A Crowdsourced Database of Women and Non-Binary Persons Doing Ancient History

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Displaying 1 - 25 of 531

 Name Position Affiliation Research Interests Websites
Susan HolmanJohn R. Eckrich Chair and Professor, Religion and the Healing ArtsValparaiso University

intersections of religion and health in history, cross-generational voices, and material culture

https://www.valpo.edu/christ-college/susan-holman/; https://ptochotrophia.wordpress.com/
Kimberly Bauser McBrienVisiting Assistant ProfessorTrinity University

Early Christian literature, New Testament, noncanonical literature, Gospels, historical Jesus, social memory, Apocryphon of James, parody

Mary McHughProfessor of ClassicsGustavus 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

Marja VierrosAssociate ProfessorUniversity of Helsinki

Greek language and linguistics, Greek papyri, Greco-Roman Egypt, multilingualism, Digital Classics

Christina VidebechPhD candidateUniversity of Bergen

Archaeology, Rome, Late Antiquity

Ulla RajalaResearcherStockholm University

Archaeology, epigraphy, funerary archaeology, settlement archaeology, GIS, network analysis, survey

Carolyn La RoccoPhD Student, TutorUniversity of St Andrews

Roman archaeology, Visigothic archaeology, ‘Christianisation’, material culture of identity

Laura Carlson HaslerAssistant Professor of Religious Studies and Jewish StudiesIndiana University

Texts, Textuality, and Historiography in Jewish Antiquity, History of the Book, Gender and Sexuality in Antiquity, American Biblical Interpretation

https://religiousstudies.indiana.edu/about/faculty/hasler-laura.html
Megan NutzmanAssistant ProfessorOld Dominion University

Roman and late antique Palestine, magic, Greek and Roman religion

Jacqueline VayntrubAssociate Professor of Hebrew BibleYale University

Hebrew Bible; Ancient Near East; Early Jewish Literature; Wisdom Literature; Poetry; Aesthetics; Poetics; Philology; Orality; Voice Studies; Prophecy; Political Theology; Epigraphy; Monumentality; History of the Self; History of Emotions; Medical Anthropology

https://hcommons.org/members/vayntrub; https://divinity.yale.edu/faculty-and-research/yds-faculty/jacqueline-vayntrub; https://renewedphilology.yale.edu/
Jane SancinitoAssistant ProfessorUniversity of Massachusetts Lowell

Roman social history, Roman economic history, ancient merchants, ancient numismatics

Olivia Stewart LesterAssistant Professor of New Testament and Early ChristianityLoyola University Chicago

New Testament, Hellenistic Judaism, Ancient Mediterranean Religion, Gender, Prophecy and Divination

Meghan HenningAssociate ProfessorUniversity of Dayton

afterlife, hell, disability, gender, and healthcare in the ancient world

https://udayton.edu/directory/artssciences/religiousstudies/henning_meghan.php
Catharine EdwardsProfessor of Classics and Ancient HistoryBirkbeck College, University of London

My work focuses on the cultural history of the Roman world, particularly Rome in the late republic and early principate. The complex literary strategies of Roman texts (I have worked particularly on Seneca, Ovid and more recently Cicero) are an intrinsic part of that world’s fabric. I am interested in the ways in which conceptions of gender and other aspects of personal and social identity operate through, and are inflected by, language.

Another important strand in my research has been the reception of antiquity in later centuries, particularly the C19th, and how receptions of antiquity are implicated in strategies of cultural formation and self-construction (I have published on the reception of Rome in Gibbon, in Mme de Stael, T.B.Macaulay, Nathaniel Hawthorne and in C19th guidebooks, particularly the work of Augustus Hare).

https://www.bbk.ac.uk/our-staff/profile/8003806/catharine-edwards
Marlena WhitingResearcherUniversity of Mainz

Late Antique/Byzantine Near East; archaeology; social history; architecture of the 6th c. E Mediterranean,
epigraphy, graffiti, pilgrimage, travel, road networks, monasticism, women, lived religion.

Ersin HusseinLecturer in Ancient HistorySwansea University

Local identity formation in the Roman provinces, especially the culture and society of Roman Cyprus on the basis of material culture and inscriptions. Also the cultural value of metals.

Andrea BrockLeverhulme Early Career FellowUniversity of St Andrews

I am an environmental archaeologist with particular expertise in historical ecology and palaeolandscape reconstruction. My current work integrates the literary record on early Rome with geoarchaeological evidence, in order to produce an environmental and topographical reconstruction of Rome’s river valley. I have been involved in several archaeological excavations and surveys, most recently in Rome. As director of the Forum Boarium Project, I have conducted a coring survey of the city’s original river harbour and harbour sanctuary. Among other findings, my research is revealing new insights on the role of environmental stress—in particular frequent flooding and rapid sedimentation in the river valley—on Rome’s urbanization process, as well as the scale of landscape change that occurred alongside urban development.

I also serve as Director of the Centre for Ancient Environmental Studies: https://caes.wp.st-andrews.ac.uk/

Rebecca SweetmanProfessor of Ancient History and ArchaeologyUniversity of St Andrews

Greek and Roman Archaeology. Roman and Late Antique Crete and the Peloponnese (especially Sparta). Art and Architecture including; Roman and Late Antique mosaics and architecture of Crete and Greece. Christianization of the Peloponnese. Religious architecture. The Cycladic islands in the Roman and Late Antique periods. Network analysis.

Maureen CarrollChair in Roman ArchaeologyUniversity of York

Maureen is a Roman archaeologist whose key research interests are Roman burial practices, funerary commemoration, and Roman childhood and family studies. She headed up the British team participating in a large EU-funded multi-national project (DressID) on Roman textiles and clothing, her focus being on dress and identity in funerary portraits on the Rhine and Danube frontiers. A further area of interest is the topic of Roman garden archaeology, on which she has published extensively. More recently, Maureen has studied the role of women in votive religion in early Roman Italy.

She has directed excavations in Germany, Italy, Tunisia, and Britain. Her current fieldwork project, funded by the British Academy/Leverhulme Trust, the Roman Society, the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC), and the Rust Family Foundation, is the exploration of a Roman rural estate in imperial possession from the first to the third century A.D. at Vagnari in Puglia (Italy).

Eleri CousinsLecturer in Roman HistoryUniversity of Lancaster

I work on the role played by ritual and religion (broadly defined!) in the construction of provincial society and identity in the Roman Empire, in particular Britain, Gaul, and Germany. My research sits at the intersection of ancient history and archaeology, and I am especially interested in the connections between ritual and landscape in the Roman world. My previous work focused on the Roman sanctuary at Bath and my first book, The Sanctuary at Bath in the Roman Empire, was published by Cambridge University Press in January 2020. My current major research project explores religious practices in the Alps during the Roman period. In this work, I combine an emphasis on the lived experience of ancient religion with archaeological approaches to landscape to explore how Alpine populations used, and were affected by, the mountains in their engagement with the divine. In addition to this project, I also have active research interests in the dynamics of religion and society on Hadrian’s Wall, in Roman provincial art, and in 18th and 19th century antiquarian culture in Britain.

Erin WalshAssistant Professor of New Testament and Early Christian LiteratureThe University of Chicago Divinity School

New Testament Studies; Early Christianity; Late Antiquity and Early Byzantium; biblical interpretation and reception history; asceticism; Syriac language and literature; poetry; gender and sexuality; Christianity and Judaism in Late Antiquity

https://divinity.uchicago.edu/directory/erin-galgay-walsh
Silvia OrlandiAssociate ProfessorSapienza University of Rome

Latin Epigraphy
Roman History
History of Scholarship

Cornelia HornProfessorMartin-Luther-University Halle-Wittenberg

women in the early Church, children in late ancient Christianity, parental roles, family, late antiquity, asceticism, monasticism, hagiography, apocrypha, Syriac language and literature, Armenian language and literature, Georgian language and literature, Coptic, Ethiopic, Christian Arabic, women in the Christian Orient, Jesus and Mary in early Islamic traditions, transmission and reception history of apocryphal traditions in connection with Judaism and early Islam, intersections of hagiography and historiography, Palestine in late antiquity,

https://halle.academia.edu/CorneliaHorn
Nathalie BarrandonProfessorUniversité de Reims Champagne Ardenne

Roman History, War History, Romanization, Republic, Administration of Empire, Hispania

www.nathaliebarrandon.fr
Ronin Margueritepermanent research fellowCNRS 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

 Name Position Affiliation Research Interests Websites

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