
Melissa Lane & Benjamin Morison
Presented by Labyrinth Books and co-sponsored by Princeton University’s Humanities Council and Politics, Philosophy, and Classics Departments.

LLL Presents Peter Brown & Jack Tannous
Co-presented by Labyrinth Books and the Princeton Public Library and co-sponsored by Princeton University’s Humanities Council and Department of Classics.

Sponsored by the Eberhard L. Faber 1915 Memorial Fund in the Humanities Council

To attend in person please RSVP by Tuesday, April 25th to Eileen Robinson, [email protected]

Sponsored by the Eberhard L. Faber 1915 Memorial Fund in the Humanities Council
Fall 2023

Princeton Paleography Lab is co-sponsored by the Department of Classics, Program in Medieval Studies, and by MARBAS (Manuscript, Rare Book & Archive Studies).

Support for this project is provided in part by Princeton's Departments of Classics and Comparative Literature, Humanities Council, Lewis Center for the Arts, Princeton University Public Lectures Committee, Program in Humanistic Studies, and the Seeger Center for Hellenic Studies
Spring 2023



To attend in person please RSVP by Tuesday, May 2nd to Eileen Robinson, [email protected]

To attend in person please RSVP by Monday, March 27th to Eileen Robinson, [email protected]

Dinner reception for members of the community to follow. Please RSVP to [email protected]by March 23.
Fall 2022

To attend in person please RSVP by Tuesday, November 29th to Eileen Robinson, [email protected]
Click here for the Zoom registration link


To attend in person Please RSVP by Tuesday, November 1st, to Eileen Robinson: [email protected]

To attend in person Please RSVP by Monday, October 24, to Eileen Robinson: [email protected]
Click here for the Zoom registration link

Please RSVP for the reception by October 3rd to [email protected]
Support for this project has been provided in part by Princeton's Departments of Classics and Comparative Literature, Humanities Council, Lewis Center for the Arts, Princeton University Public Lectures Committee, Program in Humanistic Studies and the Seeger Center for Hellenic Studies
Spring 2022

Professor Most will be a giving a virtual talk at 11:00am.
To join us in-person for coffee and pastries RSVP to [email protected]. Please wear a mask when not eating or drinking.
To register for the Zoom link click here

A workshop on the Epic of Gilgamesh 9am-3.30pm, East Pyne 161
Sophus Helle on ‘Touch’
Erynn Kim on ‘Dreamscapes in Gilgamesh and Homer’
Evan Brandon on ‘The Generation Gap’
Johannes Haubold on ‘The End of Creation’
Tom Hare on ‘Three Views of the Two Brothers’
Josh Billings on ‘Gilgamesh and Psychoanalysis’
Register here for the workshop by April 19-Space is limited
Readings and Q&A with Sophus Helle, in person and on Zoom 4.30pm-6pm,
Louis Simpson A71
Register here for the Zoom link
THESE EVENT ARE OPEN TO PRINCETON FACULTY, STAFF AND STUDENTS
FACE MASKS ARE REQUIRED

This event is open to Princeton faculty, staff and students.
In person attendance requires on-site registration and face coverings.
To attend virtually click here for the zoom registration link.


Fall 2021

This event is open to Princeton faculty, staff and students
Pre registration is required.
Lunch will be provided for in-person attendance.
Face coverings are required when not actively eating or drinking
In-Person attendance - Click here to register
Zoom Registration - Click here to register
Spring 2021

As a way to close out the first semester of the Quechua workshop, we'd like to invite you to stream with us the movie Yawar Mallku. This 1969 movie is incredible for many reasons, the least of which is that it is filmed in the communities in the highlands and the main language of the movie is Quechua. The film also had important political and social ramifications in Bolivia.
The film is in Quechua with Spanish subtitles.
The plan is to stream the movie together (it's only 70 minutes) and leave time for discussion.
Please email Felice Physioc ([email protected]) if you have any questions.
https://princeton.zoom.us/j/93260978772
Open to the University community (students, faculty, staff).
Sponsored by Program in American Studies, Department of Classics, Center for Collaborative History, Program in Latin American Studies, Department of Spanish and Portuguese, PIIRS

Click here for Zoom registration link:
https://princeton.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJ0pf-qvrTstE91BN5w7PETt_nH_r297qRxF
Sponsored by Program in American Studies, Department of Classics, Center for Collaborative History, Program in Latin American Studies, Department of Spanish and Portuguese, PIIRS

Click here for Zoom registration link:
https://princeton.zoom.us/meeting/register/
tJwpduiprzMpGNDgEe16HJrIaTHC-QLRkBOq

The Quechua workshop meets next on March 24 (4:30-6:30) to read and discuss Bruce Mannheim's, The language of the Inka since the European invasion and Catalina Andrango-Walker's, El símbolo católico indiano (1598) de Luis Jerónimo de Oré : saberes coloniales y los problemas de la evangelización en la región andina. More information is available on our Canvas website; to be added to the site, please email [email protected]. Upcoming events include a guest lecture by Andrango-Walker and a summer boot camp on historical documents in Quechua.
Open to the University community (students, faculty, staff).
Sponsored by Program in American Studies, Department of Classics, Center for Collaborative History, Program in Latin American Studies, Department of Spanish and Portuguese, PIIRS

Virtual Information Session
Come learn about Princeton's first workshop dedicated to Quechua, a pre-Columbian language spoken by over eight million people along the Andean cordillera. Scheduled events include a semester-long book club, lectures, and outreach to Quechua-speaking communities in New Jersey.
Open to the University community (students, faculty, staff).
RSVP to [email protected] to receive the Zoom link.
Sponsored by Program in American Studies, Department of Classics, Center for Collaborative History, Program in Latin American Studies, Department of Spanish and Portuguese, PIIRS
2019-2020 Spring

Sponsored by the Eberhard L. Faber 1915 Memorial Fund in the Humanities Council