The American School of Classical Studies in the news.
UPDATED! The Gennadius Library's Clean Monday celebration in New York City will have a change of venue this year to Kellari Taverna and will be held on February 27, 2012. Festivities begin at 6:30 pm. and feature great food for the Lenten season, an auction, music and dancing! Read details here.
Read MoreOn October 11, 2011 there was the Book Presentation of Gennadeion Monograph VI: “Exploring Greek Manuscripts in the Gennadius Library,”
Read MoreOn April 12, 2011, Evanthis Hatzivassiliou (University of Athens) delivered the Archives lecture, "The Americans and the Greeks, 1949-1959: Intervention and Modernization."
Read MoreOn April 5, 2011, Malcolm Wiener Visiting Research Professor Michael MacKinnon (University of Winnipeg) delivered the lecture, "Animals in the Agora: Reconstructing Cultural Life in Ancient Athens from Zooarchaeological Remains."
Read MoreThe catalog for the musical scores of composer Dimitry Levidis (1886-1951) is now available electronically through the American School's web page.
Read MoreThe American School is pleased to announce its schedule of lectures for the 2011-2012 academic year. The series will cover a broad range of topics, from prehistoric finds in Messenia to women in Mt. Athos, and from Athens economics to a lecture by Patrick Leigh Fermor's biographer.
Read MoreProfessor, archaeologist and beloved member of the School community, Fred Cooper died on Sunday, September 25.
Read MoreProfessor Agne Vlavianou Arvanite has donated to the Archives of the Gennadius Library a small number of letters from poet Kostis Palamas to Nikos Fandrides, as well as books given to Fandrides by Kostis Palamas.
Read MoreManaging Committee member and co-director of the Mt. Lykaion excavation David Romano reports that on July 30, 2011, the first trail of the proposed Parrhasian Heritage Park of the Peloponnesos was opened between Ano Karyes (Arcadia) and Neda (Messenia). The Park will protect the area of Mt. Lykaion but will also extend to protect and unify many other ancient cities and sanctuaries in the region.
Read MoreASCSA and the Cultural Society of Chora presented commemorative certificates to nearly fifty members of the community in recognition of the role they or members of their family had played in excavations of the "Palace of Nestor."
Read MoreKathimerini reporter Christina Sanoudou interviews Wiener Laboratory researchers.
Read MoreAugust is vacation time, but for School Director Jack Davis and wife Shari Stocker a trip Down Under served as a working vacation. The pair traveled to the Antipodes as guests of the Australian Archaeological Institute in Athens to participate in the Institute's Visiting Lecturer program. The indefatigable Professor Davis delivered 30 lectures in 9 cities while there.
Read MoreThe latest issue contains articles ranging from the Mycenaean to the Roman period, addressing topics as diverse as LBA ceramics from the Peloponnese, the reminting of silver coinage in Athens, the leasing of sacred land in the 4th c. B.C., and the evolving character of a Roman road at Corinth. Subscribers can read the issue on JSTOR, Hesperia’s new online home.
Read MoreEdward Capps was one of the luminaries of the American School, and many recognize him as the "Second Founder of the School." This summer the great-nephew of Edward Capps came to Athens to remember the Capps legacy.
Read MoreSecretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and Greek Minister of Foreign Affairs Stavros Lambrinidis signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) on June 17, 2011 to reduce the incentive for further pillage of Greece's cultural heritage.
Read MoreASCSA Director Jack Davis, was made an honorary citizen of Pylos on July 11, 2011 for his contributions to the community where he has excavated.
Read MoreWiener Laboratory Director, Sherry Fox, began work with the University of Athens' first field campaign at Tell Nader in Kurdistan (Erbil, Iraq) this past April under the direction of Prof. Konstantinos Kopanias from the University of Athens.
Read More"The Matter of Antiquity: An Archaeological Conference in Honor of Susan Rotroff" was held on June 17–18 and filled with colleagues and well-wishers of this noted Agora scholar and recent winner of the AIA Gold Medal. Read more to see why we think Susan is "kind of a big deal."
Read MoreSamantha Martin-McAuliffe and Jenifer Neils report on the first-ever alumni trip in June. Diverse ages, experiences and nationalities made for animated and convivial camaraderie and a memorable experience.
Read MoreThe issue of Gennadeion News for Spring 2011 was recently published and distributed to all members and friends of the Gennadius Library. Read the issue online and in color.
Read MoreThe Spring 2011 edition of the School newsletter ákoue can be read online and in color here.
Read MoreMore reminiscences from School alumni in celebration of Alumni week. Next up: The Famous Professor and the Lowly (but clever) Graduate Student, as remembered by Ron Stroud.
Read MoreHelp us restore U.S. government funding to American Overseas Research Centers! Please sign the petition and make your voice heard!
Read MorePhotos and documents—both illuminating and amusing— from the American School’s academic program are on display in the Basil Room of the Gennadius Library through September 30th.
Read MoreASCSA marked the 130th year of the School's founding with tributes to 5 great Philhellenes—Alan L. Boegehold, Lloyd E. Cotsen, David W. Packard, Malcolm H. Wiener, and Charles K. Williams, II—and a new exhibition. Watch the event here.
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