Week of Events
Start of Spring Instruction
Start of Spring Instruction
First day of classes.For the official academic calendar, click the link:
In Search of King Midas: New Discoveries and Reinterpretations at Gordion (Turkey)
In Search of King Midas: New Discoveries and Reinterpretations at Gordion (Turkey)
For over half of a century, the University of Pennsylvania Museum has conducted excavations at the ancient site of Gordion in central Turkey. The site is best known as the capital of the Iron Age kingdom of Phrygia and the home of the semi-legendary King Midas, who ruled around 725 BC and whose enormous wealth […]
The Archaeology of Shipwrecks: Treasuring the Past?
The Archaeology of Shipwrecks: Treasuring the Past?
To the media and in the minds of the general public ‘maritime archaeology’ often suggests the study of shipwrecks, perhaps because of the prominent role they played in the development of the subject over the last half century. In reality maritime archaeology encompasses all past human activity relating to seas, interconnected waterways and adjacent locales. […]
“Close to Jedenew”
“Close to Jedenew”
Kevin Vennemann will be delivering an introduction to and a lecture from his widely acclaimed debut novel Close to Jedenew, published in German by the prestigious Suhrkamp Verlag 2005 and in English, by Melville House in 2008. A group of children from the rural village of Jedenew, which might or might not be located in […]
The Non-Aligned Movement and the Cold War, 1961-1973
The Non-Aligned Movement and the Cold War, 1961-1973
The Non-Aligned Movement was created to stand apart from the Cold War. Lorenz Luthi argues, however, that the Non-Aligned Movement was a product of the Cold War and was almost torn apart by it during the 1961-1973 period. From the start, Cold War issues--such as the division of Germany, nuclear weapons, the Middle East conflict, […]