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Volume 55,2 presents the contributions of the eighth meeting of the Working Group "Legal Documents in Ancient Societies", which was devoted to the topic "Accounts and Bookkeeping in the Ancient World". The volume is dedicated to an early and seemingly ubiquitous type of text, which often followed certain classification criteria and which, for the sake of easier clarity, was gladly subjected to a specially developed layout. In addition to the discussions of individual artefacts or artefact groups as well as literary texts, there are considerations of ancient and modern terminology, the choice of writing media used for this purpose, the bodies entrusted with data collection, the purposes pursued with it, the further processing and archiving of the collected data as well as their organisation at the various levels of administration. The examples from Emar and early Greece again show that a written version was by no means self-evident. The contributions not only draw attention once again to the high level of knowledge that can be gained from such a comparative approach, but also to the great potential of the always underestimated and only seemingly unattractive format of lists and directories. This undoubtedly applies to the entire field of economic administration, but also to questions of military affairs, demography, and sociology, for whose research this serial material is of importance that should not be underestimated.
(Produktform)Paperback / softback --- (Zielgruppe)Fachpublikum/ Wissenschaft --- (Produktform (spezifisch))Sewn --- History of Accounting --- Egyptology --- Papyrology --- Cultural History --- History of Law --- Economic History --- Oriental Studies --- Antiquity --- (VLB-WN)1553: Hardcover, Softcover / Geschichte/Altertum --- Accounting --- Roman law --- Greek law --- History --- Law, Greek. --- Public administration --- Bookkeeping --- Accounting. --- Bookkeeping. --- Public administration. --- Greece. --- Middle East. --- Rome (Empire).
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The Egyptians, the Greeks, the Romans, and the Jews, each with their own vibrant culture, met in antiquity, and without completely losing their national identities absorbed deep and indelible influences, which remain with their descendants and with all of us to this day. In this volume, dedicated to Ranon Katzoff, whose studies of Roman and Jewish legal antiquities have enlightened a generation, leading scholars investigate various aspects of the interaction among these four nations in antiquity, particularly on the cultural and legal plane, and something of their reflection in later times.
E-books --- Festschrift - Libri Amicorum --- Civilization, Ancient. --- East and West. --- Civilization, Classical. --- Jews --- History, Ancient. --- Civilisation ancienne --- Orient et Occident --- Juifs --- Histoire ancienne --- History --- Histoire
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Guardian and ward --- Law, Ancient --- Ancient law --- Guardianships --- Tutelage --- Wards --- Domestic relations --- Trusts and trustees --- Conservatorships --- Interdiction (Civil law) --- History --- Law and legislation --- Conferences - Meetings --- E-books
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Law --- Acts, Legislative --- Enactments, Legislative --- Laws (Statutes) --- Legislative acts --- Legislative enactments --- Jurisprudence --- Legislation --- Conferences - Meetings
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Cet ouvrage, qui réunit des spécialistes des cités grecques et du royaume ptolémaïque, se propose d’interroger la notion d’identité dans les mondes grecs par le biais des processus d’identification, processus qui conduisent conjointement à singulariser un individu et à le différencier d’un autre pour pouvoir le reconnaître. Il procède de deux objectifs : tenter de dépasser l’effet de rupture suscité par la spécificité des sources conservées pour les cités grecques d’époque classique, d’une part, et pour les royaumes hellénistiques, d’autre part ; confronter la perspective sociale et la perspective juridique afin de cerner ce qui unit et sépare les tenants d’une histoire sociale à proprement parler et ceux qui centrent leurs objets sur les normes juridiques et les pratiques en contexte judiciaire. Un premier groupe de cinq articles interroge ainsi le degré d’implication des instances de la polis ou de l’État monarchique en matière d’identification des personnes (A. Maffi, P. Ismard, U. Yiftach, Y. Broux – avec un éclairage complémentaire offert par M. Béraud pour le monde romain). Six autres contributions explorent plus particulièrement les relations et les tensions entre identifications individuelles et identifications collectives (R. Guicharrousse, M.-L. Sronek, L. Sot, K. Bouillot, S. Wackenier, L. Rossi). Trois études enfin sont centrées sur les pratiques d’identification en contexte judiciaire et parajudiciaire (N. Siron, É. Scheid-Tissinier, G. Baetens).
Grecs --- Identité collective --- Identité collective --- Actes de congrès. --- Citizenship (Greek law) --- Identification (Greek law) --- Individuality --- Social stratification --- Greeks --- Stratification, Social --- Equality --- Social structure --- Social classes --- Psychology --- Conformity --- Identity (Psychology) --- Likes and dislikes --- Personality --- Self --- Ethnology --- Mediterranean race --- Law, Greek --- History --- Ethnic identity --- Conferences - Meetings --- Classics --- identité collective --- antiquité --- identification des personnes
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