Current Issue

Issue: 3, 12/29/23

Year: 2023

Research Articles

Book Reviews

The Journal of the Turkish Institute of Archaeology and Cultural Heritage is an international and peer-reviewed scholarly journal published annually in English and Turkish. The journal’s purpose is to produce scholarship and to promote scholarly discussions that document, preserve, discuss, study, and advance the understanding of the cultures of Anatolia and its environs, as well as the intercultural relations in the region.

The Journal of the Turkish Institute of Archaeology and Cultural Heritage welcomes submissions related to Anatolia and its neighboring regions, including the Mediterranean, Aegean, Black Sea, and Balkans, as well as Southwest and Central Asia, from prehistory to the present day, including (but not limited to) the Bronze Age, the Iron Age, the Archaic, Classical, Hellenistic, and Roman periods, Late Antiquity, and the Byzantine, Seljuk, Beylik, and Ottoman periods.

It publishes original scholarly research articles and book reviews from the disciplines of history, archaeology, history of art, anthropology, epigraphy, history of architecture, archaeometry, geographical information systems (GIS), numismatics, maritime archaeology, landscape archaeology, theoretical archaeology, cultural heritage management, digital heritage management and museum studies.

Exclusive of exceptional cases, catalogues and excavation reports that have not been extensively discussed nor set in a general framework will not be accepted. Papers on a defined theme and/or related to symposium proceedings will be considered for publication.

TARE Submission and Style Guide

Articles must be submitted in English or Turkish.

Complete articles (text, tables, figures, and bibliography) should be submitted electronically as email attachments or, in the case of large files, a WeTransfer download. Please send the text as a Microsoft Word document.

On receipt of submissions, authors will receive an email acknowledging receipt and outlining the review process. All submissions will undergo a blind review process.

Articles should be a maximum 5,000 words (not including the bibliography). Articles should include the following:

    • Title of article

    • Name(s) of author(s)

    • ORCID IDs

    • Academic affiliation(s) of author(s)

    • Abstract of 100–200 words

    • 5 Keywords

    • Text•Acknowledgements

    • Appendices

    • Bibliography

    • Figures and captions

    • Tables and captions


Spellings

• English-language articles should follow American English.

• Follow spellings as they appear in Merriam-Webster Dictionary.


Formatting

• Footnote markers are ideally at the end of sentences but may also be after other punctuation within a sentence. Only keep a footnote marker    elsewhere if really necessary.

• Captions are formatted in the following manner (please note the closed sentence inside the parentheses for photo credit):

            o    Fig. 1. Overglaze gilding and cloisonné colored glaze tiles, Green Mosque (Yeşil Camii), 1424–29, Bursa, Turkey. (Photo: Lucile Martinet.)

• The first paragraph of each section is justified on the left, the following paragraphs are indented.

• Use one space at the end of each sentence rather than two.


Transliteration, Proper Nouns, and Italics

• Place names should be given in English: Istanbul rather than İstanbul, Seville rather than Sevilla, Ephesus rather than Ephesos.

• All proper nouns coming from Turkish should keep all accents: Sultan Süleyman, FuatPaşa, Aşıklı Höyük.

• Proper nouns coming from Arabic, Farsi, and Ottoman should not include any diacritics other than markers for aiyn ⟨ʿ⟩in all instances and alef ⟨ʾ⟩when it occurs in the middle of the word (but not the beginning). For more information, see the IJMES transliteration guide.

• Foreign terms that do not appear in standard English dictionaries should be italicized.

• Terms (not proper nouns) coming from Arabic/Farsi/Ottoman should be transliterated with all diacritics. See the IJMES for more information.

• For terms set in italics (such as foreign words) and made plural, the final “s” is not italicized.

• Proper nouns from other languages (including monuments) are generally not italicized.


Hyphenation (for a comprehensive guide, see the Chicago Manual of Style§7.89)

• Compound adjectives are open, unless preceding a noun (“the site is well known”; “a well-known site”).

• Compounds ending with “ly” are left open.

• Compound directions are closed (northwest, southeast, etc.).

• Do not hyphenate words from other languages (the in situ votive deposit).

• Do not hyphenate words that modify colors (light, dark, pale, etc.) unless necessary for clarity
            o    “a pale yellow glaze” but a “pink-to-red colored glaze” and “Chinese blue-and-white ceramics”


Capitalization

• Words denoting political divisions are capitalized when they follow a name or are part of the generally accepted name:

        • the Republic of Turkey

        • Byzantine Empire, Ottoman Empire, the empire, the Empire of Trebizond

• Periods are capitalized as follows:

        • Early, Middle, Late Byzantine period

        • Late Antiquity, Late Antique period

        • Neolithic period, Chalcolithic period

        • Hellenistic period

        • Roman era

        • Bronze Age

        • Archaic period

        • Late Antique period

        • The terms “classical” and “archaic” are capitalized only when used with “period” (e.g., Classical period) or with a specific division of a    cultural period (e.g., Late Classical literature) or when the meaning can be misconstrued:

                o    Late Archaic art

                o    Early Classical polis

                o    classical vase painting

                o    archaic Greek pottery

• Names of mountains, rivers, oceans, islands, and so forth are capitalized. The generic term (mountain etc.) is also capitalized when used as part of the name.

• The names of specific buildings, monuments, parts of sites, and artifact collections/groups are capitalized. The generic form is lowercased.

• The following elements are capitalized in archaeological contexts when referring to a specific feature: walls, tombs, rooms, groups

         o    Wall 4, Tomb C, Room E, Group 7

• General excavation terms are lowercased: stratum 6, level 2, trench X, locus 55

• Capitals are not used for seasons or points of the compass (southern Italy, the south of Gaul) except when they indicate an official name or specific concept:

         o    in spring 349, southwestern Italy, northern France

         o    South America, the West

• Capitals are used for titles when these appear in full or immediately preceding a personal name. Capitals are not used when the title as an appositive:

         o    Sultan Mehmet II; the patriarch Sergios; Darius, emperor of Persia


Dates

• Please use BCE/CE

• For calendar dates, use the format “1 January 173” rather than “January 1, 173”

• Date ranges should always be given in full: e.g., 1500–1544

• Centuries should always be spelled out in full: e.g., in the second century; a seventeenth-century letter; a second-century BCE votive deposit


Measurements

• Abbreviations for distance, volume, etc.: “m” for meter, “cm” for centimeter, “mm” for millimeter, “km” for kilometer, “ha” for hectare, “l” for liter, “lb” for pound

         o    There should be no dot after an abbreviation


Numbers

• Spell out whole numbers from 0 to 10, plus multiples of 100 and 1000 and approximations; always spell out numbers at the start of a sentence.

• In technical and statistical contexts, all numbers should be written with numerals.

• Ordinals are written as normal text: 122nd and 123rd.

• 4-digit numbers (other than years) use a comma: They found 5,426 pieces of ceramics.

• Arabic numbers should be used for chapter numbers, journal numbers, figures, plates etc.: e.g., Chapter 1; Fig. 2.4; Journal of Ancient History 25

• Simple fractions are spelled out and hyphenated:

         o    They excavated three-fourths of the site

• Number ranges are styled as follows:

         o    3–10

         o    71–72

         o    101–8

         o    808–33

         o    1103–4

         o    321–28

         o    498–532

         o    1087–89

• “circa” is abbreviated “ca.”


Abbreviations and Initialisms

• Saint abbreviated “St.” unless part of a proper noun that requires it to be written out (such as the town of Saint-Josse in France).

• Initials of names have a space between: R. Q. Davis.


Punctuation and Other Style Points

• Limit i.e. and e.g. to parentheses and notes; replace item in text with “that is” and “for example,” respectively.

• Use the serial (Oxford) comma for lists: He went to the store, the mall, the cinema, and the park.

• Em dashes (—) should not be surrounded with spaces: “When the drawings were finally ready⁠—nearly three months late⁠—the article text still needed to be edited.”

• An en dash (–) is normally used to be mean “up to” “including” and “through” between numbers; it can also be used to signify “to” between words.

        • The years 1993–2000 were heady ones for the computer literate.

        • For source citations and indexing, see chapters 14–16.

        • The London–Paris train leaves at two o’clock.


Citations and Bibliography: The Chicago Manual of Style

The following is a short guide for formatting footnotes and the bibliography. For sources not covered in the examples below, please follow the guidelines provided in chapter 14 of The Chicago Manual of Style. Each example below gives the format for the first citation in the footnotes, a shortened version for any later occurrences, and the full form for the bibliography.


Book with one author

1. Gülru Necipoğlu, The Age of Sinan: Architectural Culture in the Ottoman Empire (London: Reaktion Books, 2007), 77.

2. Necipoğlu, The Age of Sinan, 45–46.

Necipoğlu, Gülru. The Age of Sinan: Architectural Culture in the Ottoman Empire. London: Reaktion Books, 2007.


Book with editor in place of author

1. Regina Krahl, ed., China without Dragons: Rare Pieces from Oriental Ceramic Society Members (Cambridge, UK: Oriental Ceramic Society, 2018), 168–71.

2. Krahl, China, 134–35.

Krahl, Regina, ed. China without Dragons: Rare Pieces from Oriental Ceramic Society Members. Cambridge, UK: Oriental Ceramic Society, 2018.


Books with two authors

1. Lisa Golombek and Donald Newton Wilber, The Timurid Architecture of Iran and Turan, Princeton Monographs in Art and Archaeology 4 (Princeton: Princeton University Press 1988), 233–52.

2. Golombek and Wilber, Timurid Architecture, 235.

Golombek, Lisa, and Donald Newton Wilber. The Timurid Architecture of Iran and Turan. Princeton Monographs in Art and Archaeology 4. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1988.


Books with three authors

1. Lisa Golombek, Robert B. Mason, and Gauvin A. Bailey, Tamerlane’s Tableware: A New Approach to the Chinoiserie Ceramics of Fifteenth-and Sixteenth-Century Iran (Costa Meza: Mazda Publishers, 1996), 32–36.

2. Golombek, Mason, and Bailey, Tamerlane’s Tableware, 115.

Golombek, Lisa, Robert B. Mason, and Gauvin A. Bailey. Tamerlane’s Tableware: A New Approach to the Chinoiserie Ceramics of Fifteenth-and Sixteenth-Century Iran. Costa Meza: Mazda Publishers, 1996.


For a book with four or more authors, list all the authors in the bibliography but use the first full name and “et al.”


Book with editor or translator

1. Anna Komnena, The Alexiad, trans. E. R. A. Sewter (London: Penguin, 2003), 349.

2. Komnena, Alexiad, 100.

Komnena, Anna. The Alexiad. Translated by E. R. A. Sewter. London: Penguin, 2003.


Chapter in an edited volume

1. Paul Arthur, “Pots and Boundaries on Cultural and Economic Areas between Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages,” in LRCW2: Late Roman Coarse Wares, Cooking Wares and Amphorae in the Mediterranean; Archaeology and Archaeometry, eds. Michel Bonifay and Jean-Christophe Tréglia, Bar International Series 2616 (Oxford: BAR Publishers, 2007), 15–16, fig. 1.

2. Arthur, “Pots,” 15.

Arthur, Paul. “Pots and Boundaries on Cultural and Economic Areas between Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages.” In LRCW2: Late Roman Coarse Wares, Cooking Wares and Amphorae in the Mediterranean; Archaeology and Archaeometry, edited by Michel Bonifay and Jean-Christophe Tréglia, 15–27. Bar International Series 2616. Oxford: BAR Publishers, 2007.


Journal article

1. Semih Gönen et al., “Archaeology and Conservation of the Middle Phrygian Gate Complex at Gordion, Turkey,” Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 379 (May 2018): 55–85, https://doi.org/10.5615/bullamerschoorie.379.0055.

2. Gönen et al., “Archaeology,” 67.

Gönen, Semih, Richard F. Liebhart, Naomi F. Miller, and Elspeth R. M. Dusinberre. “Archaeology and Conservation of the Middle Phrygian Gate Complex at Gordion, Turkey.” Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 379 (May 2018): 55–85. https://doi.org/10.5615/bullamerschoorie.379.0055.


Citing a particular volume

1. Howard G. Crane, “Art and Architecture, 1300–1453,” in The Cambridge History of Turkey: Byzantium to Turkey 1071–1453, ed. Kate Fleet (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009), 1:266–352.

2. Crane, “Art,” 1:288.

Crane, Howard G. “Art and Architecture, 1300–1453.” In The Cambridge History of Turkey: Byzantium to Turkey 1071–1453, vol. 1, edited byKate Fleet, 266–352. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009.


Theses and dissertations

1. İlkay İvgin, “Trakya İlk Tunç Çağı kronolojik sistemlerinin karşılaştırmalı olarak değerlendirilmesi” (master’s thesis, Trakya University, 2010), 75.

2. İvgin, “Trakya,” 110–15.

İvgin, İlkay. “Trakya İlk Tunç Çağı kronolojik sistemlerinin karşılaştırmalı olarak değerlendirilmesi.” Master’s thesis, Trakya University, 2010.


1. Aysel Yıldız, “Vaka-yı Selimiyye or the Selimiyye Incident: A Study of The May 1807 Rebellion,” (PhD diss., Sabancı University, 2008), 119.

2. Yıldız, “Vaka-yı Selimiyye,” 120.

Yıldız, Aysel. “Vaka-yı Selimiyye or the Selimiyye Incident: A Study of The May 1807 Rebellion.” PhD diss., Sabancı University, 2008.


Ancient Sources

These references only need to appear in the notes unless you are citing information provided by the edited/commentator/translator.

1. Herodotus, Histories 2.73.

2. Pliny the Elder, Natural History XXXVI:27.

If you use information provided by the editor or other commentator, format the reference like a normal edited and translated volume:

Theon of Smyrna. Expositio rerum mathematicarum ad legendum Platonem utilium. Edited by Eduard Hiller. Leipzig: Teubner, 1878.


Websites

Electronic resources follow the same rules as other citations. The basic bibliographic form is the following:

Lastname, Firstname. “Title of Web Page.” Name of Website. Publishing organization, publication or revision date if available. Access date if no other date is available. URL.

Provide as much of the information as possible. The Purdue University Online Writing Lab has excellent examples for how to style a variety of web sources.


Titles in other languages

English titles are in headline capitalization; other languages are in sentence style (meaning only capitalize words that would normally be capitalized in those languages).

Böhlendorf-Arslan, Beate. “Die Beziehungen zwischen byzantinischer und emiratszeitlicher Keramik.” In Ortaçağ’da Anadolu, edited by Nermin Şaman Doğan, 135–56. Ankara: Hacettepe Üniversitesi, Edebiyat Fakültesi, Sanat Tarihi Bölümü, 2002.

———. Glasierte byzantinische Keramik aus der Türkei. Istanbul: Ege Yayınları, 2004.

———. “Keramikproduktion im byzantinischen und türkischen Milet.” Istanbuler Mitteilungen 58 (2008): 371–407.

Burlot, Jacques. “Premières productions de céramiques turques en Anatolie occidentale: contextualisation et études techniques.” PhD diss., University of Lyon 2, 2017.


Order of entries in the bibliography

A single-author entry precedes a multi-author entry beginning with the same name.

If there are multiple entries that begin with the same name but have different co-authors, the entries are listed alphabetically according to the second co-author’s last name.

Entries with the same single author are listed alphabetically by the title (ignoring a/a/the). Use a 3-em dash rather than repeating the author’s name for each entry.



Publication Ethics and Policies

TARE is dedicated to upholding the highest standards for publication ethics for the editors, reviewers, authors, publishers, and readers and follows the international standards set by the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE).
Articles submitted to TARE should be in accordance with the aim and scope of the journal.


Ethical Codes and Guidelines for Peer Review

TARE employs a peer-review process to ensure the academic integrity required by the international scholarly community. The following text is created to provide guidelines for peer reviewers and adapted from the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE) guidelines which defines peer review process as
"Peer review, for the purposes of these guidelines, refers to reviews provided on manuscript submissions to journals, but can also include reviews    for other platforms and apply to public commenting that can occur pre- or post-publication. Reviews of other materials such as preprints,    grants, books, conference proceeding submissions, registered reports (pre-registered protocols), or data will have a similar underlying ethical    framework, but the process will vary depending on the source material and the type of review requested. The model of peer review will also    influence elements of the process." (Source: https://publicationethics.org/guidance/Guidelines)         

 

Models for Peer Review

Plagiarism
The editorial team first examines every article submitted to the journal to evaluate whether it conforms to the TARE Submission Guidelines. Authors who submit articles to the journal accept that their manuscript is not published or under review elsewhere. Articles are checked for plagiarism by uploading them to plagiarism detection software (IThenticate) and creating a plagiarism report. The similarity rate should not be higher than 20%. Articles with more than 20% similarity rates are either rejected or go through a more rigorous examination during which authors might be contacted to make some changes to specific sections of the articles depending on the nature of the similarity report.

Review Process
Articles that pass the editorial examination start the double-blind review process. They are sent to at least two independent reviewers that work on a related topic. In order to be accepted, an article should be accepted by at least two reviewers. Reviewers fill out the review form where they elaborate on their opinions about the article and whether it should be accepted. In the case of conflicting opinions, a third reviewer might be appointed for the article.


Ethics Codes for Reviewers

Professional Responsibility
TARE encourages submitting authors to contribute to the peer review process as members of the professional scholarly and scientific community. TARE editors are responsible for appointing appropriate reviewers for the submitted manuscripts in terms of content and scope of their study to receive the best reviews possible. Accepting reviewers are expected to provide accurate professional information on their scientific expertise and credentials, including verifiable contact information. Potential reviewers should be aware that providing inaccurate information such as impersonation of other individuals is considered a breach of TARE's policy and serious unethical behavior. Reviewers are further advised to accept to review a manuscript if their scientific and scholarly expertise matches the manuscript and if they can provide an unbiased report. In cases where reviewers detect incompatibility or gap between the manuscript and their expertise, they are encouraged to convey this to the TARE editors before starting the review process.

Conflicts of Interest
Reviewers are responsible for disclosing any conflict or competition interest that may affect the review process. In cases where reviewers are not completely clear or sure of these interests, which may be of personal, financial, intellectual, professional, political, or religious nature, they are encouraged to ask the TARE editors for advice. Furthermore, reviewers are not allowed to accept reviews to gain an advantage by accessing manuscripts that bear considerable resemblance to their own works currently under reconsideration at other journals.

Timeliness
When approached by the TARE editors, potential reviewers are kindly asked to respond in a timely manner. Please agree for a review if you are available to produce a report within the timeframe that will be agreed upon mutually. In cases where there would be changes in the reviewer's schedule or ability to complete the review, please inform the TARE editors as soon as possible. When reviewers are unable to accept, suggestions for alternative reviewers based on their specialty and without any personal influence will be much appreciated.


Conducting a Review

Initial steps: Before starting a report, reviewers are asked to carefully read all the submitted materials, including any additional data files and the journal policy documents. In cases where there are any unclear matters or questions, inform the TARE editors and do not contact the manuscript's authors directly. Furthermore, reviewers need to confirm the scope of their reviews with the TARE editor before starting on their reviews.

Confidentiality: Reviewers are expected to respect the confidentiality of the peer-review process and not to use any information received as part of the review process to their advantage or others' disadvantage. Involvement of third parties other than the reviewer and the editors, such as advisees or assistants, is not allowed without the permission of the journal. In cases where other individuals are involved with the review after getting permission from the TARE, their names should be communicated to the journal editors for acknowledgment of their efforts and the journal's own records.

Bias and competing interests
: Reviewers are expected to refrain from any bias based on nationality, political or religious beliefs, gender, or any other characteristics related to the submitting authors as well as commercial interests or the origins of the manuscripts. If reviewers were to notice any reasons that might prevent them from an unbiased review, they are advised to contact the TARE editors. They are asked to discontinue their review process and abstain from looking into the related materials while waiting to hear from the TARE editors should the review process be terminated. Reviewers are further advised to contact the TARE editors if they concur that they do not possess the required expertise to go on with the review process. They are further asked to notify the TARE editors if they suspect the identity of authors during the double-blind review process.

Suspicion of ethics violations: Any suspected violation of ethical conduct should be communicated to the TARE editors. These may include but are not limited to misconduct during the research of the writing of the submitted work, considerable similarity between the submitted work and other published material, or submitted works to another journal. Reviewers are also advised not to pursue the violations individually and keep the matter private after contacting the TARE editors.

Preparing a Report: Reviewers are asked to follow the manuscript review form provided by the TARE and consult these documents and TARE editors for further guidance.


Author’s responsibilities

Authors that submit articles to the journal accept that their articles are original manuscripts that have not been published or are currently being reviewed elsewhere. It is the authors' duty to ensure that their article adheres to the scientific and ethical rules and standards. Authors are responsible for following the copyright laws and regulations for any material they use for the manuscript. Appropriate permissions and acknowledgments must be obtained to reproduce and reuse copyright materials such as figures, drawings, and extensive quotations.

Any contributions or words that do not belong to the author(s) must be credited. In manuscripts with multiple authors, all authors must provide direct scientific or academic contributions to the manuscript. Contributions that are not extensive enough to qualify for authorship should be credited in the acknowledgments section of the manuscript.

All authors must disclose any conflict of interests that might potentially affect the results of the scientific research. It is the authors' responsibility to cooperate with the editors and inform them if they realize a significant error or inaccuracy in their published article and provide corrections to their mistakes or retract their article.

Archive

All TARE volumes are stored in a digital format in the archives of the Turkish Institute of Archaeology and Cultural Heritage.


​Price and Open Access Policy

Journal of the Turkish Institute of Archaeology and Cultural Heritage adopts open access policy. Readers can download, read and share all articles that have been published by the journal for free of charge. TARE does not request processing or publication fees from the authors.

The Journal of the Turkish Institute of Archaeology and Cultural Heritage is an open-access journal, and there are no fees for submitting or for publishing articles. It is the authors’ responsibility to obtain any necessary copyrights and permissions for materials (photography, drawings, graphics, tables and charts, etc.) included in the articles.