Arqueología y Téchne – José Remesal Rodríguez ;
Interacciones que dejan huella. Hacia una ciencia de redes de los
objetos que quedaron – Luce Prignano, Ignacio Morer Zapata and
Albert Díaz-Guilera ;
RomanOpenData: A semantic based Data Visualization & Exploratory
Interface – Xavi Giménez Baqués, Alessandro Mosca, Bernardo
Rondelli and Guillem Rull Fort ;
From Counting Pots to Reconstructing Economy: Computational Tools
Developed in the EPNet Project – Iza Romanowska, Simon Carrignon,
María Coto-Sarmiento, Jean-Marc Montanier and Xavi Rubio-Campillo
;
Similarity Analysis in Epigraphy. Syntactic Clustering of Tituli
Picti on the PO8 Amphoras – Daniel J. Martín Arroyo-Sánchez and Iza
Romanowska ;
La economía de Mauretania Tingitana en el Alto Imperio (2009-2019).
Colaboraciones internacionales y aplicación de nuevas técnicas –
Lluís Pons Pujol ;
Analysis tools for the study of the amphorae productions from the
northeast of Hispania Citerior Tarraconensis. A first approach from
EPNet Project – Antoni Martín i Oliveras, Carlos Palacín Copado and
Jordi Pérez González ;
La codificación de los sellos sobre ánforas olearias Dressel 20 en
la Baetica – Juan Moros Díaz ;
La importacia de una provincia bisagra en el concierto del Imperio
romano. El caso de Raetia – Juan Manuel Bermúdez Lorenzo ;
Olive Oil Beyond the Wall: Stamps on Baetican Dressel 20 found on
the Forth-Clyde Isthmus – Jordi Pérez González ;
Approaches to the Roman Food Economy: GIS Agricultural Modelling in
Baetica and Amphorae Epigraphy from Pompeii – Daniel J. Martín
Arroyo-Sánchez ;
Bibliography of the EPNet Project – Leticia Sierra Díaz and Jordi
Pérez González
José Remesal Rodríguez has been Professor of Ancient History at the
University of Barcelona since 1988. He is founder of the ‘Centro
para el Estudio de la Interdependencia Provincial en la Antigüedad
Clásica’ (CEIPAC), with projects in Austria, Germany, Italy, Libya
and Tunisia. His work has been published internationally in more
than 160 scientific articles. The main subject of his research is
the interaction between political and economic life in the Roman
world, based on the study of the production, distribution and
consumption of food. ;
Jordi Pérez González is a postdoctoral researcher ‘Juan de la
Cierva-Formación’ at the University of Girona (Department of
History and Art History). He received his Doctorate from the
University of Barcelona, obtaining the Extraordinary Doctorate
Award (2017). He was a research technician in the CEIPAC group
during the period 2013-2020. As well as numerous journal articles
he is the author of Sumptuary Specialists and Consumer Elites in
Rome’s world order (2021).
'To anyone wanting to know the intricacies of working with Network Science and databases being a humanist, this is a very recommendable read.' – Arnau Lario Devesa (2022): Rezensionsjournal sehepunkte
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