Schedule

Tuesday 19th September

9:15 – 9:30 Welcome and Introductions

9:30 – 10:45 Panel 1: Everyday Life

  • Giacomo Casucci (Pavia) – North-Central Anatolia in the kitchen: the Iron Age as mirrored in cooking tools
  • Andrés Rea (Leuven) – (Barely) Scratching the surface. Identifying graffiti culture in late antique Sagalassos (SW Anatolia)

10:45 – 11:15 Coffee break

11:15 – 12:30 Panel 2: Group Identity

  • George Downs (Liverpool) – Beyond One Nation, One Language: In Search of a Multilingual Ionia
  • Bianca Miranda Cardoso (Leicester) – (Mis)understanding the Galatians – the importance of choice

12:30 – 13:30 Lunch

13:30 – 15:15 Panel 3: Literature & Rhetoric

  • Pietro Ortimini (Pisa) – Greek Metrical Inscriptions from Anatolia Dated to the Imperial Age (1st-3rd Century AD): Definition and Analysis of the Corpus
  • Chiara Battisti (Princeton) – Modes of Self-representation in Grave Stelai from Hellenistic Smyrna: Grammar of Honours and Allusive Textuality [in-person only]
  • Ariadne Pagoni (Oxford) – Hellenistic oratory in Asia Minor: geographical shifts and stylistic innovation

15:15 – 15:30 Coffee Break

15:30 – 16:30 Keynote

  • Prof. Naoíse Mac Sweeney (Vienna) – Kingly Cloth: Power Dressing in Iron Age Anatolia

Wednesday 20th September

9:15 – 10:30 Panel 4: Sanctuary Spaces

  • Figen Öztürk Akan (Istanbul) – Parameters determining the location of the archaic sanctuary of Larisa (Aeolis)
  • Gözde Demir (Istanbul) – Questioning the Monastic Identity of Değle Settlement

10:30 – 10:45 Coffee Break

10:45 – 12:30 Panel 5: Priesthoods

  • Inès Bonnabot (Tours) – Studying Priests and Priestesses in Roman Ionia using Digital Tools
  • Julien Dechevez (Liège) – More appropriate and more pleasing to the deities: shifts, changes and variations in the mode of attribution of priesthoods in Hellenistic and Roman Anatolia

12:30 – 13:30 Lunch Break

13:30 – 15:15 Panel 6: Lycia from Antiquity to Modernity

  • Eloise Jones (Liverpool) – Abundant Death: Wealth and Power on the Telmessos Great Sarcophagus
  • Sebastian Marshall (Cambridge) – “Much new to an European eye”: scholars, sailors, and Ottoman communities in George Scharf’s Lycian sketchbooks
  • Batuhan Ozdemir (Durham) – Lycia on Display: Decentring Fixed Hellenism in the British Museum

15:15 Concluding Remarks

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