Hyperboreus

Hyperboreus is a peer reviewed Journal for classical studies. It was founded by the Bibliotheca classica Petropolitana in 1994 as the first academic journal in Russia since the 1917 revolution specializing in the field of classical studies. The aims of Hyperboreus are to advance the study of classical antiquity in Russia and to encourage international cooperation in this field by publishing original articles and reviews of books in Russian, English, German, French, Italian, and Latin. The editors invite contributions in all areas of classical scholarship (language and literature, history, philosophy and sciences, papyrology, epigraphy, archaeology, arts) based primarily on the interpretation of classical sources. Hyperboreus also aims at throwing light upon archaeological excavations of the classical sites on the Northern coast of the Black Sea region.

Hyperboreus is edited in two annual fascicles.

The annotations follow the bibliographical periodicals: Gnomon, L' Annee philologique.

Guidelines for contributors

The maximal length of a publication in one volume should not exceed 64,000 characters (with spaces). Publications exceeding this limit will be split into two and more parts and published in several volumes. Shorter publications are welcome.
Priority is given to publications with a clear argument based upon interpretation of primary sources as well as to publications that represent a novel contribution to the field.
Contributions are accepted in Russian, Latin, English, German, French, and Italian. Papers are accompanied by an English and a Russian summary, and key-words in English and Russian.

Contributions should be sent as a hard copy or as a file in Word and PDF format attached to an e-mail at the following e-mail address: hyperbicl@gmail.com.

Authors should send a copy of the final version of their paper in Word and PDF format per e-mail after acceptance has been communicated by the editors. English summary should be attached to the final version.

Please, note that the rules for bibliographical references depend on the language of the paper. Details are available at the website: http://www.bibliotheca-classica.org/en/node/128

Editors: Nina Almazova, Sofia Egorova, Denis Keyer, Alexander Verlinsky.

Editorial office: Michael von Albrecht, P. E. Easterling, Alexander Gavrilov, Carlo M. Lucarini, Dmitri Panchenko.