Ronnie Ancona
Hunter College
Friday, March 29
4:30 pm
Carpenter Library B21
-Tea at 4:00 pm n the Quita Woodward Room-
A celebration of the work of Mark Castro, graduate student in History of Art, on the exhibition that has just opened at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, “Journeys to New Worlds: Spanish and Portuguese Colonial Art from the Roberta and Richard Huber Collection” (see http://www.philamuseum.org/exhibitions/777.html).
Mark will give a brief talk at 5 p.m. in Carpenter 21; we shall then repair upstairs to the Quita Woodward Room for refreshments.
Last semester, we marked the start of the year with a delightful lunch. But chilly days call for more warming celebrations. Accordingly, please come for drinks and snacks in the Dorothy Vernon Room next Tuesday, January 29, from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m.
Discussion and planning process for 10th anniversary celebration.
Quita Woodward Room
Tuesday December 11, from 4-5 p.m.
lecture by
Eirene Visvardi
Center for Hellenic Studies & Wesleyan University
Friday, December 7, 2012
4:30 pm in Carpenter Library B21
Tea at 4:00 pm in the Quita Woodward Room
Astrid Lindenlauf
Bryn Mawr College
4:30 pm in Carpenter Library B21
Tea at 4:00 pm in the Quita Woodward Room
Jonathan Conant, Assistant Professor, Brown University
“Defying Attila: Slavery, Violence, and the Precariousness of Social Obligations in the Late Antique Mediterranean”
Monday, November 12, 2012, 5pm
Carpenter B21 (followed by a reception in the Quita Woodward Room)
In 443, Romans living along the empire’s Danube frontier defied the imperial administration and refused to accede to Attila the Hun’s demand that they surrender fellow citizens into captivity as the price of peace. At the same time, bishops throughout the Mediterranean—including Augustine of Hippo—found themselves confronted with the problem of free (or freed) Roman citizens being captured by slave traders and sold into bondage to their fellow Romans within the territory of the late Roman state. In light of the susceptibility of Roman populations to violent enslavement in late antiquity, this paper will explore fourth- and fifth-century conceptions of what members of a society owed one another, why, and how far those obligations extended.
This talk is held in connection with the Graduate Group seminar “Carthage: The View from Elsewhere”, and is sponsored by the Graduate Group in Archaeology, Classics, and History of Art.
Ute Kelp
Universität zu Köln
4:30 pm in Carpenter Library B21
Tea at 4:00 pm in the Quita Woodward Room