Hermes (classical philology journal) explained

Hermes
Language:German, English, French, Italian
Discipline:Classical philology
Editor:
Publisher:Franz Steiner Verlag
History:1866–present
Frequency:Quarterly
Issn:0018-0777
Eissn:2365-3116
Website:https://www.steiner-verlag.de/brand/Hermes
Link1:https://www.jstor.org/journal/hermes
Link1-Name:Online archive (JSTOR)
Italic Title:yes
Abbreviation:Hermes

Hermes (full title: German: '''Hermes: Zeitschrift für classische Philologie'''; Hermes: Bulletin for Classical Philology) is a German periodical specialising in classical studies. Originally published by the Berlin publisher Weidmann, it is now published by Franz Steiner Verlag.

Its founding in 1866 was led by the ancient historian Theodor Mommsen, who co-founded the publication with Adolf Kirchhoff and Rudolf Hercher. Its first editor, from 1866 until 1881, was the philologist Emil Hübner: most of its early contributors, including Hübner, were pupils of the Plautine scholar Friedrich Wilhelm Ritschl. As of 2024, it is edited by Hans Beck, Martin Hose and Claudia Schindler.

On its release, the German scholar Wilhelm Wagner praised Hermes as a worthy rival to the German: [[Rheinisches Museum für Philologie]], the oldest and then the dominant classical journal in the German-speaking world. Hermes is listed by Scopus, where it has a CiteScore of 0.2.

External links