Athena Iakovidou - Academia.edu (original) (raw)
Papers by Athena Iakovidou
Coin Hoards and Hoarding in the Roman World
Chapter 6 provides an overview of the Roman hoards discovered in the territory of modern Greece, ... more Chapter 6 provides an overview of the Roman hoards discovered in the territory of modern Greece, and discusses circulation patterns of both local and imperial coinages. It presents the overall composition of the hoards and the types of currency included for each of two major regions: the Roman province of Achaia with the addition of the Aegean islands and Crete; and the part of the Roman province of Macedonia which belongs to the modern Greek state. The chapter explores differences in the patterns of geographical distribution for the Roman denominations between the two regions and which denominations prevailed over time. What is the percentage of Roman versus local issues and in what type of hoards are the two currencies encountered? How far did local coins travel? Special attention is given to tracing change over time, and to regional variation.
DARIAH Annual Event 2022: Storytelling, 2022
This article discusses patterns of numismatic circulation in two major cities of the province of ... more This article discusses patterns of numismatic circulation in two major cities of the province of Achaia. It is based on published material deriving from systematic archaeological excavations and aims at underlining similarities and differences in circulation patterns between the two cities.
DARIAH Annual Event 2019: Humanities Data, 2019
The UDigiSH Working Group focuses on the study of Digital Methods and Good Practices of heritage ... more The UDigiSH Working Group focuses on the study of Digital Methods and Good Practices of heritage and urban change, the impact of urban development on cultural heritage, the identity of the city and the role of civil society. This is planned to be the first physical meeting of the participants of the WG Digital Practices for the Study of Urban Heritage. Meeting in person will accelerate interaction between the members of the group and will allow us to finalise a plan of action for the first year, the list of tasks for which will be compiled before arriving at the venue through a series of virtual meetings of the group on Zoom. The meeting will also enable us to agree on members' contribution based on availability and expertise. Coordination of activities at a local level, access to resources and sharing of tools will also be discussed during the meeting with the aim to facilitate and enable work for achieving the goals and objectives of the WG. Subgroup follow up meetings will be organised individually by various members to conduct on-site data collection/working sessions, which will be then integrated into the WG body of work. Finally, this 1st meeting of the WG will give us the opportunity to introduce our activities, motivation and objectives to other DARIAH WGs and communities, as well as to familiarise ourselves with the parallel activities of the network and explore new collaborations and opportunities that will strengthen DARIAH communities and the network.
Gardner ıÂÒÚËÛÂ, ·Ú¯Èο, fiÙÈ Ù· ÓÔÌ›ÛÌ·Ù· ÂΉ›‰ÔÓÙ·Ó Û ÓÔÌÈÛÌ·ÙÔÎÔÂ›Ô ÛÙËÓ ›‰È· ÙËÓ fiÏË Ù˘ ... more Gardner ıÂÒÚËÛÂ, ·Ú¯Èο, fiÙÈ Ù· ÓÔÌ›ÛÌ·Ù· ÂΉ›‰ÔÓÙ·Ó Û ÓÔÌÈÛÌ·ÙÔÎÔÂ›Ô ÛÙËÓ ›‰È· ÙËÓ fiÏË Ù˘ ◊Ïȉ·˜, 1 fï˜ Ô Seltman, Ì ÈÛ¯˘Úfiٷٷ ÂȯÂÈÚ‹Ì·Ù· Î·È ·ÎÔÏÔ˘ıÔ ‡ÌÂÓÔ˜ ·fi Ï›-ÛÙÔ˘˜ ÂÚ¢ÓËÙ¤˜, Ù· ·¤‰ˆÛ ÙÂÏÈο Û ÓÔÌÈÛÌ·ÙÔÎÔÂ›Ô ÛÙÔ ›‰ÈÔ ÙÔ ÈÂÚfi ÙË√ Ï˘Ì›·˜. 2 √È ÛٷًÚ˜, ÔÈ ‰Ú·¯Ì¤˜, Ù· ËÌ›‰Ú·¯Ì· Î·È ÔÈ Ô‚ÔÏÔ› Ô˘ Ù¤ıËÎ·Ó 1. Gardner 1879, 221-73. 2. Seltman 1921, 1-5. ™ø™π ¶√ §π™ 56 Û ΢ÎÏÔÊÔÚ›· ÙËÓ ÂÚ›Ô‰Ô Ô˘ ı· Ì·˜ ··Û¯ÔÏ‹ÛÂÈ, Â͢ËÚÂÙÔ ‡Û·Ó ÙȘ ·˘-ÍË̤Ó˜ ÔÈÎÔÓÔÌÈΤ˜ ·Ó¿ÁΘ ÙÔ˘ ÈÂÚÔ ‡, ηıÒ˜ ÔÈ ∏Ï›ÔÈ Â›¯·Ó ÂÈ‚¿ÏÂÈ ÛÙËÓ ÂÚÈÔ¯‹ ÙËÓ ·ÔÎÏÂÈÛÙÈ΋ ¯Ú‹ÛË ÙˆÓ Â›ÛËÌˆÓ ∏ÏÂÈ·ÎÒÓ Ì¤ÙÚˆÓ, ÛÙ·ıÌÒÓ Î·È ÓÔÌÈÛÌ¿ÙˆÓ. ŸÛÔÓ ·ÊÔÚ¿ ÙËÓ ¤Ó·ÚÍË Ù˘ ÏÂÈÙÔ˘ÚÁ›·˜ ÙÔ˘ ÓÔÌÈÛÌ·ÙÔÎÔ›Ԣ ÔÈ ·fi"ÂÈÙˆÓ ÂÚ¢ÓËÙÒÓ ÔÈΛÏÏÔ˘Ó. √ Babelon 3 ıÂÒÚËÛ ÈÔ Èı·Ó‹ ÌÈ· ¯ÚÔÓÔÏÔÁ›· ÎÔÓÙ¿ ÛÙ· Ù¤ÏË ÙÔ˘ 6 Ô˘· È. .Ã., ¿Ô"Ë Ô˘ ÂÓÛÙÂÚÓ›˙ÂÙ·È Î·È Ô Seltman, 4 ÂÓÒ Ô Head, 5 ÚÒÙÔ˜ ˘ÔÛÙ‹ÚÈÍ fiÙÈ Ù· ÓÔÌ›ÛÌ·Ù· ¿Ú¯ÈÛ·Ó Ó· ÂΉ›‰ÔÓÙ·È ÙÔ 471 .Ã., ¯ÚÔÓÔÏÔÁ›· ÛÙËÓ ÔÔ›· ÙÂÏÈο ηٷϋÁÂÈ Î·È Ô Kraay. 6 ¶Ú¿ÁÌ·ÙÈ, ÓÔÌ›-ÛÌ·Ù· Ù˘ √Ï˘Ì›·˜ ‰ÂÓ ¤¯Ô˘Ó ‚ÚÂı› Û ηӤӷ «ıËÛ·˘Úfi» ÙÔ˘ ‡ÛÙÂÚÔ˘ 6 Ô˘‹ ÙˆÓ ·Ú¯ÒÓ ÙÔ˘ 5 Ô˘· È. .Ã., ÂÓÒ ÔÈ ÚˆÈÌfiÙÂÚÔÈ «ıËÛ·˘ÚÔ›» Ô˘ ÂÚȤ¯Ô˘Ó ÓÔ-Ì›ÛÌ·Ù· Ù˘ ÂÚÈÔ¯‹˜ ÚÔ¤Ú¯ÔÓÙ·È, Ô ¤Ó·˜ ·fi ÙË ¡· ‡·ÎÙÔ Ì ¯ÚÔÓÔÏÔÁ›· ηٿ¯ˆÛ˘ ÙÔ 460 .Ã. (IGCH 19) Î·È Ô ¿ÏÏÔ˜ ·fi ÙËÓ ¶ÂÏÔfiÓÓËÛÔ Ì ·Úfi-ÌÔÈ· ¯ÚÔÓÔÏÔÁ›· ηٿ¯ˆÛ˘ (IGCH 20). 7 ÕÏψÛÙÂ, ˘ÔÛÙËÚÈÎÙÈÎfi ·˘Ù‹˜ ÙËÚ ÔÓÔÏfiÁËÛ˘ Â›Ó·È Î·È ÙÔ ÁÂÁÔÓfi˜ fiÙÈ, Û ‡Ìʈӷ Ì ÙÔÓ ™ÙÚ¿‚ˆÓ· (8.3.2), Ë ◊Ïȉ· ÏÔÁ›˙ÂÙ·È ˆ˜ ÌÂÁ¿ÏÔ ÔÈÎÈÛÙÈÎfi ΤÓÙÚÔ Î˘Ú›ˆ˜ ÌÂÙ¿ ÙÔ Û˘ÓÔÈÎÈÛÌfi ÙÔ4 71 .Ã., fiÙ·Ó ÔÈ ∏Ï›ÔÈ ÂÁη٤ÛÙËÛ·Ó ÂΛ ¤Ó· ÌÂÁ¿ÏÔ Ì¤ÚÔ˜ ÙÔ˘ ÏËı˘ÛÌÔ ‡ Ù˘ ∏Ï›·˜. 8 ∂›Ó·È ÏÔÈfiÓ ÏÔÁÈÎfi, ·Ì¤Ûˆ˜ ÌÂÙ¿, ÔÈ Î¿ÙÔÈÎÔÈ Ù˘ ◊Ïȉ·˜ Ó· ÚÔ-‚Ô ‡Ó ÛÙËÓ ÚÒÙË ÙÔ˘˜ ÓÔÌÈÛÌ·ÙÈ΋ ·Ú·ÁˆÁ‹, Û ÓÔÌÈÛÌ·ÙÔÎÔÂ›Ô Ô˘ ‰ËÌÈ-Ô ‡ÚÁËÛ·Ó ÛÙÔÓ ›‰ÈÔ ÙÔ ¯ÒÚÔ Ù˘ √Ï˘Ì›·˜. √È ÚˆÈÌfiÙÂÚ˜ ·ÂÈÎÔÓ›ÛÂȘ, ÔÈ Ôԛ˜ ¯ÚÔÓÔÏÔÁÔ ‡ÓÙ·È ÛÙÔ ‰È¿ÛÙËÌ· 468-452 .Ã. Î·È ·ÔÙÂÏÔ ‡Ó ÙÔ ÚÒÙÔ ·Ú¿‰ÂÈÁÌ· ·fi‰ÔÛ˘ Ù˘ ÌÔÚÊ‹˜ Ù˘ Û ÓÔ-Ì›ÛÌ·Ù· ÙÔ˘ ΢ڛˆ˜ ÂÏÏ·‰ÈÎÔ ‡ ¯ÒÚÔ˘, ·ÚÈÛÙÔ ‡Ó ÙË ¡›ÎË Ó· ÙÚ¤¯ÂÈ ÛÙË ÛÙ¿ÛË ÙÔ˘ âÓ ÁÔ ‡Ó·ÛÈÓ ‰ÚfiÌÔ˘, ÎÚ·ÙÒÓÙ·˜ Ì ÙÔ ¤Ó· ¯¤ÚÈ ÛÙÂÊ¿ÓÈ Î·È Ì ÙÔ ¿ÏÏÔ ÙËÓ ¿ÎÚË ÙÔ˘ ¯ÈÙÒÓ· (ÂÈÎ. 1-3). ∫·Ù¿ ÙËÓ ÂfiÌÂÓË ÂÚ›Ô‰Ô (452-432 .Ã.) Ë Ù˘ÔÏÔÁ›· Ù˘ ¡›Î˘ ÂÌÏÔ˘Ù›-ÂÙ·È Î·È Ë ·fi‰ÔÛË Ù˘ ÌÔÚÊ‹˜ ·ÔÌ·ÎÚ ‡ÓÂÙ·È ÛÙ·‰È·Î¿ ·fi ÙËÓ ·Ú¯·˚΋ ÛÙ¿ÛË ÙÔ˘ âÓ ÁÔ ‡Ó·ÛÈÓ ‰ÚfiÌÔ˘. ∫ÔÓÙ¿ ÛÙÔ ‹‰Ë ˘¿Ú¯ÔÓ ı¤Ì· Ù˘ ıÂfiÙËÙ·˜ Ô3 .
Contributions to projects by Athena Iakovidou
Ashmolean Museum - Oxford Roman Economy Project
The Coin Hoards of the Roman Empire Project is a joint initiative of the Ashmolean Museum and the... more The Coin Hoards of the Roman Empire Project is a joint initiative of the Ashmolean Museum and the Oxford Roman Economy Project. It is the brainchild of Baron Lorne Thyssen-Bornemisza and is funded by the Augustus Foundation. It intends to fill a major lacuna in the digital coverage of coin hoards from antiquity. It aims to collect information about hoards of all coinages in use in the Roman Empire between approximately 30 BC and AD 400. Imperial coinage forms the main focus of the project, but Iron Age and Roman Provincial coinages in circulation within this period are also included to give a complete picture of the monetary systems of both the West and the East. The Project also includes hoards of Roman coins from outside the Empire to demonstrate Rome's economic and cultural reach. The hoards currently documented contain over 8 million coins. The intention of the Project is to provide the foundations for a systematic Empire-wide study of hoarding and to promote the integration of numismatic data into broader research on the Roman Economy.
Ακαδημία Αθηνών, Κέντρο Ερεύνης της Ιστορίας του Νεώτερου Ελληνισμού, 2018-2020
Η ΑΠΟΛΛΩΝΙΣ είναι η εθνική υποδομή που υποστηρίζει και προωθεί τις ψηφιακές ανθρωπιστικές επιστήμ... more Η ΑΠΟΛΛΩΝΙΣ είναι η εθνική υποδομή που υποστηρίζει και προωθεί τις ψηφιακές ανθρωπιστικές επιστήμες και τέχνες, και τη γλωσσική τεχνολογία και καινοτομία στην Ελλάδα. Εντάσσεται στη Δράση «Ενίσχυση των Υποδομών Έρευνας και Καινοτομίας» και χρηματοδοτείται από το Επιχειρησιακό Πρόγραμμα «Ανταγωνιστικότητα, Επιχειρηματικότητα και Καινοτομία» στο πλαίσιο του ΕΣΠΑ 2014-2020, με τη συγχρηματοδότηση της Ελλάδας και της Ευρωπαϊκής Ένωσης (Ευρωπαϊκό Ταμείο Περιφερειακής Ανάπτυξης). Η ΑΠΟΛΛΩΝΙΣ δημιουργήθηκε από τη σύμπραξη του Εθνικού Δικτύου Γλωσσικής Τεχνολογίας clarin:el και του Εθνικού Δικτύου Ψηφιακών Υποδομών για τις Ανθρωπιστικές Επιστήμες DARIAH-GR/ΔΥΑΣ, τα οποία είναι συνιστώσες των αντίστοιχων ευρωπαϊκών υποδομών CLARIN και DARIAH. Στην παρούσα φάση εξέλιξης της υποδομής περιλαμβάνονται δράσεις περαιτέρω ανάπτυξης και εμπέδωσης των υπηρεσιών των δύο συνιστωσών υποδομών, μέσα σε ένα πλαίσιο διαλειτουργικότητας και αμοιβαίας ενίσχυσης, ενώ συνεχίζεται η συμμετοχή της Ελλάδας στις αντίστοιχες ευρωπαϊκές υποδομές.
(KERA)/IHR/NHRF, 2013-2015
The Section of Greek and Roman Antiquity of the Institute of Historical Research is hosting InCoM... more The Section of Greek and Roman Antiquity of the Institute of Historical Research is hosting InCoMac (Inscriptions and Coins: New Documents from Ancient Macedonia), a project of basic research about ancient sources. The project is closely connected to the Institute’s profile as a leading institution with an international reputation in the field of historical, epigraphic, and numismatic studies.
The objective of InCoMac is the systematic study and publication of primary sources, namely inscriptions preserved on stone and coins, which provide evidence about the history of ancient Macedonia. Both these categories of material evidence constitute primary sources of unparalleled significance for the study of institutions, diplomacy, social hierarchy, economic structure, the circulation of wealth and many other facets of ancient societies. This kind of contemporary evidence is a valuable supplement to the literary sources for ancient Macedonia, which in many cases were composed by authors writing in later periods.
The specific aims of this project are twofold:
A. To produce two complete corpora, collections of the material, which can be used as sources to construct more comprehensive narratives of ancient Macedonian history.
A1. The second volume of inscriptions from Lower Macedonia, the area extending from the Axios river to Mt. Bermion and known in antiquity as the Third Macedonian District and
A2. A corpus of the Hellenistic coins struck in the name of the Macedonians, the Amphaxians and the Botteatai.
Both these corpora will be compiled on the basis of geography and genre, in the case of inscriptions, and on the basis of issuing authorities and die identifications, in the case of coins.
B. To create a digital platform that will enable research groups and public institutions to cooperate in the task of recording and studying inscriptions and coins. Two digital collections will be embedded in this platform.
B1. A collection of the inscriptions on stone from central Macedonia (the area between the Axios and the Strymon rivers, known since antiquity as the Second Macedonian District) and
B2. A collection of coins from two important Macedonian cities, namely Aigai and Amphipolis.
This infrastructure will facilitate close collaboration of all interested parties, research institutes, museums, Universities and the Archaeological Service.
(KERA)/IHR/NHRF, 2015
The objective of this research is to present numismatic circulation in two cities of the Roman pr... more The objective of this research is to present numismatic circulation in two cities of the Roman province of Achaia, namely, Corinth and Athens. These are two important albeit different cities as to their legal status and numismatic production. The finds discussed in this paper have been discovered during systematic excavations, particularly by the American School of Classical Studies—excavations conducted from 1896 to 2004 in Corinth and from 1931 to 1990 in Athens. The sufficient amount of numismatic material published has allowed us to proceed to its systematic presentation as well as comparisons between the two cities. It should be noted that the photographs accompanying the maps are indicative and do not illustrate the specific coins found during the excavation but similar ones.
(KERA)/IHR/NHRF, 2007-2008
Αντικείμενο του έργου είναι η ενίσχυση των υποδομών και της λειτουργικότητας για (α) την συστηματ... more Αντικείμενο του έργου είναι η ενίσχυση των υποδομών και της λειτουργικότητας για (α) την συστηματική συλλογή μεγάλων συνόλων ανεκμετάλλευτων γραπτών πηγών της Αρχαίας Ελληνικής Ιστορίας και Πολιτισμού με ιδιαίτερη έμφαση στις επιγραφές και τα νομίσματα και σε επιλεγμένες περιοχές του ελληνικού χώρου (Θράκη, Μακεδονία, Θεσσαλία, Αττική, Αχαΐα, Ηλεία, Κυκλάδες, Μ. Ασία, Παλαιστίνη κλπ), (β) την δημοσίευσή τους σε έντυπη και ηλεκτρονική μορφή, (γ) την επιστημονική αξιοποίησή τους υπό μορφήν μονογραφιών και άρθρων, (δ) την εκπαίδευση νέων επιστημόνων, (ε) την αξιοποίηση και ανάπτυξη νέων τεχνολογιών στον χώρο της ιστορίας και του πολιτισμού, (στ) την ενίσχυση διεθνών συνεργασιών στο πλαίσιο της ενισχύσεως του ενιαίου ευρωπαϊκού χώρου έρευνας μέσω των ευρωπαϊκών δικτύων αριστείας, καθώς επίσης και (ζ) την καλλιέργεια δεσμών με τις γειτονικές βαλκανικές και μεσογειακές χώρες
(KERA)/IHR/NHRF, 1996, 1998
PANDEKTIS is a project of the National Hellenic Research Foundation which contains major digital ... more PANDEKTIS is a project of the National Hellenic Research Foundation which contains major digital collections of Greek history and civilization. The collections have been produced by the Institute of Neohellenic Research, the Institute of Byzantine Research and the Institute of Greek and Roman Antiquity. The National Documentation Centre supports the collections' digital form. This collection of epigraphic texts represents part of the epigraphic archives of the Institute for Greek and Roman Antiquity (KERA), which were progressively constituted since 1980 with permission and in collaboration with the corresponding Department of Antiquities of the direction of Antiquities of the Greek Ministry of Culture, to promote the systematic study and scientific exploitation of epigraphic texts as primary sources for the history, institutions, language, religion and culture of specific Greek regions in Greek and Roman Antiquity.
The collection comprises three sets of published ancient inscriptions on stone (the lower limit being the 7th century AD):
from the Achaean city of Patras (Prof. A Rizakis)
from Upper Macedonia (prefectures of Grevena, Kozani, Kastoria and Florina, Prof. A. Rizakis and Dr. J. Touratsoglou)
from Aegean Thrace (prefectures of Xanthi, Rhodopi and Hebros: KERA researchers Drs. L. Loukopoulou, M.-G. Parissaki, S. Psoma and A. Zournatzi in collaboration with the archaeologists of the 19th Ephoria of Prehistoric and Classical Antiquities D. Triantaphyllos, K. Kallintzi, K. Koutsoumanis, Ch. Karadima, E. Skarlatidou, D. Terzopoulou and P. Tsatsopoulou)
(KERA)/IHR/NHRF, 2005-2006
(KERA)/IHR/NHRF, 1996-1998, 1996
Talks by Athena Iakovidou
Books by Athena Iakovidou
Coin Hoards and Hoarding in the Roman World
Chapter 6 provides an overview of the Roman hoards discovered in the territory of modern Greece, ... more Chapter 6 provides an overview of the Roman hoards discovered in the territory of modern Greece, and discusses circulation patterns of both local and imperial coinages. It presents the overall composition of the hoards and the types of currency included for each of two major regions: the Roman province of Achaia with the addition of the Aegean islands and Crete; and the part of the Roman province of Macedonia which belongs to the modern Greek state. The chapter explores differences in the patterns of geographical distribution for the Roman denominations between the two regions and which denominations prevailed over time. What is the percentage of Roman versus local issues and in what type of hoards are the two currencies encountered? How far did local coins travel? Special attention is given to tracing change over time, and to regional variation.
DARIAH Annual Event 2022: Storytelling, 2022
This article discusses patterns of numismatic circulation in two major cities of the province of ... more This article discusses patterns of numismatic circulation in two major cities of the province of Achaia. It is based on published material deriving from systematic archaeological excavations and aims at underlining similarities and differences in circulation patterns between the two cities.
DARIAH Annual Event 2019: Humanities Data, 2019
The UDigiSH Working Group focuses on the study of Digital Methods and Good Practices of heritage ... more The UDigiSH Working Group focuses on the study of Digital Methods and Good Practices of heritage and urban change, the impact of urban development on cultural heritage, the identity of the city and the role of civil society. This is planned to be the first physical meeting of the participants of the WG Digital Practices for the Study of Urban Heritage. Meeting in person will accelerate interaction between the members of the group and will allow us to finalise a plan of action for the first year, the list of tasks for which will be compiled before arriving at the venue through a series of virtual meetings of the group on Zoom. The meeting will also enable us to agree on members' contribution based on availability and expertise. Coordination of activities at a local level, access to resources and sharing of tools will also be discussed during the meeting with the aim to facilitate and enable work for achieving the goals and objectives of the WG. Subgroup follow up meetings will be organised individually by various members to conduct on-site data collection/working sessions, which will be then integrated into the WG body of work. Finally, this 1st meeting of the WG will give us the opportunity to introduce our activities, motivation and objectives to other DARIAH WGs and communities, as well as to familiarise ourselves with the parallel activities of the network and explore new collaborations and opportunities that will strengthen DARIAH communities and the network.
Gardner ıÂÒÚËÛÂ, ·Ú¯Èο, fiÙÈ Ù· ÓÔÌ›ÛÌ·Ù· ÂΉ›‰ÔÓÙ·Ó Û ÓÔÌÈÛÌ·ÙÔÎÔÂ›Ô ÛÙËÓ ›‰È· ÙËÓ fiÏË Ù˘ ... more Gardner ıÂÒÚËÛÂ, ·Ú¯Èο, fiÙÈ Ù· ÓÔÌ›ÛÌ·Ù· ÂΉ›‰ÔÓÙ·Ó Û ÓÔÌÈÛÌ·ÙÔÎÔÂ›Ô ÛÙËÓ ›‰È· ÙËÓ fiÏË Ù˘ ◊Ïȉ·˜, 1 fï˜ Ô Seltman, Ì ÈÛ¯˘Úfiٷٷ ÂȯÂÈÚ‹Ì·Ù· Î·È ·ÎÔÏÔ˘ıÔ ‡ÌÂÓÔ˜ ·fi Ï›-ÛÙÔ˘˜ ÂÚ¢ÓËÙ¤˜, Ù· ·¤‰ˆÛ ÙÂÏÈο Û ÓÔÌÈÛÌ·ÙÔÎÔÂ›Ô ÛÙÔ ›‰ÈÔ ÙÔ ÈÂÚfi ÙË√ Ï˘Ì›·˜. 2 √È ÛٷًÚ˜, ÔÈ ‰Ú·¯Ì¤˜, Ù· ËÌ›‰Ú·¯Ì· Î·È ÔÈ Ô‚ÔÏÔ› Ô˘ Ù¤ıËÎ·Ó 1. Gardner 1879, 221-73. 2. Seltman 1921, 1-5. ™ø™π ¶√ §π™ 56 Û ΢ÎÏÔÊÔÚ›· ÙËÓ ÂÚ›Ô‰Ô Ô˘ ı· Ì·˜ ··Û¯ÔÏ‹ÛÂÈ, Â͢ËÚÂÙÔ ‡Û·Ó ÙȘ ·˘-ÍË̤Ó˜ ÔÈÎÔÓÔÌÈΤ˜ ·Ó¿ÁΘ ÙÔ˘ ÈÂÚÔ ‡, ηıÒ˜ ÔÈ ∏Ï›ÔÈ Â›¯·Ó ÂÈ‚¿ÏÂÈ ÛÙËÓ ÂÚÈÔ¯‹ ÙËÓ ·ÔÎÏÂÈÛÙÈ΋ ¯Ú‹ÛË ÙˆÓ Â›ÛËÌˆÓ ∏ÏÂÈ·ÎÒÓ Ì¤ÙÚˆÓ, ÛÙ·ıÌÒÓ Î·È ÓÔÌÈÛÌ¿ÙˆÓ. ŸÛÔÓ ·ÊÔÚ¿ ÙËÓ ¤Ó·ÚÍË Ù˘ ÏÂÈÙÔ˘ÚÁ›·˜ ÙÔ˘ ÓÔÌÈÛÌ·ÙÔÎÔ›Ԣ ÔÈ ·fi"ÂÈÙˆÓ ÂÚ¢ÓËÙÒÓ ÔÈΛÏÏÔ˘Ó. √ Babelon 3 ıÂÒÚËÛ ÈÔ Èı·Ó‹ ÌÈ· ¯ÚÔÓÔÏÔÁ›· ÎÔÓÙ¿ ÛÙ· Ù¤ÏË ÙÔ˘ 6 Ô˘· È. .Ã., ¿Ô"Ë Ô˘ ÂÓÛÙÂÚÓ›˙ÂÙ·È Î·È Ô Seltman, 4 ÂÓÒ Ô Head, 5 ÚÒÙÔ˜ ˘ÔÛÙ‹ÚÈÍ fiÙÈ Ù· ÓÔÌ›ÛÌ·Ù· ¿Ú¯ÈÛ·Ó Ó· ÂΉ›‰ÔÓÙ·È ÙÔ 471 .Ã., ¯ÚÔÓÔÏÔÁ›· ÛÙËÓ ÔÔ›· ÙÂÏÈο ηٷϋÁÂÈ Î·È Ô Kraay. 6 ¶Ú¿ÁÌ·ÙÈ, ÓÔÌ›-ÛÌ·Ù· Ù˘ √Ï˘Ì›·˜ ‰ÂÓ ¤¯Ô˘Ó ‚ÚÂı› Û ηӤӷ «ıËÛ·˘Úfi» ÙÔ˘ ‡ÛÙÂÚÔ˘ 6 Ô˘‹ ÙˆÓ ·Ú¯ÒÓ ÙÔ˘ 5 Ô˘· È. .Ã., ÂÓÒ ÔÈ ÚˆÈÌfiÙÂÚÔÈ «ıËÛ·˘ÚÔ›» Ô˘ ÂÚȤ¯Ô˘Ó ÓÔ-Ì›ÛÌ·Ù· Ù˘ ÂÚÈÔ¯‹˜ ÚÔ¤Ú¯ÔÓÙ·È, Ô ¤Ó·˜ ·fi ÙË ¡· ‡·ÎÙÔ Ì ¯ÚÔÓÔÏÔÁ›· ηٿ¯ˆÛ˘ ÙÔ 460 .Ã. (IGCH 19) Î·È Ô ¿ÏÏÔ˜ ·fi ÙËÓ ¶ÂÏÔfiÓÓËÛÔ Ì ·Úfi-ÌÔÈ· ¯ÚÔÓÔÏÔÁ›· ηٿ¯ˆÛ˘ (IGCH 20). 7 ÕÏψÛÙÂ, ˘ÔÛÙËÚÈÎÙÈÎfi ·˘Ù‹˜ ÙËÚ ÔÓÔÏfiÁËÛ˘ Â›Ó·È Î·È ÙÔ ÁÂÁÔÓfi˜ fiÙÈ, Û ‡Ìʈӷ Ì ÙÔÓ ™ÙÚ¿‚ˆÓ· (8.3.2), Ë ◊Ïȉ· ÏÔÁ›˙ÂÙ·È ˆ˜ ÌÂÁ¿ÏÔ ÔÈÎÈÛÙÈÎfi ΤÓÙÚÔ Î˘Ú›ˆ˜ ÌÂÙ¿ ÙÔ Û˘ÓÔÈÎÈÛÌfi ÙÔ4 71 .Ã., fiÙ·Ó ÔÈ ∏Ï›ÔÈ ÂÁη٤ÛÙËÛ·Ó ÂΛ ¤Ó· ÌÂÁ¿ÏÔ Ì¤ÚÔ˜ ÙÔ˘ ÏËı˘ÛÌÔ ‡ Ù˘ ∏Ï›·˜. 8 ∂›Ó·È ÏÔÈfiÓ ÏÔÁÈÎfi, ·Ì¤Ûˆ˜ ÌÂÙ¿, ÔÈ Î¿ÙÔÈÎÔÈ Ù˘ ◊Ïȉ·˜ Ó· ÚÔ-‚Ô ‡Ó ÛÙËÓ ÚÒÙË ÙÔ˘˜ ÓÔÌÈÛÌ·ÙÈ΋ ·Ú·ÁˆÁ‹, Û ÓÔÌÈÛÌ·ÙÔÎÔÂ›Ô Ô˘ ‰ËÌÈ-Ô ‡ÚÁËÛ·Ó ÛÙÔÓ ›‰ÈÔ ÙÔ ¯ÒÚÔ Ù˘ √Ï˘Ì›·˜. √È ÚˆÈÌfiÙÂÚ˜ ·ÂÈÎÔÓ›ÛÂȘ, ÔÈ Ôԛ˜ ¯ÚÔÓÔÏÔÁÔ ‡ÓÙ·È ÛÙÔ ‰È¿ÛÙËÌ· 468-452 .Ã. Î·È ·ÔÙÂÏÔ ‡Ó ÙÔ ÚÒÙÔ ·Ú¿‰ÂÈÁÌ· ·fi‰ÔÛ˘ Ù˘ ÌÔÚÊ‹˜ Ù˘ Û ÓÔ-Ì›ÛÌ·Ù· ÙÔ˘ ΢ڛˆ˜ ÂÏÏ·‰ÈÎÔ ‡ ¯ÒÚÔ˘, ·ÚÈÛÙÔ ‡Ó ÙË ¡›ÎË Ó· ÙÚ¤¯ÂÈ ÛÙË ÛÙ¿ÛË ÙÔ˘ âÓ ÁÔ ‡Ó·ÛÈÓ ‰ÚfiÌÔ˘, ÎÚ·ÙÒÓÙ·˜ Ì ÙÔ ¤Ó· ¯¤ÚÈ ÛÙÂÊ¿ÓÈ Î·È Ì ÙÔ ¿ÏÏÔ ÙËÓ ¿ÎÚË ÙÔ˘ ¯ÈÙÒÓ· (ÂÈÎ. 1-3). ∫·Ù¿ ÙËÓ ÂfiÌÂÓË ÂÚ›Ô‰Ô (452-432 .Ã.) Ë Ù˘ÔÏÔÁ›· Ù˘ ¡›Î˘ ÂÌÏÔ˘Ù›-ÂÙ·È Î·È Ë ·fi‰ÔÛË Ù˘ ÌÔÚÊ‹˜ ·ÔÌ·ÎÚ ‡ÓÂÙ·È ÛÙ·‰È·Î¿ ·fi ÙËÓ ·Ú¯·˚΋ ÛÙ¿ÛË ÙÔ˘ âÓ ÁÔ ‡Ó·ÛÈÓ ‰ÚfiÌÔ˘. ∫ÔÓÙ¿ ÛÙÔ ‹‰Ë ˘¿Ú¯ÔÓ ı¤Ì· Ù˘ ıÂfiÙËÙ·˜ Ô3 .
Ashmolean Museum - Oxford Roman Economy Project
The Coin Hoards of the Roman Empire Project is a joint initiative of the Ashmolean Museum and the... more The Coin Hoards of the Roman Empire Project is a joint initiative of the Ashmolean Museum and the Oxford Roman Economy Project. It is the brainchild of Baron Lorne Thyssen-Bornemisza and is funded by the Augustus Foundation. It intends to fill a major lacuna in the digital coverage of coin hoards from antiquity. It aims to collect information about hoards of all coinages in use in the Roman Empire between approximately 30 BC and AD 400. Imperial coinage forms the main focus of the project, but Iron Age and Roman Provincial coinages in circulation within this period are also included to give a complete picture of the monetary systems of both the West and the East. The Project also includes hoards of Roman coins from outside the Empire to demonstrate Rome's economic and cultural reach. The hoards currently documented contain over 8 million coins. The intention of the Project is to provide the foundations for a systematic Empire-wide study of hoarding and to promote the integration of numismatic data into broader research on the Roman Economy.
Ακαδημία Αθηνών, Κέντρο Ερεύνης της Ιστορίας του Νεώτερου Ελληνισμού, 2018-2020
Η ΑΠΟΛΛΩΝΙΣ είναι η εθνική υποδομή που υποστηρίζει και προωθεί τις ψηφιακές ανθρωπιστικές επιστήμ... more Η ΑΠΟΛΛΩΝΙΣ είναι η εθνική υποδομή που υποστηρίζει και προωθεί τις ψηφιακές ανθρωπιστικές επιστήμες και τέχνες, και τη γλωσσική τεχνολογία και καινοτομία στην Ελλάδα. Εντάσσεται στη Δράση «Ενίσχυση των Υποδομών Έρευνας και Καινοτομίας» και χρηματοδοτείται από το Επιχειρησιακό Πρόγραμμα «Ανταγωνιστικότητα, Επιχειρηματικότητα και Καινοτομία» στο πλαίσιο του ΕΣΠΑ 2014-2020, με τη συγχρηματοδότηση της Ελλάδας και της Ευρωπαϊκής Ένωσης (Ευρωπαϊκό Ταμείο Περιφερειακής Ανάπτυξης). Η ΑΠΟΛΛΩΝΙΣ δημιουργήθηκε από τη σύμπραξη του Εθνικού Δικτύου Γλωσσικής Τεχνολογίας clarin:el και του Εθνικού Δικτύου Ψηφιακών Υποδομών για τις Ανθρωπιστικές Επιστήμες DARIAH-GR/ΔΥΑΣ, τα οποία είναι συνιστώσες των αντίστοιχων ευρωπαϊκών υποδομών CLARIN και DARIAH. Στην παρούσα φάση εξέλιξης της υποδομής περιλαμβάνονται δράσεις περαιτέρω ανάπτυξης και εμπέδωσης των υπηρεσιών των δύο συνιστωσών υποδομών, μέσα σε ένα πλαίσιο διαλειτουργικότητας και αμοιβαίας ενίσχυσης, ενώ συνεχίζεται η συμμετοχή της Ελλάδας στις αντίστοιχες ευρωπαϊκές υποδομές.
(KERA)/IHR/NHRF, 2013-2015
The Section of Greek and Roman Antiquity of the Institute of Historical Research is hosting InCoM... more The Section of Greek and Roman Antiquity of the Institute of Historical Research is hosting InCoMac (Inscriptions and Coins: New Documents from Ancient Macedonia), a project of basic research about ancient sources. The project is closely connected to the Institute’s profile as a leading institution with an international reputation in the field of historical, epigraphic, and numismatic studies.
The objective of InCoMac is the systematic study and publication of primary sources, namely inscriptions preserved on stone and coins, which provide evidence about the history of ancient Macedonia. Both these categories of material evidence constitute primary sources of unparalleled significance for the study of institutions, diplomacy, social hierarchy, economic structure, the circulation of wealth and many other facets of ancient societies. This kind of contemporary evidence is a valuable supplement to the literary sources for ancient Macedonia, which in many cases were composed by authors writing in later periods.
The specific aims of this project are twofold:
A. To produce two complete corpora, collections of the material, which can be used as sources to construct more comprehensive narratives of ancient Macedonian history.
A1. The second volume of inscriptions from Lower Macedonia, the area extending from the Axios river to Mt. Bermion and known in antiquity as the Third Macedonian District and
A2. A corpus of the Hellenistic coins struck in the name of the Macedonians, the Amphaxians and the Botteatai.
Both these corpora will be compiled on the basis of geography and genre, in the case of inscriptions, and on the basis of issuing authorities and die identifications, in the case of coins.
B. To create a digital platform that will enable research groups and public institutions to cooperate in the task of recording and studying inscriptions and coins. Two digital collections will be embedded in this platform.
B1. A collection of the inscriptions on stone from central Macedonia (the area between the Axios and the Strymon rivers, known since antiquity as the Second Macedonian District) and
B2. A collection of coins from two important Macedonian cities, namely Aigai and Amphipolis.
This infrastructure will facilitate close collaboration of all interested parties, research institutes, museums, Universities and the Archaeological Service.
(KERA)/IHR/NHRF, 2015
The objective of this research is to present numismatic circulation in two cities of the Roman pr... more The objective of this research is to present numismatic circulation in two cities of the Roman province of Achaia, namely, Corinth and Athens. These are two important albeit different cities as to their legal status and numismatic production. The finds discussed in this paper have been discovered during systematic excavations, particularly by the American School of Classical Studies—excavations conducted from 1896 to 2004 in Corinth and from 1931 to 1990 in Athens. The sufficient amount of numismatic material published has allowed us to proceed to its systematic presentation as well as comparisons between the two cities. It should be noted that the photographs accompanying the maps are indicative and do not illustrate the specific coins found during the excavation but similar ones.
(KERA)/IHR/NHRF, 2007-2008
Αντικείμενο του έργου είναι η ενίσχυση των υποδομών και της λειτουργικότητας για (α) την συστηματ... more Αντικείμενο του έργου είναι η ενίσχυση των υποδομών και της λειτουργικότητας για (α) την συστηματική συλλογή μεγάλων συνόλων ανεκμετάλλευτων γραπτών πηγών της Αρχαίας Ελληνικής Ιστορίας και Πολιτισμού με ιδιαίτερη έμφαση στις επιγραφές και τα νομίσματα και σε επιλεγμένες περιοχές του ελληνικού χώρου (Θράκη, Μακεδονία, Θεσσαλία, Αττική, Αχαΐα, Ηλεία, Κυκλάδες, Μ. Ασία, Παλαιστίνη κλπ), (β) την δημοσίευσή τους σε έντυπη και ηλεκτρονική μορφή, (γ) την επιστημονική αξιοποίησή τους υπό μορφήν μονογραφιών και άρθρων, (δ) την εκπαίδευση νέων επιστημόνων, (ε) την αξιοποίηση και ανάπτυξη νέων τεχνολογιών στον χώρο της ιστορίας και του πολιτισμού, (στ) την ενίσχυση διεθνών συνεργασιών στο πλαίσιο της ενισχύσεως του ενιαίου ευρωπαϊκού χώρου έρευνας μέσω των ευρωπαϊκών δικτύων αριστείας, καθώς επίσης και (ζ) την καλλιέργεια δεσμών με τις γειτονικές βαλκανικές και μεσογειακές χώρες
(KERA)/IHR/NHRF, 1996, 1998
PANDEKTIS is a project of the National Hellenic Research Foundation which contains major digital ... more PANDEKTIS is a project of the National Hellenic Research Foundation which contains major digital collections of Greek history and civilization. The collections have been produced by the Institute of Neohellenic Research, the Institute of Byzantine Research and the Institute of Greek and Roman Antiquity. The National Documentation Centre supports the collections' digital form. This collection of epigraphic texts represents part of the epigraphic archives of the Institute for Greek and Roman Antiquity (KERA), which were progressively constituted since 1980 with permission and in collaboration with the corresponding Department of Antiquities of the direction of Antiquities of the Greek Ministry of Culture, to promote the systematic study and scientific exploitation of epigraphic texts as primary sources for the history, institutions, language, religion and culture of specific Greek regions in Greek and Roman Antiquity.
The collection comprises three sets of published ancient inscriptions on stone (the lower limit being the 7th century AD):
from the Achaean city of Patras (Prof. A Rizakis)
from Upper Macedonia (prefectures of Grevena, Kozani, Kastoria and Florina, Prof. A. Rizakis and Dr. J. Touratsoglou)
from Aegean Thrace (prefectures of Xanthi, Rhodopi and Hebros: KERA researchers Drs. L. Loukopoulou, M.-G. Parissaki, S. Psoma and A. Zournatzi in collaboration with the archaeologists of the 19th Ephoria of Prehistoric and Classical Antiquities D. Triantaphyllos, K. Kallintzi, K. Koutsoumanis, Ch. Karadima, E. Skarlatidou, D. Terzopoulou and P. Tsatsopoulou)
(KERA)/IHR/NHRF, 2005-2006
(KERA)/IHR/NHRF, 1996-1998, 1996