Monday, October 19, 2020

Chronique des fouilles et découvertes archéologiques à Chypre

Chronique des fouilles et découvertes archéologiques à Chypre

 

Bulletin de correspondance hellénique

Various authors.
For the years 1958-2005 (Suspended after 2005).

*Click on the year to access the searchable, on-line version. Courtesy of Persée.
**In some cases, illustrations are not available due to copyright issues, but BCH full texts can also be accessed via the French School at Athens www site.

1958: BCH 83 (1959)
1959: BCH 84 (1960)
1960: BCH 85 (1961)
1961: BCH 86 (1962)
1962: BCH 87 (1963)
1963: BCH 88 (1964)
1964: BCH 89 (1965)
1965: BCH 90 (1966)
1966: BCH 91 (1967)
1967: BCH 92 (1968)
1968: BCH 93 (1969)
1969: BCH 94 (1970)
1970: BCH 95 (1971)
1971: BCH 96 (1972)
1972: BCH 97 (1973)
1973: BCH 98 (1974)
1974: BCH 99 (1975)
1975: BCH 100 (1976)
1976: BCH 101 (1977)
1977: BCH 102 (1978)
1978: BCH 103 (1979)
1979: BCH 104 (1980)
1980: BCH 105 (1981)
1981: BCH 106 (1982)
1982: BCH 107 (1983)
1983: BCH 108 (1984)
1984: BCH 109 (1985)
1985: BCH 110 (1986)
1986: BCH 111 (1987)
1987: BCH 112 (1988)
1988: BCH 113 (1989)
1989: BCH 114 (1990)
1990: BCH 115 (1991)
1991: BCH 116 (1992)
1992: BCH 117 (1993) (note: mislabeled in Persée)
1993: BCH 118 (1994)
1994: BCH 119 (1995)
1995: BCH 120 (1996)
1996: BCH 121 (1997)
1997: BCH 122 (1998)
1998: BCH 123 (1999)
1999: BCH 124 (2000)
2000: BCH 125 (2001)
2001: BCH 126 (2002)
2002: BCH 127 (2003)
2003-2004: BCH 128-129 (2004-2005)
2005: BCH (2006) (note mislabeled in Persée)

The lecture series FORVM ANTIKE

The lecture series FORVM ANTIKE

 

The lecture series FORVM ANTIKE came into being in the winter term 2013 as a cooperation between the Department of Ancient History and the Department of Numismatics as successor of CONGIARIVM. As speakers, we invited experts in the fields of Ancient History, Epigraphy, Papyrology, Etruscology and Numismatics from all around the world. Colleagues from the participating institutes in Vienna have so far constituted the main audience of FORVM ANTIKE.

The COVID-19-pandemic has led to the adoption of a new online format for the lectures, allowing us to reach a broader and more international audience.

The lectures are now organised by the Department of Ancient History, the Department of Numismatics and the Department of Byzantine Studies, with the support of the Forschungsschwerpunkt Kulturen des euromediterranen Raums und Altertumswissenschaften.

Organisers: Chiara CENATIDavid HACKMartin HALLMANNSECKERTina HOBEL, Cosimo PARAVANONadine Franziska RIEGLERDavid WEIDGENANNT


Programme Winter Semester 2020/2021

All the lectures will take place online on the platform Collaborate. The link to the event will be shared one day before the lecture on this website. Attendance is open to anyone interested.

 

28 October 2020 5:00 p.m. GMT+1

Ian RUTHERFORD, Hana NAVRATILOVA (University of Reading)
Graffiti and Cultural Memory in Greco-Roman Egypt: The Case of Abydos (Abstract)

Access to the lecture

 

11 November 2020 5:00 p.m. GMT+1

Annalisa MARZANO (University of Reading)
The Augustan Horticultural Revolution (Abstract)

Access to the lecture

 

9 December 2020 11:00 a.m. GMT+1

Malcolm CHOAT (Macquarie University, Sydney)
A Forger, his models, methods, and motives: The papyri of Constantine Simonides (Abstract)

Access to the lecture 

 

20 January 2021 5:00 p.m. GMT +1

Loreleï VANDERHEYDEN (Universität Heidelberg)
From the Nile to the Danube. A Survey of the Coptic Letters in the Vienna Papyrological Collections (Abstract)

Access to the lecture 

 

27 January 2021 5:00 p.m. GMT+1

Francesca CECI (Soprintendenza di Roma Capitale, Musei Capitolini Roma)
Die Stadtgeschichte Roms im Münzbild (Abstract)

Access to the lecture

 

Open Access Journal: BAF-Online: Proceedings of the Berner Altorientalisches Forum

 [First posted in AWOL 7 June 2018, updated 19 October 2020]

BAF-Online: Proceedings of the Berner Altorientalisches Forum
ISSN: 2504-2076

BAF Online
BAF-Online is the publication platform of the Berner Altorientalisches Forum (BAF). It makes available to the public within the shortest possible delays vidcasts of the talks that have been held at the BAF. The vidcasts published at BAF Online have been peer-reviewed by members of the BAF scientific committee and are quotable. The aim of BAF-Online is to facilitate the dissemination and publication of ideas prior to final results.

The Berner Altorientalisches Forum (BAF) is an annual international meeting designed to bring together researchers of the Ancient Near East specialising in different areas and disciplines. There is no theme. Participants are encouraged to communicate their ideas as concisely as possible. Talks last no more than 10 minutes and are vidcasted.

The idea of setting up a forum designed to bring together specialists from all disciplines active in all areas of the Ancient Near East broadly defined was put forward by Johanna Tudeau in January 2015. The BAF project followed, developed in the course of a conversation between Johanna and Mirko Novák. The first BAF took place in Bern on 24-25 June 2016, organised by Johanna and Hannah Mönninghoff with the support of the BAF Committee

Current Issue

Vol. 3 (2018)
Published: 10-09-2019
View All Issues

 

2017

Vol 2 (2017)

Table of Contents

Programme of the 2nd BAF, 28-29 June 2017
 
PDF
Guiding Questions for Panels
 
PDF

Panel 1: Defining spheres of influence

Jeannette Boertien
Nurcan Küçükarslan

Panel 2: Recovering function, purpose and meaning

Anna Glenn
Nicole Herzog

Panel 3: Describing language and symbolism

Nelson Henrique da Silva Ferreira
Sara Manasterska

Panel 5: Managing and using data across different fields of study and research

Sebastian Borkowski
Michael Mäder
Eva Schmalenberger






Nouveaux textes babyloniens sur Achemenet

L'équipe en charge des textes babyloniens sur le site <achemenet.com> annonce la mise en ligne des transcriptions des textes CT 55 n°1 à 200 (majoritairement de l'Ebabbar de Sippar) et d'une grande partie des archives privées d'Uruk d'époque achéménide (règnes de Darius Ier à Darius III) à l'adresse:<http://www.achemenet.com/fr/tree/?/sources-textuelles>

Saturday, October 17, 2020

Ancient Greek Tutorials @ AtticGreek.org

Ancient Greek Tutorials @ AtticGreek.org
Cover210x300
AtticGreek.org is the home of the revised Ancient Greek Tutorials by Donald Mastronarde, adjusted to conform to the changes made in the second edition of Introduction to Attic Greek (University of California Press 2013) and to provide additional supplements to that book. Many parts of this site will be helpful, however, to anyone beginning or reviewing the study of ancient Greek with any textbook.
If you are using the first edition of Introduction to Attic Greek, visit the site tailored to the first edition.

This site should display Greek correctly if viewed with a modern browser on a modern operating system, without further action by the user. If, however, Greek words are cut off, or the Greek is displayed with a combination of different fonts or with a combination of characters and rectangles, then the user should install one of the free fonts recommended below.

Open Access Journal: Atene e Roma

Atene e Roma 

E-ISSN(s): 2239-6306 

P-ISSN(s): 0004-6493

 


 

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

Aliento: Analyse Linguistique, Interculturelle d’ÉNoncés sapientiels et Transmission Orient/Occident

Aliento: Analyse Linguistique, Interculturelle d’ÉNoncés sapientiels et Transmission Orient/Occident


The Aliento project focuses on medieval sapiential texts translated and circulated in the Iberian Peninsula during the Middle Ages between the 9th and the 15th centuries.

Our basic unit of study is the Brief Sapiential Statement, a global denomination which includes proverbs, sentences, maxims, sayings, aphorisms, apophthegmata…, and whose definition is: every statement (from one word up to two or three sentences) presented as a unit containing a lesson, an advice, a moral, a judgment (moral or social)

The Aliento project intends to show how Brief Sapiential Statements (BSS from now on) of ancient origin were shared and exchanged between 3 religious cultures and 5 languages in the Iberian Peninsula in the Middle Ages (9th – 15th c.). We have chosen a minimal corpus given their well-known relationship in order to develop a methodology of annotations and a tool allowing to cross these texts and establish links between the BSS, regardless of the language used in the original text. Textual medieval treatises are written in Latin, Arabic, Castilian, Hebrew and Catalan.

The database objective is to build a model of efficient description transferable to other similar corpus, making it possible to compare the BSS of every sapiential text (ancient, medieval, modern or contemporary) with the other texts of the database.