Luento

Helsinki Archaeology Seminar: Björn Forsén, ’Roman Roof Tiles in Epirus, Greece: Production, Patterns of Landowning and Trade’

You are all warmly welcome to the first Helsinki Archaeology Seminar (HAS) of this academic year on Friday 25th of October. We have the pleasure of hearing the lecture by Björn Forsén (University of Helsinki) titled

Roman Roof Tiles in Epirus, Greece: Production, Patterns of Landowning and Trade

Lecture will take place on Friday 25th of October at 14:15 (EET) in Arla Pro Lecture Room, F-block ground floor, Topelia, Unioninkatu 38.

You can also follow the lecture via Zoom.

Helsinki Archaeology Seminar: Björn Forsén, ’Roman Roof Tiles in Epirus, Greece: Production, Patterns of Landowning and Trade’ Read More »

AMME seminar: Hands-on Approaches to Ancient Material 31.10.

Ancient and Medieval Middle East (AMME) seminars series in Helsinki and Zoom.

Thursday 31.10.24 (16:15-18:00 EET): Hands-on Approaches to Ancient Material 

MA/MSc Bonnie Nilham: ‘Neolithic Plaster at Tell Sabi Abyad, North Syria ’ 

Dr. Luisa M. García González ‘Reinterpreting ancient Egyptian materials: from discovery to interdisciplinary research. A brief presentation of the Qubbet el-Hawa Project’

AMME seminar: Hands-on Approaches to Ancient Material 31.10. Read More »

Villa Lanten ystävien ry:n webinaari: Antiikki ja me – Miksi antiikintutkimusta tarvitaan 23.10.

Antiikki ja me – Miksi antiikintutkimusta tarvitaan ”Lokakuun webinaari järjestetään keskiviikkona 23.10. klo 18 alkaen Zoomissa. Ilmoittautumiset tuttuun tapaan osoitteeseen villalantenystavat@yahoo.com. Antiikin perintö on olennainen osa eurooppalaista sivistystä ja identiteettiä. Se on läsnä kielissä ja kulttuurissa, tieteissä ja taiteissa sekä arvoissa ja ajattelumalleissa. Webinaarimme lähtee liikkeelle nyt lokakuussa ilmestyvästä kirjasta Antiikki ja me. Miksi antiikintutkimusta tarvitaan, joka esittelee suomalaista antiikintutkimusta. Esillä ovat niin elävät kuolleet kielet, antiikin ajatusten pitkät jäljet kuin kirjallisuuden tosiklassikotkin. Monitieteinen ja korkeatasoinen antiikintutkimus on tarpeen, jotta ymmärrämme muinaisten kreikkalaisten ja roomalaisten vaikutuksen arjessamme sekä osaamme tuottaa kriittistä tietoa ja vaihtoehtoisia tulevaisuudenkuvia. Webinaarin keskustelijat ovat kirjan eri lukujen kirjoittajia, Ville Vuolanto myös yksi toimittajista. Keskustelun puheenjohtaja, Laura Nissin, on Suomen antiikintutkimuksen verkoston puheenjohtaja ja Villa Lanten ystävien varapj.” Uutisen lähde: linkki.

Villa Lanten ystävien ry:n webinaari: Antiikki ja me – Miksi antiikintutkimusta tarvitaan 23.10. Read More »

AMME seminar: Cognitive Perspectives on Ancient Texts 23.9.

Ancient and Medieval Middle East (AMME) seminars series in Helsinki and Zoom:

Monday 23.09.24 (16:15-18:00 EEST):Cognitive Perspectives on Ancient Texts 

Dr. Matthew Ong: ‘Metaphors for the emotions of Marduk in Ludlul: a cognitive approach’ 

Prof. Dr. Jutta Jokiranta:‘Cognitive Mechanisms in Cultural Rituals: Examples from Dead Sea Scrolls’

AMME seminar: Cognitive Perspectives on Ancient Texts 23.9. Read More »

Paideia ry: Antiikintutkimuksen iltapäivä – Antiikin jäljet Suomessa 27.9.

Paideia ry:n antiikintutkimuksen iltapäivän teemana on tänä vuonna, miten kreikkalais-roomalaisen antiikin vaikutus yhä näkyy Suomessa ja Turussa. Asiantuntijavieraiden esitelmissä tuodaan esille, miten antiikki ja latinan kieli ovat läsnä turkulaisessa kaupunkimaisemassa ja arkeologisissa esinelöydöissä Suomessa.

Paideia ry: Antiikintutkimuksen iltapäivä – Antiikin jäljet Suomessa 27.9. Read More »

Laura Nissin (13.9.), ’Matkoja muinaisiin makumaailmoihin: antiikin roomalaiskeittiöiden aistihistoriaa’

Laura Nissin puhuu Joensuun kirjallisuustapahtumassa aiheesta ’Matkoja muinaisiin makumaailmoihin: antiikin roomalaiskeittiöiden aistihistoriaa’. Esitelmän ajankohta on perjantaina 13. syyskuuta klo 13:45, ja paikka on Educa, sali E100, Tulliportinkatu 1, Joensuu. Tapahtumasta ja koko ohjelmasta saa lisää tietoa täältä: https://www.joensuunkirjallisuustapahtuma.fi/ohjelma

Laura Nissin (13.9.), ’Matkoja muinaisiin makumaailmoihin: antiikin roomalaiskeittiöiden aistihistoriaa’ Read More »

HY:n uusien professorien juhlaluennot 29.5.: Anneli Luhtala ja Marja Vierros

Helsingin yliopiston 25 uutta professoria pitävät juhlaluentonsa keskiviikkona 29.5.2024 yliopiston päärakennuksella, klo 14.15 alkaen. Luennot ovat yleistajuisia johdatuksia professorien omaan tieteenalaan ja ajankohtaisiin tutkimuskysymyksiin. Alla olevasta ohjelmasta löytyvät yksittäisten luentojen aloitusajat, luentosalit sekä luentojen aiheet. Ennen jokaisen luennon alkua tiedekunnan dekaani tai varadekaani esittelee luennoivan professorin.

HY:n uusien professorien juhlaluennot 29.5.: Anneli Luhtala ja Marja Vierros Read More »

Conference 22.5.: ’Castrum Novum – History and archaeology of a Roman colony’

The Finnish Institute in Rome organises, in collaboration with Istituto Italiano di Cultura di Helsinki, a conference that presents the progress and results of the excavations of Castrum Novum (new fort), the ancient Roman colony now located in the suburbs of Santa Marinella, Rome. The ‘Castrum’ is a place more unique than rare, where you can find a theatre and barracks still perfectly recognisable: in fact, it is being transformed from a simple site into an archaeological park.

In 2022 and 2023 The Finnish Institute in Rome has offered Finnish students the possibility, through a scholarship, to participate in the excavations, providing them with the opportunity to experience the culture of Ancient Rome together with the modern Rome of today.

Conference 22.5.: ’Castrum Novum – History and archaeology of a Roman colony’ Read More »

Lecture 8.5.: Dries Daems, ’Unravelling the Threads of Connectivity: Integrating computational modeling and network analysis to trace material networks in the Hellenistic and Roman Mediterranean’

On Wednesday, May 8 starting at 15:15, the Helsinki Institute for Social Sciences and Humanities (HSSH) welcomes Dries Daems (HSSH Visiting Professor, and Assistant Professor in Spatial Digital Humanities at Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam) for a talk titled: ”Unravelling the Threads of Connectivity: Integrating computational modeling and network analysis to trace material networks in the Hellenistic and Roman Mediterranean”. The talk will take place in Topelia D-Block, Room 204. All welcome!

Lecture 8.5.: Dries Daems, ’Unravelling the Threads of Connectivity: Integrating computational modeling and network analysis to trace material networks in the Hellenistic and Roman Mediterranean’ Read More »

Trivium symposium 24.4.: Child Labour & Child Abuse. Pre-modern Perspectives

Trivium – Tampere Centre for Classical, Medieval and Early Modern Studies is hosting Dr Oana Cojocaru, visiting scholar from New Europe College, Institute for Advanced Study (Bucharest), and organizing a symposium on Wednesday 24th of April at 16.15–18, in seminar room PinniB3074, Tampere University.

Trivium symposium 24.4.: Child Labour & Child Abuse. Pre-modern Perspectives Read More »

HelRAW 6.5.: Sanni Kiesiläinen, ’Vertebrate Fossils and Classical Mythology’ and Jamie Vesterinen, ’Τo δiκαιον δαιμoνιον: guilt and divine justice in ancient dream reports’

Uutisen lähde: linkki. ”The final Helsinki Research on the Ancient World seminar (HelRAW) takes place with two speakers: Sanni Kiesiläinen (University of Helsinki) and Jamie Vesterinen (University of Helsinki), on the 6th of May at 17:15 in Topelia D112 (Unioninkatu 38, 1st floor). You are warmly welcome to join our speakers at Topelia or Zoom (link below)! Sanni Kiesiläinen: Vertebrate Fossils and Classical Mythology The idea that ancient Greek and Roman societies had discovered animal fossils and understood their organic origins has been widely accepted since paleobiologist Othenio Abel (1875–1946) theorized that Greek stories about cyclopes and giants were at least partially based on the skulls of prehistoric dwarf mammoths that inhabited the Mediterranean islands. In the last couple of decades, the idea of fossils as inspiration for ancient myths has been deepened and widely popularized by Adrienne Mayor, a research Scholar at Stanford University, in her book The First Fossil Hunters: Dinosaurs, Mammoths, and Myth in Greek and Roman Mythology (2000). My presentation will mainly focus on classical interpretations of large vertebrate fossils from the ancient Mediterranean. I will explain against this background the topic of my PhD dissertation, in which I will be diving deeper into the theme by examining how the fossils of prehistoric whales have affected Greco-Roman dragon and serpent mythology. I believe I will be able to find a connection between the known sites of whale fossils and the places which the ancient Greek and Roman societies believed dragons and other mythical serpents inhabited. I will focus especially on the fossils of prehistoric odontocetes, or toothed whales, and how their habitats correspond to the habitats of the mythical serpents, and how their physiologies correspond to how the mythical serpents have been described in classical literature and art. About the speaker: I am a PhD researcher in the Programme of History and Cultural Heritage at the Faculty of Arts at the University of Helsinki. My background is on classical philology and especially Latin and Roman literature. My main research interests include scientific literature in classical antiquity, and especially the ways in which science and mythology have intersected in the ancient world. I began looking into classical interpretations of fossils while I worked on my master’s thesis, which focused mainly on invertebrate fossils and their uses in magic and medicine. Jamie Vesterinen: Τὸ δίκαιον δαιμόνιον: guilt and divine justice in ancient dream reports Ancient literature includes many references to dreams that are associated with moral transgression. These dreams either precede an act of transgression and may warn against it, or occur, sometimes repeatedly, after an offensive deed has been committed. In this paper, I will investigate how the cause and origin of such dreams are presented in Greek and Latin sources. I will focus especially on dreams that haunt moral transgressors and explore how the themes of a guilty conscience and retribution effected by gods or the dead are present in these narratives and sometimes intertwined. Associated concepts such as ἀσέβεια / εὐσέβεια, ὕβρις, and ἀδίκημα offer insight into the nature of the moral transgressions that evoked a dream response. About the Speaker: Jamie Vesterinen is a doctoral candidate in the Doctoral Programme of History and Cultural Heritage at the University of Helsinki. He holds a Master’s degree in Greek Language and Literature. His doctoral dissertation explores dream reports in Greek literature. When: Monday, May 6th, 17:15 (UTC +3 EEST) Where: Topelia, D112, Unioninkatu 38, 1st floor or in Zoom https://helsinki.zoom.us/j/61816077453?pwd=bnZVY05ieXlmNTIyUkNQcmJOOFZ3UT09  Meeting ID: 618 1607 7453 Passcode: 887970″

HelRAW 6.5.: Sanni Kiesiläinen, ’Vertebrate Fossils and Classical Mythology’ and Jamie Vesterinen, ’Τo δiκαιον δαιμoνιον: guilt and divine justice in ancient dream reports’ Read More »