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The empire that the Athenians established in the years after 478 BC was an entirely new phenomenon in the history of Greece, and the basis of much of the brilliant development of Athenian culture in the fifth century. Its growth and collapse was the key event in the history of the period, after the defeat of the Persian invasion. Yet this important historical phenomenon remains baffling to study. New developments in various fields have made urgent a revision of existing approaches, which largely originated in the first half of the last century. Advances in archaeology have hugely extended the possibilities of writing an archaeology of the empire. The accepted chronology of many key inscriptions has been powerfully challenged, so that new narrative reconstructions become possible. Relevant new documents in languages such as Lycian have become available. Understanding of the Persian empire which was the parallel, and in a sense the model, with which the Athenian empire interacted has been transformed in the last quarter century. Broader developments in historiography (microhistory; history from below; and, post-colonial theory) invite us to pose new questions.The aim of this collection is not to offer a final word on any of the problems, but to give a sense of the possibility of a new generation of studies of the empire.
My BA Dissertation. Spring 2015
Epigraphical Approaches to the Post-Classical Polis: Fourth Century BC to Second Century AD
Introduction: Epigraphy and the PolisInventive Inscriptions – the Organization of Epigraphic Knowledge in the Nineteenth Century (special issue of the Journal of the History of Collections)
Epigraphy in Early Modern Greece2014 •
In this paper, I study the emergence and advancement of epigraphic studies in roughly the first forty years following the foundation of the modern Greek state. The main protagonists – most of whom remain unknown outside Greece – are introduced, and their epigraphic output in its multiple manifestations is examined: the recording and analysis of inscriptions, the publication of articles and monographs, and the creation and protection of epigraphic collections. My study is contextualized by examining contemporary issues of ethnic identity and state-institution formation, as well as questions of interface amongst the Greek intellectuals themselves on the one hand, and between them and their European counterparts on the other. Ultimately, however, an attempt is made to understand the form and content that early epigraphic studies acquired in the Greek-speaking world, and the extent to which Greek scholarship contributed to the emerging field of epigraphy as it materialized with the publication of the early epigraphic corpora.
Mediterranean Historical Review
Thessalians abroad, the case of Pharsalos’ in: I. Malkin, C. Constantakopoulou and K. Panagopoulou (eds.), Networks in the Ancient Mediterranean, Mediterranean Historical Review, vol. 22.2 (2007) 211-2362007 •
M.M. Miles (ed.), Autopsy in Athens. Recent Archaeological Work on Athens and Attica. Oxbow Books, Oxford, 2015.
Roads out of Attica, in M.M. Miles (ed.), Autopsy in Athens. Recent Archaeological Work on Athens and Attica. Oxbow Books, Oxford, 2015.2013 •
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2015 •
Autopsy in Athens. Recent Archaeological Research on Athens and Attica. Ed. Margaret M. Miles. Oxford, Oxbow Books, 2015: 163-180.
The Vanishing Double Stoa at Thorikos and its Afterlives2015 •
Athens, Thebes and Plataia and the end of the sixth century BCE
Athens, Thebes and Plataia and the end of the sixth century BCE2017 •
Bulletin of The Institute of Classical Studies
EPIGRAPHY, LEGISLATION, AND POWER WITHIN THE ATHENIAN EMPIRE2010 •
A Matthaiou & R Pitt (eds.), Athenaion Episkopos: Studies in Honour of Harold B Mattingly, Athens, 2014, pp.339-347
Davis, G. (2014), 'Where are all the little owls?', in A Matthaiou & R Pitt (eds.), Athenaion Episkopos: Studies in Honour of Harold B Mattingly, Athens, 339-347The Classical Quarterly
IG II2 2490, the Epakreis and the pre-Cleisthenic trittyes2007 •
2009 •
Greek Theatre in the Fourth Century B.C.
The Archaeology of the 'Rural' Dionysia in Attica2014 •
2011 •
2017 •
Representation, Narrative, and Function
"The Wretchedness of Old Kings," in A. Avramidou and D. Demitriou, eds., Approaching the Ancient Artifact: Representation, Narrative, and Function, A Festschrift in Honor of H. Alan Shapiro (Berlin 2014) 141-1522014 •
Greeks who dwelt beyond the sea: people, places, monuments. Universitätsforschungen zur prähistorischen Archäologie 333.
Nováková, L.: Greeks who dwelt beyond the sea: people, places, monuments. Universitätsforschungen zur prähistorischen Archäologie 333. Bonn: Dr. Rudolf Habelt 2019.2019 •