How I got here: an interview with Dr. Hendrik Dey (IPCAA PhD, 2006)

by Jenny Kreiger

Dr. Hendrik Dey graduated from IPCAA in 2006. His dissertation, “The Aurelian Wall and the Refashioning of Imperial Rome, A.D. 271-855,” took him to Rome for several years of research and writing, and now he balances teaching and departmental service with an active field project in Caesarea Maritima (Israel). He has a new book out: The Afterlife of the Roman City: Architecture and Ceremony in Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages (Cambridge University Press, 2014), which you can check out at the linkI interviewed him over e-mail about his time in IPCAA, what he does now, and his accomplishments in between.

JK: Please describe your current position. What is your institution like? What are your responsibilities?
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Update from Dr. Paolo Visonà (IPCAA PhD, 1985)

A team from The Foundation for Calabrian Archaeology and the University of Kentucky led by Dr. Paolo Visonà has recently located a series of Greek fortifications on the mountains in the hinterland of ancient Locri Epizephyrii (please see details in last chapter of an essay to appear in Notizie degli Scavi this summer or fall). The most promising of nearly a half a dozen sites includes what may be a frontier sanctuary (a rectangular [?] building covering an area of c. 900 square meters) and a large fort (?) ringed by a massive wall circuit. The latter has been surveyed preliminarily in June 2015; it covers an area of c. 2000 square meters. Surface finds include Greek rooftile and bronze arrowheads. The presumed sanctuary has yielded diagnostic Greek pottery datable to the classical and Hellenistic periods, roof tiles, and prehistoric lithic tools; all are surface finds.

 

Have updates of your own to share? Submit them to ipcaanewsletter@umich.edu.

Update from Dr. Adela Sobotkova (IPCAA PhD, 2012)

After a two-and-a-half-year “interlude with the digital humanities” as manager of the Federated Archaeological Information Management Systems eResearch Project at the University of New South Wales, Dr. Adela Sobotkova has taken a new position as a Research Fellow in the Department of Ancient History at Macquarie University. In her new position she will be able to pursue fieldwork and publication relating to her research in Bulgaria.

Have updates of your own to share? Submit them to ipcaanewsletter@umich.edu.