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NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS

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Eran Almagor is the author of studies on Plutarch and other Greek imperial‐era writers (Strabo, Josephus). His interests include the history of the Achaemenid Empire and its image in Greek literature (especially in Herodotus and Ctesias), Plutarch’s works (mainly the Lives), and the modern reception of antiquity, particularly in popular culture. He is the author of Plutarch and the Persica (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2018), and is co‐editor (with J. Skinner) of Ancient Ethnography: New Approaches (London: Bloomsbury, 2013) and co‐editor (with L. Maurice) of The Reception of Ancient Virtues and Vices in Modern Popular Culture (Leiden: Brill, 2017).

Pascal Arnaud has fields of expertise in ancient geography and mapping, historical topography, and ancient maritime history and archaeology. He is co‐director, along with S. J. Keay (Southampton), of the ERC‐funded senior grant Portuslimen, Professor Emeritus in Roman History at University Lumière (Lyon 2, France), and Senior Fellow of the Institut Universitaire de France. He is the author of some 180 articles, three books—including Les routes de la navigation antique (2005)—and five edited books, including The Sea in History: The Ancient World—La Mer dans l’Histoire: L’Antiquité (with P. de Souza, 2016).

Egbert J. Bakker is the Alvan Talcott Professor of Classics at Yale University. He is the co‐editor of Brill’s Companion to Herodotus (2002), the editor of A Companion to the Ancient Greek Language (Wiley‐Blackwell, 2010), and the author of The Meaning of Meat and the Structure of the Odyssey (Cambridge, 2013). He is currently working on a commentary on Book 9 of the Odyssey for Cambridge University Press.

Ernst Baltrusch is Professor of Ancient History at the Freie Universität Berlin. He studied (1975–92) Classics at the Georg‐August‐University of Göttingen, the Rheinische Friedrich‐Wilhelms University Bonn, and the Technische University of Berlin (Habilitation). He has published widely on various topics in Ancient History, especially on the Roman Republic, Jews and Judaism in the ancient world, and international law and Sparta in antiquity, including Symmachie und Spondai (1994), Sparta (fourth edition, 2010), Außenpolitik, Bünde und Reichsbildung in der Antike (2008), and Herodes. König im Heiligen Land (2012). He is also the author of an article on “Greek International Law in Thucydides” (2016).

Emily Baragwanath is Associate Professor in the Classics Department at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Her publications include Motivation and Narrative in Herodotus (Oxford, 2008), articles on the literary techniques employed by the Greek historians, and the co‐edited volumes Myth, Truth, and Narrative in Herodotus (Oxford, 2012) and Clio and Thalia: Attic Comedy and Historiography (Histos Supplement 2016). At present she is writing a monograph on Xenophon’s representation of women.

Andrew Barker is Emeritus Professor of Classics at the University of Birmingham. He specializes in Greek music and musical theory, and their connections with philosophy. His recent publications include Ancient Greek Writers on their Musical Past (Fabrizio Serra editore, 2014) and Porphyry’s Commentary on Ptolemy’s Harmonics (Cambridge University Press, 2015).

Elton Barker is a Reader in Classical Studies at The Open University. With research fellowships from Venice International University, the TOPOI excellence cluster in Berlin, the Onassis Foundation, and the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation, he has published widely on agonistics and poetic rivalry in ancient Greek epic, historiography, and tragedy. Since 2008, he has been leading international collaborations, pioneering the use of digital resources to rethink ancient representations of space and place. Hestia (http://hestia.open.ac.uk/) exposes the spatial connections that underpin Herodotus’ Histories; Pelagios (http://commons.pelagios.org/) is developing a method, community, and tools for linking and exploring historical places on the Web.

Christopher Baron is an Associate Professor of Classics at the University of Notre Dame (South Bend, IN, USA). He specializes in the study of the historical writing of ancient Greece and Rome as well as the history of the Greek world after Alexander. He is the author of Timaeus of Tauromenium and Hellenistic Historiography (Cambridge University Press, 2013), co‐editor with Josiah Osgood (Georgetown) of Cassius Dio and the Late Roman Republic (Brill, 2019), and the General Editor of The Herodotus Encyclopedia. His next large‐scale project is a monograph on the Greek historians under the Roman Empire.

Jessica Baron earned a PhD in History and Philosophy of Science with a concentration in the history of medicine and public health from the University of Notre Dame. She now runs a private consulting firm and works in the field of tech ethics and science and health communication for luxury industries as well as corporate diversity. Her popular writing has appeared in publications such as Aeon and HuffPost and she is an Innovation Contributor to Forbes.com.

Natasha Bershadsky is a Fellow in Ancient Greek History at the Center for Hellenic Studies. She received her PhD from the University of Chicago. Her book in preparation explores ritual and mythological aspects of long‐running border conflicts in archaic Greece and their creative transformations by the democracies of the classical period. Her other project is an investigation of Hesiod’s hero cults, their connection to Hesiodic poetry and their political use in the archaic and classical periods. Her publications include “A Picnic, a Tomb and a Crow: Hesiod’s Cult in the Works and Days,” HSCP 106 (2011) 1–45, and “Impossible Memories of the Lelantine War,” Mètis 16 (2018), 191–213.

Reinhold Bichler born 1947, is a retired Professor of Ancient History at the University of Innsbruck, Austria. The main subjects of his research activities are the history of political ideas, with emphasis on ancient utopias, Greek historiography and ethnography, in particular Herodotus and Ctesias, and the reception of ancient history, concentrating on Alexander and the concept of Hellenism.

Sandra Blakely is Associate Professor of Classics at Emory University, with research interests in historiography, the archaeology of religion, maritime mobility, the anthropology of the ancient world, and digital approaches to antiquity. Recent publications include BNJ 273, Alexander Polyhistor; BNJ 26, Conon; “Maritime Risk and Ritual Responses: Sailing with the Gods in the Ancient Mediterranean,” in C. Buchet and P. de Souza (eds.), Oceanides (Paris, 2016); and “Object, Image and Text: Materiality and Ritual Practice in the Ancient Mediterranean,” in S. Blakely (ed.), Gods, Objects and Ritual Practice, Studies in Ancient Mediterranean Religions (Atlanta, 2017), 1–13.

W. Martin Bloomer is Professor of Classics at the University of Notre Dame. He has written “The Superlative Nomoi of Herodotus’ Histories,” Classical Antiquity 12 (1993): 30–50. His books include Valerius Maximus and the Rhetoric of the New Nobility (1993), Latinity and Literary Society at Rome (1997), The Contest of Language (2005), The School of Rome (2011), and The Wiley‐Blackwell Companion to Ancient Education (2015).

Deborah Boedeker is Professor of Classics Emerita at Brown University and a former co‐director of the Center for Hellenic Studies. Her scholarly work focuses on Herodotus, Greek religious and cultural history, and early Greek poetry.

Sarah Bolmarcich received her PhD from the University of Virginia and now teaches at Arizona State University. Her research interests include ancient Greek international relations, Thucydides, and Greek epigraphy. Recent refereed publications include “The Date of the Oath of the Peloponnesian League” (Historia 2008) and “The Athenian Regulations for Samos Again” (Chiron 2009). She is currently at work on a sourcebook for ancient Sparta.

Grégory Bonnin is a Lecturer and a Research Associate in Ancient Greek History at the Université Bordeaux–Montaigne. He specializes in the study of the classical period, focusing on Athenian imperialism and more particularly on the relationship between Insular allied/subjects and Athens. He is the author of De Naxos à Amorgos. L'impérialisme athénien vu des Cyclades à l'époque classique (Ausonius, 2015) and the co‐editor of Pouvoir, îles et mer. Formes et modalités de l'hégémonie dans les Cyclades antiques (Ausonius, 2014).

Angus Bowie was until 2016 Lobel Praelector in Classics at The Queen's College, and CUF Lecturer in the University of Oxford. His main earlier works were The Poetic Dialect of Sappho and Alcaeus (1981) and Aristophanes: Myth, Ritual and Comedy (1993). More recently he has written commentaries on Herodotus 8 (2007), Odyssey 13–14 (2013), and Iliad 3 (2019). His current project is Iliad 21–24. His special interest is in the relationship between Greek culture and Near Eastern, Anatolian, and Indo‐European civilizations. He has also written on tragedy, Greek religion, Vergil, and narratology.

Marcaline J. Boyd is an Assistant Professor of Classics in the Department of Languages, Literatures, and Cultures at the University of Delaware. She has published articles on Hellenistic epigram and Polycrates of Samos. Her main interests are in Greek history and historiography, epigraphy, and tyrants. She is currently working on a book on patterns of tyranny in Greek history.

David Branscome is Associate Teaching Professor at Florida State University. His research interests are Greek historiography and history. He is the author of Textual Rivals: Self‐Presentation in Herodotus’ Histories (University of Michigan Press, 2013). His forthcoming book is Ancient Greek Views of the Persian Tiara (Edinburgh University Press).

Emma Bridges is Public Engagement Fellow in Classics at the Institute of Classical Studies, London. She specializes in the literature of ancient Greece and its reception since antiquity, and has a particular interest in cultural responses to armed conflict. She is the author of Imagining Xerxes: Ancient Perspectives on a Persian King (Bloomsbury, 2014). Her next major project focuses on the representation of the experiences of soldiers’ wives in ancient mythical narratives.

Roger Brock is Senior Lecturer in Classics at the University of Leeds. His research interests lie particularly in Greek history and historiography: he is the author of Greek Political Imagery (Bloomsbury, 2013) and is currently investigating citizenship, civic subdivisions, and political participation in ancient Greece.

William S. Bubelis is Associate Professor of Classics and the Curator of the John Max Wulfing Collection of Ancient Coins and Related Objects at Washington University 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).

Henry P. Colburn is Andrew W. Mellon Curatorial Fellow in Ancient Near Eastern Art at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. His research focuses on the art and archaeology of ancient Iran and its interactions with neighboring regions prior to the advent of Islam. His interests range from seals, coins, and drinking vessels to questions of historiography, identity, and globalization. His first book, Archaeology of Empire in Achaemenid Egypt, is forthcoming from Edinburgh University Press.

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]).

Gil Davis is the Director, Program for Ancient Mediterranean Studies, Macquarie University (Sydney) where he teaches Greek history, and is Managing Editor of the Journal of the Numismatic Association of Australia. His main research interests are Athenian history, numismatics, and compositional analysis of coins. He is working on a new history of archaic Athens based on evidence from a die study and metallurgical analysis of coinage (Cambridge, forthcoming with K. Sheedy) and is co‐editing Volume 6 in the series Metallurgy in Numismatics (Royal Numismatic Society, forthcoming). He is a partner in the ERC Advanced Grant—Silver Isotopes and the Rise of Money. He co‐edited Registers and Modes of Communications in the Ancient Near East (Routledge, 2018).

Mathieu de Bakker is University Lecturer in Ancient Greek at the University of Amsterdam, specializing in ancient historiography and oratory. He is co‐editor (with Emily Baragwanath) of the volume Myth, Truth, and Narrative in Herodotus (Oxford, 2012) and co‐author (with Evert van Emde Boas, Albert Rijksbaron, and Luuk Huitink) of the Cambridge Grammar of Classical Greek (Cambridge, 2018).

Julian Degen is a postgraduate at the University of Innsbruck. His master’s thesis, titled “Dimensions of Hellenic and Ancient Near Eastern Violence in Herodotus’ Histories,” will be published soon. He has published several articles about Herodotus and ancient Near Eastern motives in Greek historiography. Currently he is working on his dissertation with the title “The Oriental Face of Alexander: An Appraisal.”

Denise Demetriou is an Associate Professor and the Gerry and Jeannie Ranglas Endowed Chair in Ancient Greek History in the Department of History at the University of California, San Diego. Her research interests include ancient Greek religion, identities in the ancient Mediterranean, and Greco‐Phoenician international diplomacy. She is the author of Negotiating Identity in the Ancient Mediterranean: The Archaic and Classical Greek Multiethnic Emporia (Cambridge University Press, 2012) and a co‐editor of Approaching the Ancient Artifact: Representation, Narrative, and Function (De Gruyter, 2014).

Paul Demont is Emeritus Professor of Ancient Greek at the University of Paris–Sorbonne. He has published numerous articles on disease in the ancient Greek world, the Hippocratics, and Herodotus’ method of historical inquiry. His most recent work includes “Le Nomos‐Roi: Hérodote, III, 38,” in Hérodote. Formes de pensée, figures du récit, edited by Jean Alaux (Rennes 2013), 37–45, and “Herodotus on Health and Disease,” in Herodotus: Narrator, Scientist, Historian, edited by Ewen Bowie (Berlin: De Gruyter, 2018).

Carolyn Dewald taught for many years at the University of Southern California, and is now an Emerita Professor of History and Classics from Bard College. She is the author of Thucydides' War Narrative: a Structural Study (2006) and the co‐editor, with John Marincola, of The Cambridge Companion to Herodotus (2006). She has written a number of articles on ancient Greek historiography and is currently co‐editing with Rosaria Munson a commentary on Herodotus Book 1 for the Cambridge Greek and Latin Classics series.

John Dillery is Professor of Classics at the University of Virginia. He focuses on the study of ancient Greek historical writing of the classical and Hellenistic periods, and in particular on the interaction of Greek and non‐Greek ways of curating the past. He is the author of a monograph on Xenophon, several articles on Herodotus, and most recently a volume entitled: Clio’s Other Sons. Berossus and Manetho, with an afterword on Demetrius (University of Michigan Press, 2015).

Matthew Dillon is the Professor of Classics and Ancient History at the University of New England, Armidale, Australia. He publishes on Greek religion and Greek history. His most recent book is Omens and Oracles: Divination in Ancient Greece (Routledge, 2017).

Katrin Dolle teaches Ancient Greek and Biblical Greek at the Justus‐Liebig‐University of Giessen. She specializes in the literature of late antiquity as well as texts on ancient medicine and architecture. She is the author of “Herodots Gastmahl des Attaginos” (Antike und Abendland 58.1 (2012): 16–36) and, together with Annette Weissenrieder, Körper und Verkörperung—Biblische Anthropologie im Kontext antiker Medizin und Philosophie (forthcoming, FoSub vol. 8). Her next large‐scale projects concern receptions of the Homeric Odyssey in modern art, new media, and literature (together with Semjon Dreiling), Paul the Silentiary’s ekphrasis of the Hagia Sophia in Istanbul, and the Mole Antonelliana in Turin (together with C. Frateantonio).

Marco Dorati is a Research Associate in Greek Language and Literature at the University of Urbino “Carlo Bo.” His main interests are Greek historiography and Greek theater, as well as narratology and literary theory. He is the author of Le Storie di Erodoto: etnografia e racconto (Pisa‐Rome, Istituti Editoriali e Poligrafici Internazionali, 2000) and Finestre sul futuro: fato, profezia e mondi possibili nel plot dell’Edipo Re di Sofocle (Pisa and Rome, Fabrizio Serra Editore, 2015).

Kerstin Droß‐Krüpe is currently working as an Academic Assistant at postdoctoral level at Kassel University. She studied Classical Archaeology, Ancient History, and Business Administration at Philipps‐University Marburg. From 2006 to 2013 she was an Academic Assistant at the Department of Ancient History at Philipps‐University Marburg. She gained her PhD in 2010 with a thesis about textile production in the Roman province of Egypt, which was published as Wolle—Weber—Wirtschaft: Die Textilproduktion der römischen Kaiserzeit im Spiegel der papyrologischen Überlieferung (Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz 2011). Her main research interests are ancient economic history, ancient textiles studies, and the reception of antiquity.

Esther Eidinow is Professor of Ancient History at the University of Bristol. She has particular interest in ancient Greek religion and magic, and her publications include Oracles, Curses, and Risk among the Ancient Greeks (2007) and Luck, Fate and Fortune: Antiquity and its Legacy (2010). Her latest monograph, published with Oxford University Press, is Envy, Poison, and Death: Women on Trial in Classical Athens (2016).

Anthony Ellis is a Leverhulme Scholar at University of Bern. His research focuses on religion and theology in classical Greek historiography and the encounter between Greek and Hebrew thought in the Septuagint and Josephus. He is currently writing a book on divine and d(a)emonic envy, jealousy, and begrudgery in Greek, Hebrew, and Christian thought. Recent publications discuss the rewriting of the Croesus logos in Xenophon’s Cyropaedia (JHS 136 (2016): 73–91), proverbs in the dialogue between Solon and Croesus (BICS 58.2 (2015): 83–106), and notions of truth employed by the narrator of the Histories (in Truth and History in the Ancient World: Pluralizing the Past, edited by L. Hau and I. Ruffell (Routledge, 2016: 104–29)).

Johannes Engels is apl. Professor of Ancient History at the University of Cologne (Universität zu Köln) and currently also lecturing at the University of Bonn. He specializes inter alia in the study of historical and biographical works of ancient Greece and Rome, ancient geography, ancient rhetoric, and Greek history of the classical and Hellenistic periods.

Christopher Erlinger completed his PhD at The Ohio State University in 2016. He is currently working on a monograph based on his dissertation, Eunuchs in Greco‐Roman Literature, and an article on Herodotus’ depiction of the Phoenicians. He specializes in ancient gender studies and Greek ethnography.

Adam Foley is a classicist and historian whose interests span the classical tradition, including Greek epic and lyric poetry, translation and reception studies, the history of Platonism, and the history of historiography. Trained in Classics, he completed his PhD in the Department of History at the University of Notre Dame where he wrote his dissertation on the first Latin translations of Homer in the Italian Renaissance. He lived for two years in Rome (2015–17), where he spent one year as a fellow at the American Academy in Rome, and recently finished a postdoctoral fellowship in the Department of Classical Studies at the University of Pennsylvania (2017–2018).

Margaret Foster is Associate Professor of Classical Studies at Indiana University, Bloomington. Her research focuses on Greek lyric poetry and archaic and classical cultural history. She is the author of The Seer and the City: Religion, Politics, and Colonial Ideology in Ancient Greece (University of California Press, 2018). A second monograph project considers the politics and polemics of genre hybridity in classical lyric poetry.

Robert L. Fowler FBA is H. O. Wills Professor of Greek (Emeritus) at the University of Bristol. He has worked on Greek epic and lyric poetry as well as historiography, mythography, religion, and the history of classical scholarship. His publications include The Cambridge 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 as the Greeks in Egypt. She has published Le kaléidoscope hérodotéen: images, imaginaire et représentations de l’Égypte à travers le livre II d’Hérodote (Paris : Belles Lettres, 2009) and, on Libya, “Ladiké et Phérétimé: deux Cyrénéennes en Égypte (Hérodote, II, 181 et IV, 165–167; 200–205),” in L’hellénisme, d’une rive à l’autre de la Méditerranée, edited by Jean‐Christophe Couvenhes, 311–24 (Paris: de Boccard).

Raleigh C. Heth is currently a doctoral student studying Christianity and Judaism in Antiquity at the University of Notre Dame. His research interests center on the study of ancient magical, divinatory, omenological, and prophetic texts in the ancient world. Though he primarily focuses on Mesopotamian and Levantine texts from the third to mid‐first millennia, he also frequently engages with Greek dramatic poets and historians as well as later texts composed in Classical Armenian.

Alexander Hollmann is an Associate Professor of Classics at the University of Washington. His interests are in Greek literature, Herodotus, and Greek religion and magic. He is the author of several articles on Herodotus and The Master of Signs: Signs and the Interpretation of Signs in Herodotus' Histories (Center for Hellenic Studies, 2011). His current project is a collaborative edition of and commentary on magical texts in Greek on metal from the Levant (Magica Levantina).

Peter Hunt is a Professor of Classics and (courtesy) History at the University of Colorado Boulder. His first two books were Slaves, Warfare, and Ideology in the Greek Historians (Cambridge, 1998) and War, Peace, and Alliance in Demosthenes’ Athens (Cambridge, 2010). His college‐level survey of ancient slavery, Greek and Roman Slavery: Case Studies and Comparisons (Wiley‐Blackwell) came out in 2018.

John O. Hyland (BA Cornell 1999, PhD Chicago 2005) is an Associate Professor in the Department of History at Christopher Newport University. He is the author of Persian Interventions: The Achaemenid Empire, Athens, and Sparta, 450–386 BCE (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2018), and articles on various aspects of ancient warfare and Graeco‐Persian relations.

Elizabeth Irwin is an Associate Professor of Classics at Columbia University, specializing in political readings of archaic and classical Greek literature. She is the author of Solon and Early Greek Poetry: The Politics of Exhortation (Cambridge, 2005) and co‐editor of three volumes on Herodotus: (with E. Greenwood) Reading Herodotus: A Study of the logoi in Book Five of Herodotus’ Histories (Cambridge, 2007); (with K. Geus and T. Poiss) Herodots Wege des Erzählens: Logos und Topos in den Historien (Berlin, 2013); (with T. Harrison) Interpreting Herodotus (Oxford, 2018). She is completing books on the relationship between Herodotus and Thucydides, the contemporary resonances of Herodotus Book 3, and the Samian War as reflected in Athenian drama.

Philip Kaplan is an Associate Professor of History at the University of North Florida, where he teaches courses on Greece, Rome, Israel, and the Near East. He has published articles about Greek geographical writing, travel and exploration, mercenaries, and relations between Greek communities and the states of the Near East in the archaic and classical ages. He is currently working on studies of alliances among the states of the Eastern Mediterranean, and of the role played by individuals who migrate between these states.

Niki Karapanagioti is a Teacher of Classics at Oxford High School GDST, in Oxford. She has a PhD in Classics from Reading University. Her PhD thesis is entitled An Exploration of Women and Revenge in Herodotus’ Histories. Her next research projects concern the reception of Herodotus’ Histories in nineteenth‐century Greece and the management of anxiety and underperformance in secondary school pupils who study Latin.

Klaus Karttunen (b. 1951), PhD, is the former Professor of South Asian Studies at the University of Helsinki, now a research scholar at the same working on a monograph about the relations between India and Rome and the literary image of India in the West. He has published monographs on India in Early Greek Literature (1989), India and the Hellenistic World (1997), and Yonas and Yavanas in Indian Literature (2015), as well as many articles on Sanskrit philology, Indo‐Western relations, and the history of learning (plus several books in Finnish).

Danielle Kellogg is Associate Professor of Classics at Brooklyn College and the Graduate Center, CUNY. Her research focuses on the political history and epigraphy of Attica. In addition to several articles on Athenian epigraphy and history, her publications include Marathon Fighters and Men of Maple: Ancient Acharnai (Oxford, 2013). Her current research project is focused on migration and its effects on our understanding of Athenian demography and democratic processes.

Rebecca Futo Kennedy is Associate Professor of Classics at Denison University. Her research and teaching interests include Athenian tragedy; social and political history of Athens in the fifth and fourth centuries BCE; race, ethnicity, and gender in the ancient Mediterranean; and the reception of ancient concepts of race and ethnicity in modern contexts. She has recently published the monograph Immigrant Women in Athens (Routledge, 2014), co‐edited The Routledge Handbook of Identity and Environment in the Classical and Medieval Worlds (Routledge, 2016), and edited Brill’s Companion to the Reception of Aeschylus (Brill, 2018).

Hyun Jin Kim is Lecturer in Classics, Discipline of Classics and Archaeology, at the University of Melbourne, Australia. His research interests include Greek history, Inner Asian history, comparative literature, and late antiquity. He is the author of Ethnicity and Foreigners in Ancient Greece and China (Duckworth, 2009) and The Huns, Rome and the Birth of Europe (Cambridge University Press, 2013).

Julia Kindt is Professor of Ancient History in the Department of Classics and Ancient History at the University of Sydney. She is currently director of the Centre for Classical and Near Eastern Studies of Australia and an ARC Future Fellow (2018–22). Her research interests include ancient Greek history (from the archaic period through to Roman Greece), ancient Greek religion and the interdisciplinary study of religions, ancient anthropology and human/animal relations, historiography (ancient and modern) as well as Herodotus. Her publications include Revisiting Delphi (Cambridge University Press, 2016) Rethinking Greek Religion (Cambridge University Press, 2012).

Athena Kirk is Assistant Professor of Classics at Cornell University. Her research interests include Greek literature and its connections to epigraphic texts, and ancient animal studies. Her current book project is called The Tally of Text: Catalogues and Inventories in Ancient Greece.

N. Bryant Kirkland is Assistant Professor of Classics at the University of California, Los Angeles. His research interests include Herodotus and the literature of the Second Sophistic. He has published journal articles on the Vita Homeri and on Plutarch's On the Malice of Herodotus. He is writing a book on the reception of Herodotus in the works of select Imperial Greek authors.

Elizabeth Kosmetatou is Associate Professor of History at the University of Illinois–Springfield. She specializes in classical and Hellenistic history, archaeology, epigraphy, and numismatics, while her interests also include Political Science and Political Psychology.

Michael Kozuh is an Associate Professor of History at Auburn University. He specializes in the economic, social, and political history of Mesopotamia in the first millennium BCE and is the author of The Sacrificial Economy: Assessors, Contractors, and Thieves in the Management of Sacrificial Sheep at the Eanna Temple of Uruk (Eisenbrauns, 2014). His next project is a social history of the Mesopotamian plowteam.

Jeremy LaBuff is Senior Lecturer in History at Northern Arizona University and the author of Polis Expansion and Elite Power in Hellenistic Karia (Lexington Books, 2016). His current project is a history of Hellenistic Asia Minor through the lenses of indigeneity, ethnicity, and race.

Alison Lanski has wide ranging‐interests, from pragmatics and narratology to learning analytics and data science. She has held various roles at the University of Notre Dame since completing her dissertation on Herodotean emissaries in 2013 (University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign), including positions in the Department of Classics, Kaneb Center for Teaching and Learning, Office of Information Technologies, and Institutional Research.

Donald Lateiner Professor Emeritus of Humanities and Classics at Ohio Wesleyan University, became interested in Herodotus because of his obsession with Thucydides, Herodotus’ competitor and perhaps contemporary. He has published many articles and one book on him: The Historical Method of Herodotus (Toronto, 1989). His interests digressed from traditional historiographical analysis to nonverbal behaviors in historiography and epic, and methods of narration in ancient fictions. Recent studies include the emotions of disgust (Ancient Emotion of Disgust, Oxford University Press (2017), co‐editor D. Spatharas) and hope, embarrassment, protocols of humiliation, and the human senses, especially smell and taste, in Greek historiography and Greek and Latin fictions.

Brian M. Lavelle is Professor in Classical Studies at Loyola University Chicago. His focuses are Peisistratid tyranny at Athens, Herodotus, Archilochus and his age, and the history of archaic Greece in general. He is the author of The Sorrow and the Pity: A Prolegomenon to a History of Athens under the Peisistratids, c. 560–510 B.C . (Steiner, 1993), Fame, Money and Power: The Rise of Peisistratos and “Democratic” Tyranny at Athens (Michigan, 2005), and Archaic Greece: The Age of New Reckonings (Wiley‐Blackwell, 2020). He is completing a history of Athens under the younger Peisistratids.

John W. I. Lee is Associate Professor of History at the University of California, Santa Barbara. His research interests include Greece and Achaemenid Persia, ancient warfare, and the history of African‐American classical scholarship. He is the author of A Greek Army on the March: Soldiers and Survival in Xenophon’s Anabasis (Cambridge University Press, 2008).

Jeremy B. Lefkowitz is Associate Professor of Classics at Swarthmore College. He received his PhD from the University of Pennsylvania in Classical Studies and was awarded a Rome Prize from the American Academy in Rome in 2015–16. His recently published work on the ancient fable includes “Innovation and Artistry in Phaedrus’ Morals” (Mnemosyne 70.3 (2017) 417–35); “Grand Allusions: Vergil in Phaedrus” (American Journal of Philology 137 (2016) 487–509); and “Aesop and Animal Fables” (The Oxford Handbook of Animals in Classical Thought and Life, ed. G. Campbell, Oxford (2014) 1–23).

Bruce Lincoln is the Caroline E. Haskell Distinguished Service Professor of History of Religions at the University of Chicago. His areas of specialization include the religions of Achaemenid Persia, as described in his “Happiness for Mankind”: Achaemenian Religion and the Imperial Project (Louvain: Peeters, 2012).

Michael Lloyd is Professor of Greek Language and Literature at University College Dublin, Ireland. He is the author of The Agon in Euripides (1992), Euripides’ Andromache: with Introduction, Translation, and Commentary (1994; second edition, 2005), and Sophocles: Electra (2005). He is also the editor of Aeschylus in the Oxford Readings in Classical Studies series (2007), and of articles on Homer, Herodotus, and Greek tragedy.

Helmut Loeffler is an Associate Professor of History at the City University of New York–Queensborough. His research interests include ancient Greek history, history of classical scholarship, classical mythology and its reception, and Greek tragedy. He has published books and articles on Herodotus, Ulrich von Wilamowitz‐Moellendorff, and the adaptation of ancient Greek and Roman mythology in popular culture.​

Carolina López‐Ruiz is a Professor of Classics at The Ohio State University. Her research explores the contact between the Greek and Near Eastern cultures, with a special focus on the Northwest Semitic world and the Phoenicians. Among other edited volumes and articles, she is the author of When the Gods Were Born: Greek Cosmogonies and the Near East (Harvard University Press, 2010), co‐author of Tartessos and the Phoenicians in Iberia (Oxford, 2016), and editor of Gods, Heroes, and Monsters: A Sourcebook of Greek, Roman, and Near Eastern Myths in Translation (Oxford, 2017, 2nd edition).

Suzanne Marchand is LSU Systems Boyd Professor of European Intellectual History at Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge. She is the author of Down from Olympus: Archaeology and Philhellenism in Germany, 1750–1970 (Princeton University Press, 1996) and German Orientalism in the Age of Empire: Religion, Race, and Scholarship (Cambridge University Press, 2009).

John Marincola is the Leon Golden Professor of Classics at Florida State University. His main interests are in classical historiography and rhetoric. He is the author of Authority and Tradition in Ancient Historiography (1997), Greek Historians (2001), and several other books and articles on the Greek and Roman historians.

Mark C. Mash is an independent scholar and public school teacher who lives in Durham, North Carolina. He wrote his dissertation on humor and ethnography in Herodotus’ Histories (UNC–Chapel Hill, 2010). His primary area of research is Herodotus, and he has published on the topic of humor in Herodotus in Resemblance and Reality in Greek Thought (Routledge, 2016) and Clio and Thalia: Attic Comedy and Greek Historiography (Histos Supplement 6, 2017).

Angela McDonald is a Lecturer in Egyptology at the University of Glasgow. Her research focuses on animal metaphors in the ancient Egyptian script, particularly within the determinative system. She is the author and editor of several works, including Write Your Own Egyptian Hieroglyphs (2006) and Decorum and Experience (2014).

Jeremy McInerney is Professor of Classical Studies at the University of Pennsylvania. His current research is focused on hybridity in Greek culture. He is the author of books on state formation in archaic Greece and pastoral culture in Greece; most recently, he co‐edited with Ineke Sluiter, Valuing Landscape in Classical Antiquity: Natural Environment and Cultural Imagination (Leiden: Brill, 2016).

Caspar Meyer is Professor of Classical Archaeology and Material Culture at the Bard Graduate Center in New York. His interests are in northern Black Sea archaeology and its historiography and reception in Russia. He is the author of Greco‐Scythian Art and the Birth of Eurasia: From Classical Antiquity to Russian Modernity (Oxford University Press, 2013).

Lorenzo Miletti is Associate Professor of Classical Philology at the University of Naples Federico II. His main research fields are ancient historiography and rhetoric, Renaissance antiquarianism, and reception of Greek and Latin works in the early modern period. He has published several articles on Herodotus as well as Linguaggio e metalinguaggio in Erodoto (Pisa and Rome, 2008). He is also the author of a commented Italian‐translated edition of Aelius Aristides’ oration 28 K (L’arte dell’autoelogio. Studio sull’ or. 28 Keil di Elio Aristide, con testo, traduzione e commento, Pisa, 2011).

Margaret C. Miller Arthur and Renee George Professor of Classical Archaeology at the University of Sydney, has, with L. A. Beaumont and S. A. Paspalas, co‐directed fieldwork at Zagora (Andros) since 2012. She specializes in the study of the material evidence for social life and thought in archaic and classical Greece, with special focus on relations between Greece and the Near East in the Persian period. She is author of Athens and Persia in the Fifth Century B.C.: A Study in Cultural Receptivity (Cambridge 1997) and Imaging Persians in Athens (forthcoming).

Mauro Moggi Professor of Greek History at the University of Siena, has published I sinecismi interstatali greci (1976), has translated Thucydides into Italian (Storie, 1984), and edited an edition, with Italian translation and commentary, of Books 7–9 of the Periegesis of Pausanias (2000–10). He is currently overseeing a new edition, with Italian translation and commentary, of Aristotle’s Politics (2011–). His research interests include Greek colonization, relations between Greeks and barbaroi, polemical literature, and historiography.

Giustina Monti is a Lecturer in Classical Studies in the School of History and Heritage at the University of Lincoln. Her research interests include Alexander the Great and his interactions with the Near East, fragmentary historians, and Greek and Roman historiography. She is author of Alexander the Great. Letters: A Selection (Liverpool University Press, 2021).

Kathryn A. Morgan is Professor of Classics at UCLA. Author of Pindar and the Construction of Sicilian Monarchy in the Fifth Century B.C . (Oxford, 2015) and the Plato chapters for the series Studies in Ancient Greek Narrative, she works on early‐classical Greek poetry and a variety of contextualizing interpretations of Plato’s dialogues.

Ian S. Moyer is Associate Professor in the Department of History at the University of Michigan. He is the author of Egypt and the Limits of Hellenism (Cambridge, 2011) and other studies on the interactions between ancient Greeks and Egyptians. His current research focuses on cultural and political interactions in the public areas of Ptolemaic Egyptian temples.

James R. Muir earned his DPhil at the University of Oxford, and taught there and at King’s College. He is presently an Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of Winnipeg. He is the author of “Is Our History of Educational Thought Mostly Wrong?” Theory and Research in Education (2005, Vol. 3.2, 165–95) and The Legacy of Isocrates and a Platonic Alternative: Political Philosophy, Normative Method and the Value of Education (Routledge, 2018).

Rosaria Vignolo Munson is the J. Archer and Helen C. Turner Professor of Classics at Swarthmore College. She is the author of Telling Wonders: Ethnographic and Political Discourse in the Work of Herodotus (2001); Black Doves Speak: Herodotus and the Language of Barbarians (2005), and several articles on Herodotus and Thucydides. She is co‐editing (with Carolyn Dewald) a commentary on Herodotus Book 1 for the Cambridge Greek and Latin Classics series.

Sheila Murnaghan is the Alfred Reginald Allen Memorial Professor of Greek at the University of Pennsylvania. She works in the areas of ancient Greek epic and tragedy, historiography, gender in classical culture, and classical reception and is the author of Disguise and Recognition in the Odyssey (2nd edition, 2011). Recent publications include a Norton Critical Edition of Euripides’ Medea and Childhood and the Classics: Britain and America, 1850–1965 (co‐authored with Deborah H. Roberts). She is currently writing a commentary on Sophocles’ Ajax.

F. S. Naiden is Professor of History at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where he specializes in ancient Greek history, with attention to Near Eastern parallels, especially among the Western Semites.

Heinz‐Günther Nesselrath is Full Professor of Ancient Greek Literature at the University of Göttingen. His main areas of interest are Greek comedy and historiography, as well as Greek literature of Roman imperial times (especially Lucian) and late antiquity (especially Libanius and the Emperor Julian). Recent major publications are Platon, Kritias: Übersetzung und Kommentar (2006), Libanios, Zeuge einer schwindenden Welt (2012), Iulianus Augustus, Opera (2015), and a new German translation of Herodotus (Herodot, Historien, neu übersetzt und erläutert, 2017).

Andrew Nichols is an adjunct lecturer at the University of Florida. He specializes in Greek history, particularly Greek interactions with and views of the East, and Greek topography. He is the author of Ctesias: On India (Bloomsbury Academic Press, 2011).

Roberto Nicolai is Full Professor of Greek Literature at the University of Rome–La Sapienza. He is editor of the journal “Seminari Romani di Cultura Greca” and has published several articles on historiography, geography, epic and tragic poetry, together with two monographs: La storiografia nell’educazione antica (Pisa 1992) and Studi su Isocrate (Roma 2004).

John Peter Oleson is Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Greek and Roman Studies at the University of Victoria, Canada. He specializes in the study of ancient technology, particularly hydraulic technology, Roman harbors, and the Roman Near East. He is the author of twelve books and numerous articles and chapters on these and other topics.

Ian Oliver (PhD Classics, University of Colorado Boulder) is a Lecturer for the Classics Department at the University of Colorado Boulder. His dissertation, The Audiences of Herodotus: The Influence of Performance on the Histories, reexamines large sections of the Histories by identifying the influence of audiences that differ from that of the unitary work.

Zinon Papakonstantinou is Associate Professor of Classics at the University of Illinois at Chicago. His publications include Lawmaking and Adjudication in Archaic Greece (London: Duckworth, 2008); Sport and Identity in Ancient Greece (London: Routledge, 2019); (ed.) Sport in the Cultures of the Ancient World: New Perspectives (London: Routledge, 2010); and (co‐ed.) Sport, Bodily Culture and Classical Antiquity in Modern Greece (London: Routledge, 2011). He currently serves on the editorial boards of Nikephoros. Zeitschrift für Sport und Kultur im Altertum and International Journal of the History of Sport.

Victor Parker is Associate Professor of Classics at the University of Canterbury in Christchurch, New Zealand. He has published some fifty specialized articles on Greek, Roman, and Near Eastern history and historiography as well as the entry on Ephorus in Brill’s New Jacoby. He has also published A History of Greece 1300–30 B.C . (Wiley, 2014) and Untersuchungen zum lelantischen Krieg und verwandten Problemen der frühgriechischen Geschichte (Franz Steiner, 1997).

Giovanni Parmeggiani is Assistant Professor of Greek History at the University of Trieste. He specializes in the study of the historical writing of ancient Greece in the classical age. He is the author of Eforo di Cuma. Studi di storiografia greca (Patron editore, 2011), and the editor of Between Thucydides and Polybius: The Golden Age of Greek Historiography (Harvard University Press, 2014). He is currently working on an English translation of his monograph on Ephorus, on a new edition of the fragments of Anaximenes of Lampsacus, and on a new commentary on Book 12 of Diodorus’ Bibliotheke.

Maria Pavlou is Lecturer in Ancient Greek Literature at the Theological School of the Church of Cyprus. Her main areas of interest include archaic lyric poetry, Plato, digital classics, and the reception of classical antiquity. She has published on Pindar, Bacchylides, Thucydides, Plato, and Yannis Ritsos. She is the editor (with V. Liapis and A. Petrides) of Debating with the Eumenides: Aspects of the Reception of Greek Tragedy in Modern Greece (Cambridge Scholars, 2018). She is currently editing (with A. Tsakmakis and E. Kaklamanou) Framing the Dialogues: How to Read Openings and Endings in Plato, to be published by Brill in 2020.

Pascal Payen is Professor of Greek History at the University of Toulouse–Jean Jaurès. Previous publications include Les îles nomades. Conquérir et résister dans l’Enquête d’Hérodote (1997); Plutarque, Grecs et Romains en parallèle (1999); Johann Gustav Droysen, Histoire de l’hellénisme, with introduction (2005); (with D. Foucault) Les autorités. Dynamiques et mutations d’une figure de référence à l’Antiquité (2007); (with V. Fromentin and S. Gotteland) Ombres de Thucydide. La réception de l’historien depuis l’Antiquité jusqu’au début du XX e siècle (2010); and Les revers de la guerre en Grèce ancienne. Histoire et historiographie (2012).

Cameron G. Pearson is a Postdoctoral Researcher/Assistant Professor at the University of Warsaw where he is part of a collaborative project on cultural forms of social mobility in archaic Greece. He received his PhD from the City University of New York, Graduate Center and specializes in Greek epigraphy, literature, and cultural history. He is currently expanding his dissertation on the Athenian family, the Alkmeonidai, into a monograph about the role of monuments in creating social and cultural memory.

Angeliki Petropoulou was until her recent retirement Professor at the Hellenic Open University at Patras. She holds a BA in History and Archaeology (National and Kapodistrian University of Athens) and a PhD in Classics (University of Colorado Boulder). She was an Associate Member of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens, a Research Fellow at Princeton University, and Visiting Scholar at Trinity College, Cambridge. Her interests focus on divine and heroic cult, and comparative studies. Recent publications include “Hyakinthos and Apollo of Amyklai: Identities and Cults. A Reconsideration of the Written Evidence,” Μουσείο Μπενάκη 11–12 (2011–2012: 153–61); “Hieromēnia and Sacrifice During the Hyakinthia,Mètis, n.s. 13 (2015: 167–88); “The Hyakinthia. The Cults of Hyakinthos and Apollo in Historical Perspective,” in Sacred Landscapes in the Peloponnese from Prehistory to Pre‐modern, edited by C. Gallou et al. (in press, Oxford, Archaeopress).

Aurélien Pulice is a PhD student at Bordeaux–Montaigne University. He specializes in classical Greek historiography and its reception throughout ancient and Byzantine times. He is the author of “Brasidas aux pieds rapides: aspects de l’héritage épique chez Thucydide” (2014, Hommage à Jacqueline de Romilly: l’empreinte de son œuvre, edited by Marc Fumaroli et al. (Paris: AIBL), 161–84). He is currently working on a comprehensive study of Thucydides’ Lives and scholia. He is also interested in the reception of Euripides’ Bacchae and has recently published, with Romain Piana,“Les Bacchantes,” Euripide (2015, Futuroscope: Canopé éditions).

Joachim Friedrich Quack is professor of Egyptology at Heidelberg University. He specializes in Egyptian language and writing, with a focus on literary and religious texts of the late periods. He is the author of Einführung in die altägyptische Literaturgeschichte III. Die demotische und gräko‐ägyptische Literatur (Berlin, 3rd edition, 2016); Eine magische Stele aus dem Badischen Landesmuseum Karlsruhe (Inv. H 1049), Abhandlungen der Heidelberger Akademie der Wissenschaften 58 (Heidelberg, 2018); and, together with Kim Ryholt, The Carlsberg Papyri 11. Demotic Literary Texts from Tebtunis and Beyond, CNI Publications 36 (Copenhagen, 2019).

Patrick Reinard studied Ancient History, Classical Archaeology, and Latin Philology at the University of Trier from 2003 until 2010. He completed his PhD at the Philipps‐University of Marburg in the Institute of Ancient History in 2014. Since 2015 he has been a postdoctoral fellow in the Institute of Ancient History at the University of Trier. His areas of research are the ancient economy and Greco‐Roman Egypt. Recent publications include “Zum marktwirtschaftlichen Verhalten in der römischen Kaiserzeit: Individueller Wirtschaftsraum, Preis(in)transparenz und konstante Marktstrukturen,” in Scripta Mercaturae 46 (2017), 11–88.

Robin F. Rhodes is Associate Professor of Art History (concurrent in Classics and in the School of Architecture) at the University of Notre Dame. He is the author of Architecture and Meaning on the Athenian Acropolis (1995), creator of the exhibit The Genesis of Monumental Architecture in Greece: the Corinth Project (2006), and editor of The Acquisition and Exhibition of Classical Antiquities: Professional, Legal, and Ethical Perspectives (2007). His current projects include a monograph on The Seventh Century Temple on Temple Hill in Corinth and preparation of an exhibition on Greek kaikia.

Adrian Robu is Researcher at the Romanian Academy (Institute for South‐East European Studies), Associate Researcher at the Berlin Academy (Inscriptiones Graecae Department), and lecturer at the École Pratique des Hautes Études (Paris). His current research concerns the history, the institutions, and the epigraphy of the Greek cities from the archaic to the Roman period. He has published Mégare et les établissements mégariens de Sicile, de la Propontide et du Pont‐Euxin. Histoire et institutions (Bern: Peter Lang, 2014), and he is the co‐editor of Mégarika. Nouvelles recherches sur Mégare et les cités de la Propontide et du Pont‐Euxin. Archéologie, épigraphie, histoire (Paris: de Boccard, 2016).

Robert Rollinger is Professor of Ancient History and Ancient Near Eastern Studies at the Leopold‐Franzens University of Innsbruck. His main research areas are the history of the Ancient Near East and the Achaemenid Empire, contacts between the Aegean world and the Ancient Near East, and ancient historiography. Recent publications include: Imperien in der Weltgeschichte. Epochenübergreifende und globalhistorische Vergleiche (co‐edited; 2014); Mesopotamia in the Ancient World. Impact, Continuities, Parallels (co‐edited; 2015); and Alexander und die großen Ströme. Die Flussüberquerungen im Lichte altorientalischer Pioniertechniken (2013).

James Romm is the James H. Ottaway Jr. Professor of Classics at Bard College and author of several books on Greek history, including The Edges of the Earth in Ancient Thought (Princeton 1992) and Herodotus (Yale 1998). He has also annotated a translation of Herodotus’ Histories published by Hackett Press.

Jessica M. Romney is Assistant Professor (Classics) in the Department of Humanities at MacEwan University in Canada. Her research examines the construction of ancient identity via literary production, focusing on how text, social context, and audience interactions together create and/or maintain Greek socio‐political and ethnic identities. She has published on sympotic identity and Spartan civic identity, and her current research examines how archaic and classical authors use food and geography to construct social and ethnic identities.

Margaret Cool Root is a Professor Emerita (Department of the History of Art) and a Curator Emerita (Kelsey Museum of Archaeology) at the University of Michigan. Beginning with her first book, The King and Kingship in Achaemenid Art (1979), she has published widely on Persian architecture, sculpture, seals, imperial ideology, and historiography.

Eric Ross is an Assistant Professor of Classical Studies at the University of North Dakota. He specializes in the study of Greek historiography, Presocratic philosophy, and classical reception in film. His most recent publication is a paper on the heroic depiction of Leonidas in Herodotus and the film 300, forthcoming in The Golden Ages of Classical Antiquity on Screen.

Sydnor Roy is an Assistant Professor of Classics at Texas Tech University. She specializes in the study of race, ethnicity, and politics in Greek historiography, most notably, Herodotus. She is the co‐author of Race and Ethnicity in the Classical World (Hackett, 2013, with R. Kennedy and M. Goldman). Her current project is a monograph on political theory in Herodotus’ Histories.

Catherine Rubincam is Associate Professor Emeritus at the University of Toronto. She specializes in Greek historiography. Her current project is a database containing quantifiable information on every number in the texts of the major Greek historians, and a monograph entitled Quantifying Mentalities: Numbers in Ancient Greek Historiography. Recent publications include: “New and Old Approaches to Diodorus: Can they be reconciled?” in L. I. Hau, A. Meeus, and B. Sheridan (eds.), Diodoros of Sicily: Historiographical Theory and Practice in the Bibliotheke (2018) 13–41; “The ‘Rationality’ of Herodotus and Thucydides as Evidenced by their Respective Use of Numbers,” in Donald Lateiner and Edith Foster (eds.), Thucydides and Herodotus (2012) 97–122; “The Numeric Practice of the Hellenica Oxyrhynchia,” Mouseion 9 (2009 [2012]), 303–29.

Kai Ruffing is Professor of Ancient History at the University of Kassel. Current areas of research are the economic and social history of the Greek and Roman world, the contacts between the Mediterranean world and the Ancient Near East, the perception of the East in classical sources, Classical receptions, and the geography of the ancient world. Recent publications on Herodotus include Herodots Quellen—Die Quellen Herodots (edited with Boris Dunsch: Wiesbaden, 2013 (CLeO 6)) and “Gifts for Cyrus, Tribute for Darius,” in Thomas Harrison and Elizabeth Irwin (eds.), Interpreting Herodotus (Oxford, 2018), 149–61.

Kelcy Sagstetter is a Professor of History at the United States Naval Academy, specializing in archaic and classical Greek history and culture. Her areas of research include archaic tyranny, the reforms and legislation of Solon of Athens, the transition from tyranny to democracy in Athens, the Athenian Empire, and epigraphy.

Carlo Scardino is a Senior Lecturer at the Heinrich‐Heine‐Universität Düsseldorf. He specializes in the study of the historical writing of ancient Greece and Rome as well as late antiquity and Graeco‐Arabica. He is the author of Gestaltung und Funktion der Reden bei Herodot und Thukydides (De Gruyter, 2007) and Edition antiker landwirtschaftlicher Werke in arabischer Sprache (De Gruyter, 2015). His next large‐scale project is an edition of Anatolius Arabicus.

Ulrich Schädler classical archaeologist, who received his PhD from the University of Frankfurt (Germany), is director of the Swiss Museum of Games at La Tour‐de‐Peilz and Honorary Professor at the University of Fribourg in Switzerland. His main areas of interest are Greek architecture, Greek and Roman sculpture, and in particular the cultural history of games. Among numerous other publications on the subject, he authored the entry “Games, Greek and Roman,” in The Wiley‐Blackwell Encyclopaedia of Ancient History, edited by Roger S. Bagnall et al. (2012). He is co‐editor of Ludographie—Spiel und Spiele and the Board Game Studies Journal.

Andreas Schwab is Professor of Ancient Greek Philology and Religious Studies of Antiquity at the Ludwig‐Maximilians‐University of Munich (LMU) and Privatdozent at the Ruprecht‐Karls‐University of Heidelberg. He has published articles on ancient Greek philosophy, literature and issues of reception, and he is the author of Thales von Milet in der frühen christlichen Literatur (Berlin/Boston 2012) and Fremde Religion in Herodots Historien: religiöse Mehrdimensionalität bei Persern und Ägypten (Hermes‐Einzelschriften, Stuttgart 2019). He co‐edited The Reception of the Homeric Hymns (Oxford, 2016) and is co‐editing a new multidisciplinary volume on Herodotean Soundings: The Cambyses Logos.

Matthew A. Sears is Associate Professor of Classics and Ancient History at the University of New Brunswick. He has published articles and chapters on ancient Greek history and historiography, especially warfare and the interactions between Greeks and non‐Greeks. He is the author of Athens, Thrace, and the Shaping of Athenian Leadership (Cambridge, 2013) and Understanding Greek Warfare (Routledge, 2019).

Anastasia Serghidou served as Assistant Professor at the Department of History and Archaeology of the University of Crete. She is currently an associated scientific member of the AnHiMa UMR 8210, Paris (Centre d’Anthropologie d’Histoire et des Mondes Anciens). Her research interests have focused upon the relationship between the intellectual and cultural issues of the ancient Greeks. She specializes in ancient slavery and works in intellectual domains such as the reception of ancient emotions, historical monumentality, classical reception, and historiography. These issues are mainly reflected in her book Servitude tragique, esclaves et héros déchus dans la tragedie grecque (Besançon: PUFC, 2010).

Valeria Sergueenkova is an Assistant Professor of Classics at the University of Cincinnati and specializes in the fields of ancient historiography and the history of science. She is currently preparing a book about the scope and methods of Herodotean history (A Science of the Past: Herodotus’ Histories between Nature and Culture). She is the author of articles on numbers and calculations in Herodotus, smells in classical antiquity, and ancient interactions with Bronze and Iron Age monuments in Anatolia.

Susan O. Shapiro is an Associate Professor of History and Classics at Utah State University. Her research focuses on Herodotus and Greek intellectual history; she has also written on Catullus. She is currently working on a monograph on the Seven Sages of archaic Greece.

Graham Shipley is Professor of Ancient History at the University of Leicester. His research interests include ancient Greek geographers as well as Hellenistic history, the city‐state, Sparta, and rural landscapes. His most recent books are Pseudo‐Skylax’s Periplous (Exeter, 2011; 2nd edition forthcoming, Liverpool, 2019) and The Early Hellenistic Peloponnese (Cambridge, 2018).

Matthew Simonton is an Assistant Professor of History at Arizona State University. His work focuses on ancient Greek politics, social conflict, and institutional history. He is the author of Classical Greek Oligarchy: A Political History (Princeton, 2017).

Joseph Skinner is Lecturer in Ancient Greek History at Newcastle University. His research interests include the history of ancient ethnographic thought and its reception, Herodotus’ Histories, and ancient Greek identity. He has published The Invention of Greek Ethnography: From Homer to Herodotus (New York, 2012), and (as co‐editor, with Eran Almagor) Ancient Ethnography: New Approaches (London, 2013). He is currently working on his next monograph, Neglected Ethnographies: The Visual and Material.

Alexander Skufca defended his PhD dissertation, “From Alexandria to Rome: Diodorus Siculus on Late Hellenistic Politics and Universal History,” at Florida State University in 2019. His research centers on ancient historiography, biography, and political theory. He is interested in universal history and has published articles on Diodorus Siculus and Cornelius Nepos.

Zoe Stamatopoulou is an Associate Professor of Classics at Washington University in St. Louis. She is the author of Hesiod and Classical Greek Poetry: Reception and Transformation in the Fifth Century BCE (Cambridge University Press, 2017). She has also published several articles on Greek literature.

Bernd Steinbock is Associate Professor of Classical Studies at the University of Western Ontario in London, Canada. He studied Latin, Greek, and History at the universities of Erlangen‐Nuremberg and Freiburg in Germany before completing his PhD in Classics at the University of Michigan. His research interests lie at the point where history and literary texts intersect. His book Social Memory in Athenian Public Discourse: Uses and Meanings of the Past (2012) explores the manifestation, transmission, and contestation of collective memory in classical Athens. He is currently working on the trauma of the Sicilian Expedition in Athenian social memory.

Lester Stephens is a PhD candidate in the departments of Classics and History at Yale University. His contributions to The Herodotus Encyclopedia materialized while obtaining an MA in Classics (2015) at the University of Notre Dame. His current research and dissertation focus on the late Roman Republic, encompassing Roman law, violence, institutional change, evolving norms, and the language of rebellion and revolution.

William Stover is a graduate student at the University of Virginia. His research interests include ethnic perception in the ancient world, historiography, and ancient legal rhetoric.

Melina Tamiolaki is Associate Professor in Ancient Greek Literature at the University of Crete (Department of Philology). She is the author of Liberté et esclavage chez les historiens grecs classiques (Paris, 2010). Besides numerous articles, she has also edited: Thucydides Between History and Literature (with Antonis Tsakmakis, 2013); Comic Wreath. New Trends in the Study of Ancient Greek Comedy (2014—in modern Greek); Methodological Perspectives in Classical Studies. Old Problems and New Challenges (2017); Gaze, Vision, and Visuality in Ancient Greek Literature (co‐edited, 2018), Polybius and his Legacy (with Nikos Miltsios, 2018), and Xenophon and Isocrates. Political Affinities and Literary Interactions (2018).

Louisa Désirée Thomas is working as a research assistant in Ancient History at the University of Kassel. She currently specializes in the study of ancient Iran, especially the Achaemenid Empire.

Rosalind Thomas is Professor of Greek History at Balliol College, Oxford. She is the author of Herodotus in Context: Science, Ethnography and the Art of Persuasion (Cambridge 2000); Literacy and Orality in Ancient Greece (Cambridge 1992); and Oral Tradition and Written Record in Classical Athens (Cambridge 1989).

Romain Thurin specializes in the political and social history of the late Medieval Islamic world. His research focuses on the Seljuk Sultanate of Rum, the early Anatolian Beyliks, and the Mongol Ilkhanate.

Daniel Tober is Assistant Professor of Classics and Ancient History in the Department of the Classics at Colgate University. His current research focuses on the interface between cultural memory and local history in classical and Hellenistic Greece, the subject of a forthcoming monograph, The Autobiographical Polis, and several articles (most recently, “Greek Local Historiography and its Audiences,” CQ 67.2 (2017)).

Lela Urquhart is an archaeologist and researcher at the Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles. She specializes in Greek and Phoenician colonization, ancient religion, and the archaeology of the west Mediterranean. She is the author of Measuring the Impact of Colonization: Colonial Religion and Indigenous Society in Archaic Sicily and Sardinia (Brill, forthcoming).

Elizabeth Vandiver is Clement Biddle Penrose Professor of Latin and Classics at Whitman College. She specializes in Greek and Roman historiography and in classical receptions in early twentieth‐century British literature. She is the author of Heroes in Herodotus: The Interaction of Myth and History (Peter Lang, 1991) and Stand in the Trench, Achilles: Classical Receptions in British Poetry of the Great War (Oxford University Press, 2010, paperback 2013). Her next large‐scale project concerns the reception of classical literature in the poetry and prose of Richard Aldington.

Pietro Vannicelli is Associate Professor of Greek History at University of Rome–La Sapienza. His main interests are Greek archaic and classical history and Greek historiography. He is the author of Erodoto e la storia dell’alto e medio arcaismo (Sparta‐Tessaglia‐Cirene) (Rome: Gruppo Editoriale Internazionale, 1993), Resistenza e intesa. Studi sulle guerre persiane in Erodoto (Bari: Edipuglia, 2013), and a commentary on Herodotus Book 7 (Milan: Fondazione Lorenzo Valla/Mondadori, 2017).

Emily Varto is an Associate Professor of Classics at Dalhousie University, specializing in early Iron Age Greek history. She is the author of articles and book chapters on early Greek kinship, genealogy, historiography, and housing, as well as on the role of the classics and classical scholarship in nineteenth‐century anthropology. She is the editor of Brill’s Companion to Classics and Early Anthropology (2018).

R. S. Walker was raised in the Pacific Northwest and received his BA from Western Washington University in Ancient History. During his graduate studies at the University of Notre Dame, his interests expanded to include ancient epic and the interaction between the epic tradition and ancient historiography. His MA thesis, entitled Addita Fati Peioris Manifesta Fides, examines the connections between prodigy passages in Tacitus' Annals and Lucan's Pharsalia. He completed his MA from Notre Dame in 2018.

Matt Waters is Professor of Classics and Ancient History at the University of Wisconsin–Eau Claire. He received his PhD in Ancient History from the University of Pennsylvania. He is the author of A Survey of Neo‐Elamite History (State Archives of Assyria Studies XII, 2000), Ancient Persia (Cambridge University Press, 2014), and Ctesias’ Persica and Its Near Eastern Context (University of Wisconsin Press, 2017), and his work has appeared in numerous journals in Classics and Near Eastern studies.

Melody Wauke is a candidate in the MA program in Classics at the University of Notre Dame. Her research interests include epic poetry and Latin and Greek paleography.

Marek Wecowski (MA Warsaw, PhD Paris, École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales) is Associate Professor of Ancient History at the University of Warsaw. He was a Junior Fellow at Harvard’s Center for Hellenic Studies, and a Fulbright Visiting Professor at Princeton University. His research interests include archaic Greek poetry, Greek historiography, and archaic and classical Greek history. His published works include The Rise of the Greek Aristocratic Banquet (Oxford 2014). The English translation of his recent book on the original purpose of Athenian ostracism is in preparation. He currently directs a research grant on early Greek aristocracy and aristocratic culture.

Christopher Welser teaches Ancient History at Colby College in Maine. His interests include historiography and Athenian democracy. His first two published articles were on Herodotus (Classical Antiquity, 2009 and Mnemosyne, 2010).

Christian Wendt is Professor of Ancient History at the Freie Universität Berlin and head of the Berlin Thucydides Center. His publications include Sine fine (2008) and numerous articles on Greek historiography and political thought, ancient international law, and the reception of Thucydides in modern political theory. He is the co‐editor of 2000 Jahre Varusschlacht (2012), Ein Besitz für immer? Geschichte, Polis und Völkerrecht bei Thukydides (2011), Thucydides and Political Order (2 vols.) (2016), and Seemacht, Seeherrschaft und die Antike (2016).

Katharina Wesselmann is Professor of Didactics of Ancient Languages at the Christian‐Albrechts‐University in Kiel, Germany. She gained her doctorate in Classics in 2011 from Basel University, where she continued to work as a postdoctoral fellow. Her main areas of interest are Greek historiography, early Greek epic, and didactics of ancient languages. There is a shorter English version of her book, Mythische Erzählstrukturen in Herodots Historien, which is published on the Harvard Center for Hellenic Studies’ website (http://chs.harvard.edu/CHS/article/display/5570) and explores mythical story patterns in Herodotus. At present, she is co‐editing a volume on lists and catalogues in ancient literature, and working on a commentary on Book 7 of Homer’s Iliad.

Everett L. Wheeler Scholar in Residence at Duke University, has published widely on ancient military history and military theorists (ancient and modern). His books include Stratagem and the Vocabulary of Military Trickery (1988), Polyaenus, Stratagems of War (translated with Peter Krentz, 1994), and The Armies of Classical Greece (2007). He was a contributor to The Landmark Herodotus (2007) and currently serves on the editorial boards of Journal of Military History and Revue internationale d’histoire militaire ancienne.

James White is a graduate student in the history department at the University of California, Santa Barbara. His research interests include Greek historiography of the Near East, the Achaemenid Persian Empire, and military technology in the ancient world.

Josef Wiesehöfer is a retired Professor of Ancient History at Kiel University (Germany). He specializes in the study of Pre‐Islamic Iran, the connections between the cultures of the Mediterranean and those of the Ancient Near East and Central Asia as well as the history of scholarship. He is the author of Ancient Persia (Tauris, 2001) and main editor of the series Oriens et Occidens.

Carolyn Willekes holds a PhD in Greek and Roman Studies. She teaches at Mount Royal University. Her area of specialty is the history of horses and horse cultures, as well as human‐animal relationships in the ancient world. She is the author of From Bucephalus to the Hippodrome: The Horse in the Ancient World (I. B. Tauris, 2016).

Maria Elizabeth G. Xanthou is Harvard CHS Research Associate in Pindaric Studies and Senior Research Associate at the University of Bristol. She teaches Greek and Roman civilization at Hellenic Open University. She specializes in Greek lyric poetry, Attic comedy, and rhetoric. Her research interests lie also in the history of emotions, Greek interstate relations, the resilience of communities, e‐learning and hybrid pedagogy in teaching Greek and Latin. She published a commentary in Greek on Isocrates’ On the Peace and Against Sophists. Her current project concerns a commentary on Pindar’s Nemean odes. She is also involved in a large‐scale research project and examines the resilience of Greek and Roman communities.

Ioannis Xydopoulos teaches ancient Greek history as an Associate Professor at the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece. The author of several works on ancient Macedonia, his interests now center on issues of identity, perception, and violence. Recent publications include “Euergetes and euergesia in Inscriptions for Public Benefactors from Macedonia,” AWE 17 (2018), 83–117; “The theorodokoi Inscription from Nemea (SEG 36, 331) and the Date of IG IV, 583,” ΤΕΚΜΗΡΙΑ 13 (2015–2016), 173–191; and a co‐edited volume (with K. Vlassopoulos and E. Tounta), Violence and Community: Law, Space and Identity in the Ancient Eastern Mediterranean World (Routledge, 2017).

David Yates is an Associate Professor of Classics at Millsaps College. He specializes in the history and historiography of archaic and classical Greece. He is the author of numerous articles and is currently working on a book about the Greek memory of the Persian War.

Mehmet Fatih Yavuz is Associate Professor of Ancient History at Çanakkale Onsekiz Mart University. He participated in the Granicus Survey Project and is a member of the ongoing Thracian Chersonese survey project. His research focuses mainly on the history of the Propontis and its outlets, the Hellespont and the Thracian Bosporus.

Vasiliki Zali is University Teacher in Classical Studies at the University of Liverpool. She has research interests in Herodotus and his reception, as well as in the use of narrative techniques and rhetoric in classical Greek historiography. She is the author of The Shape of Herodotean Rhetoric (Brill, 2014) and co‐editor of Brill’s Companion to the Reception of Herodotus in Antiquity and Beyond (Brill, 2016).

Angela Zautcke is a PhD student of Christianity and Judaism in Antiquity at the University of Notre Dame. Her research focuses on religions of the ancient Mediterranean basin and their development and shared influences during the classical and Hellenistic periods.

Marcus Ziemann is a PhD candidate in Classics at The Ohio State University. He is working on a dissertation on the relationship between the Iliad and the Epic of Gilgamesh that reanalyzes the Orientalizing Revolution in terms of a globalization of the East Mediterranean.

Antigoni Zournatzi is Director of Research at the National Hellenic Research Foundation (Athens, Greece). Her special areas of study are the cultural interconnections of the Greek world with the Near East, ancient Cyprus, and the Achaemenid Empire. Her research addresses, among other topics, the impact of Achaemenid Persian rhetoric on Greek and Near Eastern historiography, and the dialogue between the ancient Greek and Iranian civilizations in Iran (http://iranohellenica.eie.gr/).

The Herodotus Encyclopedia

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