Name | Position | Affiliation | Research Interests | Websites |
---|---|---|---|---|
Katie Stringer Clary | Assistant Professor | Coastal Carolina University | public history, museums, accessibility, access, inclusion, human remains, cultural heritage, museum history, museum ethics, south carolina, ancient world, egypt, | |
Anisha Saxena | Assistant Professor | Onondaga Community College | India, South Asia, Gender, Violence, Art History, Sacred Geography, Early Medieval Temples, Jainism, contested sacred spaces in India, specifically in Kutch, Udaipur, and Jodhpur. | |
Helen Roche | Assistant Professor | Durham University | Germany, Austria, Italy, National Socialism, fascism, Nazi Germany, Third Reich, elite schools, oral history, education history, classical reception, philhellenism, Napola, Prussia, Germany, Austria, Italy, Sparta, German history from the nineteenth century onwards; National Socialism; Fascism, Austrian history during the inter-war period; comparative fascism studies, History of childhood and history of education, especially German elite education, Youth exchange during the twentieth century; Anglo-German relations, History and memory in post-war Germany, Classical reception in general, and German philhellenism in particular, Greco-German relations from the eighteenth century to the present, Humanistic education in Nazi Germany, Historical and historiographical work on elements of ancient Greek history. | |
María del Carmen Moreno Escobar | Lecturer | Durham University | Roman history, Roman archaeology, Mediterranean Sea, landscape archaeology, Spain, Italy, France, geographic information systems, Roman Empire, Roman republic, Iron Age, navigation, territory, settlement patterns, Iron Age Iberian Peninsula (Archaeology), Archaeological GIS, Spatial Analysis, Landscape Archaeology, Statistics, Spain (History), Archaeology of Roman Hispania, Spatial archaeology, Antequera (Archaeology), Archaeology of the Iberian Peninsula, Ancient Ports and Harbours. | |
Fiona Mitchell | Teaching Fellow | University of Birmingham | ancient Greece, ancient literature (Reading Antiquity) and iconography (Classical Mythology and Art), ancient Greek literature and myth, and their interaction with other cultures in the ancient Mediterranean and Near East. I am developing a project on the interactions between ancient Greek creation narratives and those found in ancient Indian sources. | |
Natalie Swain | Graduate Student | University of Bristol | Elegiac and Augustan Literature, trans-medial narratology, classics in comics and video games, comics narratology and semiotics, Roman sex and sexuality, classical reception studies | |
Candace Rice | Assistant Professor | Brown University | Mediterranean maritime trade and economic development during the Roman period, Mediterranean ports and harbours, Roman merchants and trading communities, and Roman villas (from pottery to mosaics). | |
Ronin Marguerite | permanent research fellow | CNRS Paris | Roman law - Roman history - legal history - environmental history - economic history - Irrigation – drainage – Rural production – rural economy - agriculture - natural resources – impérialism – suburbium – construction materials – environmental risks – urban risks – aqueducts – river transport – fishing – Justinian's Digeste | |
Elizabeth Pollard | Professor | San Diego State University | Witchcraft Accusation against Women in Imperial Rome; Comics & Classics; Mediterranean / Indian Ocean Interactions; Digital Humanities; World History | |
Jessica Tomkins | Visiting Assistant Professor of History | Oglethorpe University | Egyptology, nascent states, power | |
Alison Jeppesen-Wigelsworth (Jeppesen) | Interim Associate Dean, School of Arts and Sciences | Red Deer College | Research Interests | |
Tracene Harvey | Director/Curator, Museum of Antiquities | University of Saskatchewan | Art Coins, Roman Empresses Empresses in art Kings and rulers in numismatics Livia,--Empress, consort of Augustus, Emperor of Rome, Numismatics Portrait sculpture in numismatics Rome (Empire) Women in numismatics Women--Social conditions | |
Susan Treggiari | Emeritus Professor of Classics, Stanford University; Retired member of the Faculty of Classics, University of Oxford | Roman social history, especially the family; the Ciceronian age. | ||
Chantal Gabrielli | Temporary Lecturer in Latin Epigraphy | University of Florence | Economic and Social History of Rome | |
Errietta Bissa | Senior Lecturer | University of Wales Trinity Saint David | The Greek economy, particularly state intervention in trade. Universal historiography, particularly Diodoros. Sexuality and gender in the ancient world. Slavery in classical Athens. The Athenian epimeletai accounts. | |
Kristina Neumann | Assistant Professor of Roman and Digital History | University of Houston | Ancient Imperialism; Digital Humanities; Roman Politics and Systems; Numismatics; Pottery; Eastern Mediterranean; Antioch | |
Kristin Harper | Adjunct Professor | Missouri State University | Childhood Studies, Woman in Late Antique Rome, Late Antiquity, Epigraphic Habit, Late Antique Poetics | |
Ryleigh Adams | PhD Candidate | University of Tasmania | The Roman Republic, Roman imperialism, Roman provincial management, emotions in antiquity, numismatics, and Latin literature. | |
Kelly Murphy | Associate Professor | Central Michigan University | Hebrew Bible; Early Judaism; Gender; Economics; Monsters/Horror | |
Magdalena Diaz Araujo | Professor | Universidad Nacional de Cuyo / Universidad Nacional de La Rioja | Second Temple Judaism and Early Christianity, Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha, Apocalypticism and Mysticism, Gender Studies, Aesthetics | |
Christina Videbech | PhD candidate | University of Bergen | Archaeology, Rome, Late Antiquity | |
Marja Vierros | Associate Professor | University of Helsinki | Greek language and linguistics, Greek papyri, Greco-Roman Egypt, multilingualism, Digital Classics | |
Jill Harries | Professor Emerita | University of St Andrews | Late Antiquity, History of Roman Gaul, History of Christianity, History of Women in Antiquity, Roman legal culture and society | |
Mary McHugh | Professor of Classics | Gustavus Adolphus College | Roman world of 1st cent. C.E.; Roman imperial women, especially Livia and Agrippina the Elder and Agrippina the Younger; Tacitus; Food & Foodways; Ancient Philosophy, especially Plato; Muslim innovation and reception of Greco-Roman antiquity | |
Kimberly Bauser McBrien | Visiting Assistant Professor | Trinity University | Early Christian literature, New Testament, noncanonical literature, Gospels, historical Jesus, social memory, Apocryphon of James, parody | |
Name | Position | Affiliation | Research Interests | Websites |
October 12, 2017