Opuscula-Annual of the Swedish Institutes at Athens and Rome

Papers
(The TQCC of Opuscula-Annual of the Swedish Institutes at Athens and Rome is 1. The table below lists those papers that are above that threshold based on CrossRef citation counts [max. 250 papers]. The publications cover those that have been published in the past four years, i.e., from 2021-11-01 to 2025-11-01.)
ArticleCitations
Review of C. Prescott et al. eds., Trinacria. ‘An island outside time’, Oxford 20218
The topography of Hermione—A preliminary outline7
Johan Niklas Byström and the so-called Venus of Stockholm. New research on a presumably lost sculpture6
Front matter6
Review of G. Cifani, The origins of the Roman economy, Cambridge 20215
Review of D.M. Smith, W.G. Cavanagh & A. Papadopoulos, eds, The wider island of Pelops. Studies on prehistoric Aegean pottery in honour of Professor Christopher Mee, Oxford: Archaeopress 20235
The humans of ancient Hermione. The necropolis in the light of bioarchaeology5
An overlooked 2nd-century BC decree by the polis of the Orthieians, Thessaly5
Dissertation abstracts 2023–20245
The development of the water supply on the Peloponnese in Greco-Roman times4
Architectural terracottas from San Giovenale. Addenda and conclusions3
Review of E. Rystedt, Excursions into Greek and Roman imagery, Abingdon 20233
Roman and Early Byzantine evidence from the area of Palamas. A preliminary report of the ongoing Greek-Swedish archaeological work in the region of Karditsa, Thessaly2
Review of R. Rönnlund, The cities of the plain. Urbanism in ancient western Thessaly, Oxford: Oxbow Books 20232
Research review. Navigating the digital limes: Transformative practices and challenges in Classical and Mediterranean archaeology2
Review of M. Blomberg, G. Nordquist, P. Roos, E. Rystedt & L. Werkström, Corpus Vasorum Antiquorum, Sweden fascicule 5, 20202
The Kalaureia Excavation Project. A preliminary report of the work carried out in Area L between 2015 and 20182
The Temple of Demeter Chthonia at Hermione1
Front matter1
A Roman bath with broken windows in Asine, Argolis. The result of repeated earthquakes?1
Review of M. Fontaine, ed., How to tell a joke, Princeton 20211
Front matter1
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