Subjects -> ARCHAEOLOGY (Total: 300 journals)
| A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z 1 2 [Sort by number of followers] [Restore default list] Showing 1 - 57 of 57 Journals sorted alphabetically |
| Acta ad archaeologiam et artium historiam pertinentia (Followers: 2) |
| Acta Antiqua (Followers: 22, SJR: 0.1, CiteScore: 0) |
| Acta Archaeologica (Followers: 59) |
| Acta Archaeologica Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae (Followers: 7, SJR: 0.139, CiteScore: 0) |
| Acta Terrae Septemcastrensis (Followers: 1) |
| Acta Universitatis Lodziensis : Folia Archaeologica (Followers: 1) |
| ADLFI. Archéologie de la France - Informations (Followers: 1) |
| Advances in Archaeomaterials (Followers: 2) |
| African Archaeological Review (Followers: 17) |
| Afrique : Archéologie & Arts (Followers: 5) |
| Akroterion (Followers: 5) |
| American Antiquity (Followers: 26) |
| American Journal of Archaeology (Followers: 73) |
| Anadolu Araştırmaları / Anatolian Research (Followers: 1) |
| Anales de Arquelogía Cordobesa |
| Anales de Arqueología y Etnología |
| Anatolia Antiqua : Revue internationale d’archéologie anatolienne |
| Anatolica (Followers: 10) |
| Ancient Asia (Followers: 9) |
| Ancient History : Resources for Teachers (Followers: 10) |
| Ancient Near Eastern Studies (Followers: 26) |
| Ancient Society (Followers: 23) |
| Ancient West & East (Followers: 7) |
| Annuaire du Collège de France (Followers: 6) |
| Annual of the British School at Athens (Followers: 20) |
| Anthropology & Archeology of Eurasia (Followers: 18) |
| Antipoda : Revista de Antropología y Arqueología (Followers: 3) |
| Antiqua (Followers: 8) |
| Antiquaries Journal, The (Followers: 9) |
| Antiquite Tardive (Followers: 6) |
| Antiquités Africaines |
| Antiquity (Followers: 45) |
| AntropoWebzin (Followers: 2) |
| AP : Online Journal in Public Archaeology (Followers: 1) |
| Arabian Archaeology and Epigraphy (Followers: 11) |
| Archaeofauna (Followers: 5) |
| Archaeologia Adriatica |
| Archaeologia Baltica (Followers: 2) |
| Archaeologia Lituana |
| Archaeologiai Értesitö (Followers: 1, SJR: 0.112, CiteScore: 0) |
| Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences (Followers: 23) |
| Archaeological Dialogues (Followers: 30) |
| Archaeological Discovery (Followers: 5) |
| Archaeological Journal (Followers: 13) |
| Archaeological Prospection (Followers: 13) |
| Archaeological Reports (Followers: 7) |
| Archaeological Research in Asia (Followers: 5) |
| Archaeologies (Followers: 13) |
| Archaeology in Oceania (Followers: 14) |
| Archaeology, Ethnology and Anthropology of Eurasia (Followers: 25) |
| Archaeometry (Followers: 38) |
| Archaeonautica |
| Archäologie im Rheinland |
| Archäologische Informationen (Followers: 1) |
| ArcheoArte. Rivista Elettronica di Archeologia e Arte (Followers: 7) |
| Archeological Papers of The American Anthropological Association (Followers: 13) |
| Archéologie médiévale (Followers: 1) |
| Archeomatica (Followers: 4) |
| ArcheoSciences (Followers: 10) |
| Archipel |
| Archivo Español de Arqueología (Followers: 1) |
| Arkæologi i Slesvig-Archäologie in Schleswig |
| Arqueología |
| Arqueología de la Arquitectura (Followers: 2) |
| Arqueología y Territorio Medieval |
| Artefact : Techniques, histoire et sciences humaines (Followers: 2) |
| Artefact : the journal of the Archaeological and Anthropological Society of Victoria (Followers: 2) |
| Asian Archaeology (Followers: 2) |
| Asian Perspectives (Followers: 11) |
| Athar Alrafedain |
| Ausgrabungen und Funde in Westfalen-Lippe |
| Australasian Historical Archaeology (Followers: 8) |
| Australian Archaeology (Followers: 12) |
| Australian Cane Grower (Followers: 1) |
| Azania: Archaeological Research in Africa (Followers: 7) |
| BABesch - Bulletin Antieke Beschaving (Followers: 3) |
| Bajo Guadalquivir y Mundos Atlánticos |
| Balcanica Posnaniensia Acta et studia |
| Berkala Arkeologi |
| Boletim do Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi. Ciências Humanas (Followers: 1) |
| Boletín de Arqueología (Followers: 1) |
| Boletín de Arqueología Experimental |
| Boletín del Museo Chileno de Arte Precolombino (Followers: 1) |
| Brill Research Perspectives in Ancient History (Followers: 3) |
| Britannia (Followers: 13) |
| Bryn Mawr Classical Review (Followers: 51) |
| BSAA Arqueología |
| Built Environment Inquiry Journal |
| Bulletin de l'Institut français d'archéologie orientale |
| Bulletin du centre d’études médiévales d’Auxerre (Followers: 6) |
| Bulletin of the History of Archaeology (Followers: 16) |
| Cadernos do LEPAARQ |
| California Archaeology (Followers: 3) |
| Cambridge Archaeological Journal (Followers: 99) |
| Canadian Zooarchaeology / Zooarchéologie canadienne (Followers: 2) |
| Cartagine. Studi e Ricerche (Followers: 2) |
| Catalan Historical Review (Followers: 2) |
| Chronique des activités archéologiques de l'École française de Rome |
| Comechingonia : Revista de Arqueología |
| Complutum (Followers: 2) |
| Conimbriga |
| Conservation and Management of Archaeological Sites (Followers: 7) |
| Continuity and Change (Followers: 15) |
| Cuadernos de Arqueología de la Universidad de Navarra |
| Cuadernos de Prehistoria y Arqueología (Followers: 1) |
| Cultural Heritage and Science (Followers: 5) |
| Damrong Journal of The Faculty of Archaeology Silpakorn University |
| Danish Journal of Archaeology (Followers: 2) |
| Die Welt des Orients (Followers: 3) |
| Digital Applications in Archaeology and Cultural Heritage (Followers: 14) |
| Dissertationes Archaeologicae (Followers: 1) |
| Documenta Praehistorica (Followers: 1) |
| Dotawo : A Journal of Nubian Studies (Followers: 3) |
| E&G Quaternary Science Journal (Followers: 10) |
| Eastern Christian Art (Followers: 2) |
| Economic Anthropology (Followers: 20) |
| Environmental Archaeology (Followers: 40) |
| Estudios Atacameños (Followers: 2) |
| Estudios de Cultura Maya (Followers: 3) |
| Ethnoarchaeology : Journal of Archaeological, Ethnographic, and Experimental Studies (Followers: 13) |
| Ethnos: Journal of Anthropology (Followers: 96) |
| European Journal of Archaeology (Followers: 76) |
| European Journal of Law and Economics (Followers: 52) |
| Exchange (Followers: 4) |
| Florentia Iliberritana (Followers: 1) |
| Frankokratia |
| Gaia : Revue interdisciplinaire sur la Grèce archaique (Followers: 1) |
| Gallia : Archéologie des Gaules (Followers: 1) |
| Gallia Préhistoire |
| Geoarchaeology: an International Journal (Followers: 19) |
| Geochronometria (Followers: 1) |
| Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies (Followers: 51) |
| Herança : Revista de História, Património e Cultura (Followers: 1) |
| Heritage Science (Followers: 5) |
| Heritage, Memory and Conflict Journal (Followers: 17) |
| Hispania Epigraphica (Followers: 4) |
| Historical Archaeology (Followers: 2) |
| Hortus Artium Medievalium (Followers: 4) |
| In Situ Archaeologica (Followers: 1) |
| Index of Texas Archaeology : Open Access Gray Literature from the Lone Star State |
| Industrial Archaeology Review (Followers: 18) |
| International Journal for the History of Engineering and Technology (Followers: 2) |
| International Journal of Cultural Property (Followers: 13) |
| International Journal of Heritage in the Digital Era (Followers: 7) |
| International Journal of Historical Archaeology (Followers: 41) |
| International Journal of Nautical Archaeology (Followers: 23) |
| International Journal of Paleopathology (Followers: 11) |
| International Journal of Speleology (Followers: 3) |
| Internet Archaeology (Followers: 15) |
| Iranica Antiqua (Followers: 7) |
| Iraq (Followers: 3) |
| ISIMU. Revista sobre Oriente Próximo y Egipto en la Antigüedad |
| Journal of African Archaeology (Followers: 1) |
| Journal of African Diaspora Archaeology and Heritage |
| Journal of African History (Followers: 30) |
| Journal of Ancient Egyptian Interconnections (Followers: 3) |
| Journal of Ancient History and Archaeology (Followers: 30) |
| Journal of Anthropological Archaeology (Followers: 74) |
| Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory (Followers: 55) |
| Journal of Archaeological Research (Followers: 55) |
| Journal of Archaeological Science (Followers: 76) |
| Journal of Archaeological Science : Reports (Followers: 26) |
| Journal of Biourbanism (Followers: 2) |
| Journal of Cognitive Historiography (Followers: 5) |
| Journal of Community Archaeology & Heritage (Followers: 7) |
| Journal of Computer Applications in Archaeology (Followers: 2) |
| Journal of Conflict Archaeology (Followers: 14) |
| Journal of Contemporary Archaeology (Followers: 4) |
| Journal of Eastern Mediterranean Archaeology & Heritage Studies (Followers: 10) |
| Journal of Egyptian History (Followers: 10) |
| Journal of Field Archaeology (Followers: 37) |
| Journal of Glacial Archaeology (Followers: 2) |
| Journal of Inner Asian Art and Archaeology (Followers: 8) |
| Journal of Islamic Archaeology (Followers: 4) |
| Journal of Island and Coastal Archaeology (Followers: 7) |
| Journal of Lithic Studies (Followers: 3) |
| Journal of Maritime Archaeology (Followers: 20) |
| Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology (Followers: 32) |
| Journal of Near Eastern Studies (Followers: 31) |
| Journal of Neolithic Archaeology (Followers: 9) |
| Journal of Open Archaeology Data (Followers: 9) |
| Journal of Pacific Archaeology (Followers: 6) |
| Journal of Paleolithic Archaeology (Followers: 2) |
| Journal of Quaternary Science (Followers: 34) |
| Journal of Roman Archaeology (Followers: 25) |
| Journal of Skyscape Archaeology (Followers: 6) |
| Journal of Social Archaeology (Followers: 46) |
| Journal of the British Archaeological Association (Followers: 18) |
| Journal of Wetland Archaeology (Followers: 9) |
| Journal of World Prehistory (Followers: 37) |
| Karthago (Followers: 2) |
| Kentron (Followers: 1) |
| Kuml |
| La zaranda de ideas (Followers: 1) |
| Landscapes (Followers: 18) |
| LANX: Rivista della Scuola di Specializzazione in Archeologia |
| Layers. Archeologia Territorio Contesti (Followers: 1) |
| Les Cahiers de l’École du Louvre (Followers: 2) |
| Les Nouvelles de l'archéologie (Followers: 1) |
| Levant (Followers: 6) |
1 2 [Sort by number of followers] [Restore default list]
|
|
- Introduction
Authors: Christopher Prescott Pages: vii - x Abstract: The articles in the present volume are the result of two workshops held at the Norwegian Institute in Rome that are both robustly disciplinary, but simultaneously raise issues beyond the disciplinary bounds of art history (into philosophy, history of ideas and history) and archaeology (into criminology, heritage studies and contemporary sociology and politics). The first was organised by DniR-researcher Mattia Biffis in October 2019, The Art of Truth: Providing Evidence in Early Modern Bologna. The second section is based on a digital workshop organised by DniR-researcher Samuel Hardy in collaboration with the Heritage Experience Initiative project at the University of Oslo in October 2020, Handling of Cultural Goods and Financing of Political Violence. On cover: ANNIBALE CARRACCI (BOLOGNA 1560 - ROME 1609), An Allegory of Truth and Time c. 1584-1585. Oil on canvas 130,0 x 169,6 cm. (support, canvas/panel/str external) RCIN 404770 Royal Collection Trust / © Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II 2021. PubDate: 2021-09-13 DOI: 10.5617/acta.9016 Issue No: Vol. 32, No. 18 N.S. (2021)
- Providing evidence in Early Modern Bologna
Authors: Mattia Biffis Pages: 1 - 8 Abstract: This article provides a scientific introduction to the papers that are collected in the first section of Acta, originating from a workshop on "The Art of Truth: Providing Evidence in Early Modern Bologna" organized at the Norwegian Institute in Rome in October 2019. On cover: ANNIBALE CARRACCI (BOLOGNA 1560 - ROME 1609), An Allegory of Truth and Time c. 1584-1585. Oil on canvas 130,0 x 169,6 cm. (support, canvas/panel/str external) RCIN 404770 Royal Collection Trust / © Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II 2021. PubDate: 2021-09-13 DOI: 10.5617/acta.9017 Issue No: Vol. 32, No. 18 N.S. (2021)
- 'The reality effect': the figure seen from behind in
Carracci's art Authors: Luca Esposito Pages: 9 - 28 Abstract: This article focuses on Carracci's frequent use of the figure seen from behind in their graphic and pictorial oeuvre (i.e., in the frescoes in Palazzo Fava, in the Cloister of San Michele in Bosco by Ludovico, in the series of the body in art by Annibale, and the engravings Ogni cosa vince l'oro by Agostino). It claims that the figure seen from behind plays a rhetorical function instrumental to the Carracci's search for a new form of naturalism in painting. In particular it creates a 'reality effect' that enhances the naturalistic rendering of the pictorial composition. On cover: ANNIBALE CARRACCI (BOLOGNA 1560 - ROME 1609), An Allegory of Truth and Time c. 1584-1585. Oil on canvas 130,0 x 169,6 cm. (support, canvas/panel/str external) RCIN 404770 Royal Collection Trust / © Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II 2021. PubDate: 2021-09-13 DOI: 10.5617/acta.9025 Issue No: Vol. 32, No. 18 N.S. (2021)
- L' ultima opera di Malvasia: 'Il Claustro di S. Michele in Bosco' e la
decorazione carraccesca tra finzione e verità Authors: Maria Gabriella Matarazzo Pages: 29 - 58 Abstract: The Carracci's decorative vocabulary (from the early Bolognese friezes to the cycles of the Farnese Gallery in Rome and of the Cloister of San Michele in Bosco in Bologna) made extensive use of anthropomorphic supports, especially telamons and terms. Painted with a monochromatic technique, they deceived the beholder for their effective imitation of marble sculptures that illusively jut from the surface of the wall. While art historical scholarship mainly discussed them in regard to their chronology, attribution, iconography and their relationship with the Cinquecento decoration systems, their early reception still lacks a comprehensive assessment. This essay aims to undertake it through the case study of Il Claustro di S. Michele in Bosco, the last art-historical work by Malvasia. A section of this booklet is dedicated to the chiaroscuro"Termini" flanking the episodes of the life of St. Benedict painted by Ludovico Carracci and his pupils in the cloister of the Bolognese Olivetan monastery. Giacomo Giovannini, the engraver to whom Malvasia commissioned the illustrations included in the volume, also reproduced these painted sculptures in four etchings. By referring to a central couplet from the famous sonnet by Agostino Carracci "in lode di Nicolò Bolognese", he characterized Ludovico's (and Reni's) telamons as Michelangiolesque in their contour and Tizianesque in their naturalezza, as opposed to Annibale's terms frescoed in the Farnese Gallery, whose style Malvasia considered too harsh and dry ("statuino"). In this essay, Malvasia's notes on the cloister's telamons will be compared to his previous critical works and will be contextualized within the seventeenth-century Literature of Art and the coeval reproductive printmaking. As I will demonstrate, Malvasia aimed to restore the central role played by Agostino and Ludovico in the renovation of this decorative style, a role that was obscured by Annibale's growing fame in this genre of painting, particularly driven by the prints after his frescoes in the Farnese Palace published in the second half of the seventeenth century. On cover: ANNIBALE CARRACCI (BOLOGNA 1560 - ROME 1609), An Allegory of Truth and Time c. 1584-1585. Oil on canvas 130,0 x 169,6 cm. (support, canvas/panel/str external) RCIN 404770 Royal Collection Trust / © Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II 2021. PubDate: 2021-09-13 DOI: 10.5617/acta.9018 Issue No: Vol. 32, No. 18 N.S. (2021)
- Truth and the Transunto: a copy of the Holy Shroud in Sixteenth-Century
Bologna Authors: Samantha L. Smith Pages: 59 - 80 Abstract: 'Truth and the transunto' investigates the use of a hand-painted copy of the Holy Shroud which found its way to Bologna in the late sixteenth century. Used by the archbishop of Bologna, Alfonso Paleotti (1531-1610), this copy was the source of observations of the body of Christ, in the manner of an autopsy and is presented in Paleotti's book Esplicatione del Lenzuolo [...]. Early modern copies of the Holy Shroud are not however accurate copies, but present seemingly simplified replicas of the original. This article explores how such information, and indeed, level of trust, can come from these copies, which, to the modern eye, seem fallible. Previous studies have excused the strange appearance of these Shroud copies by considering them solely devotional instruments yet as the article shows, Paleotti's use of such an object shows that the copies might be better understood in the context of early modern natural historical studies and illustrations. The article draws on scholarship which discusses the emerging interest for visual evidence in early scientific practice and shows how certain types of images and image-making practices were able to evoke the idea of presence and clarify the indecipherable. Demonstrating that Paleotti's copy of the Holy Shroud was not just a religious tool, but also an epistemic image, this article shows how Paleotti's use of the term 'transunto' could be used as a valuable tool in gaining a more nuanced understanding of the concept 'copy' in Early Modern Europe. On cover: ANNIBALE CARRACCI (BOLOGNA 1560 - ROME 1609), An Allegory of Truth and Time c. 1584-1585. Oil on canvas 130,0 x 169,6 cm. (support, canvas/panel/str external) RCIN 404770 Royal Collection Trust / © Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II 2021. PubDate: 2021-09-13 DOI: 10.5617/acta.9019 Issue No: Vol. 32, No. 18 N.S. (2021)
- Aldrovandi, truthfully drawing naturalia, and local context
Authors: Florike Egmond Pages: 81 - 96 Abstract: This essay focuses on the 16th -century Bolognese naturalist and collector Ulisse Aldrovandi (1522-1605) and his enormous image collection of naturalia. Do these images present a specifically Bolognese form of visual natural science, and was his visual format of truthfulness new at the time' Did Local visual culture leave clear marks on Aldrovandi's image collection' On cover: ANNIBALE CARRACCI (BOLOGNA 1560 - ROME 1609), An Allegory of Truth and Time c. 1584-1585. Oil on canvas 130,0 x 169,6 cm. (support, canvas/panel/str external) RCIN 404770 Royal Collection Trust / © Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II 2021. PubDate: 2021-09-13 DOI: 10.5617/acta.9020 Issue No: Vol. 32, No. 18 N.S. (2021)
- Ludovico Carracci a Roma
Authors: Giovanna Perini Folesani Pages: 97 - 116 Abstract: This essay focuses on Ludovico Carracci (1555-1619) and this reputation in Rome in his lifetime and afterwards. Well-known, but often overlooked literary and visual evidence on Ludovico's appreciation in Rome is brought to bear, in order to reassess his contemporary fame, superior to his cousins', as is suggested by works attributed to him in the main seventeenth-century Roman collections. His present-day partial disgrace is the result of a number of changes soon brought about by several factors, including the probability of untold doubts on his religious orthodoxy raising in the early seventeenth-century. His use of German prints especially in his late religious paintings may have a lot to do with this. On cover: ANNIBALE CARRACCI (BOLOGNA 1560 - ROME 1609), An Allegory of Truth and Time c. 1584-1585. Oil on canvas 130,0 x 169,6 cm. (support, canvas/panel/str external) RCIN 404770 Royal Collection Trust / © Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II 2021. PubDate: 2021-09-13 DOI: 10.5617/acta.9021 Issue No: Vol. 32, No. 18 N.S. (2021)
- Narratives of the provenance of art and antiquities on the market and the
reality of origins at the source Authors: Samuel Andrew Hardy Pages: 117 - 124 Abstract: This essay presents the findings of the International Conference on Handling of Cultural Goods and Financing of Political Violence and introduces provenance research that examines the market in Europe for antiquities from Asia and the market in North America for antiquities from Europe. It summarises findings, such as the involvement of violent political organisations, transnational organised criminals and politically-exposed persons (PEPs) in illicit trafficking of cultural objects. It also highlights some foundations for progress, such as enhanced traceability and due diligence in the art market, plus action and cooperation to respond to illicit flows as regional problems. On cover: ANNIBALE CARRACCI (BOLOGNA 1560 - ROME 1609), An Allegory of Truth and Time c. 1584-1585. Oil on canvas 130,0 x 169,6 cm. (support, canvas/panel/str external) RCIN 404770 Royal Collection Trust / © Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II 2021. PubDate: 2021-09-13 DOI: 10.5617/acta.9022 Issue No: Vol. 32, No. 18 N.S. (2021)
- Tales of saviours and iconoclasts. On the provenance of "the Dead Sea
Scrolls of Buddhism" Authors: Josephine Munch Rasmussen, Årstein Justnes Pages: 125 - 146 Abstract: Academic research on newly discovered ancient Buddhist manuscripts is largely based on objects that come from the antiquities market and to a much lesser degree on objects coming from documented and controlled archaeological excavations. Despite their being unprovenanced, collectors and scholars often present such objects with narratives mimicking provenance. The use of the label "Dead Sea Scrolls" attached to archaeological material without connections to Judaism or early Christianity is a prevalent example of this scholarly praxis. In this article, we deconstruct provenance narratives associated with the undocumented Buddhist manuscripts in the Schøyen Collection and discuss their implications for research on these manuscripts and beyond. On cover: ANNIBALE CARRACCI (BOLOGNA 1560 - ROME 1609), An Allegory of Truth and Time c. 1584-1585. Oil on canvas 130,0 x 169,6 cm. (support, canvas/panel/str external) RCIN 404770 Royal Collection Trust / © Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II 2021. PubDate: 2021-09-13 DOI: 10.5617/acta.9023 Issue No: Vol. 32, No. 18 N.S. (2021)
- The antiquities market we deserve: 'Royal-Athena Galleries'
(1942-2020) Authors: Christos Tsirogiannis Pages: 147 - 175 Abstract: On September 13, 2020 a quarter of a century had elapsed since the Swiss and Italian authorities raid in the Free Port of Geneva, on the warehouses of Giacomo Medici, later convicted of involvement in cases of trafficked antiquities. Since then, many other raids followed on properties of other notorious antiquities traffickers, thousands of antiquities were confiscated from them and their invaluable archives were discovered and seized. The research on these archives resulted in hundreds of notable repatriations so far, but mainly in the enrichment of our knowledge about the criminal way in which the so-called ‘reputable’ members of the international antiquities market have been acting since the 1970 UNESCO Convention, which they completely ignored in practice. Despite the numerous occasions on which these ‘reputable’ members were identified as involved, even today they continue to act in the same way, some without any (or known) legal sanctions. This chapter reviews the illicit associations of one of these ‘prominent’ members of the international antiquities market, the ‘Royal-Athena Galleries’ in New York, a gallery run by the antiquities dealer Jerome Eisenberg, who has repeatedly been found selling looted, smuggled and stolen antiquities. I then present seven antiquities, most of them identified in October 2019, one in March 2020, soon before the retirement of Jerome Eisenberg and the closure of ‘Royal-Athena Galleries’ on October 31, 2020. This piece lays out all the relevant evidence from the confiscated archives and combines everyone involved to illustrate the network that ‘circulated’ these seven objects. This case study also highlights all the problems that are ongoing in this research field, proving that essentially nothing has changed since 1995, or even 1970, and we indeed deserve the (illicit) antiquities market we still have. On cover: ANNIBALE CARRACCI (BOLOGNA 1560 - ROME 1609), An Allegory of Truth and Time c. 1584-1585. Oil on canvas 130,0 x 169,6 cm. (support, canvas/panel/str external) RCIN 404770 Royal Collection Trust / © Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II 2021. PubDate: 2021-09-13 DOI: 10.5617/acta.9024 Issue No: Vol. 32, No. 18 N.S. (2021)
|