Monday, June 8, 2026

Open Access Journal: The Corvus Journal of Classics and Ancient History

januaty[First posted in AWOL 4 February 2019, updated (new URLs) 8 June 2026]

The Corvus Journal of Classics and Ancient History
ISSN: 2369-9086 (Print)
ISSN: 2369-9094 (Online)

Corvus, now in its twelfth year of publication, is an undergraduate level journal that allows students to come together to produce a highly professional undergraduate journal.  Being completely student run, funded, edited, and overseen, the journal of the Carleton University Classics Society strives to improve with each passing year, while continuing to offer new insight into the realm of the Classics.

The hard work of our students pays offs each year with our annual publication of Corvus and its quality continues to be challenged and improved.

The journal is produced annually, and is managed completely by undergraduate student

       

      Nouveaux monuments épigraphiques de Scythie mineure

      Aricescu, A., V. Barbu, N. Gostar, Gh. Poenaru-Bordea et A. Radulescu (1964) : Noi monumente epigrafice din Scythia Minor, Constanta [Nouveaux monuments épigraphiques de Scythie mineure].

      Ce petit volume rassemble 8 articles consacrés à une centaine d’inscriptions grecques et latines de Dobroudja.

      Chaque inscription est illustré et brièvement commentée.

      Résumé en russe et en français.

      Le livre en ligne : https://biblioteca-digitala.ro/?pub=10130-noi-monumente-epigrafice-din-scythia-minor

      Expressions of Opposition to the Roman Empire: Proceedings of the Sixteenth Workshop of the International Network Impact of Empire (Sevilla, May 22-25, 2024)

      Cover Expressions of Opposition to the Roman Empire  
      Impact of Empire, Volume: 52

      The Roman Empire was shaped and consolidated by pro-Roman and imperialistic discourses, but also by the words and actions of its enemies and critics. Discourses and actions of opposition to Rome had an impact on how Rome was conceived and forced the Empire to react. Repressing them was one response, but other reactions were also possible. In that sense, the very enunciation of Rome and its Empire as 'enemy', or the selection of certain features of the empire against which opposition was exercised, can be interpreted as a way of shaping or consolidating the empire.