Bibliography

Alex (Alexandra)
Mullen
s. xx–xxi

5 publications between 2007 and 2018 indexed
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2018

work
Mullen, Alex, and Coline Ruiz Darasse, Gaulish: language, writing, epigraphy, AELAW, 5, Zaragoza: Prensas de la Universidad de Zaragoza, 2018.

2013

work
Mullen, Alex, Southern Gaul and the Mediterranean: multilingualism and multiple identities in the Iron Age and Roman periods, Cambridge Classical Studies, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2013. xix + 455 pp.

2012

work
Mullen, Alex, and Patrick James [eds.], Multilingualism in the Graeco-Roman worlds, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2012.

2007

article
Russell, Paul, and Alex Mullen, A database of the Celtic personal names of Roman Britain (CPNRB), Online: Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse and Celtic, University of Cambridge, 2007–present. URL: <https://www.asnc.cam.ac.uk/personalnames/>. 
abstract:
This database collects all the personal names from Roman Britain which are thought to contain Celtic elements. While personal names from Gaul have received considerable attention over the years in works such as GPN and KGP, the huge increase in the number of names (from the finds in Bath and Vindolanda, together with the publication of RIB II) now makes it imperative that the data is available in a easily searchable format. It is hoped that this database will offer a useful and flexible tool by which the information provided by personal names from Roman Britain can be integrated into the scholarship both of Roman Britain and of name-studies more generally (for a discussion based on the epigraphic data published up to and including 2005, see Mullen 2007a). If funding were available, this database might be a prototype for a much-needed database of all personal names attested from Roman Britain.
abstract:
This database collects all the personal names from Roman Britain which are thought to contain Celtic elements. While personal names from Gaul have received considerable attention over the years in works such as GPN and KGP, the huge increase in the number of names (from the finds in Bath and Vindolanda, together with the publication of RIB II) now makes it imperative that the data is available in a easily searchable format. It is hoped that this database will offer a useful and flexible tool by which the information provided by personal names from Roman Britain can be integrated into the scholarship both of Roman Britain and of name-studies more generally (for a discussion based on the epigraphic data published up to and including 2005, see Mullen 2007a). If funding were available, this database might be a prototype for a much-needed database of all personal names attested from Roman Britain.
article
Mullen, Alex, “Evidence for written Celtic from Roman Britain: a linguistic analysis of Tabellae Sulis 14 and 18”, Studia Celtica 41 (2007): 31–45.