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- Contains open access
- ISSN: 0263-7189 (Print), 2052-6148 (Online)
- Editor: Victoria Leitch University of Durham, UK
- Editorial board
Libyan Studies is the annual journal of record of the British Institute for Libyan & Northern African Studies, appearing in November each year. Contributions are peer-reviewed and cover a broad range of subjects, including archaeology, ancient and Islamic history, geology, geography and social sciences. The articles will appeal to readers with an interest in the Middle East and Mediterranean worlds as well as North Africa.
Latest content
Archaeology blog
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Community collaboration: My experience as an undergrad Production Assistant on ‘Advances’
- 30 January 2026,
- My name is Adrianna Wagner, and I am a third-year student at Lehigh University in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, where I study English literature with minors in marketing...
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Excavating the British tin trade that shaped the Bronze Age
- 19 January 2026,
- In 2025, we published an article in Antiquity, demonstrating through chemical and isotopic analyses that, c. 1300 BC, tin ingots made from tin ores in southwest...
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From Mycenaean Frescoes to Hellenistic Sculpture: Women’s Research in the Early Years of the ABSA
- 06 January 2026,
- The first volume of the Annual of the British School at Athens was published in 1895, almost a decade after the foundation of the School in 1886.…
Classics « Cambridge Core Blog
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From Mycenaean Frescoes to Hellenistic Sculpture: Women’s Research in the Early Years of the ABSA
- 06 January 2026,
- The first volume of the Annual of the British School at Athens was published in 1895, almost a decade after the foundation of the School in 1886.…
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The Statues from the Antikythera Shipwreck, 125 Years Later
- 08 October 2025,
- In the mid-1st century BCE, a freighter laden with Greek art was sailing westward in the Mediterranean when it crashed and rapidly foundered, taking some of...
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A fragment of Aristotle’s lost Eudemus in Tertullian’s De Anima
- 07 October 2025,
- Aristotle is certainly one of the most foundational, influential, and therefore heavily commented on and thoroughly studied figures in the history of philosophy.…...
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