CFP | ORGANS: Form, Function and Bodily Systems in Greco-Roman Medicine

Seen on various lists:

‘ORGANS: Form, Function and Bodily Systems in Greco-Roman Medicine’

Sponsored by the Society for Ancient Medicine and Pharmacy (SAM) SAM is an affiliated group of
the American Philological Association.

Accepted papers will be presented at a SAM panel at the APA at the 2015 meetings, which will be
held January 8-11, 2015 in New Orleans, LA. Panelists must be members of the APA at the time of
presentation.

Largely hidden from sight, the organs of the body have always offered fascination as well as
frustration. We sense their function in the course of sustaining a biological life, but can for the
most part only infer the details of their processes. In antiquity this alienation of the self from the
material components of the human body and their interactions was especially acute, and so many
of the ancient medical texts are clearly groping for ways to understand the role of individual
organs in health and disease, both physiological and psychological. We invite papers for this
session on all aspects of the organs in Greco-Roman medicine, and particularly encourage
contributions with cultural and philosophical dimensions, as well as clinical, therapeutic and
physiological.

Please send an abstract of 500-600 words of your proposed paper (20 mins.) by e-mail to Ralph
M. Rosen (rrosen
AT sas.upenn.edu). Deadline for submission of abstracts is March 1, 2014.

This Day in Ancient History: ante diem vi kalendas novembres

ante diem vi kalendas novembres

  • 97 A.D. – The emperor Nerva adopts the future emperor Trajan
  • 312 A.D – Battle of the Milvian Bridge; Constantine I has a vision and defeats Maxentius to become sole emperor (not sure the vision was the same day as the battle?)

… and a decade ago at rogueclassicism, in addition to some nice eye candy from an auction, we were reading about the discovery of Trajan’s bridge across the Danube (which, incidentally, was presented as a ‘new’ find (albeit with sonar) in that documentary a short time ago: Review: Rome’s Lost Empire) …

Classical Words of theDay

Linguatweets:

Bestiaria Latina Blog | Latin Proverbs and Fables Round-Up: October 28

@ Bestiaria Latina Blog

Latin Proverbs and Fables Round-Up: October 28
http://bestlatin.blogspot.com/2013/10/latin-proverbs-and-fables-round-up_28.html

Lecture | Robert Giegengack on Vesuvius

A nice UPenn lecture on the ‘science’ side of Vesuvius and related volcanoes … here’s the blurb:

The Pompeii Lecture Series, presented in conjunction with the Franklin Institute’s new “A Day in Pompeii” exhibition, kicks off with this talk by Dr. Robert Giegengack, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences. Mount Vesuvius is the most active volcano in Europe and the Mediterranean; its explosive eruption in 79 CE produced a cloud of heated dust and gases that killed about 16,000 people in Pompeii, Herculaneum, and the adjacent countryside. In this lecture, Dr. Giegengack discusses the history and science surrounding the eruptions of Vesuvius and other volcanoes in the Calabrian Arc.