Art History
Art History promotes world-class art-historical scholarship from across the globe, representing the diversity of the discipline at large. Access to v.20 (1997) to present (AAR only). Older issues are available in the Library.
The Library & Archives will reopen to the public on September 9
Art History promotes world-class art-historical scholarship from across the globe, representing the diversity of the discipline at large. Access to v.20 (1997) to present (AAR only). Older issues are available in the Library.
Arion: A Journal for Humanities and the Classics. Access to v.1 (1962) to v.28 (2020) (AAR only).
AAR only, beginning with v.29 (1996). Older volumes are available at the AAR Library.
Archaeometry publishes on the application of the physical and biological sciences to archaeology, anthropology and art history, including, among others, dating methods, artifact studies, mathematical methods, remote sensing techniques, conservation science, environmental reconstruction, biological anthropology and archaeological theory. Access to v.39 (1997) to v.62 (2020) (AAR only). The volumes prior to 1997 are available at the Library.
On world archaeology, reports new archaeological research and new methods. Access to v.84 (2010)–v.89 (2015) (AAR only). The volumes prior to 2010 are available at the Library.
On the history and archaeology of North Africa, protohistory to Arabic conquest. Full text online, v.52 (2016) to present (AAR only) ; open access (with moving wall) via persée.
AAR only, beginning with v.15 (2007). Older volumes are available in the AAR Library.
AAR only. The library owns all volumes prior to the online subscription.
Ancient West & East is an academic journal devoted to the study of the periphery of the ancient world, its so-called barbarian milieu, the activities thereabouts of Greeks and Romans, and the relations between them and local peoples. AAR only.
Ancient Society is an annual journal founded in 1970 by the ancient history section of the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven. Its main objective is the study of the society of the Greek, Hellenistic, and Roman world in all its aspects, including the relations with peripheral peoples and cultures. Available also through JSTOR (with moving wall, AAR only).