Research team

 

Directors:

mnc.jpg

Milagros NAVARRO CABALLERO

Institut Ausonius, CNRS-Université de Bordeaux-Montaigne, Labex LaScArBx

is Director of Research at the CNRS. In charge of various projects and research groups both in France and internationally, her research is focused on the social history of the Iberian peninsula and the Gauls in the Roman period, based most of all on an epigraphic method. Apart from the publication of epigraphic corpora such as those of Bordeaux, Labitolosa, Teruel or Bilbilis, her research publications are most of all concerned with ancient onomastics and the social history of local elites, especially female elites (Perfectissima femina : Femmes de l’élite dans l’Hispanie romaine, 2017). She is also the author or editor of a number of collected works, in particular Atlas antroponímico de la Lusitania romana,  2004, Elite hispaniques, 2001 (with Ségolène Demougin), La transmission de l’idéologie impériale dans l’Occident romain, 2006 (with Jean-Michel Roddaz). Currently she is the vice-president of the organizing committee of the next international congress of Greek and Latin epigraphy (Bordeaux, 2022). She is the research director of the epigraphic database PETRAE, as a result of which she is a collaborator on the international database confederation EAGLE. She is responsible for the collection and study of the Latin epigraphy of Roman Aquitania and for its publication in the collection ILA : Inscriptions latines de l’Aquitaine. Currently she is involved in the study of the inscriptions of the Bituriges Cubi. She is director of a project to produce a digital onomastic atlas of Roman Aquitania, as well as of the project ADOPIA.

https://u-bordeaux3.academia.edu/MilagrosNavarroCaballero

je.jpg

Jonathan EDMONDSON

York University / Université York, Toronto

is Distinguished Research Professor of Roman History and Classical Studies at York University (Toronto), a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, Corresponding Member of the Royal Academy of History of Spain and Corresponding Member of the German Archaeological Institute (DAI). His research focuses on the social, cultural and economic history of Roman Spain, especially Lusitania, and on Latin epigraphy, in particular of the Iberian peninsula and, most notably, of Augusta Emerita (Mérida). He is the author of Imagen y Memoria. Monumentos funerarios con retratos en la colonia Augusta Emerita (with T. Nogales Basarrate and W. Trillmich, 2001) and Granite Funerary Stelae from Augusta Emerita (2006) and is the editor of numerous collected works, including (with Christer Bruun) The Oxford Handbook of Roman Epigraphy (2015). He is currently involved in the preparation of the fascicules on the epigraphy of Emerita (urban centre and rural territory) for the second edition of CIL II. A volume (co-written with Luis Hidalgo Martín, Juana Márquez Pérez and José Luis Ramírez Sádaba) that publishes all the new funerary inscriptions discovered since 1990 in urban excavations at Mérida, Nueva epigrafía funeraria de Augusta Emerita (NEFAE): Tituli sepulcrales urbanos (ss. I-VII) y su contexto arqueológico, is currently in press. In addition, he has published a series of articles on the Roman family and on public spectacle in the Roman world, especially those involving gladiators. He is the co-director of the project ADOPIA.

https://yorku.academia.edu/JonathanEdmondson 

Technical manager:

 

np.jpg

Nathalie PRÉVÔT


 

Research team of ADOPIA (Lusitania)

 

 

 

 

Jean-Pierre BOST

Institut Ausonius, CNRS-Université de Bordeaux-Montaigne, Labex LaScArBx

is Honorary Professor of Roman History at the University of Bordeaux – Montaigne. He initially devoted his main research activities to the study of coin circulation in the Iberian peninsula, which he published in numerous works or in the proceedings of scholarly conferences in Spain and Portugal. More recently, apart from his research on the archaeology and history of Aquitania, he has dedicated himself to the study of epigraphy and onomastics (with more than 40 publications in this area, in particular ILA Pétrucores [2001], Atlas antroponímico de la Lusitania romana [Grupo Mérida, 2003], ILA Landes et Pyrénées-Atlantiques [2015], and ILA Lémovices, in preparation

jg.jpg

Joaquín GORROCHATEGUI

Universidad del Pais Vasco

is Professor of Indoeuropean Linguistics at the University of the Basque Country – Universidad del País Vasco-Euskal Herriko Unibertsitatea (Vitoria-Gasteiz). His research centres on the study of the pre-Roman languages of W. Europe, in particular those spoken in the Iberian peninsula.  He has worked on various aspects of the languages, from texts and inscriptions to the secondary onomastic material, combining linguistic and historical questions in his research.  He is the author of Onomástica indígena de Aquitania (1984), the standard work on Aquitanian, and various studies on ancient Basque.  He has also produced various works on Lusitanian, both on his own (“En torno al lusitano) and in collaboration with others (for instance, with J. Ma. Vallejo (“Onomástica indígena”, Eje 1 of the Atlas; and Iberografías 6), as well as various epigraphic studies on the Latin inscriptions of Aquitania.  Editor of the review Veleia for 27 years, he is now in charge of the database “Hesperia”, which focuses on Palaeohispanic languages and epigraphies.

ag.jpg

Amílcar GUERRA

Universidade de Lisboa

is Professor of Ancient History and Archaeology at the University of Lisbon and a research member of the UNIARQ.  His research centres on epigraphic and historical themes, generally in connection with linguistic and archaeological problems. In his (unpublished) doctoral thesis, he analyzed the literary and epigraphic evidence for the pre-Roman toponyms of Western Hispania, an area in which he has published a considerable number of articles. He was co-director of the excavations in the sanctuary of Endovellicus from 2002 to 2009, and he is currently collaborating on the monograph publishing the results of those campaigns,responsible in particular for the epigraphic material. Apart from his interests in Roman epigraphy, in particular the inscriptions of Olisipo and amphora stamps (a co-authored work on all amphora stamps from Lusitania is currently in press), he has recently concentrated on questions of pre-Roman epigraphy, in particular on SW script. 

mrhs.jpg

María Rosario HERNANDO SOBRINO

Universidad Complutense de Madrid

is Profesor Titular of Ancient History in the Complutense University, Madrid. She is currently sub-director of the Archivo Epigráfico de Hispania, as well as a member of the editorial board of Hispania Epigraphica and secretary of the journal Gerión. She is a member of various national and international research groups and projects. Her research focuses principally on the history of Roman Spain, with a special interest in epigraphic evidence. The results of her main lines of research are, apart from various journal articles and book chapters, her monographs, Epigrafía Romana de Ávila (PETRAE Hispaniarum 3, Bordeaux-Madrid, 2005) and Manuscritos de contenido epigráfico de la Biblioteca Nacional de Madrid (siglos XVI – XX). La transmisión de las inscripciones de la Hispania romana y visigoda (Madrid, 2009).

 

jjpv.jpg

Juan José PALAO VICENTE

Universidad de Salamanca

is Profesor Titular of Ancient History at the University of Salamanca. His research has centred on the history of the Iberian Peninsula during the High Empire, with a special focus on the Roman army, epigraphy and social history. The results of his research have been published in the form of books and articles in various prestigious research journals, as well as through his participation in national and international conferences. Most notable among his publications are his book Legio VII Gemina. Estudio de una legión romana (Salamanca, 2006), his collaboration on the Atlas Antroponímico de la Lusitania romana (Bordeaux-Mérida, 2003) and his role as editor of the volume of essays Villes et territoires dans la Bassin du Douro à l’époque romaine (Bordeaux, 2007) and the book Militares y civiles en la antigua Roma. Dos mundos diferentes, dos mundos unidos (Salamanca, 2010). He has also been a participant in various national and international research projects. He is currently a member of the team responsible for the international project Petrae Hispaniarum. He is currently responsible, in collaboration with Prof. Manuel Salinas, for the preparation of the epigraphic corpus of the modern province of Salamanca. 

 

jmvr.jpg

José María VALLEJO RUIZ

Universidad del Pais Vasco

is Profesor Titular of Indoeuropean Linguistics at the University of the Basque Country–Euskal Herriko Unibertsitatea. His area of research focuses on the ancient languages of the west of the Iberian Peninsula, with special reference to onomastics and the methodological problems posed by the secondary transmission of linguistic evidence. The results of his research have been published in various national and international scholarly journals and conference proceedings. Among his main publications are Antroponimia indígena de la Lusitania romana (Vitoria, 2005) and Onomástica paleohispánica. Antroponimia y teonimia: Testimonios epigráficos latinos, celtibéricos y lusitanos, y referencias literarias (Bilbao, 2016).He has also participated in various national and international research projects, including, for example, the Atlas Antroponímico de la Lusitania romana, which was published in 2003, or the database Hesperia, the aim of which is to publish on the internet all the available evidence for ancient languages of the Iberian Peninsula. He is currently part of the network ACCIÓN COST AELAW “Ancient European Languages And Writings”, the aim of which is to coordinate a group of international scholars dedicated to the study of ancient languages and writings of Europe. 

MOS.png

Mercedes ORIA SEGURA

Universidad de Sevilla

is Profesora Titular of Archaeology at the University of Seville.  Her research has always focused on Classical Archaeology, especially of Roman Spain.  In particular, she is a member of the long established research group at the University of Seville that focuses on rural settlement and town/country relations in the Lower Guadalquivir valley, using field survey evidence.  Her own research is concerned with religious and social history, using iconography and epigraphy as key sources.  This is reflected in her publications on the cult of Hercules in Hispania, especially her monograph Hércules en Hispania: una aproximación (Barcelona, 1996), which is based on her doctoral thesis, as well as in her other studies on divinities such as Diana and Venus, the role of images of gods in the cities of Roman Spain, the language in which sacred dedications were framed, etc.  Her current research focuses on the image of women in the ancient world and women’s role in Roman religion. She was a member of the original team responsible for the Atlas Antroponímico de la Lusitania Romana (Mérida-Bordeaux, 2003).    

 

armando.png

Armando REDENTOR

Universidade de Coimbra

He is assistant professor in the Faculty of Arts at the University of Coimbra. His research interests focus on Iron Age and Roman archaeology and Latin epigraphy, especially of the north-west of the Iberian Peninsula and northern Lusitania. He is the author of various articles and books, including Epigrafia romana da região de Bragança (2002) and A cultura epigráfica no conventus Bracaraugustanus: percursos pela sociedade brácara da época romana (2017). He sits on the editorial boards of Hispania Epigraphica and Conimbriga and is a member of various scientific groups and associations, including the Association Internationale d'Épigraphie Grecque et Latine (AIEGL), for which he currently serves as a member of its Comité.

 

 

Research team of ADOPIA (Baetica)

sevilla_junio2019.jpg

aam.jpg

ANTHONY ÁLVAREZ MELERO

Universidad de Sevilla

is an assistant professor at the University of Seville. His research concentrates most on epigraphy, Latin onomastics, prosopography, women in ancient Rome and Roman social history. He is the author of Matronae equestres. La parenté féminine des chevaliers romains originaires des provinces occidentales sous le Haut-Empire romain (Ier-IIIe siècles), Brussels-Rome: Brepols, 2018 and editor of the volume of collected articles of Marie-Thérèse Raepsaet-Charlier, Clarissima femina. Études d’histoire sociale des femmes de l’élite à Rome. Scripta varia, Brussels-Rome, 2016. He is also part of the team working on the publication of the new volume of inscriptions, CIL II2/4, as well as a member of the research group ORDO.

https://us.academia.edu/Anthony%C3%81lvarezMelero

acr.jpg

ANTONIO CABALLOS RUFINO

Universidad de Sevilla

Professor of Ancient History at the University of Seville, is a Member (“Académico de Número”) of the Real Academia Sevillana de Buenas Letras, Corresponding Member for Seville of the Real Academia de la Historia and Corresponding Member of the German Archaeological Institute. From 2002 to 2012 he was a member of the Comité of the Association Internationale d´Épigraphie Grecque et Latine (A.I.E.G.L.) and served as a member of the Advisory Council of the Berlin-Brandenburgische Akademie der Wissenschaften for the C.I.L. project until the year 2018. He is director of the research group for the Andalucian Research Plan project “La Bética Romana: su Patrimonio Histórico” (PAIDI-HUM323) and co-founder and coordinator of the research group ORDO (“Oligarquías romanas del Occidente”). In the area of proposography, he is responsible for cataloguing all members of the senatorial and equestrian orders of Hispanic origin. He has published the first editions of several key inscriptions such as the mosaic of Trahius, the new plaque of the Lex coloniae Genetivae Iuliae (chapters XIII-XX), and, together with W. Eck and F. Fernández Gómez, the Senatus Consultum de Cn. Pisone patre. He is the author of the important volume on Los senadores hispanorromanos y la romanización de Hispania (Siglos I-III). 1: Prosopografía, Écija (Sevilla) (2 vols., 1990). More recently he has published Hispalis, de César a Augusto. La Colonia Romula y los orígenes institucionales de la Sevilla romana entre la República y el Imperio (2017) and Augustus, pater Hispalensium. Los orígenes de la Sevilla romana entre la República y el Imperio (2016).

https://investigacion.us.es/sisius/sis_showpub.php?idpers=1802

https://us.academia.edu/AntonioCaballosRufino

SGDDLV.png

SERGIO GARCÍA-DILS DE LA VEGA

is municipal archaeologist of Écija (Sevilla), Professor-tutor at the Seville branch of the UNED and Member (“Académico de Número”) of the Real Academia de Ciencias, Bellas Artes y Buenas Letras “Luis Vélez de Guevara”. His areas of research include Roman and late-Roman archaeology, Latin epigraphy, historical, artistic and archaeological heritage management, as well as G.I.S. systems applied toward the documentation and analysis of archaeological data in urban and rural settings. In terms of his epigraphic research, he has published more than a hundred new inscriptions, most of which have been discovered in the archaeological projects that he has directed in the city of Écija. These epigraphic documents cover a wide spectrum from the private as well as the public sphere. Private inscriptions include curse-tables, graffiti, herms, mosaics, funerary stelae and construction materials, while those from public contexts include building inscriptions, honorific pedestals, litterae aureae, a calendar, a nuncupatio uotorum, etc. He is the author of Colonia Augusta Firma Astigi: El urbanismo de la Écija romana y tardoantigua (2015), co-author, with P. Sáez Fernández, E. García Vargas, S. Ordóñez Agulla, of Carta Arqueológica Municipal de Écija. 1. La ciudad S. García-Dils de la Vega) (2004) and co-author, along with S. Ordóñez Agulla, of Civitas Solis. Diez años de estudios sobre la ciudad antigua de Écija (2011) and Ager Astigitanus. Diez años de estudios sobre el territorio histórico de Écija (2011).

https://us.academia.edu/SergioGarcìaDilsdelaVega

hgp.jpg

HELENA GIMENO PASCUAL

Centro CIL II, Universidad de Alcalá

is Director of the Centro CIL II at the Universidad de Alcalá. Her thesis Historia de la investigación epigráfica en Hispania en los siglos XVI y XVII (Institución F. el Católico, Zaragoza, 1997) opened up a line of research previously little studied or exploited, which now constitutes one of the key priority topics of epigraphic research on the Iberian peninsula in the ancient and late-antique periods, along with the epigraphic habit. Her specialization in epigraphy is also connected to her work on the new edition of the inscriptions from Hispania (CIL II2) for the Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum (CIL). She is most of all involved in the southern part of the Conventus Hispalensis and with the inscriptions of the Roman city of Valeria (prov. Cuenca). She is currently the Principal Investigator of the research project, The new edition of CIL II: 1. Inscriptions from the western part of the Conventus Gaditanus. 2. Inscriptions from the ancient municipalities of Baetica situated to the east of the Guadiana river. She is the coordinator of the documentary archive of the epigraphic heritage of Spain and Portugal for the new edition of CIL II.

https://dialnet.unirioja.es/servlet/autor?codigo=29151

https://uah.academia.edu/GimenoHelena

mrhs.jpg

María Rosario HERNANDO SOBRINO

Universidad Complutense de Madrid

is Profesor Titular of Ancient History in the Complutense University, Madrid. She is currently sub-director of the Archivo Epigráfico de Hispania, as well as a member of the editorial board of Hispania Epigraphica and secretary of the journal Gerión. She is a member of various national and international research groups and projects. Her research focuses principally on the history of Roman Spain, with a special interest in epigraphic evidence. The results of her main lines of research are, apart from various journal articles and book chapters, her monographs, Epigrafía Romana de Ávila (PETRAE Hispaniarum 3, Bordeaux-Madrid, 2005) and Manuscritos de contenido epigráfico de la Biblioteca Nacional de Madrid (siglos XVI – XX). La transmisión de las inscripciones de la Hispania romana y visigoda (Madrid, 2009).

Foto E. Melchor para ADOPIA.jpg

ENRIQUE MELCHOR GIL

Universidad de Córdoba

is Professor of Ancient History at the University of Córdoba. His research focuses on Roman Hispania, with special attention to municipal society (especially municipal elites) and the administration of public life, using epigraphy and juridical evidence as his main sources of information. He is the author of works such as Evergetismo en la Hispania romana (Córdoba, 1993), El mecenazgo cívico en la Bética (Córdoba, 1994), La munificencia cívica en el mundo romano (Madrid, 1999) and El patronazgo cívico en la Hispania romana (Sevilla, 2018). At the same time, he has edited a number of collective works, among which one might single out the volume Senados municipales y decuriones en el Occidente Romano (Sevilla/Córdoba, 2013). The main lines of his research include euergetism, civic honours, patronage of municipalities, local elites in Roman Hispania and the Roman West, as well as local administration and municipal life in the Roman Empire. His main lines of research are closely linked to the ORDO (Oligarchies in the Roman West) research project. 

https://uco-es.academia.edu/EnriqueMelchorGil

SOA.png

SALVADOR ORDÓÑEZ AGULLA

Universidad de Sevilla

is Professor of Ancient History at the University of Seville. His main lines of research include studies on the municipalization of the province of Baetica from historical and archaeological perspectives, with a particular emphasis on the cities of Astigi and Hispalis, the publication of Roman inscriptions, the historiography of ancient history and issues concerning the territories of the civic communities of this same province. He is the Principal Investigator of the research group of the Andalucian Research Plan project (HUMA-0441) on “Country and Town. Social, economic and ideological structures in Andalucia and the Mediterranean world in Antiquity”. He is member of the Editorial Committee of the journal Habis, of which he was Secretary and then Editor between 1990 and 2014. He has published a series of books including Colonia Augusta Firma Astigi (1988); Primeros pasos de la Sevilla romana (Siglos I A.C.-I D.C.) (1998); Carta Arqueológica Municipal de Écija. 1. La ciudad (co-author with P. Sáez Fernández, E. García Vargas and S. García-Dils de la Vega) (2004) and he has co-edited two volumes with S. García-Dils de la Vega: Civitas Solis. Diez años de estudios sobre la ciudad antigua de Écija (2011) and Ager Astigitanus. Diez años de estudios sobre el territorio histórico de Écija (2011). His articles publishing new inscriptions from Astigi have appeared in such journals as ZPE, Habis, Pallas and Sylloge Epigraphica Barcinonensis, as well as Ficheiro Epigráfico.

https://us.academia.edu/SalvadorOrdóñez

Mauricio.png

MAURICIO PASTOR MUÑOZ

Universidad de Granada

is Professor of Ancient History (retired), University of Granada. He has directed archaeological excavations on the «Cerro de la Mora», Moraleda de Zafayona (Granada) and on the «Cerro del Cabezo», Capilla (Badajoz). He is the author of more than a hundred research publications on various themes about the Ancient History of Roman Spain, among which one may single out: Mirobriga. Excavaciones en el «Cerro del Cabezo», Capilla (Badajoz)” (Mérida 1993), Viriato. La lucha por la libertad (Madrid 2000; Portuguese ed.m, 2003; French ed., 2009), Viriato. El héroe hispano que luchó por la libertad de su pueblo (Madrid 2004; Portuguese ed., 2006). He has dedicated part of his research activity to the world of sport in Anti       quity, especially gladiators: Deporte y Olimpismo (Granada 2007), Deporte y Olimpismo en el Mundo antiguo y Moderno (Granada 2008), «Munera gladiatoria en Hispania», Los gladiadores. El fascinante espectáculo de los munera gladiatoria en el mundo romano (2018). He is a specialist in Latin epigraphy, centring on Granada, on which he has written numerous works: Inscripciones latinas de Granada y su provincia (Granada 1987); Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum II2/5: Conventus Astigitanus (Berlin 1998); Corpus de Inscripciones latinas de Andalucía IV: Granada (Seville 2002); Sociedad y epigrafía en Granada en época romana (Granada 2004).

 

MOS.png

Mercedes ORIA SEGURA

Universidad de Sevilla

is Profesora Titular of Archaeology at the University of Seville.  Her research has always focused on Classical Archaeology, especially of Roman Spain.  In particular, she is a member of the long established research group at the University of Seville that focuses on rural settlement and town/country relations in the Lower Guadalquivir valley, using field survey evidence.  Her own research is concerned with religious and social history, using iconography and epigraphy as key sources.  This is reflected in her publications on the cult of Hercules in Hispania, especially her monograph Hércules en Hispania: una aproximación (Barcelona, 1996), which is based on her doctoral thesis, as well as in her other studies on divinities such as Diana and Venus, the role of images of gods in the cities of Roman Spain, the language in which sacred dedications were framed, etc.  Her current research focuses on the image of women in the ancient world and women’s role in Roman religion. She was a member of the original team responsible for the Atlas Antroponímico de la Lusitania Romana (Mérida-Bordeaux, 2003).

Diego.png

DIEGO ROMERO VERA

Universidad de Sevilla

is a Juan de la Cierva postdoctoral researcher at the University of Seville. His research focuses on the analysis of cities in the Hispanic provinces in the Antonine period on the basis of archaeological and epigraphic evidence. At the same time, he has developed other lines of research including funerary associations in the ancient saltus Tugiensis (Jaén), the non-built-up areas of cities in Roman Spain and imperial wealth and properties in the Hispanic provinces. He has held a FPU doctoral grant and postdoctoral grant at the University of Córdoba, as well as a postdoctoral fellowship at the Institut Ausonius, Bordeaux, as part of the ERC research project “Patrimonium, Geography and Economy of the Imperial Properties in the Roman World”. He has spent periods conducting research at the universities of Florence, Coimbra and Oxford and at the German Archaeological Institute in Rome.

https://us.academia.edu/DiegoRomeroVera

SSDLPP.png

SANTIAGO SÁNCHEZ DE LA PARRA PÉREZ

Universidad de Salmanca

is a doctoral researcher, whose work is supported by grants from the regional government of Castille and Leon and the European Social Fund of the University of Salamanca. His research focuses on the analysis of public building projects in the western Roman provinces, using archaeological and epigraphic evidence. From 2016 to 2018 his work was supported by a grant from the José Luis de Oriol – Catalina de Urquijo Foundation for the Promotion of Research. He has enjoyed research stays at York University (Toronto, Canada) and at the German Archaeological Institute in Madrid. 

https://usal.academia.edu/SantiagoS%C3%A1nchezdelaParraP%C3%A9rez

JCSC.png

JOSÉ CARLOS SAQUETE CHAMIZO

Universidad de Sevilla

VTG.png

VÍCTOR TORRES GONZALEZ

Universidad de Sevilla

Is an FPU doctoral researcher at the University of Seville, where he is completing a thesis on the chief magistracy and the magistrates of the civic communities of Latium from the end of the Social War to the mid-third century A.D.  His main areas of research comprise the study of the processes of municipalization and colonization, local administration and municipal life, as well as local elites in Roman Hispania and Italy, using inscriptions and juridical evidence as the basic sources of information. He is a member of the research group ORDO (“Oligarquías romanas de Occidente”) and participates in international projects such as “Epigraphica Romana” coordinated by the research unit “Anthropologie et Histoire des Mondes Anciens” (ANHIMA) of the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS).

https://us.academia.edu/VíctorAndrésTorresGonzález

 

Research team of Atlas antroponímico de la Lusitania romana (Merida - Bordeaux, 2003)

 

Ángela ALONSO SÁNCHEZ

Universidad de Extremadura

Jean-Pierre BOST

Institut Ausonius, CNRS-Université de Bordeaux-Montaigne, Labex LaScArBx

Enrique CERRILLO Y MARTÍN DE CÁCERES

Universidad de Extremadura

Julián DE FRANCISCO MARTÍN

Universidad de Oviedo

José D’ENCARNAÇÃO

Universidade de Coimbra

Jonathan EDMONDSON

York University, Toronto

José María FERNÁNDEZ CORRALES

Universidad de Extremadura

Marta GONZÁLEZ HERRERO

Universidad de Oviedo

Joaquín GORROCHATEGUI

Universidad de País Vasco

Marta JIMÉNEZ LOSA

Universidad de Cantabria

José Luis MELENA

Universidad de País Vasco

Milagros NAVARRO CABALLERO

Institut Ausonius, CNRS-Université de Bordeaux-Montaigne, Labex LaScArBx

Mercedes ORIA SEGURA

Universidad de Sevilla

Juan José PALAO VICENTRE

Universidad de Salamanca

José Luis RAMÍREZ SÁDABA

Universidad de Cantabria

Manuel SALINAS DE FRÍAS

Universidad de Salamanca

Alain TRANOY

Université de Poitiers

José María VALLEJO RUIZ

Universidad de País Vasco

†João Luís Inês VAZ

Universidade Católica de Viseu