From Mycenaean Frescoes to Hellenistic Sculpture: Women’s Research in the Early Years of the ABSA
The first volume of the Annual of the British School at Athens was published in 1895, almost a decade after the foundation of the School in 1886.…

The first volume of the Annual of the British School at Athens was published in 1895, almost a decade after the foundation of the School in 1886.…

Portable braziers, frequently made of clay utensils and appearing in different shapes (Fig. 1:a), are associated with the process of cooking. They were popular across the Mediterranean from the Early Hellenistic to the Early Roman periods.

It may seem obvious to state that slavery existed within the Roman Empire. Afterall, there is a large corpus of epigraphic and literary evidence outlining the role of enslaved people during this period.…

In popular imagination, the Roman Empire was an agent of law and peace in the ancient world. However, Rome had a brutal side, with the death penalty used for a wide range of crimes.

A new blog from Professor Lin Foxhall looking at domestic interactions in the ancient world.

Lin Foxhall chats to Cambridge about her new editorship and hopes for the Journal's future.

Shaping 2019: Introducing the Cambridge Philological Society Prize As the year draws to its conclusion, the Cambridge Philological Society was pleased to see that three articles in Classical Archaeology and Ancient History (published between 2015 and 2017 in our society journal – The Cambridge Classical Journal) featured among the most downloaded papers of 2018!…

Lucy Donkin, Lecturer in History and History of Art at the University of Bristol, discusses her forthcoming article, ‘Mons manufactus: Rome’s man-made mountains between history and natural history’, in Papers of the British School at Rome (2017), which will shortly be published via FirstView on Cambridge Core.

Meet the editors of the Papers of the British School at Rome as they discuss how they represent the journal and pick out their favourite articles.