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As part of the submission process, authors are required to check off their submission's compliance with all of the following items, and submissions may be returned to authors that do not adhere to these guidelines.

  • The submission has not been previously published or submitted for consideration by any other journal (or an explanation has been provided in the Comments to the Editor).
  • The file has to be sent into OpenOffice, Microsoft Word, RTF or WordPerfect.
  • Wherever possible, URLs are provided for references.
  • Text is single-spaced; 12 point font size; italics are used instead of underlining (except in URLs); and all illustrations, figures and tables are placed in the appropriate places in the text, rather than at the end.
  • The text adheres to the stylistic and bibliographic requirements outlined in the Author Guidelines, which appear in "About the journal".

 

1. Submission of Papers

Mediterranea accepts submissions of:

-      articles

-      notes

-      review articles

-      book reviews

Contributors must submit their paper in a MS Word for Windows file. They should include their full name, their institutional affiliation (University, Institute, etc.), and a brief CV indicating their academic degree, postal and electronic addresses, and telephone number.

Authors should also provide: 

-      a short abstract (no longer than 10 lines; not necessary for book reviews and review articles);

-      5 to 8 keywords;

-      a  bibliography of works cited.

Accepted publication languages: English, French, German, Italian and Spanish, although priority is given to papers submitted in English. If the contribution is not in English, please provide also an English translation of the title (for articles and notes) and of the abstract (for articles).

There are no word limits for papers in this Journal.

 

 2. Addresses 

Papers must be submitted through the Open Journal System platform of the journal: https://journals.uco.es/mediterranea/index.

In order to submit a paper, author must create an account in the OJS platform as ‘author’ at the following link: https://journals.uco.es/mediterranea/user/register.

Once registered and for successive submissions, please, use this link to login: https://journals.uco.es/mediterranea/login.

For any inconvenience within the platform and/or the submission process, authors may contact the editorial team by writing to mediterranea@uco.es.

Books for review must be sent to: Prof. Dr. Pedro Mantas España – Facultad de Filosofía y Letras – Universidad de Córdoba – Plaza Cardenal Salazar, 3 – 14071 Córdoba (Spain).

 

3. Editorial Process

  1. Receipt of the Submissions

Submission receipt will be acknowledged by e-mail in the briefest period possible. In this phase a preliminary editorial assessment will take place in which the following features will be evaluated: (a) the appropriateness of the submitted paper to the scope and interests pursued by the Journal, and (b) the fulfilment of the basic formatting requirements requested by the publishing rules. Reception of the paper does not guarantee its acceptance. In this first stage and before entering a second phase (peer reviewing), we will communicate to the author if the article has been accepted and sent to peer review, rejected, or needs some corrections.

  1. Peer Review

Submissions that pass internal review will be sent confidentially and anonymously to be analysed by one or two experts who are neither members of the Journal’s editorial team nor part of the advisory board. Reviewers will submit a detailed report on the quality, interest, and potential impact of the manuscript, which will be carefully considered by the editors while assessing the manuscript submission. In case of disagreement between two reports, the manuscript will be submitted to a third referee. Acceptation and refusal of the manuscript, as well as suggested or required modifications, will be promptly communicated to the author. Inclusion of required modification into the manuscript is conditional to its final acceptation. If considered necessary by the editors, the new version of the manuscript will undergo a further peer-review process before being eventually accepted (or rejected). Authors will be kept appraised throughout the editorial process. Once the paper is accepted, the peer-reviewed and revised version of the manuscript will be uploaded to the OJS platform. The Journal will send to the author the article proofs, which must be corrected and returned within 25 calendar days.

  1. Reviewers

The Journal relies on specialised reviewers to assess methodological procedures used in papers. The choice of reviewers depends on the editors, who take into account their academic and scientific merits, and their professional experience.

  1. Acceptance and Refusal

The editors’ decision to accept or reject a paper will take into account both the negative and the favorable judgements of the evaluators.

Criteria for rejecting a paper include:

-      not being included under the scientific topics cultivated by the Journal;

-      not using the proposed citation system;

-      not sending the paper in the required format.

Criteria for accepting a paper include:

-      conformity to the objectives of the section in which they are offered;

-      the paper is original, or at least offers a qualitative analysis proffering valuable information;

-      novelty, freshness and advances in the themes covered by the Journal;

-      coherence in the methodology;

-      a good formal presentation—i.e., good writing and text organisation:logical coherence and presentation.

 

 

4. Publication Charges

There are no submission fees, publication fees or page charges for this Journal.

Figures will be reproduced in colour in your article free of charge. It is understood that authors will need to obtain the necessary permission to reproduce third-party material (see next section.)

 

5. Using Third-Party Material

Authors must obtain the necessary permission to reuse third-party material in their article. The use of brief extracts of text and some other types of material is usually permitted, on a limited basis, for the purposes of criticism and review without securing formal permission. However, if authors wish to include any material in their published work for which they do not hold copyright, and which is not covered by this informal agreement, they will need to obtain written permission from the copyright owner prior to submission.

 

6. Proof Reading

In due time the authors will be sent two sets of proofs; these should be corrected and returned within 25 calendar days overall.

 

7. Style Sheet

  1. Spacing and Punctuation

-       A single space (not two) should follow full-stops at the end of sentences.

-       Punctuation generally goes outside quotation marks, unless it is part of the quotation.

-       For short quotations use French quotation marks followed by a space (« … »); for quotations within single quotation marks within French quotation marks (« … ‘…’ … »). Long quotations should be presented as indented paragraphs, without quotation marks.

-       Place ellipses within square brackets when they indicate omitted text from a quotation ([...]); generally, avoid the use of ellipses at the beginning of a quotation or at the end.

-       Use the hyphen in compounds (e.g. ‘well-being’ and ‘advanced-level’; when the first of two or more words is used adjectively (e.g. ‘a tenth-century manuscript’); for names (e.g. ‘Irène Rosier-Catach’).

-       Use the en dash to indicate inclusive dates and numbers (i.e. ‘1244–1247’, ‘p. 37–59’), for places of publication and publishers (‘Harper & Row–Collins, New York–London 1972’), and to create a strong break in the structure of a sentence. In the last case, insert a space before and after the en dash (for all the languages).

  1. Spelling & Proper-names

-       For articles in English, use the Commonwealth and UK spelling (as given in the Oxford English Dictionary and its derivatives).

-       Place names: In the text, use the native form of the place-name, except cases where the English form is well known. For the place of publication in references, use the form given by the book that is quoted.

-       Proper names ending in ‘s’, ‘x’ or ‘z’ take an extra possessive (e.g., Averroes’s works). 

  1. Abbreviations

-       Use a full stop for abbreviations (e.g. Dr., St., eds.; vol., col., p., l.). 

-       MS and MSS for shelf-mark citations and references to manuscripts; otherwise the word ‘manuscript’ in full.

-       c.(not ca.); b. (born); d. (died); r.(ruled); fl.(flourished).

-       Do not use italics for cf., e.g., i.e., d., etc., viz., Ibid., Id., passim.

-       For giving the numbers of pages, columns, folios, etc., use ‘p.’, ‘col.’, ‘fol.’, etc. (not ‘pp.’, ‘cc.’, ‘ff.’).

  1. Dates & Time Periods

-       Centuries should always be spelt out in full (e.g. in the twelfth century; a thirteenth- century manuscript ).

-       For dates, use the format ‘12 March 2019’.

  1. Numbers

-       Use Arabic numerals for chapter numbers, journal numbers, series numbers, figure and plate numbers.

-       Use Roman numerals, for volume numbers, book numbers, and other major subdivisions of books.

-       For inclusive numbers falling within the same hundred you should include all the figures (e.g. 1933–1939’, not ‘1933–39’).

  1. References in Footnotes

Please provide: 

-       forenames for people cited – at least the first or principal name followed by initials, leaving a space between the initials (e.g. ‘Paul J. J. M. Bakker’);

-       publisher and place of publication;

-       series and series number.

Manuscripts

Quote the city and library name in full (e.g. Vatican City, Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana, Vat. barb. 513, fol. 1r–10v).

Monographs 

e.g. Anne Tihon [small caps]Le ‘Petit commentaire’ de Théon d’Alexandrie aux Tables faciles de Ptolémée: histoire du texte, édition critique, traduction, Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana, Città del Vaticano 1978 (Studi e testi, 282).

Journal articles

e.g. Eugenio Randi [small caps], « La vergine e il papa: potentia absolutaplenitudo potestatispapale nel XIV secolo »History of Political Thought, 5 (1984), p. 425–445. (space between the quotation marks and the text therein)

Book chapters

e.g. Olaf Pedersen [small caps], « The Theorica Planetarumand Its Progeny », in Graziella Federici Vescovini, Francesco Barocelli (eds.) [small caps], Filosofia, scienza e astrologia nel Trecento europeo: Biagio Pelacani Parmense, Il Poligrafo, Padova 1992 (Percorsi della scienza: storia, testi, problema, 2), p. 53–78.

Unpublished thesis

e.g. Victoria Morse [in small caps], « A Complex Terrain: Church, Society, and the Individual in the Works of Opicino de Canistris (1296–ca. 1354) », Ph.D. Diss., University of California 1996.

Links

e.g. <http://classics.mit.edu/Aristotle/physics.html> (Accessed June 2017).

Bible references

                  e.g. II Cor. 5:13–15; Is. 22:17.

Abbreviations 

-       If a reference is repeated in the next footnote: Ibid, p. … . For following references, use the surname of the author, followed by the abbreviated title (e.g. Tihon [small caps], Le ‘Petit commentaire’ de Théon d’Alexandrie, p. … ; Morse [small caps], « A Complex Terrain », p. …)

-       For repeated references, the author may use acronyms written in standard capitals (e.g. CCCM, PL, AL etc.). However, the first mention should be reported in full, followed by the abbreviation within square brackets (e.g. Abū al-Fidāʾ, al-Mukhtār fī Akhbār al-Bashar, in Michele Amari (ed.), Biblioteca arabo-sicula [= BAS // or henceforth, BAS], Loescher, Torino–Roma 1881).

  1. Transcription Convention

The authors must use the international transcription systems of non-Latin alphabets to fit the specific linguistic field of study.

 

These guidelines should be followed, as much as possible, also for contributions submitted in Italian, Spanish, French or German—otherwise, they should be adapted to the respective standard conventions.