Dr L. Kallet ; Tuesday 3 ; Examination Schools
These lectures will complete the lecture series for the fifth-century Greek History paper in Lit.Hum., CAAH and AMH.
They will include the following topics: Thucydides and the conceptualization of the Peloponnesian War; origins and causes; aims and strategies; the Athenian Empire during the war; politics, society and culture in Athens; religion and the war; Greeks in the West; stasis in Greek communities; Greece and Persia; the Spartan victory.
Dr C. V. Crowther ; Monday 11 Wks 1-4 ; Ioannou Centre
Dr S. Gartland; Monday 9 ; Examination Schools
Covering the period 403-356, the lectures will focus on the changing nature of the interaction between the Greek communities of the mainland and the Aegean as well as those further afield. There will be a particular focus on the struggle for predominance between Boiotia, Sparta, Athens and Persia.
1. The freedom of the Greeks
2. The Korinthian Wars
3. The peaceful Great King
4. The turbulent Aegean
5. Mainland hegemonies
6. The other Greeks
7. Imbalances of power
8. The Boiotian fourth century
These lectures are intended for those taking the paper 'The End of the Peloponnesian War to the Death of Philip II of Macedon: 403 BC to 336 BC' in the Final Honour Schools of Ancient and Modern History and Literae Humaniores, but all are welcome.
Dr S. Gartland; Tuesday 12 ; Examination Schools, except Weeks 7 & 8: Ioannou Centre
Covering the period 336-323, the lectures will broadly follow the campaigns of Alexander from his accession to his death.
1. Makedonian beginnings
2. Greece
3. Pella to the Kilikian Gates
4. Issos to Alexandria
5. Great King Alexander
6. Baktria
7. India
8. Death of an empire
These lectures are intended for those taking the paper 'Alexander the Great and his Early Successors' in the Final Honour Schools of Ancient and Modern History, Classical Archaeology and Ancient History, and Literae Humaniores, though all are welcome.
Mr R. J. Lane Fox ; Wednesday 5-6:15 Wks 3-8 ; New College
This series will consist of 8 lectures in total.
Dates and times of the 7th and 8th lectures TBA.
Dr B Dignas ; Thursday 12 ; Ioannou Centre
Dr J. Kroll; Wednesday 3-4:30 ; Ashmolean Museum: Heberden Coin Room
Essential for the CAAH paper on 'Greek and Roman Coins' and the M. Stud. and M.Phil. options in Greek Coinage/Greek Numismatics, but open to all with an interest in Greek history or coinage.
The lectures are planned to provide familiarity with the major coinages of the Greek world and their value as evidence for aspects of Greek economic, political, and artistic history. Time will be reserved at the end of each session for the handling some of the coins discussed.
Topics.
1. Monetary background and the beginning of coinage in electrum.
2. Emergence and spread of silver coinage.
3. Coinage in the Athenian Empire.
4. Coins and texts: the legal basis of Greek coinage systems.
5. Coins, society, and field archaeology: small change in silver and bronze.
6. Artistic coinages of Sicily.
7. Coinages of Northern Greece and the Kings of Macedon, Alexander I to Alexander III.
8. Monetary and design trends in Hellenistic Coinage.
Dr J.R.W. Prag ; Wednesday 9 Wks 5-8 ; Examination Schools
These four lectures will cover a number of thematic topics not directly addressed elsewhere but of direct relevance to the Roman history period papers and Cicero: Politics and Thought. Topics will include the army, the grain-supply, and publicani.
Dr A. Mullen; Tuesday 2 Wks 1, 3, 5, 7 ; Ioannou Centre
Class 1 will set out the preliminaries: what epigraphy is, why we should care, how to 'do' epigraphy, how to understand and search published texts etc. Class 2 will be a practical session on reading cursive Latin texts using examples from Vindolanda, Bath and Pompeii. Classes 3 and 4 demonstrate that epigraphy does much more than provide information for histoire événementielle, and can allow us, using a range of techniques from different fields (multilingualism studies, linguistic landscapes, multimodal analysis), to reconstruct multiple identities, linguistic and cultural contacts, communities and even the nature of settlements themselves. This class is designed for both undergraduates and graduates.
Dr C.T. Kuhn ; Monday 11 ; Examination Schools
These lectures should prove most directly relevant to 1st year Ancient and Modern Historians taking the Augustan Rome paper in Prelims and 1st year CAAH students for the 50 BC-AD50 paper, as well as those offering Roman History 46BC-AD54 in Greats or AMH finals, but all are welcome. The aim is to explore some major aspects of the politics, society and culture of Rome during the Augustan Age. Topics to be covered: Approaches to the Augustan Age; The Establishment of the Principate; Augustus and the Ordines: Senate, Equites and Populus; Social Legislation under Augustus; Augustan Foreign Policy; Augustus and the City of Rome; Augustus and the Divine; Augustus and the Patronage of Culture.
Prof. C. J. Howgego ; Friday 12 ; Ashmolean Museum, Heberden Coin Room
The lectures aim to combine a practical introduction to the coinage of the Roman Empire with a discussion of some of the historical topics which numismatic evidence illuminates. There will be an opportunity at the end of each lecture to examine a selection of relevant coins.
1-2. Monetary history from Augustus to Aurelian;
3. Coinage and politics under the Empire;
4. Roman provincial coinage: AD 69-297;
5. Supply and distribution;
6. Circulation and models of the monetary economy;
7-8. Monetary History AD 274-500:
reforms, inflation, and the break-up of the empire in the West.
Dr J.R.W. Prag ; Monday 10 Wks 5-8 ; Examination Schools
These four lectures will work through the epigraphic documents detailed in the document dossier for the Roman History 241-146 BC period paper (available on weblearn). The material is important for anyone studying this period, whether for Literae Humaniores or AMH. For those studying the LitHum version of the paper, these texts provide the material for the optional gobbet question in the Finals examination. Texts and translations of the documents will be provided.
Dr G Kantor ; Tuesday 10 Wks 2, 4, 6, 7 ; Examination Schools
Dr J.R.W. Prag ; Wednesday 9 Wks 1-4 ; Examination Schools
These four lectures will examine the main institutions and processes that underlie the political functioning of the Roman Republic. As such, these are intended to be of use to anyone studying any Roman history paper: although the focus will be on the political system of the Republican period, an understanding of this is no less important for the history of the early Empire.
Prof. M.D. Goodman ; Thursday 10 ; Oriental Institute
Prof. N. Purcell ; Friday 11 ; Examination Schools
The lectures take the form of a spiral tour through the Roman world, beginning in Gaul and Germany, and proceeding through provincial spaces to arrive eventually in Italy and at Rome. At the same time as the presentation of some of the large themes of the paper, such as the oppositions of universal and local, or of plural and unitary, the relationships of religiosity to structures of power, economic imperatives, mobility, environment, community and ethnicity, the aim is to present telling case-studies, mainly relatively unfamiliar ones, through specific archaeological, documentary or literary evidence. The series also aspires to emphasize important aspects of change through time in the history of religion from ca 50 BC to ca AD 330, and to help conceptualize the category Roman Religion itself.
The series is constructed around the FHS Lit. Hum Ancient History Option of the same name, and is intended as the core lecture-course for that paper, but it is also intended to be of use to those preparing for FHS Archaeology and Anthropology Paper II 'Cultural representations, beliefs and practices', and will therefore attempt to address both archaeological evidence and some relevant theoretical and comparative literature. Translations of all Greek and Latin will be provided.
It is hoped that the series will be of interest to all those studying the Roman Empire, including graduate students.
The materials for each lecture will be made available on WebLearn after it has been delivered.
Dr L. Bendall ; Wednesday 11-1 ; Institute of Archaeology, Seminar Room
This series offers a basic introduction to the Aegean Bronze Age scripts, with particular focus on Linear B and what it can tell us about Mycenaean society. The course is intended for undergraduates taking Homeric Archaeology, Bronze Age & Early Iron Age Aegean and Minoan Crete, graduate students taking Scripts as an examined option (and any other grads who would like to sit in), and anyone generally interested in the scripts. Knowledge of Greek is not required and there is no need to sign up - just come along.
Undergraduates (and graduates)
The undergraduate part of the course runs in Weeks 1-4. Graduates should also attend this section, where we will set out the basics of what you need to know to study Linear B. Topics are as follows:
1. Introduction (overview of the scripts; decipherment of Linear B; basics)
2. Running a polity and running a palace: administration and political geography
3. The Mycenaean economy
4. Religion and banqueting
Graduates
The course will continue for graduate students in Weeks 5-8. We will identify as a group topics we wish to explore further, and students doing the Scripts option will be expected to make presentations. Topics treated in previous years include:
- Mycenaean land tenure
- Linear B ideograms
- the Pylos furniture tablets
- Mycenaean sealing systems
- Mycenaean weaponry and chariots
At some point there will be a handling session at the Ashmolean Museum, which has the largest collection of Minoan artefacts (including Linear B tablets from Knossos), outside Crete. Date and time tba.
Dr L.G. Audley-Miller ; Tuesday 2 ; Ioannou Centre (Weeks 1-6); Examination Schools (Weeks 7-8)
Themes in Roman Art
These lectures address key themes in Roman Art. They are designed to complement the chronological overview given in Roman Art I, and the focus upon mosaics, wall painting and provincial material presented in the Roman Art III lectures. They will address the following concerns:
1. The 'Problem of Roman art'
2. Funerary Self-Representation in the Provinces
3. The Art of Ordinary Romans (freedmen, slaves and lots of others)
4. Artists, Workshops, and Clients
5. The so-called Minor Arts
6. Responses to Images (iconoclasm etc.)
7. The Art of Religion
8. Myth in Roman Contexts
Prof. A.I. Wilson ; Monday 2 ; Institute of Archaeology
Dr M. Stamatopoulou ; Monday 12 ; Examination Schools
Prof. R.R.R. Smith ; Wednesday, Friday 12 Wks 1-6 ; Ioannou Centre
Lectures will take place on Wednesdays of Weeks 1-6 at 12-1 pm and on Fridays of Weeks 1, 2, 4 and 5 at 12-1 pm.
**Please note that there will be no lecture on Friday of Weeks 3 or 6**
The lectures will look at: (1) the art and cities of the Hellenistic kingdoms at the height of their power in the third and second centuries BC - the Macedonian dynasties based in Alexandria, Antioch, and Pella; (2) the archaeology of the Macedonian interaction with local peoples in Asia and Egypt and with the old city-states that flourished within and beside the kingdoms; and (3) how the whole apparatus and technology of Hellenistic material and visual culture became available in Italy and Rome. The lectures will be as follows:
1. Kingship and Macedonia
2. World of the polis: Athens & Priene
3. Seleucid and Parthian Asia
4. Bactria and Ai Khanoum
5. Attalid Pergamon: royal acropolis
6. Attalid Pergamon: the Great Altar
7. Ptolemaic Egypt
8. Ptolemaic Alexandria
9. Delos to Italy
10. Hellenistic Rome
The lectures are essential for anyone taking (a) the CAAH finals course Rome, Italy, and the Hellenistic East, or (b) the new archaeological special subject Hellenistic Art and Archaeology in Greats, CML, and COS. It will be of direct relevance to those taking The Hellenistic World: Cultures and Societies subject in Ancient History, and of interest to anyone who wants to know about the rich and diverse visual culture that came after Classical Athens and informed that of Republican and Imperial Rome.
Dr J DeLaine ; Thursday 12 ; Examination Schools
Week 1: Introduction: nature and problems of Roman architecture, sources and documentation
Week 2: Vitruvius; Roman architects, builders and clients; the process of design
Week 3: Construction and building materials in Rome and Italy
Week 4: Republican temples and orders, Etruscan and Greek parallels
Week 5: Late Republican sanctuaries and civic centres (including concrete terracing, fora, basilicas)
Week 6: Theatres, amphitheatres, circuses
Week 7: Augustan marble revolution, regional traditions and variations in columnar architecture (esp. temples)
Week 8: Urban embellishments
Prof. I.S. Lemos ; Wednesday, Friday 2:30 Wks 1-5 ; Ioannou Centre
Dr L. Bendall ; Thursday 4 ; Institute of Archaeology, Seminar Room
Seminar Room, Institute of Archaeology
9. Linear B and the Mycenaean economy
10. Mycenaean religion
11. Mycenaeans in Anatolia and the archaeology of Troy
12. The ‘collapse’ of Mycenaean palace society
13. Life and death in a not-so-Dark Age: Xeropolis and Lefkandi
14. Old tales and new beginnings: Greeks and Phoenicians abroad
15. ‘State’ formation once again: moving towards the polis
16. Who owns the past? Heritage, archaeology, and Aegean Prehistory
Dr A. Benaissa ; Wednesday 11-1 Wks 1, 3, 5, 7 ; Ioannou Centre
Dr L. Bendall ; Wednesday 11-1 ; Institute of Archaeology, Seminar Room
This series offers a basic introduction to the Aegean Bronze Age scripts, with particular focus on Linear B and what it can tell us about Mycenaean society. The course is intended for undergraduates taking Homeric Archaeology, Bronze Age & Early Iron Age Aegean and Minoan Crete, graduate students taking Scripts as an examined option (and any other grads who would like to sit in), and anyone generally interested in the scripts. Knowledge of Greek is not required and there is no need to sign up - just come along.
Undergraduates (and graduates)
The undergraduate part of the course runs in Weeks 1-4. Graduates should also attend this section, where we will set out the basics of what you need to know to study Linear B. Topics are as follows:
1. Introduction (overview of the scripts; decipherment of Linear B; basics)
2. Running a polity and running a palace: administration and political geography
3. The Mycenaean economy
4. Religion and banqueting
Graduates
The course will continue for graduate students in Weeks 5-8. We will identify as a group topics we wish to explore further, and students doing the Scripts option will be expected to make presentations. Topics treated in previous years include:
- Mycenaean land tenure
- Linear B ideograms
- the Pylos furniture tablets
- Mycenaean sealing systems
- Mycenaean weaponry and chariots
At some point there will be a handling session at the Ashmolean Museum, which has the largest collection of Minoan artefacts (including Linear B tablets from Knossos), outside Crete. Date and time tba.
Mr E. Proudfoot, Ms N. Sheldrick, Miss T. Chezum; Friday 3 Wks 2-5, 7-8 Friday 11 Wk 6 ; Institute of Archaeology, Lecture Room
Week 1: No Lecture
Week 2: Stephen Smith (Royal Holloway) "Sacred by Design? Double-Rounded Moulding on Roman Altars and Podia"
Week 3: Niccolò Mugnai (Leicester) "At the edge of the Roman world: architecture and decoration at Sala (Chellah, Rabat - Morocco)"
Week 4: Amanda Sharp (Oxford) TBA
Week 5: David Scahill (Bath) TBA
Week 6: Ben Russell (KCL) "Sub-elite marble use and re-use at Pompeii and Herculaneum: the evidence from the bars" (**Please note different time and place**)
Week 7: Dirk Booms (British Museum) TBA
Week 8: Stefano Camporeale (Ecole Normale Supérieure, Paris) " 'Opus Africanum': problems of origin, diffusion and uses in the western Mediterranean"
Dr C.T. Kuhn ; Tuesday 5 ; Ioannou Centre
Week 1 (15 January): Alan Bowman: 'The State and the Economy in the High Empire'
Week 2 (22 January): Olivier Hekster: 'Adoptive Ancestry? Imperial Representations under the Antonines'
Week 3 (29 January): Christopher Howgego and Volker Heuchert: 'Roman Provincial Coinage in the Antonine Period'
Week 4 (5 February): Martin Goodman: 'Jews in the Antonine Age'
Week 5 (12 February): Tim Whitmarsh: 'Periegesis and the Art of Cultural Memory in the Antonine Empire'
Week 6 (19 February): Bert Smith: 'The Greek East under Rome: Some Monuments'
Week 7 (26 February): Barbara Levick: 'How did the Antonines become a Dynasty?'
[Week 8: Vernant Memorial Lecture]
Prof. N. Purcell and others; Tuesday 2 Wks 2, 4, 6 Tuesday 3 Wk 7 ; Ioannou Centre
Week 2 (22nd January)
Dr Jas' Elsner, Images
Week 4 (5th February)
Professor Rosalind Thomas, Literacy
Week 6 (19th February)
Dr Georgy Kantor, Law
Week 7 (26th February) **3 pm**
Dr Amin Benaissa, Papyrology
Dr P Niewöhner ; Tuesday 9-11 ; Institute of Archaeology
Dr I.T. Toth ; Tuesday 2-3:30 ; Ioannou Centre
Prof. R.R.R. Smith, Dr M. Stamatopoulou ; Monday 5 ; Ioannou Centre
Week 1 (14 January): Messene: Its Classical, Hellenistic and Roman faces
Petros Themelis (Athens)
Week 2 (21 January): Aï Khanoum: The spatial organization of a Greek city in ancient Afghanistan
Laurianne Sève-Martinez (Lille)
Week 3 (28 January): Pella: capital of Alexander the Great. Its commercial and administrative centre
Ioannis Akamatis (Thessaloniki)
Week 4 (4 February): Delos: The urban fabric of late Hellenistic Delos and the integration of economic activities in the domestic sphere
Mantha Zarmakoupi (Washington DC)
Week 5 (11 February): Karasis: A fortified residence in Cilicia
Adolf Hoffmann (Istanbul)
Week 6 (18 February): Balboura: a Pisidian foundation in the highlands of 'North Lycian' Kabalia
Jim Coulton (Athens)
Week 7 (25 February): Alexandria: How Egyptian was Alexandria? Recent finds and discussions
Marianne Bergmann (Berlin)
Week 8 (4 March): Aphrodisias: Three Bouleuteria
Chris Hallett (Berkeley)
Organisers: R.R.R. Smith & Maria Stamatopoulou
Dr A. Benaissa ; Wednesday 11-1 Wks 1, 3, 5, 7 ; Ioannou Centre
Dr C. V. Crowther, Prof. R.C.T. Parker, Dr J.R.W. Prag ; Monday 1 Wks 2-6, 8 ; Ioannou Centre
Week 4 (Monday 4 February): Abigail Graham, 'Face Value: Assessing the role of Space and Decoration in Monumental Inscriptions' (provisional title)
Week 5 (Monday 11 February): Philomen Probert, 'Some relative clauses in archaic Greek inscriptions'
Week 8 (Monday 4 March): Ersin Hussein, 'Being Roman in Cyprus: the monuments of Italian businessmen' (provisional title)
Miss A C H Gartrell, Mr T Russell ; Thursday 5-6:30 ; Ioannou Centre
Prof. R.C.T. Parker ; Monday 2:15-3:45 Wks 1, 3, 5 Monday 5 Wk 7 ; Ioannou Centre
Ms V Riedemann Mr N. West, Ms A. Kasseri; Thursday 1 Wks 2, 4, 6, 8 ; Institute of Archaeology, Lecture Room
Prof. M.D. Goodman ; Tuesday 2:30-4 ; Oriental Institute
Week 1 (15 January): Tessa Rajak (Somerville) and Martin Goodman, 'The reception of Josephus to 1750'
Week 2 (22 January): QUMRAN FORUM : Joan Taylor (King's College London), 'The Essenes, the Scrolls, and the Dead Sea' (chaired by Geza Vermes (Director of the Qumran Forum))
Week 3 (29 January): James Kugel (Bar-Ilan University and Harvard University), 'The book of Jubilees and ancient biblical interpretation'
Week 4 (5 February): Michael Avioz (Bar-Ilan University), 'Josephus' interpretation of the Book of Samuel'
Week 5 (12 February): Jang S. Ryu (University), 'Philo's discourses of knowledge between Alexandria and Rome'
Week 6 (19 February): Laliv Clenman (Leo Baeck College and King's College London) , 'The Palestinian Talmud and Pinchas the Zealot'
Week 7 (26 February): Arye Edrei (Tel-Aviv University), 'A split diaspora?'
Week 8 (5 March): George Carras (Washington and Lee University), 'Torah observance in diaspora Judaism: Josephus, Philo and Pseudo-Phocylides'
Dr M. Mango, Dr P Niewöhner ; Thursday 11-12:30 Wks 2-8 ; St John's College, New Seminar Room
Week 2 (24 January): PD Dr David Knipp (Freiburg)
Some mosaic compositions at the Chora and the peristyle floor in the Great Palace of the Byzantine emperors
Week 3 (31 January): Dr Nikolaos Karydis (Kent)
The Church of St Mary at Ephesos revisited: architectural transformations from Late Antiquity to the Byzantine period
Week 4 (7 February): Dr Pamela Armstrong (Wolfson)
Byzantine ceramics and ceramic production: current knowledge and a way forward
Week 5 (14 February): Dr Linda Hulin (Oxford Centre for Maritime Archaeology)
Farming the margins in eastern Libya: the relation between settled and mobile populations
Week 6 (21 February): Dr Jacques Mercier (Paris)
The rediscovery of the Garima Gospels
Week 7 (28 February): Dr Marlia Mango (St John’s)
Responding to Byzantine environments: then and now
Week 8 (7 March): Alex Johnson (Oxford)
Geophysical prospecting, a Byzantine perspective.
Convenors: Dr Marlia Mango (St. John's) and Dr Philipp Niewöhner (Brasenose)
Prof. M Lauxtermann, Dr M. Whittow ; Wednesday 5 ; Ioannou Centre
Week 1 (16th January): David Gwynn (Royal Holloway)
"'If you enquire whether the bath is ready, the answer is that the Son was made out of nothing': Doctrinal Controversies and the Late Antique Historian."
Week 2 (23rd January): David Knipp (University of Freiburg)
"S. Maria Antiqua (Rome). The Pre-existing building and its last secular phase."
Week 3 (30th January): Aglae Pizzone (University of Durham)
"Readerships and readerly pleasure in Eustathios' Homeric Commentaries."
Week 4 (6th February): Ida Toth (Wolfson)
"The Making of the Byzantine Book of the Philosopher Syntipas."
Week 5 (13th February): Victor Walser (Kommission für Alte Geschichte und Epigraphik, Munich)
"Servants of God, Heretics, and Musicians. New Inscriptions from Germia in Central Anatolia."
Week 6 (20th February): Catherine Jolivet-Levy (Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes, Paris)
"Byzantine Monumental painting and its audience: Cappadocian case-studies."
Week 7 (27th February): Daniel Reynolds (University of Birmingham)
"Christian iconoclasm in Umayyad Palestine: social and economic perspectives."
Week 8 (6th March): Philipp Niewöhner (Brasenose)
"The Porphyry Tetrarchs at Venice, the Last Obelisk of Antiquity, and the first Monument of Theodosius I at Constantinople."
Dr N.B. McLynn ; Wednesday 9:30-11 ; Corpus Christi College
Dr A. D. Kelly, Dr J.R.W. Prag ; Friday 5:30 Wks 2, 4, 6 ; Balliol College, Lecture Room 23
Week 2 (Friday 25 January): Dr Antonio Naco del Hoyo (Barcelona): 'Intelligence and politics in Mithridates VI's time'
Week 4 (Friday 8 February): Prof Adam Ziolkowski (Warsaw): 'The gates of Pre-Servian Rome and the territorial expansion of the Archaic City'
Week 6 (Friday 22 February): Dr Kostas Vlassopoulos (Nottingham): 'Epigraphies of Slavery'
All are welcome, and wine and soft drinks will be served. Those wishing to dine with the speaker afterwards should contact the secretary (adrian.kelly@balliol.ox.ac.uk) by 5.00 pm Thursday the evening before the paper.
Miss A.-S. Diener, Miss E. Karouzou, Miss A. Kasseri; Tuesday 1 Wks 2, 4, 6, 8 ; Institute of Archaeology, Lecture Room
Prof. N. Purcell ; Monday 2-3:30 Wks 2, 4, 6, 8 ; Ioannou Centre
Dr N.B. McLynn , Dr C. Leyser; Thursday 5 ; Corpus Christi College
Ms R Hesse, Ms E Rowan, Prof. A.I. Wilson ; Wednesday 1 ; Institute of Archaeology, Lecture Room
Week 1 (16 January): Rachel Hesse (University of Oxford): 'Understanding Roman Sacrificial Practice: The Faunal Remains from the Temple at Omrit, Israel'
Week 2 (23 January): Dr Ergün Lafli (Dokuz Eylul University, Izmir, Turkey): 'Recent Research on Roman Paphlagonia (North-Central Turkey)'
Week 3 (30 January): Professor Andrew Wilson (University of Oxford): 'Nymphs in a palm grove: water and leisure in the South Agora at Aphrodisias'
Week 4 (6 February): Dr Alessandro Launaro (University of Cambridge): 'Seeing the unseen: The case of Interamna Lirenas and its territory (Southern Lazio, Italy)'
Week 5 (13 February): Dr Hilary Cool (Barbican Associates): 'Insula VI.1 Pompeii and the Augustan Consumer Boom'
Week 6 (20 February): Carmela Franco (University of Oxford): 'Roman Sicilian amphorae in the Western Mediterranean (I-VI AD): an economic analysis in the light of new data'
Week 7 (27 February): Dr Dimitrios Christodoulou (11th Ephorate of Prehistoric and Classical Antiquities, Chalcis, Greece): 'Deifying Diocletian and Galerius: Salonica - Split - Gamzigrad - Šarkamen'
Week 8 (6 March): Professor Jean-Pierre Brun (Collège de France, Paris): 'Perfume making at Delos'
Data last updated 23 January 2013 , 02:07 PM.
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Classics at Oxford, Faculty of Classics. Webmaster.
Ioannou Centre for Classical and Byzantine Studies, 66 St Giles', Oxford, OX1 3LU.