Summary
ILLR is the first intellectual and cultural history of Rhodes centered on a seminal period of its cultural prominence between its
alliance with Rome (164 BC), where its financial and military power was curtailed and it became semi-autonomous, and its
incorporation into the province of Asia (AD 44) by the Emperor Claudius. Using a combination of actor-network/social
network theory and intellectual history with literary and material evidence, ILLR shows the transformation of Rhodian and
Greek identities from a predominately economic and political power to a cultural one in a Greek and subsequently Greco-
Roman world, and Rhodes’ part in the creation of the Classics and Greco-Roman culture.
ILLR demonstrates Rhodes’ pivotal and under-appreciated role as an important intersection within networks of learning, by
analysing ancient intellectual life in all its forms (e.g. philology, history, philosophy, the sociology and anthropology of
knowledge). Consisting of a monograph and two articles, it examines the preservation and study of heritage, the
development of poetry, scholarship, philosophy, and rhetoric, and their subsequent influence on Greeks and Romans.
My main research interests are Greco-Roman literary history, Greek poetry and music, ancient scholarship, and fragmentary
literary texts. ILLR will advance my career and strengthen my profile as a researcher by allowing me to expand my research
interests to Latin literature and learning, Greek epigraphy, and Greco-Roman oratory, and allow me to disseminate these
skills through teaching and further research. ILLR serves as a point of comparison, and, conceivably, of inspiration, when
dealing with analogue features of our contemporary world. These features include the mobility of students and scholars, the
formalisation and diversification of academic disciplines, languages and multilingualism, and the use of cultural heritage and
learning as means of identity and representation.
alliance with Rome (164 BC), where its financial and military power was curtailed and it became semi-autonomous, and its
incorporation into the province of Asia (AD 44) by the Emperor Claudius. Using a combination of actor-network/social
network theory and intellectual history with literary and material evidence, ILLR shows the transformation of Rhodian and
Greek identities from a predominately economic and political power to a cultural one in a Greek and subsequently Greco-
Roman world, and Rhodes’ part in the creation of the Classics and Greco-Roman culture.
ILLR demonstrates Rhodes’ pivotal and under-appreciated role as an important intersection within networks of learning, by
analysing ancient intellectual life in all its forms (e.g. philology, history, philosophy, the sociology and anthropology of
knowledge). Consisting of a monograph and two articles, it examines the preservation and study of heritage, the
development of poetry, scholarship, philosophy, and rhetoric, and their subsequent influence on Greeks and Romans.
My main research interests are Greco-Roman literary history, Greek poetry and music, ancient scholarship, and fragmentary
literary texts. ILLR will advance my career and strengthen my profile as a researcher by allowing me to expand my research
interests to Latin literature and learning, Greek epigraphy, and Greco-Roman oratory, and allow me to disseminate these
skills through teaching and further research. ILLR serves as a point of comparison, and, conceivably, of inspiration, when
dealing with analogue features of our contemporary world. These features include the mobility of students and scholars, the
formalisation and diversification of academic disciplines, languages and multilingualism, and the use of cultural heritage and
learning as means of identity and representation.
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More information & hyperlinks
Web resources: | https://cordis.europa.eu/project/id/792579 |
Start date: | 01-09-2018 |
End date: | 31-08-2020 |
Total budget - Public funding: | 168 277,20 Euro - 168 277,00 Euro |
Cordis data
Original description
ILLR is the first intellectual and cultural history of Rhodes centered on a seminal period of its cultural prominence between itsalliance with Rome (164 BC), where its financial and military power was curtailed and it became semi-autonomous, and its
incorporation into the province of Asia (AD 44) by the Emperor Claudius. Using a combination of actor-network/social
network theory and intellectual history with literary and material evidence, ILLR shows the transformation of Rhodian and
Greek identities from a predominately economic and political power to a cultural one in a Greek and subsequently Greco-
Roman world, and Rhodes’ part in the creation of the Classics and Greco-Roman culture.
ILLR demonstrates Rhodes’ pivotal and under-appreciated role as an important intersection within networks of learning, by
analysing ancient intellectual life in all its forms (e.g. philology, history, philosophy, the sociology and anthropology of
knowledge). Consisting of a monograph and two articles, it examines the preservation and study of heritage, the
development of poetry, scholarship, philosophy, and rhetoric, and their subsequent influence on Greeks and Romans.
My main research interests are Greco-Roman literary history, Greek poetry and music, ancient scholarship, and fragmentary
literary texts. ILLR will advance my career and strengthen my profile as a researcher by allowing me to expand my research
interests to Latin literature and learning, Greek epigraphy, and Greco-Roman oratory, and allow me to disseminate these
skills through teaching and further research. ILLR serves as a point of comparison, and, conceivably, of inspiration, when
dealing with analogue features of our contemporary world. These features include the mobility of students and scholars, the
formalisation and diversification of academic disciplines, languages and multilingualism, and the use of cultural heritage and
learning as means of identity and representation.
Status
CLOSEDCall topic
MSCA-IF-2017Update Date
28-04-2024
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