(2024) Dosi, M. ‘The Datacons Project: An Open-access Dataset of Late Roman Consular Dates.’ Journal of Open Humanities Data, 10: 9, pp. 1–8. DOI: https://doi.org/10.5334/johd.130
Digital tools
(2023) Dosi, M., ‘The DataCons Project: An Open-Access Archive of Late Roman Consular Dates’ (2.0.0) [Dataset]. Zenodo. DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10251711 (2023)
Burgi, K., Bushnell, M., Dosi, M., Dunwoody, S., Fox, J., Ghelarducci, V., Kono, K., Lowe, I., McDermott, C., Meredith, G., Ohge, C., Pisanelli, L., Saunders, N., Steer, M., Trinkwon, G., Walters, E., Winters, J., & Zolotariof, E. Mapping the Arts & Humanities in the UK. University of London School of Advanced Studies. Accessible from: https://www.humanities.org.uk/
(forthcoming) Dosi, M., Heather, P., Licudi, A., & Kieran, B., DataCons: The Digital Database of Late Roman Consular Dates. King’s College London Central IT Services. Beta version is accessible from: https://web-papyr-rp-poc-neu-1.azurewebsites.net/
Other Research Outputs
Dissertations
(2022). Consular Dating and Consular Dissemination in Late Antiquity. PhD dissertation, King’s College London. DOI: https://doi.org/10.18742/pqvw-fh97
(2017). Rome after Rome: Imperial Ideology and Propaganda in the Reigns of Zeno and Anastasius. MRes dissertation, University of Birmingham.
(2014). Intorno a Re Odoacre e alla caduta senza rumore di Roma. Una questione storiografica ancora aperta. MA dissertation, Universita’ degli Studi di Milano.
Work-in-progress
Baker, K., Dosi, M., Heather P. & Licudi, A. (sub. exp. 2024). ‘DataCons: a New Research Tool for Digital Humanities and Ancient History.’
Baker, K. & Dosi, M. (sub. exp. 2024). ‘Logistic Regression Analysis, Geospatial Modelling and Overlap Analysis in Establishing Regional Dissemination Times and Deviations in the Order of Appearance of the Consular Formula: Preliminary Results’. This article presents the preliminary results of a collaborative project funded by KCL in 2019-2022, dealing with(i) an algorithm to identify anomalies in the expected order of dissemination of consular dates in the years 284-541, and (ii) a geospatial model to predict regional dissemination times of consular dating formulas.
Dosi, M. (sub. exp. 2024), ‘Justinian and the End of the Ordinary Non-Imperial Consulship.’ Id. (sub. exp. 2024), ‘A Revision of the Conflicting Consular, Postconsular, Indictional and Diurnal Dates in Consular Papyri and Inscriptions in Bagnall, R. S. & Worp, K. A. Chronological systems of Byzantine Egypt. Second Edition. Leiden, 2004.’
Id. (sub. exp. 2024), ‘The Dissemination of Belisarius’ Consulship in Ostrogothic Italy, AD 535.’
Id. (sub. exp. 2024), ‘Polyonymous Nomenclatures in Late-Antique Consular Formulae.’
Id (sub. exp. 2024), “The Formula ‘Et qui fuerat nuntiatus (e.q.f.n.)’ in Late-Antique Consular Dates”.
Id. (sub. exp. 2024), “The Origin and Development of the Practice of Dating by Junior Consuls in Late Antiquity”.
Id. (sub. exp. 2024), ‘Recovering Contemporary Dissemination: Perfect, Most-Likely and Irreconcilable Dates in the Epigraphical and Papyrological Corpus of Late-Antique Consular Material’.
Id. ‘Critical Discussion of the Places of First Appearance of the New Consulates: 284-541.’ In, id. DataCons: The Digital Database of Late Roman Consular Dates.
Id. ‘Earliest attested Type-2 Formulas’. In id. DataCons: The Digital Database of Late Roman Consular Dates.
Id. ‘Findspots’. In id. DataCons: The Digital Database of Late Roman Consular Dates.