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Call for Papers: Exemplary Representation(s) of the Past: New Readings of Valerius Maximus’ Facta et dicta memorabilia

01. Februar 2022, Dorothée Grieb - Call for papers

Internationale Konferenz
Fribourg (CH), Institut für Antike und Byzanz, 15.-17.12.2022

Exemplary Representation(s) of the Past: New Readings of Valerius Maximus’ Facta et dicta memorabilia

Die letzten 30 Jahre haben ein verstärktes Interesse an Valerius Maximus und seinen Facta et dicta memorabilia zutage gefördert; die Sammlung historischer exempla wird nun stärker als zuvor als Werk mit einem eigenen literarischen Anspruch gelesen und im Hinblick auf seine ethische, soziale und intellektuelle Bedeutung im frühen Principat und darüber hinaus untersucht.

Diesem Interesse möchten auch die Mitglieder des an der Universität Fribourg angesiedelten und vom Schweizerischen Nationalfonds geförderten Projekts „Im Spiegel der Republik. Valerius Maximus’ Facta et dicta memorabilia“ (https://valmax.hypotheses.org/) Ausdruck geben und hiermit eine internationale Konferenz ankündigen, die vom 15. bis 17. Dezember 2022 in hybrider Form in Fribourg (Schweiz) stattfinden wird, unter dem Titel: „Exemplary Representation(s) of the Past: New Readings of Valerius Maximus’ Facta et dicta memorabilia“.

Die Konferenz hat das Ziel, neue Perspektiven auf Valerius und sein Werk zu eröffnen. Wir freuen uns daher auf Forschungsbeiträge zu unterschiedlichen Aspekten der Facta et dicta memorabilia sowie zu ihrer Rezeption. Dabei könnten sowohl einzelne Passagen (z.B. Kapitel oder Sequenzen von exempla) im Zentrum stehen als auch das Werk insgesamt; mögliche Zugänge könnten etwa Valerius’ literarische Gestaltung, seine Vorstellungen von der Vergangenheit Roms oder auch seine weitere sozio-ethische oder intellektuelle Bedeutung sein.

Ihre Teilnahme bereits zugesagt haben die drei externen Partner des Fribourger Projekts, Prof. Rebecca Langlands (University of Exeter), Prof. Matthew B. Roller (Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore) und Prof. David Wardle (University of Cape Town).

Die Konferenzsprache wird Englisch sein. Eine Publikation der Beiträge in einem renommierten Fachverlag ist geplant.

Konkrete Themenvorschläge mit einem inhaltlichen Abstract von max. 300 Wörtern sollten bis Montag, 28. Februar 2022 per E-Mail eingereicht werden (tanja.itgenshorst@unifr.ch).
Es wäre sehr nützlich, wenn Sie bereits angeben könnten, ob Sie im Präsenzmodus in Fribourg teilnehmen würden (sofern dies die allgemeine Lage gestattet). Mit einer Rückmeldung von unserer Seite ist Mitte März 2022 zu rechnen.
Reise- und Unterbringungskosten bei der Anreise nach Fribourg werden erstattet.

Université de Fribourg
Institut für Antike und Byzanz
Geschichte der Antike
Rue Pierre-Aeby 16
CH-1700 Fribourg

https://valmax.hypotheses.org/
 


Call for Papers: The End of the Roman Climate Optimum and the Disintegration of the Roman Empire

04. November 2021, Dorothée Grieb - Call for papers

International Conference
Binn, Valais, Switzerland, 29 Aug – 1 Sep 2022

The End of the Roman Climate Optimum and the Disintegration of the Roman Empire

Palaeoclimatologists believe to have identified a period of unusually warm and humid weather in Europe and the Mediterranean that expanded from roughly 200 BCE to 150 CE, which they called the ‘Roman Climate Optimum’ or the ‘Roman warm period’. Some historians have linked this overall perseverance of unusually stable and favorable climatic conditions to the expansion of the Roman Empire to its greatest height, and argue that these predominantly warm and humid conditions in large parts of the Empire enabled the delivery of sufficient supply to the growing urban population around the Mediterranean and to the Roman army. From the middle of the second century CE, climate change occurred at different rates, from apparent near stasis during the early Empire to rapid fluctuations during the late Empire. A general cooling trend coincided and, as some scholars argue, contributed to the crisis of the Empire, the Germanic migration, civil wars, and the subsequent ‘decline’ or ‘transformation’ of the Roman world. Furthermore, differences in climate conditions in the Western and Eastern Mediterranean have been hypothezised to mirror the diverging fates of the Roman West and the Byzantine Empire. More recently, other scholars based on regional datasets of climate proxies have reasoned that establishing such a connection between the climatic conditions and its consequences for the history of the Roman Empire does not do justice to the multitude of microclimates in Europe, the Balkans, the Middle East and North Africa on the one hand and the complexity of the material available on the other one.

This international conference will be the first that is specifically devoted to the notion of a Roman Climate Optimum and its impact on the fate of the Roman Empire. The conference will examine the implications of a Roman Climate Optimum for writing Roman environmental, political, social and economic history, and will bring climate scientists, ancient historians and environmental archaeologists around one table. We aim at papers that focus on regional studies and pursue a synthesis of the evidence from written, archaeological, and natural climate archives. Special emphasis will be placed on the challenges of a collaboration between ancient historians, archaeologists and palaeoclimatologists, the methodological difficulties in distinguishing between correlation and causality, and methods of assessing the impact of climatic variability or change on ancient societies without oversimplifying causal connections.

The event is part of the research project ‘The Roman Egypt Laboratory: Climate Change, Societal Transformations, and the Transition to Late Antiquity’ (PI: Sabine R. Huebner) and is sponsored by the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF), the Swiss Association of Classical Studies (SVAW/ASEA), and the Swiss Academic Society for Environmental Research and Ecology (SAGUF). 

Confirmed speakers include:

  • John Haldon (Princeton University)
  • Joseph McConnell (University of Nevada)
  • Annalisa Marzano (University of Reading)
  • Timothy Newfield (Georgetown University)
  • Lee Mordechai (Hebrew University of Jerusalem)
  • Kevin Bloomfield (Cornell University)
  • Paolo Maranzana (Boğaziçi University)
  • Petra Vaiglova (Washington University)
  • Christophe Corona (University of Clermont Auvergne)
  • Brandon McDonald (University of Basel)
  • Matthias Stern (LMU Munich)
  • François Blondel (University of Geneva)
  • Charlotte L. Pearson (University of Arizona)
  • Markus Stoffel (University of Geneva)

We welcome abstracts of about 300 words. Papers should be 20 minutes in length, allowing for 10 minutes of discussion time after each paper, and should be in English. We encourage junior researchers and recent PhD holders to apply as well. The results of this conference will be published in form of an open-access peer-reviewed volume in the new series “Studies in Premodern History and Environment”, ed. CCHRI, Oxford University Press.

Please submit your abstract by e-mail to Prof. Dr. Sabine R. Huebner (sabine.huebner@unibas.ch), including the full title of your paper and a short biographical note on your affiliation and previous research.
The deadline for proposals is 30 November 2021.

Contact:
Prof. Dr. Sabine Huebner
Petersgraben 51
4051 Basel
Schweiz
e-mail: sabine.huebner@unibas.ch


Neu bei recensio.antiquitatis: Exemplaria Classica

28. Oktober 2021, Dorothée Grieb - Aktuelles

"Exemplaria Classica" ist eine wissenschaftliche Zeitschrift der Universität Huelva, die sich ausschließlich dem Themenbereich der Klassischen Philologie widmet und Artikel, Kurzbeiträge und Rezensionen zur Erforschung klassischer griechischer und lateinischer Texte veröffentlicht. Besondere Schwerpunkte liegen auf den folgenden Gebieten: Manuskripte, Textgeschichte, Textkritik, Editionstechnik, Editionen und Kommentar und die Überlieferungsgeschichte von Texten griechischer und römischer Autoren.

Der umfangreiche Rezensionsteil der Zeitschrift wird nun auch auf recensio.antiquitatis bereitgestellt, der altertumswissenschaftlichen Rezensionsplattform von Propylaeum.
 


Neu: Infovideo zu PropylaeumSEARCH

28. Oktober 2021, Dorothée Grieb - Aktuelles


Altertumswissenschaftliche Fachrecherche mit PropylaeumSEARCH

PropylaeumSEARCH unterstützt Sie bei der Fachrecherche in den Altertumswissenschaften. Im Video werden die datenquellenübergreifende Suche und die wichtigsten Funktionen der Rechercheplattform, etwa der kartenbasierte Sucheinstieg ("GeoSuche"), vorgestellt.

Weitere Informationen finden Sie auf der Startseite von PropylaeumSEARCH

Direktlink zum Rechercheportal: https://propylaeum.bsb-muenchen.de/metaopac/start.do?View=prop

 


Call for Papers: The Eastern Roman Empire under the Severans – new beginnings, old connections?

20. Oktober 2021, Dorothée Grieb - Call for papers

International Conference, Online
Freie Universität Berlin, Germany, 16.-18. June 2022

The Eastern Roman Empire under the Severans – new beginnings, old connections?

After the murder of the emperor Pertinax, the year AD 193 saw four men being proclaimed as Roman emperors by their respective troops: in Rome, Didius Julianus, an Italian, was made emperor by the Praetorian guard; Septimius Severus, who was from North Africa and had a Syrian wife, was sponsored by the troops in Pannonia; Pescennius Niger, who was from Italy, was supported by the troops in Syria and finally Clodius Albinus, again from North Africa, was proclaimed emperor by the troops in Britain. It was Septimius Severus who finally defeated his rivals and established a new dynasty that ruled till AD 235. The Severan dynasty would go on to instituted profound changes in the Roman Empire that would shape the empire’s responses towards the various challenges of the third century.

Despite the fact that the year of the four emperors in AD 193 clearly shows the cosmopolitan interconnectedness of the Roman Empire, scholarship called Septimius Severus the “African emperor”[1] and his wife and her family the “Syrian empresses”[2]. Equally, the two final emperors of the dynasty, Elagabal and Severus Alexander, are also often framed within a narrative of oriental exoticism stressing their Syrian background[3]. Even though there has been considerable scholarly interest in the Severan dynasty in the last 20 years, scholarship has not been able to entirely shake off this ‘narrative of origin’. However, important progress has been made with recent studies on individual emperors and empresses of the dynasty as well as on different aspects of their reign. Thus, aspects of Severan administration – in particular the famous Constitutio Antoniana – and military policy have received scholarly attention and re-evaluation. Equally, important new studies have stressed the innovative framing of imperial propaganda and self-representation under the Severans and the dynasty’s so far underestimated impact on Roman culture as a whole. Rantala even goes so far as to claim in the title of his book on the ludi Saeculares that the Severans instituted “a new Roman Empire”[4].

To date, however, no study has comprehensibly looked at the impact of Severan rule on the Eastern parts of the Roman Empire. The Eastern Roman Empire was, of course, also affected by the Severan refashioning of empire – from administrative changes in Egypt and Syria to building activities across the Eastern provinces, the Severans left their mark on a region they should in the logic of the ‘narrative of origin’ have been particularly partial to. But were they? Do administrative measures of the Severan emperors show a particular insight into matters of the Eastern part of the Empire? Could the new dynasty draw on local connections to develop and institute these? Did the communities of the Eastern Empire in their turn profit from the fact that the emperors and empresses hailed from their part of the world? Did they built more or honor the emperors of the Severan dynasty more because they felt a special connection to them? And what kind of a Roman Empire do we have to imagine in the East in Severan times? Did the peoples of the Eastern parts of the Empire refashion their identities because of the ‘Syrian empresses’? In short – what happened in the Eastern Roman Empire under Severan rule – do we see new beginnings, old connections?

“The Eastern Roman Empire under the Severans – new beginnings, old connections?” will bring together scholars from a wide variety of fields taking a new look at the impact of Severan rule on the Eastern half of the Roman empire in a three-day digital conference at the FU Berlin in 2022. The conference will aim to provide a forum for scholars working on the Severan age in the Eastern Roman Empire to showcase their work as well as offering a comprehensive insight into the state of the art of our current knowledge on this issue.

Speakers will be given 30 minutes for a presentation, followed by 15 minutes for discussion. Papers can be given in German, English and French, though the main language of communication will be English. Short abstracts for the papers will be shared in advance of the conference with the participants. Papers will be given by invited speakers, but this call for papers is also open for applications for further papers.
Please contact us till November, 19th, 2021, with a short proposal (400 words), if you wish to present a paper at the conference:  julia.hoffmann-salz@fu-berlin.de

Organizers:
Matthäus Heil, Berlin-Brandenburgische Akademie der Wissenschaften:  heil@bbaw.de
Julia Hoffmann-Salz, Free University Berlin:  julia.hoffmann-salz@fu-berlin.de
Holger Wienholz, German Archaeological Institute:  holger.wienholz@dainst.org


Notes:
[1] A. Birley, Septimius Severus: The African emperor, London 1999.
[2] J. Babelon, Impératrices syriennes, Paris 1957.
[3] E.g. R. Turcan, Héliogabale et le sacre du soleil, Paris 1985.
[4] J. Rantala, The Ludi Saeculares of Septimius Severus: the ideologies of a new Roman Empire, London 2017.

 


Webinar am 14. Oktober 2021: Altertumswissenschaften – Propylaeum: Neue Services zur Alten Welt

05. Oktober 2021, Dorothée Grieb - Aktuelles

Am Donnerstag, dem 14.10.2021 findet um 15:30 Uhr ein Webinar zum Fachinformationsdienst Altertumswissenschaften statt.

Die Bayerische Staatsbibliothek unterstützt Altertumswissenschaftlerinnen und Altertumswissenschaftler in Studium, Lehre und Forschung durch ein umfassendes Angebot an Recherchedienstleistungen. Über unsere Suchportale finden Sie Monographien, Aufsätze, Bilddaten, Publikationen im Open Access und vieles mehr. Die Services werden im Rahmen des „Fachinformationsdienstes Altertumswissenschaften”, den die Bayerische Staatsbibliothek gemeinsam mit der Universitätsbibliothek Heidelberg betreut, über das Fachportal „Propylaeum” angeboten.

Inhalte:  

  • Fachportal „Propylaeum“ (https://www.propylaeum.de/)
  • Angebote zur Recherche (u. a. PropylaeumSEARCH, Gnomon Bibliographische Datenbank und recensio.antiquitatis)
  • Weitere Services und Informationsangebote von Propylaeum im Überblick (u. a. FID-Lizenzen, Digitales Wunschbuch, Themenportale und E-Learning, Forschungsdaten

Zielgruppen:
Studierende, Lehrende und Forschende aus allen altertumswissenschaftlichen Disziplinen (v. a. Ägyptologie, Alte Geschichte, Alter Orient, Byzantinistik, Klassische Archäologie, Klassische Philologie, Mittel- und Neulateinische Philologie und Vor- und Frühgeschichte) sowie alle an Propylaeum interessierten Nutzerinnen und Nutzer

Link zum Webinarraum:
https://webconf.vc.dfn.de/altertumswissenschaften/

Bitte planen Sie etwa 1,5 Stunden Zeit für die Veranstaltung ein.
15 Minuten vor Beginn öffnen wir den Webinarraum.

Was brauchen Sie dafür?
Wo finden Sie Informationen zum Datenschutz?