CFP: Warfare in Antiquity: Approaches and Controversies

Seen on the Classicists list:

Call for Papers
Warfare in Antiquity: Approaches and Controversies
Conference

August 12-13th 2011 in University College Dublin, Ireland

The study of ancient warfare is a broad and well established subject that stretches across a range of disciplines. However, persistent controversies regarding interpretations of and approaches to the subject matter remain. In light of this and in celebration of the recent 2,500 year anniversary of the battle of Marathon, the UCD Schools of Archaeology and Classics will be co-hosting a two-day interdisciplinary conference entitled ‘Warfare in Antiquity: Approaches and Controversies’ .

The aim of the conference is to provide a platform for discussion and exchange of ideas on current approaches and controversies regarding the study of ancient warfare. The conference is aimed equally at postgraduate students, early career researchers and established academics. There are no specific spatial or temporal parameters regarding the subject matter of papers, although it is anticipated that contributions will focus on the Mediterranean basin and North Western Europe from the Bronze Age to Late Antiquity.

Proposals/abstracts should be no longer than 250 words and should be sent to warfare.antiquity AT gmail.com

The deadline for submission of proposals is June 18th, 2011.

For more information contact Peter Myler or Kevin de Groote at:

Peter.myler AT ucdconnect.ie

99802686 AT ucdconnect.ie

CONF: What Catullus Wrote

Seen on the Classicists list:

What Catullus Wrote. An international conference on the poems of C.
Valerius Catullus

20-21 May 2011. Center for Advanced Studies,
Ludwig-Maximilians-Universitaet Muenchen, Munich, Germany

Speakers include:

Giuseppe Gilberto Biondi (Parma): Catullo, Sabellico (e dintorni) e …
Giorgio Pasquali
David Butterfield (Cambridge): ‘cui uideberis bella’: the influence of
Baehrens and Housman on the text of Catullus
Julia Haig Gaisser (Bryn Mawr): Pontano’s Catullus
Stephen Heyworth (Oxford): Problems in Catullus 45, 62 and 67
Daniel Kiss (Munich): The lost Codex Veronensis and its descendants:
Catullus’ manuscript tradition
David S. McKie (Cambridge): Catullus 64.323-381: the song of the Fates
Antonio Ramirez de Verger (Huelva): Catullus and Nicolaus Heinsius
Gail Trimble (Cambridge): Textual problems in Catullus 64: the task of the
commentator

The full programme is online at
http://www.cas.uni-muenchen.de/veranstaltungen/tagungen/catull/program.pdf

CONF: What Catullus Wrote

Seen on the Classicists list:

What Catullus Wrote. An international conference on the poems of C.
Valerius Catullus

20-21 May 2011. Center for Advanced Studies,
Ludwig-Maximilians-Universitaet Muenchen, Munich, Germany

Speakers include:

Giuseppe Gilberto Biondi (Parma): Catullo, Sabellico (e dintorni) e …
Giorgio Pasquali
David Butterfield (Cambridge): ‘cui uideberis bella’: the influence of
Baehrens and Housman on the text of Catullus
Julia Haig Gaisser (Bryn Mawr): Pontano’s Catullus
Stephen Heyworth (Oxford): Problems in Catullus 45, 62 and 67
Daniel Kiss (Munich): The lost Codex Veronensis and its descendants:
Catullus’ manuscript tradition
David S. McKie (Cambridge): Catullus 64.323-381: the song of the Fates
Antonio Ramirez de Verger (Huelva): Catullus and Nicolaus Heinsius
Gail Trimble (Cambridge): Textual problems in Catullus 64: the task of the
commentator

The full programme is online at
http://www.cas.uni-muenchen.de/veranstaltungen/tagungen/catull/program.pdf

CFP: Ancient Rome and Early Modern England

Seen on Classicists (please respond to the folks mentioned below, not rogueclassicism):

ANCIENT ROME AND EARLY MODERN ENGLAND: LITERATURE, HISTORY, AND POLITICS

Interdisciplinary conference, Jesus College Oxford, 21-22 May 2011

Speakers include David Norbrook and Blair Worden

CALL FOR PAPERS

Ancient Rome was a source of endless fascination to the early moderns.
Historians, politicians, divines, and imaginative writers looked to the
Roman example for models and inspiration. The aim of the conference is to
reassess the place of ancient Rome in the literary and political culture of
late Tudor and early Stuart England. In what ways did the translation and
reception of the Roman classics stimulate the native literary tradition or
influence its political outlook? What was the impact of the Roman precedent
on attitudes towards constitutional change, the rights and wrongs of empire,
and the law? How did it influence ecclesiastical policy and, more generally,
the views of the relationship between church and state? In what ways did
Roman historiography, political writings, and rhetoric shape the language
and substance of public argument? What was the trajectory of circulation in
manuscript and print of the Roman classics? What were the uses and topical
appeal of the Roman models in the wider public world and in education? How
did the Roman legacy compare with that of ancient Greece?

Our aim is to foster dialogue among literary scholars, classicists,
political and intellectual historians, historians of religion, specialists
in the history of the book, and historians of historiography. Bringing
together scholars representing diverse disciplines and approaches, the
conference will encourage reconsideration of much received wisdom about the
place of ancient Rome in early modern England’s literature and political
imagination. It will, we hope, raise new questions about, inter alia, the
shaping influence of the Roman example upon formal properties and topical
undercurrents of imaginative literature, sermons, and polemical writings;
upon conceptions of public institutions and the individual’s relationship to
them; upon views of foreign policy and international relations as also
military theory and practice; upon emergent confessional divisions and
incipient notions of religious toleration; and, finally, upon perceptions of
social relations in urban, above all metropolitan contexts. No less
important will be to assess the utility and pervasiveness of romanitas
before and after the union with Scotland, and compare the situation in
England with major European states, in particular, France, Spain, Italian
principalities, and the Netherlands.

We invite proposals for 30-minute papers. Please e-mail abstracts of no more
than 500 words to Felicity Heal (felicity.heal AT jesus.ox.ac.uk) or Paulina
Kewes (paulina.kewes AT jesus.ox.ac.uk) by 30 January 2011.

The Oxford gathering is a follow-up to the conference on ‘Ancient Rome and
Early Modern England: History, Politics, and Political Thought’ to be held
at the Huntington Library, 21-22 January 2011. For further information,
please contact Carolyn Powell (cpowell AT huntington.org).


CFP: Historiography & Antiquarianism Conference, Sydney (12-14 August 2011) Information & CFP

Seen on Classicists (please respond to the folks mentioned below, not rogueclassicism):

HISTORIOGRAPHY AND ANTIQUARIANISM (sponsored by CCANESA)
12-14 August 2011
University of Sydney, Australia

CFP: Title and a 150 word abstract due 15 January 2011

This conference aims to expand a discussion on approaches to the past from
Greco-Roman antiquity to the 17th century, and to assemble scholars
interested in the relationship between history and antiquarianism in the
ancient and pre-modern worlds. While antiquarian studies have expanded
significantly in early modernist circles in the last 30 years, earlier
centuries of antiquarianism (up to the 16th century) are only now
beginning to attract interest. Was Arnaldo Momigliano right in 1950 that
historians write narratives and solve problems, while antiquaries build
systems and collect material remains? What has changed in our view of
historiography and antiquarianism? Must we reconsider the disciplinary
value of antiquarian methods? One historian has even recently argued: ‘in
the twentieth century antiquarianism conquered history.’ The hope at this
conference is to cross the boundaries between ancient and early modern
historians and to provide new ideas for the study of culture in both
fields.

For further information see http://classics.org.au/haconference/

email: antiqua2011 AT gmail.com