1,721,082 research outputs found

    IT governance.Concetti teorici e implementazione

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    Il volume nasce dal confronto tra studio accademico ed esperienze aziendali in tema di IT governance, al fine di mettere a sistema concetti teorici e concrete implementazioni di sistemi di governo dell'IT

    Un graffito su uno skyphos attico da Monte Iudica (CT)

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    The author examines a graffito found on the foot of a black-glazed Attic skyphos. The vase was part of the burial assemblage of a chamber tomb datable to the first half of the fifth century BC. After a brief description of the find context, a Sikel-Greek necropolis in eastern Sicily, the author goes into a morphological and typological study of the skyphos and a paleographical analysis of the graffito. He finally discusses possible readings and interpretations of the inscription

    Un graffito su uno skyphos attico da Monte Iudica (CT)

    No full text
    The author examines a graffito found on the foot of a black-glazed Attic skyphos. The vase was part of the burial assemblage of a chamber tomb datable to the first half of the fifth century BC. After a brief description of the find context, a Sikel-Greek necropolis in eastern Sicily, the author goes into a morphological and typological study of the skyphos and a paleographical analysis of the graffito. He finally discusses possible readings and interpretations of the inscription

    Intagli egei nel mondo preromano

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    This short paper presents some intaglios from several Orientalising Etruscan and Italic sites. In the first part of the paper, the author illustrates some that are of undoubted Aegean origin (Terni, Veii, Chiavari). These materials are exceptional in comparison to other Greek and Oriental artifacts that are more frequently found in the Italian peninsula. As such, they can contribute to shed light on the dynamics of the circulation of luxury goods in the Mediterranean. Some of the intaglios show evidence that their circulation was strictly linked to the mobility of people, notably an inscribed gem from Perachora, which probably went on a round trip of sorts. In the second part, the author examines some rather puzzling items, which can be regarded as local products with a generic Levantine influence. Finally, he briefly examines some finds from Greek contexts (Euboea in particular) showing a possible Etruscan influence

    La circolazione delle monete cirenaiche degli ultimi Tolemei in area egea

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    In 96 BC Cyrenaica, up to then under Ptolemaic control, definitively came under Roman influence. Ptolemy Apion had granted freedom to the Greek city-states of Cyrenaica, while the chora had been bequeathed to the Romans. Even the currency, which the Ptolemies basically issued for local circulation, had to conform to the new economic impulses and to the opening up of the money market. Some findings from Attica, Corinthia, and above all from the Aegean islands allow the author to outline one of the paths of dissemination of the Cyrenaean coin series from this period

    Going Beyond Counting First Authors in Author Co-citation Analysis

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    The present study examines one of the fundamental aspects of author co-citation analysis (ACA) - the way co-citation counts are defined. Co-citation counting provides the data on which all subsequent statistical analyses and mappings are based, and we compare ACA results based on two different types of co-citation counting - the traditional type that only counts the first one among a cited work's authors on the one hand and a non-traditional type that takes into account the first 5 authors of a cited work on the other hand. Results indicate that the picture produced through this non-traditional author co-citation counting contains more coherent author groups and is therefore considerably clearer. However, this picture represents fewer specialties in the research field being studied than that produced through the traditional first-author co-citation counting when the same number of top-ranked authors is selected and analyzed. Reasons for these effects are discussed

    Omero, Maratona e Atene dalle ampie strade (Od. VII, 78-81). Una nota sulla rappresentazione dell’Atene micenea sotto i Pisistratidi

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    In commenting the celebrated passage of the Odyssey (VII 78-81) that describes the visit of the goddess Athena to the “well-built house of Erechtheus” on the Acropolis of Athens, scholars have focused on isolated features, such as the hapax legomenon name of the city in the singular accusative, or the attribute euryagyia. Other elements have been overlooked, such as the seemingly inconsistent route of the goddess from Scheria to Athens and the obscure mention of Marathon. This paper reappraises these elements to put forward a new interpretation of the passage. Rather than hinting at a Late Bronze Age origin, the unparalleled form of the city-name was necessary for metrical reasons, as it was modified by an attribute exclusively recurring in the singular to realize the fifth dactyl of the hexameter. The adjective euryagyia is used to equate Athens to both Mycenae and Troy in urban splendor and political importance. The reference to Marathon seems to imply that the goddess landed on the northeast coast of Attica, as if she were coming from Euboea or some other North Aegean island. This is entirely inconsistent with all the ancient traditions, which located the mythical island of Scheria at the westernmost limits of the world, but seems to hint at Peisistratus’ march in 547/6 BC, which started from Marathon and ledto his victory in the battle of Pallene. The author argues that Marathon is mentioned in this passage to acknowledge itsconnection with Peisistratus, and that the goddess Athena is accordingly represented as retracing Peisistratus’ route. This suggests that the passage is an interpolation of the 6th century BC
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