This paper focuses on the interrelated meanings of the expression litterae communes as attested in different types of sources. One group of texts includes a law issued by the emperors Valentinian and Valens and one of the Justinian’s novels; here litterae communes is employed to refer to the minuscule writing system of the new Roman cursive, which was widespread in documentary practices outside the imperial chancery and, more generally, in current uses from the 4th century onwards. Another type of sources comprises pedagogical-grammatical texts from Late Antiquity to early Middle Ages, where the expression litterae communes relates to the rudimenta litterarum that could be learnt through primary education. The convergence point between thes...
The Latin quotation in the title of this article is taken from the Admonitio generalis, a key docume...
The paper offers an editio princeps for an unpublished Latin documentary papyrus, ChLA XLIV 1300 rec...
There is presently no systematic study of Roman legal language. David Daube delivered several lectur...
The aim of this research is to investigate the origins of Roman writing usually called ‘capitale rus...
Ancient writers used different terms for letters. Unlike the Greek language, in which we find many te...
It can be useful for the life within the vici to be able to write and read: we can find traces of t...
Making a corpus of Latin grammatical papyri is not simply a contribution to Latin Papyrology, but es...
This thesis examines the spread of literacy and the written word in the late Roman Republic 63-43 BC...
Manual of Roman Everyday Writing Volume 1: Scripts and Texts describes the kinds of documents that a...
"Approaching the Collatio Legum Mosaicarum et Romanorum (or Lex Dei as an Example of Late Antique Cu...
Il saggio sviluppa un tema trattato, tra gli altri, nella relazione tenuta dall'autrice su invito al...
This paper aims at analysing the participial constructions between Latin and Romance on the basis of...
Collection of critical editions of a series of treatises 'De littera', partly unedited and possibly ...
This volume explores the creation of ‘written spaces' through the accretion of monumental inscriptio...
The present thesis aims to record sociolinguistic variation in the non-literary texts written on tab...
The Latin quotation in the title of this article is taken from the Admonitio generalis, a key docume...
The paper offers an editio princeps for an unpublished Latin documentary papyrus, ChLA XLIV 1300 rec...
There is presently no systematic study of Roman legal language. David Daube delivered several lectur...
The aim of this research is to investigate the origins of Roman writing usually called ‘capitale rus...
Ancient writers used different terms for letters. Unlike the Greek language, in which we find many te...
It can be useful for the life within the vici to be able to write and read: we can find traces of t...
Making a corpus of Latin grammatical papyri is not simply a contribution to Latin Papyrology, but es...
This thesis examines the spread of literacy and the written word in the late Roman Republic 63-43 BC...
Manual of Roman Everyday Writing Volume 1: Scripts and Texts describes the kinds of documents that a...
"Approaching the Collatio Legum Mosaicarum et Romanorum (or Lex Dei as an Example of Late Antique Cu...
Il saggio sviluppa un tema trattato, tra gli altri, nella relazione tenuta dall'autrice su invito al...
This paper aims at analysing the participial constructions between Latin and Romance on the basis of...
Collection of critical editions of a series of treatises 'De littera', partly unedited and possibly ...
This volume explores the creation of ‘written spaces' through the accretion of monumental inscriptio...
The present thesis aims to record sociolinguistic variation in the non-literary texts written on tab...
The Latin quotation in the title of this article is taken from the Admonitio generalis, a key docume...
The paper offers an editio princeps for an unpublished Latin documentary papyrus, ChLA XLIV 1300 rec...
There is presently no systematic study of Roman legal language. David Daube delivered several lectur...