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CLOSEIHR Research websites
IHR Research websites
Aiming to highlight the historical continuity of Athens, the National Hellenic Research Foundation organized a series of twelve lectures under the title “Archaeology of the City of Athens”. Twelve expert scholars presented major topics concerning the history of Athens’ urban and suburban landscape, from prehistoric times to the modern era.
The portal constitutes the digital publication of this project, featuring substantial additions — including newly written chapters, excerpts from historical sources, and a rich collection of illustrative material.
The portal of the research project "Kyrtou Plegmata" includes applications for the study, documentation, and interpretive mapping of the structure and functions of various networks that developed historically, investigating their impact on the formation of the respective conceptualizations of the Greek space.
PANDEKTIS includes major digital collections on Greek history and culture created by the National Hellenic Research Foundation. These collections originate from the Institutes of Neohellenic Research, Byzantine Research, and Greek and Roman Antiquity (actual Institute of Historical Research) and have been digitized and made available online by the National Documentation Centre.
The collections contain information on historical and cultural heritage that can be of value both to the scholarly community and to the general public.
ARISTEIA // InCoMac
A project of the Section of Greek and Roman Antiquity (KERA / Institute of Historical Research) about “Inscriptions and Coins: New Documents from Ancient Macedonia”
The objective of InCoMac is the systematic study and publication of primary sources, namely inscriptions preserved on stone and coins, which provide evidence about the history of ancient Macedonia. Both these categories of material evidence constitute primary sources of unparalleled significance for the study of institutions, diplomacy, social hierarchy, economic structure, the circulation of wealth and many other facets of ancient societies.
Mobility and economic migration in the Mediterranean
Italiote Greek and Roman businessmen in Greece
This website focuses on the presence of numerous Romans and Italiote Greeks at various spots of mainland Greece and the adjacent islands. Various historical evolutions encouraged an economic outreach of these people who searched for profit opportunities abroad and are attested from the 3rd c. BC onwards at many places of the Roman oecumenen, from the Iberian Peninsula to Asia Minor and from Rhine and Danube to North Africa.
On the website “Kyprios Character”, you will discover everything you want to know about ancient Cypriote history, archaeology and numismatics.
You can search for information related to the ancient coins of Cypriote city-kingdoms, read scientific articles written especially for this website by specialised researchers, locate related numismatic bibliography, and consult a calendar of events as well as links of interest.
Material Entanglements in the Ancient Mediterranean and Beyond investigates cultural, and especially artistic, contacts across a broad swath of the ancient Mediterranean and Near Eastern world from the Middle Bronze Age to the Sasanian Period (c. 2000 BCE – c. 650 CE).
This website presents the results of three survey campaigns (2004-2006) in the ancient city of Boubon (Cibyratis, northern Lycia) and its territory. It includes a corpus of the inscriptions found in Boubon, 15 of which are published here for the first time, as well as documentation of the archaeological remains of the city and its territory.
CyCoMed
The Cypriot connection to the Mediterranean from the Late Bronze Age to the end of the Classical period
The project studies ancient Cyprus and its Mediterranean interconnections through archaeological, epigraphic and numismatic evidence. The website is addressed to all those who wish to learn more about ancient Cyprus, one of the most exciting islands of the Mediterranean in terms of cultural wealth and vitality.
The database includes written works classified under the following categories: Lives of Saints, Encomia, Miracles, Homilies, and Unclassified, according to their listing in the Bibliotheca Hagiographica Graeca (=BHG). The texts are entered into the database page by page, exactly as they were published in the original edition.
The “Byzantine History Database” is an ongoing project of the SBR/IHR. It is the result of in-depth scholarly processing of more than one hundred Greek and Latin texts to date and aims to create a significant tool for research and support of the educational process.
The database “Byzantine Documents of the Monastery of St. John the Theologian” forms part of the preparation for a unified catalogue of the Byzantine documents preserved in the Monastery’s Archive. In its current form, it includes Imperial, Official, and Patriarchal documents for which a modern diplomatic edition exists.
The database “Western Religious Orders in the Aegean, the Ionian, and Cyprus (11th–19th centuries)” aims to: (a) map for the first time the extent, density, and diversity of the establishments of Western religious orders in these regions from the 11th century to 1830, the year of Greek independence; and (b) collect and present the essential bibliographical documentation concerning these establishments.
The data have been drawn primarily from the scholarly literature and published sources, as well as from unpublished archival material.
The Gazetteer includes all military conflicts that took place in the Byzantine or former Byzantine territories of the Balkan Peninsula and Asia Minor during the period 1204–1461, in which one of the opposing sides consisted wholly or partly of Byzantines. It is accompanied by an interactive digital atlas.
The database records, in diplomatic transcription, the texts of Greek post-Byzantine documents preserved in the archives of the Athonite monasteries. At this stage, it includes all the documents from the monasteries of Esphigmenou and Stavronikita, as well as selected ones from Pantokrator, Xeropotamou, and Karakallou. The database will gradually be enriched with the complete corpus of documents from the remaining monasteries.
The “Prosopography” offers a treasury of processed historical data in a state of constant reconstruction. It is a powerful analytical tool that includes a catalogue of all the persons mentioned in the sources, constituting a complete and objective record of the past.
The database records the notes found in manuscripts of the Monastery of Patmos that have been published in the catalogues of its collection issued to date and, as a final stage, it aims to develop it into a thesaurus of primary historical evidence from the collections of the monastery, with the addition of historical information in its published documents.
The project The “Greek-speaking” Merchants of Constantinople, the Southern Balkans, Asia Minor, and the Islands aims to record and utilize information concerning the activities of “Greek-speaking” merchants within this geographical area.
Raw Materials, Natural Resources and Agricultural Products
Evidence from the Peloponnese, 4th-15th Centuries
The digital database contains information on the Peloponnese concerning raw materials (soil, subsoil), natural resources (forest products, fishery products, rocks), and agricultural produce (farming, livestock) from Late Antiquity to the Late Byzantine period, that is, from the 4th to the 15th century.
The database includes iconographic material focusing on depictions of the codex in mosaics, frescoes, panel paintings, illuminated manuscripts, and works of minor arts. Its purpose is to document and analyze the iconographic conventions used in portraying the codex — which, in most cases, represents the Gospel Book.
The churches built during the Byzantine period are the ones still standing today in the historic center of Athens and beyond. Many of these churches are featured on the website “Byzantine Monuments of Attica”. Alongside the churches, a selection of frescoes, sculptures, mosaics, inscriptions, as well as rare and unpublished material from the British School at Athens (drawings and photographs by 19th-century British architects) are presented here to encourage on-site visits.
The project highlights the imported categories of pottery found in sites in the Peloponnese and in Crete and the fluctuations in the distribution and circulation of ceramic products depending to each period, from the 4th to the 15th or 16th c., respectively. The database contains more than 5800 records and is accompanied by a digital map.
In the ever-growing scholarly interest in studying aspects of the material culture of past societies, research on ceramics has experienced remarkable growth. The study of glazed vessels immured in churches of various areas of Greece offers an important tool for gaining deeper insight into this rich facet of material culture found throughout the Greek world, as the material itself forms a kind of open-air museum for medieval and post-medieval glazed pottery.
This database includes terms related to bookbinding and to the description of the codex as a physical object. It is organized into sections corresponding to the structure of the book, and each term is accompanied by an explanatory text in Greek and a translation of the term only into English.
The database “Chrysothemis” consists of entries concerning methods of food preparation in Byzantium, mainly of the Byzantine recipes, cooked food called mageiriai. Some of the relevant comments are extended studies investigating food preparation and standard of living over time and making comparisons not only among various social classes, but also among various ethnic and religious groups within and beyond the boundaries of the Byzantine Empire.
Domestic and Wild Fauna in the Greek Space
Written Testimonies and Archaelogical Sources (8th-15th C.)
The research examines the role of domestic animals and wild fauna in everyday life. It aims to approach the subject from geographical, historical, and environmental perspectives, focusing on the collection of data concerning the perception and use of wild animals, the breeding and exploitation of domestic animals and livestock, as well as activities such as fishing, apiculture, and hunting.
