
Join us on Zoom on Thursday, March 3 at 6 pm for a lecture by Dr. Vassiliki Panoussi (Professor of Classical Studies, College of William & Mary): “The Image of Africa in Early Modern Vergil Commentaries.” Click here to register!
23 Wednesday Feb 2022
Posted in lectures

Join us on Zoom on Thursday, March 3 at 6 pm for a lecture by Dr. Vassiliki Panoussi (Professor of Classical Studies, College of William & Mary): “The Image of Africa in Early Modern Vergil Commentaries.” Click here to register!
28 Friday Jan 2022
Posted in lectures
Tags

Please join us on Zoom on Thursday, February 10 at 6 pm EST for a lecture by Dr. Melinda Yang, Assistant Professor of Biology at the University of Richmond: “Using ancient DNA to study human history – perspectives on East Asia.”
02 Tuesday Nov 2021
Posted in lectures

On Thursday, November 11 at 6 pm, Dr. Carrie Atkins (University of Toronto, Mississauga) will present a webinar lecture entitled “Religious Ritual On Board the Greco-Roman Ship.” Please join us!
Click here to register for the Zoom webinar
Abstract: For Greco-Roman sailors or passengers aboard a ship, aspects of daily life occurred within a ship’s physical boundaries while at sea. These activities were related not only to sailing and trading, but also to eating, sleeping, and performing rituals. The material remnants of these ritual activities have been little studied, yet represent key evidence in understanding the impact of mobility on ritual practices aboard the Greco-Roman ship. In this lecture, I discuss archaeological evidence for potential ritual objects from shipwrecks in the Mediterranean alongside textual and iconographic depictions of these rituals. Not all ritual objects found in shipwrecks provide evidence for shipboard ritual but instead were likely transported as cargo. For some multifunctional objects that had a potential use both in religious ritual or for general activities, I suggest these objects could construct temporary sacred spaces aboard the ship when employed at poignant times in the voyage. These rituals, however, were not prescriptive nor ubiquitous but instead were chosen by individuals, shaped by cross-cultural connectivity and mobility.
08 Friday Oct 2021
Posted in Uncategorized
All will be held on Thursdays at 6pm. The two lectures in the national AIA lecture program (Nov. and April) will be Zoom webinars. We will decide about the format of the others in the spring.
November 11 – Carrie Atkins (University of Toronto), “Religious Ritual on board the Greco-Roman Ship”
February 10 – Melinda Yang (University of Richmond), “Using ancient DNA to study human history – perspectives on East Asia”
March 3 – Vassiliki Panoussi (William & Mary), “The Image of Africa in Early Modern Vergil Commentaries”
April 14 – Leslie Reeder-Myers (Temple University), “Coastal Heritage and Climate Change—A Monumental Challenge to Preserve the Past in the 21st Century”
May 12 – Spring Member Event with Jack Gary, Director of Archaeology, Colonial Williamsburg
28 Tuesday Sep 2021
Posted in Uncategorized

Join us on Zoom on Thursday, October 7 at 6 pm: Professor Marcello Canuto (Tulane University) will present exciting recent discoveries made through LiDAR survey in Guatemala: “Taking the High Ground: Lowland Maya Settlement Patterns as Seen through LiDAR”
16 Monday Aug 2021
Posted in lectures
Mark your calendars for our fall lectures, which will again be held as Zoom webinars, with the links posted here about a week before each lecture:
Thursday, October 7, 6 pm: Marcello Canuto (Tulane University), “Taking the High Ground: Lowland Maya Settlement Patterns as Seen through LiDAR“
Thursday, November 11, 6 pm: Carrie Atkins (University of Toronto), “Religious Ritual on board the Greco-Roman Ship”
04 Tuesday May 2021
Posted in annual spring event, lectures

This year our May event will be held in partnership with the Charlottesville Society of the AIA: a book talk and Q&A with UVa’s Fiona Greenland (Sociology & Anthropology), author of Ruling Culture: Art Police, Tomb Raiders, and the Rise of Cultural Power in Italy (University of Chicago Press, 2021). This new book situates the emergence of national symbols and icons in Italy’s longer historical entanglements of cultural elites, state officials, and tombaroli (‘tomb robbers’). The event will take place over Zoom on Thursday, May 13 at 6 pm EDT. Click here to register!
11 Sunday Apr 2021
Posted in annual spring event

This week’s lecture on ancient DNA by Dr. Melinda Yang (UR Dept. of Biology) has been postponed to next year. Our next event will be on May 13, co-sponsored with the Charlottesville AIA: a book talk and Q&A with Dr. Fiona Greenland (UVA Dept. of Sociology), author of the new book Ruling Culture: Art Police, Tomb Raiders, and the Rise of Cultural Power in Italy. See the registration link for more details!
12 Friday Mar 2021
Posted in Uncategorized

Please join us for a webinar lecture by Jeremy Pope, Associate Professor of History at the College of William and Mary: “Nubian Queen: How an Ancient African Kingdom Became a Symbol of Feminine Power and Vice Versa”
Thursday, March 18, 6:00 pm
Click here to register for the Zoom webinar
Co-sponsored by the University of Richmond Department of Classical Studies
02 Tuesday Feb 2021
Posted in lectures

Join us on Thursday, February 11 at 6 pm for a webinar presentation of the AIA’s Ferdinando and Sarah Cinelli Lecture in Etruscan and Italic Archaeology. Hilary Becker, Assistant Professor of Classics at Binghamton University, will present “The Etruscan helmets from Vetulonia: new evidence for the life of an Etruscan soldier.”
Click here to register for the Zoom webinar
Co-sponsored by the University of Richmond Department of Classical Studies