Seminarium późnoantyczne Ewy Wipszyckiej – semestr zimowy 2025/2026

W imieniu organizatorów warszawskiego Seminarium Późnoantycznego Ewy Wipszyckiej zapraszamy na wykłady organizowane w ramach seminarium w semestrze zimowym 2025/2026.
Spotkania odbywają się w czwartki, o 16.45 w sali 203 Wydziału Prawa i Administracji oraz online na platformie Zoom.
Kontakt: Agata Deptuła (agata.deptula@uw.edu.pl) oraz Robert Wiśniewski (r.wisniewski@uw.edu.pl).
Aktualne abstrakty dostępne na stronie seminarium.
Pełen program:
2.10 Jakub Urbanik (UW), D. I 3.37 / P. Oxy. LXXXV 5495 – Consuetudo Strikes Back
9.10 Simcha Gross (University of Pennsylvania), Good Fences Make Bad Neighbors: Communities and Empire on the Roman-Sasanian Frontier
16.10 Zachary Herz (University of Colorado Boulder), A Fetid Jungle of Laws. The Organization of Imperial Rescripts, 160–534 C.E.
23.10 Yitzhak Hen (The Hebrew University of Jerusalem), Purifying Texts in Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages
30.10 Robert Wiśniewski (UW), Was St Peter a popular saint?
6.11 David Addison (University of Liverpool), Extraneae Feminae: Women, the Clerical Household, and the Legacy of Nicaea
13.11 Stuart Airlie (University of Glasgow), Body Horror of the Empress and Dark Palaces of the Emperor: Rulers and Resentment c.400-c.1100
20.11 Roxanne Bélanger-Sarrazin (Universität Würzburg), Apocrypha, Magic, Liturgy: The Multiple identities of Coptic Prayers in Late Antique and Early Islamic Egypt
27.11 Jean-Michel Carrié (EHESS), TBA
4.12 Oto Mestek (Univerzita Karlova), The Disappearance of the Heruli: Justinian’s Policy Towards the Barbarian Foederati
11.12 Paweł Nowakowski (UW) Thinking in Greek and Thinking in Aramaic: How Languages Foster Unique Ways of Processing and Expressing Thought in Late Antique Epigraphy
18.12 Grzegorz Ochała (UW) Of Names and Meanings: Insights into Socioonomastics of Medieval Nubia
8.01 Joanna Ciesielska (UW) The People of Soba: Bioarchaeological Perspectives on the Society and History of Medieval Alwa
15.01 Sofía Torallas-Tovar (IAS Princeton) Writing Magic: Scribes and Magical Formularies on Papyrus
22.01 Karl Dahm (University of Durham), Family Dramas in Late Antique Church Conflicts