The Herodotus Encyclopedia. Группа авторов

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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).

      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.

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