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Online Open House | Experimental Archaeology of Ancient Greek Warfare
Online Open House | Experimental Archaeology of Ancient Greek Warfare
We are excited to welcome Natasha Bershadsky, Paul M. Bardunias,
Christian Cameron, and Giannis Kadoglou for an Online Open House
entitled “Experimental Archaeology of Ancient Greek Warfare.” The event
will take place on Friday, July 17 at 11:00 a.m. EDT and will be
recorded. You can watch the live-streaming on the Center for Hellenic
Studies YouTube Channel.
To get ready for the event you might like to read:
Xenophon, Hellenica 4.3
http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Xen.+Hell.+4.3&fromdoc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.01.0206
Xenophon Agesilaus 2
http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.01.0210%3Atext%3DAges.%3Achapter%3D2
Xenophon Cyropaedia 2.3.21
http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Xen.+Cyrop.+2.3.21&fromdoc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.01.0204
Euripides Phoesissae 1355:
http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.01.0118%3Acard%3D1340
Thucydides Mantinea: The Peloponnesian War 5.55
http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.01.0200%3Abook%3D5%3Achapter%3D55%3Asection%3D1
Paul M. Bardunias
Paul
M. Bardunias received his PhD from the University of Florida and
studies self-organization and swarm behaviors in social insects. He is
also a Greek, whose family hails from Sparta, and was reared on tales of
ancient warfare. As he read the works of modern historians on hoplite
warfare, it became clear that many of the issues the authors found most
contentious could be resolved by applying the concepts of
self-organization to men in combat. The process by which
minimally-trained troops executed seemingly complex maneuvers on a
battlefield, synchronized their efforts in combat, and even routed can
be informed by watching a school of fish or a murmuration of starlings
move almost as a single creature. He is the author of numerous
scientific articles on group movement and nest construction in social
insects, as well as articles on ancient warfare and the book Hoplites at War.
Natasha Bershadsky
A
research subject that I am most interested in is the employment of
myths and rituals in the political developments of the Archaic and
Classical periods. My book in preparation explores ritual and
mythological aspects of long-running border conflicts in Archaic Greece
and their creative transformations by the democracies of the Classical
period. My other project is an investigation of Hesiod’s hero cults,
their connection to Hesiodic poetry and their political use in the
Archaic and Classical periods. I am a Fellow in Ancient Greek History
and in Poetry at the Center for Hellenic Studies. I received my PhD
degree from the University of Chicago, my BA degree from the Hebrew
University of Jerusalem, and was born in Moscow.
Christian Cameron
Christian
Cameron was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in 1962. He grew up in
Rockport, Massachusetts, Iowa City, Iowa, and Rochester, New York, where
he attended McQuaid Jesuit High School and later graduated from the
University of Rochester with a degree in history.
After the longest undergraduate degree on record (1980–87), he joined
the United States Navy, where he served as an intelligence officer and
as a backseater in S-3 Vikings in the First Gulf War, in Somalia, and
elsewhere. After a dozen years of service, he became a full time writer
in 2000. He lives in Toronto (that’s Ontario, in Canada) with his wife
Sarah and their daughter Beatrice, currently age seven. He attends the
University of Toronto when the gods move him and may eventually have a
Masters in Classics, but right now he’s a full time historical novelist,
and it is the best job in the world.
Giannis Kadoglou
Giannis
Kadoglou was born in Alexandroupolis, Northern Greece, in 1988. Like
any good hoplite he studied agriculture in the Alexander School of
Agricultural Technology of Thessaloniki, and lives in Alexandroupolis,
where he maintains a pear farm. Since 2016 he has worked as a luthier of
Greek folk instruments, and he continues to exercise his lifelong
occupation as a musician.
His active research into historical reconstruction was inspired by the
experimental archaeology of historian and author Peter Connolly. He
found others with this passion on online forums specialized on Greek and
Roman warfare, where he met some of his lifelong companions in the
research and interpretation of ancient sources and reconstruction of
Greek material culture. He has collaborated with various museums in
Greece both for the promotion of research in the reconstruction sector
and for the education of the public in the usefulness of reenactment and
experimental archaeology in our understanding and interpretation of the
ancient sources.
He founded the reenactment group “Rhesidae” based in Northern Greece in
2011, and that same year he contributed to the organization of the first
international reenactment of the battle of Marathon which took place in
the historical battlefield. In 2015 he was part of the organization
committee of the second Marathon event in Greece, which helped to
establish a closer relationship between local authorities, museums and
educational institutions in Greece, with historical reenactors. He is
currently a member of the organization committee for the reenactment of
the battle of Plataea, in the town of Plataea, Greece.
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