Ritual behaviour in early Roman religion
11 March 2025, 5:30 pm–6:30 pm
Vincenzo Timpano (Humboldt University of Berlin) will give the penultimate Accordia Lecture of the 2024-25 series on 11 March.
This event is free.
Event Information
Open to
- All
Availability
- Yes
Cost
- Free
Organiser
-
Prof Ruth Whitehouse
Location
-
Room 264Senate HouseMalet StreetLondonWC1United Kingdom
The lecture, which will be given in person, is entitled Ritual behaviour in early Roman religion: opportunities and challenges of an archaeo-anthropological perspective.
This is a joint lecture with the Institute of Classical Studies and will be held in Room 264, Senate House, Malet Street, London WC1.
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.