W imieniu organizatorów warszawskiego Seminarium Późnoantycznego Ewy Wipszyckiej zapraszamy na wykłady organizowane w ramach seminarium w semestrze letnim 2025/2026.
Spotkania odbywają się w czwartki, o 16.45 w sali 203 Wydziału Prawa i Administracji oraz online na platformie Zoom.
Kontakt: Agata Deptuła (agata.deptula@uw.edu.pl) oraz Robert Wiśniewski (r.wisniewski@uw.edu.pl).
Aktualne abstrakty dostępne na stronie seminarium.
Harmonogram spotkań:
- 19.02 — Agnieszka Lic (Institute of Mediterranean and Oriental Cultures, PAS): Eastern Arabia and the Gulf in the Early Islamic Period: Archaeological Perspectives on the Christianisation, Islamisation, and Urbanisation of the Region
- 26.02 — Mariusz Gwiazda (UW): Marmora Christiana? Marble Use and Distribution Patterns in the Early Byzantine Southern Levant
- 5.03 — Julia Doroszewska (UW): Subversive Sainthood: Late Antique Hagiography as Evidence for Religious Mentality
- 12.03 — Aaron Butts (University of Hamburg): The Connected Histories of Ethiopic and Syriac Christians
- 19.03 — Korshi Dosoo (CNRS, UMR 8167 Orient et Méditerranée, Paris): Magic by the Psalms in the Coptic Tradition
- 26.03 — Haggai Olshanetsky & Lev Cosijns (University of Oxford): Cluedo in the Eastern Desert: Who, or What, Killed Berenice and Myos Hormos? Plague, Climate, War or Competing Trade Routes
- 9.04 — John Merrington (Austrian Academy of Sciences / University of Oxford): Rationality after Rome
- 16.04 — Andrew Wilson (University of Oxford): The Archaeology of the Third-Century Crisis
- 23.04 — Maria Mossakowska-Gaubert (CNRS, UMR 8167 Orient et Méditerranée, Paris / UW): Silk in Late Antique Egypt: Texts and Textiles
- 30.04 — Anastasiia Lyakhovich (UW): Between Languages, Landscapes, and Power: Linguistic Strategies of Naming Space in Middle Byzantine and Medieval Armenian Hagiography
- 7.05 — Mischa Meier (University of Tübingen): Jerusalem under Heraclius (610–641): Christians, Jews, Muslims, and the End of the World
- 14.05 — Elisabeth R. O'Connell (British Museum): From Byzantium to Aksum: Displaying the Red Sea port of Adulis at the British Museum
- 21.05 — Giulia Rosetto (University of Vienna): The Sinai Palimpsests and Their Contributions to the Study of Late Antique Greek Scripts and Texts
- 28.05 — Kristina Sessa (Ohio State University): Disaster at Scale: Experiencing Ruinous Events in Late Antiquity