Showing posts with label Late Antiquity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Late Antiquity. Show all posts

Friday, May 11, 2018

Open Accces Journal: Studia academica Šumenensia

Studia academica Šumenensia
ISSN 2367-5446












The main purpose of this periodical is to allow various topics of the history and archaeology of the Balkans and South– Eastern Europe which are quite often highly controversial to be discussed by the broader scholarly of the region. This is why the SAŠ is published entirely in international languages – English, German, French, Italian, Russian and Spanish. In order to broaden the range of the discussion, an interdisciplinary approach will be employed and historians, archaeologists, classicists, epigraphists etc. will be invited and most welcomed.
Volume 1: THE EMPIRE AND BARBARIANS IN SOUTH-EASTERN EUROPE IN LATE ANTIQUITY AND EARLY MIDDLE AGES, edited by Stoyan Vitlyanov and Ivo Topalilov.
Volume 2: Christianity in Southeastern Europe  (Civilizational and Political Perspective)
Volume 3: Transition from Late Paganism to Early Christianity in the Architecture and Art in the Balkans 
Volume 3 PhD Supplementum

Monday, April 23, 2018

Newly Open Access Journal: Scrinium: Journal of Patrology and Critical Hagiography

Scrinium: Journal of Patrology and Critical Hagiography
ISSN: 1817-7530 
E-ISSN: 1817-7565
NEW! NOW PUBLISHED IN OPEN ACCESS. For the years 2018-2020 all articles in Scrinium are published as full open access articles. There are no submission charges and no Article Processing Charges as these are fully funded by institutions through Knowledge Unlatched, resulting in no direct charge to authors. 
 
Scrinium: Journal of Patrology and Critical Hagiography, established in 2005, is an international scholarly periodical devoted to patristics, critical hagiography, and Church history. Its scope is the ancient and medieval Christian Church worldwide, but especially Eastern / Oriental Christianity and Christian Origins. Each volume is focused on a specific subject (covering no less than 60% of the whole volume) formulated in the individual title of each volume.