Notes on Contributors
Johannes C. Bernhardt PhD 2012 at the University of Freiburg, is an ancient historian and digital manager at Baden State Museum Karlsruhe. He has published on Hellenistic history and museum studies, including Die Jüdische Revolution (De Gruyter 2018).
John Bintliff is Emeritus Professor of Classical and Mediterranean Archaeology at Leiden University and Emeritus Professor at the University of Edinburgh. He is the author, among others, of The Complete Archaeology of Greece (Wiley-Blackwell 2012) and The Death of Archaeological Theory? (Oxbow 2011).
Mirko Canevaro is Professor of Greek History at the University of Edinburgh. He has published extensively on the history of the Greek polis, particularly on Demosthenes and Athens (OUP 2013, De Gruyter 2016) and Aristotle’s Politics (L’Erma di Bretschneider 2014, 2022).
Alain Duplouy is Reader in Greek archaeology at the Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne. He has published extensively on pre-Classical elites, citizenship, and the making of the Greek city (Les Belles Lettres 2006, 2019; OUP 2018).
Edward M. Harris is Emeritus Professor of Ancient History at Durham University. He is the author of Aeschines and Athenian Politics (OUP 1995), Democracy and the Rule of Law in Classical Athens (CUP 2006), and The Rule of Law in Action in Democratic Athens (OUP 2013).
Lars Hübner PhD 2018 at the University of Hamburg, is an ancient historian and high school teacher at Margaretha Rothe Gymnasium Hamburg. He has published on Archaic Homeric reception and intentional history, including Homer im kulturellen Gedächtnis (Steiner 2019).
Tanja Itgenshorst is Professor of Ancient History at the University of Fribourg (Switzerland). She has published on the Roman Republic (particularly on the Roman triumph) and Archaic Greece (e.g. on political thought: Denker und Gemeinschaft, Schöningh 2014).
David M. Lewis is Lecturer in Greek History and Culture at the University of Edinburgh. He works on ancient slavery and ancient Greek labour history and is author of Greek Slave Systems in their Eastern Mediterranean Context, c. 800–146 BC (OUP 2018).
Jan B. Meister is SNSF Eccellenza Professor at the University of Bern. After his dissertation on the Roman emperor’s body (Steiner 2012) he recently published his second book on elites and concepts of nobility in Archaic and Classical Greece (Steiner 2020).
Sebastian Scharff is an ancient historian at Münster University. He has published on interstate relations in Greek antiquity (Steiner 2016) and the cultural history of Greek athletics (Steiner 2016, CUP forthcoming 2022).
Gunnar Seelentag is Professor of Ancient History at the Leibniz University Hannover. He specializes in Archaic and Early Classical Greece as well as the Roman Principate of the first two centuries. Among his recent publications is an edited volume on competition and institutionalisation in Archaic Greece (Steiner 2020).
James Taylor received his PhD from Durham University in 2017, specialising in Archaic Greek society and the phenomenon of tyrannis. He now teaches history at a school in Hertfordshire, England.
Sara Zanovello is CPD Research Manager of the Law Society of Scotland. She holds a joint-PhD from the Universities of Padova (Law School) and Edinburgh (Classics). She is author of From Slave to Free. A Legal Perspective on Greek Manumission (Edizioni dell’Orso 2021).
Peter Zeller is Assistant Professor at the University of Tübingen. His doctoral thesis was about the early period of Archaic Greece (Verlag Antike 2020). Now his main field of research is the climate history of Greek and Roman antiquity.