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The Herodotus Encyclopedia


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in St. Louis. He focuses on the interaction of Greek religion and economics and also has special interest in Athens, Macedon, Cyprus, and the Achaemenid Empire. His most recent publication is Hallowed Stewards: Solon and the Treasurers of Ancient Athens (University of Michigan Press, 2016).

      Nicholas Cahill is currently the director of the Sardis Expedition, and is particularly interested in its Lydian and Persian remains. He has published on Lydian houses, on new discoveries of Lydian coins, and edited general volumes and exhibition catalogues about the site. He is Professor of Art History at the University of Wisconsin‐Madison.

      Douglas Cairns is Professor of Classics in the University of Edinburgh. He works on Greek society and ethics, especially the emotions, and is the author of Aidôs: The Psychology and Ethics of Honour and Shame in Ancient Greek Literature (1993), Bacchylides: Five Epinician Odes (2010), and Sophocles: Antigone (2016).

      Chris Carey is Emeritus Professor of Greek at University College London. He has researched early Greek poetry, Greek tragedy and comedy, oratory and law. He edited the Oxford Classical Text of Lysias and has produced commentaries on Lysias and Demosthenes for the Cambridge “Green and Yellow” series and translated Aeschines for University of Texas Press. His Democracy in Classical Athens is now in its second edition (2017), and he is currently working on a commentary on Herodotus Book 7 for Cambridge University Press. His book Thermopylae, in the Oxford University Press Great Battles series, appeared in 2019.

      Paul Cartledge is A. G. Leventis Senior Research Fellow, Clare College, Cambridge, and emeritus A. G. Leventis Professor of Greek Culture, Cambridge University. He has written, co‐written, edited or co‐edited some twenty‐five books, including The Greeks. A Very Short Introduction (Oxford University Press, 2011) and most recently Democracy: A Life (Oxford University Press, 2016; paperback with new Afterword, 2018). He was consultant for a special issue devoted to Herodotean themes of Classical World 102.4 (Summer 2009). He is an Honorary Citizen of modern Sparta and holds the Gold Cross of the Order of Honour conferred by the President of Greece.

      Aideen Carty was previously a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Dahlem Research School of the Freie Universität Berlin, where her research focused on the archaic period of Greek history. Her PhD thesis was published as Polycrates, Tyrant of Samos: New Light on Archaic Greece (Stuttgart: Franz Steiner, 2015). Dr. Carty no longer works in the field of Classics.

      Gian Franco Chiai studied Ancient History, Classical Philology, and Archaeology at University of Rome–La Sapienza. He finished his PhD at the Department of Ancient History in 2002. Currently, he is writing his Habilitation in Ancient History at the Free University of Berlin. He worked as a Research Assistant at the Universities of Heidelberg, Frankfurt am Main, Eichstätt, and at the Academy of Sciences of Berlin. His research areas include Greek and Roman epigraphy, numismatics, ancient historiography, and Greek and Roman religion. He has published Troia, la Troade ed il Nord Egeo nelle tradizioni mitiche greche: contributo alla ricostruzione della geografia mitica di una regione nella memoria culturale greca (Paderborn, 2017).

      Charles C. Chiasson is Associate Professor, Distinguished Teaching Professor, and Director of the Classical Studies Program at the University of Texas at Arlington. His research focuses on the relationship between Herodotus and the Greek poetic tradition, the subject of a book that is currently in progress. He won the Gildersleeve Prize for 2005 awarded by the American Journal of Philology. Recent publications include “Solon’s Poetry and Herodotean Historiography,” in the American Journal of Philology 137 (2016), and “Myth and Truth in Herodotus’ Cyrus Logos,” in E. Baragwanath and M. de Bakker, eds., Myth, Truth, and Narrative in Herodotus (Oxford, 2012).

      Susan D. Collins is Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Notre Dame. She is co‐translator of Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics, author of Aristotle and the Rediscovery of Citizenship, and co‐editor of Action and Contemplation: Studies in the Moral and Political Thought of Aristotle.

      Stephen Colvin is Professor of Classics and Historical Linguistics at University College London. His areas of interest include the Greek dialects and the koinē, Greek verbal aspect, and the sociolinguistic culture of the ancient world. He has written books and articles on various aspects of the Greek language and linguistic culture, most recently A Brief History of Ancient Greek (Wiley, 2014).

      Aldo Corcella is Professor of Classical Philology at the Università della Basilicata. He specializes in the study of ancient historiography and rhetoric (the school of Gaza and its tradition in the Byzantine world) as well as the history of classical scholarship. Among his works are a commentary on Herodotus’ Book 4 (in A Commentary on Herodotus Books I–IV, edited by Oswyn Murray and Alfonso Moreno, Oxford University Press, 2007) and the volume Friedrich Spiro filologo e libraio. Per una storia della S. Calvary & Co. (Bari: Edizioni Dedalo, 2014).

      Monica S. Cyrino is Professor of Classics at the University of New Mexico. Her research centers on the reception of the ancient world on screen. She is the author of Big Screen Rome (Blackwell, 2005) and Aphrodite (Routledge, 2010); editor of Screening Love and Sex in the Ancient World (Palgrave Macmillan, 2013), Rome, Season One: History Makes Television (Blackwell, 2008), and Rome, Season Two: Trial and Triumph (Edinburgh, 2015); and co‐editor of Classical Myth on Screen (Palgrave Macmillan, 2015) and STARZ Spartacus: Reimagining an Icon on Screen (Edinburgh, 2017). She has published numerous essays and gives lectures around the world on the representation of classical antiquity on screen. She has served as an academic consultant on several recent film and television productions.

      Catherine Darbo‐Peschanski is researcher at the French National Center of Scientific Research (CNRS). She has firstly worked on historia as a genuine Greek category of empiric knowledge, then on a phenomenology of Greek experience of the world (modes of presence and of action) and currently on the animate body and its inside and outside spaces. Her publications include L’historia. Commencements grecs (Paris, 2007), of which Chapter 4 appears in English translation in Herodotus: Volume 2, Herodotus and the World, edited by Rosaria Vignolo Munson (Oxford, 2013, 78–106); “Place and Nature of Memory in Greek Historiography” in Greek Memory. Theories and Practice, edited by L. Castagnoli and P. Ceccarelli (Cambridge, 2018, 117–42).

      Véronique Dasen is Professor of Classical Archaeology at the University of Fribourg in Switzerland. Her interests include history of medicine and the body, gender studies, history of childhood, history of twins, magic, and ludic culture. She is the author of Le sourire d’Omphale. Maternité et petite enfance dans l’Antiquité (Rennes, 2015); Agir. Identité(s) des médecins antiques. Histoire, médecine et santé (Toulouse, 2015); with J.‐M. Spieser (eds.), Les savoirs magiques et leur transmission de l’Antiquité à la Renaissance (Florence, 2014); with Helen King, La médecine dans l’Antiquité grecque et romaine (Lausanne, 2008); Jumeaux, jumelles dans l'Antiquité grecque et romaine (Kilchberg, 2005); and Dwarfs in Ancient Egypt and Greece (Oxford, 2013 [orig. 1993]).