Online Open House | A Land Called Crete, with Andrew Koh
Online Open House | A Land Called Crete, with Andrew Koh
We are excited to welcome Andrew Koh, of the MIT Center for Materials
Research and the Harvard Semitic Museum, for a Center for Hellenic
Studies Online Open House discussion entitled ‘A Land Called Crete: From
Harriet Boyd Hawes to the Cretan Collections Project’. The event will
be streamed live on Thursday, October 24 at 11 a.m. EDT, and will be
recorded.
To prepare for the event you could read Odyssey 19.172–184, the context for which is provided in the following posts at Classical Inquiries:
and view the text from the second pylon of Ramesses III’s mortuary
temple at Medinet Habu, which depicts the Ramesses III leading
prisoners, with the gods Amun and Mut. You can see an image of the pylon
inscription at this link (then scroll down to see the translation):
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sea_Peoples#/media/File:Medinet_Habu_Ramses_III._Tempel_Erster_Hof_(Lepsius)_01.jpg
The OpenARCHEM project
The OpernARCHEM project is not a singular archaeological
endeavor, but rather the first step in an exciting new collaborative
interdisciplinary retelling of the entangled post-Bronze Age
Mediterranean and the greater implications it holds for the emergence of
what we now know as the classical world. The characterization of
funerary artifacts from southern Phocis, eastern Crete, and the southern
Levant will thus illuminate the extent to which Greece was wholly cut
off from the greater Mediterranean, or clarify through which channels it
interacted with particular regions as it entered the 1st millennium
BCE.
You can watch the live stream on the day on the Center for Hellenic Studies YouTube channel. The recording will be added to this blog post afterwards.
Andrew Koh
Andrew
Koh received a B.S. in Biophysics and the Classics from the University
of Illinois, an M.A. in Ancient Near Eastern Studies from Biblical
Theological Seminary, and a Ph.D. in Art & Archaeology of the
Mediterranean World from the University of Pennsylvania. He was a
graduate fellow at the Penn Museum Corinth Computer Project and a
Colburn Fellow at the American School of Classical Studies in Athens. He
initially honed his interdisciplinary approach to the classical world
by characterizing a perfumed oil workshop at the Minoan harbor town of
Mochlos, dissertation research he completed as an exchange scholar at
the Stanford University Department of Classics and the inaugural
Archaeological Institute of America Pomerance Fellow. Koh is currently a
senior research fellow at the MIT Center for Materials Research in
Archaeology & Ethnology and a research associate at the Harvard
Semitic Museum. He founded the ARCHEM Project in 2003 and now serves as
the co-editor-in-chief of its interdisciplinary and collaborative
archaeometric database (http://openarchem.org).
Koh utilizes both traditional and scientific methods to better
understand cross-cultural interactions and complex societies through
their organic commodities and branded goods. This approach integrates
text, material culture, and material science, illuminating previously
invisible data sets to address questions of culture and society. This
blended approach offers exciting new ways forward for Classics and
archaeology by introducing processes, social groups, and practices
absent from other records. This interdisciplinary, longue durée approach
underlies his monograph, Luxury Trade and Social Complexity in the
Ancient Mediterranean World, which is under contract with Cambridge
University Press.
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