Rome If You Want To: How Skeletons Reveal Immigrants in the Empire

Sponsored by Departments of Anthropology, Chemistry, and Classics, the Central Carolinas chapter of the Archaeological Institute of America, and the McGaw Lecture Fund, Davidson College

AIA Society Event: Central Carolinas (Charlotte)

Wednesday, January 26, 2011 - 7:00pm - 8:00pm

Location:
Belk Visual Arts Center room 117
Main Street
Davidson, NC 28036
United States

Dr. Kristina Killgrove, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, will deliver a lecture entitled, "Rome If You Want To: How Skeletons Reveal Immigrants In The Empire," at 7:00 pm on Wednesday, January 26, 2011, Belk Visual Arts Center 117. A reception will follow the lecture which is sponsored by the Central Carolinas Society of the Archaeological Institute of America and the Davidson College Departments of Classics and Anthropology.

Dr. Killgrove will discuss how throughout Roman history millions of people came to the capital city. Some voluntarily sought out new experiences, but many were brought by force. The lives of the vast majority of immigrants are basically unknown, since historical and epigraphic records tend towards the wealthy, literate elite. This talk details the relatively new technique of strontium and oxygen isotope analyses, carried out on over one hundred human skeletons recovered from two Imperial-era cemeteries in the Roman suburbium. Integrating isotope data with osteological and historical information can illuminate the lives of slaves and foreigners at Rome, adding valuable information about the ancient Romans.

Website: http://www3.davidson.edu/cms/x41225.xml

Contact:
Hilary Becker
hibecker@davidson.edu
704-894-2318

Jeffrey Becker: "Cities and their culture in Republican Italy"

Sponsored by Davidson College, Departments of Classics and Anthropology

AIA Society Event: Central Carolinas (Charlotte)

Sunday, November 7, 2010 - 4:00pm - 6:00pm

Location:
Belk Visual Arts Center, room 117, Davidson College
315 North Main Street
Davidson, NC 28036
United States

The Central Carolinas Society of the Archaeological Institute of America and the Department of Classics and the Department of Anthropology at Davidson College present …

“Cities and their culture in Republican Italy”

Dr. Jeffrey Becker

(Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World, Brown University)

Contact:
Michael Toumazou
mitoumazou@davidson.edu
704-894-2281

Conservation in Archaeology: Case Studies in the Mediterranean Region

AIA Society Event: Western Carolina (Brevard/Asheville)

Wednesday, October 20, 2010 - 7:30pm

Location:
Whitman Room, Ramsey Library, UNC at Asheville
One University Heights
Asheville, NC 28804-8504
United States

Lecturer: Roberto Nardi

Abstract: Conservation in Archaeology: Case Studies in the Mediterranean Region

Kress Lecture

The Western Greeks and Their Neighbors

AIA Society Event: Western Carolina (Brevard/Asheville)

Thursday, February 24, 2011 - 7:30pm

Location:
Whitman Room, Ramsey Library, UNC at Asheville
One University Heights
Asheville, NC 28804-8504
United States

Lecturer: Barbara Barletta

Abstract: The Western Greeks and Their Neighbors

A Monumental Cargo: The Roman Column Wreck at Kizilburun, Turkey

AIA Society Event: Greensboro

Thursday, November 11, 2010 - 8:00pm

Location:
101 Sullivan Science Building, UNCG
Greensboro, NC
United States

Lecturer: Deborah Carlson

Abstract: A Monumental Cargo: The Roman Column Wreck at Kizilburun, Turkey

Joukowsky Lecture

At the Western Frontier of Landscape Archaeology in the Nile Delta

AIA Society Event: Greensboro

Wednesday, January 26, 2011 - 8:00pm

Location:
101 Sullivan Science Building, UNCG
Greensboro, NC
United States

Lecturer: Joshua Trampier

Abstract: At the Western Frontier of Landscape Archaeology in the Nile Delta

Giving Back Identity to Human Remains: Why Forensic Anthropology is Important

AIA Society Event: Greensboro

Wednesday, March 2, 2011 - 8:00pm

Location:
101 Sullivan Science Building, UNCG
Greensboro, NC
United States

Lecturer: Eugénia Cunha

Abstract: Giving Back Identity to Human Remains: Why Forensic Anthropology is Important

Portugal Lecture

AIA Society: Western Carolina

Chartered in 1999

Society Contact:
Laurel Taylor
ltaylor@unca.edu
(828) 251-6290

AIA Society: North Carolina (Triangle Area)

Chartered in 1948

Website: http://www.duke.edu/web/ncaia/

Society Contact:
Lidewijde de Jong
ldejong@email.unc.edu

AIA Society: Central Carolinas (Charlotte)

Chartered 2013

Society Contact:
Peter Krentz
pekrentz@davidson.edu

Syndicate content

Become a Member

Become a Member

Become a Member to enjoy exclusive benefits and discounts while supporting the Institute’s outreach, education, and preservation initiatives. Join today!

Subscribing Members

Upgrade today

ARCHAEOLOGY readers are Subscribing Members of the AIA. Upgrade today and continue to receive the magazine while enjoying all the great benefits of supporting the AIA at a higher level.

Dig Deeper

Email the AIA
Subscribe to the AIA e-Update

Sign Up!