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AAnz (AA)

Archäologischer Anzeiger.

The Archaeological Gazette is one of the most important German-language journals in the field of archaeology.

The Archaeological Gazette was first published in 1889 as a supplement to the yearbook of the German Archaeological Institute (JdI). It has been published as an independent journal since 1976, initially with four sub-issues by Verlag Walter de Gruyter in Berlin until 2001, since then in two bound half-volumes per year (2001 to 2007 by Verlag Philipp von Zabern, since 2008 by Hirmer Verlag). Since 2008, a supplement with the annual report of the German Archaeological Institute (DAI) has been published in addition to the first half-volume of the year. Since then, the archaeological indicator has also appeared in color. It is published as one of three periodicals by the Berlin headquarters of the German Archaeological Institute. The editorial office is located in the Berlin headquarters of the DAI. The editors are the President of the DAI, Friederike Fless, and the Secretary General of the organization, Philipp von Rummel. Co-editors are the respective directors of the departments and commissions of the DAI. The journal's advisory board includes Norbert Benecke, Orhan Bingöl, Serra Durugönül, Jörg W. Klinger, Sabine Ladstätter, Franziska Lang, Massimo Osanna, Corinna Rohn, Brian Rose and Alan Shapiro.

Articles, reports and smaller communications are published in the journal. The articles usually deal with reports on excavations or excavation projects of the DAI. In addition, research essays or excavation reports from excavations that were not carried out by the DAI are also included. Primarily, but not exclusively, the journal deals with the cultures of the Mediterranean region and the Near East from prehistory to late antiquity. In recent years in particular, the profile has shifted more and more towards global archaeology. In addition, annual reports of the DAI and the Archaeological Society of Berlin as well as a list of completed doctorates are published once a year and scholarships from the DAI are advertised.

The second half volume in 2004 was a special edition for the 175th anniversary of the DAI. Among other things, reports on the legal status of the German Archaeological Institute including legal opinions, the rules of procedure of the DAI and a report on the celebrations for the anniversary were published.


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