Showing posts with label Greek. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Greek. Show all posts

Monday, September 13, 2021

Open Access Journal: Graeco-Latina Brunensia

[First posted in AWOL 4 January 2014, updated 13 September 2010]

Graeco-Latina Brunensia
ISSN: 1803-7402 (print)
ISSN: 2336-4424 (online)
Description: Časopis Graeco-Latina Brunensia, ISSN 1803-7402 je odborný recenzovaný časopis, který uveřejňuje příspěvky z klasické filologie, klasické archeologie, dějin starověku, medievistiky a také byzantologie i pozdějšího vývoje řeckého a latinského jazyka (či jevů z nich vycházejících). Vychází dvakrát ročně od r. 2009. Je pokračováním periodika Sborník prací filozofické fakulty brněnské univerzity (SPFFBU; Studia minora facultatis philosophicae universitatis Brunensis), řady klasické (N), ISSN 1211-6335, která vycházela letech 1996-2008 a řady archeologicko-klasické (E), ISSN 0231-7915 (1956-1995). 
 

Description: Graeco-Latina Brunensia, ISSN 1803-7402, is scholarly peer reviewed journal which publishes contributions from the fields of of Classical Philology, Classical Archeology, Ancient History, Medieval Studies, as well as Byzantine Studies and later development of the Greek and Latin languages. It has been published since 2009 and is issued twice a year. Graeco-Latina Brunensia is continuation of the periodical Sborník prací filozofické fakulty brněnské univerzity (SPFFBU; Studia minora facultatis philosophicae universitatis Brunensis), Series classica (N), ISSN 1211-6335, which was published in 1996-2008 and Series archaeologica-classica (E), ISSN 0231-7915 (1956-1995).

























2021 (Volume 26) 1

2020 (Volume 25) 1 2

2019 (Volume 24) 1 2

2018 (Volume 23) 1 2

2017 (Volume 22) 1 2

2016 (Volume 21) 1 2

2015 (Volume 20) 1 2

Monday, August 16, 2021

Open Access Journal: Studia graeco-arabica

 [First posted in AWOL 2 April 2011. Updated (new /urls) 16 August 2021 (new URL)]

Studia graeco-arabica
ISSN 2281-2687
 http://www.greekintoarabic.eu/fileadmin/templates/immagini/testata.jpg
Studia graeco-arabica features critical articles and reviews on the transmission of philosophical and scientific texts from and into various languages – Greek, Syriac, Arabic, and Latin – from late Antiquity to the Middle Ages and Renaissance (ISSN Online  2239-012X). Studia graeco-arabica follows a double-blind peer review process.


Available in print:
Click and order now
    Guest Editor: Yury Arzhanov
Affiliations and addresses of the Authors of this Volume

Articles
1. Amos Bertolacci, A Diamond and Its Light
SGA 10 (2020), pp. I-VIII

Affiliation: IMT, Lucca (Italy)
doi: 10.53130/2239-012X-2020-1
Keywords: Falsafa, Textual Criticism, Persian transmission of Greek philosophy

Abstract, Full Text PDF

2. Elisa Coda, Themistius on Intellect. Theophrastus and Plotinus as Sources of In De Anima III 5
SGA 10 (2020), pp. 1-20

Affiliation: Centre Jean Pépin UMR8230 (France)
doi: 10.53130/2239-012X-2020-2
Keywords: Themistius, De Anima, Medieval Philosophy

Abstract, Full Text PDF

3. Oliver Overwien, Medizinische Prolegomena aus dem spätantiken Alexandria im Kodex Aya Sofya 3588
SGA 10 (2020), pp. 21-36

Affiliation: Humboldt-Universität Berlin (Germany)
doi: 10.53130/2239-012X-2020-3
Keywords: Galen, Summaria Alexandrinorum, Ancient Medicine

Abstract, Full Text PDF

4. Henri Hugonnard-Roche, La tradition gréco-syriaque et syro-arabe du corpus logique aristotélicien, entre Alexandrie et Bagdad (VIe-XIIe siècle). Un bilan
SGA 10 (2020), pp. 37-44

Affiliation: Centre Jean Pépin UMR8230 (France)
doi: 10.53130/2239-012X-2020-4
Keywords: Aristotelian Logics, Aristotle, Syriac Literature

Abstract, Full Text PDF

5. Geoffrey Moseley, On a Pair of Greek Quotations in the Arabic Version of Aristotle’s Rhetoric
SGA 10 (2020), pp. 45-48

Affiliation: Deerfield Academy (Massachusetts, USA)
doi: 10.53130/2239-012X-2020-5
Keywords: Aristotle, Rhetoric, Falsafa

Abstract, Full Text PDF

6. Manfred Ullmann, Die arabischen Fragmente der Bücher II bis IV der Kyraniden
SGA 10 (2020), pp. 49-58

Affiliation: Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg
doi: 10.53130/2239-012X-2020-6
Keywords: The Cyranides, Parisinus gr. 2537, Venetus Marcianus V 13

Abstract, Full Text PDF

7. Gerhard Endress – Pieter Sjoerd Hasper, The Arabic Tradition of Aristotle’s Sophistici Elenchi
SGA 10 (2020), pp. 59-110

Affiliations: Ruhr-Universität Bochum / Universität Tübingen
doi: 10.53130/2239-012X-2020-7
Keywords: Aristotle, Sophistici Elenchi, Falsafa, Arabic Organon

Abstract, Full Text PDF

8. Cristina D’Ancona, The Neoplatonic Epistle on the Divine Science. The Text, Three Translations, and an Index
SGA 10 (2020), pp. 111-196

Affiliation: Università di Pisa
doi: 10.53130/2239-012X-2020-8
Keywords: Arabic Plotinus, Epistle on the Divine Science, Falsafa

Abstract, Full Text PDF

9. Christian Förstel – Marwan Rashed, Du nouveau sur les manuscrits pourprés: Les codex byzantins de Ḥunayn ibn Isḥāq à l’époque du conflit des images
SGA 10 (2020), pp. 197-216

Affiliations: Bibliothèque nationale de France (Paris) / Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique – Univ. Paris-Sorbonne
doi: 10.53130/2239-012X-2020-9
Keywords: Ḥunayn ibn Isḥāq, Codicology,

Abstract, Full Text PDF

10. Elvira Wakelnig, Ǧābir ibn Ḥayyān über die Autorenschaft der Präambel zu Euklids Elementen. Zur Definition und Finalität im Buch der Untersuchung (Kitāb al-Baḥṯ)
SGA 10 (2020), pp. 217-226

Affiliation: Institut für Orientalistik der Universität Wien
doi: 10.53130/2239-012X-2020-10
Keywords: Ǧābir ibn Ḥayyān, Kitāb al-Baḥṯ, Falsafa

Abstract, Full Text PDF

11. Carmela Baffioni, Hippocratic Quotations in Kitāb al-Ḥāwī fī l-Ṭibb IX: “On the Diseases of the Womb”
SGA 10 (2020), pp. 227-240

Affiliation: Università degli Studi di Napoli “L’Orientale”
doi: 10.53130/2239-012X-2020-11
Keywords: Ǧābir ibn Ḥayyān, Falsafa

Abstract, Full Text PDF

12. Cleophea Ferrari, Warum ist Lachen ansteckend? Ein ideengeschichtlicher Blick auf das arabische Mittelalter
SGA 10 (2020), pp. 241-244

Affiliation: Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg
doi: 10.53130/2239-012X-2020-12
Keywords: Falsafa

Abstract, Full Text PDF

13. Dimitri Gutas, Avicenna’s al-ḥikma al-mutaʿāliya. Initial Begriffsgeschichte
SGA 10 (2020), pp. 245-259

doi: 10.53130/2239-012X-2020-13
Affiliation: Yale University (USA)
M. Cüneyt Kaya, Appendix, SGA 10 (2020), pp. 259-260
Affiliation: İstanbul Üniversitesi (Turkey)
Keywords: Avicenna, “al-ḥikma al-mutaʿāliya”, Falsafa

Abstract, Full Text PDF

14. Hans Hinrich Biesterfeldt, Eine arabische Klassifikation der Wissenschaften aus dem 4./5. Jahrhundert H.
SGA 10 (2020), pp. 261-270

Affiliation: Ruhr-Universität Bochum
doi: 10.53130/2239-012X-2020-14
Keywords: Avicenna, Abū Sahl al-Masīḥī, Falsafa

Abstract, Full Text PDF

15. Cecilia Martini Bonadeo, The Distinctio sermonis super librum auditus naturalis Attributed to Abū Naṣr al-Fārābī in Gerard of Cremona’s Latin Translation
SGA 10 (2020), pp. 271-292

Affiliation: Università di Padova (Italy)
doi: 10.53130/2239-012X-2020-15
Keywords: Abū Naṣr al-Fārābī, Gerard of Cremona, Falsafa

Abstract, Full Text PDF

16. Hans Daiber, Aristotle’s Meteorology in 18th Century Egypt. Damanhūrī (1100/1689 or 1690 – 1192/1778), ʿAyn al-ḥayāt fī ʿilm istinbāṭ al-miyāh
SGA 10 (2020), pp. 293-308

Affiliation: Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universität Frankfurt am Main
doi: 10.53130/2239-012X-2020-16
Keywords: Damanhūrī, Aristotle’s Meteorology, Falsafa

Abstract, Full Text PDF

17. Ulrich Rebstock – Stefan Reichmuth, Zwischen Arithmetik und Esoterik: Beobachtungen und Quellentexte zu den Grundrechenarten in der arabisch-islamischen Bildungstradition Nigerias
SGA 10 (2020), pp. 309-342

Affiliations: Universität Freiburg / Ruhr-Universität Bochum
doi: 10.53130/2239-012X-2020-17
Keywords: Falsafa

Abstract, Full Text PDF

Book Announcements - EXPANDABLE LIST  
Reviews – EXPANDABLE LIST
See the full List of Open Access Journals in Ancient Studies
And see also A Digital Corpus for Graeco-Arabic Studies



Monday, August 2, 2021

Hellenistic Astrology Website

[First posted in AWOL 7 December 2010, updated 2 August 2021]

Hellenistic Astrology Website

Hellenistic astrology is a tradition of Greco-Roman astrology that originated in the Mediterranean region sometime around the 1st century BCE, and was practiced until approximately the 7th century. It is the source of many of the modern traditions of astrology that still flourish around the world today.

This tradition originated partially out of a synthesis of the ancient Egyptian and Mesopotamian traditions of astrology, and it influenced many other subsequent traditions of astrology across Europe, Africa, the Middle East and India during the middle ages and through to modern times.

Despite its pivotal role in the history of astrology, many of the details surrounding the theory and practice of Hellenistic astrology were unknown until relatively recently. Many of the foundational texts of this tradition have only become available again over the course of the past century, and modern translations of these texts from Greek and Latin have only started to be published in the past few decades.

This website represents part of a broader effort that is taking place in the academic and astrological communities today to recover and reconstruct the ancient traditions of astrology.

Texts

Translations and Critical Editions

This page contains a collection of astrological texts from the Hellenistic tradition in their original languages. Most of these are “critical editions” that remain untranslated from Greek and Latin, which provide the basis for translations of the texts.

Some other works have also been added which are useful for the study of Hellenistic astrology.

Where appropriate we have added links to pages in the Hellenistic astrologers section of our site, which contain more extensive background information and bibliographies for individual astrologers.

The CCAG: Catalogus Codicum Astrologorum Graecorum

In the late 19th century a group of scholars began cataloging all of the existing Greek astrological manuscripts that survived in various libraries around Europe. Over the course of the next 50 years they indexed all of the Greek manuscripts that they could find, and they published their catalog with a number of long excerpts from the texts in a 12 volume collection known as the Catalogus Codicum Astrologorum Graecorum (Catalogue of the Codices of the Greek Astrologers), or CCAG for short.

This project was finished in the early 1950s, and although other scholars have continued to edit and publish additional critical editions of the texts in their original languages, the CCAG remains an important source for many Greek astrological texts.

Since most of the CCAG was printed in the early part of the 20th century much of it is in the public domain at this point. These volumes are available below as PDF files:

If you find scans of the remaining volumes of the CCAG hosted on other websites please let us know, and then we will link to them here.

Vettius Valens

The first critical edition of the work of the 2nd century astrologer Vettius Valens, known as the Anthology, was published by Wilhelm Kroll in 1907. This edition is available for download below thanks to Google Books. David Pingree later published an updated edition of the text with additional fragments in the 1986, thus superseding Kroll’s edition. While Pingree’s edition should be the primary one used for any translations at this point, Kroll’s is still a useful starting point, and so it is available below:

A full English translation of Valens’ Anthology was released online in late 2010 by Mark Riley. For more information see our entry on Riley’s translation of Vettius Valens on our blog.

Maximus, Ammon & Manetho

In the 4th or 5th century a Roman astrologer named Maximus wrote a treatise on katarchic astrology titled On Inceptions (Peri Katarche). A critical edition of Maximus’ text was published by Arthur Ludwich in 1877. Google Books scanned the text, and we provide it below as PDF since it is now in the public domain. This PDF file also contains an edition of some fragments attributed to an astrologer known as Ammon, as well as Koechly’s critical edition of the didactic astrological poem of Manetho. Note that a more recent critical edition of Manetho was produced by Robert Lopilato in 1998, although it is only available as a dissertation from Brown University.

Hephaistio of Thebes

The first critical edition of the Apotelesmatika of the early 5th century astrologer Hephaistio of Thebes was published by August Engelbrecht in 1887. This edition was superseded by David Pingree’s critical edition of Hephaistio in the mid-1970’s, although since Engelbrecht’s edition is in the public domain we provide it below courtesy of Google Books:

Marcus Manilius

The Latin text of Marcus Manilus‘ 1st century poem known as the Astronomica is available via the Latin Library:

Scans of A. E. Housman’s infamous early 20th century edition of Manilius also recently became available via Google Books and the Internet Archive. All five volumes can be downloaded below:

A scan of Scaliger’s 16th century edition of Manilius also recently became available through Google Books:

The standard critical edition of Manilius at this point is M. Manilii Astronomica edited by George P. Goold, first published in 1985 by Teubner, and then again with corrections in 1998. This is conveniently available in an English translation by Goold as part of the Loeb edition of Manilius.

An excellent monograph on Manilius was also recently published by Katharina Volk: Manilius and his Intellectual Background.

Firmicus Maternus

The primary critical edition of the astrological work of the 4th century astrologer Firmicus Maternus, known as the Mathesis, was published in two volumes by Kroll, Skutsch and Ziegler from 1897-1913. Google Books has scanned volume 1 of the critical edition, which contains books 1 through 4 of the Mathesis in the original Latin:

Volume 2 of the critical edition, containing books 5-8, was recently made available by the Internet Archive:

The standard translation of Firmicus, based on the above critical edition, is Ancient Astrology Theory and Practice: Matheseos Libri VIII by Jean Rhys Bram.

A new English translation of the Mathesis was recently published by James Holden.

Dorotheus of Sidon

The standard critical edition of the work of the 1st century astrologer Dorotheus of Sidon was published in 1976 by David Pingree as Dorothei Sidonii Carmen Astrologicum.

Pingree’s English translation of the Arabic version of the text was republished on its own a few years ago by Astrology Classics as Dorotheus of Sidon, Carmen Astrologicum.

Deborah Houlding recently released book 1 of Pingree’s English translation of Dorotheus online via her website Skyscript.

Sextus Empiricus

A critical edition of the skeptic Sextus Empiricus’ works was published by Immanuel Bekker in 1842. Book 5 of his work Against the Professors consists of a skeptical critique of astrology, and the first half of this work provides a rather decent overview of some of the basic terms and technical concepts employed by Hellenistic astrologers. The critical edition of the Greek was scanned by Google Books. Pages 728-748 contain his disputation of astrology titled Against the Astrologers.

Auguste Bouche-Leclercq: L’astrologie grecque

In 1899 the noted historian of ancient magic and astrology Auguste Bouche-Leclercq published a massive 600+ page survey of Hellenistic astrology titled L’astrologie grecque. This work is still seen by many in the academic community as being the standard scholarly reference work on Hellenistic astrology, although it is largely out-of-date given the amount of work that has been done in the field over the course of the past century. Bouche-Leclercq was a Belgian scholar, so the work is written in French, although Lester Ness is currently preparing a full translation of the text into English.

Since the book was published in 1899 it is now in the public domain. A scan of the original French version of the text was recently made available on the Internet Archive, and this can be downloaded as a PDF (41 MB) using the link below:

Franz Boll: Sphaera

Franz Boll was a philologist in the early 20th century who devoted much of his work to studying Ptolemy. One of his most notable works was his 1903 book Sphaera, in which he published and discussed some of the recently discovered works of Teucer of Babylon, Vettius Valens, and Antiochus of Athens. The book is written in German, and it was recently scanned by Google Books. It can be downloaded as a PDF (19 MB) by using the link below:

Proclus

Proclus’ commentary on Plato’s Republic, edited by Wilhelm Kroll.  Scans from the Internet Archive:

John Lydus

John Lydus’ De Ostentis, edited by Curt Wachsmuth. Scanned by Google Books:

Censorinus

Censorinus’ De Die Natali Liber, edited by Friedrich Hultsch. Scanned by Google Books:

An English translation of De Die Natali Liber was recently published by Holt N. Parker as Censorinus, The Birthday Book.

Geminus

Geminus’ Introduction to the Phenomena, edited by Manitius. Scanned by Google Books, and available through WilbourHall.org:

An excellent English translation of Geminus was recently published by James Evans and J. Lennart Berggren as Geminos’s “Introduction to the Phenomena”.

Nechepso and Petosiris

Ernst Riess’ edition of Nechepso and Petosiris fragments and testimonia: Nechepsonis et Petosiridis fragmenta magica, ed. Ernestus Riess, Philologus, supplement 6, 1891-93, pgs. 325-394. Scanned by Chris Brennan, and available through the following link as a 41 MB PDF file:

For more detailed entries on individual authors please see the astrologers page.

Thursday, July 29, 2021

Open Access Journal: Euroclassica Newsletter

 [First posted in AWOL 29 July 2016, update 29 March 2021]

 Euroclassica Newsletter
Euroclassica Logo 



Euroclassica, whose aims are pedagogical, cultural and scientific, has the following aims and objectives:
a) to bring together all the associations of teachers of classical languages and civilisations in Europe and to promote their cooperation;
b) to ensure the promotion and defence of the study of classical languages and civilisations, providing a unifying link and a powerful platform for cultural cohesion among European countries, especially through representation at international organisations;
c) to assert publicly the contemporary relevance of classical languages and civilisations, and to highlight the pressing need to teach them, fully respecting the autonomy of each country;
d) to encourage cooperation with associations outside Europe which have similar aims.
  • 2021 Euroclassica Newsletter

    The Newsletter contains a lot of interesting and important information concerning the European basic languages Latin and Greek. Detailansicht

    2021 Euroclassica Newsletter

  • 2020 Euroclassica Newsletter

    The Newsletter contains a lot of interesting and important information concerning the European basic languages Latin and Greek. Detailansicht

    Newsletter Euroclassica 2020

  • 2019 Euroclassica Newsletter

    The Newsletter contains a lot of interesting and important information concerning the European basic languages Latin and Greek. Detailansicht

    Newsletter 2019

  • 2018 Euroclassica Newsletter

    The Newsletter contains a lot of interesting and important information concerning the European basic languages Latin and Greek. Detailansicht

    Newsletter 2018

  • 2017 Euroclassica Newsletter

    The Newsletter contains a lot of interesting and important information concerning the European basic languages Latin and Greek. Detailansicht

    Newsletter 2017

  • 2016 Euroclassica Newsletter

    The Newsletter contains a lot of interesting and important information concerning the European basic languages Latin and Greek. Detailansicht

    Newsletter 2016

  • 2015 Euroclassica Newsletter

    The Newsletter contains a lot of interesting and important information concerning the European basic languages Latin and Greek. Detailansicht

    Newsletter 2015

  • 2014 Euroclassica Newsletter

    The Newsletter contains a lot of interesting and important information concerning the European basic languages Latin and Greek.
    Detailansicht

    Newsletter 2014

  • 2013 Euroclassica Newsletter

    The Newsletter contains a lot of interesting and important information concerning the European basic languages Latin and Greek (1 MB). Detailansicht

    Newsletter 2013

  • 2012 Euroclassica Newsletter

    The Newsletter contains a lot of interesting and important information concerning the European basic languages Latin and Greek (0,8 MB). Detailansicht

    eduhi.at

  • 2011 Euroclassica Newsletter

    The Newsletter contains a lot of interesting and important information concerning the European basic languages Latin and Greek. (pdf; 1 MB) Detailansicht

    eduhi.at

  • 2010 Euroclassica Newsletter 2010: First details about the ECCL/Vestibulum

    The Newsletter contains a lot of interesting and important information concerning the European basic languages Latin and Greek. Detailansicht

    eduhi.at

  • 2009 Euroclassica Newsletter

    The Newsletter contains a lot of interesting and important information concerning the European basic languages Latin and Greek. Detailansicht

    eduhi.at

  • 2008 Euroclassica Newsletter

    The Newsletter contains a lot of interesting and important information concerning the European basic languages Latin and Greek. Detailansicht

  • 2007 Euroclassica Newsletter

    The Newsletter contains a lot of interesting and important information concerning the European basic languages Latin and Greek. Detailansicht

    eduhi.at

  • 2006 Euroclassica Newsletter

    The Newsletter contains a lot of interesting and important information concerning the European basic languages Latin and Greek. Detailansicht

    eduhi.at

  • 2005 Euroclassica Newsletter

    The Newsletter contains a lot of interesting and important information concerning the European basic languages Latin and Greek and many current issues. Detailansicht

    eduhi.at

  • 2002 Euroclassica Newsletter

    The Newsletter contains a lot of interesting and important information concerning the European basic languages Latin and Greek. Detailansicht

    eduhi.at

  • 2003 Euroclassica Newsletter

    The Newsletter contains a lot of interesting and important information concerning the European basic languages Latin and Greek. Detailansicht

    eduhi.at

  • 2004 Euroclassica Newsletter

    The Newsletter contains a lot of interesting and important information concerning the European basic languages Latin and Greek. You can read about the European classic network, the new homepage, the new European Curriculum etc. Detailansicht

    eduhi.at

Wednesday, July 14, 2021

Open Access Serial: AIO Papers (Attic Inscriptions Online)

 [First posted in AWOL 4 May 2015, updated 14 July 2021]

AIO Papers (Attic Inscriptions Online)
AIO
AIO Papers complement the English translations of Attic inscriptions available on Attic Inscriptions Online. They are designed:
a) to clarify the Greek texts underlying the translations published in AIO.
b) to equip the user of AIO with the background knowledge necessary to understand the inscriptions in historical context.
c) to advance the understanding of Attic inscriptions consistently with the objectives of AIO.
AIO Papers is a peer-reviewed series. Charges are levied only where necessary to cover costs (e.g. of translation) incurred in producing the papers.

AIO Papers 12

The Ephebate in Roman Athens: Outline and Catalogue of Inscriptions - Christopher de Lisle

The ephebate was the system of public education which prepared young men for life as adult members of the community in Roman Athens, as in earlier periods of Athenian history. This paper provides an overview of the institution in the Roman period. Section 1 lays out the development of the ephebate and its epigraphic habit between two key events: the sack of Athens by Sulla in 86 BC and the sack of the city by the Heruli in 267 AD. Section 2 outlines the personnel who ran the ephebate: the annual magistrates who oversaw it, the permanent ephebic staff, and the ephebes themselves. Section 3 presents the activities of the ephebes in terms of political participation, athletics, military training, rhetoric and academic activities, and festivals. Section 4 discusses the ephebate’s role in citizenship and social status in Roman Athens. The paper concludes with a catalogue listing the 391 known ephebic inscriptions from between 86 BC and 267 AD.

AIO Papers 11B

The Last Athenian Decrees Honouring Ephebes. II. Photographic Documentation - S. D. Lambert and J. G. Schneider

This paper contains photographic documentation for AIO Papers 11. A larger pdf (38 MB) is available to any reader requiring higher definition images. Please apply directly to juliangabriel.schneider@gmx.ch.

AIO Papers 10

Short Teaching Guide to Materials Available on Attic Inscriptions Online - S. D. Lambert

This paper is designed as a short guide for teachers and students to the materials available on Attic Inscriptions Online. After an overview, there are some Frequently Asked Questions, followed by brief lists of some key materials arranged by topic. The guide is updated regularly (last update: January 2020).

AIO Papers 11

The Last Athenian Decrees Honouring Ephebes - S. D. Lambert and J. G. Schneider

The Athenian Council and/or Assembly regularly inscribed decrees in the Agora honouring the young men, or ephebes, who had performed national service, from the Chremonidean War (266/5 BC) through to the Augustan period. The last five of these monuments post-date the sack of Athens by Sulla in 86 BC, and a full set of the texts has not been available since 1916 (IG II2), since when the progress of scholarship has made it almost impossible for specialists, let alone non-specialist researchers and students, to obtain an overview of these important documents. This paper accompanies the publication on AIO of new Greek texts, based on autopsy, and annotated English translations, of all five monuments. For ease of future reference it includes complete Greek texts of the two most substantial sets of decrees, IG II2 1039 +, honouring the ephebes of 80/79 BC and their officers, and 1043 +, honouring the ephebes of 38/7 or 37/6 BC and their officers, with textual notes. Though most of the fragments of post-Sullan ephebic decrees are still in Athens, one (IG II2 1042 fr. b) is in the British Museum, and to accompany this paper we are also publishing a short video about this inscription on the AIO Youtube channel.

AIO Papers 9

357/6 BC: A Significant Year in the Development of Athenian Honorific Practice - S. D. Lambert

The main purpose of this short paper is to draw attention to the significance of 357/6 BC as the year that dedications by Athenian officials begin to refer to the crowning of officials by the Council and/or People (section 2). It also makes a case for lowering the accepted date at which the Athenians began honouring more than one Council prytany per year from ca. 340 BC to after 307/6 BC (section 3) and proposes consequential changes to the editions of some relevant inscriptions in IG II3 4 fasc. 1, mainly to dates (section 4). The paper concludes with a brief note on historical context (section 5).

AIO Papers 8

Two Inscribed Documents of the Athenian Empire: The Chalkis Decree and the Tribute Reassessment Decree - S. D. Lambert

This paper discusses two important inscriptions for the history of the Athenian Empire, the Chalkis decree of 446/5 (or 424/3?) BC (IG I3 40) and the tribute reassessment decree (“Thoudippos’ decree”) of 425/4 BC (IG I3 71). Based on English translations of the most up-to-date and authoritative Greek texts, the paper sets out to explain the inscriptions in historical context, without assuming prior knowledge of ancient Greek or of the history of Athens and the Athenian Empire. To help the reader new to the study of Athenian inscriptions, the Paper includes an introduction to inscribed Athenian decrees of the fifth century BC. This paper will be useful for researchers, teachers and learners of Greek History at University level, but is also designed to help 6th-form teachers and students in the UK with the study of these two inscriptions, which are set as source material for the “Relations between Greek states and between Greek and non-Greek states, 492-404 BC” period study under the OCR specification for A-level Ancient History (H407, for first assessment in 2019; LACTOR4 1.78 and 138). Note: minor corrections were incorporated on 28 June 2017. Hard copies are available through Andromeda Books.

AIO Papers 7

The Last Erechtheion Building Accounts - S. D. Lambert with a contribution by J. D. Morgan

This paper presents up-to-date texts, informed by relevant work published since 2000, of the two extant sets of fragments of the building accounts of the Erechtheion in Ionic script as a basis for translations of these accounts published simultaneously on AIO. It reviews the date of these accounts, and presents a fresh argument by John Morgan to the effect that, if certain assumptions are made, no. 2 (IG I3 477) is datable to 405/4 BC. That would make it probably the latest extant account. Morgan also finds in this fragment a supporting argument for the position initially aired in AIO Papers 5, p. 3, that the Council's year and the archon's year were not made systematically coterminous in 407 BC, as had previously been thought, but continued to be out of step, probably until ca. 403 BC.

AIO Papers 6

The Inscribed Version of the Decree Honouring Lykourgos of Boutadai (IG II2 457 and 3207) - S. D. Lambert

This paper reviews the relationship between IG II2 457, the upper part of an Athenian decree of 307/6 BC honouring posthumously the orator Lykourgos of Boutadai, and IG II2 3207, the lower part of a stele inscribed with crowns commemorating decrees honouring Lykourgos passed in his lifetime. It finds that 3207 either belonged to the same stele as 457, as the great epigraphist Adolf Wilhlem proposed, or to a separate, but associated stele. In section 2 it investigates the decrees commemorated on 3207, locating them in the context of Lykourgos’ career, his rivalry with Demades and his relations with other politicians of the period.

AIO Papers 5

Accounts of Payments from the Treasury of Athena in 410-407? BC (IG I3 375 and 377) - S. D. Lambert

This paper treats the accounts of payments from the treasury of Athena in 410-407? BC which are inscribed on the front and back of the so-called Choiseul marble, in the Louvre in Paris (IG I3 375 and 377). It presents a fresh text of the difficult reverse face of the inscription (377), which prints only those readings on which the three rival texts currently in circulation are in agreement, and discusses the date. It is designed to support the translations of IG I3 375 and 377 published on AIO and includes an annotated table of the payments listed in these accounts.

AIO Papers 4

Inscribed Athenian Decrees of 229/8-198/7 BC (IG II3 1, 1135-1255) - S. D. Lambert

After exploring features of the history and methodology of Attic epigraphy, this paper surveys the corpus of 121 Athenian decrees of 229/8-198/7 BC recently published as IG II3 1, 1135-1255 (sections I-II of IG II3 1 fascicule 5). It reviews the decrees by category, discussing some historical aspects and proposing some improvements to the texts. It is designed to be read with the translations of these inscriptions published on AIO.

AIO Papers 3

"To Destroy the Stele","To Remain Faithful to the Stele": Epigraphic Text as Guarantee of Political Decision - Enrica Culasso Gastaldi

This paper, which supplies a broader context for AIO Papers no. 2, shows, with many examples (particularly from Crete), that references to inscribed stelai in ancient Greece imply that the erection of a stele was regarded as not so much a record of political action, but as a political action in itself.​ It first appeared in Italian as “‘Abbattere la stele’, ‘Rimanere fedeli alla stele’. Il testo epigrafico come garanzia della deliberazione politica”, in A. Tamis, C. J. Mackie and S. G. Byrne eds., Philathenaios. Studies in Honour of Michael J. Osborne (Greek Epigraphical Society, Athens, 2010), 139-55, and is published here in a new English translation by Claire Dickman-Wilkes.

AIO Papers 2

"To Destroy the Stele”: Epigraphic Reinscription and Historical Revision in Athens - Enrica Culasso Gastaldi

This paper conducts a systematic survey, illustrated by many examples, of the practices of correction, erasure, destruction and re-inscription of inscribed texts in ancient Athens, and draws conclusions as to the political significance of these actions. It first appeared in Italian as “Abbattere la stele. Riscrittura epigrafica e revisione storica ad Atene”, Cahiers Glotz 14 (2003), 241-62, and is published here in a new English translation by Claire Dickman-Wilkes.

AIO Papers 1

Notes on Inscriptions of the Marathonian Tetrapolis - S. D. Lambert

This paper accompanies the publication on AIO of the inscriptions of the Marathonian Tetrapolis and is designed primarily to clarify the texts on which the translations are based. It reviews scholarship on the Tetrapolis’ sacrificial calendar (iv BC), published since my new edition, ZPE 130 (2000), 43-70, and makes some fresh observations. It also reviews the other inscriptions attributable to the Tetrapolis, IG I3 255, IG II2 2933, IG II2 1243, and an unpublished inscription.