Greeks from the earliest times attached much importance to funeral rites and showed much interest in tombs, especially those of men fallen in war. Therefore, inscriptions on tombs seem to have been one of important factors that helped Greeks of the archaic period to acquire knowledge of writing
Grave Markers of the Ancient Elite By Natalie Scott Grave markers, even in our current era, leave a ...
In what follows I shall analyse funerary epigrams in which the wayfarer is invited to abstain from v...
The ability of mainly urban Roman upper class men to read and write has been well documented. It sho...
Greeks from the earliest times attached much importance to funeral rites and showed much interest i...
The Romans introduced reading and writing on a larger scale to their provinces, which is recognizabl...
FUNERARY RITUAL OF GREEKS IN ANTIQUITY AS REFLECTED IN FUNERARY EPIGRAMSThe author discusses the Gre...
La Cilicie Trachée demeure, malgré la multiplication des études récentes, une région méconnue. Les i...
Epitaph as a research source has attracted the attention of historians, art historians, architects, ...
by Anna Sitz After the Bronze Age collapse of circa 1200 BCE, Greeks forgot how to write. Linear B...
This dissertation examines Archaic Greek epigram in its context (cultural, historical, physical, etc...
In Roman funerary commemoration, the dead could communicate with the living through the medium of th...
In this paper, I study the emergence and advancement of epigraphic studies in roughly the first fort...
In our contemporary Western society, death has become taboo. Despite its inevitability, we focus on ...
In August 2015 the Soprintendenza dei Beni Artistici e Culturali of Palermo retrieved a number of ar...
Cemeteries are our greatest source of knowledge of the Etruscans, because the Etruscan elite furnish...
Grave Markers of the Ancient Elite By Natalie Scott Grave markers, even in our current era, leave a ...
In what follows I shall analyse funerary epigrams in which the wayfarer is invited to abstain from v...
The ability of mainly urban Roman upper class men to read and write has been well documented. It sho...
Greeks from the earliest times attached much importance to funeral rites and showed much interest i...
The Romans introduced reading and writing on a larger scale to their provinces, which is recognizabl...
FUNERARY RITUAL OF GREEKS IN ANTIQUITY AS REFLECTED IN FUNERARY EPIGRAMSThe author discusses the Gre...
La Cilicie Trachée demeure, malgré la multiplication des études récentes, une région méconnue. Les i...
Epitaph as a research source has attracted the attention of historians, art historians, architects, ...
by Anna Sitz After the Bronze Age collapse of circa 1200 BCE, Greeks forgot how to write. Linear B...
This dissertation examines Archaic Greek epigram in its context (cultural, historical, physical, etc...
In Roman funerary commemoration, the dead could communicate with the living through the medium of th...
In this paper, I study the emergence and advancement of epigraphic studies in roughly the first fort...
In our contemporary Western society, death has become taboo. Despite its inevitability, we focus on ...
In August 2015 the Soprintendenza dei Beni Artistici e Culturali of Palermo retrieved a number of ar...
Cemeteries are our greatest source of knowledge of the Etruscans, because the Etruscan elite furnish...
Grave Markers of the Ancient Elite By Natalie Scott Grave markers, even in our current era, leave a ...
In what follows I shall analyse funerary epigrams in which the wayfarer is invited to abstain from v...
The ability of mainly urban Roman upper class men to read and write has been well documented. It sho...