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Panel at the 11th Celtic Conference in Classics. University of St Andrews, 11-14th July 2018. Organized by Eran Almagor, Timothy Howe & B. Antela-Bernárdez
Faculty of Arts and Humanities, University of Coimbra, held on 26th - 29th June 2019, Coimbra, Portugal
Review of the 15th ICCS in the Australian Celtic Journal Volume 13 2015 p119-26.
Classics Ireland is the journal of the Classical Association of Ireland (http://www.classicalassociation.ie) It seeks to present the best of Irish and international scholarship on the ancient world and its reception throughout the ages, with a particular though not exclusive focus on its influence and reception in the Celtic world. Notes for Contributors Contributions are welcome on all aspects of the language, history, archaeology, and literature of Greek and Roman antiquity, especially if there is an Irish dimension. Contributions should be scholarly, but not technical. All Greek and Latin must be translated. Minimal footnotes are preferred. Articles should not normally exceed 5,000 words and will be independently refereed before formal acceptance for publication. Copyright remains with the author.
Journal of Roman Studies, 2001
Raimund Karl & Katharina Möller (Hrsg. / Eds): Proceedings of the second European symposium in Celtic Studies, held at Prifysgol Bangor University from July 31st to August 3rd 2017, 2018
Contents Elisa Roma: Old Irish pronominal objects and their use in verbal pro-forms . . . 7 Alistair J. P. Sims; Celtic obsession in modern fantasy literature . . . 21 George Broderick Prof. Sir John Rhŷs in the Isle of Man (1886–1893): Linguistic material and texts . . . 35 Tatyana A. Mikhailova: Geneta Viscara: the element caro- in Gaulish compound names and inscriptions . . . 71 Marcel Bubert: Transcultural history and early medieval Ireland. Some reflections on European diversity, cultural transfer, and the history of knowledge . . . 87 Mary Leenane; Character creation in the Ulster Cycle . . . 103 James January-McCann; ‘Y gwsanaeth prydwysaidd yn y gwledydd yma’: Portrayals of Continental and English catholicism in sixteenth century Wales . . . 119 Doris Edel: What did Ailill and Medb really quarrel about? A legal approach to the ‘Pillow Talk’ . . . 131 Marco Budassi: The development of Insular Celtic double system of inflection . . . 141 Raimund Karl: Social changes in Late Bronze and Early Iron Age Wales: The beginning of Celtic Wales? . . . 159
in R. Haussler and A. King (eds), Celtic Religions in the Roman Period: Personal, Local and Global. Aberystwyth: Celtic Studies Publications, 2017
This multi-authored book brings together new work, from a wide range of disciplinary vantages, on pre-Christian religion in the Celtic-speaking provinces of the Roman Empire. The chapters are the work of international experts in the fields of classics, ancient history, archaeology, and Celtic studies. It is fully illustrated with b&w and colour maps, site plans, photographs and drawings of ancient inscriptions and images of Romano-Celtic gods. The collection is based on the thirteenth workshop of the F.E.R.C.AN. project ( fontes epigraphici religionum Celticarum antiquarum), which was held in 2014 in Lampeter, Wales. celtic studies publications CSP-Cymru Cyf celtic studies publications CSP-Cymru Cyf 9 7 8 1 8 9 1 2 7 1 2 5 0 1 3 9 9 5 ISBN 978-1-891271-25-0 cover Celtic Religions Cocidius knockout terfynol.indd 1
Witcher, R.E. (2014) New Book Chronicle. Antiquity, 88(340): 689-702.
This quarter, NBC investigates recent books on Mediterranean archaeology and explores the metaphors and other framing devices deployed to characterise the relationships between Mediterranean societies and their environments. We start with a geographical tour before considering more general contributions on the relationships between prehistoric and historic societies and the Mediterranean—both as physical environment and conceptual space. KONSTANTINOS CHALIKIAS. Living on the margin: Chryssi Island and the settlement patterns of the Ierapetra area (Crete) (British Archaeological Reports international series 2549). vii+154 pages, numerous b&w illustrations. 2013. Oxford: Archaeopress; 978-1-4073-1169-2 paperback £30. MICHAEL K. TOUMAZOU, P. NICK KARDULIAS & DEREK B. COUNTS (ed.). Crossroads and boundaries: the archaeology of past and present in the Malloura valley, Cyprus (Annual of the American Schools of Oriental Research 65). xxiii+376 pages, 223 colour and b&w illustrations, 16 tables. 2011. Boston (MA): American Schools of Oriental Research; 978-0-89757-086-2 hardback £65. MICHAEL C. HOFF & RHYS F. TOWNSEND (ed.). Rough Cilicia: new historical and archaeological approaches. xii+315 pages, numerous b&w illustrations. 2013. Oxford & Oakville (CT): Oxbow; 978-1-84217-518-7 hardback £65. K. KISSAS & W.-D. NIEMEIER (ed.). The Corinthia and the northeast Peloponnese: topography and history from prehistoric times until the end of Antiquity (Athenaia 4). xii+558 pages, 438 colour and b&w illustrations. 2013. Munich: Deutschen Archäologischen Institut Athen; 978-3-7774-2122-3 paperback €85. MICHAEL L. GALATY, OLS LAFE, WAYNE E. LEE & ZAMIR TAFILICA (ed.). Light and shadow: isolation and interaction in the Shala valley of northern Albania (Monumenta Archaeologica 28). xxvi+272 pages, 18 tables. 2013. Los Angeles (CA): Cotsen Institute of Archaeology Press; 978-1-931745-71-0 hardback; $65. DAVID AUSTIN, ROSAMOND FAITH, ANDREW FLEMING & DAVID SIDDLE. Cipières: community and landscape in the Alpes-Maritimes, France. xvi+333 pages, 223 colour and b&w illustrations. 2013. Oxford: Windgather; 978-1-905119-99-8 paperback £38. STELLA SOUVATZI & ATHENA HADJI (ed.). Space and time in Mediterranean prehistory. xvi+303 pages, 35 b&w illustrations, 2 tables. 2013. London & New York: Routledge; 978-0-415-83732-3 hardback £80. JONATHAN R.W. PRAG & JOSEPHINE CRAWLEY QUINN (ed.). The Hellenistic West: rethinking the ancient Mediterranean. xxi+471 pages, 16 colour and 127 b&w illustrations. 2013. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 978-1-107-03242-2 hardback £75. KEVIN WALSH. The archaeology of Mediterranean landscapes: human-environment interaction from the Neolithic to the Roman period. xxii+367 pages, numerous b&w illustrations. 2014. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 978-0-521-85301-9 hardback £65 & $99.
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