10th Annual UK Punic/Phoenician Network Graduate Workshop - 22/02/2020, Dublin (Ireland)
The Annual Punic Network Graduate Workshop provides students working on Punic and Phoenician topics at Masters and Doctoral level with the chance to showcase their research, and to network with their peers on an international level.
FECHA /DATE/DATA : 22/02/2020
LUGAR/LOCATION/LUOGO: Neill Lecture Theatre, Long Room Hub, Trinity College Dublin (Dublin, Ireland)
ORGANIZADOR/ORGANIZER/ORGANIZZATORE: The School of Histories and Humanities
INFO: web - hillan@tcd.ie
INSCRIPCIÓN/REGISTRATION/REGISTRAZIONE:
PROGRAMA/PROGRAM/PROGRAMMA:
(9.00-9.30) Registration and coffee
(9.30-9.45) Introduction
Morning slot: War and Peace
(9.45-10.15) Andrzej Dudziński (Jagiellonian University, Krakow) Four strategies of the Carthaginian policy towards Sicily
(10.20-10.50) Terence M. Hayes (University College London) The Victor Writes the History. The First Punic War – One War or Two?
(10.55-11.25) Ted Szadzinski (Kings College London) Commanding the Column of Babel: Examining the Issues of Command and Control in the Carthaginian Army of the 3rd Century
(11.30-11.45) Coffee Break
(11.50-12.20) Andrew M. Hill (Trinity College Dublin) Cruel, Greedy, and Cunning: Punic stereotyping and Polybius’ view of the Mercenary War
(12.25-12.45) Tyler Nye (Trinity College Dublin) Hannibal in the Phlegraean Fields: Lakeside within the crater of Avernus
(12.50-1.20) Oded Haim (Ben-Gurion University of the Negev) The Punic Army at the Battle of Zama
(1.25-1.55) Lunch
Afternoon slot: Iberia and the Islands
(2.00-2.30) María de los Reyes López Jurado (University of Seville) Ceramic Unguentaria from the Necropolis of Gadir/Gades (Cádiz, Spain)
(2.35-2.55) Alessandro Mazzariol (Università degli Studi di Padova) The Phoenician necropolis of Nora (Sardinia, Italy). Analyzing the Phoenician diaspora through a multidisciplinary approach.
(3.00-3.30) Sonia Carbonell Pastor (University of Alicante) Contact dynamics in Minorca (Balearic Islands, Spain). Thoughts on the funerary sphere of the 2nd half of the 1st millennium BCE
(3.35-3.50) Final discussion
(4.00-5.00) Old Library tour