911³Ô¹Ï

2026

Friday, April 17, 2026

Reflections on the Representation of Byzantium in Young Adult and Children’s Literature: Exploring Issues of Identity and Ideology

Rosy-Triantafyllia Angelaki, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki

Abstract

This talk examines how Byzantium is represented in Greek literature for children and adolescents from 1955 to the present, focusing on how the Byzantine past is interpreted and reshaped for young readers. It draws on two distinct research projects conducted over eight years, each analyzing different categories of children’s books about the Byzantine era. The first study looked at thirty-five historical novels, exploring how representations of Byzantium have evolved and how authors connect Byzantine history to Greek identity and multicultural awareness. The second focused on thirty-five nonfiction picture books about Byzantium, a relatively understudied genre that blends factual information with narrative elements. It investigated how these books present reliable, accessible historical knowledge while remaining engaging for young readers. This study also explored categorization, narrative conventions, and the integration of text and images. Finally, it evaluates how these works connect past and present, encourage curiosity, and balance educational and aesthetic goals while avoiding stereotypes and addressing both children and adult readers. Dr. Angelaki's talk brings the findings of the aforementioned studies together to showcase the evolving place of Byzantium in the thought world of young Greeks.

Friday, April 10, 2026

What sort of Late Antiquity? Reflections on Peter Brown’s Journeys of the Mind

Geoffrey Greatrex, University of Ottawa

Abstract

This paper discusses the relation between Peter Brown’s recent autobiography and our approaches to the period known as Late Antiquity. Whereas Brown is generally positive about the many changes that overtook the Roman empire and society generally at this time, others have been more critical. It is suggested that some aspects of his biography may help to explain his more positive approach, which may not fully do justice to this tumultuous period.

Friday, March 27, 2026

The Life and Times of a Golden Gospel Lectionary

Robert S. Nelson, Yale University

Abstract

A rare text of the Gospel lections written entirely in gold ink had several elite owners from the patriarchate and imperial palace in Constantinople, to the cathedral of the Empire of Trebizond, an emigre Greek bishop in Italy, Pope Julius II in Rome, the Grand Duke of Tuscany, before being given to the Biblioteca Laurenziana in Florence.  Each valued the object for different purposes, which allows its biography to be described in detail. Thus, the manuscript is a case study of its prestige and importance in the Greek East and the Latin West.

Friday, March 20, 2026

Co-curating African Art in a Greek Museum: Identity, Representation, and the Politics of Display

Dr. Sophia Handaka, Benaki Museum, Athens

Abstract

Drawing from the Benaki Museum’s collection of African art, the participatory exhibition Africa Amongst Us* unfolded at the intersection of visibility and absence, Greekness and Blackness, and the complexities of belonging and representation. The project engaged not only with historical narratives of Africa, but also with the political urgency of the present, foregrounding Afrodiasporic presence in contemporary Athenian society.

This talk reflects on this long-term project as an ongoing curatorial and ethical process, shaped by collaboration, co-design, and forms of co-authorship developed through working with communities. It approaches identity as something continually negotiated within the museum space—between curators, participants, objects, and audiences—while examining how African cultures are mediated within a Greek institutional framework and how museums operate as civic spaces where dialogue, knowledge, and social presence are continually reconfigured.

Friday, March 13, 2026

The Sanctification of Museum Spaces through the Display of Religious Art: Reflections on Icons from Sinai After Twenty Years 

Kristen Collins, J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles

Speaker Biography

Dr. Kristen Collins is a curator of Manuscripts at the J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles. Her lecture explores the transformation of the secular spaces of the museum through the 2006 exhibition Holy Image, Hallowed Ground: Icons from Sinai.  Conceived and presented as a collection of historically significant Byzantine religious works, the exhibition surprised staff and visitors alike with the depth of feeling that the icons, their display, and interpretation engendered among those who connected to the show through online media and print, as well as in-person visits and programs, transforming the museum for a short time into a site for pilgrimage, prayer, and wonder.  

Friday, February 13, 2026

Forests of Empire: Timber Production and the Athenian Conquest of Eion

John Daukas, 911³Ô¹Ï

Abstract

Just a few years after the Battle of Salamis in 480 BCE, Athenians attacked and seized Eion. A small Greek city-state in the Northern Aegean, its connections to Persia were peripheral, and its conquest has sparked scholarly debate as a result. This talk offers one perspective on Eion's conquest, contextualizing it in the Mediterranean timber trade by elucidating its perceived role in Athens' political economy. Seizing and colonizing Eion gave Athenians access to timber resources which allowed them to cheaply satisfy critical military and domestic needs, paving the way for Athens' rise as an imperial power. I will first discuss the importance of timber suitable for building and maintaining Athens' state-of-the-art navy, a topic long noted by scholars. I will then contribute to scholarship by discussing timber's role in construction more broadly as well as timber's role as a source of energy at Athens. Finally, I will touch on the important role that specialized labor played in Eion's capture. By connecting these aspects together, I hope to better contextualize Eion's seizure in what I am calling the "Arboreal Economy.

Friday, January 16, 2026

Istanbul’s Apokries Between Empire, Nation, and Modernity in the 20th century

Naz Vardar, 911³Ô¹Ï    

Abstract

This talk traces the history of Apokries (carnival) festivities in Istanbul in the early 20th century until the 1940s, when they disappeared. It aims to explore questions of urban space, class, gender, and ethnic identities against the background of the collapse of the Ottoman Empire and Turkish nation-building efforts. Centered in Tatavla, a small lower-class Greek-Orthodox neighborhood in Istanbul, Apokries and Clean Monday fair were moments of collective entertainment and consumption. During the Ottoman period, the festivities had a multi-ethnic, semi-underground character, which was not necessarily embraced by all, but largely tolerated. Drawing on Greek and Ottoman-Turkish sources, this talk first aims to draw the social and cultural dynamics at play in festivities and how they were viewed by the Greek-Orthodox elite, Ottoman authorities, and Muslims at the end of the Ottoman Empire. The talk then turns to Turkish newspapers of the 1920s and 19230s, which documented the Apokries’ growing scale and participation, while simultaneously attacking it as Greek, Christian and foreign. By tracing these shifting representations, the paper shows how the marginalization and eventual disappearance of Apokries formed part of a broader project of Turkish nation-building, modernity, secularism, and remaking of Istanbul’s urban public space.