News and Events
- Searching for the Goddess of Countless Names: Isis, Gender, and Ethnic Identity in Vergil and OvidLily Panoussi Thursday, April 18, 2024 5pm - Eaton Humanities (HUMN) 250 ABSTRACTThis presentation will focus on the depiction of
- Labor Unions and the "Fall" of RomeSarah E. Bond Wednesday, March 13, 2024 5pm - Eaton Humanities (HUMN) 250 ABSTRACTArresting a charioteer in the late Roman world was a perilous act. A large portion of the Roman
- Department of Classics Commencement CeremonyEaton Humanities 150Thursday May 9th, 202412-2 pmDownload the program here ProgramWelcomeProfessor Andy CainDepartment ChairPresentation of Undergraduate DegreesAssociate Professor
- Power of the Ancestors at Pylos, GreeceWednesday, February 21st at 7:15pmEaton Humanities #250 Free and open to the publicAbstract Tholos tomb near Palace at PylosOver the past few decades, archaeologists have assigned
- Rome’s Other Twins: Ovid’s Gemini in Fasti V.Rachel Dzugan The head of Roma on the front and the two Dioscuri riding horses on the back. Münzkabinett, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin. The legendary she-wolf suckles
- Kirk AmbroseIn fall 2023, Professor Kirk Ambrose was selected as a 2023-4 Distinguished Research Lecturer. This prestigious award, one of the highest honors bestowed on the CU «Ƶ faculty, recognizes
- Dimitri NakassisThe Department is thrilled to announce that Professor Dimitri Nakassis has been named a College Professor of Distinction, an honorific title awarded by CU’s College of Arts and Sciences that is “reserved for
- Interconnectivity and Local Responses: A View from the eastern Adriatic island of BračWednesday, January 24th at 7:15pmEaton Humanities #250 & Zoom (REGISTER HERE) Free and open to the public Abstract: Inhabitants of the
- “Art would get us through it”:* Plague and Poetry from Vergil’s Bees to Emily St. John Mandel’s Station ElevenFriday, January 19, 5:00pmEaton Humanities #250 Free and open to the publicDownload the program This event is sponsored
- Defining Beer in the Ancient WorldBy Travis RuppWednesday, November 29, 7:00pmEaton Humanities #250 & Zoom Free and open to the publicDownload the poster ABSTRACTThis lecture will be a deep dive into the academic debate over what