events
- Environmental Change in Ancient AnatoliaProfessor John M. MarstonWednesday, November 8th at 7:00pmEaton Humanities #250 & Zoom (REGISTER HERE) Free and open to the public ABSTRACTIdentifying how societies make decisions about agricultural
- Patronage and Clientelism in Archaic & Early Classical Greece: A HypothesisMonday, October 16, 5:00 p.m.Eaton Humanities Building, #125Speaker: Marek Weçowski, University of Warsaw Sponsored by CU «Ƶ's Center for
- Call for Papers The 2024 «Ƶ Classics Graduate Colloquium conference: Plague and Pandemic in the Ancient World Friday, 19th – Saturday 20th January, 2024 Keynote Address by HunterGardner (University of South Carolina)
- Phocion the Good and Philippe Pétain, Marshal of France: Parallel Lives?Professor Peter HuntThursday, April 20, 7:00 p.m.Hale Science Building Room 230 & Zoom (REGISTER HERE) Free and open to the publicDownload the poster
- Uncovering the City of the Baboon: New excavations at Hermopolis Magna, EgyptProfessor Yvona Trnka-AmrheinThursday, March 16, 7:00 p.m.Hale Science Building Room 230 & Zoom (REGISTER HERE) Free and open to the publicDownload the poster
- Imagining a Greek Home for an Egyptian Goddess: Time, Landscape, and Architecture in Greek Sanctuaries to Isis Professor Lindsay Mazurek Wednesday, January 25 at 7:00pm Hale Sciences 270 or via Zoom Free and Open to
- McClanahan Essay Prize LectureAthanasius Strikes Back: The Life of Antony as a Rebuttal of the Vita Apollonii Jacob Horton, «ƵThursday, January 26, 2023 | 5:00 p.m. | Eaton
- New Technologies and Architectural Insights on a 6th-century BCE Temple in SicilyProfessor Philip SapirsteinWednesday, November 30 at 7:00pm Paleontology Hall (CU Museum of Natural History) or via Zoom Free and Open to PublicREGISTER HERE
- Spartans on the Capitol: Recent Far-Right Appropriations of Spartan Militarism and Their Historical Roots Professor Stephen Hodskinson (University of Nottingham)Wednesday, October 26, 2022 | 6:00 p.m. | Eaton Humanities 250
- Friday, October 21 at 5:00pmEaton Humanities 135 or via Zoom Free and Open to PublicREGISTER HERE This event will highlight and celebrate the many critical interventions that Professor Joy King made over the course