projet Karnak (CNRS, USR 3172 - CFEETK / UMR 5140, Équipe ENiM - Programme « Investissement d’Avenir » ANR-11-LABX-0032-01 Labex ARCHIMEDE) a pour ambition d’organiser et de rendre accessible la documentation textuelle issue des temples de Karnak.
Ce travail est fondé sur un dépouillement exhaustif des documents et inscriptions de Karnak collationnées sur l’original. Chaque document reçoit un numéro d’identifiant unique (KIU : Karnak Identifiant Unique) lors de l’intégration à la base de données. Toute la richesse des archives du CFEETK (photographies, fac-similés, etc.) est exploitée par le projet Karnak, directement connecté à la base de données ArchéoGrid Karnak et à la bibliographie en ligne du CFEETK.
 
Étroitement lié au projet Dictionnaire Permanent de l’Égyptien Ancien (DPEA) développé par l’équipe d’égyptologie de l’UMR 5140 (CNRS-Université Montpellier III-Paul Valéry), le projet Karnak offrira un outil d’accès direct au riche corpus des inscriptions de Karnak (hiéroglyphiques, hiératiques et démotiques). Toutes les informations relatives à un document (KIU) seront accessibles à partir d’une notice unique. Celle-ci comportera l’édition typographique de l’inscription ainsi que sa translittération, l’ensemble des photographies, fac-similés et tout autre document d’archives associé.
Cet outil en ligne, hébergé sur les serveurs de l’IN2P3, autorisera ainsi des recherches directes dans le contenu des notices et dans les inscriptions hiéroglyphiques par le biais de la translittération. Il fournira en outre divers indices permettant des recherches multicritères (noms des divinités, épithètes divines, toponymes, ethniques et lieux de cultes, éléments de titulatures, anthroponymes, éléments prosopographiques et vocabulaire des inscriptions).
 

École française d'Athènes: Archives manuscrites en ligne



Le servi
ce des archives met progressivement en ligne les carnets de fouilles et de relevés d'inscriptions qu'il conserve dans les séries géographiques.

Série « Argos »

Journal de fouilles d'Argos (1902-1930).
Auteur : W. Vollgraff. Cote : ARGOS 2-C ARG 124.
 


Série « Asie Mineure »

Carnet de fouilles de Claros (1950-1952).
Auteur : R. Martin. Cote : AS 2-C 28.
 
Auteur : R. Martin. Cote : AS 2-C 31.
Carnet de fouilles de Claros (1956-1957).
Auteur : R. Martin. Cote : AS 2-C 33.
 
Carnet de fouilles de Claros (1958-1959).
Auteur : R. Martin. Cote : AS 2-C 36.
Carnet de fouilles de Claros (1961).
Auteur : R. Martin. Cote : AS 2-C 40.
 
 


Série « Délos »

Carnet de fouilles de Délos (1877).
Auteur : Th. Homolle. Cote : DÉLOS 2-C DEL 2.
 
Carnet de fouilles de Délos (mars-juil. 1877).
Auteur : Th. Homolle. Cote : DÉLOS 2-C DEL 3.
Carnet de fouilles de Délos (mai-juin 1878).
Auteur : Th. Homolle. Cote : DÉLOS 2-C DEL 4.
 
Carnet de fouilles de Délos (juin-sept. 1878).
Auteur : Th. Homolle. Cote : DÉLOS 2-C DEL 5.
Carnet de fouilles de Délos (1879).
Auteur : Th. Homolle. Cote : DÉLOS 2-C DEL 6.
 
Carnet de fouilles de Délos (1879).
Auteur : Th. Homolle. Cote : DÉLOS 2-C DEL 7.
Carnet de fouilles de Délos (1880).
Auteur : Th. Homolle. Cote : DÉLOS 2-C DEL 8.
 
Carnet de fouilles de Délos (1903).
Auteur : A. Jardé. Cote : DÉLOS 2-C DEL 17.
Carnet de fouilles de Délos (1904).
Auteur : A. Jardé. Cote : DÉLOS 2-C DEL 25.
 
 


Série « Delphes »

Journal de la grande fouille de Delphes (1892-1901).
Auteurs : L. Couve, É. Bourguet, P. Perdrizet, P. Jouguet, G. Colin, P. Fournier, J. Laurent et D. Brizemur.
Cote : DELPHES 2-C DPH 23.
 


Série « Philippes »

Carnet de fouilles de Philippes et de Dikili Tash (1920).
Auteur : L. Renaudin. Cote : PHILIPPES 2-C PHI 8 A.
 
Carnet de fouilles de Philippes (1922).
Auteur : L. Renaudin. Cote : PHILIPPES 2-C PHI 16 A.
Carnet de relevés d’inscriptions et de dessins de blocs effectués à Philippes et à Thasos (1927).
Auteur : P. Collart. Cote : PHILIPPES 2-C PHI 23.
 
Auteur : P. Collart. Cote : PHILIPPES 2-C PHI 24.
 
Carnet de fouilles de Philippes (1930).
Auteur : P. Collart. Cote : PHILIPPES 2-C PHI 27.
 
Auteur : P. Collart. Cote : PHILIPPES 2-C PHI 28.
 
Carnet de fouilles de Philippes (1933).
Auteur : P. Collart. Cote : PHILIPPES 2-C PHI 30.
 


Séries « Thasos » et « Thrace »

Voyage dans l’archipel thrace (1910).
Auteurs : Ch. Picard et A.-J. Reinach. Cote : THRACE 2.
 
Auteur : A.-J. Reinach. Cote : THASOS 2-C THA 2.
Carnet de fouilles de Thasos (1911).
Auteur : Ch. Picard. Cote : THASOS 2-C THA 3.
 
Carnet de fouilles de Thasos (1911).
Auteur : Ch. Avezou. Cote : THASOS 2-C THA 4.
 
Carnet de fouilles de Thasos (1911).
Auteur : A.-J. Reinach. Cote : THASOS 2-C THA 5.
 
Carnet de fouilles de Thasos (1912).
Auteur : Ch. Picard. Cote : THASOS 2-C THA 6.
 
Carnet de fouilles de Thasos (1912-1913).
Auteur : Ch. Avezou. Cote : THASOS 2-C THA 7-8.
 
Carnet de fouilles de Thasos (1913).
Auteur : Ch. Picard. Cote : THASOS 2-C THA 9.
 
Carnet de fouilles de Thasos VI-VII (1913).
Auteur : Ch. Avezou. Cote : THASOS 2-C THA 11.

 
Carnet de fouilles de Thasos XI (1913).
Auteur : Ch. Avezou. Cote : THASOS 2-C THA 10.

 

Sunday, July 24, 2016

Ancient Numismatics News from NUMISHARE

ANS coins from RIC 6-10 published to OCRE, and other updates
Following the release of volumes 6, 7, 8, and 10 to OCRE, we have republished our coins from these volumes to link them into the newly-published coin type URIs. This represents an addition of more than 17,000 physical specimens of late Roman coinage into OCRE, including photographs for more than 3,000 of these (and photographic gaps from previous volumes of RIC). There are now 36,000 Roman imperial coins from the ANS collection in OCRE, and 60,000 in total from all our partners. Including CRRO and PELLA, there are just under 100,000 physical coins aggregated by Nomisma.org's SPARQL endpoint.

In addition to these coins, the Portable Antiquities Scheme provided access to several hundred imperial coins linked to OCRE URIs. The PAS had previously linked its entire collection of Republican coins (nearly 1,000) into CRRO, but the inclusion of imperial material in OCRE is a watershed moment for the study of Roman numismatics. These are the first few hundred of potentially hundreds of thousands of coins published in their database, each with attested findspots. This will have a dramatic effect on geographic analysis of ancient monetary circulation and trade.

The Harvard Art Museums API was also reprocessed. Harvard's coverage of late Roman coinage is quite good, and their contribution to OCRE has more than doubled to 1,300 coins. 
 

Saturday, July 23, 2016

CAMERA KALAUREIA An Archaeological Photo-Ethnography | Μια αρχαιολογική φωτο-εθνογραφία by Yannis Hamilakis & Fotis Ifantidis

CAMERA KALAUREIA An Archaeological Photo-Ethnography | Μια αρχαιολογική φωτο-εθνογραφία by Yannis Hamilakis & Fotis Ifantidis.
170 pages; illustrated in full colour throughout. Full text in English and Greek. Available both in print and Open Access.
ISBN 9781784914141. 
How can we find alternative, sensorially rich and affective ways of engaging with the material past in the present?

How can photography play a central role in archaeological narratives, beyond representation and documentation?

This photo-book engages with these questions, not through conventional academic discourse but through evocative creative practice. The book is, at the same time, a site guide of sorts: a photographic guide to the archaeological site of the Sanctuary of Poseidon in Kalaureia, on the island of Poros, in Greece.

Ancient and not-so-ancient stones, pine trees that were “wounded” for their resin, people who lived amongst the classical ruins, and the tensions and the clashes with the archaeological apparatus and its regulations, all become palpable, affectively close and immediate.

Furthermore, the book constitutes an indirect but concrete proposal for the adoption of archaeological photo-ethnography as a research as well as public communication tool for critical heritage studies, today.

Also available in hardback and paperback printed editions:
Click here to purchase paperback edition priced £30.00.
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Hale and Buck: A Latin Grammar

Hale and Buck: A Latin Grammar

Introduction

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

The Scans

Corrections and bug reports

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

Editorial practices

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

Thursday, July 21, 2016

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

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

Editorial

Dario Piombino-Mascali, Rimantas Jankauskas
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5

Articles

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