Showing posts with label Rome. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rome. Show all posts

Saturday, September 26, 2020

Open Access Journal: Revista Internacional de Derecho Romano

[First posted in AWOL 24 September 2010. Updated 26 September 2020 2018]

Revista Internacional de Derecho Romano
ISSN: 1989-1970
OBJECTIVES

The International Review of Roman Law, created under the auspices of the Ibero-American Association of Roman Law and of the University of Castilla-La Mancha, is focused on accepting research within the ambit of the Roman Law, Romanistic Tradition and Historical-Juridical Sciences, and difussing its results. The aim of Ridrom is to overcome all geographical frontiers and it is open to all like-minded individuals and institutions. The review also covers the activities of the Ibero-American Association, along with any news or information that may be of interest to the Romanistic community.


The RIDROM aspires to become a reference publication within its field. In order to achieve this, the rigour and quality of all contributions will be guaranteed through an evaluation by researchers of accredited claim and prestige.


FORMAT


RIDROM is a periodic scientific publication in electronic format (HTML format). It doesn't have printed edition, although the published articles will also be conserved in paper support.


FREQUENCY OF PUBLICATION


RIDROM is a biannual publication. Editions will be published in the months of April and October respectively.


LANGUAGE


RIDROM will be published in Spanish and English. Nevertheless, it is possible for articles to be published in any other language of considerable scientific diffusion (German, French, Italian, Portuguese). That said, the translation of the article into English, on the part of the author, inevitably facilitates its diffusion and impact considerably.


SECTIONS


RIDROM is divided up into four main sections: summaries, news, view of reviews and links. Under "Summaries", information on the articles of each edition will be given, along with the corresponding abstracts, and shall be divided by articles /file. In the "News" section, forthcoming events, meetings, congresses, seminars, courses, publications, etc., will be detailed. "View of reviews" section will detail information regarding other magazines. Finally, under "Links", we shall provide information on other interesting resources available on-line.

Saturday, September 5, 2020

The National Roman Fabric Reference Collection: a Handbook

The National Roman Fabric Reference Collection: a Handbook

Museum of London Archaeology Service Monograph 2, 1998. First published in Great Britain in 1998 by the Museum of London Archaeology Service.
Roberta Tomber and John Dore, with contributions by John Cooper, Ian Freestone, Sylvia Humphrey and Andrew Middleton, and additional information from Brenda Dickinson, Kay Hartley and Valery Rigby.








Welcome to the on-line version of the National Roman Fabric Reference Collection.
The original project was initiated by English Heritage and was conducted as a collaboration between English Heritage (now Historic England), the Museum of London Specialist Services (now Museum of London Archaeology) and the British Museum. The resulting monograph, Tomber and Dore 1998, The National Roman Fabric Reference Collection: A Handbook, MoLAS Monograph 2, was reprinted in 2002 and is now out of print, but the original text in its entirety, is available on this site. There are a number of small changes between this resource and the printed version, particularly in the thin-section descriptions. In the case of any discrepancies between the two versions, the on-line one should take precedence.
This web site comprises the original macroscopic photographs of fresh sherd breaks that were published in Tomber and Dore 1998. Here they are available at a significantly larger size than was possible to achieve in print and viewed at a width of field of 24 mm. The original photographs and their digitisation was the work of Andy Chopping of Museum of London Archaeology (© Museum of London Archaeology). In addition, the on-line resource has been enhanced by the addition of a thin-section photomicrograph for each fabric. These were taken by Roberta Tomber in the Department of Conservation and Scientific Research (now Department of Scientific Research, © The British Museum) using a Leica DMRX petrological microscope, mostly in cross-polarised light (XPL), although plane-polarised light (PPL) was sometimes used for clarity. In most cases their width of field is 1.74 mm...

Hand specimen picture panel
Thin section picture panel
References
Appendix 1: Keywords and Definitions
Appendix 2: Physical Layout of Sherds Housed in the NRFRC

Friday, August 21, 2020

Open Access Journal: Camenae

[First posted in AWOL 17 February 2010. Updated 21 August 2020]

Camenae
ISSN: 2102-5541








La revue Camenae, créée en 2007 par P. Galand, actuellement dirigée par V. Leroux, se propose de publier en ligne des numéros thématiques consacrés à la philosophie, la littérature et les arts du monde romain antique, à la relation entre ces disciplines et à leur réception au Moyen Âge et à la Renaissance, en latin comme en vernaculaire.
Elle est placée sous les auspices des « Camènes », ces nymphes prophétiques des bois et des sources, bien vite assimilées aux Muses par les Romains et tout aussi familières aux humanistes, pour que ce titre illustre à la fois la latinité, les « nœuds entre les arts » et la translatio imperii et studii, qui sont au cœur de nos préoccupations

Camenae n°25bis - juin 2020 - Masques et coronamasques

Écrits de confinement rassemblés par Virginie Leroux avec la complicité de Max Engammare, Anne-Pascale Pouey-Mounou et Jean Vignes
emblerme-pangolin

Camenae n°25 - mai 2020 - Michel d’Amboise humaniste

Sous la direction de Sandra Provini
camenae-25-image

Camenae n°23 - Mars 2019 - Declamazione e spettacolo nella tarda antichità

Sous la direction d'Eugenio Amato, Paola D'Alessio, Nunzia Pendino et Giampiero Scafoglio
camenae-23-illustration

Camenae n°21 - Avril 2018 - Correction, clarté, élégance : poésie et idéal oratoire (1550-1650)

Actes du colloque des 28-29 mai 2015 (EPHE, PSL) dir. C. Barbafieri, V. Leroux et J.-Y. Vialleton
Camenae 21 Gravure perspictuitas

Camenae n°20 - Décembre 2017 - Généalogie de l'Ode

Actes de la journée d’études du 12 février 2015, Université Paris Diderot, dir. Jean-Pierre De Giorgio et Maxime Pierre
Odes

Camenae n°19 - Décembre 2016 - Savoir-vivre et grossièreté de l'Antiquité à la Renaissance

Actes de la journée d’études d’octobre 2014, Université de Dijon, réunis par Sylvie Laigneau-Fontaine
image-brueghel
camenae-18-britannicus-venise-1520
Série Camenae horatianae n° 4
Carpentras - BM - ms. 0363 fol. 42
Camenae présente tous ses vœux à ses lecteurs pour l’année 2015 !
Camenae 15 wormraum-2
Sous la direction d’Alice Vintenon, Adeline Desbois,  Rachel Darmon et Arnaud Laimé.

Camenae n°13 - octobre 2012 - Horace, l'autre poétique

Actes des journées d’étude du 19 octobre 2010 et du 28 mai 2011 réunis par N. Dauvois
Moralia horaziana-preview-3

Camenae n°11 - avril 2012 - Présence et visages de Venance Fortunat XIVe centenaire

Abbaye Saint-Martin de Ligugé (11-12 décembre 2009) Colloque organisé par François Cassingena-Trévedy
Camenae 11 Fortunat1moymax
Textes édités par Sylvie Labarre.
Camenae 09 Henri IIX456 HiRes web2
Textes édités par Marie-Françoise André (Université de Paris IV) et Mélanie Bost-Fievet (Université de Paris IV-EPHE)
La grande famille
Sous la direction de Nicolas Corréard, Alice Vintenon et Christine Pigné : L’imagination/la fantaisie de l’Antiquité au XVIIe siècle.
Sous la direction de Florent Rouillé : La poésie médiévale entre langues latine et vernaculaire.
Jupiter, Mercure et la Vertu
Sous la direction de Sarah Charbonnier et Mélanie Bost-Fiévet
Giorgione Vénus endormie
Textes édités par Virginie LEROUX (Université de Reims-IUF) et Christine PIGNÉ (Paris)
Chroniques de Bertrand Du Guesclin
Textes rassemblés par Sandra PROVINI (Université de Paris 7) Le présent recueil s’interroge sur la notion d’"héroïque" dans la littérature occidentale mais aussi, selon une perspective plus largement comparatiste, dans d’autres littératures écrites ou orales. En plus des formes traditionnelles telles que l’épopée dans la culture de l’occident, d’autres formes plus courtes se trouvent ainsi interrogées, ainsi que les modes de narration cinématographiques. Ce numéro, sans prétention à l’exhaustivité, assume le choix, qui paraît fécond à ses auteurs, d’objets et d’approches hétérogènes. L’enquête, menée par de jeunes "classicistes" appuyés par des spécialistes chevronnés, espère témoigner de la vitalité des études antiques, médiévales et renaissantes. Le lecteur trouvera ici des articles détaillés qui reflètent des communications prononcées au cours des réunions du groupe de travail de Sandra Provini (Paris 7, 2005-2008), entremêlés de résumés d’interventions ou de travaux plus amples, qui viennent compléter ces articles.
Tenture de l’histoire de Diane
Textes édités par Elsa KAMMERER (Université Charles de Gaulle-Lille 3), Anne-Hélène KLINGER-DOLLÉ (Université Toulouse II-Le Mirail), Anne-Laure METZGER-RAMBACH (Université de Picardie Jules Verne), Agnès PASSOT-MANNOORETONIL (Paris)

Camenae n°1 - janvier 2007 - Philosophie, Rhétorique et Poétique Latines, de l'Antiquité à la Renaissance

Colloque des jeunes chercheurs de l’EA 4081 « Rome et ses renaissances » (juin 2007)

Open Access Journal: dPVS: the Digital Proceedings of the Virgil Society

[First posted in AWOL 18 March 2014, updated 21 August 2020]

dPVS: the Digital Proceedings of the Virgil Society
ISSN: 0968-2112
THE Virgil Society was founded in 1943, and its first President, the poet T.S. Eliot, delivered What is a Classic? as his Presidential Address in the following year. The purpose of the Society was and remains to unite all those who cherish the central educational tradition of Western Europe. Of that tradition Virgil is the symbol. Membership is open to all those who are in sympathy, whether they read Latin or not.

There are normally five or six meetings each year in London, held on Saturday afternoons in Senate House, Malet Street, London WC1E 7HU. 

The speakers include both amateur and professional scholars, many of them Virgilians of international repute. Lectures are followed by refreshments, giving an opportunity to meet the speaker and other members of the Society.

Most lectures are published in full in the Proceedings of the Virgil Society, which also include some reviews of works relevant to Virgil. There is also a Newsletter, which appears twice a year.
Presidential Address, 1948
Virgil Society 1 (1961-1962)

Virgil Society 2 (1962-1963)
Virgil Society 3 (1963-1964)
Virgil Society 4 (1964-1965)
Virgil Society 5 (1965-1966)
Virgil Society 6 (1966-1967)
Virgil Society 7 (1967-1968)
Virgil Society 8 (1968-1969)
Virgil Society 9 (1969-1970)
Virgil Society 10 (1970-1971)
Virgil Society 11 (1971-1972)
Virgil Society 12 (1972-1973)
Virgil Society 13 (1973-1974)
Virgil Society 14 (1974-1975)
Virgil Society 15 (1975-1976)
Virgil Society 16 (1976-1977)
Virgil Society 17 (1978-1979)
Virgil Society 18 (1986-1987)
Virgil Society 19 (1988-1989)
Virgil Society 20 (1991-1992)
Virgil Society 21 (1993-1994)
Virgil Society 22 (1996-1997)
Virgil Society 23 (1998-1999)
Virgil Society 24 (2001-2002)
Virgil Society 25 (2004-2005)
Virgil Society 26 (2008-2009)
Virgil Society 27 (2011-2012)
Virgil Society 28 (2013-2014)
Virgil Society 29 (2017) NEW

Tuesday, July 28, 2020

Open Access Journal: HISTORIKA Studi di storia greca e romana

[First posted in AWOL 29 March 2016, updated 28 July 2020]

HISTORIKA Studi di storia greca e romana
ISSN: 2240-774X
e-ISSN: 2039-4985
http://www.ojs.unito.it/public/journals/1/pageHeaderTitleImage_it_IT.png
Historika è una pubblicazione a periodicità annuale edita dall’Università degli Studi di Torino (Dipartimento di Studi Storici - Storia antica) in collaborazione con la casa editrice universitaria Celid. Nasce per iniziativa dei docenti di storia greca e romana dell’Ateneo torinese: intende proporre al lettore ricerche su “oggetti” storici e storiografici, historika/historica appunto, i quali, segnati nel mondo greco e romano dall’identità linguistica e metodologica di historìa/historia, continuano a suscitare oggi come allora scritti storici, historika grammata.

Historika sperimenta la diffusione on line ad accesso aperto, aderisce alla “Dichiarazione di Berlino” (Open Access to Knowledge in the Sciences and Humanities) e, nell’ambito della ricerca universitaria in storia antica, promuove la comunicazione e il dibattito scientifico nell’età del web: senza rinunciare all’edizione cartacea, diffonde le proprie pubblicazioni nel proprio sito internet e depositandole nei repository e nelle open libraries internazionali, pratica la peer review anonima al fine della valutazione dei testi proposti al comitato scientifico ed editoriale, conserva all’autore la piena proprietà intellettuale del testo pubblicato (con il solo vincolo di citare la pubblicazione su Historika qualora si riproponga il testo, in tutto o in parte, in altra sede), riconosce al lettore il diritto di accedere gratuitamente ai risultati della ricerca scientifica finanziata con risorse pubbliche.

Historika è a disposizione della comunità scientifica internazionale per accogliere contributi innovativi e originali inerenti alla storia antica dal periodo arcaico a quello tardoantico. In particolare sono specifici obiettivi di Historika la storia politica, istituzionale, sociale, economica e culturale, la ricerca epigrafica e il suo contributo alla macro e microstoria, l'uso politico e ideologico del passato greco e romano nelle età postclassiche.
V. 9 (2019)

Pubblicato: 2020-02-04



See AWOL's full List of Open Access Journals in Ancient Studies