Theoretical Roman Archaeology Journal
@traj-journal.bsky.social
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The Theoretical Roman Archaeology Journal #TRAJ publishes peer-reviewed #OpenAccess articles on #RomanArchaeology by @openlibhums.bsky.social | Edited by @emilyhanscam.bsky.social https://traj.openlibhums.org/
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🎉 #TRAJ Volume 8 is launched!

Check out the first paper of our Cosmologies Special Issue on pilgrimage routes to Hayling Island in Britain, a review of ancient wine archaeology & more!

FREE traj.openlibhums.org/issue/1682/i...
A cover for a journal showing the mosaic floor of the Guildhall in London.
traj-journal.bsky.social
NEW #TRAJ Book Review 📚

Roman Urbanism in Italy: Recent Discoveries and New Directions edited by Alessandro Launaro, reviewed by Myles McCallum.

"an important and stimulating volume"

doi.org/10.16995/tra...
traj-journal.bsky.social
A very topical book review by @curtisdozier.bsky.social of pharos.vassarspaces.net

📚 Classical Controversies: Reception of Greco-Roman Antiquity in the Twenty-First Century ed. by Kim Beerden & Timo Epping

doi.org/10.16995/tra...
traj-journal.bsky.social
Kick off the fall with a #TRAJ #BookReview!

📚 'At Home in Roman Egypt' by Anna Boozer, reviewed by Stefania Alfarano

"she successfully highlights the complexity of household life in Roman Egypt, challenging assumptions of its exceptionalism within the broader Roman world"

doi.org/10.16995/tra...
a fresco of a person from Roman Egypt on the cover of the book
traj-journal.bsky.social
🍇 Interested in #Wine and #AncientRome?

Check out this review of Methods in Ancient Wine Archaeology: Scientific Approaches in Roman Contexts ed. by @emlynkd.bsky.social & @divali.bsky.social, reviewed by Anna Meens.

doi.org/10.16995/tra...
A book cover showing a Roman relief of two satyrs picking grapes from central vine tree, small wicker basket before each.
traj-journal.bsky.social
NEW #TRAJ review, 'In the Footsteps of the Etruscans: Changing Landscapes around Tuscania from Prehistory to Modernity, by Graeme Barker & Tom Rasmussen.

"The long-awaited publication of the Tuscania survey offers a dataset of high quality and importance." ✍️ Robert Witcher

doi.org/10.16995/tra...
Book cover image, showing three people field walking in Tuscany.
traj-journal.bsky.social
Check out one of our latest book reviews!

Gabii through its Artefacts, ed. by Laura M. Banducci & Mattia D'Acri, reviewed by Adeline Hoffelinck.

"This volume stands out for its qualitative analysis of everyday objects ... contributions are of outstanding quality"

doi.org/10.16995/tra...
Book cover showing Roman artefacts on a black background
traj-journal.bsky.social
There are some great new Book Reviews in the latest issue of #TRAJ, including -

📘 Gabii through its Artefacts
📕 Methods in Ancient Wine Archaeology
📗 In the Footsteps of the Etruscans
📙 #Roman Feet & Shoes

Check them out here! traj.openlibhums.org/issue/1682/i...
a row of old leather-bound books
traj-journal.bsky.social
🎉 #TRAJ Volume 8 is launched!

Check out the first paper of our Cosmologies Special Issue on pilgrimage routes to Hayling Island in Britain, a review of ancient wine archaeology & more!

FREE traj.openlibhums.org/issue/1682/i...
A cover for a journal showing the mosaic floor of the Guildhall in London.
traj-journal.bsky.social
Spring is a great time to read about the 'planty’ agency of trees, plants, flowers, and fruits in the creation of the Roman funeral landscape 🌷

Check out 'There Buds the Laurel’: Nature, Temporality & the Making of Place in the Cemeteries of Roman Italy' from #TRAJ Vol. 1

doi.org/10.16995/tra...
‘There Buds the Laurel’: Nature, Temporality, and the Making of Place in the Cemeteries of Roman Italy
Using the necropolis environments of the Vesuvian region of Imperial period Italy as a case study, this paper examines the ways in which multiple, overlapping, and temporally specific senses of place ...
doi.org
traj-journal.bsky.social
We used to celebrate #FindsFriday in the old place, for today, how about the Colchester Cup from the British Museum?

Read more about 1st century Roman mold-blown glass cups in Cassibry 2018, 'Spectacular Translucence: The Games in Glass' from #TRAJ Vol 1

doi.org/10.16995/tra...
A green glass cup from the Roman Empire showing horses and monoliths
traj-journal.bsky.social
We are always pleased to see a new round of the conference which inspired TRAJ!

The Theoretical Roman Archaeology Conference 2025 will be held online from 22-24 Oct, see the call for sessions.

#TRAC2023 was also held on Gather.town, for commentary see our Vol 7 editorial: doi.org/10.16995/tra...
A poster advertising a conference with lots of white text on a brown background
traj-journal.bsky.social
Check out a recent #TRAJ #BookReview!

Revelation & Material Religion in the Roman East ed. by Leach, Smith & Keddie, reviewed by Constanze Graml

'contributions on the textual world of the New Testament, which provide interesting and creative thought experiments"

doi.org/10.16995/tra...
Book cover of Revelation and Material Religion in the Roman East
traj-journal.bsky.social
NEW #TRAJ Book Review 'Archaeology of the #Roman Conquest' by Manuel Fernández-Götz & Nico Roymans, ✍️ by Al McCluskey

"excellent up-to-date references, well-written, lavishly illustrated & is highly accessible"

"new multidisciplinary methodologies to conflict archaeology"

doi.org/10.16995/tra...
A book cover showing an archaeology site covered in grass.
traj-journal.bsky.social
Check out this recent #TRAJ review! 'Un insediamento di età romana dimenticato nel tempo' ed. by Paolo Visonà, ✍️ (in English) by Edoardo Vanni.

'a good preliminary historical-archaeological foundation history.. of the territory of the middle Agno-Guà Valley (Veneto, Italy)'

doi.org/10.16995/tra...
traj-journal.bsky.social
If the raccoons need a break, our Dino army 🦖 is standing by! They’ve been a little bored since the days of the earth shattering mosaic discovery.
traj-journal.bsky.social
🎉 With the publication of the Editorial by our guest editors Cristina Crizbasan & Dragos Mitrofan, #TRAJ Vol 7 is now complete!

Don't miss 'The Role of the Digital in Roman Archaeology', with incisive commentary on digital platforms & misinformation

doi.org/10.16995/tra...
The Role of the Digital in Roman Archaeology
The editorial of the seventh volume of the Theoretical Roman Archaeology Journal explores the intertwining relationships between digital platforms and Roman archaeology. When faced with powerful digit...
doi.org
Reposted by Theoretical Roman Archaeology Journal
romanpalace.bsky.social
If anyone thinks they have a Bowl more Super than ours, they are sadly deluded. 😎
A restored Roman Samian bowl. Check it out. It's a beauty! Dramatic lighting shows off the scrolling patters to maximum effect. This Bad Boy is from our collections and dates to, give or take, 100AD (we can't be more precise as we don't have access to our catalogue at the moment).
traj-journal.bsky.social
NEW #TRAJ 📚 #BookReview

🌳 Trees in Ancient Rome: Growing an Empire in the Late Republic and Early Principate by Andrew Fox, reviewed by Giulia Caneva

"stimulating and extremely useful in this modern era of ‘plant blindness’"

FREE doi.org/10.16995/tra...

@bloomsburyacad.bsky.social #AcademicSky
Reposted by Theoretical Roman Archaeology Journal
alisonfisk.bsky.social
Some things never change!

A 2,000 year-old Roman souvenir pen with a joke inscription roughly equivalent to:

“I went to Rome and all I got you was this cheap pen!" 😂

Dated to about 70 AD, this iron stylus pen was found in London during excavations by MOLA. 📷 MOLA

#EpigraphyTuesday
#Archaeology
The photo shows a Roman iron stylus pen used to write on wax-filled wooden writing tablets. It has an inscription which runs along its length on four sides. The image shows the four lines of inscribed text which read:

‘ab urbe v[e]n[i] munus tibi 
gratum adf(e)ro
acul[eat]um ut habe[a]s memor[ia]m nostra(m)
rogo si fortuna dar[e]t quo possem
largius ut longa via ceu sacculus est (v)acuus’

‘I have come from the City. I bring you a welcome gift
with a sharp point that you may remember me.
I ask, if fortune allowed, that I might be able (to give)
as generously as the way is long (and) as my purse is empty.’

Excavated in London by MOLA. Photo by Juan Jose Fuldain/MOLA
traj-journal.bsky.social
📣 One week left until the deadline!

Submit a proposal for an #OpenAccess Special Issue of #TRAJ

- push the boundaries of traditional approaches to studying the Roman world

- Deadline 31 Jan, info below -

#RomanArchaeology #Archaeology #AcademicSky
PDF call for special issue proposals
traj-journal.bsky.social
We are very happy to welcome 3 new Editorial Board members!

Dr Stuart McKie (U of Exeter)
Dr Cristina Mondin (U of Padova)
Dr Berber van der Meulen-van der Veen (U of Amsterdam)

Curious about the humans behind #TRAJ? Have a look at our current editorial team:

traj.openlibhums.org/editorialteam/
The Roman Pantheon, a classical building with columns.