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ISSN 2156-2253

Friday, February 6, 2026

Open Access Journal: Papers of the British School at Rome

Papers of the British School at Rome
ISSN: 0068-2462
EISSN: 2045-239X 
cover of Papers of the British School at Rome

The Papers of the British School at Rome exists to publish work related to the archaeology, history and literature of Italy and other parts of the mediterranean area up to modern times, in the first instance by the staff of the School and by its present and former members. The Papers is edited by the Faculty of Archaeology, History and Letters of the Council of the BSR, and is a refereed journal. 

  • 2025 (Vol. 93)
    1. 2025 pp. 1-437 OPEN ACCESS 
  • NEW VOICES IN EPIGRAPHY PAST AND PRESENT: UNPUBLISHED EPITAPHS FROM ROME (pp. 295-328)
    Abigail Graham, Silvia Orlandi, Chris Erdman, Katharina Korthaus, Benjamin Moon-Black, Victoria Muccilli, Ethan Bragg Rummel and Alfredo Tosques
    https://www.jstor.org/stable/27440380
    OPEN ACCESS
  • TRE ISCRIZIONI FUNERARIE INEDITE PRESSO LA BIBLIOTECA DELLA BRITISH SCHOOL AT ROME: TRASCRIZIONE, EDIZIONE E COMMENTO (pp. 329-343)
    Alessandra Tafaro
    https://www.jstor.org/stable/27440381
    OPEN ACCESS
  • THE GREAT LIVY DELUSION, 1924 (pp. 345-377)
    Ronald T. Ridley
    https://www.jstor.org/stable/27440382
    OPEN ACCESS
  • NOTES FROM ROME 2024–25 (pp. 379-391)
    Christopher Stephen Siwicki
    https://www.jstor.org/stable/27440383
    OPEN ACCESS
  • Archaeological Fieldwork Reports

    • ARCHAEOLOGICAL FIELDWORK REPORTS (pp. 393-395)
      Stephen Kay
      https://www.jstor.org/stable/27440384
      OPEN ACCESS
    • THE FIRST MILE OF THE VIA LATINA PROJECT, ROME (pp. 395-397)
      Stephen Kay and Christopher Siwicki
      https://www.jstor.org/stable/27440385
      OPEN ACCESS
    • THE FALERII NOVI PROJECT: THE 2024 SEASON (pp. 398-404)
      Seth Bernard, Margaret Andrews, Emlyn Dodd and Stephen Kay
      https://www.jstor.org/stable/27440386
      OPEN ACCESS
    • FURFO PROJECT (BARISCIANO, L’AQUILA): THE 2024 SEASON (pp. 404-409)
      Francesco Maria Cifarelli, Stephen Kay, Dario Mangolini, Alberta Martellone, Roberto Montagnetti, Elena Pomar and Christopher Whittaker
      https://www.jstor.org/stable/27440387
      OPEN ACCESS
    • INTERAMNA LIRENAS PROJECT (COMUNE DI PIGNATORO INTERAMNA, PROVINCIA DI FROSINORE, REGIONE LAZIO) (pp. 409-413)
      Ninetta Leone and Alessandro Launaro
      https://www.jstor.org/stable/27440388
      OPEN ACCESS
    • THE PALAIOPYRGOS TOWER ON PAROS (CYCLADES): INVESTIGATING GREEK RURAL LANDSCAPES USING GEOPHYSICAL PROSPECTION AND SURFACE SURVEY (pp. 413-419)
      Emlyn Dodd, Stephen Kay, Evan Levine, Elena Pomar and Christopher Whittaker
      https://www.jstor.org/stable/27440389
      OPEN ACCESS
  • RESEARCH REPORTS

    • Associate Senior Fellowship

      • The work of nature and human experience: pietra commessa in late-Renaissance Rome (pp. 421-422)
        Richard Checketts
        https://www.jstor.org/stable/27440390
        OPEN ACCESS
    • Balsdon Fellowship

      • New muralism: urban futures through the arts in Italy (pp. 422-423)
        Francesca Billiani
        https://www.jstor.org/stable/27440391
        OPEN ACCESS
    • Cambridge-BSR Doctoral Student Award

      • Transforming urban heritage in post-war Rome, 1944–1951: transnational flows and national identity (pp. 423-424)
        Jiayao Jiang
        https://www.jstor.org/stable/27440392
        OPEN ACCESS
    • Coleman-Hilton Scholarship

      • A body in crisis: metaphors of violence and the early imperial Roman body politic (pp. 425-426)
        Kimberly Harris
        https://www.jstor.org/stable/27440393
        OPEN ACCESS
    • Macquarie Gale Rome Scholarship

      • The selectiveness in connectivity: mapping exchanges through ceramics and bronze artefacts in Southern Italy (pp. 426-427)
        Sara Fioretti
        https://www.jstor.org/stable/27440394
        OPEN ACCESS
    • Paul Mellon Centre Rome Fellowship

      • Sandra Blow and Alberto Burri: exchanges in abstraction 1948–1955 (pp. 427-428)
        Jennifer Johnson
        https://www.jstor.org/stable/27440395
        OPEN ACCESS
    • Ralegh Redford Rome Award

      • Improvising musical palindromes with Giacinto Scelsi (pp. 429-430)
        Joe Bates
        https://www.jstor.org/stable/27440396
        OPEN ACCESS
    • Rome Fellowship

      • Geoarchaeology of the pre-Roman world: a comparative case study from Tarquinia and its landscape (pp. 430-431)
        Gian Battista Marras
        https://www.jstor.org/stable/27440397
        OPEN ACCESS
    • Shortland-Jones Award

      • Visions of the desert: the ‘Apophthegmata Patrum’ and its transmission in the sixth-century Latin West (pp. 432-433)
        David Addison
        https://www.jstor.org/stable/27440398
        OPEN ACCESS
    • Simon Keay Award

      • Market integration and cultural identity: the impact of Roman African ceramics on regional wares in Campania in late antiquity (pp. 433-434)
        Vincenzo Castaldo
        https://www.jstor.org/stable/27440399
        OPEN ACCESS
    • Sykes Award for the Study of Italy from Dante to The Present Day

      • Sartorial cultures and artisanal communities in early modern Rome (1570–1620) (pp. 434-436)
        Alessandro Nicola Malusà
        https://www.jstor.org/stable/27440400
        OPEN ACCESS
    • Thérèse and Ronald Ridley Scholarship

      • Equestrian connections: exploring interregional contacts in iron-age Veneto (pp. 436-437)
        Ronak Alburz
        https://www.jstor.org/stable/27440401
        OPEN ACCESS
  • Back Matter
    https://www.jstor.org/stable/27440402
    OPEN ACCESS

  • 2024 (Vol. 92)
    1. 2024 pp. 1-363 OPEN ACCESS
  • 2023 (Vol. 91)
    1. 2023 pp. 1-372 OPEN ACCESS
  • 2022 (Vol. 90)
    1. 2022 pp. 1-372 OPEN ACCESS
  •  

    See the full List of Open Access Journals in Ancient Studies 

     

     

    Posted by Chuck Jones at 12:58 PM 0 comments
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    Honour in Aristotle's Ethics

    Honour in Aristotle's Ethics
    Kleanthis Mantzouranis 
    Honour in Aristotle's Ethics 
    A thorough re-evaluation of the nature and workings of honour in Aristotle’s psychology and ethics
    • The first sustained investigation of the significance and pervasiveness of honour in Aristotle’s ethics
    • Establishes a two-way dialogue between Aristotle and contemporary sociology, philosophy and psychology
    • Challenges common assumptions about honour and highlights the importance of honour for a range of human emotions and dispositions
    • Provides a model of social relations that brings forward both the culturally specific and the universal characteristics of human interaction
    • Showcases how Greek thought can enrich contemporary ethical and political debates

    Why does Aristotle label honour (timē) as the ‘greatest’ among the external goods required for the good life (eudaimonia)? And how does this statement relate with human emotions and Aristotle’s famous assertion that human beings are by nature political animals? Despite the dominant place of honour in Aristotle’s philosophy of human affairs (ethics, politics, rhetoric), its role has been grossly understudied, mainly because honour has been erroneously conceived as an outmoded notion out of sync with modern preoccupations and concerns. Drawing on contemporary sociology, philosophy and psychology, this monograph offers a thorough re-evaluation of Aristotelian timē that challenges common assumptions both about ancient and about modern ‘honour’. Aristotle’s incisive remarks on the role of timē in human psychology and behaviour reveal that, far from being a parochial concept, Greek timē is indicative of a universal human concern for esteem and social recognition in our lives as social beings.

    • 234 mm x 156mm
    • 320 pages
    • The Edinburgh History of Honour in the Ancient Greek World
    • Published January 2026 (Hardback)
    • ISBN
    • Hardback: 9781399532259
    • Ebook (app): 9781399532280
    • Ebook (PDF): 9781399532273

    Acknowledgments
    Abbreviations, Editions, Transliteration

    Introduction

    1. The Features of Honour

    2. Honour, Axia and Self-Respect: Emotions Towards Face-Threats

    3. Honour, Axia and the Principles of Social Interaction: Emotions and Virtues of Sociability

    4. Emotions Towards the Fortunes of Others: Pity and Indignation

    5. Emotions of Social Comparison: Envy and Emulation

    6. ‘Proper Love of Honour’ or Philotimia

    7. Greatness of Soul

    Conclusion

    Bibliography

     

    Posted by Chuck Jones at 12:33 PM 0 comments
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    Blog: The History of the Study of Antiquity through the Lens of Autobiography

    [First posted in AWOL 23 November 2015, updated 6 February2026]

    The History of the Study of Antiquity through the Lens of Autobiography
    This blog is a component of a research project initiated by Charles E. Jones, Tombros Librarian for Classics and Humanities, Pennsylvania State University Libraries. Part of a long standing interest in the history of the study of the Ancient Near East and Egypt, and of old world Antiquity more generally, this blog presents the working bibliography of the project, and provides a platform for comment and discussion of autobiographical writing by students and scholars of the ancient world.

    I hope also to develop a venue for the publication of new autobiographical essays in the form of an online open access periodical.

    Working Bibliography of Autobiographies

     Click through to subscribe free of charge.
    Posted by Chuck Jones at 12:13 PM 1 comments
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    Silver Beyond Empire: The transition between late Roman and early medieval Europe

    Silver Beyond Empire: The transition between late Roman and early medieval Europe
    Edited by Alice E. Blackwell, Fraser Hunter, Andreas Rau & Martin Goldberg

    Power and prestige in Europe during the first millennium AD were predominantly expressed in two portable materials: silver and gold. These precious metals underpinned the emergence of early Medieval kingdoms in Europe by providing the raw materials for objects that were used to create, contest and reflect status within and between societies. They also provide a key source of evidence for understanding reactions to the political vacuum caused by the disintegration of the Roman Empire and the emergence of the early Medieval kingdoms of Europe.

    While parts of temperate Europe favoured gold, silver was the most important precious metal in northern Britain for over 700 years (c.200–900). Silver was introduced to Scotland by Rome (via subsidies, military pay, diplomacy and loot), first as denarii and later as hacksilver, and rapidly became a vital means of expressing power and prestige in the lands beyond this frontier. Indeed, silver’s Imperial connotations may have been a key part of its attraction. The supply of silver declined with the diminishing influence of the western Roman Empire and this dwindling resource needed to be carefully managed and recycled by early Medieval societies.

    Together National Museums Scotland and Leibniz-Zentrum für Archäologie created an international research network of specialists working on silver from the 4th–6th centuries with a focus on the North Sea region. This volume of papers results from meetings of the network in Edinburgh and Schleswig that explored the role of silver in the crucial transition from the late Roman Empire, with barbaricum beyond its frontiers, to early Medieval Europe and the peoples and polities that many modern European nations trace their origins back to. It aims to provide the first comparative, international and cross-disciplinary study of this powerful and valuable material during a pivotal period in Europe’s history. It also provides the first full catalogues of a number of important but poorly understood hacksilver hoards from the UK: Norrie’s Law (Fife), Gaulcross (Aberdeenshire), Tummel Bridge (Perthshire) and Patching (Sussex).

    Paperback ISBN: 9789464264098 | Hardback ISBN: 9789464264104 | Imprint: Sidestone Press | Format: 210x280mm | 454 pp. | Language: English | 73 illus. (bw) | 666 illus. (fc) | Keywords: Late Roman; early medieval; silver; hacksilver; transition; status; Britain; Europe | download cover | DOI: 10.59641/k1n7h8i9j0 | CC-license: CC BY 4.0

    Chapter 1. The circulation of Roman silver in the 4th and 5th centuries around and across the frontier
    Fraser Hunter

    Chapter 2. Silver for the Soldiers: quantifying the use and absence of silver among the limitanei of the dux Britanniarum
    Rob Collins

    Chapter 3. Hacksilver hoarding and silver use in 5th/6th-century Scotland
    Alice Blackwell & Martin Goldberg

    Chapter 4. Silver in the societies of Roman Iron Age and Migration Period Scandinavia – with a focus on hacksilver of the 4th–6th centuries
    Andreas Rau

    Chapter 5. Denarii in late Roman and Migration Period hoards
    Aleksander Bursche & Kyrylo Myzgin

    Chapter 6. Silver in the Merovingian realm: a post-monetary economy between the late Roman and the Carolingian Empire
    Dieter Quast

    Chapter 7. Hacksilver in late Antiquity, the Merovingian period and Slavic times. Structural similarities or continuity?
    Matthias Hardt

    Chapter 8. Object biographies of silver objects in the Quoit Brooch Style of south-east Britain: manufacture, use and reuse
    Ellen Swift

    Chapter 9. Patching, West Sussex: the nature of the hacksilver and the date of the hoard
    Fraser Hunter & Andreas Rau

    Chapter 10. The early medieval hacksilver hoard from Wem, Shropshire
    Roger H. White, Richard Hobbs & Richard Abdy

    Chapter 11. Scotland’s silver spiral rings in context
    Jenna Martin

    Chapter 12. A reconsideration of silver handpins
    Susan Youngs

    Chapter 13. Hillquarter and the Norrie’s Law and Gaulcross mounts: saddle or shield?
    Joanna Close-Brooks

    Chapter 14. The siliquae from Gaulcross and Norrie’s Law in context
    Richard Abdy

    Chapter 15. The scientific examination and analysis of the Gaulcross and Norrie’s Law silver hoards
    Lore Troalen, Janet Lang & Jim Tate

    Chapter 16. Silver-working at the Craw Stane complex, Rhynie in north-east Scotland
    Gemma Cruickshanks & Gordon Noble


    Catalogue 1: The Norrie’s Law hoard, Fife, Scotland
    Alice Blackwell & Fraser Hunter, with Richard Abdy & Martin Goldberg

    Catalogue 2: The Gaulcross hoard, Aberdeenshire, Scotland
    Alice Blackwell & Fraser Hunter, with Richard Abdy

    Catalogue 3: The Tummel Bridge hoard, Perthshire, Scotland
    Alice Blackwell & Fraser Hunter

    Catalogue 4: The Patching hacksilver, West Sussex, England
    Fraser Hunter

    Catalogue 5: The Wem hoard, Shropshire, England
    Roger H White, Richard Hobbs & Richard Abdy

    Catalogue 6: The ‘Cavan’ bangle, Armargh, Northern Ireland
    Alice Blackwell

    Technical appendix 1: Technological observations of the Gaulcross silver
    Lore Troalen, Julia Novion Ducassou & Janet Lang

    Technical appendix 2: Investigation of a selection of objects from the Gaulcross and Norrie’s Law silver hoards
    Lore Troalen & Janet Lang

    Technical appendix 3: Quantitative analysis of a selection of Gaulcross and Norrie’s Law silver fragments by particle-induced X-ray emission analysis
    Lore Troalen, Jim Tate & Quentin Lemasson

    Technical appendix 4: Surface analysis of the Norrie’s Law silver by X-ray fluorescence
    Data by Susy Kirk, with interpretation and text by Lore Troalen

    Posted by Chuck Jones at 12:09 PM 0 comments
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    Thursday, February 5, 2026

    Open Access Journal: Nova Tellus: Anuario del Centro de Estudios Clásicos

    [First posted in AWOL 23 September 2014, updated  5 February 2026]

    Nova Tellus: Anuario del Centro de Estudios Clásicos
    ISSN: 0185-3058
    Encabezado de página
    Noua Tellus publica artículos y notas de investigación de carácter filológico referentes a las lenguas y literaturas griega, latina y sánscrita clásicas, además de a su tradición, así como documentos, reseñas y noticias relativas a dichos campos de estudio.

    El Anuario del Centro de Estudios Clásicos Noua Tellus ofrece a sus lectores una útil guía de consulta, da crédito y reconocimiento a sus colaboradores, quienes la han distinguido con la generosidad de sus conocimientos, desde 1993 hasta el primer semestre de 2013.
    Vol. 44 Núm. 1 (2026)

    Publicado: 2026-01-09

    Artículos

    Mahābhārata 12.289: sobre el yoga de los portentos. Estudio preliminar y traducción

    Óscar Figueroa

    11-30

    Cosmic Fire: Heraclitus and Universal Conflagration

    Cristóbal Palisson Krämer

    31-58

    La metáfora de la “rectitud” en la Política de Aristóteles. Un estudio en el cruce entre el Nuevo Materialismo y la Historia Conceptual

    Camilo Arroyo

    59-77

    La Diosa-Yegua en el mito griego. Una visión de género a la historia de Hipo y Melanipe

    Ernesto Gabriel Sánchez Barragán

    79-104

    Τοῖς παιδικοῖς ἀπομνημονεύμασιν: la niñez de Alcibíades en la biografía de Plutarco

    Analía Verónica Sapere

    105-130

    Partos humanos dismórficos y derecho romano. Sobre la cuestión de la figura humana en las fuentes jurídicas romanas

    Jorge Menabrito Paz

    131-151

    Leopoldo Lugones y la Literatura griega como fundamento cultural y de identidad en América Latina

    David García Pérez

    153-164

    Historia de las traducciones castellanas de la Germania de Tácito: apuntes y ensayos para la versión mexicana de la UNAM

    Genaro Valencia Constantino

    165-188

    Reseñas bibliográficas

    Mares Manrique, Elizabeth, La ética como epistḗmē en Aristóteles, Ciudad de México, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (Cuadernos del Centro de Estudios Clásicos, 63), 2022, 248 págs., ISBN: 978-607-30-6929-8.

    Víctor Hugo Méndez Aguirre

    191-194

    Tesauro, Emanuele, El catalejo aristotélico, ed. Raquel Barragán Aroche, Fernando Ibarra Chávez y Andrés Íñigo Silva, trad. del italiano, notas e índices de Fernando Ibarra, trad. del latín de Adrián Israel Rodríguez Avila, Gregorio Enrique de Gante Dávila y Sergio Embleton Márquez, estudio preliminar Fernando Ibarra Chávez y Sharon Suárez Larios, Ciudad de México, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (Ediciones Especiales, 138), 2024, 877 págs., ISBN: 978-607-30-8898-5.

    Ricardo Pérez Martínez

    195-205

    Waldron, Byron, Dynastic Politics in the Age of Diocletian, AD 284-311, Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 2022, 273 págs., ISBN: 9781474498654.

    Miguel Ángel Ramírez Batalla

    207-211

    Gomá, Javier, Carlos García Gual y David Hernández de la Fuente, El estoicismo romano. Séneca, Epicteto, Marco Aurelio, Barcelona, Arpa & Alfil Editores, 2024, 176 págs., ISBN: 978-84-19558-60-2.

    Hugo Francisco Bauzá

    213-219

    Malamis, Daniel, The Orphic Hymns. Poetry and Genre, with a Critical Text and Translation, Leiden/Boston, Brill (Mnemosyne, Supplements, Monographs on Greek and Latin Language and Literature, 486), 2025, 671 págs., ISBN: 978-90-04-71407-6 (hardback), ISBN 978-90-04-71408-3 (e-book).

    María Alejandra Escobar Velázquez

    221-228

    Braund, Susanna Morton, Translating Virgil: A Cultural History of the Western Tradition from the Eleventh Century to the Present, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press (Classics after Antiquity), 2025, 1022 págs., ISBN: 9781108470612.

    Carlos Mariscal de Gante Centeno

    229-241


    Archivos

     


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

    Spanish/Catalan/Portuguese Open Access Journals on the Ancient World
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    Labels: Classics, Mexico, Noua Tellus, Nova Tellvs

    Open Access Journal: Madrider Mitteilungen

     [First posted in AWOL 23 October 2020, update 5 February 2026]

    Madrider Mitteilungen
    ISSN: 0418-9744
    Die Madrider Mitteilungen sind die Zeitschrift der Madrider Abteilung des Deutschen Archäologischen Instituts. Sie erscheint seit 1960 jährlich. Darin finden sich aktuelle Beiträge zu Themen der Altertumskunde der Iberischen Halbinsel und Nordwestafrikas und ihren Nachbardisziplinen von den Anfängen der Menschheitsgeschichte bis zur Zeit der Reconquista. Es werden Beiträge in deutscher, spanischer, portugiesischer, französischer und englischer Sprache veröffentlicht. Alle Beiträge enthalten Schlagworte und Zusammenfassungen in deutscher, englischer und spanischer oder französischer Sprache. 

    Aktuelle Ausgabe

    Bd. 66 (2025)

    Die Druckausgabe ist erhältlich über https://www.harrassowitz-verlag.de

    DOI: https://doi.org/10.34780/bheh8875
    Veröffentlicht: 2026-01-15

    Artikel

    • O Monumento Pré-histórico da Praia das Maçãs (Sintra) Resultados Preliminares dos Trabalhos Arqueológicos na Câmara Ocidental

      Catarina Costeira, Eduardo Porfirio, Linda Melo
      14-51
      • DAI-Journal-Viewer (Portugiesisch)
      • PDF (Portugiesisch)
    • Excavaciones arqueológicas en la parcela de la Nueva Biblioteca Una gran construcción muraria en el asentamiento de la Edad del Cobre de Valencina de la Concepción (Sevilla)

      Juan Manuel Vargas Jiménez, Alfredo Mederos Martín, Thomas X. Schuhmacher, Charles Bashore Acero, Pina López Torres
      52-93
      • DAI-Journal-Viewer (Spanisch; Kastilianisch)
      • PDF (Spanisch; Kastilianisch)
    • Bell Beaker Footed Bowls in the Iberian Peninsula A Trial Inventory apropos a Find from the Lapa do Fumo Cave (Sesimbra, Portugal)

      João Luís Cardoso, Marco António Andrade, Rui Gil
      94-123
      • DAI-Journal-Viewer (Englisch)
      • PDF (Englisch)
    • Siete Arroyos A new Bronze Age funerary site in the lower Guadalquivir valley, Spain

      Martin Bartelheim, Döbereiner Chala Aldana, Marta Díaz-Zorita Bonilla, Marius Knödel
      124-153
      • DAI-Journal-Viewer (Englisch)
      • PDF (Englisch)
    • El oppidum del Cerro del Gollino (Corral de Almaguer, Toledo) Estudio del material recuperado en la campaña de excavación de 2024

      Pablo Sánchez de Oro, Manuel Fernández-Götz, Victor Morcillo, Lourdes Prados Torreira, Luis Berrocal-Rangel
      154-195
      • DAI-Journal-Viewer (Spanisch; Kastilianisch)
      • PDF (Spanisch; Kastilianisch)
    • Wer die Lanze trägt Zu den römischen Lanzenreliefs des hispanischen Nordostens

      Thomas G. Schattner
      196-252
      • DAI-Journal-Viewer
      • PDF
    • Revealing the Hidden Urban Landscape of Munigua Insights from the 2024 Ground-Penetrating Radar Survey and Its Implications for Roman and Post-Roman Occupation

      Alexander Hoer, Fabian Gapp, Franziska Wanka
      254-275
      • DAI-Journal-Viewer (Englisch)
      • PDF (Englisch)
    • Un-typisch ›Verbildlichungen‹ von Bildträgern römischer Zeit am Beispiel der Iberischen Halbinsel

      Sarah Al Jarad
      276-298
      • DAI-Journal-Viewer
      • PDF
    • La ciudad de Florentia Iliberritana (Granada) en el siglo IV d. C. a partir del registro arqueológico del yacimiento de Los Mondragones

      Ángel Rodriguez Aguilera, Macarena Bustamante Álvarez
      300-332
      • DAI-Journal-Viewer (Spanisch; Kastilianisch)
      • PDF (Spanisch; Kastilianisch)
    • Sevilla y las ciudades del Bajo Guadalquivir entre la Tardoantigüedad y el Emirato

      Fernando Amores Carredano, Ana Mateos-Orozco
      334-360
      • DAI-Journal-Viewer (Spanisch; Kastilianisch)
      • PDF (Spanisch; Kastilianisch)
    • The Gardens of Madīnat al-Zahrāʼ (Córdoba, Spain) Results of a Non-invasive Investigation

      Felix Arnold, Dirk Blaschta, Tomasz Herbich, Dominik Lengyel, Alberto J. Montejo Córdoba
      362-389
      • DAI-Journal-Viewer (Englisch)
      • PDF (Englisch)
    • El palacio fortificado del Castillejo de Monteagudo (Murcia), siglo XII Cien años después de su descubrimiento

      Julio Navarro Palazón, Felix Arnold, Pedro Jiménez-Castillo
      390-502
      • DAI-Journal-Viewer (Spanisch; Kastilianisch)
      • PDF (Spanisch; Kastilianisch)
    • Ḫatam, Barzaḫ, and the Hereafter Considerations for an Iconographic Analysis of the Eight-Fold Marīnid Zillīǧ

      Maria Antonieta Emparan Fernandez
      504-527
      • DAI-Journal-Viewer (Englisch)
      • PDF (Englisch)
    • Peter Witte in memoriam (1933–2024)

      Michael Koch
      528-533
      • DAI-Journal-Viewer
      • PDF
    • Theodor Hauschild in memoriam (1929–2024)

      Carlos Fabião
      534-539
      • DAI-Journal-Viewer (Portugiesisch)
      • PDF (Portugiesisch)
    Alle Ausgaben anzeigen

     

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

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    The AWOL Index

    The AWOL Index: The bibliographic data presented herein has been programmatically extracted from the content of AWOL - The Ancient World Online (ISSN 2156-2253) and formatted in accordance with a structured data model.
    List of Open Access Journals in Ancient Studies
    List of Active Open Access Journals in Ancient Studies
    Alphabetical List of Open Access Monograph Series in Ancient Studies
    Open Access Ancient Language Textbooks, OERs, and Primers

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    AWOL is a project of Charles E. Jones, Tombros Librarian for Classics and Humanities at the Pattee Library, Penn State University

    AWOL began with a series of entries under the heading AWOL on the Ancient World Bloggers Group Blog. I moved it to its own space here beginning in 2009.

    The primary focus of the project is notice and comment on open access material relating to the ancient world, but I will also include other kinds of networked information as it comes available.

    The ancient world is conceived here as it is at the Institute for the Study of the Ancient World at New York University, my academic home at the time AWOL was launched. That is, from the Pillars of Hercules to the Pacific, from the beginnings of human habitation to the late antique / early Islamic period.

    AWOL is the successor to Abzu, a guide to networked open access data relevant to the study and public presentation of the Ancient Near East and the Ancient Mediterranean world, founded at the Oriental Institute, University of Chicago in 1994. Together they represent the longest sustained effort to map the development of open digital scholarship in any discipline.

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    AWOL - The Ancient World Online by Charles E. Jones is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.