International audienceBuilding on the results of a doctoral thesis devoted to the land and credit market in Athens and the Cyclades (ca. 400-100 BCE), the paper extends the analysis to two inscriptions from the Chalkidian city of Olynthos, engraved shortly before the destruction of the city by the troops of Philip II in 348 BCE. While several clues converge to establish that the two documents refer to the same house, the analysis of the underlying transactions — a sale and a mortgage contract — leads to a revision of the relative chronology of the two operations, both dated by the same eponym. The proposed interpretation leads to three modifications in the sequence of the months of the Euboean-Chalkidian calendar, favouring a solution that ...
The economy of Greek Bronze Age societies is almost exclusively known through the archaeological rec...
Presented here is the editio princeps of a new fragment of the late-5th-century b.c. Athenian calend...
International audienceThis paper offers a temporary synthesis about the two lists of annual magistra...
International audienceBuilding on the results of a doctoral thesis devoted to the land and credit ma...
This article studies the epigraphic material in Epirus and Southern Illyria and the names of the mon...
Cette étude porte sur l’évolution des systèmes fonciers à Athènes et dans les îles de culture juridi...
This study examines the evolution of land tenure systems at Athens and in the islands characterized ...
International audienceThis study is devoted to the calendar of Megara and her colonies, and to the i...
The social and economic turmoil of the Aegean World for about a century does not allow us to underst...
Presented here is the editioprinceps of a newfragment of the late-5th-century b.c. Athenian calendar...
This paper discusses two important inscriptions for the history of the Athenian Empire, the Chalkis ...
An inscription carved on a slab of schist, containing the purchase of a house, was found in Torone ...
International audienceAbstract As a contribution to further study of the remarkable 'New Festival Ca...
The inscription SEG 30: 977, known as the calendar graffito, is one of the most interesting document...
The economy of Greek Bronze Age societies is almost exclusively known through the archaeological rec...
Presented here is the editio princeps of a new fragment of the late-5th-century b.c. Athenian calend...
International audienceThis paper offers a temporary synthesis about the two lists of annual magistra...
International audienceBuilding on the results of a doctoral thesis devoted to the land and credit ma...
This article studies the epigraphic material in Epirus and Southern Illyria and the names of the mon...
Cette étude porte sur l’évolution des systèmes fonciers à Athènes et dans les îles de culture juridi...
This study examines the evolution of land tenure systems at Athens and in the islands characterized ...
International audienceThis study is devoted to the calendar of Megara and her colonies, and to the i...
The social and economic turmoil of the Aegean World for about a century does not allow us to underst...
Presented here is the editioprinceps of a newfragment of the late-5th-century b.c. Athenian calendar...
This paper discusses two important inscriptions for the history of the Athenian Empire, the Chalkis ...
An inscription carved on a slab of schist, containing the purchase of a house, was found in Torone ...
International audienceAbstract As a contribution to further study of the remarkable 'New Festival Ca...
The inscription SEG 30: 977, known as the calendar graffito, is one of the most interesting document...
The economy of Greek Bronze Age societies is almost exclusively known through the archaeological rec...
Presented here is the editio princeps of a new fragment of the late-5th-century b.c. Athenian calend...
International audienceThis paper offers a temporary synthesis about the two lists of annual magistra...