Saturday, April 27, 2024

Open Access Journal: Histos: The On-line Journal of Ancient Historiography

[First posted in AWOL 24 September 2010. Updated 27 April 2024]

 
Histos: The On-line Journal of Ancient Historiography
ISSN: 2046-5963

http://research.ncl.ac.uk/histos/element_HistosLogo.gif
Histos, the on-line journal of ancient historiography, was founded in 1996 by John Moles, then of the University of Durham, who was also its Editor, supported by an Editorial Board of scholars from the UK and North America. Four issues appeared from 1997 to 2000, and many of the articles that appeared during those years have since become standard works in the study of ancient historiography. The website for Histos was hosted by the University of Durham from 1996 to 2011.

In 2010 a decision was made to re-start Histos, under the editorship of John Moles, now of the University of Newcastle, and with the addition of John Marincola, of Florida State University, as co-editor. The new site, now hosted by the University of Newcastle, was launched in June 2011, and the earlier material from volumes 1 to 4 was transferred to the new site, the older contributions having been converted from HTML format to PDF.

The brief of HISTOS is rapid publication of high-quality articles and notes on all aspects of ancient historiography and biography (including Jewish historiography, the Gospels and later Christian material) and of in-depth reviews of recent publications in the field. It is not our intention to publish material which is per se historical, unless it illuminates the qualities of ancient historians or biographers (this will be a matter of balance and judgment). All submissions will be anonymously refereed by experts. We aim for a turn-around time of a maximum of three months. We will publish in English, French, German and Italian.

HISTOS will be available both online, in a full open-access version (in PDF form), and in a printed version. All the papers accepted for publication will appear in both formats. Readers' responses are welcomed. 
Current Articles
Working Papers

HISTOS 17 (2023)

 

 

 

ELLEN O’GORMAN, Embedded Speech and the Embodied Speaker in Roman Historiography, April 2023

 

CHRISTOPHER B. KREBS, ‘It’s Caesar [Kaiser/Tsar], Not Mr. King.’ (Mis)understanding a Caesarian Pun (Suet. Iul. 79.2) and Its Ironies, April 2023

 

ASKE DAMTOFT POULSEN, Conflicting Reports? Augustus’ Relationship with the Senate and Established Order During His Road to Power in Res Gestae, Velleius Paterculus, Suetonius, and Tacitus, June 2023

 

JACK W. G. SCHROPP, Was There Dual Authorship in Greek Historiography? A Critical Overview of the Epigraphic and Literary Evidence from Aristotle to Pamphile of Epidaurus, July 2023

 

IVAN MATIJAŠIĆ, Enoch Powell’s The History of Herodotus and Three Letters from Felix Jacoby: A Rude Preface, Nazi Germany, and Antisemitism, August 2023

 

VASILEIOS LIOTSAKIS, The Multifunctionality of Source Citations and Indirect Speech in Arrian’s Anabasis of Alexander, December 2023

 

ROBERT PARKER, The Historian Dionysius of Halicarnassus and the Gods, December 2023

 

A. J. WOODMAN, Quintilian on Sallust and Livy, December 2023

 

LUCA BELTRAMINI, Le conseguenze della vittoria. Scipione e la riflessione sull’imperialismo romano in Livio, December 2023

 

GABRIELE BRUSA, Diverging Traditions on Marcellus’ Sicilian Campaign (214–211 BC): Livy, Cicero, Plutarch, and Appian on Marcellus’ Fides and Humanity, December 2023

 

MATTEO BARBATO, Political Conflict in Diodorus Siculus: The Χαριέστατοι and the Historian’s Moral Agenda, December 2023

 

 

HISTOS 16 (2022)

HISTOS 15 (2021)

HISTOS 14 (2020)

HISTOS 13 (2019)

HISTOS 12 (2018)

HISTOS 11 (2017)

HISTOS 10 (2016)

HISTOS 9 (2015)

HISTOS 8 (2014)

HISTOS 7 (2013)

HISTOS 6 (2012)

HISTOS 5 (2011)

HISTOS 4 (2000)

HISTOS 3 (1999)

HISTOS 2 (1998)

HISTOS 1 (1997)

  



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