Friday, August 28, 2020

Open Access Journal: Oracula

[First posted in AWOL 5 November 2009. Updated 28 August 2020]

Oracula
ISSN: 1807-8222
Oracula: Revista de Estudos do Cristianismo Primitivo
A Revista Oracula foi criada no ano de 2005 como meio de divulgação dos projetos e produções do Grupo Oracula de Pesquisa do Programa de Pós-Graduação em Ciências da Religião da Universidade Metodista de São Paulo. Articulando professores, doutorandos e mestrandos da área da literatura bíblica, bem como da história da antiguidade para o estudo da apocalíptica judaica e cristã primitiva, com métodos da história da religião e da exegese bíblica, o propósito foi, durante muito tempo, publicar artigos sobre apocalíptica, profecia e fenômenos visionários dos pesquisadores do grupo e de seus interlocutores no Brasil e no exterior.
A partir do décimo quinto número, no entanto, a revista estendeu o seu horizonte de interesses para os estudos de cristianismo primitivo, incluindo aí Novo Testamento, textos apócrifos, religiosidades mediterrâneas, judaísmo em aspectos literários, históricos, metodológicos etc. Ao não mais se restringir a certo gênero literário ou tipo de religiosidade específica, a Revista Oracula colabora para o fortalecimento de publicações e pesquisas nessa área incipiente – ainda que promissora – na pós-graduação brasileira.










2005

Egypt and Austria VIII MEETINGPOINT EGYPT - Ägypten und Österreich VIII TREFFPUNKT ÄGYPTEN

Egypt and Austria VIII MEETINGPOINT EGYPT - Ägypten und Österreich VIII TREFFPUNKT ÄGYPTEN
Edited by / Herausgegeben von Irena Lazar
Koper 2015
ISBN 978-961-6964-18-0 (pdf)  
1. Vzp. stv. nasl. 2. Lazar, Irena, 1962- 279162880  
CONTENTS / INHALT 

Meetingpoint Egypt / Treffpunkt Ägypten
  • Introduction 
  • Miran Plaum, Veronika Pflaum The ibis mummy in the National Museum of Slovenia
  • Veronika Dulíková Maria Stona’s chance encounter with a renowned egyptologist Flinders Petrie. The lost and forgotten Opava collection of Egyptian finds  
  • Fritz Blakolmer Egyptian, Persian, Phrygian, Nuraghic, Gothic or classical Greek? The understanding of Aegean Bronze Age monuments in the 18th19th centuries 
  • Marko Frelih, Sabina Kramar, Matej Dolenec, Aleš Česen Non-destructive analyses of Egyptian amulets from the Slovene Ethnographic Museum 
  • Tina Škrokov The reflections of Egypt in the St. Anna cemetery in Trieste and cemeteries of the Slovenian coastal towns 
  • Angela Blaschek Heinrich Himmel von Agisburg. An exclusive traveller and writer
  • Hubert Szemethy The journey of Felix von Luschan to Egypt in 1889 
  • Adéla Jůnová Macková Jaroslav Petrbok – Orient and the Balkan Peninsula travels 
  • Amanda Heggestad Merrymaking on the Nile: Travel as a means of expanding social horizons
  • Martin Odler, Ľubica Hudáková  Teaching the history of Egypt and Nubia – the 1860s schoolbooks of the Slovak grammar school in Revúca 
  • Lucie Storchová “Till now I have been thinking only of study and work.” Gender, Orient and authorial self-presentations in the travel memoirs of Vlasta Kálalová di Lotti
 

Mélanges offerts a Edith Varga „Le lotus qui sort de terre”

Mélanges offerts a Edith Varga „Le lotus qui sort de terre”
(Bulletin du Musée Hongrois des Beaux-Arts Supplément 1. Budapest, 2001)
Hedvig Győry
HEDVIG GYŐRY
MARGARET M. BAKOS: The divine power of Wine
LADISLAV BARES: Shabtis from the Late Period tombs at Abusir (Preliminary remarks)
ANDREY O. BOLSHAKOV: Osiris in the Forth Dynasty Again? The false door of 'Intj, MFA 31.781
JUAN JOSÉ CASTILLOS: Eso-Eris, the Wandering Mummy
ROSALIE DAVID: The Riqqeh Pectoral in the Manchaster Museum
LEO DEPUYDT: What Is Certain about the Origin of the Egyptian Civil Calendar?
CLAIRE DERRIKS: Les miroirs cariatides: une forme aboutie dans l'histoire de la statuaire féminine en bronze
ATTILA MÁRTON FARKAS: A Magical Plaque from Budapest
JOHN GEE: Towards an Interpretation of Hypocephali
LUISE GESTERMANN: "Gegrüßet seiest Du, Schöngesichtiger" - Zur Bonner Mumienmaske des Imhotep
HANS GOEDICKE: Anthropological Problems - Gynecological Questions
FAROUK GOMAA: Ein Tempelblock aus el-Kom el-Ahmar/Scharuna in Budapest
NADINE GUILHOU: Des ronds dans l'eau :... rapports a l'espace et au temps
ROLF GUNDLACH: Neferchaut - Chef der Wüstenpolizei unter Thutmosis III.
HEDVIG GYŐRY: Un collier amarnien a Budapest
ELFRIEDE HASLAUER: Hypocephali in Wien und im Asasif
SVETLANA HODJASH: The Collection of Adrian Prakhov in the State Puskhin Museum of Fine Arts, Moscow
SIGRID HOEDEL-HOENES: Afrikanisches Gedankengut im Mundöffnungsritual
PETER HUBAI: Unbekannte koptische Apokryphe aus Nubien (Vorläufiger Bericht)
JOZEF HUDEC: Altägyptische Kanopen in der Slowakei
CHRISTIAN JACQ: La conciliation des contraires comme aspect fondamental de la pensée égyptienne
LÁSZLÓ KÁKOSY: A late Horus cippus
PETER KAPLONY: Pachom als Nachfolger der altägyptischen Weisen und Zauberer - eine Textrekonstruktion
URSULA KAPLONY-HECKEL: Gebet an die Göttin Bastis - Das demotische Ostrakon Cairo JdE 47601
KATALIN ANNA KÓTHAY: Houses and households at Kahun: Bureaucratic and Domestic Aspects of Social Organization During the Middle Kingdom
MELINDA AL-RAWINÉ KŐVÁRI: Die Verkündigungsszene in der koptischen und byzantinischen Kleinkunst - unter besonderer Berücksichtigung der Anwendung der Szene auf Textilien, Ampullen, Ringen und Armbändern
FRÉDÉRIQUE VON KÄNEL: Égyptien ... ou chinois? Un tres curieux chat en bronze
ULRICH LUFT: Das achte Jahr des Königs Sesostris II. nebst einigen Anmerkungen zu Stele Kairo JdE 59485
HERMAN DE MEULENAERE: Le surnom égyptien a la Basse Époque (Deuxieme série d'Addenda et Corrigenda)
MAYA MÜLLER: Schönheitsideale in der Ägyptischen Kunst
KAROL MYSLIWIEC: Le harpon de Sakkara
SAPHIN AZ-AMAL NAGUIB: Cultural Heritage and its Display
SERGIO PERNIGOTTI: Il frammento Bologna KS 1811
DANIELA PICCHI: Les ushabtis et les musées de Itm-htp fils de Ht-Hr-m-hb
ALESSANDRO ROCCATI: La quarta pagina del papiro Budapest Inv. No. 51.1961
HELMUT SATZINGER: Zur Kontraktion der Lautfolge VjV im Vor-Urkoptischen
HERMANN SCHLÖGL: Ein Beitrag zu den Anfängen der Arbeitersiedlung von Deir el-Medineh
JOACHIM SLIWA: Egyptian Hall and the Exhibition of Egyptian Art in London, 1821-1822
FRANK STEINMANN: Steindorff in Nubien
GÁBOR TAKÁCS: The Origin of the Name Bes (bs)
ANGELA P. THOMAS: The Rediscovery of some Dynasty III Stone Vessels from Reqaqnah
CLAUDE VANDERSLEYEN: Les peintures minoennes de Tell el-Dab'a (Avaris) et l'hypothese d'un mariage princier?
M. HEERMA VAN VOSS: Aus einem Totenbuch der 21. Dynastie

Open Access Journal: BABELAO: Electronic Journal for Ancient and Oriental Studies

[First posted in AWOL 13 June 2015, updated 23 February 2022]

BABELAO: Electronic Journal for Ancient and Oriental Studies
ISSN: 2034-9491 
Son bulletin, le BABELAO, est conçu comme une revue à vocation scientifique. La revue couvre le domaine de l’Orientalisme sous ses différentes facettes : philologie, paléographie, histoire du monde ancien et oriental, histoire des langues et des littératures comparées, édition des textes, etc. Son Comité de rédaction dont le recrutement est international regroupe des chercheurs qui sont à même d’assurer une expertise dans tous les domaines requis. Les membres sont: Alessandro Bausi (Hambourg), Anne Boud'hors (Paris), Antoine Cavigneaux (Genève), Sabino Chialà (Bose), Bernard Coulie (Louvain-la-Neuve), Alain Delattre (Bruxelles), Didier Devauchelle (Lille), Johannes Den Heijer (Louvain-la-Neuve), Jean-Charles Ducène (Bruxelles), J.Keith Elliott (Leeds), Jean-Daniel Macchi (Genève), Michael Marx (Berlin), Claude Obsomer (Louvain-la-Neuve), Agnès Ouzounian (Paris), Tamara Pataridzé (Louvain-la-Neuve), Paul-Hubert Poirier (Québec), Véronique Somers (Paris, Louvain-la-Neuve), David Taylor (Oxford) et Anton Vojtenko (Moscou).
Le BABELAO est référencé dans AWOL (The Ancient World Online), RHE (Revue d'Histoire Ecclésiastique), Elenchus Bibliographicus (Ephemerides Theologicae Lovanienses)

Version intégrale du volume

DOI : https://doi.org/10.14428/babelao.vol9.2020

Sommaire

Claude Obsomer, Le terme ẖnw et le début du Naufragé, p. 1-27
DOI : https://doi.org/10.14428/babelao.vol9.2020.57593

Camille Pierre, Les vice-rois de Kouch à la XVIIIe dynastie, p. 29-44
DOI : https://doi.org/10.14428/babelao.vol9.2020.57603

Léna Pleuger, Le Livre de la Terre. À propos du sens de lecture d'une composition funéraire de l’Égypte ramesside, p. 45-94
DOI : https://doi.org/10.14428/babelao.vol9.2020.57613

Jean-Claude Haelewyck, Les cantiques daniéliques (Dn 3,26-90) vieux latins et leurs types de texte, p. 95-116
DOI : https://doi.org/10.14428/babelao.vol9.2020.57633

Pierre Hanjoul, États et propriétés des déclinaisons arabes, p. 117-145
DOI : https://doi.org/10.14428/babelao.vol9.2020.57643

Naïma Afif, De Leipzig à Fès : une copie sépharade de la traduction hébraïque du Coran d’Hermann Reckendorf, p. 147-160
DOI : https://doi.org/10.14428/babelao.vol9.2020.57653

James Keith Elliott, Versions of the New Testament: A Survey of (some) Recent Research, p. 161-166
DOI : https://doi.org/10.14428/babelao.vol9.2020.57663


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

New Open Access Monograph Series: Kitab - Egyptology in Focus: Material Culture of ancient Egypt and Nubia

Kitab - Egyptology in Focus: Material Culture of ancient Egypt and Nubia
Kitab is a peer-reviewed series with an advisory board of international renown Egyptologists for control of quality;
Kitab provides:
•  speediness in publication; after the submission of the final version of the manuscript, only 6 months will occur to have the volume printed out;
•  control over the layout manuscript (no camera ready pdf and images in the text
•  hybrid format: all the Kitab are printed books and are available as ebooks,
•  high quality
•  high scientific standards: all the volumes will be subject to the blind peer-review
If you are interested in publishing with Kitab, please submit a proposal, max 300 words, providing the aim of the volume and a preliminary “Title and Table of Contents” to the following addresses: Gianluca Miniaci (gianluca.miniaci@unipi.it).
Gianluca Miniaci 
Kitab 1
128 page. hard cover, over 40 colour images
ISBN 978-1838118006
In 1895–96, William Matthew Flinders Petrie and James Edward Quibell discovered a shaft-tomb below the ‘Ramesseum', the funerary temple of Ramses II at Thebes, Egypt. This is most famous for having the largest group of Middle Kingdom papyri – also known as the Ramesseum Papyri – found in a single spot together with a number of distinctive objects, such as carved ivory tusks and miniature figurines in various materials dated around XVIII century BC. Gianluca Miniaci attempts to thoroughly reconstruct the archaeological context of the tomb: the exact find spot (forgotten afterwards its discovery), its architecture, the identity of its owner(s) and recipient(s) of the assemblage of artefacts. A detailed analysis of the single artefacts – provided for the first with full color photographic records and drawings – and their network of relations gives new life to the Ramesseum assemblage after more than a century from its discovery. 
download pdf 

See the Alphabetical List of Open Access Monograph Series in Ancient Studies

Thursday, August 27, 2020

Open Access Journal: Egypt and Austria Online Papers

Egypt and Austria Online Papers
Apart from the printed books the Egypt and Austria society offers also a series of online publications – the Egypt and Austria Online Papers. At the moment available:
  • EAOP 1 (2014): Edith Specht, Auf dem Weg ins Heilige Land: Das katholische Österreich besucht Ägypten.
  • EAOP 2 (2014): Elmar Samsinger, "Das Innere der Gruft ist leer wie ein entlüfteter Pneumatik." Aegyptischer Automobilismus von Filius.
  • EAOP 3 (2015) Konrad Antonicek, Franz Ferdinand von Troilo in Ägypten: Altägyptische Monumente in einer Reisebeschreibung des 17. Jahrhunderts.

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

ARWA - International Association for Archaeological Research in Western & Central Asia

ARWA - International Association for Archaeological Research in Western & Central Asia
Front Page Main Image
The International Association for Archaeological Research in Western & Central Asia is aimed to establish a worldwide link between scholars, to defend the archaeological discipline and its scientists, to propose a number of services (informing, encouraging joint projects, mentoring promising students, advising international organizations).

This new international association will be steered by a democratically elected Board, with a limited-time mandate, through a transparent process including all the regularly affiliated members.
The association will propose a general and regular Congress, and a series of regional and transversal workshops at venues decided by its members and Executive Board.
  • Acting as an advisory body as concerns contacts with UNO, UNESCO, ICOMOS, ICCROM, WMF, …
  • Proposing a dialogue with sister associations
  • Advising as concerns any matter related to its scientifical and social objectives
  • Promoting an ethics charter, valid for archaeology and its related disciplines
  • Encouraging publication
  • Proposing archaeological fieldwork training or other activities addressed to students
  • Encouraging career development for students and mentoring the most promising ones
  • Defending affiliates in difficult circumstances
  • Providing assistance to colleagues and students of countries in state of war
  • Recommending international project funding
  • Contacting the press and producing press releases
  • Encouraging international cooperation and projects, including their publication
  • Assuring the coverage of international projects supported by the association
  • Encouraging the share of information between the archaeological missions and the host countries
  • Promoting the social and environmental sustainability of the archaeological research