Thursday, October 17, 2024

Open Access Journal: CIPEG Journal: Ancient Egyptian & Sudanese Collections and Museums

[First posted in AWOL 22 December 2017, updates 18 October 2024]

CIPEG Journal: Ancient Egyptian & Sudanese Collections and Museums
ISSN: 2522-2678
The Comité international pour l’égyptologie (CIPEG) is one of 30 International Committees of the International Council of Museums (ICOM). The scope of CIPEG embraces the representation of Egyptian and Sudanese collections across the worldwide museums community, and provides a unique forum for museum professionals and scholars who deal with ancient Egyptian and Sudanese heritage.
In 2017, CIPEG inaugurated the CIPEG Journal: Ancient Egyptian & Sudanese Collections and Museums to serve as a platform for the dissemination of information regarding the study, preservation, and presentation of such collections, monuments and sites worldwide. This open access journal promotes communication and collaboration among museums, museum professionals and others involved in ancient Egyptian and Sudanese collections around the world.
Contributions to the CIPEG Journal comprise papers presented at the previous year’s CIPEG Annual Meeting and its associated workshop, and focus either on the conference theme or on general museum work, collections research, conservation treatments, and exhibition planning, as well as archaeological excavations led by museum teams.
2023

2022

Vol. 6 (2022)

CIPEG Journal No. 6 includes papers that were presented at the 2020 and 2021 CIPEG annual meetings, held online on 13-15 November 2020 and 5-7 November 2021. Due to unprecedented obstacles to scholarly research during this period, the CIPEG Journal exceptionally accepted report-style contributions that highlight the innovative and imaginative ways museums responded to challenges presented by the COVID-19 pandemic. 

2021

Offerings to Maat. Essays in Honour of Emily Teeter
No. 5 (2021)

This Festschrift honours Emily Teeter, former curator at the Oriental Institute Museum at the University of Chicago. Colleagues and friends have contributed articles on a range of Egyptological and museological topics, including publications of museum objects, archival research into the history of collecting, and reports of educational and outreach projects in museums and on excavations.

2020

No. 4 (2020)

Contributions published in CIPEG Journal no. 4 were presented at the 2019 CIPEG Annual Meeting, part of the 25th ICOM General Conference held on 2–7 September in Kyoto, Japan. Papers were invited on the theme ‘The Future of Traditions: Paving the Way for Egyptian Collections Tomorrow’ as well as general museum work.  Additional contributions presented at the CIPEG International Symposium: Egyptological Research in Museums and Beyond, held on 10 September at the Tokyo National Research Institute for Cultural Properties, are included. Other articles related to ancient Egyptian and Sudanese collections and museums but not associated with the annual meeting and international symposium are also featured in the volume.

2019

No. 3 (2019)

The 2018 CIPEG Annual Meeting was held on 4–7 September at The Egypt Centre/Y Ganolfan Eifftaidd, Swansea University, UK. Contributions published in CIPEG Journal no. 3 are papers presented either on the theme ‘Beating Barriers! Overcoming Obstacles to Achievement’ or related to general museum work. Other articles related to ancient Egyptian and Sudanese collections and museums but not associated with the annual meeting are also featured in the volume.

 

2018

No. 2 (2018)

Many of the contributions published in CIPEG Journal NO. 2 were presented at the 2017 CIPEG Annual Meeting held at the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago in Chicago, Illinois (USA) on 6-8 September. Papers were invited on the theme ‘The Role of Curators in Museum Research and Exhibits: Tradition, Change, and Looking to the Future’ or general museum work. Other articles related to ancient Egyptian and Sudanese collections and museums but not associated with the annual meeting are also featured in the volume. (2017).

2017

No. 1 (2017)

In 2016, CIPEG held its annual meeting in Milan, Italy, as part of the 24th ICOM General Conference held on 4–7 July. Papers were invited on the theme ‘Egyptological Landscapes: Museums, Libraries, Historical Palaces and Archives’. CIPEG also held a post-conference workshop from 10–12 July at the Museo Civico Archeologico in Bologna, this time with a focus on ‘Egyptological Landscapes: Museums, Resources and Networks among Collections and Institutions’. A selection of papers on these themes, as well as contributions on broader matters of collection research, conservation, exhibitions, and archaeological excavations presented in Milan and Bologna are published here in CIPEG Journal No. 1 (2017).

Epigraphische Datenbank zum antiken Kleinasien - Epigraphic database for ancient Asia Minor

 [First posted in AWOL 6 December 2010, updated 17 October 2024]

Epigraphische Datenbank zum antiken Kleinasien - Epigraphic database for ancient Asia Minor








Das EDAK-Projekt der Hamburger Alten Geschichte hat das Ziel, die verstreut publizierten griechischen wie lateinischen Inschriften aus dem Gebiet der heutigen Türkei in einer Datenbank zu erfassen und mittels Kommentar und Beschreibung auch inhaltlich zu erschließen. Derzeit sind über 6000 Einträge zu den Inschriften von Lydien, Galatien, Paphlagonien, Phrygien und Proseilemmene recherchierbar, die stetig durch weitere aus anderen Regionen Kleinasiens ergänzt werden.
Nach einer technischen Überarbeitung der Datenbank im Zuge einer universitären Nachhaltigkeitsinitiative, wurde diese den modernen Suchstandards angepasst und um diverse Funktionen erweitert. Näheres dazu finden Sie unter Erweiterungen seit 2015.
Für die technische Realisierung möchten wir uns recht herzlich bei Dr. Hagen Peukert bedanken, der sich selbst von technik-aversen Vorstellungen nicht hat abschrecken lassen und stets bemüht ist, den Anforderungen epigraphischer Forschung mit der passenden digitalen Umsetzung zu begegnen. 
Aktuelles:
Da sich die Website im Umbau befindet, kann es zu Einschränkungen mancher Funktionen kommen.
Derzeit werden die Datensätze in den aktuellen TEI/EpiDoc-Standard transformiert.
[Stand: November 2020]

 

Epigraphic database of ancient Asia Minor

Description

This is a beta version of the EDAK (Epigraphische Datenbank zum Antiken Kleinasien).

The project of the Department for Ancient History at the University of Hamburg aims to collect the widespread published Greek and Latin inscriptions of the regions of modern Turkey and to present them in a database with a short description and a commentary. Currently, the dataset contains inscriptions of ancient Lydia, Galatia, Paphlagonia, Phrygia, and Proseilemmene. TEI/EpiDoc is used as the standard for describing inscription data.

The beta version still has functional errors and only shows an excerpt from the entire data set of inscriptions to present the basic technical functions of the new search interface, which is developed and continuously optimized by Research Field F (Data Linking).

Files

edak.csmc

Reconstruire Rome : la restauration comme politique urbaine, de l'Antiquité à nos jours

Sous la direction de Bruno Bonomo, Charles Davoine et Cécile Troadec

 Reconstruire Rome : la restauration comme politique urbaine, de l'Antiquité à nos jours

Partout dans Rome, les monuments sont couverts d’inscriptions, antiques ou modernes, qui ne rapportent pas uniquement le nom de leur constructeur, mais célèbrent leur restauration. Les empereurs romains, les dirigeants de la Commune au xiie siècle, les papes de la Renaissance ou encore Mussolini au xxe siècle se sont souvent présentés comme les protecteurs d’un patrimoine ancien et ont fait de la restauration urbaine l’un des fondements de leur légitimité, quand bien même ils modernisaient la ville. En effet, toute l’histoire de l’urbanisme romain peut être interrogée sous l’angle du lien qui unit reconstruction matérielle de la ville, identité romaine et restauration d’un ordre politique. Cet ouvrage collectif réunit ainsi seize contributions d’historien·ne·s, archéologues, spécialistes de la littérature latine et historien·ne·s de l’art, qui mettent en lumière l’impératif politique de la restauration à différentes époques et différentes échelles, du monument ou du quartier à l’espace urbain dans son ensemble. De l’Antiquité aux premières années du xxie siècle, les notions de restauration ou de reconstruction ont été à la fois un moteur de l’urbanisme romain, un programme politique des pouvoirs publics et un idéal partagé ou contesté par les différents acteurs de la ville.


Le texte seul est utilisable sous licence Licence OpenEdition Books 

Éditeur : Publications de l’École française de Rome

Lieu d’édition : Rome

Publication sur OpenEdition Books : 27 août 2024

ISBN numérique : 978-2-7283-1814-8

DOI : 10.4000/127a5 

Collection : Collection de l'École française de Rome | 616

Année d’édition : 2024

ISBN (Édition imprimée) : 978-2-7283-1813-1

Nombre de pages : 510


Highlights from the NINO Collections: The Netherlands Institute for the Near East presents selected objects from its collections and archives

Highlights from the NINO Collections: The Netherlands Institute for the Near East presents selected objects from its collections and archives 

ISBN 13: 978-90-6258-249-5

This booklet aims to give a brief introduction to NINO’s rich and diverse collections and archives, and to show their value and potential. They do not only document the history of the Netherlands Institute for the Near East and the many persons involved in various ways, but also capture the formative period of the academic fields of ancient Near Eastern archaeology, Egyptology and Assyriology in the Netherlands in word and image. 31 items from NINO’s collections and archives are highlighted.

Presented at the opening of Leiden University’s new Herta Mohr building, the booklet is available in Open Access and as a printed publication (limited edition).

Wednesday, October 16, 2024

Aspects de la vie économique de la province de Scythie

Opait, A. (1996) : Aspecte ale vieții economice din provincia Scythia (secolele IV-VI p.Ch.). Producția ceramicii locale și de import [Aspects de la vie économique de la province de Scythie (IV-VI siècles après JC). Production de céramiques locales et importées]

Après s’être intéressé aux conditions de production, l’auteur retrace l’évolution des différentes catégories céramiques produites et identifiées dans différents sites de Dobroudja. Il aborde rapidement les importations.

Une version en anglais légèrement enrichie a été publiée en anglai : Local and imported ceramics in the Roman province of Scythia (4th-6th centuries AD)

Long résumé en anglais de 57 p.

62 planches en noir et blanc

L’ouvrage en ligne : https://biblioteca-digitala.ro/?pub=2553-aspecte-ale-vietii-economice-din-provincia-scythia-secolele-iv-vi-p-ch-productia-ceramicii-locale-si-de-import-institutul-roman-de-tracologie


 

Concilium Universale Ephesenum. Band 1: Von den Anfängen der nestorianischen Streitigkeiten bis zur Einberufung des Konzils

Edited by: Wolfram Kinzig and Thomas Brüggeman
In collaboration with: Julia Catharina Beier  
Compiled by: Sabine Lütkemeyer 
book: Concilium Universale Ephesenum
Part of the multi-volume work Acta conciliorum oecumenicorum > Translationes

 The Council of Ephesus (431) was summoned to clarify whether describing Mary, the mother of Jesus, as the "God-bearer" could be reconciled with the true faith. Its history has been documented in numerous records. This volume is the first in a series aiming to translate these documents into modern language for the first time and to provide a detailed commentary on them.

eBook
  • Published: October 21, 2024
  • ISBN: 9783111340401
Hardcover
  • Published: October 21, 2024
  • ISBN: 9783111339931