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Articles 1 - 30 of 47
Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities
Oracula Mortis In The Pharsalia, John Makowski
Tacitus, Roman Wills And Political Freedom, James Keenan
Tacitus, Roman Wills And Political Freedom, James Keenan
James G. Keenan
No abstract provided.
The Names Flavius And Aurelius As Status Designations In Later Roman Egypt, James Keenan
The Names Flavius And Aurelius As Status Designations In Later Roman Egypt, James Keenan
James G. Keenan
An examination of the uses of the names Flavius and Aurelius.
On Law And Society In Late Roman Egypt, James Keenan
On Law And Society In Late Roman Egypt, James Keenan
James G. Keenan
No abstract provided.
'Die Binnenwanderung’ In Byzantine Egypt, James Keenan
'Die Binnenwanderung’ In Byzantine Egypt, James Keenan
James G. Keenan
No abstract provided.
Two Loan Repayments From Second-Century Tebtunis, James Keenan
Two Loan Repayments From Second-Century Tebtunis, James Keenan
James G. Keenan
The type of document commonly referred to as the repayment, or return of a loan has been recently discussed in the introduction to P. Yale 63. The editors there conclude (p. 198) that "written repayments of loans were not given for repayment itself, but to cover peculiar circumstances" (spaced by me), such as the decease of the original creditor or debtor, or occasions when repayment was made in a place different from that in which the loan was taken out. The two papyri presented below lend confirmation to this conclusion: No. 1 is the repayment in Tebtunis of a loan …
Roman Criminal Law In A Berlin Papyrus Codex (Bgu Iv 1024–1027), James Keenan
Roman Criminal Law In A Berlin Papyrus Codex (Bgu Iv 1024–1027), James Keenan
James G. Keenan
No abstract provided.
Three Short Notes On Late Roman Documents From Egypt, James Keenan
Three Short Notes On Late Roman Documents From Egypt, James Keenan
James G. Keenan
The observations printed below were made in the course of research on social mobility in late Roman Egypt conducted under a Summer Faculty Fellowship for 1976 from Loyola University Chicago.
Ptolemaic Account (P. Teb. 131), James Keenan, Michael Toumazou
Ptolemaic Account (P. Teb. 131), James Keenan, Michael Toumazou
James G. Keenan
No abstract provided.
Études Sur La Correspondance De Synésios De Cyrène By Denis Roques, Jacqueline Long
Études Sur La Correspondance De Synésios De Cyrène By Denis Roques, Jacqueline Long
Jacqueline Long
No abstract provided.
F.M. Ahl, Lucan: An Introduction, John Makowski
The Case Of Flavia Christodote: Observations On Psi I 76, James Keenan
The Case Of Flavia Christodote: Observations On Psi I 76, James Keenan
James G. Keenan
No abstract provided.
Four Papyri From Second-Century Tebtunis, James Keenan, John Shelton
Four Papyri From Second-Century Tebtunis, James Keenan, John Shelton
James G. Keenan
The texts presented here have until now been known to papyrologists only from short descriptions in the back of P. Teb. Vol. II. We print below full transcripts together with a commentary to take account of scholarship since the original publication in 1907. The texts have a common feature in their concern with weaving: nr. 1 is an apprenticeship to a weaver, the remainder are receipts for weavers' tax.
Literary Evidence For Roman Arithmetic With Fractions, David Maher, John Makowski
Literary Evidence For Roman Arithmetic With Fractions, David Maher, John Makowski
John F Makowski
No abstract provided.
Pastoralism In Roman Egypt, James Keenan
Two Notes On P. Merton Ii 100, James Keenan
Two Notes On P. Merton Ii 100, James Keenan
James G. Keenan
The papyrus now accessible as P. Merton II 100 was first edited by H.I. Bell as "A Requisitioning Order for Taxes in Kind," in Aegyptus, fasc.2 (1951) (Raccolta Vitelli), pp. 307-12, and subsequently reprinted as SB VI 9232. The document, written during the emirate of Jordanes (ca. A.D. 699-704), is dated 23 Phaophi of the thirteen indiction (21 October 699). Difficulties of decipherment are owed to the colors of the inks that were used (they fade into the color of papyrus itself), the frequent use of abbreviation, and the extreme cursiveness of the second hand (lines 5-8). Nevertheless, some improvements …
Violence In Plautus: Or, How I Learned To Stop Worrying And Love Performance, Christopher Bungard
Violence In Plautus: Or, How I Learned To Stop Worrying And Love Performance, Christopher Bungard
Christopher Bungard
Christopher Bungard's contribution to the American Philological Association Annual Meeting, 2015.
Comedy, Violence, And Undergraduates, Christopher Bungard
Comedy, Violence, And Undergraduates, Christopher Bungard
Christopher Bungard
Christopher Bumgard's contribution to the CAMWS Annual Meeting: Boulder, Colorado, 2015.
Mercator, 691-802 In English, Version A. Neh Summer Institute: Roman Comedy In Performance., Christopher Bungard
Mercator, 691-802 In English, Version A. Neh Summer Institute: Roman Comedy In Performance., Christopher Bungard
Christopher Bungard
Dorippa has discovered that her husband Lysimachus is harboring a prostitute in their house. She wrongly thinks that it is his prostitute rather than his friend Demipho's. At the precisely the wrong time, the cook arrives who Demipho had asked Lysimachus to hire for a party. Lysimachus becomes increasingly frustrated with his friend Demipho. Filmed in Forest Theatre, on the campus of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Version 2: Performed in English. Dorippa is played assertively, and the cook unwittingly complicates Lysimachus' troubles. Translation by Sharon James with modifications by Christopher Bungard, Christine Woodworth, Dan Smith, and …
L’Ingannatore Ingannato: I Due Aspetti Di Milfione Nello Poenulo, Christopher Bungard
L’Ingannatore Ingannato: I Due Aspetti Di Milfione Nello Poenulo, Christopher Bungard
Christopher Bungard
Christopher Bungard's contribution to: Lecturae Plautinae Sarsinates XV: Poenulus. R. Raffaelli and A. Tontini, eds. Urbino: Edizioni QuattroVenti.
Determinando Un Ruolo: Immo E Improvvisazione Nello Pseudolus, Christopher Bungard
Determinando Un Ruolo: Immo E Improvvisazione Nello Pseudolus, Christopher Bungard
Christopher Bungard
Christopher Bungard's contribution to: Lecturae Plautinae Sarsinates XVI: Pseudolus. R. Raffaelli and A. Tontini, eds. Urbino: Edizioni QuattroVenti.
Moore, T. 2012. Roman Theatre. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, Christopher Bungard
Moore, T. 2012. Roman Theatre. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, Christopher Bungard
Christopher Bungard
Christopher Bungard's review of Roman Theatre, by Timothy Moore.
Review Of Dexter Hoyos, Mastering The West: Rome And Carthage At War, Fred Drogula
Review Of Dexter Hoyos, Mastering The West: Rome And Carthage At War, Fred Drogula
Fred K. Drogula
A Re-Examination Of Some Of The South Stoa Wells At Corinth, Guy Sanders, Yuki Furuya, Lynne. Kvapil
A Re-Examination Of Some Of The South Stoa Wells At Corinth, Guy Sanders, Yuki Furuya, Lynne. Kvapil
Lynne Kvapil
In undertaking the publication of the Hellenistic pottery from Corinth, G. Roger Edwards did for Corinth what Homer Thompson had done for the Athenian Agora. Both scholars studied an unattractive body of material from an unfashionable period and made it accessible to a wider audience. In doing so their chronological framework influenced modern scholarship far beyond the archaeology of Hellenistic Corinth and Athens, indeed to every region receiving mainland Greek ceramic imports or imitating them. As a result, most publications on Hellenistic material culture subsequent to Edwards’ Corinth VII.iii refer to it for stylistic parallels and dates. Even new studies …
Making Ends Meet Outside The Palace: The Informal Economy At Mycenae, Lynne. Kvapil
Making Ends Meet Outside The Palace: The Informal Economy At Mycenae, Lynne. Kvapil
Lynne Kvapil
Abstract of paper presentation from: Annual Meeting of CAMWS, Cincinnati, OH, April 2007.
Controlling The Countryside: Defining The Territory Of Mycenae, Lynne. Kvapil
Controlling The Countryside: Defining The Territory Of Mycenae, Lynne. Kvapil
Lynne Kvapil
Abstract of paper presentation from: Annual Meeting of CAMWS, Tucson, AZ, April 2008. Link leads to abstract provided by: CAMWS
The Athenian Agora Museum Guide, Laura Gawlinski
The Athenian Agora Museum Guide, Laura Gawlinski
Laura Gawlinski
Written for the general visitor, the Athenian Agora Museum Guide is a companion to the 2010 edition of the Athenian Agora Site Guide and leads the reader through all of the display spaces within the Stoa of Attalos in the Athenian Agora — the terrace, the ground-floor colonnade, and the newly opened upper story. The guide also discusses each case in the museum gallery chronologically, beginning with the prehistoric and continuing with the Geometric, Archaic, Classical, Hellenistic, Roman, and Byzantine periods. Hundreds of artifacts, ranging from common pottery to elite jewelry held in 81 cases, are described and illustrated in …
Review Of Nathan Rosenstein, Rome And The Mediterranean 290 To 146 Bc: The Imperial Republic, Fred Drogula
Review Of Nathan Rosenstein, Rome And The Mediterranean 290 To 146 Bc: The Imperial Republic, Fred Drogula
Fred K. Drogula
Review Of Michael Scott, Delphi: A History Of The Center Of The Ancient World, Laura Gawlinski
Review Of Michael Scott, Delphi: A History Of The Center Of The Ancient World, Laura Gawlinski
Laura Gawlinski
Antigone Claimed: 'I Am A Stranger!' Political Theory And The Figure Of The Stranger, Andrés Henao-Castro
Antigone Claimed: 'I Am A Stranger!' Political Theory And The Figure Of The Stranger, Andrés Henao-Castro
Andrés Fabián Henao-Castro
This paper seeks to destabilize the silent privilege given to the secured juridical-political position of the citizen as the stable site of enunciation of the problem/solution framework under which the stranger (foreigner, immigrant, refugee) is theoretically located. By means of textual, intertextual, and extratextual readings of Antigone , the paper argues that it is politically and literarily possible to (re)invent her for strangers in the twenty-first century, that is, for those symbolically produced as not-legally locatable and who resignify their ambivalent ontological status between life and death as an alternative sociopolitical location of speech and action in equality with 'others.'