Institute for the Study of the Ancient World
https://isaw.nyu.edu
Alisher Begmatov
https://isaw.nyu.edu/people/visiting-research-scholars/previous/vrs-2022-2023/alisher-begmatov
No publisher2022/07/08 09:35:00 GMT-4ProfileTrans-Eurasian Exchange:
https://isaw.nyu.edu/events/trans-eurasian-exchange
This lecture will take place online. Registration is required; click through for the registration link. Zoom information will be provided via confirmation email to registered participants. Sogdiana, in what is now mainly central and eastern Uzbekistan and north-western Tajikistan, found itself in between China, India, Iran, and Byzantium during late antiquity and early medieval period. A large of number of artistic and textual materials from Eurasia have shown that the inhabitants of Sogdiana took great advantage of this strategic position and acted as international traders.No publisher2022/10/17 22:52:05 GMT-4EventCatherine Klesner
https://isaw.nyu.edu/people/visiting-research-scholars/previous/vrs-2022-2023/catherine-klesner
No publisher2021/07/12 12:45:00 GMT-4ProfileLorenzo Castellano
https://isaw.nyu.edu/people/visiting-research-scholars/lorenzo-castellano
No publisher2022/10/06 12:31:02 GMT-4ProfileIrene Soto Marín
https://isaw.nyu.edu/people/students/alumni/irene-soto-marin
No publisher2018/06/01 11:50:00 GMT-4ProfileSeals and Status:
https://isaw.nyu.edu/events/seals-and-status
This lecture will take place online. Registration is required; click through for the registration link. Zoom information will be provided via confirmation email to registered participants. The Persepolis Fortification Archive (PFA) is a large corpus of administrative documents from Persepolis dating to the reign of Darius I (509-493 BCE). The archive’s texts record various administrative transactions related to the collection and redistribution of agricultural products. The PFA also preserves the impressions of over 4,000 distinct and legible seals.No publisher2022/10/05 16:28:20 GMT-4EventEmployment Policy
https://isaw.nyu.edu/guide/academic-affairs/student-employment-policy
No publisherstudents2017/02/17 14:40:00 GMT-4PageSam Mirelman
https://isaw.nyu.edu/people/students/alumni/sam-mirelman
No publisher2018/06/01 11:30:00 GMT-4Profile16th Annual Leon Levy Lecture
https://isaw.nyu.edu/events/leon-levy-lecture-fall-2022
This lecture will take place online. Registration is required; click through for the registration link. Zoom information will be provided via confirmation email to registered participants. Study of the “Silk Roads” has helped to greatly expand our knowledge of the movement of people, ideas, and goods as well as the influences that they exerted on various cultures throughout Eurasia. Scholars have often looked to China’s Tang dynasty (618-907) as an example of the cosmopolitanism that such exchanges promoted. But there are other, less obvious polities that developed cosmopolitan tendencies as well. One of these is the steppe empire of the Uyghurs, whose political center was in what is today Mongolia.No publisher2022/09/14 10:45:00 GMT-4EventKrzysztof Nawotka
https://isaw.nyu.edu/people/visiting-research-scholars/previous/vrs-2022-2023/krzysztof-nawotka
No publisher2022/09/12 12:20:12 GMT-4ProfileOpen House for Prospective Students
https://isaw.nyu.edu/events/open-house-2022
ISAW's open house for prospective doctoral students will take place online. Registration is required; click through for the registration link. Zoom information will be provided via confirmation email to registered participants. The event will include an opportunity to meet the ISAW faculty; an information session about our academic program; a Q&A session with current students; and sessions on archaeology, digital humanities, exhibitions, and the library at ISAW.No publisher2022/09/14 10:48:22 GMT-4EventFrom the Ground Up:
https://isaw.nyu.edu/events/from-the-ground-up
This lecture will take place online. Registration is required; click through for the registration link. Zoom information will be provided via confirmation email to registered participants. The period between c.1450 and 550 BCE on Crete was one of major social, political, and economic change, including the final phase – and ultimate collapse – of the Bronze Age palatial tradition, and the gradual emergence of the island’s earliest poleis or city-states. This lecture offers a novel perspective on these historical processes by foregrounding the fundamental pressures and opportunities of the Cretan landscape, and the agricultural foundations on which the societies of the Late Bronze Age and Early Iron Age were built.No publisher2022/09/14 10:45:24 GMT-4EventDivya Kumar-Dumas
https://isaw.nyu.edu/people/visiting-research-scholars/previous/vrs-2021-2022/divya-kumar-dumas
No publisher2021/08/25 16:20:00 GMT-4ProfileValentina A. Grasso
https://isaw.nyu.edu/people/visiting-research-scholars/previous/vrs-2021-2022/valentina-a-grasso
No publisher2021/07/12 12:45:00 GMT-4ProfileDominic Pollard
https://isaw.nyu.edu/people/visiting-research-scholars/dominic-pollard
No publisher2022/07/06 15:35:00 GMT-4Profile