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Ridgeway lecture: Petsas House, Mycenae: pottery, production, and the palatial economy of the 14th c. BCE
University of Puget Sound, Tahoma Room, Thomson Hall 1500 N Warner St, Tacoma, WA, United StatesRidgeway lecture: Kim Shelton, UC Berkeley: Petsas House, Mycenae: pottery, production, and the palatial economy of the 14th c. BCE This lecture will present a wide variety of material from the current excavations at Mycenae which provides insight into the production of pottery in a late bronze age workshop, the reconstructed demographics and decision-making process […]
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New Archaeological Discoveries in England
First hand description by Katherine Neustadt, Senior Heritage Consultant at Atkins. about several exciting new archaeological projects in England.
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TO BE RESCHEDULED: Exploring Fragments: Digital Approaches to the Study of Athenian Vase Painting
This lecture is to be rescheduled from April 4th to a different date. The new date/time will be posted online when available. Noble Lecture
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Protecting Cultural Property During Wartime
on Zoom - pre-register via our partner org here: https://cas.stthomas.edu/departments/areas-of-study/art-history/ St. Paul, MN, United StatesMonday, April 4, 2022 at 6pm CT on Zoom: Brian I. Daniels on "Protecting Cultural Property During Wartime"
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Block by Block: Piecing Together Athenian Democracy
Solow Lecture
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Block by Block: Piecing Together Athenian Democracy
Scranton Lecture
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A Feminist History of Ancient Medicine
Assumption University Curtis Performance Hall of the Tsotsis Family Academic Building (TFAC 120) 500 Salisbury Street, Worcester, MA, United StatesKershaw Lecture Co-sponsored by the Human Arts Series and the Programs of History, Women’s Studies, and Medieval and Early Modern Studies, Assumption University Please note Assumption University's current policy for guests as of January 2022, which states “Guests may visit campus if they can demonstrate proof of vaccination or a negative PCR test within 72 hours […]
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Exploring Humanity’s Technological Origins (Virtual Lecture)
Sonia F. Harmand, Associate Professor, Department of Anthropology, Turkana Basin Institute, Stony Brook University; Director, Mission Préhistorique au Kenya/West Turkana Archaeological Project Human evolutionary scholars have long assumed that the earliest stone tools were made by members of the genus Homo, 2.4–2.3 million years ago, and that this technological development was directly linked to climate […]
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