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- Contains open access
- ISSN: 1047-7594 (Print), 2331-5709 (Online)
- Editor: Professor Greg Woolf University of California, Los Angeles, USA
- Editorial board
The journal will be concerned with Italy and all parts of the Roman world from about 700 B.C. to about A.D. 700. It will exclude the prehistoric period but include the Etruscan period. It is intended to be Mediterranean-wide in its coverage, and is not intended to give priority to any particular geographical regions within the Roman world. All aspects of archaeology, by the broadest interpretation of that word, will be relevant for inclusion, including historical material which has an archaeological component or which is likely to be relevant for archaeologists.
Welcome to our new Editors
The Journal of Roman Archaeology welcomes Professor Greg Woolf as Editor-in-Chief and Dr. Cristina Murer as Reviews Editor. Contact details, and more information about the journal, can be found here.
Latest content
News
Journal of Roman Archaeology acquired by Cambridge University Press
- 27 Jul 2020,
- Cambridge University Press has reached an agreement to acquire the Journal of Roman Archaeology, to be published on behalf of the Press Syndicate of the University of Cambridge starting with the annual volume 34 (2021).
Cambridge Archaeology blogs
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Juneteenth in Denton
- 07 September 2023,
- The joy was infectious. “Happy Juneteenth” we shouted to the trucks and people parading by Fred Moore Park in Denton Texas.…
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Following in giant footsteps: introducing a new Editorial team for Ancient Mesoamerica
- 24 March 2023,
- In January 2023, I was honored and humbled to be appointed Editor-in-Chief of Ancient Mesoamerica (ATM), together with a new Editorial team including leading...
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Why Archaeological Repositories and Data Publishers Care about being FAIR
- 09 February 2023,
- Post Excerpt Archaeological data that are Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable (i.e. FAIR) enable all sorts of things that we can’t do with “hidden” or “siloed” data. As such, FAIR practices have clear impacts on archaeological data use and reuse....
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