Tuesday, September 17, 2024

A History of the Congress of Roman Frontier Studies 1949-2024

book cover 

In 1949, in the aftermath of a devastating war, Eric Birley organised the First Congress of Roman Frontier Studies. His aim was not only to pursue the study of Roman frontiers but also to take a step towards restoring harmony in international relations within this field of research. The pattern was set early on: the exchange of information, networking and friendship. These three elements remain at the core of the approach of those organising and attending the Congress. They are reinforced by the pattern of the meetings, usually held every three years. The programme includes not only lectures but also visits to the local Roman military sites led by appropriate specialists.

Over the 75 years since the First Congress, membership has grown enormously with more lecture theatres and more coaches being required every meeting. This publication marks the twenty-sixth Congress at Batumi in Georgia. It aims to help newer members understand the body they have joined; for those who have been attending for longer, it will be a reminder of friendships made and strengthened; for all, the book hopes to be a spur to continuing investigations and research into Rome’s greatest monument, its frontiers; for the moment of publication, it will be a celebration of the twenty-sixth Congress of Roman Frontier Studies.

H 174 x W 245 mm

206 pages

169 figures (colour throughout)

Published Sep 2024

Archaeopress Archaeology

ISBN

Paperback: 9781803278179

Digital: 9781803278186

DOI 10.32028/9781803278179

Preface

Introduction

The Sixth International Congress of Archaeology, Berlin 1939

The First Congress, Newcastle, England, UK 1949

The Second Congress, Carnuntum, Austria 1955

The Third Congress, Rheinfelden/Basel, Switzerland 1957

The Fourth Congress, Durham, England, UK 1959

The Fifth Congress, former Yugoslavia 1961

The Sixth Congress, Arnoldshain, Germany 1964

The Seventh Congress, Tel Aviv, Israel 1967

The Eighth Congress, Cardiff, Wales, UK 1969

The Ninth Congress, Mamaïa, Romania 1972

The Tenth Congress, Xanten and Nijmegen, Germany and the Netherlands 1974

The Eleventh Congress, Székesfehérvár, Hungary 1976

The Twelfth Congress, Stirling, Scotland, UK 1979

The Thirteenth Congress, Aalen, Germany 1983

The Fourteenth Congress, Carnuntum, Austria 1986

The Fifteenth Congress, Canterbury, England (UK) 1989

The Sixteenth Congress, Rolduc Abbey, Kerkrade, the Netherlands 1995

The Seventeenth Congress, Zalău, Romania 1997

The Eighteenth Congress, Amman, Jordan 2000

The Nineteenth Congress, Pécs, Hungary 2003

The Twentieth Congress, León, Spain 2006

The Twenty-First Congress, Newcastle, England (UK) 2009

The Twenty-second Congress, Ruse, Bulgaria 2012

The Twenty-third Congress, Ingolstadt, Germany 2015

The Twenty-fourth Congress, Viminacium, Serbia 2018

The Twenty-fifth Congress, Nijmegen, the Netherlands 2022

Reflections on the Congress
The structure of the Congress meetings
International influences
The cycle of meetings
The location of Congresses
Planning a Congress
Special features

The Frontiers of the Roman Empire World Heritage property

Further reading

Appendix: The frontiers of the Roman Empire multi-language books

Acknowledgements

 

 

 

Frontiers of the Roman Empire: The Roman Frontier in Georgia - რომის იმპერიის საზღვრები: რომაული სასაზღვრო ხაზი საქართველოში

book cover

 From the times of Pompeius Magnus to the period of the Persian Wars of Justinian I the Great, Roman military expeditions passed through Colchis and Iberia many times. However, the Roman Empire never permanently conquered the territory of Georgia. For this reason, diplomatic relations were also maintained with the local rulers, especially the kings of Iberia. The first centuries AD were a time of intense cultural exchange (through diplomacy and trade) between the southern Caucasus and the eastern provinces of the Roman Empire. Traces of these relations include valuable artefacts, found in elite burials and deposits, which we can see today in the Batumi Archaeological Museum, among others. This is no coincidence, as local communities living on the Black Sea coast from Trebizond to the Caucasus had particularly close relations with the Romans. These areas were also home to garrisons subordinate to the governor of the Roman province of Cappadocia.

H 248 x W 185 mm

96 pages

Illustrated in full colour throughout

Published Sep 2024

Archaeopress Archaeology

ISBN

Paperback: 9781803277530

Digital: 9781803277547

DOI 10.32028/9781803277530

Foreword by Zaur Akhvlediani and Alojzy Z. Nowak


FRONTIERS OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE

Common cultural heritage of the Roman Empire

The Roman Empire

Frontiers and trade

The ‘Frontiers of the Roman Empire’ World Heritage Site

The definition of a World Heritage Site

The task ahead

History and extent of frontiers

Rome’s foreign policy

The location of frontiers

The army and frontiers

The purpose of frontiers

Soldiers and civilians

Military administration

Research on Roman frontiers

Inscriptions and documents

Survey and excavation

Aerial survey and remote sensing

Protection and presentation of frontiers

Future perspectives


THE ROMAN FRONTIER IN GEORGIA

Introduction

Location and natural conditions

Travellers and the first archaeologists

Historical background

The Roman garrison of Georgia

Life on the Limes

The native tribes

The Boranoi, hoards of Roman coins and the golden treasure from Gonio

The first Christians on the Roman borderland in Colchis

Where to see the military remains / Preservation of historical monuments and tourism

Cultural heritage in danger

Further reading

Illustration acknowledgements

 

 

How to Read Ancient Texts: With a Focus on Select Phoenician Inscriptions from Malta

book cover

How to Read Ancient Texts foregrounds the principles of interpretation that scholars employ when reading ancient inscriptions. In order to better come to grips with Canaanite, such as Phoenician, inscriptions, we need to first understand how people wrote and read texts in the ancient Mediterranean world, including that of the Greeks and Romans. The use of continual script and lack of punctuation did not pose insurmountable problems to the ancients, since spoken language is not built on a division between words but on two-second spurts of sounds with pauses in between. This shows the crucial role that lectors and consequently orality played in antiquity. It is clear that philological analysis is crucial when it comes to reading Phoenician inscriptions, such as those examined here. However, in texts with no word division, no punctuation, and no vowels (such as Phoenician inscriptions), context plays a crucial role. That context turns out to be threefold: the textual context that an inscription itself provides, its archaeological context, and also (as in the case of the papyrus inscription examined as a case study here) the wider Mediterranean context, such as that of ancient Egypt. In the case of the Phoenician inscription CIS I, 123 it is the archaeological context that allows us to pin down one highly probable interpretation out of multiple philological solutions that are theoretically possible. The Phoenician inscriptions examined here show us more clearly and with greater probability that the Phoenicians in Malta did practice child sacrifice and that they also had very strong links with the Phoenicians in Egypt.

H 245 x W 174 mm

140 pages

7 Figures

Published Sep 2024

Archaeopress Archaeology

ISBN

Paperback: 9781803278278

Digital: 9781803278285

DOI 10.32028/9781803278278

Contents

Preface


Chapter 1. Introduction


Chapter 2. The Phoenicians: Who are They?


Chapter 3. The Hallmarks of Writing and Reading in Antiquity: Prose and Verse


Chapter 4. Verse in the Levant: Classical Hebrew


Chapter 5. Basic Principles of Interpretation: General and Phoenician-Specific


Chapter 6. Context as the Indispensable Criterion of Interpretation: The Case of CIS I, 123 and 123 bis

Stela of Milk-Ba‘al

Stela of an offering instead of an infant

Stela of a sacrifice consisting of an infant

Stela of a sacrifice of a lord

Stela of a (human) sacrifice of one making (it)

Stela of a sacrifice to Ba‘al (literally ‘of a sacrifice of Ba‘al’)

Stela of one sacrificed to Ba‘al (literally ‘of a sacrificed one of Ba‘al’)


Chapter 7. Reading and Interpreting Phoenician Verse: The Tal-Virtù Papyrus


Chapter 8. Conclusions


Bibliography


Index

 

 

 

Alle origini della minuscola libraria greca (PDF): I. Pratiche di scrittura e produzione libraria nel monachesimo studita: II. Catalogo dei manoscritti

Alle origini della minuscola libraria greca (PDF) 

Accesso Open AccessQuesta opera è in Open Access

Licenza: CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 International

La presente opera, in due volumi, fa il punto sulle pratiche di scrittura e la produzione libraria fiorite attorno al monastero costantinopolitano del Prodromo di Stoudios dall’epoca del suo più celebre egumeno, Teodoro Studita, fino agli inizi del secolo X. Nel primo volume, alla definizione dello stato dell’arte sul tema fa seguito l’analisi delle fonti letterarie sul monastero e sulle sue attività, su Teodoro, su Platone di Sakkoudion e sugli altri monaci della comunità studita, presentandone alcune sinora inedite o poco note alla critica. Una nuova analisi paleografica e codicologica dei manoscritti tradizionalmente considerati studiti conduce alla ricostruzione di un ambiente dalle molteplici sfaccettature e caratterizzato dall’assenza di quegli aspetti normalmente individuati come caratteristici degli scriptoria, quali l’omogeneità nella scelta di soluzioni grafiche, materiali e decorative, e l’adesione a modelli dettati da una guida precisa. Il secondo volume raccoglie le schede catalografiche dei codici presi in esame.

Due volumi indivisibili

Dettagli supporto

Supporto digitale (download)

Pagine I vol. xvi-252; II vol. viii-304 (40 tavv.)

ISBN 9788893598019

Anno 2024

DOI 10.57601/TT_231

Numero in collana 231

 

 

Monday, September 16, 2024

Connecting Late Antiquities

Connecting Late Antiquities is a collaborative project to create open, digital prosopographical resources for the Roman and post-Roman territories between the third and seventh centuries AD. Its main aim is to digitise, unite and link existing resources to make them more accessible and enhance their reach and utility. The enterprise will dramatically improve access to information about late-antique people for all scholars of this period and allow the easy integration of prosopographical material with online geographical, textual, epigraphic and papyrological resources. 

The need for a late-antique prosopography has long been recognised, with Theodor Mommsen planning such a project after the completion of the Prosopographia Imperii Romani. In the second half of the twentieth century, the Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire and the ongoing Prosopographie chrétienne du Bas-Empire have done much to realise this aim, although no electronic version is available for either of these invaluable reference works. 

Technological developments have provided new opportunities for prosopography, including allowing for both constant updating and an expansion beyond the traditional focus on the higher echelons of society. The Prosopography of the Byzantine Empire and Prosopography of the Byzantine World projects provide excellent examples of the greater possibilities allowed by this approach. Connecting Late Antiquities will draw together material from a variety of major printed prosopographies and specialist digital databases, as well as incorporating entries for 'non-elite' individuals who are attested in ancient sources, but have not been included in earlier publications. This approach will allow more extensive research into understudied figures and their social connections. 

The initial stage of the project is commencing in February 2023 with two years of funding from the UK’s Arts and Humanities Research Council and Germany’s Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft. This has three main aims:

  • The digitisation of the Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire, with permission from Cambridge University Press. This three-volume reference work is being updated with addenda and corrigenda and will be transformed into a searchable online resource, complete with internal cross-references and the marking up of places, dates and other personal names, as well as textual, epigraphic and papyrological sources. The Digital Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire will be made openly available on the Cambridge Core platform and will be a very useful resource for scholars in its own right, as well as providing the foundation for our larger project. 

  • The creation of our central Connecting Late Antiquities resource, incorporating material from the Digital Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire and new entries produced by our case studies, as well as linking to information from other digital research projects. This will expand the project's scope and utility and demonstrate the potential of its innovative linked open data methodology, while also increasing the visibility of the linked resources themselves, breathing new life into the digital outputs of completed projects. 

  • The completion of two case studies that demonstrate the utility of these resources for challenging the existing limitations of prosopographical scholarship and advancing our understanding of late antiquity: the first, on North Africa, will explore the interconnectedness of the so-called ‘religious’ and ‘secular’ spheres, an artificial separation currently encouraged by the division of the Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire and the Prosopographie chrétienne du Bas-Empire into discrete projects. This research will reveal the workings of elite networks and how they altered when their members entered the Church, as well as demonstrating the wider intellectual potential of reintegrating two halves of an originally unified prosopographical project. The second case study, on Britain, will expand beyond the coverage of Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire to incorporate material concerning other attested figures from late-antique Britain, including clerics and soldiers. 

Participants

The project involves a large number of participants and collaborators, including an Advisory Board and Consultative Committee made up of experts in late-antique prosopography and Digital Humanities, as well as representatives of a range of other relevant projects and online resources. The current AHRC-DFG funded stage is led by a core team at Exeter, London and Bonn: 

We are very keen to welcome other collaborators into the project, including scholars who are working on related projects which could be linked to ours. If you are interested in working with us, please contact Richard Flower.

 

 

Open Access Journal: Revista de estudios latinos

[First posted in AWOL 6 October 2010. Updated 16 September 2024]

Revista de estudios latinos
ISSN: 1578-7486
e-ISSN: 2255-5056
http://www.relat.org/relat/public/journals/1/pageHeaderTitleImage_es_ES.gif
Publicación anual de la Sociedad de Estudios Latinos 
La Revista de Estudios Latinos (RELat) está destinada a recoger aportaciones científicas rigurosamente originales e inéditas en cualquier ámbito de la Filología Latina y de las disciplinas relacionadas con ella. Consta de tres secciones: Artículos científicos, Informes sobre didáctica y nuevas tecnologías y Reseñas.
Presentación de originales y procedimientos de evaluación y selección: los originales remitidos para su publicación se atendrán a las pautas que se detallan en las Directrices de presentación y evaluación de originales y se ajustarán a las Normas de edición de la RELat. Serán objeto de dos informes técnicos de evaluación confidenciales realizados por expertos externos como requisito para su admisión, en su caso, por parte del Consejo Editorial.
Todos los contenidos de la revista están disponibles y son de libre acceso en esta página web de la RELat, salvo el último número publicado, del cual se ofrece el índice y los resúmenes de los artículos.

Número actual

Vol. 23 (2023)

Ultimo número publicado

Publicado: 2023-12-13

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Informes sobre Innovación docente y Nuevas Tecnologías

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Open Access Journal: MELA Notes The Journal of the Middle East Librarians Association

[First posted in AWOL 5 November 2009. Updated 16 September 2024]

MELA Notes: The Journal of the Middle East Librarians Association
ISSN 0364-2410


The Middle East Librarians Association begins to publish MELA Notes as part of its reason for being. If this publication will continue to be read it is because we now encourage you to recall us to our purposes by your contributions and notices, and because you heartily do so. Our gratitude to the Officers and other lead-off writers. Suffice the Editor’s fingerprints to be his faithful signature.
We “People of the Book” have special and professional ties with the civilizations of the Middle East especially since the rise of Islam. The many streams of consciousness of which we are a part long ago interested the rest of the international community, so we gather the books and make bibliophiles! Our imperial languages of past and recent history mellow as they bend to the task of interpretation and cooperation. Herewith please read our stated objectives:
It shall be the purpose of the Middle East Librarians Association to facilitate communication among Members through meetings and publications; to improve the quality of area librarianship through the development of standards for the profession and education of Middle East library specialists; to compile and disseminate information concerning Middle East libraries and collections and represent the judgment of the Members in matters affecting them; to encourage cooperation among Members and Middle East libraries, especially in the acquisition of materials and the development of bibliographic controls; to cooperate with other library and area organizations in projects of mutual concern and benefit; to promote research in and development of indexing and automated techniques as applied to Middle East materials.
James W. Pollock (Indiana University Library, Bloomington) — Editor, MELA Notes, in the first number (Fall 1973).