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Texts Added to the Thesaurus Linguae Graecae (TLG®) on August 10, 2018

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Texts Added to the Thesaurus Linguae Graecae (TLG®) on August 10, 2018
Updated on: 2018-08-10
2710LEO BARDALAS Epigr.
2718Manuel PHILES Scr. Eccl., Scr. Rerum Nat. et Poeta
3089Nicephorus CHRYSOBERGES Orat. et Rhet.
3200Manuel II PALAEOLOGUS Imperator Theol. et Rhet.
3205THEODORUS II DUCAS LASCARIS Theol. et Rhet.
3236Nicephorus Callistus XANTHOPULUS Hist. et Theol.
3315ANONYMA PALAEOLOGICA Encom.
3384PHOTIUS DIACONUS Theol.
3385LEONTIUS Monachus Hagiogr.
3386MICHAEL Monachus Theol.
4031EUSTRATIUS Phil.
4090CYRILLUS Alexandrinus Theol.
4201Joannes CHORTASMENUS Philol. et Rhet.
4445Georgius SCYLITZES Poeta
4466Georgius LAPITHES Theol.
4470LEO MEGISTUS Rhet.
4471THEODORUS II IRENICUS PATRIARCHA Phil.
4472Philippus MONOTROPUS Theol.
5150VITAE SANCTI SPYRIDONIS Hagiogr.
5152MIRACULA SANCTI MENAE Hagiogr.
5153VITAE SANCTORUM GALACTIONIS ET EPISTEMES Hagiogr.
5323ACTA MONASTERII SANCTI IOANNIS PRODROMI IN PETRA Eccl., Acta et Legal.
5510CARMINA ANONYMA E CODICE VATICANO GR. 743 Phil.
9009Michael APOSTOLIUS Paroemiogr.
9056ARSENIUS AUTORIANUS Acta et Eccl.
9058Meletius PEGAS Patriarcha Hagiogr.
9059Georgius CHRYSOGONUS Phil. et Theol.

Open Access Journal: Arabian Epigraphic Notes: An Open Access Online Journal on Arabian Epigraphy

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 [First posted in AWOL 4 January 2016, updated 14 August 2018]

Arabian Epigraphic Notes: An Open Access Online Journal on Arabian Epigraphy
ISSN: 2451-8875
The Arabian Peninsula contains one of the richest epigraphic landscapes in the Old World, and new texts are being discovered with every expedition to its deserts and oases. Arabian Epigraphic Notes is a forum for the publication of these epigraphic finds, and for the discussion of relevant historical and linguistic issues. The Arabian Peninsula is broadly defined as including the landmass between the Red Sea and the Arabo-Persian gulf, and stretching northward into the Syrian Desert, Jordan, and adjacent cultural areas. In order to keep up with the rapid pace of discoveries, our online format will provide authors the ability to publish immediately following peer-review, and will make available for download high resolution, color photographs. The open-access format will ensure as wide a readership as possible.
AEN invites original articles and short communications dealing with the Ancient South Arabian, Ancient North Arabian, Nabataean (and Aramaic in general), Arabic, and Greek epigraphy from the Arabian Peninsula, but also from other areas so long as the link to Arabia and its cultures is clear. The language of the Journal is English. Review articles will also be considered.
Arabian Epigraphic Notes is essential reading for all interested in the languages and scripts of the ancient Near East, and of interest to students of Northwest Semitic epigraphy, Cuneiform studies, Egyptology, and classical antiquity. We hope that the journal will contribute to our understanding of the languages and cultures of Arabia, from their earliest attestations until the contemporary period. It is hoped that the journal’s accessibility will further help integrate the epigraphy and languages of ancient Arabia into the broader field of Semitic Philology.

Volumes



Raimund Karl and the Bullddozers: We Can't STOP the Bulldozers Destroying the Past and we cannot STOP dogs fouling the Streets of Britain's Historic Towns

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Can't STOP the bulldozing of our PASt?
... and here is something  from the impotent 'might-as-well-shrug-our-shoulders' supporters of the present status quo over the conservation of the archaeological record in the face of the damage being done to it by its Collection-Driven Exploitation: Raimund Karl (Prifysgol Bangor University) 'Bulldozing and the lack of efficacy of any kind of regulationA response to a paper by Samuel A. Hardy'. Here is the abstract:
In a recent study, Samuel A. Hardy (2017) has attempted a wide-ranging comparison of the efficacy of different kinds of regulating mechanical earthmoving operations in archaeological landscapes. Based on a comparison of 12 countries with partially different regulatory regimes, some more liberal, others more restrictive, he arrives at the tentative conclusion that liberal regulatory approaches are less effective than restrictive ones in reducing damage to archaeological evidence by bulldozing. According to the results of his study, the regulatory systems in England and Wales, and the USA, work particularly badly in preventing archaeological damage due to earthmoving operations. In this paper, I demonstrate that his study is seriously methodically flawed, and thus cannot be considered to be the empirical study it pretends to be. As I show, while Hardy uses a reasonably consistent methodology to estimate the scale of commercial earthmoving in 10 of the countries he examines, by slightly deflating the membership figures of the respectively largest online commercial earthmoving discussion board or Facebook group in each of them, he deviates massively from this for England and Wales, and the USA. Where these two countries are concerned, while having comparable data of the same quality as for all others, he estimates the size of the respective commercial earthmoving communities based on the vastly inflated numbers of the largest metal detecting association in one, and a miscalculation based on uncorroborated sales figures for metal detectors, second hand information gathered from an online journal article, in the other. I thus argue that Hardy’s (2017) study, its results, and the conclusions he draws from them, sadly must be discarded. Rather, I argue that his data, if not manipulated, shows (sic) that neither more liberal nor more restrictive regulation of bulldozing is more efficient than the other in reducing archaeological damage.
Keywords: Keywords: bulldozing, regulation, archaeology, transnational comparison, empirical research
I admit I have altered the title and content of the abstract a little (original here) to illustrate how specious the overall argument is. I think we should all be not a little disturbed by the number of archaeologists adopting this line of argument precisely now. What they are saying is that if restrictive laws do not stop people from destroying sites with metal detectors, spades and bulldozers, we might as well scrap the restrictive laws that exist so when these sites are disturbed by metal detectorists, and bulldozer drivers, we at least see some of the artefacts these people 'uncover' by their destructive activity. What nonsense. We should not rely on the law - since some metal detector users (and some mechanical earthmoving equipment drivers) but on increasing public awareness and public disapproval.

It's social pressure and attitudes that will bring an end to the current shoulder-shrugging laissez fairism. Like it has dog poo on the streets. Not in England though, it seems to me when I go back there on a visit from Europe, many towns still stinks of dog shit on a hot summer day. It should be against the law... 

Karl reckons that Hardy's figure of 27000 detectorists in England and Wales 'sadly must be discarded' in favour (he says on p. 19) of the
[...] figure of 14,834 established further above as the minimum number of presumably active metal detectorists in England and Wales, and assuming all of them to actually, at least mostly, make ‘licit’ finds, this would immediately bring down Hardy’s estimate of the number of ‘licit’ ‘reportable’ finds made per annum in England and Wales to ‘only’ c. 1,315,274. 
(note the scare quotes). Ah... but then only 80000 of those are recorded on the PAS database in an average year... oh dear, so still the PAS is not doing all that well (BTW these are figures well above that of the HA arteafct erosion counter). So Karl still has to play with the figures. Look at this (from someone who's just accused Hardy of manipulating his numbers):
Also, Hardy forgot to consider in his ‘calculations’ that the PAS does not record all finds reported to it (Lewis 2016, 131). Rather, the number of finds actually recorded by the PAS may reflect, on average, as little as c. 1 in 10 of all finds reported to its FLOs (pers. comm. P. Reavill, PAS FLO). Thus, the number of recorded finds might actually represent c. 837,950 finds reported annually to the PAS. Comparing these ‘estimates’, as many as c. 63.71% of all ‘reportable’ finds found annually by metal detectorists during ‘licit’ searches in England and Wales might actually be reported by them to the PAS. This would at least be considerably better than the c. 4% Hardy argues for, even if it probably is an ‘overestimate’.
What is missing here?
  FLO Catchment area map, Peter  Reavill
You say it could be almost 64%, Dr Karl? So, I guess we are supposed to assume everything is OK, it's not the ("partner") metal detectorists that are the problem, but just the inability to cope with the FLOODS of artefacts coming in. The point is, even if Karl was right (and I am sure he is not) these objects are still being pocketed by artefact hunters without even the most rudimentary information getting into the public domain -s we are all the losers from the selfishly-exploitative hobby that raimund Karl seems insistent on defending. I'd also like to know what all Mr Reavil's 'partnering' metal detectorists think of all this, week after week they take the trouble to put their artefacts in little polybags, write out the labels and the so-and-so in Ludlow cherrypicks the best ten percent and gives the rest back unrecorded. So the 5,313 records he's spent the last few years making represent some 48000 artefacts lost without record on his patch alone? If that is true, that is abysmal, Mr Reavill.

And in Bangor, 64% of the dog poo is not lying in the middle of the pavements, which makes Dr Karl really happy. 36% still is though, 4% has been bagged ip and taken right away, and the other 60% has been swept behind the bushes where nobody can see it. That'sapparently what the Bangor professsor sees as a great success and does not require any kind of social campaign to change things, and anyone who says it is not will get the same treatment as Dr Hardy.






Ancestral Puebloans May Have Bred Scarlet Macaws

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New Mexico macawsSTATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA—According to a Smithsonian Magazine report, a new study of scarlet macaw bones unearthed in New Mexico suggests the birds were bred in captivity and raised with a great deal of specialized care and effort at a single, small aviary in what is now the southwestern United States or northwestern Mexico by ancestral Pueblo peoples between A.D. 850 and 1150. Richard George of Penn State University and his team extracted mitochondrial DNA from the remains of 14 macaws recovered from five different sites in Chaco Canyon and the Mimbres region of New Mexico. They found that all 14 birds shared a similar heritage, and more than 70 percent of them likely shared a maternal lineage. “This is important… not only the population history of macaws and human interaction, but also what was happening between groups of people,” George explained. Images of macaw chicks on Mimbres pottery also support the idea that the fast-growing birds were raised locally. It had been previously suggested that macaws in North America had been imported from the Paquimé aviary in Mexico, which was most active between A.D. 1250 and 1450. Such a long journey from Mexico to Chaco Canyon would have taken more than a month. For more on evidence of macaws in the American Southwest, go to “Angry Birds.”

Ice sheets of the last ice age seeded the ocean with silica

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New research led by glaciologists and isotope geochemists from the University of Bristol has found that melting ice sheets provide the surrounding oceans with the essential nutrient silica. Researchers from the Bristol Glaciology Centre look over the vast Greenland Ice Sheet, which stretches beyond the  horizon, during a field campaign lasting over three months in 2015. The researchers camped in a remote region of Greenland,...

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Evolution timeframes get a rethink after scientists take a closer look at Earth’s first animals

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When did animals originate? In research published in the journal Palaeontology, we show that this question is answered by Cambrian period fossils of a frond-like sea creature called Stromatoveris psygmoglena. An Ediacaran fossil from the National Earth Science Museum, Namibia [Credit: J. Hoyal Cuthill]The Ediacaran Period lasted from 635 to 542m years ago. This era is key to understanding animal origins because it occurred just...

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Parker Solar Probe launches on historic journey to touch the sun

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Hours before the rise of the very star it will study, NASA's Parker Solar Probe launched from Florida Sunday to begin its journey to the Sun, where it will undertake a landmark mission. The spacecraft will transmit its first science observations in December, beginning a revolution in our understanding of the star that makes life on Earth possible. The United Launch Alliance Delta IV Heavy rocket launches NASA's Parker Solar Probe to...

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1200 medieval skeletons uncovered in Ypres, West Flanders

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Archaeologists working in the centre of Ypres in West Flanders have so far uncovered 1,200 skeletons of people buried in the Middle Ages, as well as interesting information on the way of life in the city during that period. Credit: BelgaThe excavations were opened to the public in May, when it was shown how the Sint-Niklaas parish, a stone’s throw from what is not the city centre, was important in the growth of the city from the 13th...

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The Greek city of Halaesa comes to light in Messina, Sicily

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For the second consecutive year, an Italian-English mission excavation campaign has been carried out in the area that houses the remains of the most important sanctuary in the ancient city of Halaesa, where traces of an ancient theatre have also been found. View of the archaeological site of Halaesa, Tusa [Credit:  Allie Caulfield]Halaesa, in fact, was a Sicilian-Greek city of considerable importance that took its name from...

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Well-preserved Roman ship found off Crimean coast

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A wooden ship found in the depths of the Black Sea, is more than 2,000 years old, according to experts. Credit: Sky NewsThe Roman vessel, dates back to the 2nd or 3rd centuries and could have been used as a merchant ship, senior researcher Viktor Lebedinsky told Russian news agency TASS . He said: "The discovered vessel, presumably dating back to the 2nd or 3rd centuries, rests at the depth of 85 meters and this is a wooden...

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Astronomers discover supermassive black hole in an ultracompact dwarf galaxy

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A team of scientists from the Faculty of Physics and Sternberg State Astronomical Institute, MSU, leading an international collaboration with members from Europe, Chile, the U.S. and Australia discovered a supermassive black hole in the center of the Fornax galaxy. The results of the research were published in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society journal. An optical image of the giant elliptical galaxy NGC 1399 and its...

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Scientists trace atmospheric rise in CO2 during deglaciation to deep Pacific Ocean

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Long before humans started injecting carbon dioxide into the atmosphere by burning fossil fuels like oil, gas, and coal, the level of atmospheric CO2 rose significantly as the Earth came out of its last ice age. Many scientists have long suspected that the source of that carbon was from the deep sea. Satellite photo of Antarctica [Credit: NASA]But researchers haven't been able to document just how the carbon made it out of the ocean...

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Meteorite bombardment likely to have created the Earth's oldest rocks

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Scientists have found that 4.02 billion year old silica-rich felsic rocks from the Acasta River, Canada - the oldest rock formation known on Earth - probably formed at high temperatures and at a surprisingly shallow depth of the planet's nascent crust. The high temperatures needed to melt the shallow crust were likely caused by a meteorite bombardment around half a billion years after the planet formed. This melted the iron-rich crust...

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200-million year old Pterosaur 'built for flying'

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Scientists on Monday unveiled a previously unknown species of giant pterosaur, the first creatures with a backbone to fly under their own power. Artist's interpretation of the newly discovered pterosaur snacking on a primitive crocodylomorph known as a sphenosuchian [Credit: Josh Cotton]Neither dino nor bird, pterosaurs -- more commonly known as pterodactyls -- emerged during the late Triassic period more than 200 million years ago...

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New study reveals evidence of how Neolithic people adapted to climate change

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Research led by the University of Bristol has uncovered evidence that early farmers were adapting to climate change 8,200 years ago. In situ pottery at the archaeological site of Çatalhöyük [Credit: Çatalhöyük Research Project]The study, published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, centred on the Neolithic and Chalcolithic city settlement of Çatalhöyük in southern Anatolia, Turkey which existed from...

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In a massive region of space, astronomers find far fewer galaxies than they expected

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University of California astronomers, including three from UCLA, have resolved a mystery about the early universe and its first galaxies. Computer simulation of the distribution of matter in the universe. Orange regions host galaxies; blue structures are gas and dark matter. A University of California study demonstrated that opaque regions of the universe are like the large  voids in the galaxy distribution in this image because...

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Origins and spread of Eurasian fruits traced to the ancient Silk Road

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Studies of ancient preserved plant remains from a medieval archaeological site in the Pamir Mountains of Uzbekistan have shown that fruits, such as apples, peaches, apricots, and melons, were cultivated in the foothills of Inner Asia. The archaeobotanical study, conducted by Robert Spengler of the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History, is among the first systematic analyses of medieval agricultural crops in the heart of...

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Unpublished Egyptian texts reveal new insights into ancient medicine

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The University of Copenhagen in Denmark is home to a unique collection of Ancient Egyptian papyrus manuscripts. Instructions for a 3,500-year-old pregnancy test [Credit: Carlsberg Papyrus Collection/University of Copenhagen]A large part of the collection has not yet been translated, leaving researchers in the dark about what they might contain. "A large part of the texts are still unpublished. Texts about medicine, botany, astronomy,...

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From Athens to Washington via London: The story of a stolen and found medieval codex of the four Gospels

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Screen Shot 2018-08-15 at 09.35.49

GA 2120 in the exhibit case. Screenshot from the MOTB Facebook video: https://www.facebook.com/museumoftheBible/videos/1776418095806474/

For once, I am writing in praise of my friends of the Washington Museum of the Bible. They seem to have (finally!) understood what provenance means and implies, and are going to give back a medieval codex to its legitimate owner, the University of Athens.

A video posted on Facebook explains how a Byzantine vellum manuscript containing the four canonical Gospels was stolen from Athens, ended in the United States via London in 2010, and will be repatriated this coming October. I am not surprised this has happened considering the way Mr Green acquired on the market in those years, with the help (so to speak) of Scott Carroll, but the story is fascinating and I am very happy the Museum seems to have taken the right path in cleaning-up their warehouses. Critics might comment that this is a MOTB’s communication strategy to restore the bad reputation gained in recent years: maybe yes, but I welcome the change of direction and the fact that through operations like this one, we will have access to invaluable information on the flux of manuscripts on the illicit and grey market, as it will be apparent at the end of this blog post. I have been very clear on the questionable source of at least part of the Green papyri that I hope will be similarly studied and then sent back to Egypt: what has happened with this twelfth century manuscript seems indeed a good start. But as I was saying, the story, which is currently at the centre of a well thought but rather dull display in the Museum (do find a better graphic designer, please…), has many interesting sides that deserve to be considered.

The chain of modern ownership of the codex goes back to Spyridon Lampros (1851–1919), a Greek classicist and politician, who taught at the University of Athens where he also served as Provost. Lampros’ legacy was inherited by the daughter, Lina Tsaldari, who was his assistant, had a political career too, and in 1964 donated her father’s collection of manuscripts, including the codex in question, to the University’s Byzantine Seminar. The Byzantine book has been well known and studied, and has been recorded by specialists as Gregory Aland 2120.

Then in 1987 the University of Athens established a History Museum and GA 2120 was one of four artefacts to be borrowed from the Seminar in order to be on exhibit. The codex went missing (= stolen, as it is now clear) most probably between 1987 and 1991, since that year a museum inventory did not include it. This is a typical story that demonstrates how fragile manuscripts and other cultural heritage objects are, even those owned by Universities and other public institutions that in theory should protect them for future study and care.

GA 2120 re-emerged in December 1998, when it was sold on auction at Sotheby’s, London. Unsurprisingly the auction catalogue entry did not offer a single line on the collection history of the Gospels book. Moreover it did not recognise the manuscript as GA 2120 and had a misleading inaccurate description. For instance, the book scribe was wrongly identified as the famous Theodor Hagiopetrides, while he is in fact a less renowned monk Theodoros the Sinner as the colophon, which was even included in the catalogue, showed (this raises the question if some collectors are indeed able to understand and appreciate the manuscripts they buy…). Of course the identification with a famous scribe raised the price nicely for the (illicit) owner and Sotheby’s: they know how to sell at Sotheby’s, that’s their job. We are miles away from cultural heritage protection and study so collectors, please, get to grip with it and try to avoid to be cheated so easily.

To my mind, the inaccuracy of the entry of the Sotheby’s catalogue can only be explained in two ways: either Sotheby’s manuscript curators were embarrassingly incompetent or the entry was voluntarily deceptive. Both hypotheses are disturbing. By that time the manuscript had also lost some pages (Sotheby’s records 261, while the codex had 263 according to older catalogues). It should be brought in mind that thieves do not take care of manuscripts and unscrupulous book dealers sometimes dismember codices in order to sell them more easily and for higher sums.

Equally disturbing are some other aspects of the following vicissitudes of GA 2120. A bookplate seems to show that at some point it was with Rick Adams, the internet entrepreneur and collector, then in 2010 it was sold to Mr Green by “a rare book dealer in London”. Mr Green and his people have the habit to protect unscrupulous dealers, so we will never be told who this one is.

In conclusion, the life of our codex demonstrates twice (Sotheby’s and the rare book dealer) that London is indeed a good location for stolen manuscripts to be cleaned and then sold for high prices, through methods that may include dismembering and producing deceptive catalogue entries for collectors, like Mr Adams and Mr Green, easy to be fooled. Let us also bear in mind that each single collector who is aware that a dealer has dismembered, mutilated or ruined a manuscript and does not denounce this shame publicly is complicit in the destruction of human cultural heritage. Finally, I would also like to highlight that despite the key role in the legal and illegal market in antiquities, the United Kingdom has a tiny, understaffed Art and Antiquities Squad of three people based in London who try to fight an impossible fight. For the joy of the crooks.

(I wish to thank my colleague and friend Tommy Wasserman who discovered the real identity of the book while working for the Green/MOTB, and has discussed some aspects of the story with me. Opinions expressed in this post are exclusively mine)

The Museum of the Bible press releases:

http://demoss.com/newsrooms/museumofthebible/news/museum-of-the-bible-solves-mystery-of-missing-greek-manuscript-will-return

https://www.museumofthebible.org/press/press-releases/museum-of-the-bible-solves-mystery-of-missing-greek-manuscript-will-return-artifact-to-rightful-owners

Lettre sur plomb, trouvée à Olbia en 2010

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Mitina, V. V. (2017) :  Свинцовое письмо, найденное в Ольвии в 2010 году, и ольвийские денежные единицы VI−IV веков до нашей эры / Svincovoe pis’mo, najdennoe v Ol’vii v 2010 godu, i ol’vijskie denezhnye edinicy VI−IV vekov do nashej éry, … Lire la suite
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