Events

Filters

Changing any of the form inputs will cause the list of events to refresh with the filtered results.

Awash in Innuendo at the Baths of Caracalla

WEBINAR (New Haven 1) New Haven, CT

a remote ZOOM lecture by Maryl Gensheimer, University of Maryland Archaeological Institute of America, New Haven Society November 2 2021, from 5-6 pm Zoom link: https://yale.zoom.us/j/93935437567   You are invited to […]

U2 Spy Plane Photos and The Archaeology of the Middle East

Declassified military imagery from planes and satellites plays an important role in landscape and environmental archaeology. Historic imagery sources, especially the large archives generated by the US during the Cold War, are far better than Google Earth for providing archaeologists with a window into the past, before development and intensive agriculture took hold in many […]

POSTPONED!!! “Archaeology through Art: Early Modern Japanese Ship Construction”

THIS LECTURE HAS BEEN POSTPONED UNTIL SOMETIME IN THE SPRING. Michelle Damian, Assistant Professor of History, Monmouth College (mdamian@monmouthcollege.edu) Maritime trade and transport flourished during Japan’s early modern (Edo, 1603 – 1868) period, connecting the urban centers of Osaka and Edo with the farthest reaches of Hokkaido and Kyushu. The omnipresent nature and variety of […]

Weapons, Warfare, and Women

Whitman College, Maxey Hall 413-461 Boyer Ave, Walla Walla, WA, United States

The Dangerous Lives of Early Bronze Age Women in Central Anatolia Speaker: Stephanie Selover Abstract: In archaeology and art history, women of the ancient world are often identified through stereotypically “feminine” materials such as jewelry or weaving tools. This study of ancient cultures and the rise of early urbanism in the Early Bronze Age (ca. […]

Limestone Sculpture of Cyprus: Portraits of Culture

Hofstra University, Breslin Hall 1000 Hempstead Turnpike (Hofstra University 105), Hempstead, NY, United States

A lecture by Dr. Pam Gaber, Professor of Archaeology and Art History on Lycoming College, on how Cyprus has yielded hundreds of votive sculptures from the First Millennium BCE, and how they reveal religious worship, travel, and trade in the Ancient Near East.   Zoom Meeting ID: 870 1437 5777 Passcode: 319732