The Herodotus Encyclopedia. Группа авторов
Companion to Homer (ed., Cambridge 2004), and the two volumes of Early Greek Mythography (Oxford 2000–13), which collect and comment on the fragments of the first twenty‐nine Greek mythographers.
Florencia Foxley is a PhD candidate at the University of Colorado at Boulder. She previously studied Classics at the University of Notre Dame and Haverford College. Her research centers on Greek poetry, especially the representation of women, children, and the domestic sphere in Greek tragedy. Her dissertation explores the relationship between childbirth and wedding rituals in Euripidean tragedy.
Maria Fragoulaki is a Lecturer in Ancient Greek History at Cardiff University. She specializes in Greek historiography, especially Thucydides and Herodotus, Greek ethnicity, cultural politics, and the interaction between history and literature. She is the author of Kinship in Thucydides: Intercommunal Ties and Historical Narrative (Oxford University Press, 2013) and co‐editor of Shaping Memory: Ancient Greek Historiography, Poetry, and Epigraphy (Histos Supplement, forthcoming). She is writing a monograph on the literary and cultural interaction between Thucydides and Homer.
Susanne Froehlich (née Pilhofer) received her doctorate in 2011 from the Universities of Freiburg and Strasbourg, on Handlungsmotive bei Herodot (Stuttgart: Franz Steiner, 2013). After holding a lectureship at the University of Giessen from 2012 to 2017, she transferred to the University of Greifswald where she has sole responsibility for the Ancient History Section. Her scholarly work centers on Greek historiography, Roman Asia Minor, mobility in antiquity, and Greek and Latin epigraphy. Her current research project envisages a cultural history of the Roman city gate.
Peter Funke is Senior Professor at the Cluster of Excellence “Religion and Politics in Pre‐Modern and Modern Cultures” as well as at the Institute for Ancient History and the Institute for Epigraphy at Westfälische Wilhelms‐Universität in Münster. He is Project Manager of “Inscriptiones Graecae” of the Berlin‐Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities. He is the author of some 170 articles, two books, and eleven edited books, including The Politics of Ethnicity and the Crisis of the Peloponnesian League (2009), Greek Federal States and Their Sanctuaries. Identity and Integration (2013), Federalism in Greek Antiquity (2015), and Part 1 of Collezioni epigrafiche della Grecia occidentale / Epigraphische Sammlungen aus Westgriechenland (2018).
Mark B. Garrison holds the Alice Pratt Brown Distinguished Professorship in Art History in the Department of Art and Art History at Trinity University in San Antonio, Texas, USA. His primary research interests are the glyptic arts of ancient Iran and Iraq in the first half of the first millennium BCE.
Coulter H. George is Professor of Classics at the University of Virginia. He is the author of Expressions of Time in Ancient Greek (Cambridge University Press, 2014), and his research interests include the syntax and semantics of the Greek verb, particles and prepositional phrases, and contact phenomena between Greek and the other languages of the ancient Mediterranean. He is currently working on a linguistic history of Greek prose style.
Maurizio Giangiulio is a Full Professor of Greek History at the University of Trento (Italy). He has worked on the history of the Western Greeks, on Pythagoreanism, and on archaic social memory. His publications include “Constructing the Past” in Nino Luraghi (ed.), The Historian’s Craft in the Age of Herodotus (Oxford 2001); Deconstructing Ethnicities: Multiple Identities in Archaic and Classical Sicily (BABesch 85, 2010); “Collective Identity, Imagined Past, and Delphi” in Lin Foxhall, Hans‐Joachim Gehrke, and Nino Luraghi (eds.), Intentionale Geschichte: Spinning Time in Ancient Greece (Stuttgart 2010); and Democrazie greche. Atene, Sicilia, Magna Grecia (Rome 2015). His next project concerns the oracular tales reported by Herodotus.
Vanessa B. Gorman is a Professor of History at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln. She is the author of Miletos, the Ornament of Ionia: A History of the City to 400 BCE (Michigan 2001), the co‐author with Robert Gorman of Corrupting Luxury in Ancient Greek Literature (Michigan 2014), and a co‐editor (with Eric Robinson) of the Festschrift for A. John Graham. She is currently collaborating with Robert Gorman on several digital treebanking projects, including the Digital Athenaeus Project, in which she is distinguishing methods of identifying authorship and of distinguishing text from cover text through the analysis of syntactic constructions.
Luke Gorton teaches courses in Classics and Religious Studies at the University of New Mexico. His research interests especially include topics relating to connections between cultures of the ancient Mediterranean, including interactions between religious and/or linguistic groups. He is currently preparing his dissertation on the origins and spread of wine for publication as a book.
Vivienne Gray (Emeritus Professor of Classics at the University of Auckland) has research interests in Xenophon and Herodotus. She is the author of Xenophon on Government (Cambridge 2007), Xenophon. Oxford Readings in Classical Studies (Oxford 2010), and Xenophon’s Mirror of Princes (Oxford 2011), as well as “Herodotus’ Short Stories,” in Brill's Companion to Herodotus (Leiden 2002: 291–321), “Herodotus 5.55–69: Structure and Significance,” in Reading Herodotus: A Study of the logoi in Book Five of Herodotus’ Histories (Cambridge 2007: 202–25), and “Herodotus on Melampus,” in Myth, Truth and Narrative in Herodotus (Oxford, 2012: 167–91).
R. Drew Griffith is a Professor of Classics at Queen’s University at Kingston. He has published books on Homer, Sophocles, and ancient humor, and many articles on Greek and Latin poetry.
Jane Grogan (University College Dublin, Ireland) is a Senior Lecturer in early modern English literature. Her research interests lie in the study of the poet Edmund Spenser, Persia (ancient and early modern), epic, poetics, and classical reception. She has published two monographs, including The Persian Empire in English Renaissance Writing, 1549–1622, and edited the first English translation of Xenophon’s Cyropaedia for the MHRA Tudor and Stuart Translations Series.
Matthias Haake is currently Wissenschaftlicher Mitarbeiter in the Seminar für Alte Geschichte at Westfälische Wilhelms‐Universität, Münster. His research focuses on the social and cultural history of philosophy in the Ancient World as well as on sole‐rule in the Greco‐Roman world. He is author of Der Philosoph in der Stadt. Untersuchungen zur öffentlichen Rede über Philosophen und Philosophie in den hellenistischen Poleis (2007) and co‐editor of Rollenbilder in der athenischen Demokratie. Medien, Gruppen, Räume im politischen und sozialen System (2009), Friedrich Münzer. Kleine Schriften (2012), Greek Federal States and Their Sanctuaries. Identity and Integration (2013), Rechtliche Verfahren und religiöse Sanktionierung in der griechisch‐römischen Antike (2016), and Politische Kultur und soziale Struktur der römischen Republik. Bilanzen und Perspektiven (2017).
Jason Hawke is Associate Professor of History at Roanoke College. He specializes in early Greek law, elite power, and the history of archaic and classical Greece. He is the author of Writing Authority: Elite Competition and Written Law in Early Greece (Northern Illinois University Press, 2011). His next major projects include a historical biography of Alcibiades and the development of numeracy in early Greece.
Jan Haywood is Lecturer in Classical Studies at The Open University (UK). His research expertise includes ancient Greek historiography, ancient divination, and the ancient and modern reception of the Trojan War tradition. He has published (with Naoíse Mac Sweeney) Homer’s Iliad and the Trojan War: Dialogues on Tradition (Bloomsbury, 2018), and (with Zosia Archibald) a festschrift for John Davies, The Power of Individual and Community in Ancient Athens and Beyond (Classical Press of Wales, 2019). His next monograph, Herodotus and his Sources, will investigate the chief functions of the different textual sources that support Herodotus’ Histories.
Typhaine Haziza is Maître de Conférences at the University of Caen‐Normandie (France) and member of HisTeMé (ex CRHQ, EA 7455). Her research focuses on Herodotus as well