Lecture
Events
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Hannibal’s Secret Weapon
Norton Lecture
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Genghis Khan and the Mongol Empire
White Hall Rm 102, Emory University 210 Briarcliff Road, Atlanta, GAJoukowsky Lecture
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Operation Demeter: What Italy’s largest antiquities bust reveals about archaeological looting today
537 Leggett, Randolph College 2500 Rivermont Ave, Lynchburg, VA -
Ancestral Maya Pilgrimage at the Sacred Pools of Cara Blanca, Belize
WEBINAR (Central Texas) Austin, TXJoukowsky Lecture
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Great Lectures: Teotihuacan: Rome of the Ancient Americas
Penn Museum 3260 South St, Philadelphia, PA, United StatesAround 100 CE, a huge metropolis began to emerge in the Basin of Mexico, one the Aztecs would later call Teotihuacan, or “Birthplace of the Gods.” It quickly came to dominate the region, and, with its completely new urban grid-plan, contained as many as 150,000 people. Its two gigantic buildings, the Pyramids of the Sun […]
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Exploring the Technologies and Realities of Roman Toilets: Not a lot to Go on
WEBINAR (Columbus) Columbus, OHNorton Lecture
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Vikings: The North Atlantic Saga
The Met Fifth Avenue 1000 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY, United StatesJoukowsky Lecture
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Gold Victories: The Gold of Coinage of Alexander the Great
Heritage Hall (inside of Father O'Connell Hall), Catholic University of America 620 Michigan Ave NE, Washington, DCMetcalf Lecture
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Treasure troves. How to Study a Greek Coin Hoard
Campbell Hall 160, University of Virginia 110 Bayly Dr, Charlottesville, VAMetcalf Lecture
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When Evolution Hurts (Free Hybrid Lecture)
Geological Lecture Hall 24 Oxford Street, Cambridge, MA, United StatesTerence D. Capellini, Professor of Human Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University Being able to walk upright on two feet is a physical trait that distinguishes modern humans from our early ancestors. While the evolution of bipedalism has contributed to our success as a species, it has also limited the evolution of other features and increased our […]