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This is the eighth volume of the Lexicon of Greek Personal Names and the third of three volumes that comprise the personal names attested in Asia Minor. This particular volume is concerned with its interior, incorporating the ancient regions of Phrygia, Milyas, Pisidia, Galatia, Kappadokia, Paphlagonia, Pontos, and Armenia Minor, among others.

Produktbeschreibung
This is the eighth volume of the Lexicon of Greek Personal Names and the third of three volumes that comprise the personal names attested in Asia Minor. This particular volume is concerned with its interior, incorporating the ancient regions of Phrygia, Milyas, Pisidia, Galatia, Kappadokia, Paphlagonia, Pontos, and Armenia Minor, among others.
Autorenporträt
Jean-Sébastien Balzat is currently a Research Fellow at Wolfson College, Oxford, and an editor of the Lexicon of Greek Personal Names, having been a member of the editorial staff since 2010. He read History and Classics at the Université catholique de Louvain and holds an MA from the University of Nottingham and a doctorate from Newcastle University; he has published mainly in the fields of ancient Greece and Asia Minor. Richard W. V. Catling read Literae Humaniores at the University of Oxford as an undergraduate, subsequently working on a doctorate in Classical Archaeology at the University of Cambridge. He has been a member of the editorial staff of the Lexicon of Greek Personal Names since 1990 and has also published the results of several archaeological field projects. His principal research interests lie in the history and archaeology of the Aegean world in the first half of the first millennium BC. Édouard Chiricat was a Researcher at the Lexicon of Greek Personal Names from 2009 until 2016 and is currently an Academic Visitor at the Centre for the Study of Ancient Documents at the University of Oxford. He is a former foreign student at the École Normale Supérieure and Junior Research Fellow at the École Pratique des Hautes Études, both in Paris, and has taught Greek and Roman history in several French universities. Thomas Corsten completed his PhD in Classics in 1984 before taking up research and teaching positions in Cologne, Frankfurt, Heidelberg, Chicago, Ann Arbor, Lyon, Leiden, Oxford, and, most recently, Vienna, where he is Professor of Greek History and Epigraphy. He joined the editorial staff of the Lexicon of Greek Personal Names in 2000, initially as an assistant editor then as an editor, and is also one of the editors of the Supplementum Epigraphicum Graecum (Brill).