Publications
February 4, 2026 2026-03-27 13:47Publications
The "Ioanna Sfakianaki" Legacy
Supplement Series
Ariadne
Florilegia
Publications Committee
Aggela Kastrinaki
Angela Gioti
Merkourios Georgiadis
Chloe Balla
Guidelines for authors/editors
Original scientific papers in Greek, English, French, and German are accepted in Ariadne.
Papers are published under the sole responsibility of the authors regarding their content and linguistic form, as well as copyright issues (e.g. any illustrative material, etc.). Submissions must be in their final form before being sent to reviewers. Texts must be submitted electronically (MS Word and PDF) to the Secretariat of the Dean’s Office of the Faculty of Philosophy at the address: deanphil_sec@uoc.gr.
Submission of texts for publication is open to contributors beyond the Faculty of Philosophy of the University of Crete. Submitted papers are sent anonymously by the Editorial Board to external reviewers, whose anonymity is also strictly maintained. Authors receive an electronic offprint (PDF format) of their published paper and two copies of the journal volume.
Authors are requested to follow the guidelines below (otherwise, texts will be returned for correction):
- Preparation
- Text: double-spaced, with adequate margins, font size 12 (for both text and notes)
- Author details: on the first page of the text, the title of the study and the name(s) of the author(s) must be stated; on the last page, the name, title, position, and postal and email address(es).
- Notes: footnotes with continuous numbering. A note referring to the title of the study is marked with an asterisk. Acknowledgements, special abbreviations, sources of texts, etc., are included in the first note.
- Length: text and footnotes must not exceed 8,000 words
- General bibliography: included at the end of the text (see below, 4). It is not counted in the above word limit
- Images, drawings, maps: presented in a separate list of illustrations, including captions, the source of each image, copyright information, etc.
- Abstract: each study must be accompanied by an abstract of up to 200 words in English.
- Bibliographical references
- They include
- the author’s surname
- the year of publication
- the exact page numbers (notes, illustrations, tables, etc.)
- They are incorporated
(a) in the main text in parentheses, e.g.
... the central axis of the Arsenites’ policy was “precision” (Gounaridis 1999, 196)...
According to Gounaridis (1999, 196), the central axis of the Arsenites’ policy ...(b) in the footnotes, in parentheses (ibid. 1, 2) or independently, e.g.
For “precision” as the central axis of the Arsenites’ policy see Gounaridis 1999, 196 - Special cases
Single-volume works – articles – studies in journals, volumes, encyclopedias
1 Nehamas 2001, 157.
2 Herdeen 1992, fig. 16b.
3 Carr 1995, 122 n. 4.
4 Morris 1997, 81, fig. 12.
Multi-volume works
1 Plamenatz 1963, 1: 116–55.
-
Multiple cited works
1 Castoriadis 2001, 33–49.
See also Derrida 1990, 82–87.
Koyré 1990, 83. -
Multiple references to the same author or work
1 Konstantinidis 1998, 1999. Jones 1983, 47–106; Jones 1990, 306. Frede 1998a, 1998b. Hammond 1972, 27. Hammond and Griffith 1979, 78, pl. Ig.
- They include
Examples
| Book with one author | Morris, I. 1997. Burial Ritual Customs and Social Structure in Classical Antiquity, trans. K. Manteli. Heraklion: Crete University Press |
| Book with two or more authors | Kazhdan, A. and G. Constable 1982. People and Power in Byzantium: An Introduction to Modern Byzantine Studies. Washington, DC: Dumbarton Oaks Matravers, D., J. Pike and N. Warburton (eds.) 2001. Reading Political Philosophy: Machiavelli to Mill. London: Routledge |
| Book with editor | Carden, R. 1974. The Papyrus Fragments of Sophocles: An Edition with Prolegomena and Commentary (Texte und Kommentare). Berlin/New York: de Gruyter |
| Collective volume without author | Libation: In Memory of Andreas G. Kalokairinos. Heraklion: Society of Cretan Historical Studies, 1994 Proceedings of the First International Symposium, Everyday Life in Byzantium: Continuities and Changes in the Hellenistic and Roman Tradition, Athens 15–17 September 1988. Athens: Centre for Byzantine Research/NHRF, 1989. |
| Book in a series | Papadopoulou-Kanellopoulou, H. 1997. Sanctuary of the Nymph: Black-Figure Loutrophoroi (Publications of the Archaeological Bulletin, 60). Athens: TAPA |
| Second or later edition | Van Inwagen, P. 22001. Metaphysics. Boulder, Conn.: Westview Press. Pedley, J. G. 1997. Greek Art and Archaeology. Rev. ed. New York: Abrams |
| Multi-volume work | Hammond, N.G.L. 1972. A History of Macedonia, 1. Historical Geography and Prehistory. Oxford: Clarendon Hammond, N.G.L. and G.T. Griffith 1979. A History of Macedonia, 2. 550–336 B.C. Oxford: Clarendon Plamenatz, J. 1963. Man and Society. 2 vols. London: Longman |
| Chapter in an edited volume | Carr, A.W. 1995. Originality and the Icon. In A.R. Littlewood (ed.), Originality in Byzantine Literature, Art and Music. Oxford: Oxbow, 115–24 |
| Journal article | Tsouna-McKirahan, B. 1999. Ancient Greek Philosophy and the Problem of Other Minds. Deukalion 17: 67–84. |
| Dictionary/encyclopedia entry | Boulnois, O. 2002. Analogy. In C. Gauvard, A. de Libera and M. Zink (eds.), Dictionnaire du Moyen Âge. Paris: PUF, 52–54. Wessel, K. 1970. Jonas. RbK, 3: 647–655 |
| Online publication | Marchad, J. 1999. Feudalism and Knighthood, <http://orb.rhodes.edu/wemsk/feudknightwemsk.html> (29/10/2002) |
Publication disclosure policy
Authors or collaborators who wish to make use of this open-access option
are advised to link to the publications’ website
[https://www.phl.uoc.gr/ekdoseis.php](https://www.phl.uoc.gr/ekdoseis.php) (as an embedded link),
and not to post the text directly on their own websites.