Saturday, May 2, 2026

Giuseppe Tucci: Une biographie

Reconnu comme l’un des orientalistes les plus éminents de son temps, Giuseppe Tucci a marqué le xxe siècle par ses recherches théoriques approfondies et ses talents d’organisateur. Fondateur de l’Institut italien pour le Moyen et l’Extrême-Orient, il a mené de nombreuses expéditions à travers l’Asie, contribuant à définir les cadres de la recherche en indologie et tibétologie.

À partir d’une documentation en grande partie inédite, cet ouvrage retrace son parcours biographique et intellectuel, tout en le replaçant dans le contexte particulier de l’Italie du xxe siècle – marqué, entre autres, par l’engagement controversé de nombreux intellectuels auprès du régime fasciste.

En questionnant avec finesse l’histoire de l’orientalisme et les enjeux de l’engagement des intellectuels durant des périodes tumultueuses, cette monographie redonne à Giuseppe Tucci l’importance qu’il mérite dans l’histoire de la culture italienne du xxe siècle.


Le texte seul est utilisable sous licence Licence OpenEdition Books  Les autres éléments (illustrations, fichiers annexes importés) sont « Tous droits réservés », sauf mention contraire.

Éditeur : Presses de l’Inalco

Lieu d’édition : Paris

Publication sur OpenEdition Books : 10 octobre 2025

ISBN numérique : 978-2-85831-472-0

DOI : 10.4000/14w4b  

Collection : AsieS

Année d’édition : 2025

ISBN (Édition imprimée) : 978-2-85831-471-3

Nombre de pages : 452

 


 

Les lois barbares: Dire le droit et le pouvoir en Occident après la disparition de l’Empire romain

Enfants de Rome, les royaumes dits barbares ou post-romains le sont assurément, tout comme leurs lois. Cependant, en ce qui concerne le droit comme le reste, on sut élaborer des structures et des idées nouvelles dans cette période souvent considérée comme un moment fondateur pour l’Europe. Rédigées entre la fin du ve et le début du ixe siècle, les « lois barbares » traduisent en effet la volonté des souverains d’affirmer leur autorité et de forger une identité pour les nouvelles entités politiques succédant à l’Empire romain en Occident.

Tout en présentant les importants changements qui ont caractérisé l’étude des lois ces dernières années (de l’étude de la structure de leurs manuscrits aux réflexions sur le pluralisme juridique), l’ouvrage offre une synthèse claire sur les liens que celles-ci entretiennent avec les mécanismes du pouvoir et le fonctionnement de la société au début du Moyen Âge. Il fournit par ailleurs un guide qui vise à faciliter l’accès à toutes les ressources heuristiques et bibliographiques qui ont fait de l’étude sur les lois barbares, le champ le plus novateur des études sur le haut Moyen Âge.


Éditeur : Presses universitaires de Rennes

Lieu d’édition : Rennes

Publication sur OpenEdition Books : 3 décembre 2025

ISBN numérique : 979-10-413-0999-3

DOI : 10.4000/159ol 

Collection : Histoire

Année d’édition : 2025

ISBN (Édition imprimée) : 979-10-413-0666-4

Nombre de pages : 322

 



Metis: ASCSA Archaeological Platform

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Metis: the ASCSA Archaeological Platform brings together the digital archives of the Corinth Excavations in a single searchable interface, which includes a GIS base map. All resources are made available free of charge for teaching and research purposes.

https://metis.ascsa.edu.gr/

Some material is password protected, including excavations at the Sanctuary of Demeter and Kore, the Gymnasium, and East of Theater. Unpublished material outside of these projects is open to the public.

Digitization and Funding

Large portions of the collection were first digitized in 2007, co-funded by the Office of Regional Development of the European Union and the Greek State through the Operational Program "Information Society" of the 3rd Community Support Framework, with additional support from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. In 2009 the Samuel H. Kress Foundation generously funded the cataloging of our Numismatic Study Collection. More recently in 2025, over 200,000 additional items were digitized through the Operational Program "Digital Transformation" of the NSRF 2021–2027, co-funded by the European Union and the Greek State.

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Archaeologies of the Roman Mediterranean: Papers Presented in Honour of Professor Simon Keay

book cover  

British School at Rome Archaeology

Professor Simon Keay had a long and industrious career in Roman Archaeology. Following completion of a PhD at UCL specialising in Roman amphorae, his career included fieldwork at major archaeological sites in Spain and Italy culminating in the Portuslimen project, bringing together colleagues from across the Mediterranean to study the ports and trade networks of the Roman Empire. His research meant close involvement with the British School at Rome, as well as the Catalan Institute of Classical Archaeology and colleagues at the site of Italica, Andalusia among many others. Simon’s contribution to the discipline of Roman Archaeology was immense, and his energy and mentorship influenced scholars from many different backgrounds.

This volume brings together papers authored by those who knew Simon and who were supported and enabled by his passion for archaeology, from amphora studies to research on Roman urbanism and landscapes. Each section deals with a particular area of Simon’s interests; Mediterranean ports and river systems, trade and connectivity, and landscapes and urbanism. The contributions include reminiscences of Simon and his work, together with the results of his different projects, and research that has stemmed from his scholarship. Here, these paper underscore the diversity and vibrancy of contemporary research in the areas that interested Simon, reflecting the contribution he made and the legacy of his work.

H 290 x W 205 mm

396 pages

192 figures, 4 graphs, 21 tables (colour throughout)

Published Apr 2026

Archaeopress Archaeology

ISBN

Paperback: 9781805831785

Digital: 9781805831792

DOI 10.32028/9781805831785

 

 

Friday, May 1, 2026

Open Access Journal: After Constantine: Stories from the Late Antique and Early Byzantine Era

 [First posted in AWOL 15 August 2022, updated 1 May 2026]
 
ISSN: 2732-8260
 

"After Constantine" is a peer-reviewed and open-access academic journal and it is published online once a year. Its purpose is to bring Late Antiquity to the spotlight by hosting papers that underline its importance to classic and byzantine studies and contribute to a better piece of knowledge in the academic community. Our journal encourages the ecumenical dialogue between historical, archaeological, and theological subjects around the Late Antique and Early Byzantine period, especially in the East. The academic team of the journal consists of scholars of different academic backgrounds (philology, archaeology, history, palaeography), constructing in that way its interdisciplinary profile and supporting the submission of relevant papers. With the combination of the interdisciplinary character and the online and open-access feature of the journal, we attempt to re-introduce Late Antiquity to the contemporary world and enrich the academic bibliography. "After Constantine" is hosted and published by the Orthodox Academy of Crete (OAC), an entity which operates under the spiritual auspices of His All Holiness the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople.

After Constantine – Special Issue "Entangled Christianities"

Augustine of Hippo's De Baptismo Contra Donatistas as an Invitation for Integration

Athanase Bukin

Transforming Body and Mind: Anglo-Saxon Coin Pendants as Active Objects during Christianization

Marion Fauqueur

Between Rome and Constantinople: Christianization, Sacred Space, and the Byzantine Affective Koine in Early Medieval Naples (6th–10th Centuries)

Fermude Gülsevinç

Interpreting Enlightenment: East Syriac Christianity and Buddhist Thought in Tang China

Rong Huang

The Letter of the Monk of France to the Emir of Saraqusṭa: Mozarabic Christianity and the Politics of Interreligious Engagement

Anthony John Lappin

Hymnology and Theology in the Service of Imperial Authority: An Ecclesiological Aspect of the "Entanglement" of Christianity

Pantelis Levakos

Entangled Christianity in Pagan Lithuania: Franciscan and Orthodox Martyrdoms by Grand Dukes Gediminas and Algirdas

Rasa Mažeika

Four Threads, One Roof: Orthodox, Catholic, Miaphysite, and Church of the East Visual Repertoires at Asinou

Mathew Milliner

Appropriation of the Christian Past in Post-Conquest Coptic: Case Study of Abū Mīnā Sanctuary

Przemysław Piwowarczyk

Why Do Byzantine Penitentials Pay Great Attention to Intimate Issues? Some Thoughts on Sexual Life and Social Control in Middle Byzantine Orthodox Communities

Edward Trofimov

The Entanglement of the First Carmelite Cloister on Mount Carmel with the Mamluk Armies in the Thirteenth Century

Fanny Vitto

 

 

Et magi antecedentsThe Adoration of the Magi in Ravenna art between Late Antiquity to Early Middle AgesEt magi antecedentsThe Adoration of the Magi in Ravenna art between Late Antiquity to Early Middle Ages

Author: Elisa EmaldiDOI number: 10.0619/AC.2024235579 Cite this articleEmaldi, Elisa. 2025. “Et magi antecedents: The Adoration of the Magi in Ravenna ...

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SPECIAL CHRISTMAS ISSUE (2023)

Articles

From Mithras to Jesus: Ritual Dynamics of Christmas (Mark Beumer)

Constantine and Christmas: More Counter-arguments (from Byzantium’s point of view) [Vanya Lozanova-Stancheva]

Early modern Protestant resistance to Christmas and its repercussions (Mark W. Elliott)

The Incarnation of Jesus Christ in the Early Christian Creeds (György Papp)

 

ISSUE 1 (2021)

ISSUE 2 (2022)

ISSUE 3 (2023)

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

 

Open Access Journal: Old World: Journal of Ancient Africa and Eurasia

 [First posted in AWOL 25 January 2022, updated 1 May 2026]
 
ISSN: 2667-0755 
 Cover Old World: Journal of Ancient Africa and Eurasia
This is a peer-reviewed, inclusive, non-Eurocentric, multi-disciplinary journal devoted to the study of temporal, spatial, economic, social, and linguistic aspects of ancient civilizations from the Old World, namely Africa, Asia, and Europe. We want to offer a comprehensive perspective on civilizations developed in these continents in pre-modern times, from prehistory to the fall of the Eastern Roman Empire (15th century AD).

- OW is an Open Access journal, fully-funded by the Research Centre For History and Culture (RCHC).
- OW is only published in a digital format.
- Submissions by both eminent and young scholars are welcome.
- Submissions may regard any aspects of the Old World: linguistics, history, archeology, art and architecture, philology, literature, philosophy, religion, economy, sociology, anthropology, etc.
- Submissions may regard any civilizations of Africa, Asia, and Europe, developed between prehistory and the 15th century AD, that is, the fall of the Eastern Roman Empire.
- OW also takes into consideration studies of oral literature, such as proverbs and folklore, as well as field work on endangered languages, which represent the legacy of ancient traditions verbally transmitted from generation to generation.
- Scholarly reviews are welcome as well.
- Special issues may be considered for publication.
- Articles must present original work and must have been submitted exclusively to OW. 

Volume: 6 (2026)
Latest Article

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

 

Open Access Journal: Memoirs of the American Academy in Rome

 [First posted in AWOL 8 June 2023, updated 1 May 2026]
 
ISSN: 0065-6801
EISSN: 2283-6179
Cover of Memoirs of the American Academy in Rome

The Memoirs of the American Academy in Rome contain essays on a range of subjects in the humanities, drawn from the disciplines represented in the Academy's School of Classical Studies, including archaeology, ancient studies, Greek and Latin literature, history of art, and medieval and modern Italian studies. The Memoirs, first published in 1915 and now an annual publication, continued the Supplementary Papers of the American School of Classical Studies in Rome (1905-1908), also included in this collection. The Memoirs and two other current publications of the American Academy in Rome are distributed by the University of Michigan Press; for subscription information, see http://www.press.umich.edu.

Moving Wall: 0 years
Content for this title is released as soon as the latest issues become available to JSTOR.

2025 (Vol. 70)

  1. 2025 pp. 1-502

Table of Contents

  1. Front Matter
    https://www.jstor.org/stable/27442686
    OPEN ACCESS
  2. Articles

  3. Reports from the American Academy in Rome

  4. Necrology

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Vol. 69 (2024)