The Cenomani in Northern Italy: from Celtic invaders to Roman citizens
05 November 2024, 5:30 pm–6:30 pm
Fabio Saccoccio (University of Nottingham) will give the next Accordia Lecture of the 2024-25 series on 5 November.
This event is free.
Event Information
Open to
- All
Availability
- Yes
Cost
- Free
Organiser
-
Prof Ruth Whitehouse
Location
-
Room 209UCL Institute of Archaeology31-34 Gordon SquareLondonWC1H 0PYUnited Kingdom
The lecture, which will be given in person, is entitled The Cenomani in Northern Italy: from Celtic invaders to Roman citizens.
This is a joint lecture with the UCL Institute of Archaeology and will be held in Room 209, 31-34 Gordon Square, London WC1H 0PY.
For any enquiries about the Accordia Lectures on Italy 2024-25 series, please contact Prof Ruth Whitehouse (accresearch20@gmail.com).
Programme | Accordia Lectures on Italy 2024-25
- 15 October 2024: Copper Age settlements in Sardinia: excavations at Punta Ferulosu (Bonorva) - Guillaume Robin (University of Edinburgh)
- 5 November 2024: The Cenomani in Northern Italy: from Celtic invaders to Roman citizens - Fabio Saccoccio (University of Nottingham)
- 3 December 2024: Early Etruscan religion at Poggio Colla: contexualising the Vicchio stele - Phil Perkins (Open University)
- 14 January 2025: The Neanderthals in Southern Italy - Filomena Ranaldo (Director of Museum of Prehistory, Nardò)
- 4 February 2025: The politics of death in prehistoric Italy - Jess Thompson (University of Cambridge)
- 18 February 2025: Island Archaeology revisited: social and critical perspectives from the small Mediterranean islands 25 years on - Helen Dawson (University of Tubingen)
- 11 March 2025: Ritual behaviour in early Roman religion: opportunities and challenges of an archaeo-anthropological perspective - Vincenzo Timpano (Humboldt University of Berlin)
- 6 May 2025: Regisvilla: excavations and research in the harbour of Vulci - Carlo Regoli (Fondazione Vulci)
The Accordia lecture series is jointly sponsored by the Institute of Classical Studies (Institute of Advanced Study, University of London) and the UCL Institute of Archaeology.