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Index |
241 Kellis 810
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Titre |
Colin A. Hope & Gillian E. Bowen (edd.), assisted by Bruce E. Parr, Kellis. A Roman-Period Village in Egypt's Dakhleh Oasis.
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Publication |
Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2021, xxxiv-480 pp., figg. ISBN 978-0-521-19032-9. £105.
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Résumé |
Introduction: 1. Kellis in context [C.A.H.]. - The domestic environment: 2. Houses, households, household activities [C.A.H. & G.E.B.]; - 3. Paintings from domestic contexts [Helen Whitehouse]; - 4. Crafts [C.A.H.]: 4.1. Basketry, cordage and leatherwork [G.E.B.]; - 4.2. Ceramics [C.A.H.]; - 4.3. Glass [Marie-Dominique Nenna]; 4.4. Textiles [Rosanne Livingstone]. - Aspects of life at Kellis: 5. Society and social structure [Roger S. Bagnall]; - 6. The economy: 6.1. Local economy [R.S.B.]; - 6.2. Plant husbandry and local subsistence [Ursula Thanheiser]; - 6.3. Coinage [G.E.B.]; - 7. The administration of Kellis and Dakhleh Oasis [Andrew Connor]; - 8. Literacy [A.C.]: 8.1. Greek [A.C.]; - 8.2. Coptic [Iain Gardner]; - 8.3. Demotic [Günter Vittmann]; - 8.4. Hieroglyphic Egyptian [Olaf E. Kaper]; - 8.5. Latin [A.C.]; - 8.6. Writing materials [C.A.H.]. - The religious context: 9. The pharaonic and classical religious complexes and the cult of Tutu [C.A.H., G.E.B. & O.E.K.]; - 10. Painted decoration in the main temple complex [H.W.]; - 11. The churches [G.E.B.]; - 12. Types of Christianity: history and spread, organisation, practices and literature [I.G.]. - Burial practices and population: 13. The traditional cemeteries of Kellis [C.A.H., Judith McKenzie & Carlo Rindi Nuzzolo]; - 14. Christian burial practices [G.E.B.]; - 15. Revealing life through death: a review of the bioarcheological studies of human remains [Tosha L. Dupras, Sandra M. Wheeler, Lana J. Williams & Peter G. Sheldrick]. - Concluding remarks: 16. The abandonment of Kellis [C.A.H. & G.E.B.]. - Appendix: Some Kellis texts in translation. - Bibliography. Indices.
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C.R. |
C.R. par Robert J. Littman, BMCRev < https://bmcr.brynmawr.edu/2022/2022.10.23 >. - Mattias Brand, BibO 80 (2023) coll. 36-48.
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N° |
2021-0435
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Index |
215 670
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Titre |
Eva Jakab, Law and Identity. Considerations about Citizenship and Succession in Provincial Practice; - Bernhard Palme, Griechische Rechtsgeschäfte für römische Bürger: Antwort auf Eva Jakab.
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Publication |
Kaja Harter-Uibopuu & Werner Riess (edd.), Symposion 2019. Vorträge zur griechischen und hellenistischen Rechtsgeschichte (Hamburg, 26.-28. August 2019) = Akten der Gesellschaft für griechische und hellenistische Rechtsgeschichte. 28 = Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften. Philosophisch-historische Klasse. Documenta antiqua - Antike Rechtsgeschichte (Wien, 2021) pp. 335-358; - 359-365.
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Internet |
https://verlag.oeaw.ac.at/produkt/symposion-2019/99200829
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Résumé |
There is evidence to assume that legal intercourse between different classes of provincial populace was more intensive than commonly assumed in scholarly literature. Focused on the period before the Constitutio Antoniniana, a response of Scaevola is introduced regarding a Greek parakatatheke inter vivos but employed in inheritance context (D. 32.37.5 18 dig.). Upon the paradigmatic case it can be argued that the 'choice of law' was not only based on status, but also on personal considerations, even among Roman citizens in a provincial environment. - Réponse de Bernhard Palme.
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N° |
2021-0436
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Index |
145.4 660 760
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Index bis |
145.4 P. Merton III, 101 P. Oxy. II, 237
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Titre |
François Lerouxel, Marriage and Asymmetric Information on the Real Estate Market in Roman Egypt.
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Publication |
Cristina Rosillo-López & Marta García Morcillo (edd.), Managing Information in the Roman Economy = Palgrave Studies in Ancient Economies (Cham, 2021) pp. 135-156.
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Résumé |
1. Introduction. - 2. The two prefectural edicts: a. The edict of M. Mettius Rufus (89) [P. Oxy. II, 237, col. VIII, ll. 27–43]; - b. The edict of Ser. Sulpicius Similis (8 November 109) [P. Merton III, 101]. - 3. Two kinds of asymmetric information [in the case of the real estate market of Roman Egypt]. - 4. 'Egyptian Women': the socio-legal structure of Roman Egypt. - 5. Egyptian local customs. - 6. Conclusion: law and economy in the Roman Empire.
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N° |
2021-0438
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Index |
241 Nil 364 Oraculum figuli
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Titre |
Francis Ludlow & Joseph G. Manning, Volcanic Eruptions, Veiled Suns, and Nile Failure in Egyptian History: Integrating Hydroclimate into Understandings of Historical Change.
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Publication |
Paul Erdkamp, Joseph G. Manning & Koenraad Verboven (edd.), Climate Change and Ancient Societies in Europe and the Near East. Diversity in Collapse and Resilience = Palgrave Studies in Ancient Economies (Cham, 2021) pp. 301-320, figg.
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Résumé |
Introduction. - Explosive volcanism, Nile variability, and Egyptian history. - Volcanic hydroclimatic impacts. - Societal responses to Nile flood failure. - Further reflections of volcanic phenomena and hydroclimatic stress: the Oracle of the Potter. - Conclusions.
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N° |
2021-0439
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