Professor Richard Alston BA (Leeds), PhD (Lond.) Professor of Roman History r.alston@rhul.ac.uk Office: IB 149B
Roman history, especially Roman Egypt; urbanism in the ancient world; Roman army.
Dr Ifigeneia Giannadaki BA (Crete), MA, PhD (UCL) Teaching Fellow in Greek History and Language
Ifigeneia.giannadaki@rhul.ac.uk Office: IB 144 (shared with Dr Efi Spentzou)
Greek law and oratory
Dr. Liz Gloyn B.A., M.Phil (Cantab), Ph.D. (Rutgers). Lecturer in Classics
liz.gloyn@rhul.ac.uk. Office: IB 149D
Latin literature, especially Seneca; the Roman family; ancient philosophy; gender studies; classical reception studies.
Dr David Gwynn (Department of History) BA(Massey, NZ), MA (Auckland, NZ), DPhil (Oxon.) Reader in Ancient and Late Antique History
David.Gwynn@rhul.ac.uk Office: McCrea 336
The transition from the ancient to the medieval world; the ‘decline and fall’ of the Roman Empire in the West and its survival in the East; the rise of Christianity AD 200-600.
Dr Richard Hawley MA, DPhil (Oxon.) Senior Lecturer (Teaching Focused) in Classics, Deputy HoD for Student Experience
richard.hawley@rhul.ac.uk Office: IB 146
Greek language and literature, especially Greek literature of the Roman empire; gender studies; Greco-Roman social history; ancient literary criticism.
Dr Claire Jamset BA (Cantab.), MStud, DPhil (Oxon.) Teaching Fellow in Latin Language and Literature
claire.jamset@rhul.ac.uk Office: IB 134 (shared with Prof Jonathan Powell)
Latin poetry, particularly epic and elegy; the construction of masculinity in the ancient world
Professor Ahuvia Kahane BA (Tel-Aviv), DPhil (Oxon.) Professor of Greek
ahuvia.kahane@rhul.ac.uk Office: IB 151
Greek and Latin literature, Homer, epic tradition, the ancient novel, and the classical tradition. Critical theory, antiquity and modernity, visual culture
Dr Zena Kamash MA, DPhil (Oxon.), FSA Lecturer in Roman Art and Archaeology
zena.kamash@rhul.ac.uk Office: IB 148
Roman Britain, Roman Near East, ancient technology, approaches to material culture, religion, memory, reconstructions of the past
Dr Christos Kremmydas BA (Athens), MA, PhD (Lond.) Senior Lecturer in Greek History
christos.kremmydas@rhul.ac.uk Office: IB 156
Athenian political and social history; Greek rhetoric and oratory; papyrology.
Dr Benedict J. Lowe BA (Durham), PhD (Edinburgh) Teaching Fellow in Roman History
benedict.lowe@rhul.ac.uk Office: IB 149E (shared with Dr Jari Pakkanen)
Roman Republican and Imperial history; Roman Spain; Pompeii; garum production.
Dr Nick J. Lowe MA, PhD (Cantab.) Reader in Classical Literature,
n.lowe@rhul.ac.uk Office: IB 149C
Greek and Latin literature, especially comedy; Greek religion.
Dr Jari Pakkanen MA, DrPhil (Helsinki), FSA Reader in Classical Archaeology j.pakkanen@rhul.ac.uk Office: IB 149E (shared with Dr Benedict Lowe; on secondment in Athens until December 2016)
Greek archaeology, especially Greek architecture; archaeological reconstruction; quantitative methods in archaeology.
Professor Jonathan G. F. Powell MA, DPhil (Oxon.) Professor of Latin
j.powell@rhul.ac.uk Office: IB 143 (shared with Dr Claire Jamset)
Latin language; Latin literature, esp. Cicero, satire; ancient rhetoric, oratory and advocacy.
Professor N. Boris Rankov MA, DPhil (Oxon.) FSA Professor of Ancient History, Head of Department
b.rankov@rhul.ac.uk Office: IB 147
Roman History, especially Roman Britain, Roman army, epigraphy and archaeology of the Roman empire; ancient shipping and shipsheds.
Professor Lene Rubinstein MA (Copenhagen), PhD (Cantab.) Professor of Ancient History
l.rubinstein@rhul.ac.uk Office: IB 155
Greek history, especially history of Greek law; epigraphy; papyrology.
Dr Efi Spentzou BA (Thessaloniki), MSt, DPhil (Oxon.) Reader in Classics,
e.spentzou@rhul.ac.uk Office IB 144 (shared with Dr Ifigeneia Giannadaki)
Latin literature, especially epic and elegy; literary theory and criticism; gender; classical reception; myth.
Professor Anne D. R. Sheppard MA, DPhil (Oxon.) Professor of Ancient Philosophy
a.sheppard@rhul.ac.uk Office: IB 145
Greek philosophy, especially Neoplatonism; ancient literary criticism.
Dr Polymnia Tsagouria BA (Thessaloniki), MA, DPhil (UCL) Lecturer in Modern Greek; on secondment by the Greek Ministry of Education.
P.Tsagouria@rhul.ac.uk Office: IB 237
Modern Greek language, literature and culture.
2Communication
It is vitally important that you keep in touch with us and we keep in touch with you. Efficient communication is an essential professional skill, which you need to develop during your time with us for your future career. Members of staff will often need to be able to contact you to inform you about changes to teaching arrangements, special preparations you may have to do for a class or meetings you might be required to attend. You will need to be able to contact members of the Department for example, if you are unable to attend a class, or wish to arrange a meeting with a tutor or your Personal Adviser.
Email to your College email address is routinely used and you should check regularly (at least daily) if any official communication has been sent to your email address. Do not ignore the email as it will be assumed that it will have been received by you within 48 hours, excluding Saturdays and Sundays (see 2.1 below).
You should also make a habit of checking the student pigeonholes in the Department (see 2.2 below).
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