About dygo

Graduate Student at the University of Texas at Austin

October 9, 2011

Our good friend and friend of PASP, Nikos Samartzidis will be displaying his Linear-B based artwork in the exhibition in the Mainzer Rathaus: Die Linear B-Schrift und die Perlen der Aegaeis13 October to 17 November 2011.

Here is the brochure for the exhibition.

Mr. Samartzidis’ artwork graces the rooms of PASP, providing delight, cause for contemplation, inspiration, and a link between past and present creative expression.

For more on his artwork, see: http://www.nikosam-art.de/

 

Added several articles:

By Nakassis:
[PDF]Review of A Companion to Linear B. Mycenaean Greek Texts and their World. Volume 1.
[PDF]Review of The Talking Greeks: Speech, Animals, and the Other in Homer, Aeschylus, and Plato.
[PDF]”Athens, Kylon, and the Dipolieia,” in Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies 51 (2011) pp. 527-536.

By Palaima:
[PDF]”Scribes, Scribal Hands and Palaeography,” in Y. Duhoux and A. Morpurgo Davies, eds., A Companion to Linear B. Mycenaean Greek Texts and their World. Volume 2, pp. 33-136.

By Petrakis:
[PDF]”Localising Pylian Religion: Thoughts on the geographic References in the Fr Tablets Provoked by a New Quasi-Join,” Pasiphae 4 (2010) 199-215.
[PDF]”Politics of the sea in the Late Bronze Age II-III Aegean: iconographic preferences and textual perspectives,” in G. Vavouranakis ed., The seascape in Aegean prehistory (Monographs of the Danish Institute in Athens 14: 2011) 185-234
[PDF]”E-ke-ra2-wo ≠ wa-na-ka: The Implications of a Probable Non-Identification for Pylian Feasting and Politics.” Dais: The Aegean Feast. Aegaeum 29 (2008) 391-399
[PDF]”to-no-e-ke-te-ri-jo Reconsidered,” Minos 37-38 (2002-2003 [2006]) 293-316 and 372. (English and Spanish abstracts, p. 488)

October 4, 2011

Added a piece about Palaima in his involvement with the UT athletics program.

Added Palaima reviews:
The Last Pagans of Rome
Invisible Romans: Prostitutes, Outlaws, Slaves, Gladiators, Ordinary Men and Women…The Romans That History Forgot

Added Palaima editorials:
“The ‘me-firstism’ of UT athletics”.
“History gives us guidance in dealing with national tragedy”.
“”Home, where they take you in, no matter your challenges””.
“We, the people, are losing civility, understanding”.
“Pair hope 31,000 images will help spur social change”.

 

Brief Palaima review of Steve Earle’s I’ll Never Get Out of This World Alive:
Tom Palaima, professor of Classics at the University of Texas at Austin, has been reading Steve Earle’s I’ll Never Get Out of This World Alive (Harvill Secker, 2011). “No one does. So we are lucky to have storytellers like singer/songwriter Steve Earle lay bare the truths of this world. Here he takes us to live in the bargain-basement prostitution and drug zone of San Antonio, Texas in 1963 with a morphine-addicted old doctor, the ghost of Hank Williams and a young Mexican girl discovering her powers as a curandera.”

May 22, 2011

As Tom Palaima steps down as UT Austin representative on the Coalition on Intercollegiate Athletics, he invites anyone interested in these matters to read his candid and through reports of the last three years:

UT representative on the national Coalition on Intercollegiate Athletics (COIA) 2008- 2011 annual reports:

Link to Palaima comment on review of Joseph S. Nye, The Future of Power, Perseus Books ISBN 9781586488918, Published 24 February 2011:
http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/story.asp?storycode=416165

Added Palaima editorials:
“The NCAA and the Athletes It Fails”.
“Universities’ spending on sports undermines their mission: education”.

April 11, 2011

From Michael Cosmopoulos and Cynthia Shelmerdine

Readers of Aegeanet clearly share our excitement at the discovery of a Linear B tablet from Iklaina. In the last few days it has led to some good publicity for the Aegean Bronze Age. But since media reports rarely transmit information with complete accuracy, we’d like to offer the following brief account of the context and content of the tablet. A full publication will appear as soon as practicable.

Context and date: The tablet was found in a burned refuse pit containing diagnostic pottery of LH IIB/LH IIA1/early LH IIIA2 date and is, therefore, earlier than the tablet from the Petsas House at Mycenae. Palaeographically the signs resemble those on tablets from the Room of the Chariot Tablets at Knossos, and the four (not five) early tablets from Pylos. Phylogenetic analysis by C. Skelton (cf. her article in Archaeometry 50, 2008, 158-176) bears out a date earlier than the main Pylos archive.

Content: The tablet is broken at bottom, one side, and perhaps also at the top, which is uneven. On the front side (recto), a probable man’s name is preserved in the first extant line, followed by the number 1. We read in the fragmentary second line ]ṇụ-o-wo[ , probably the end of another name (cf. the name ]ṛụ-o-wo on Knossos Sc 130). The back side (verso) is determined by the more slanting ductus of the signs, a point observed by J.L. Melena. It preserves a participial ending, attested at Knossos and Pylos as perfect active in form, with an intransitive-passive sense. The closest parallel is te-tu-ko-wo-a (‘fully finished’), attested at Knossos with reference to cloth (KN L 871.b, restored on KN X 7846), and in the variant te-tu-ko-wo-a2 at Pylos with reference to wheels (PY Sa 682). te-tu-]ko-wo-a is a plausible restoration on the Iklaina tablet, though of course not certain.

Thus the tablet may present a personnel list on one side, and a verb form possibly linked to manufacturing on the other. The really interesting point is that this is the first tablet ever found at a secondary center in a Mycenaean state. We think that Richard Hope-Simpson and John Bennet are right in identifying Iklaina as the district capital a-pu2 (Alphys, vel sim.) in the Hither Province of Pylos. If the date of the tablet is not later than LH IIIA1/early LH IIIA2, as the evidence suggests, it represents either a phase of independent written accounting predating a Pylian takeover, or the very early stages of state bureaucracy. Either way, it opens a window into a state of administration barely attested at Pylos itself.