Greek Colonization and Indigenous Communities: Rethinking Encounters in the Ancient World

Date
Jul 10, 2024Jul 11, 2024

Details

Event Description

The Classics Department is co-sponsoring this first of its kind, three-day conference organized by Marc Domingo Gygax (Princeton) and Manuel Fernández-Götz (Edinburgh) and led by Princeton's Program in the Ancient World. The conference will be held at the Princeton Athens Center, July 10-11, 2024, and is by invitation only.  Twenty-one scholars from around the world will participate.

The impact of Greek colonization on indigenous societies across the Mediterranean and the Black Sea has been debated since at least the 19th century. Traditionally, many interpretations saw the Greek presence as a key push factor for developments taking place within local communities (e.g. emergence of urban centers and increased social hierarchization), portraying the influences coming from the supposedly ‘higher’ Greek culture as a rather unidirectional process. These views have been challenged in recent decades by new approaches that emphasize the importance of endogenous processes and the bidirectional nature of cultural encounters. This conference aims to bring together a wide range of contributions that will reassess the interactions between Greek colonies and indigenous communities, taking into account novel theoretical perspectives, new archaeological discoveries, and a multi-scalar approach. The conference will encompass both communities located in the immediate hinterlands of the coastal settlements and other groups located further inland. The chronological framework will be the period between ca. 800-400 BCE, with a geographical scope extending from Iberia to the Black Sea.

See the program linked below for more details.
 


 

Sponsor
Co-sponsored by the Program in the Ancient World, Princeton International Fund, Seeger Center for Hellenic Studies, and the Department of Classics.