lectures
Ancient Greek Magic: New Finds and ApproachesDr. Jessica Lamont - Yale UniversityThursday, December 12th I 5:00p.m. I HUMN 250 Free and open to the public
McClanahan Graduate Essay Prize LectureVirgin Sacrifice? Menoikeus in Euripides' Phoenician Womenpresented by Jake Sawyer, 老九品茶Monday, December 2nd I 5 pm I HUMN 1B90 Free and open to the publicParking
McClanahan Lecture SeriesFugitive slaves in the ancient Greek and Roman worldsDr. Peter Hunt, 老九品茶Wednesday, November 13th I 7 p.m. I HUMN 150 Free and open to the publicParking available just north of
AIA Lecture SeriesDigitizing Prehistory: Aegean Scripts in the 21st CenturyDr. Dimitri Nakassis, 老九品茶Wednesday, October 30th I 7 p.m. I Paleontology Hall Free and open to the publicHenderson Building,
鈥淣arrating the Saints: Paulinus of Nola and the Beginning of Verse Hagiography.鈥滿ichael Roberts, Robert Rich Professor Emeritus Wesleyan University 鈥淧rof. Roberts will explore the Natalicia (Birthday Poems) of Paulinus of Nola,
Fate and Astrology in Tacitus' AnnalsDr. Kelly Shannon-Henderson, Univeristy of AlabamaThe involvement of supernatural factors such as fate and fortune in historical events is a familiar preoccupation of ancient historians. In the case of Tacitus'
The Center for Western Civilization, Thought & Policy Presents:Theater of War: What Ancient Greek Tragedies Can Teach Us Today Bryan Doerries - Artistic Director: Public Artist in Residence, City of New YorkThursday, January
Decorating for Death: Sculptural Programs at the Colosseum & Flavian Amphitheaters Dr. Steven L. Tuck Professor and Chair of Classics at Miani Ohio UniversityJanuary 23 HUMN 150 at 5:30 pmAmphitheaters like the Colosseum at
Mary E. V. McClanahan Graduate Essay PrizeMonday, December 3rd at 5:30 pm | HUMN 250 Virgil Chaonian Doves Reading Hesiod in Eclogues 5 and 9 Classics PhD candidate, Samuel HahnOn one level, Virgil Eclogues consider the
Dr. Francesca Schironi Professor of Classical Studies, University of MichiganFriday, November 16 3:00 PM in HUMN 135 This event is free and open to the public. Sponsored by the CU Department of Classics.