Borja Díaz Ariño
Borja Díaz became Ramón y Cajal Fellow in 2013. Previously he has been Juan de la Cierva Research Fellow at the University of the Vasque Country (2010-12) and post-doc fellow at the University of Rome – La Sapienza (2007-09). He also has been visiting scholar at the Department of Classics of the University of Cincinnati, thanks to a Tytus Fellowship (2013), at the Center for Epigraphical and Palaeographical Studies (Ohio State University), thanks to an Arthur and Joyce Gordon Fellowship (2014), and at the Institute of Archaeology (University of Oxford), thanks to a José Castillejo Fellowship (2015).
His research interests have been focused into the social, political and economic reality of Spain during the Roman Republic, especially from the perspective of cultural transformations witnessed by epigraphic texts.
He is member of the editorial board of Palaeohispanica that has become one of the main journals on pre-Roman Spain, and also participates in the research group that is involved in the development of the Hesperia online databank, dedicated to the cataloging of the all the documents related with the pre-roman languages of ancient Iberia.
His research interests have been focused into the social, political and economic reality of Spain during the Roman Republic, especially from the perspective of cultural transformations witnessed by epigraphic texts.
He is member of the editorial board of Palaeohispanica that has become one of the main journals on pre-Roman Spain, and also participates in the research group that is involved in the development of the Hesperia online databank, dedicated to the cataloging of the all the documents related with the pre-roman languages of ancient Iberia.
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Papers by Borja Díaz Ariño
Otro aspecto a destacar ha sido la contextualización de los documentos, tanto en su contexto histórico-cultural inmediato, como dentro del panorama epigráfico peninsular, que es el objetivo de los comentarios que acompañan a cada una de la piezas.
Esta obra es particularmente valiosa por las precisiones tipológicas que preceden al catálogo. Las primeras contextualizan el corpus y recogen notables conclusiones sobre el proceso de romanización peninsular.
The Novallas Bronze may be considered one of the most important epigraphic finds in recent years in Spain. It is a fragment of a public document datable to the last decades of the first century BCE. It is composed in Celtiberian language, but was written in Latin alphabet. The Novallas Bronze is not only one of the latest inscriptions composed in this language, over half a century later than the famous bronzes from Contrebia Belaisca, it is also the longest Celtiberian document written in Latin of all those known thus far.