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期刊名称:JOURNAL OF THE BRITISH ARCHAEOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION

ISSN:0068-1288
出版频率:Annual
出版社:ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD, 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON, ENGLAND, OXON, OX14 4RN
  出版社网址:http://chinesesites.library.ingentaconnect.com
期刊网址:http://chinesesites.library.ingentaconnect.com/content/maney/jba
主题范畴:ARCHAEOLOGY;    MEDIEVAL & RENAISSANCE STUDIES

期刊简介(About the journal)    投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)    编辑部信息(Editorial Board)   



About the journal

Abstracting and Indexing Services

Abstracting and indexing services that cite Journal of the British Archaeological Association include:
Art and Archaeology Technical Abstracts
Arts and Humanities Citation Index
Avery Index to Architectural Periodicals
British Humanities Index
British and Irish Archaeological Abstracts
Getty Conservation Institute Project Bibliographies
International Bibliography of Periodicals Literature (IBZ)
International Bibliography of the Social Sciences
MLA
New Testament Abstracts
Periodicals Index Online

 


Instructions to Authors

 Instructions for authors

 

Preparation of Material for the Journal and the Transactions.

Authors must observe the following guidelines and house rules when preparing their articles. Articles that do not conform to these guidelines may be sent back to authors for amendment. Particular attention should be given to the form of references, and for general conventions authors should consult a recent copy of the Journal or Transactions. All authors are encouraged to obtain a copy of The Oxford Dictionary for Writers and Editors published by Oxford University Press.

SUBMISSION


Articles and books for review for the Journal should be sent to the Honorary Editor: 

Dr Julian Luxford
School of Art History
University of St Andrews
9 The Scores
St Andrews
Fife
Scotland KY16 9AR
Tel. +44 (0)1334 462394
Email:
jml5@st-andrews.ac.uk

Contributors are asked to be concise and to limit the size and number of illustrations. Authors of articles longer than 10,000 words should discuss the length of their work with the editor before submission, by phone or email.

Copy should be fully checked before submission, as the Association will not cover the cost of author corrections at proof stage. The cost of any alterations other than the correction of printer's errors may be invoiced to the author.

For the purposes of refereeing, contributors should mail their articles to the editor(s) with printed copies (photocopies will usually do) of any illustrations. When submitting a revised article for publication, contributors should supply an electronic copy (by email, on CD or data stick, but not on floppy disk) along with the originals of any illustrations. Articles should preferably be supplied in MS Word, as this is the program in which the publisher and editors commonly work.

COPYRIGHT
Contributing authors must transfer copyright in the work to the British Archaeological Association, in all forms and languages, and for the full period of copyright, so that all published articles carry the standard copyright line © The British Archaeological Association (with the year of publication). 

Authors who wish to reproduce material from previously published sources or where the copyright is owned by a third party, such as sections of text, tables or images, must obtain written permission from the copyright holder (usually the publisher) and the author(s)/artists of the original material. A line giving the full source of the material should be included in the manuscript. If material from the author's own published work is to be used, permission must still be obtained from that publisher. Copyright is required for use in all formats (including digital) and in perpetuity. Any costs relating to this must be borne by contributors. For more information, please see the copyright advice for authors section of the Maney website.


ABSTRACT
Papers should be preceded by a short abstract, in italics, of no more than 200 words and a list of seven key words.

HEADINGS
The title should appear in Roman type, using upper and lower case, ranged left. Ordinals should be spelled out.
The author's name should appear after the title, in Roman capitals, ranged left.
If you need to use subheadings, please apply the following conventions. Level 1: small capitals, ranged left; level 2, upper and lower case, italics, ranged left; level 3, upper and lower case, roman, ranged left; level 4, upper and lower case, bold, ranged left and followed by a 2-em space, with the text running on the same line.

Please note: the first word after the abstract or after any subheading should be given in capitals.

EDITORIAL CONVENTIONS

Quotations  Use single quotation marks, and double quotation marks for quotations within quotations. Use the smart (' ' “ ”) quotation marks available on your computer (see Formatting below).

Dates  In giving approximate dates, please use circa, abbreviated as c., followed by a single space, for example 'c.1490'.

Italics  Note that certain Latin words and abbreviations in current usage are no longer italicized, for example, cf., e.g., et al., etc., ibid., i.e., passim.

Abbreviations  Where the abbreviation ends in the same letter as the complete word, a full stop is not necessary: Mr, St, Dr, fols, nos, pls, figs, pt and pts (for example) appear without stops, whereas Pl., Fig., fol. and illus. (for example) need stops. An exception to this rule is made for some indicators of measurements.

Measurements  An exception to the abbreviations rule is made for: ft, m, and mm. None of these needs a full stop or plural s. Note however that the abbreviation of inch is 'in.', to avoid ambiguity, e.g., 'a timber, 7 in. in width'. Please also note that cm is not a standard measurement - use m or mm. In all cases insert a space between the digit and the abbreviation.

Dates  Except for titles, ordinals defining centuries are written in numbers, e.g., 11th century. Specific dates should be cited, for example, as 16 May 1538. For decades, use the form 'the 1340s', not 'the 1340's'. Terminal dates should be given after a dash (en-rule), e.g., '1234-38'. Regnal dates should be give (for example) as 'Bishop Longchamp (1189-97)', not 'bishop from 1189 to 1197'. Dates BC should be given as '27 bc', and dates AD as 'ad 320', that is without full points and in small capitals. Papers dealing entirely with dates AD need not specify.

Numbers  Numbers up to one hundred should be written out in full except where the result would be inelegant, or when the context is statistical, or when figures are being used for dates and units of measurement. Please note that in expressing inclusive numbers falling within the same hundred, only the last two figures should be given, e.g., 13-15, 44-47, 104-08, 1933-39. This also applies to page numbers in references, e.g., 201-04. Full page spans must be given: citations of the form '202 et seq.' or '202 sqq.' are not permissible.

Titles  Titles affixed to personal names should have initial capitals: 'King Richard', 'Bishop Roger'. Note however 'Roger, bishop of Salisbury', 'William, duke of Normandy', etc.

Personal Names  Spellings of major persons should be as cited in E. B. Fryde, D. E. Greenway, S. Porter and I. Roy ed., Handbook of British Chronology, 3rd edn, Royal Historical Society, Guides and Handbooks, 2 (Cambridge 1996). Ecclesiastics should be cited in the forms used in the modern editions of Le Neve's Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae.

Place-names  For running text and citations of place of publication, current English forms for foreign or other non-English place-names should be used, e.g., Cologne not Köln, Rhine not Rhein. In the case of Lyons, Marseilles, Rheims, the English forms rather than the French forms (Lyon, Marseille, Reims) should be used. For other French place-names follow current usage, and note that place-names taken from saints' names should be hyphenated, with Saint and Sainte spelled out in full, e.g., 'Saint-Paul'.

Counties  Counties, départements, Länder, regioni, etc. should be added after a place-name to avoid any confusion, e.g., Notre-Dame-de-Gravenchon (Seine-Maritime), Moulins-sur-Cephons (Indre).

Architectural Terms  To avoid inconsistencies, reference should be made to J. Lever and J. Harries, Illustrated Dictionary of Architecture 800-1914 (London 1993). See further the section on hyphens below.

Figure References  Both the Journal and Transactions have black and white illustrations integrated in the text, and all such illustrations are referred to as figures (not plates). For references in the text either spell out the words in the text, e.g., 'as shown in Figure 1', or use parentheses: '(Fig.1)' or '(Figs 4 and 5)'. Please note the capitalization. If the author wishes an illustration to appear in colour, this needs to be agreed with the editor(s). Illustrations in colour are referred to as plates and are bound as a section in the volume. Each page of colour illustrations is denoted with a Roman numeral in capitals, and further reference made by adding a letter, e.g., 'Pl. II', 'Pls I-II', 'Pl. IIIb', etc.

Hyphens  When a two-word phrase consisting of an adjective and a noun or of two nouns is used descriptively before another noun, the two words are hyphenated, e.g., 'dark-green attire', 'ground-floor room', etc. The same applies to two-word phrases consisting of an adverb that does not end in -ly and a participle, e.g., 'now-lost charter', 'hard-won battle', 'well-known figure' but 'swiftly resolved situation'. Note further the hyphenation in 'early-11th-century', 'mid-12th-century', 'late-12th-century', etc., and in the terms given below:

angle-buttress
ball-flower
barrel-vaulting
bay-window
bench-end
chantry-chapel
chapter-house
coat of arms
collar-beam
corbel-table
deer-park
desk-end
dog-tooth
ground floor
hammer-beam
hood-mould
keystone
manor-house
market-place
market town
nail-head
poppy-head
quatrefoil
rood-loft
rood-screen
roof-boss
string-course
tie-beam
tomb-chest
wall-painting

FORMATTING
Do not insert page breaks. Hard returns should be used only at the ends of paragraphs, after headings, or in lists and verse where definite line breaks are required. Do not use 'hard' hyphens or 'discretionary' hyphens to improve word splits at line endings.

Start new paragraphs consistently. Paragraphs should be left-justified. Do not put an extra line-space between paragraphs. Start new paragraphs with a single tab, not multiple spaces, or format them with indented first lines.

If your article contains unusual characters or accents, please indicate this in a covering note to the editor(s).

Some BAA conventions require the use of small capitals. In Word, these can be formatted by highlighting the relevant text, and selecting Format > Font from the menu bar, and then ticking the 'small caps' box. Note that for a letter to appear as a small cap, it must be typed in lower case before formatting.

Always type a space after initials in names, and do not put double spaces at the end of sentences.

Do not attempt to improve the presentation of your article by the use of multiple typefaces and type sizes. Use one size of one simple typeface (such as Times or Courier), and avoid centred and justified type.

Use the standard quotation mark key on the keyboard as appropriate, with the 'smart quotes' function switched on. (In Word this can be found by selecting Format > AutoFormat > Options, and then clicking on the 'AutoFormat' tab.)

If you are confident that you know which is appropriate, use the em or en dash available on your PC. An em dash can be represented by two hyphens. En dashes should be used instead of hyphens in number spans (page spans, date spans, etc.)

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Acknowledgements should be placed in a separate headed paragraph at the end. The heading should be centred and in capitals. Note that some grant-aid bodies stipulate acknowledgement at the head of the article (e.g., Marc Fitch).

REFERENCES
References may be formatted using the automatic footnote/endnote facility of a word-processing programme. Please format your references as endnotes.

Endnotes should be kept to a scholarly minimum. They are meant to provide references to the text and should not be used either to expand discussions or to give extensive descriptions or arguments that are not entirely relevant to the article. Authors should be aware that editors often have a lot of trouble with references, and every care should be taken to follow the conventions given below. If references constitute more than 25% of an article's word-length, the article may be returned to the author for revision.

Please note that all references to books and articles after the first reference should use the author's surname, followed by an intelligible shortened (preferably single-word) form of the title, followed by a reference in brackets to where the full citation occurs (e.g. 'as in n. 3'). Examples are given below. Any form of the Harvard system using author and a date is not acceptable, and the References section should not be prefaced with a list of abbreviated titles.

Note that the phrases 'loc. cit.' and 'op. cit.' are not used in the Journal or the Transactions. 'Ibid.' may be used only for a repeat citation in the same note, or in the following note where no other citations intervene. If possible, a reference should not begin with an abbreviation that is normally printed in lower-case characters (for example, 'e.g.', 'i.e.', 'ibid.'). If this cannot be avoided, the initial letter should be in upper case, e.g., 21. Ibid.

Citation of Published Works and Theses: please read carefully

Please also note the following.

Authors and editors should be given with initial(s) only.

The title of a book should appear in italics. The title of an article in a journal, a chapter in a multi-author/multi-editor publication, or of an unpublished thesis should appear in Roman, within single inverted commas.

It is important that titles of books, articles, theses and series be given with the capitalization with which they appear in print.

Where the citation of a title page as printed is likely to be unclear, a colon should be inserted, e.g., T. Cocke and P. Kidson, Salisbury Cathedral: Perspectives on the Architectural History, RCHME (London 1993)

The place and date of publication should be given in round brackets (parentheses), at the end of the reference, but before the citation of any specific volume or page number/span. The place and date of publication should not be separated by a comma.

Where there is more than one place of publication, all places should be given.

The edition number (abbreviation 'edn') should be given, where appropriate, before the place and date of publication.

The number of volumes (abbreviation 'vols') should be given, where appropriate, before the place and date of publication, and after any edition number.

Where a particular volume of a work is being cited, the volume number should appear in capital roman numerals: I, II, III, etc.

Issue numbers of journals should be given in Arabic numerals

Part numbers of individual volumes should be given in lower-case Roman numerals: i, ii, iii, etc.

It is only necessary to give the part number of an issue (or the month or season of publication) if the part numbers (or months or seasons of publication) are individually paginated. If this happens, the part number should be given in the form in which it occurs in the publication.

Where a work is one in a series, the name of the series should be given in Roman after the title of the work, with the volume number in that series given in the form in which it appears in the work as published. Exceptions: for Rolls Series and BAA Transactions, the series volume numbers should be given in Roman numerals, in small capitals. Note also the abbreviated forms of some series titles given in the Abbreviations list below (e.g., BAA Trans., B/E).

Sample Citations with Possible Short Titles

1. A book by a single author.
F. Haverfield, The Romanization of Roman Britain, 4th edn (Oxford 1923), 48-56.
Possible short title: Haverfield, Romanization
Form for subsequent citation (where 'ibid.' is inapplicable): Haverfield, Romanization (as in n. 4), 51.

2. A book by multiple authors.
D. Knopp and G. P. Jones, The Mediaeval Mason (Manchester 1933).
Possible short title: Knoop and Jones, Mediaeval Mason.
Form for subsequent citation (where 'ibid.' is inapplicable): Knoop and Jones, Medieval Mason (as in n. 10), 67.

3. An edited book.
D. Knowles, C. N. L. Brooke and V. London ed., The Heads of Religious Houses in England and Wales, 940-1216 (London 1972).
Possible short title: Heads of Religious Houses. (Note editors' names not included.)
Form for subsequent citation (where 'ibid.' is inapplicable): Heads of Religious Houses (as in n. 14), 371.

4. A book that is one of a series.
R. Favreau, Épigraphie médiévale, L'atelier du médiéviste, 5 (Turnhout 1997)
Possible short title: Favreau, Épigraphie
Form for subsequent citation (where 'ibid.' is inapplicable): Favreau, Épigraphie (as in n. 1), 27.

5. An edition.
Benedict of Peterborough, Gesta Regis Henrici Secundi, ed. W. Stubbs (Rolls Series, XLIX, 1867), 231-32. Please note that all references to the Rolls Series volumes must be in this form.
Possible short title: Gesta Regis.
Form for subsequent citation (where 'ibid.' is inapplicable): Gesta Regis (as in n. 12), 193.

6. A translation.
P. Breuval, The Cathedral Buildings of the Gothic Period, trans. R. Baldry, rev. 2nd edn, 2 vols (London 1956-59).
Possible short title: Breuval, Cathedral Buildings.
Form for subsequent citation (where 'ibid.' is inapplicable): Breuval, Cathedral Buildings (as in n. 4), 91.

7. A chapter in a multi-author/multi-editor volume.
C. Norton, 'Early Cistercian tile pavements', in Cistercian Art and Architecture in the British Isles, ed. C. Norton and D. Park (Cambridge 1986), 228-55.
Possible short title: Norton, 'Tile pavements'.
Form for subsequent citation (where 'ibid.' is inapplicable): Norton, 'Tile Pavements' (as in n. 16), 253.

8. An article in a journal with continuously paginated annual volumes.
A. Arshavir, 'False Fronts in Minor Domestic Architecture', Transactions of the Ancient Monuments Society, ns, 4 (1956), 110-22, fig. 22 and pl. 14.
Possible short title: Arshavir, 'False Fronts'.
Form for subsequent citation (where 'ibid.' is inapplicable): Arshavir, 'False Fronts' (as in n. 21), 112.

9. An article in a publication that does not have through-paginated volumes.
R. Haslam, 'Uppark, West Sussex', Country Life, 189/xxi (25 May 1995), 68-73.
Possible short title: Haslam, 'Uppark'.
Form for subsequent citation (where 'ibid.' is inapplicable): Haslam, 'Uppark' (as in n. 3), 69.

10. An unpublished thesis.
R. K. Morris, 'Decorated architecture in Herefordshire' (unpublished Ph.D. thesis, University of London, 1972)
Possible short title: Morris, 'Decorated architecture'.
Form for subsequent citation (where 'ibid.' is inapplicable): Morris, 'Decorated architecture' (as in n. 12), 253.


Citation of Works in Manuscript
The first reference to a manuscript should include the city where the library it located, the name of library, the class of manuscript (where this is not indicated as part of the manuscript designation), the manuscript designation, and the folio number. These items should be separated by commas. Subsequent references to the same manuscript should consist of a shortened form of the library's name, the manuscript number, and a folio reference. Recto and verso should be specified in all instances, and the following abbreviations used: MS, MSS, fol., fols.

First reference: London, British Library, MS Cotton, Caligula D III, fol. 15r
Later references: BL, Caligula D III, fol. 15r

First reference: London, British Library, MS Add. 13457, fol. 4v
Later references: BL, MS Add. 13457, fol. 4v

First reference: Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS Rawl. B 323, fol. 3r
Later references: Bodl., MS Rawl. B 323, fol. 3r

STANDARD ABBREVIATIONS
Certain abbreviations are standard to the Journal and the Transactions.

Antiq. J.

 

Antiquaries Journal

Archaeol. J.

 

Archaeological Journal

BAA Trans.

 

British Archaeological Association Conference Transactions

B/E

 

N. Pevsner et al., The Buildings of England (Harmondsworth various dates)

B/Ir

 

The Buildings of Ireland (Harmondsworth various dates)

B/S

 

The Buildings of Scotland (Harmondsworth various dates)

B/W

 

The Buildings of Wales (Harmondsworth various dates)

Bull. mon.

 

Bulletin monumental

CA

 

Congrès Archéologique

EH

 

English Heritage

HBMC

 

Historic Buildings and Monuments Commission

JBAA

 

Journal of the British Archaeological Association

JRIBA

 

Journal of the Royal Institute of British Architects

Med. Archaeol.

 

Medieval Archaeology

NMR

 

National Monuments Record

PRO

 

Public Record Office

RCHME

 

Royal Commission on the Historical Monuments of England

VCH

 

Victoria History of the Counties of England

 

 

 

 


CAPTIONS and ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
A list of captions to illustrations must be supplied together with the text. The abbreviation for Figure should be as follows: Fig. (i.e., a full capital F, and small capital I and G).

Where the illustration is not that of the author, permission to reproduce must be obtained by the author, and the caption should include any relevant copyright or photographic acknowledgement. If acknowledgement other than that in the caption is required, this must be specified to the editor(s). In submitting illustrations for publication and an associated list of captions, the author indemnifies the publisher, the BAA and the editors of the volume against any action taken as a result of infringement of copyright.

ILLUSTRATIONS
Most illustrations will be reproduced in black and white in the printed journal (see below for colour illustration in the online journal, which is available free of charge for authors). The author may suggest images for reproduction in colour, but inclusion is at the discretion of the editor(s). Authors wishing to have more than two illustrations per 1000 words or a fold-out illustration should consult the editor(s), as the cost implications need to be considered.

Authors should submit illustrative material for their articles together with their texts. This will greatly ease the editing process, particularly where texts include detailed architectural descriptions. If images for reproduction are not ready when the text is submitted, then authors should send a photocopy or rough scan for guidance.

Authors should also indicate a desired approximate size for each illustration. This should be a quarter page or third page for most illustrations, a half page for important illustrations, and very occasionally a full page for very important and detailed illustrations. Authors may also indicate a desired layout, though final decisions will rest with the editor(s) and the publisher.

Where possible, illustrations should be supplied in digital format, as tiff, eps or jpeg files. Black and white illustrations need to be saved at a minimum input scanning resolution of 300dpi for halftones, 800dpi for simple line, 1200 dpi for fine line; colour illustrations should be supplied in CMYK, not RGB, at a resolution of at least 300dpi. The file should be named with the author's name and the figure number, e.g., 'SmithFig7'. (To check the dpi of any digital image, right-click on the icon of the file, select 'Properties', and the click on the 'Summary' tab.)

Black and white and colour illustrations can also be supplied as glossy prints or transparencies. These should be marked on the back with the author's name and figure number.

For illustrations supplied in electronic form or as prints, a rough print-out or photocopy must also be supplied, with the author's name and figure number clearly marked. Any cropping should be marked on this print-out/photocopy, or (in the case of transparencies) detailed separately.

Any illustrations not supplied in suitable format will be returned to the author. All illustrations must be clearly identified with the lead author's name and a correct figure or table number, e.g. Mynamefig1.tif. Hardcopy artwork will be returned only on request. In the event of queries, authors are encouraged to contact the Editor for help prior to submission

The author will be required to provide written evidence of permission to reproduce images (in both printed and online formats) from the copyright owner for the use of any illustrative matter in the journal and will be liable for any fee charged by the owner of the image. The caption should include relevant credit of the permission of the copyright holder to reproduce the image and all captions should be listed separately at the end of the main text.

Online Colour
It is now possible for colour illustrations to be published in the online version of Journal of the BAA free of charge. Images submitted in colour will be published in black and white in the printed journal (unless otherwise agreed with the journal editor) but will be posted online in colour. Authors have the opportunity to enhance the appearance of their article, improve its clarity, and heighten its impact by using colour for diagrams, graphs and illustrations. Authors should be aware of this development when obtaining permission to use material from third parties. Authors should also bear this in mind when preparing the format of images for submission; advice is listed in the Illustration section of these Notes (above).

PROOFS
Authors will be sent one set of proofs. These are to check that the text and illustrations have been properly set and are not for rewriting.

Wherever possible, authors will be emailed proofs in fixed pdf format to save time. These files can be printed out and then worked on as normal hard-copy proofs.

Proofs must be returned within the timeframe specified by the editor. The editor(s) will amalgamate any corrections with necessary corrections from the editor(s) and send a single proof to the publisher. If the author does not return the proofs in the allotted time, the editors' proofs will be used as the basis for the final version.

 


Editorial Board

Editor:

Dr Julian Luxford (University of St Andrews, Fife, Scotland)

Reviews Editor:

Mellie Naydenova-Slade (Courtauld Institute of Art, London, UK)

 




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