Calendar of Events

Theorizing Women in the Ancient World Reading Group

Emily Chesley & Rebakah Haigh, Princeton Graduate Students

IHUM & Program in the Ancient World
127 East Pyne Princeton University, Princeton, United States

Citizenship as the City’s Revealing Mirror: Comparative Considerations on the Content and Historical Context of Citizenship in ancient Athens and Rome

Kostas Buraselis, University of Athens

Program in the Ancient World

Theorizing Women in the Ancient World Reading Group

Emily Chesley & Rebakah Haigh, Princeton Graduate Students

IHUM & Program in the Ancient World

Theorizing Women in the Ancient World Reading Group

Emily Chesley & Rebakah Haigh, Princeton Graduate Students

IHUM & Program in the Ancient World

Theorizing Women in the Ancient World Reading Group

Emily Chesley & Rebakah Haigh, Princeton Graduate Students

IHUM & Program in the Ancient World

Theorizing Women in the Ancient World Reading Group

Emily Chesley & Rebakah Haigh, Princeton Graduate Students

IHUM & Program in the Ancient World

Theorizing Women in the Ancient World Reading Group

Emily Chesley & Rebakah Haigh, Princeton Graduate Students

IHUM & Program in the Ancient World

Theorizing Women in the Ancient World Reading Group

Emily Chesley & Rebakah Haigh, Princeton Graduate Students

IHUM & Program in the Ancient World
010 East Pyne 010 East Pyne, Princeton, NJ, United States

Were the Ancient Greeks Responsible for Antisemitism?

Erich Gruen, University of California, Berkeley

Program in the Ancient World
209 Scheide Caldwell House 209 Scheide Caldwell House

The End of Popular Participation? City Politics in Post-Imperial Hispania

Damián Fernández, Northern Illinois University

Program in the Ancient World
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