Vision

The Department of Classics at the University of Cincinnati strives to remain a leading department in North America and worldwide, as an active, dedicated center for the interdisciplinary study of the ancient Mediterranean world. 

Mission

The Department of Classics at the University of Cincinnati advances knowledge of Greece and Rome, as well as other areas of the ancient Mediterranean, by considering them and their reception in all periods and by maintaining faculty in Ancient History, Archaeology, and Philology. It trains students, both undergraduate and graduate, and disseminates research. The Department is committed to supporting a research library and other facilities that promote research and teaching. It sponsors through archaeological projects the investigation, preservation, and presentation of the material cultural heritage of the ancient Mediterranean.

Collapsed column drums during excavation at the Temple of Zeus in Nemea

For a century the Department of Classics of the University of Cincinnati has organized and supported archaeological research projects in the Mediterranean. These endeavors reflect a commitment to sustained archaeological research that is paralleled by the efforts of few other academic institutions in the United States. A consistent program of excavations and surveys has contributed to the department's well-deserved reputation as one of the preeminent centers of graduate education in pre-Classical and Classical archaeology in the world, as is attested by the many distinguished recipients of its PhDs. Today the department offers courses of study in Classics with a specialization in archaeology leading to the degrees of Master of Arts and Doctor of Philosophy. It firmly holds the individual classical disciplines to be interdependent, and control of the entire field to be an indispensable prerequisite for the success of its graduates.

Here we recap the accomplishments of members of its archaeological faculty by drawing attention to the many field projects that the department has supported in the last one hundred years. For each survey or excavation we include a brief summary of the purpose and significance of the project. 

Although the focus of this page is fieldwork, it is important not to lose sight of the fact that the faculty of the department have also made significant contributions to the the study of ancient art and to interdisciplinary studies. Two major figures in the history of the department, Cedric Boulter and Peter J. Topping, stand out. Cedric Boulter received his doctorate from the department in 1939 and enjoyed a long and distinguished career as one of the premier historians of Greek art in North America. Boulter contributed to the success of Blegen's expedition to Troy and compiled volumes of the Corpus Vasorum Antiquorum both for the Cleveland Museum of Art (1971) and the Toledo Museum of Art (1976). Peter J. Topping, one of the best known historians of modern Greece played a significant role in the development of regional studies in Greece by analyzing Venetian documentary sources on behalf of the Minnesota Messenia Expedition and the Argolid Exploration Project.

The Beginnings

The first steps toward the creation of a program of archaeological fieldwork in the department were taken in 1921, two years before the University became a co-operating institution of ASCSA in 1923. Edward Perry, secretary of the Managing Committee of the American School of Classical Studies in Athens wrote to Edward Capps, Chairman of the Managing Committee that:

"Those Cincinnati people are very enthusiastic about a Cincinnati excavation. One of their number, George Warrington...proposes to go to Greece next winter with his family with the sole motive of catching up with the School and taking part in the Cincinnati dig, for which we must select a classical site."

It is clear that Rodney Robinson and William Semple were the driving academic force behind this initiative. Perry wrote to Capps on another occasion:

"The two men in classics at the University of Cincinnati whose names are not Burnam and who would seem to be proper objects of your attention are Rodney P. Robinson and William Turstall Semple; but I have no means of knowing which (if either) of them married C.P. Taft's daughter, except writing to them to ask."

Painted portrait of Louse Taft Semple seatedLouise Taft Semple 
Painted portrait of William Semple seated wearing regaliaWilliam Turstall Semple

Semple and Louise Taft Semple's enthusiasm for archaeology provided the essential patronage to nourish archaeological research in the department and today allows archaeology to flourish through support from the Semple Classics Fund, established in 1961 "for the sole purpose of promoting the study of the Classics, such term to be interpreted in its broadest sense as the endeavor to make vital and constructive in the civilization of our country the spiritual, intellectual, and esthetic inheritance we have received from the Greek and Roman civilizations."


Excavations and Surveys

Brief summaries of archaeological projects are included below in chronological order of their accomplishment. Each project was officially sponsored by the department and nearly all were directed by members of its faculty.

Nemea, Greece (1924-27)

In 1924 a small group of philhellenes and friends of archaeology, gathered together by Professor W.T. Semple in Cincinnati, offered to the American School of Classical Studies at Athens a fund to support an excavation in Greece. With the approval of the Managing Committee, Dr. Bert Hodge Hill, Director of the School, welcomed a project of this kind and at once began to look about for a suitable site. He soon became deeply interested in the ruined temple of Zeus at Nemea.
nemeatempTemple of Zeus at Nemea
Three annual campaigns of large-scale excavation were conducted within the Sanctuary of Zeus at Nemea in 1924, 1925, and 1926-27. Carl Blegen, assistant director of ASCSA, took overall responsibility for direction of the project. Special attention was given to the Temple of Zeus. Fallen debris was cleared away from its foundations, exposing for the first time the crypt in the rear part of the cella and the long altar to the east of the Temple. The western end of the Xenon (then called a gymnasium) was excavated, as was the Bath and Oikos 1. The Cincinnati team also determined the location of the Stadium and the Basilica. A full set of plans and elevations of the Temple were prepared by Lewey Lands, an advanced student in the architectural school of the University of Cincinnati; these were later revised for publication by Charles K. Williams.
 
C. W. Blegen, "The American Excavation at Nemea, Season of 1924," Art and Archaeology 19 (1925) 175-84; C. W. Blegen, "The December Excavations at Nemea," Art and Archaeology 22 (1926) 127-34; C. W. Blegen, "Excavations at Nemea, 1926," American Journal of Archaeology 31 (1927) 427-40; D. W. Bradeen, "Inscriptions from Nemea," Hesperia 35 (1966) 320-30; B. W. Hill, L. T. Lands, and C. K. Williams, The Temple of Zeus at Nemea (1966).
 

Tsoungiza, Greece (1924-1926)

tsoungizacaveNeolithic Levels in Cave at TsoungizaThe prehistoric mound of Tsoungiza was located in the course of investigating the Sanctuary of Zeus at Nemea. With support from the department the entire top of the mound was explored, as well as a lower terrace on the north side of the hill. On the summit the remains of several houses of the Early Bronze Age were found, one with eight large storage jars and nine querns. An adjacent house contained twelve large storage jars, one deeply set into the floor On the terrace all principal phases of the Bronze Age were superimposed one on top of the other. There were many stone and bronze arrowheads in one house of the Mycenaean period. On the south slope of the mound a deep cavity in the bedrock was filled with Neolithic pottery and a skull that at the time represented the oldest known human remains in the Peloponnese.
 
C.W. Blegen, Excavations at Nemea, 1926." American Journal of Archaeology 31 (1924) 436-439.
 

 

 

 

 

The Odeum at Corinth, Greece (1927-28)

odeumPlan of the Odeum at CorinthThe Roman Odeum of Corinth was located by Hill in 1906. The excavations were adopted by the University of Cincinnati in 1927 and were completed in two major campaigns, directed first by Benjamin Meritt and then by Oscar Broneer. The cavea, with an estimated seating capacity of ca. 3000, was found to be particularly well-preserved. The high vertical scarp that separated the floor of the orchestra from the lowest seats was frescoed. The Odeum was erected toward the end of the first century A.D., but was thoroughly reconstructed in the second half of the second century with financial support from Herodes Atticus. The building was then restored again in the first quarter of the third century when it was used for gladiatorial shows and wild beast fights.

 
O. Bronzer, Corinth X: The Odeum (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1932).
 

Hagioritika, Greece (1928)

  hagiorgtikatomeNeolithic Tomb at Hagiorgitika
In 1928 the department supported, under Blegen's direction, a short excavation at the low prehistoric mound of Hagiorgitika, not far to the east of Tripolis in Arcadia. The campaign lasted only about three weeks, but revealed extensive stratified remains of dwellings with stone foundations and fixed hearths, both circular and rectangular. Two stages in the Neolithic period were defined. Several Early Helladic bothroi had later been cut into the site. A Neolithic grave was also explored.
 
E.P. Blegen, "News Items from Athens," American Journal of Archaeology 32 (1928) 533-534; S.L. Petrakis, Ayioryitika: A Neolithic Settlement in Eastern Arcadia, Greece (Ph.D. University of Pennsylvania, 1999).
 
 
 
 
 
 

Prosymna, Greece (1925-31)

  prosymnapdjJug from Prosymna
Directed by Blegen in four campaigns, excavations focused on exploration of the earliest history of the Argive Heraeum. Study of finds and the publication of the results of excavations were made possible by the department after Blegen moved to the University of Cincinnati in 1927. On the terrace above the Temple of Hera, Blegen found the remains of a Middle Helladic and Mycenaean settlement with an undisturbed Early Bronze Age stratum beneath. On the Yerogalaro ridge to the northwest of the Heraeum, several dozen richly appointed Mycenaean chamber tombs were excavated in addition to Early Helladic and Middle Helladic graves. Exploration of these tombs also yielded the first Neolithic pottery to be found in the Argolid. More than a thousand Mycenaean vases were recovered from the tombs, yielding one of the finest collections of complete Late Helladic pots every excavated in Greece. Excavations in the cemeteries also produced geometric and proto-Corinthian ceramics as well as examples of elaborate metalwork of both prehistoric and historical date.
 
C.W. Blegen, Prosymna, the Helladic Settlement Preceding the Argive Heraeum (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1937); K.S. Shelton, The Late Helladic Pottery from Prosymna (Jonsered: Paul Åströms Förlag, 1996).
 

Troy, Turkey (1932-38)

 
dorpfeldsemple
Willhelm Dörpfeld and the Semples
drexcavating
Dorothy Rawson Excavating   

Blegen and a team from the department re-investigated the mound of Troy with the blessings of Wilhelm Dörpfeld who had succeeded Heinrich Schliemann. Graduate students who participated in the project and later shared in the publication of its results included J.L. Caskey and C.G. Boulter. Marion Rawson, a graduate of UC in architecture, directed the editing of the publication. The Cincinnati team was able to clarify the stratigraphy of the settlement considerably. In the parts of the mound of Troy left undisturbed by Schliemann and Dörpfeld some 46 distinct strata could be differentiated and these could be divided into nine major layers. In addition such careful excavation made it possible to establish synchronisms with Mainland Greece more accurately than had previously been possible. It was clear that Troy I-V corresponded to the Early Helladic period in Greece, Troy VI to the Middle Helladic and earlier Late Helladic periods, and Troy VIIa and VIIb to the very end of Mycenaean times. Blegen suggested that events resulting in the destruction of Troy VIIa were remembered in historical times as the Trojan War of epic poetry.

C.W. Blegen, ed., with the collaboration of John L. Caskey and Marion Rawson, Troy: Excavations Conducted by the University of Cincinnati, 1932-1938 (Princeton: Published for the University of Cincinnati by Princeton University Press, 1950-58); C.W. Blegen, Troy and the Trojans (Praeger: New York, 1963).

Palace of Nestor, Greece (1939-1971)

  pylospalsw
Pylos, Palace from the Southwest
pylosreconstmeg
Reconstruction of the Megaron

After surface explorations in 1938 and 1939 a joint Greek-American team directed by Konstantinos Kourouniotis and Carl Blegen concluded that a site on the upper part of the Englianos ridge near the modern town of Hora held promise of revealing the palace of Homer's King Nestor. On the very first day of excavations in April 4, 1939, stone walls, fragments of frescoes, painted Mycenaean pottery, and fragments of tablets with inscriptions in the Linear B script, the first to be found on the Greek mainland, were uncovered. These promising beginnings were interrupted by the Second World War and it was impossible for Blegen to resume excavations until 1952. In a series of major campaigns the Cincinnati team then excavated the entirety of a Mycenaean palace, as well as much of the town surrounding it.

Several cemeteries were explored in the vicinity of the palace including four Mycenaean beehive tombs with richly provisioned burials and a small Protogeometric tholos tomb. The palace itself, including its core elements of a throne room and central hearth, was built in its definitive form in the Late Helladic IIIB period. Its archives of Linear B tablets are the most extensive yet found on the Greek mainland, and their discovery contributed greatly to the decipherment in 1952 by Michael Ventris of Linear B as an early form of the Greek language. The site had a long history: deep deposits of the early Mycenaean period, of the Middle Bronze Age, and of the latest phases of the Early Bronze Age were explored in soundings and in limited excavations elsewhere on the ridge. The Palace of Nestor remains the best preserved, excavated, and published palace of the Mycenaean period.

C.W. Blegen and Marion Rawson, eds., The Palace of Nestor at Pylos in Western Messenia I. The Buildings and Their Contents (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1966); M. Lang, The Palace of Nestor at Pylos in Western Messenia II. The Frescoes (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1969); C. W. Blegen, M. Rawson, Lord William Taylour, and W.P. Donovan, The Palace of Nestor at Pylos in Western Messenia III. Acropolis and Lower Town: Tholoi, Grave Circle, and Chamber Tombs; Discoveries Outside the Citadel (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1973).https://classics.uc.edu/media/editors/tinymce/skins/lightgray/img/anchor.gif"); background-color: rgb(213, 213, 213); width: 9px !important; height: 9px !important; background-position: center center; background-repeat: no-repeat no-repeat;">

Ayia Irini, Keos, Greece (1960-89)

ayiairini
Ayia Irini
caskey
Caskey and Dionysia

Full-scale excavations began on Keos in 1960 and continued until 1968 under the direction of J.L. Caskey. Study of finds on-site continued through 1989, after Caskey's death in 1982 under the direction of E. Schofield. In addition to the prehistoric settlement of Ayia Irini, Caskey's team excavated Kephala, a Final Neolithic settlement and cemetery to the north of Ayia Irini, and Troullos, a prehistoric hilltop shrine nearby. These excavations have resulted in the publication of eight books, each devoted to a phase in the occupation of the site, or to a particular category of artifact. The various phases in the life of the settlement at Ayia Irini have been labeled with Roman numerals, from I (the very end of the Neolithic) through VIII (the Mycenaean period). Still later, in Classical times, there was a shrine dedicated to Dionysus.

The settlement appears to have been abandoned after the end of the Early Bronze Age when ceramics manufactured in an Anatolian style were present. After this it is possible to follow the history of contacts between Keos and Crete from ca. 1900 B.C., when Minoan artifacts were first imported, through the earliest phases of the Late Bronze Age, when Ayia Irini had adopted Cretan fashions in many aspects of its daily life. Both in the Middle Bronze Age and in the early phases of the Late Bronze Age it was protected by strong fortification walls.

J.E. Coleman, Keos I: Kephala: A Late Neolithic Settlement and Cemetery (Princeton, N.J.: American School of Classical Studies, 1977); M.E. Caskey, J.L. Caskey, S. Bouzaki and Y. Maniatis, Keos II. The Temple at Ayia Irini Part I: The Statues (Princeton, N.J.: American School of Classical Studies, 1986); W.W. Cummer and E. Schofield, Keos III. Ayia Irini: House A (Mainz on Rhine: Philipp von Zabern, 1983); A.H. Bikaki, Keos IV. Ayia Irini: The Potters' Marks (Mainz on Rhine: Philipp von Zabern, 1984); J.L. Davis, Keos V. Ayia Irini: Period V (Mainz on Rhine: Philipp von Zabern, 1986); H.S. Georgiou, Keos VI. Ayia Irini: Specialized Domestic and Industrial Pottery (Mainz on Rhine: Philipp von Zabern, 1986); J.C. Overbeck, Keos VII. Ayia Irini: Period IV. The Stratigraphy and the Find Deposits (Mainz on Rhine: Philipp von Zabern, 1989); K.M. Petruso,Keos VIII. Ayia Irini: The Balance Weights. An Analysis of Weight Measurement in Prehistoric Crete and the Cycladic Islands; D.E. Wilson, Keos IX. Ayia Irini: Periods I-III. The Neolithic and Bronze Age Settlements (Mainz on Rhine: Philipp von Zabern, 1999).

Maroni: Vournes, Cyprus (1982-1988)

Excavations sponsored by the department and the British School at Athens investigated the remains of a large ashlar building of the thirteenth century B.C., apparently the principal administrative center of the region of Maroni in southern Cyprus. In the building olive oil had been processed and metals worked. A sanctuary of historical times was built on top of the earlier structure. In addition to the settlement, a large number of skeletons was retrieved from various chamber tombs.

G. Cadogan, "Maroni I," Report of the Department of Antiquities of Cyprus (1983) 153-162; "Maroni II," Report of the Department of Antiquities of Cyprus (1986) 40-44; "Maroni III," Report of the Department of Antiquities of Cyprus (1987) 81-84; "Maroni IV," Report of the Department of Antiquities Cyprus (1988) 229-232; G. Cadogan and M. Dommurad, "Maroni V," Report of the Department of Antiquities of Cyprus (1989) 77-82.

Troy (1988-2002)

Brian Rose, Manfred Korfmann, and Hadrian

In 1987 Prof. Dr. Manfred Korfmann of the University of Tübingen developed plans to resume excavations at Troy, and he secured the blessing of Getzel Cohen, the Head of Classics at that time, thereby following the model of Blegen and Dörpfeld fifty five years earlier. Korfmann proposed that Cincinnati join in partnership with Tübingen: he would be Director of the project and would oversee the Bronze Age excavations; Cincinnati would oversee the post-Bronze Age age excavations, i.e. Greek, Roman, and Byzantine. The Cincinnati component was originally headed by Stella Miller-Collett and Brian Rose, although Rose took over sole responsibility after 1990. After his departure from Cincinnati, Kathleen Lynch assumed responsibilities on behalf of the  department. Cincinnati's involvement in the project spanned fifteen years (1988-2002), during which excavation focused in particular on the West Sanctuary, the public buildings on the south side of the citadel, the large Theater, and the Roman houses in the Lower City. Excavation thus far has clarified the rise in the city's fortunes after Alexander the Great, its reconstruction by Augustus and his Julio-Claudian successors, and the manipulation of its legendary heritage throughout the Hellenistic and Roman periods. New light has also been shed on the Protogeometric and Archaic settlements, and the site's trade relations with mainland Greece and the Aegean islands during those periods. Collaborative work with the Canakkale museum (25 km.from Troy) has resulted in the publication of several monumental Graeco-Persian tombs near Biga that contain gold jewelry, musical instruments, and painted marble sarcophagi. 


All excavated material has been published in Studia Troica, an annual journal jointly edited by Tübingen and Cincinnati and printed by Philipp von Zabern in Mainz. Twelve volumes have so far been published, and three monographs dealing with the sacred, civic, and domestic aspects of the Post-Bronze Age periods are projected.


Midea: The Megaron Complex and Shrine Area. Excavations on the Lower Terraces 1994-1997

walberg
Gisela Walberg studying finds in the Naplion Museum

Excavations on the Lower Terraces of Midea funded by the Department of Classics and under the supervision of Gisela Walberg, Marion Rawson Professor of Aegean Prehistory, was part of an international cooperative effort with the main goal of discovering the history of the site and its role during the prehistoric, especially the Bronze Age, and historic periods. One object was to establish a stratigraphic sequence for the Late Bronze Age at a major, undisturbed site. The site remained unexcavated until 1939 when A. W. Persson opened 8 trial trenches. Surveys were undertaken in 1961 and 1965.

The 1985-2001 Cincinnati excavations and study seasons revealed remains indicating the presence of a Mycenaean shrine. Finds from the sanctuary include a hearth, food remains, an “offering- table”, fragments of large wheelmade terracotta figures and glass paste jewelry. A building of megaron-type, centered in a larger complex was discovered in 1991 and fully excavated in subsequent seasons.

mideamegaronfoundations
The foundations of the Midea megaron

The megaron-complex was built and remodeled in LH IIIB. The building itself had a traditional plan, a vestibule, porch and courtyard. Finds from the megaron complex include fresco fragments, jewelry and objects of bronze and ivory. Nodules with Linear B inscriptions suggest the presence of a local administration. After a major earthquake destruction, it was rebuilt in LH IIIC with an altered interior plan and strengthening of walls. A niche built in LH IIIC contained early Mycenaean sword pommels of ivory, alabaster and lapis lacedaemonicus, and a faience necklace. There is also evidence for an earlier MH IIIB-LH II settlement. A water supply system dating from this early period, consisting of two cisterns and a number of ducts or channels leading down to them, throws light on water management in that period. The system may have been in use as late as the Roman period. A fragmentary Mycenaean terracotta snake and other objects suggesting cult activities, were found in the area of one of the cisterns. 
Another object of the Cincinnati excavations was to reconstruct the natural environment and the interaction between the inhabitants of the citadel and the surrounding landscape. Organic material was retrieved by froth flotation and studied by J. and T. C. Shay. Animal bones were studied by D. S. Reese and human bones by A. Ingvarsson-Sundström. A study of the geology was undertaken by R.S. Bullard.

The first volume (G. Walberg, Excavations on the Acropolis of Midea. The Excavations on the Lower Terraces 1985-1991, I:1-2, Stockholm 1998 (Midea I) appeared in March 1999. Another appeared in the autumn of 2007 (G. Walberg, Midea: The Megaron Complex and Shrine Area. Excavations on the Lower Terraces 1994-1997). Students have given papers at the AIA-meetings and written MA-theses using Midea material which will also be included in a number of PhD dissertations.

(GW)

G. Walberg, Excavations on the Acropolis of Midea. The Excavations on the Lower Terraces 1985-1991, I:1-2, Stockholm 1998; G. Walberg,“Scavi a Midea in Argolide,” L'Universo 68:5, 1988 (1989); G. Walberg,“Excavations in Midea 1987. The Lower Terraces,” OpAth 18:1, 1990 
G. Walberg,“Excavations on the Lower Terraces of Midea in the Argolid,” OWAN 15:1, 1991; G. Walberg,“The 1991 Season at Midea in the Argolid,” OWAN 15:2, 1991/92; G. Walberg,“A Linear B Inscription from Midea,” Kadmos 31, 1, 1992 ; G. Walberg,“Excavations on the Lower Terraces at Midea. The 1989 Season, The 1990 Season,” OpAth 19:2, 1992; G. Walberg,“The 1991 Excavations at Midea in the Argolid,” OpAth 20, 1994; G. Walberg, “The Find-Context of the Pictorial Stirrup Jar from Midea,” JPR 8, 1994; G. Walberg,“Excavations of a Megaron-Type Building at Midea (Greece),” OWAN 18:3, 1995; G. Walberg,“The 1995 Excavations in the Megaron-Area at Midea,” OWAN 19:2, 1996; G. Walberg,“The Excavation of the Megaron at Midea,” Proceedings of the Fifth International Congress of Peloponnesian Studies, 1996; G. Walberg,“The Midea Megaron and Changes in Mycenaean Ideology,” Aegean Archaeology 2, 1995 (1997); G. Walberg,“The Excavation of the ‘ Megaron’-Type Building on the Lower Terraces at Midea”, OpAth 21, 1996 (1997); G. Walberg, “Excavations on the Lower Terraces at Midea in the Argolid”, Atti e memorie del secondo Congresso internazionale di Micenologia, 1, 1996 (1997); G. Walberg, “The Excavations of the Midea Megaron”, BICS 42,1998; G. Walberg,“The 1995 Excavations of the Megaron-Complex at Midea”, OpAth 22, 1997-1998; G. Walberg,“The 1996 Excavations of the Megaron-Complex at Midea”, OpAth 22, 1997-1998; G. Walberg,“The End of the Late Bronze Age at Midea”, Aegaeum 17; G. Walberg,”Two Nodules from the Lower Terraces at Midea”, Minos 31-32, 1996-1997; G. Walberg,“The Megaron Complex on the Lower Terraces at Midea”, Meletemata (Festschrift Wiener), 1999; G. Walberg,“Excavations on the Lower Terraces 1997. The Megaron Complex”, OpAth 23, 2001; A Peek into History (with M. Wehrman and M. France, DAAP), 2001;“ The Dirt on Midea” with J. Hancock and the 2001 Senior Graphic Design Class, The School of Design, University of Cincinnati (video)
See also:
“Midea”, AR 1995-1996, 1996;“ Excavations on the Lower Terraces at Midea in the Argolid,” AR 1989-90, 1991

Pylos, Greece (1991-1995)

prapwalking
Walking at Pylos

The Pylos Regional Archaeological Project is a multi-disciplinary diachronic archaeological expedition formally organized in 1990 to investigate the history of prehistoric and historic settlement and land use in western Messenia in Greece, in an area centered on the Bronze Age administrative center known as Palace of Nestor. The project has employed the techniques of archaeological surface survey, along with natural environmental investigations (geological, geomorphological, geophysical, and paleobotanical). In the summers of 1991-95, approximately 40 square kilometers in western Messenia were examined intensively. These included areas to the north, east, south, and west of the modern town of Hora, and the entirety of the Englianos Ridge (Upper and Lower)-the location of the Palace of Nestor. Fieldwork doubled the number of sites previously known in the area intensively surveyed. In addition, nearly all previously known sites in an additional 30 square kilometers have been reinvestigated; the spatial extent and chronological components of these have been defined with greater precision. The department has provided support for PRAP since Jack Davis, director of the project, assumed the post of C.W. Blegen Professor of Greek Archaeology in 1993.

J.L. Davis et al., "The Pylos Regional Archaeological Project I: Overview and the Archaeological Survey," Hesperia 68:3 (1997) 391-494; E.B. Zangger et al., "The Pylos Regional Archaeological Project II: Landscape Evolution and Site Preservation," Hesperia 68:4 (1997) 548-641; J. Bennet, J.L. Davis, "The Pylos Regional Archaeological Project III: Sir William Gell's Itinerary in the Pylia and Regional Landscapes in the Morea in the Second Ottoman Period," Hesperia 69 (2000) 343-380; W. Lee, "The Pylos Regional Archaeological Project IV: Change and Material Culture in a Modern Greek Village in Messenia," Hesperia 70 (2001) 49-98; J.L. Davis, ed., Sandy Pylos: An Archaeological History from Nestor to Navarino (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1998); "The Pylos Regional Archaeological Project: Internet Edition, "http://classics.uc.edu/PRAP.html"

Apollonia, Albania (1998-2006)

lbjldmgmrap
Lorenc Bejko, Jack Davis, Michael Galaty Discussing Finds at Apollonia

MRAP is a multi-disciplinary and diachronic archaeological expedition formally organized in 1996 to investigate the history of prehistoric and historic settlement and land use in central Albania, in an area centered on the Greek colony of Apollonia. The project is directed by J.L. Davis, M. Korkuti, L. Bejko, S. Muçaj, S.R. Stocker, and M.L. Galaty. MRAP is employing the techniques of intensive archaeological surface survey and excavation in conjunction with natural environmental investigations. Several dozen new sites have been defined within the area thus far investigated. At several sites have been discovered the first Paleolithic remains thus far documented in central Albania. Lower, Middle, and Late Paleolithic phases are represented. Small sites of the Hellenistic period are common in the area. Test excavations have been conducted at three sites of different dates: one a small Palaeolithic establishment, one a small hilltop Bronze Age site, and the third, a Hellenistic farmstead. Pollen cores extracted from various locations, but especially from the nearby Lagoon of Narta, will allow reconstruction of the ancient environment.

M. Korkuti, J.L. Davis, L. Bejko, M.L. Galaty, S. Muçaj, and S.R. Stocker, "The Mallakastra Regional Archaeological Project: First Season, 1998," Iliria (1998) 253-273; "The Mallakastra Regional Archaeological Project," "http://classics.uc.edu/mrap/MRAP.html"

Durrës Regional Archaeological Project (2001)

In March-April 2001, a joint Albanian-American team directed by Iris Pojani, Afrim Hoti, Jack Davis, and Shari Stocker explored uplands north of the modern city of Durrës in Albania (ancient Durrachium/Epidamnus) as far as the harbor of Porto Romano (five kilometers distant). In total a continuous area of approximately six square kilometers was intensively surveyed by two field teams in fourteen days of fieldwork. Research was urgently required since antiquities are in great danger of destruction because of illegal uncontrolled expansion of the city of Durrës since 1991. The majority of artifacts collected in the field were of the Archaic, Classical, and Hellenistic periods. Fragments of funerary monuments and remnants of grave goods of the Greek period were found in various areas near the modern city. One particularly interesting site may preserve the remains of a hitherto unknown Archaic Greek temple.

From 2004-2006 excavations were conducted at the site of Bonjakët, near Apollonia, where remains of a Greek sanctuary and temple had been noted in the course of survey. A full publication of the results of excavation is in press.

A.D. Wolpert, J.L. Davis , S.R. Stocker, A, Hoti, and I, Pojani, "The Dürres Regional Archaeological Project (Albania)," Archaeological Institute of America Annual Meeting, 2002, Philadelphia.

Bamboula (2001-)

bamboulipillar
Pillar from the University of Cincinnati excavation in 2001

Episkopi-Bamboula (2001-
The Episkopi-Bamboula Archaeological Excavation Project is an investigation of the prehistoric site of Bamboula near Phaneromeni and Kourion on the south coast of Cyprus under the direction of Gisela Walberg. Its location at the mouth of the river Kouris and finds from early excavations undertaken by J. F. Daniel (1937-1939) indicate that it was an important center of commerce with connections with the Greek mainland as well as Egypt and the Near East. Recent finds in connection with the building of a road suggest that it was also an important industrial center. The site has played a significant role in the interpretation of the Late Bronze Age and the beginning of the Iron Age in Cyprus. It is also referred to in Greek myth (legendary foundation by Argive Mycenaeans). 

During the first season (2001), the area of Episkopi-Bamboula was surveyed and a number of trial trenches were opened in order to determine the exact areas of future excavations. Material ranging in date from the Early Bronze Age to the Roman period were recovered. In one of the trenches, a 9.50 m. deep well was discovered. The finds consisted of Bronze Age ceramics (including Cypriot and Mycenaean wares), hippopotamus tusks, metal and terracotta objects, etc. The unusually complete state of preservation of many of the finds was probably due to the gradual silting up of the shaft of the well. A plundered Late Bronze Age (Late Cypriot) tomb contained an ashlar block and a fragment of a pillar, which suggest the presence of a large Late Bronze Age building in the nearby area.
In 2002, a new Late Bronze Age well was excavated to a depth of 16 m. One of the finds was a fragment of a relief pithos with groups of antithetic, fighting bulls and men crouching behind, probably in an effort to domesticate them. The well also contained skeletal remains of thirty-six dogs - the largest find of dog bones from any site of any period of Cyprus. The bones are being investigated by Dr. D. S. Reese. Among the finds from a large tomb, excavated late in the season, were a jar with unburnt bones, a seal with a bull’s head, gold and bronze ear-rings and almost 200 other objects.

gold looped earring from BamboulaGold earring from tomb excavated in 2002


We hope to throw light on the foreign presence and involvement in the trade at the site and on the relations between residents and foreigners. We also hope to clarify the situation at the Bronze Age and the early Iron Age and to reconstruct the Post Bronze Age history of the site. An environmental reconstruction is planned.

Publications of excavations and finds at Episkopi-Bamboula:

Dziech, B. 2005, 12 June. The Reward of Persistence: Gisela Walberg’s Discovery. http://www.uc.edu/profiles/profile.asp?id=6672 (January 17, 2008).

Walberg, G. 2005, 8 January. UC Discoveries this summer reveal history of Cyprus site. http://www.uc.edu//news/NR.asp?id=2942 (January 17, 2008).

Maugh II, T.H. 2003, 25 January. “Eavesdropping yields archaeologist a rare find.” Los Angeles Times, January 25, 2003: A15.

Walberg, G. 2003. “U of Cincinnati Excavations at Episkopi Bamboula.” CAARI News 27:3-5.

Walberg, G. 2003. “Excavating Episkopi-Bamboula, Cyprus.” Minerva 14.3:3-4.

Kunnen-Jones, M. 2001, 5 July. “Gisela Walberg begins Bronze Age work at Bamboula in Cyprus.” University of Cincinnati News (July 2001) http://www.uc.edu/news/cyprus2.htm (January 17, 2008).

Kunnen-Jones, M. 2001, 1 June. “Archaeologist to begin excavations at Bamboula on Cyprus.” University of Cincinnati News (June, 2001) http://www.uc.edu/news/bamb.htm (January 17, 2008).

Pilides, D. 2000. Pithoi of Late Bronze Age in Cyprus: types from the major sites of the period. Nicosia: Department of Antiquities, Cyprus.

Christou, D. 1994. “Kourion in the 11th Century B.C.” in Cyprus in the 11th Century B.C., edited by V. Karageorghis. Nicosia: Univeristy of Cyprus.

J. L. Benson, Bamboula at Kourion. The Necropolis and the Finds, Philadelphia 1972

S. Weinberg, Bamboula at Kourion: The Architecture, Philadelphia 1983

Knossos Little Palace North Project (2001 –)

The Knossos Little Palace North Project is an excavation directed by Eleni Hatzaki, now at a post-excavation and publication phase. The project aims to provide a diachronic picture of urban activities from excavation by testing stratigraphical and architectural phasing against older excavations, and by defining the nature of occupation and use of space along the exterior of the Little Palace, an elite building located in the public-elite core of the Late Bronze Age town of Knossos. Of special importance has been the application of microstratigraphic and taphonomic analysis where bioarchaeological remains (studied by Drs. Valasia Isaakidou, Alexandra Livarda, and Sevi Triantaphyllou) are combined with ceramic datasets in unravelling anthropogenic and natural formation processes in detail.

Two seasons of excavation (2001 and 2002) took place in the area immediately north of the Little Palace (excavated by Arthur Evans in the 1900s) and northeast of the Unexplored Mansion (excavated by Mervyn Popham and Hugh Sackett in the late 1960s and 1970s). The project is funded by the Louise Taft Semple Fund through the Department of Classics at the University of Cincinnati, and the Institute for Aegean Prehistory, and runs under the aegis of the British School at Athens. Publication is planned in a series of articles at the Annual of the British School at Athens and other peer-reviewed journals.

The project has provided substantial information about the development of the town of Knossos during both prehistoric and historic times. A complex architectural and stratigraphic sequence for the Neopalatial, Final Palatial and Postpalatial periods (1600-1100 BCE) has been revealed which will clarify the history of the Little Palace, especially in providing firmer dating evidence for the fire destruction responsible for the preservation of its sealings and Linear B tablets. The archaeological material recovered is not only important for the study of the LM IIIA to LM IIIC ceramic sequence at Knossos, but also in defining continuity and change in the use of urban exterior and interior spaces during the Final Palatial and Postpalatial periods. Post-Bronze Age levels include activities dated to the EIA, Greek and Roman periods (studied for publication by Dr. Mieke Prent, Stuart MacVeagh Thorne, and Dr. Peter Callaghan). This data will be linked to the well-excavated and published Unexplored Mansion site and the little known Little Palace site, thus providing a better understanding of the development of the Greek and Roman town in this part of Knossos.

During excavation special emphasis was placed on, context recording, architectural and archaeological section drawing, as well rigorous recovery procedures aimed, among other, at intensive bio- and geo-archaeological sampling. One of the project’s aims is to fully integrate the study of artefactual and ecofactual data in order to study site formation processes. Unlike most excavations at Knossos, which have focused on artefactually rewarding interior spaces, the results of the LPN Project allow ceramic and faunal specialists to study continuity and change in the use of external spaces with a high degree of detail. Approaches to the disposal of biodegradable and non-biodegradable domestic waste, and food preparation areas are subjects of particular interest for a period that coincides with major changes in the political, economic and social structures of Knossos and Crete.

 

knossoslpn
The Little Palace North site after the 2001 excavation season (looking north)
 

 

Final publication of the EIA levels:

Hatzaki, E., M. Prent, N. Coldstream, D. Evely, A. Livarda, 2008. ‘Knossos, the Little Palace North Project, Part 1: the Early Greek periods’ Annual of the British School at Athens, 235-289.

Preliminary analysis of LM III building remains:

Hatzaki, E., 2005. ‘Postpalatial Knossos: town and cemeteries from LM IIIA2 to LM IIIC’ in A. -L. D’Agata and J. Moody (eds) Ariadne’s Threads. Connections between Crete and the Greek Mainland in the Postpalatial Period (LM IIIA2 to SM) (Italian School at Athens): 65-95.

Brief reports by Hatzaki have also appeared in Archaeological Reports:

‘Little Palace North 2006 study season’ in J. Whitley, S. Germanidou, D. Urem-Kotsou, A. Dimoula, I. Nikolakopoulou, A. Karnava, and E. Hatzaki 2006. ‘Archaeology in Greece 2005-2006’. Archaeological Reports 52.

‘Little Palace North Project 2002 excavation season’ in J. Whitley 2003. ‘Archaeological Reports for 2002-2003’ Archaeological Reports 49: 81.

‘Little Palace North Project 2001 excavation season’ in D. Blackman 2002. ‘Archaeological Reports for 2001-2002’ Archaeological Reports 48: 107-8.

Isthmia, Greece (2005 - )

isthmia
Eric Poehler and Kevin Cole at the East Isthmia Archaeology Project

The East Isthmia Archaeology Project was established in 2005 by Steven Ellis and Timothy Gregory to develop an understanding – spatial, chronological, and functional – of the buildings east of the Temple of Poseidon at Isthmia. These buildings, often referred to as the ‘East Field’, were first discovered in the early 1970s by Paul Clement (UCLA) and have since stood in varying states of survival, having evaded all attempts to even delineate one building from the next. By combining on-site architectural analyses with the digitization and reintegration of the site’s legacy data within a GIS, we are now able to define not only individual buildings, but also significant phases of building construction. This redefinition of the shape of space for this area of the sanctuary represents the first phase in our endeavor to develop a more complete understanding of the social infrastructure for the sanctuary at Isthmia, and to clarify the relationship of these structures to the surrounding built and natural environments. The project is jointly directed by Steven Ellis and Timothy Gregory, and is funded by the Louise Taft Semple Fund through the Department of Classics at the University of Cincinnati. The first major publication of the project recently appeared in Internet Archaeology.

Ellis, S.J.R., Gregory, T.E., Poehler, E.E., and Cole, K.R., ‘A New Method for Studying Architecture and Integrating Legacy Data: A case study from Isthmia, Greece’ in: Internet Archaeology 24, 2008.http://intarch.ac.uk/journal/issue24/ellisetal_index.html

Pompeii, Italy (2005 - )

pasp
Porta Stabia project in Pompeii

 

Since 2005 the ‘Pompeii Archaeological Research Project: Porta Stabia’ (PARP:PS) has been uncovering the structural and occupational history of what had been a largely forgotten corner of Pompeii (insulae VIII.7 and I.1). Through the full range of archaeological inquiry, we have uncovered a working-class district (modest houses, shops, workshops, and hospitality outlets) which had an intimate urban connection to several adjacent and monumental public buildings, city fortifications, and other major civic networks.  The project was established to measure the structural and social relationships over time between working-class Pompeian families, to determine the role that sub-elites played in the shaping of the ancient city, and to register their response to city- and Mediterranean-wide historical, political, and economic developments.  Close to 50 trenches have been opened which, combined with architectural, artefactual, and geophysical studies, have revealed the full sequence of human occupation in the area – from identifying the important layering of geological events (both natural and artificial) to charting the developmental history of each of the ten properties through to 79 AD.  

 

PARP:PS is directed by Steven Ellis, and is principally funded by the Louise Taft Semple Fund through the Department of Classics at the University of Cincinnati.  Additional (and generous) support has been received from the National Geographic Society, the Loeb Classical Library Foundation, and several private donors.

 

Select publications:

Ellis, S.J.R., ‘The rise and reorganization of the Pompeian salted fish industry,’ in The Making of Pompeii: Studies in the history and urban development of an ancient town (Edited by Steven J.R. Ellis, JRA suppl. 85, 2011) 59-88.

Ellis, S.J.R., Emmerson, A., Pavlick, A., and Dicus, K., ‘The 2010 field season at I.1.1-10, Pompeii: preliminary report on the excavations’, in The Journal of Fasti Online 220, Roma 2011, 1-17, http://www.fastionline.org/docs/FOLDER-it-2011-220.pdf.  

 

Myrtos Pyrgos House Tomb Project (2007-)

Myrtos Pyrgos is a Bronze Age site on the South Coast of East Crete, excavated under the auspices of the British School at Athens since the 1970s by Gerald Cadogan. Unique among its archaeological datasets is the House Tomb, a two-storey structure used over a 1,000 years. The early Late Bronze Age ceramic assemblage (LM IA 1600-1500 B.C.) consists of over 1,500 complete vessels, which form an ideal case study for examining ceramic production and consumption, mortuary ritual, feasting practices and burial customs. The use of the tomb during this period is truly unique, since archaeologically visible burials are notoriously rare on Crete. The publication of the Late Bronze Age pottery is preparation by Eleni Hatzaki.

Cadogan, Gerald. 1992. ‘Myrtos-Pyrgos’ in Myers, J. Wilson, Eleanor Emlen Myers, and Gerald Cadogan, eds. The Aerial Atlas of Ancient Crete. University of California Press, Berkeley, 202-209.

Cadogan, Gerald. 1978. ‘Pyrgos, Crete, 1970-77’ Archaeological Reports 24: 70-84.

Hankey, Vronwy. 1985. Pyrgos. ‘The Communal Tomb in Pyrgos IV (Late Minoan I)’ Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies 33: 135-139.

myrtospyrgos
A view from Myrtos Pyrgos House Tomb

Palace of Nestor Excavations (2015-)

Excavations at and around the Palace of Nestor were renewed in 2015, under the direction of Sharon R. Stocker and Jack L. Davis. Among impressive finds has been the discovery of the grave of the Griffin Warrior. For further information see www.griffinwarrior.org and the associated Facebook site.

William T. Semple, Head 1920-1959. Semple “saw the study of classical antiquity as a single undertaking, not to be divided sharply into separate compartments; the historical and archaeological approaches to the subject were not less important than the linguistic and literary and not ancillary, but integral components to the classical discipline.” (J. L. Caskey)
From its nineteenth century roots as traditional Departments of Greek and Latin, the Cincinnati Department of Classics has blossomed into one of the most distinguished and distinctive in the world, with a rich and fascinating history. When William T. Semple assumed the Headship in 1920, he worked together with his wife, Louise Taft Semple, towards the ambitious goal of creating the finest department in the country. Under Semple’s direction, the Department embraced the holistic view of ancient studies that continues to be our hallmark, combining under one roof the study of Greek and Latin language and literatures, ancient history, and Mediterranean archaeology.

 

The Semples supported this ambitious project with their personal funds, fostering goals as diverse as the landmark excavations of Carl Blegen at Troy and Pylos (Palace of Nestor) and the creation of deep library resources in rare areas like Palaeography and modern Greek scholarship. When Louise Taft Semple died in 1961, she left to the department a large dedicated endowment. Because of this endowment, the Department is able to maintain what we believe to be the finest Classics library in North America, if not the world; to bring in dozens of visiting scholars every year, including three scholars-in-residence; to pamper our large graduate population; to attract a faculty of the highest caliber; to offer computer resources and services unparalleled among Classics departments; to fund several archaeological excavations and surveys (most recently in Troy, Cyprus, Pylos, Albania). The Department maintains three professorial chairs: The John Miller Burnam Professor of Classics; the Carl W. Blegen Professor of Greek Archaeology; the Dorothy and Marion Rawson Professor of Classical Archaeology. In the current era, the Department has collected a prize-winning faculty with a strikingly rich and diverse set of approaches to antiquity, including textual, literary, material, historical, sociological, theoretical. The current Department, that is, proudly continues its tradition of bringing the diverse strands of the study of Classics together in a single Department, thereby nurturing intense and productive dynamic of interaction among faculty, graduate students, and visiting scholars
 

THE DEPARTMENTS OF GREEK AND LATIN

In 1900 John Miller Burnam (b. Irvine, Kentucky 1864. B.A./Ph.D.Yale) came to the University of Cincinnati as Professor of Latin in an independent Department of Latin. The University at that time also had a Department of Greek, headed by Joseph E. Harry (Ph.D. Johns Hopkins). In the first decade of the 20th century, Burnam and Harry were regularly assisted by at least one Instructor or Assistant Professor. These men included:

N.A. Walker, Instructor in Latin,1900.
E.F. Alexander, Instructor in Latin, 1901.
G.H. Allen, Instructor in Latin, 1903-04, 09-11.
G.D. Hadzsits, Assistant Professor of Latin and Greek, 1904-05.
A.J. Kinsella, Instructor in Greek and Assistant in English, 1905-11.
G.W. Thayer, Instructor in Latin and Greek, 1908-09. 
A.T. Condit, Instructor in Latin and Greek, 1908-09.
J.D. Rea, Instructor in Latin and Greek, 1908-09.

In 1910-11, William T. Semple (b. Liberty, Missouri. BA/MA William Jewel College. Ph.D. Princeton), after supplemental graduate studies in Rome and Halle, came to Cincinnati as Acting Assistant Professor, where he replaced Allen in the Department of Greek. His dissertation was soon published (Authenticity and Sources of the "Origo gentis romanae," Cincinnati, Ohio, University Press, 1910), and the following year he assumed the rank of Assistant Professor. From 1911-1917, he, Burnam, Harry, and Kinsella offered instruction in the two departments of Greek and Latin, assisted in 1915-16 by Helen A. Stanley, the first woman Instructor. By 1917-18, William A. Battle had replaced Harry as professor of Greek.

THE SEMPLE HEADSHIP (1920-51)

The Early Years

When Burnam died in 1920 at age 57, he had completed only three of a projected eighteen volumes in his life’s work, Palaeographica Iberica. He, Semple, and Battle constituted the sole personnel in Latin and Greek. After his death, Semple became head and the department in its present form is largely his brainchild. In 1917, he married Louise Taft and, after Burnam’s death, Semple, as departmental head (1920-1950), with the help of his wife embarked on lifelong mission to create, through the investment of their own personal fortune, the finest Classics department in North America. In the words of J.L. Caskey, Semple "saw the study of classical antiquity as a single undertaking, not to be divided sharply into separate compartments; the historical and archaeological approaches to the subject were not less important than the linguistic and literary and not ancillary, but integral components of the classical discipline." With such goals in mind, Semple soon enticed three distinguished scholars to Cincinnati: Roy K. Hack (in 1924-25), a philologist, Allen B. West (in 1927-28), an historian and epigrapher, and Rodney Robinson (in 1920-21), a paleographer, with research interests similar to those of Burnam. A flood of distinguished publications soon followed from their pens. A sample of these might include:

R.K. Hack, God in Greek philosophy to the Time of Socrates, Princeton, Princeton University Press,1931.

B.D. Meritt and A.B. West, The Athenian Assessment of 425 B.C., Ann Arbor, University of Michigan Press, 1934.

R.P. Robinson, Palæographia iberica: fac-similés de manuscrits espagnols et portugais (IXe-XVe siè cles) avec notices et transcriptions par John M. Burnam, Paris, H. Champion,1912-25.

R.P. Robinson, C. Suetoni Tranquilli De grammaticis et rhetoribus, Paris, É . Champion, 1925.

R.P. Robinson, The Germania of Tacitus: A Critical Edition, Middletown, Conn., American Philological Association, 1935.

R.P. Robinson, Manuscripts 27 (S. 29) and 107 (S. 129) of the Municipal Library of Autun. A study of Spanish Half-uncial and Early Visigothic Minuscule and Cursive Scripts, New York,1939

R.P. Robinson, Palæographia iberica: fac-similés demanuscrits espagnols et portugais (IXe-XVe siècles) avec notices et transcriptions par John M. Burnam, Paris, H. Champion,1912-25.

A.B. West, Fifth and Fourth century Gold Coins from the Thracian Coast, New York, The American Numismatic Society, 1929.

A.B. West, Corinth VIII, 2: Latin Inscriptions, 1896-1926, Cambridge, Mass., Harvard University Press, 1931.

A unified Department of Classics had been formed in 1920-21 through the combination of the old departments of Greek and Latin. The addition of Hack, of Hilda Buttenwieser, Instructor, then Assistant Professor, and of J. Penrose Harland (in 1923-24), an Assistant Professor and former fellow of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens, made it possible for the first time in 1924-25 to offer a separate curriculum in each of four subfields, Greek, Latin, Ancient History, and Archaeology. Harland was replacedby Carl W. Blegen in 1927-28. In 1926-27 the first classes in ancient literature in translation were offered. In 1928-29 a class in Early Christian literature was first listed among those of the department. By the mid-1930s classes in archaeology had expanded in scope and included courses in Monuments and Institutions of Athens, Monuments and Institutions of Rome, and in the Mycenaean Age. Blegen had served as assistant director of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens, where he had already acquired a substantial reputation as a leading student of prehistoric Greece. As assistant director of ASCSA he had already directed excavations at Nemea and Prosymna on behalf of the University of Cincinnati. Resources provided by Semple now permitted him to initiate landmark excavations at Troy and at Pylos.

In the years prior to World War II principal members of the faculty of the Department of Classics included Semple, Blegen, Buttenwieser, Hack, Harland (until 1926-27, when he departed for UNC-Chapel Hill), Malcolm McGregor (from 1937 as Instructor and from 1938-43 as Assistant Professor), Robinson, and West (until his death in 1936). Georg Karo taught for one year in the department (1939-40), before moving to Oberlin. The professors of the department were assisted in these years by an impressive group of Instructors and Teaching Fellows. These included:

Aline Abaecherli Boyce (1931-32, 1936-37)
Cedric G. Boulter (1937-43)
Jack L. Caskey (1932-43)
Kenneth Evans (1927-28). Librarian, Burnam Classical Library.
Clarence A. Forbes (1926-27)
Elizabeth Gwyn Caskey (1935-39)
Sidney P. Goodrich (1930-35)
Moses Hadas (1928-30)
Charles H. Reeves (1939-40)
Rachel Sargeant Robinson (1931-32)
Jerome W. Sperling (1930-37)
Vernon E. Way (1926-27)

The Post-War Period

From 1943-47 a substantial part of the faculty of the department, consisting of Professors Blegen and Crist, and Instructors Boulter and Caskey (who had joined the faculty only in 1943), was called to active duty in the American and Canadian armed forces. Elizabeth Gwyn Caskey taught regularly in these years. Alister Cameron joined the faculty in 1946-47, Carl Trahman in 1948-49, and James Vail in 1949-50. Caskey departed after the 1949-50 academic year to accept an appointment as director of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens, while Blegen returned to the department after brief service as director of ASCSA and as Cultural Attache of the Embassy of the United States in Greece. Semple retired after the 1950-51 academic year. Hack died in 1944, Robinson in 1950.

The Classics Library

The Semples nurtured the growth of a special Classics library by making funds available for the acquistion of books. The meteoric growth of the department and its library necessitated that special accommodations be made for both in the new University Library building, dedicated in 1930 (and rededicated in 1983 to the memory of Carl W. Blegen). The library of the Department of Classics is today the largest of the college and departmental collections at the University of Cincinnati, with the exception of the Law Library. It is named after Burnam, whose personal library of some 5000 volumes, once housed in his 2nd floor office in VanWormer Library (now the central administration building), became the nucleus of the departmental collection. Many of the rarer titles in the Paleography Collection within the Classics Library once were his. A gift of some 600 Teubner texts by E.F. Blissin 1906 had preceded Burnam’s bequest.

The library at present contains almost 300,000 volumes, 26,195 bound periodical volumes, 2300 journal subscriptions, and 10,500 microforms. Special strengths include Spanish Latin Paleography (reflecting the particular interests of Burnam and Robinson) and a collection of 18,000 “Programmschriften” and dissertations of the 18th, 19th, and early 20th centuries, from European (particularly German) universities purchased ca. 1915. In 1983 the conversion of records of the library was made possible through funds suppliedby a federal grant. The Classics Library reflects the remarkable diversity nurtured by the Semples. As Mildred Smith, departmental librarian for some three decades, wrote in 1961, "The Classics Department at U.C. differs from the majority of Latin and Greek departments in other universities in that it is not limited to the study of Latin and Greek languages and literature, but it comprises all the related studies of ancient culture consisting of archaeology of the classical world and the Near East, history, civilization, art and philosophy."

Semple and Robinson assured that library and the department would be integrated when Blegen Library was built in 1930. Generations of faculty and graduate students have now flourished in these quarters, although the department has expanded in numbers and in the space it occupies.

The Modern Greek Collection and Program

In 1930, the year that Blegen Library was first dedicated, the Semples expanded the mission of the Classics Library to include the purchase of books in the modern Greek language: "It was then recognized as fitting that standard editions of the ancient authors published by outstanding scholars of Greece today, and the distinguished modern Greek works in ancient history and archaeology, should be given the place they merited on our shelves." Blegen became the purchasing agent and arranged for the shipment to Ohio each year of scores of volumes purchased in Greece, Turkey, Italy, and elsewhere. Soon requests by Interlibrary Loan for the volumes acquired provided further encouragement for the project, and gradually there was conceived the hope that the Classics Library "could ultimately become the nucleus about which might be formed a center of Medieval and Modern Greek study in the United States."

In 1948, UC joined a formal program of cooperation among some sixty universities to collect research materials published abroad, the so-called Farmington Plan, committing itself to the acquisition of all books published in Greece, except in the fields of medicine and agriculture. The Modern Greek collection at present contains some 45,000 volumes and is now the finest public collection of its kind in North America. It continues through Interlibrary Loan to fill the important function for which it was intended. Its contents have been described in several publications:

P.W. Topping,  Modern Greek Studies and Materials in the United States, Boston, Mass., The Byzantine Institute, Inc., 1941.

N. Kyparissiotis, The Modern Greek Collection in the Library of the University of Cincinnati, Athens 1960.

Catalog of the Modern Greek Collection, University of Cincinnati, Boston, G. K. Hall, 1978.

 

THE BLEGEN HEADSHIP (1951-57)

Carl Blegen at Troy with camera around his neck
Carl. W. Blegen, Head of Department 1951-57, excavator of Troy, Pylos, Nemea.
Blegen succeeded Semple as only the second head of the Department of Classics. Under his administration the faculty of the department was stable but small, consisting for the first two years of Boulter, Cameron, McGregor, and Trahman. A year after McGregor’s departure following the 1952-53 academic year, Donald W. Bradeen joined the faculty to teach history in 1955-56. Blegen’s retirement from the university in 1957 left the department without a head and, for the first time since 1927, also without a professor specializing in Greek prehistory. Blegen did, however, continue to direct excavations at the Palace of Nestor at Pylos on behalf of the University with the sponsorship of the department until his death in 1971. For two years (1957-59) Cameron served the department as acting head while a suitable replacement for Blegen was sought.



THE CASKEY HEADSHIP (1959-73)

 
After eight years as director of ASCSA and as director of its excavations at Lerna in the Argolid, Caskey returned to the department as head in 1959. His headship witnessed substantial changes in the staff of the department and considerable growth in its resources. Archie Christopherson joined the faculty in 1965-66, Jack Keefein 1969-70, Getzel Cohen and Mervyn Popham in 1971-72. Grube (1965-66) and Mitchel (1967-68) were visitors in the faculty. The addition of Popham brought a second prehistorian to the faculty for the first time.

 

In 1964-65 the Classics Department moved from the sixth floor to newly remodelled space on the second floor of the library.

The Modern Greek Program

Final steps in the creation of a program in modern Greek studies were also taken when Blegen personally recruited Peter Topping from the Gennadeion Library of the American School of Classical Studies in Athens. Topping accepted a post as Professor of History and Modern Greek Studies in 1961-62. He flourished in this position, even as he embraced new styles of interdisciplinary collaboration by working closely with regional archaeological projects sponsored by the University of Minnesota in Messenia and by the University of Pennsylvania in the Argolid. Eugenia Foster was recruited by Blegen to assume the post of curator of the modern Greek collection.

In the late 1960s, gifts from Herbert Lansdale, director of the YMCA in Greece before WW II, and after WW II the Director of Field Ops of the American Mission for Aid to Greece, substantially enriched the collection.

The Semple Lectures and Colloquia

Upon the death of Louise Taft Semple in March 1961, it was learned that she had established a trust fund to support classical studies at the University, providing in this way an enduring continuation of the benefactions which she had given during many years of her life. Her intentions were made clear in the Trust Agreement, where it was stated that the income from the fund should be used, under the direction of the Trustees, "solely for the purpose of promoting the study of the classics, such term to be interpreted in its broadest sense as the endeavor to make vital and constructive in the civilization of our country the spiritual, intellectual and esthetic inheritance we have received from the Greek and Roman civilizations." This donation was adjunct to a general endowment for humanities, established 30 years earlier by her mother, Annie Sinton Taft, in honor of her father, Charles Phelps Taft.

Her generosity has made possible it possible for the department to continue to attract an extraordinary faculty; to offer exceptionally generous fellowships for graduate and undergraduate studies; to maintain the Burnam Library to the highest standards; to support a varied and rich program of research, excavations, and publication; and, most recently, to fund the Tytus Fellowship program for visiting scholars. In 1961 a series of lectures and conferences was instituted by the department as a suitable honor in recognition of her many benefactions. The remarkable series of publications that have resulted include:

Lectures in Memory of Louise Taft Semple: First series, 1961-1965. Edited by D. W. Bradeen, and others, Princeton, N. J., Princeton University Press for the University of Cincinnati, 1967.

Lectures in Memory of Louise Taft Semple: Second Series, 1966-1970. Edited by C. G. Boulter, and others, Norman, University of Oklahoma Press for the University of Cincinnati, 1973.

The End of the Early Bronze Age in the Aegean. Edited by Gerald Cadogan, Leiden, E.J. Brill, 1986.

The Aegean and the Orient in the Second Millennium: Proceedings of the 50th Anniversary Symposium, Cincinnati, 18-20 April 1997. Edited by Eric H. Cline and Diane Harris-Cline, Liège, Université de Liège, Histoire de l'art et archéologiede la Grèce antique, 1998.

Plato as Author: the Rhetoric of Philosophy. Edited by Ann Michelini, Leiden, E. J. Brill, 2003.

The New Posidippus: A Hellenistic Poetry Book. Edited by Kathryn Gutzwiller, New York, Oxford University Press, 2005.

Ancient Literacies: The Culture of Reading in Greece and Rome. Edited by William Johnson, New York, Oxford University Press, 2009

T. H. Carpenter, K. M. Lynch, E. G. D. Robinson (eds.), The Italic people of ancient Apulia: New evidence from pottery for workshops, markets, and customs, New York, Cambridge University Press, 2014.

THE MODERN HISTORY OF THE DEPARTMENT

In the past five decades the department has continued to flourish under the headships of Bradeen (1973-74), Christopherson (1974-75), Bernard Fenik (1975-81), Getzel Cohen (1981-88), Michael M. Sage (1988-2001), C. Brian Rose (2001-2005),  William Johnson (2005-2009), Peter van Minnen (2010-2015), Jack Davis (2016-2022), and Daniel Markovich (2022-). When a much larger university library, Langsam Library, was constructed in the 1980s, the facilities of the department were remodelled once again and it was reinstalled in the second and third floors. Today the Classics Department remains in possession of these floors, as well as parts of the fourth and fifth floors.

FIELD ARCHAEOLOGY

It appears that the first steps toward the creation of a program of archaeological fieldwork in the department were taken in 1921, two years before the University became a co-operating institution of the American School of Classical Studies in 1923. Edward Perry, secretary of the Managing Committee of ASCSA wrote to Edward Capps,Chairman of the Managing Commitee that:

"Those Cincinnati people are very enthusiastic about a Cincinnati excavation. One of their number, George Warrington...proposes to go to Greece next winter with his family with the sole motive of catching up with the School and taking part in the Cincinnati dig, for which we must select a classical site."

It is clear that Robinson and Semple in particular were the driving academic force behind this initiative. The Semples enthusiasm provided the essential patronage to nourish research in the department and today allows a vigorous program of field archaeology to be supported by the Semple Classics Fund. Blegen later described how

In 1924 a small group of philhellenes and friends of archaeology, gathered together by Professor W.T. Semple in Cincinnati, offered to the American School of Classical Studies at Athens a fund to support an excavation in Greece. With the approval of the Managing Committee, Dr. Bert Hodge Hill, Director of the School, welcomed a project of this kind and at once began to look about for a suitable site. He soon became deeply interested in the ruined temple of Zeus at Nemea.

Three annual campaigns of large-scale excavation were conducted within the Sanctuary of Zeus at Nemea in 1924, 1925, and 1926-27. Blegen, assistant director of ASCSA, took overall responsibility for direction of the project. Special attention was given to the Temple of Zeus. A full set of plans and elevations of theTemple were prepared by Lewey Lands, an advanced student in the architectural school of the University of Cincinnati.

The prehistoric mound of Tsoungiza was located in the course of investigating the Sanctuary of Zeus at Nemea. With support from the department the entire top of the mound was explored by Blegen and Harland, as well as a lower terrace on the north side of the hill. The Roman Odeum of Corinth had been located by Hill in 1906. The excavations were adopted by the University of Cincinnati in 1927 and were completed in two major campaigns, directed first by Benjamin Meritt and then by Oscar Broneer. In 1928 the department also supported, under Blegen's direction, a short excavation at the low prehistoric mound of Hagiorgitika, not far to the east of Tripolis in Arcadia. The campaign lasted only about three weeks, but revealed extensive stratified remains of dwellings with stone foundations and fixed hearths, both circular and rectangular.

Excavations at Prosymna in Greece (1925-31) were directed by Blegen in four campaigns focussed on exploration of the earliest history of the Argive Heraeum. Study of finds and the publication of the results of excavations were made possible by the department after Blegen moved to the University of Cincinnati in 1927. Then from 1932-38 Blegen and a team from the department re-investigated the mound of Troy with the blessings of Wilhelm Dörpfeld who had succeeded Heinrich Schliemann. Graduate students participated in the project and later shared in the publication of its results. Marion Rawson, a graduate of UC in architecture, directed the editing of the publication. She was first associated with thedepartment in 1927 and had already assisted Blegen with the preparation of the publication of the excavations at Prosymna.

After surface explorations in 1938 and 1939 a joint Greek-American team directed by Konstantinos Kourouniotis and Carl Blegen concluded that a site on the upper part of the Englianos ridge near the modern town of Hora held promise of revealing the palace of Homer's King Nestor. On the very first day of excavations in April 4,1939, stone walls, fragments of frescoes, painted Mycenaean pottery, and fragments of tablets with inscriptions in the Linear B script, the first to be found on the Greek mainland, were uncovered.

Full-scale excavations began on Keos in 1960 and continued until 1968 under the direction of J.L. Caskey. Study of finds on-site continued through 1989, after Caskey's death in 1982 under the direction of E. Schofield. In addition to the prehistoric settlement of Ayia Irini, Caskey's team excavated Kephala, a Final Neolithic settlement and cemetery to the north of Ayia Irini, and Troullos, a prehistoric hilltop shrine nearby.

Several new projects began in the 1980s. From 1982-88 excavations sponsored by the department and the British School at Athens investigated the remains of a large ashlar building of the thirteenth century B.C., apparently the principal administrative center of the region of Maroni in southern Cyprus. The Midea Archaeological Project investigated the prehistoric citadel of Midea in the Argolid from1985-1999. The University of Cincinnati excavations on the Lower Terraces within the fortification wall were one part of an international cooperative effort with the main goal of discovering the history of the site and its role during the prehistoric, especially the Bronze Age, and historic periods. In 1987 Prof. Dr. Manfred Korfmann of the University of Tübingen developed plans to resume excavations at Troy, and it was agreed that he would serve as Director of the project and would oversee the Bronze Age excavations; Cincinnnati would oversee the post-Bronze Age age excavations, i.e. Greek, Roman, and Byzantine. Cincinnati's involvement in the project spanned fifteen years (1988-2002), during which excavation focused in particular on the West Sanctuary, the public buildings on the south side of the citadel, the large Theater, and the Roman houses in the Lower City.

Other fieldwork was initiated in the 1990s. From 1991-1995 the Pylos Regional Archaeological Project explored an area of approximately 40 square kilometers in western Messenia. These included areas to the north, east, south, and west of the modern town of Hora, and the entirety of the Englianos Ridge (Upper and Lower)—the location of the Palace of Nestor. Between 1998 and 2006 the Mallakastra Regional Archaeological Project has investigated the history of prehistoric and historic settlement and land use in central Albania, in an area centered on the Greek colony of Apollonia. In 2001, a joint Albanian-American team explored uplands north of the modern city of Durrës in Albania (ancient Durrachium). Between 2001 and 2010 the Bamboula Archaeological Excavation Project has explored the prehistoric site of Episkopi-Bamboulanear Kourion on the south coast of Cyprus in the western part of the Akrotiri Peninsula. Since 2005 Cincinnati has been involved in two new fieldwork projects in Greece and Italy: the East Isthmia Archaeology Project, the Pompeii Archaeological Research Project: Porta Stabia, and since 2007 in the Knossos Little Palace North Project, and since 2010 in the Knossos Gypsades Geophysics Project.  Finally, in 2015 new excavations were initiated at the Palace of Nestor and in 2019 at the site of Tharros in Sardinia.

Our postal address is:

Department of Classics
University of Cincinnati
PO Box 210226
Cincinnati, OH 45221

Our shipping address is:

Department of Classics
2602 University Cir
410 Blegen Library
Cincinnati, OH 45221

email us at classics@uc.edu

Phone us at 513-556-3050

Fax us at 513-556-4366