Colloque – The Cyprus Gazetteer Project

The Cyprus Gazetteer Project

18.45 Tuesday 3 November 2015

 Nash Lecture theatre (K2.31), Strand Campus, King’s College London

The project, based at the Centre for Hellenic Studies / Department of Classics and in the Department of Digital Humanities, King’s College London, will be launched with an evening of short presentations. Its two components, the Heritage Gazetteer of Cyprus (HGC) and the Inventory of Byzantine Churches of Cyprus (iBCC), will be presented by Prof. Charlotte Roueché, Dr Stuart Dunn and Dr Tassos Papacostas:

http://www.cyprusgazetteer.org
http://ibcc.dighum.kcl.ac.uk

Dr Marina Solomidou-Ieronymidou (Director, Department of Antiquities, Cyprus) and Dr Antonis Hadjikyriacou (Foundation for Research and Technology-Hellas) will then present short papers on the digitization of ancient monuments and on toponyms in Ottoman Cyprus, respectively.

There will be a reception following the presentations
The event is free and open to all, but please register on http://gazetteerlaunch.eventbrite.co.uk
For further information, see http://www.kcl.ac.uk/artshums/ahri/eventrecords/2015-2016/CHS/Gazetteer.aspx

Flyer ici.

Symposium — Miracles and Wonders in Antiquity and Byzantium

University of Cyprus, 16-18 October 2014

INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE

Miracles and Wonders in Antiquity and Byzantium

                               

Tales of miracle and wonder decorate both ancient and Byzantine literature and seem to have had a great impact upon ancient and Byzantine thought. A strong interest in the wondrous is already apparent in the works of Homer and Hesiod. However, a more organized recording of marvels is detected much later, in Herodotus’s time, when marvelous stories and travel accounts of exotic places and peoples are increasingly produced. From the era of Alexander and onwards such stories are recruited by historians and rhetors in an attempt to apotheose the ideal ruler.

Between the third century BC and the third century AD, the genre of paradoxography, collections of stories relating strange events and phenomena, achieves great popularity, and influences another new genre, the Hellenistic novel. At about the same time, a number of stories circulate that relate the miraculous healings of suffering people who practice incubation in Asclepian temples. Later the practice of incubation is taken over by Christian pilgrims who are cured by saints. Miraculous healings and other types of miracles that are associated with a particular Christian shrine become the material of a new genre, the miracle collection which is cultivated throughout the Byzantine era. Miracle stories are included in all Byzantine hagiographical genres, since they constitute the strongest sign of holiness. Miracles and wonders are also found in profane Byzantine genres, such as chronicles and romances.

Despite the fact that marvel literature enjoyed such a high popularity in antiquity and Byzantium, it has been mostly dismissed by modern scholars as debased, boring and even unintelligible, an attitude that has condemned this literature to obscurity.

The conference’s main aims are to bring to light miracle and wonder literature and to open up new avenues of approach. Topics of exploration may include:

• Literary Theoretical Approaches

• Cultural Studies

• Psychological Approaches

• Comparative Literary Studies

• Linguistics

Specialists are invited to submit a thirty-minute paper in English on a relevant topic.

Due to budgetary constraints, the organizers cannot cover the speakers’ travel and hotel costs. There is no registration fee for participation or attendance.

Prospective speakers are asked to submit by 30 April 2014 a title and a 400-word abstract to Stavroula Constantinou (konstans@ucy.ac.cy) and Maria Gerolemou (mariagerolemou@live.de).