My new book, The First Black Archaeologist: A Life of John Wesley Gilbert, is available from Oxford University Press.
- “A comprehensive, impeccably researched biography.” —Choice Reviews
- “Ideal for reading during Black History Month—or any time of the year.” —Atlanta Journal-Constitution
- “Rescues a pioneering Black scholar from obscurity.” —Publishers’ Weekly
- “Lee masterfully reconnects Gilbert with his era.” —Journal of Southern History
- “More than a biography…a readable narrative of historical change surrounding Black life, the classics, and the idea of interracial cooperation.” —Journal of the Progressive Age and Gilded Era
For a limited time (until October 11, 2024), enjoy 50% off the audiobook of The First Black Archaeologist when you click here to order. ALL BOOK ROYALTIES ARE DONATED to Paine College and the William Sanders Scarborough Fellowship of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens.
For a brief overview of John Wesley Gilbert’s life and work, visit The Database of Classical Scholars. Watch an interview about the book at World History Encyclopedia (YouTube). Listen to a podcast about the book on Apple podcasts (also on Spotify, Anchor FM, and other platforms). Read more in my hometown paper, Midweek Central O’ahu Voice. And check out E.R. Brown’s TikTok about Prof. Gilbert!
To learn more about African American history in Professor Gilbert’s hometown of Augusta, Georgia, visit Paine College, the Lucy Craft Laney Museum of Black History, the Augusta African-American Historical Society, and Historic Augusta.
Prof. Lee’s Recent and Upcoming Events
Featured in Episode 1 (Alexander) of the History Channel series, “Ancient Empires.” Click here to watch for free (with ads).
December 2023 interview on UCLA Pourdavoud Center podcast, “Legacies of Ancient Persia.” Click here to listen.
I spoke at the May 2, 2024 dedication of the Georgia Historical Society marker for John Wesley Gilbert. Click here to watch the news report on WJBF TV Augusta.
Monday, May 13 at 3:30pm at UC Riverside (in person): “Intimate Relationships and Identities in Achaemenid Persia: Case Studies from the Western Satrapies.”
If your institution or group is interested in a talk about John Wesley Gilbert or about the histories of Classical Greece and Achaemenid Persia, please contact me by email.
I study the history of ancient West Asia, with a focus on war, society, and culture in the Greek and Achaemenid worlds from ca. 650-330 BC. I also study receptions, interpretations, and representations of antiquity in the United States, especially amongst African American classical scholars during the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
I teach graduate and undergraduate ancient history courses, survey courses in ancient world history, and classes in the history of warfare from antiquity to the present. I have run archaeological field schools and travel-study programs in Greece and Turkey. I am a member of the Managing Committee of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens (ASCSA), of the Archaeological Institute of America, and of the UCSB Iranian Studies Initiative.
I serve as faculty advisor for the UCSB Chapter of the Student Veterans of America. Whether you are a current UCSB student veteran, military dependent, or other military-affiliated student, or are interested in attending UCSB, you are welcome to contact me for information about the SVA@UCSB and about support for veterans, dependents, and other military-affiliated students at UCSB. You may also visit the web site for UCSB Veterans and Military Services.
Graduate Study in Ancient History at UCSB
UCSB has a vibrant, inclusive, multidisciplinary ancient studies community that brings together faculty and students from History, Classics, History of Art & Architecture, Religious Studies, Anthropology, and other departments. Our Ancient History PhD program emphasizes both research and teaching. We provide rigorous graduate mentoring in a collegial, supportive environment. Through our seminars, lectures, and other events, our graduate students have the opportunity to interact with distinguished visiting scholars from around the world. Our PhDs have found success in tenure-track positions at research universities and liberal arts colleges, and in a diverse range of non-academic careers.
In addition to campus-wide and departmental funding, graduate support for ancient history students is available through the Drake and Sizgorich Funds, UCSB History Associates, and other sources.
For more information about the UCSB graduate program in Ancient History, please read our departmental field description. The application deadline for entry in Fall 2024 has passed. I will be accepting graduate applications for 2025-2026. If you are interested in applying to the graduate program for entry in Fall Quarter 2025, please contact me during Fall 2024 to discuss your application.
Last updated 2024.IX.16
- History and Archaeology of Ancient Greece & Achaemenid Persia
- African Americans and Greco-Roman Classics in the 19th-century United States
- History of Warfare from Antiquity to the 21st Century
- “That First Trip in Central Greece:” Two First-Hand Accounts of an American Archaeological Journey on Foot Through Phokis, Lokris, and Boeotia in November 1890
- Representations of Achaemenid History in 19th-20th Century U.S. School Textbooks
- Pacific Island Classics: Greek, Latin, and the Ancient Mediterranean World in 19th-Century Hawai’i
- Xenophon, Plato, and Frank Yerby’s Goat Song: A Novel of Ancient Greece (1967)
- Brother Against Brother: Cyrus the Younger, Artaxerxes II, and the Struggle for the Achaemenid Throne, 401 BC
- “African Americans and Xenophon, ca. 1800-1910” (forthcoming in Proceedings of the 2021 International Xenophon Conference, De Gruyter 2025)
- “African American Travelers Encounter Greece, ca. 1850-1900.” American Journal of Philology 143 (2022), 631-651.
- The First Black Archaeologist: A Life of John Wesley Gilbert . Oxford University Press, 2022.
- “A Soldier’s View of the March” in Shane Brennan and David Thomas (eds.) The Landmark Xenophon’s Anabasis, 342-350. Pantheon Books, 2021.
- Articles on Opountian Lokris, Arms & Armor, Armies, and Immortals in C. Baron (ed.), The Herodotus Encyclopedia. Wiley Blackwell, 2021.
- “Daily Life in Classical Greek Armies, c. 500–330 BCE” in L. Brice (ed.), New Approaches to Greek and Roman Warfare, 39-52. Wiley Blackwell, 2020.
- “Xenophon and His Times” in M. Flower (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Xenophon, 15-36. Cambridge University Press, 2016. Reviewed in Bryn Mawr Classical Review.
- Globalizing Borderlands Studies in Europe and North America, co-edited with Michael North (Greifswald University). University of Nebraska Press, 2016. (also available in Korean translation)
- “Cyrus the Younger and Artaxerxes II, 401 BC: an Achaemenid Civil War Reconsidered” in J. Collins and J. Manning (eds.), Revolt and Resistance in the Ancient Classical World and the Near East: In the Crucible of Empire, 103-121. Brill, 2016.
- “Tissaphernes and the Achaemenid Defense of Western Anatolia, 412-395 BC” in J. Armstrong (ed.), Circum Mare: Themes in Ancient Warfare, 262-281. Brill, 2016.
- Helmets of the First World War. Historical exhibition at the UC Santa Barbara Library, 2016-2017.
- “The Classical Greek Experience” in B. Campbell and L. Tritle (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Greek and Roman Warfare, 143-161. Oxford University Press, 2013.
- The Persian Empire. DVD/audio series, 24 thirty-minute lectures. The Great Courses/The Teaching Company, 2012.
- “The Fight for Ancient Sicily”. Archaeology 64.1 (2011), 38-41. PDF
- “Urban Warfare in the Classical Greek World” in Victor Hanson (ed.), Makers of Ancient Strategy. Princeton University Press, 2010. Read a review here.
- “Land Warfare in Xenophon’s Hellenika“ in Robert Strassler (ed.), The Landmark Xenophon’s Hellenika, 391-394. Pantheon Books, 2009.
- A Greek Army on the March: Soldiers and Survival in Xenophon’s Anabasis. Cambridge University Press, 2007. Nominated for the 2008 Runciman Award.
- “Xenophon’s Anabasis and the Origins of Military Autobiography” in Alex Vernon (ed.), Arms and the Self: War, the Military, and Autobiographical Discourse, 141-160. Kent State University Press, 2005. PDF
- “For there were many hetairai in the army: Women in Xenophon’s Anabasis.” The Ancient World 35.2 (2004), 145-165. PDF
- “Urban Combat at Olynthos, 348 B.C.” British Archaeological Reports S958 (2001), 11-22. PDF
- History 4A: The Ancient Mediterranean and West Asia
An introduction to early civilizations across the region from Iberia to the Iranian plateau. Fall 2024. - History 111A: Early Greece, 3000-750 BC
Topics include Neolithic culture in the Aegean, Bronze Age Minoan & Mycenaean civilization, the Late Bronze Age international system, the historicity of the Trojan War, and early Iron Age Greece. - History 111B: The Archaic and Classical Greek World, ca. 750-400 BC
Topics include the polis (“city-state”), Greek-Persian interactions, the society and culture of classical Greece, and the Peloponnesian War. - History 111C: The Last Generation of the Achaemenid Empire and the Rise of the Hellenistic World, ca. 400-250 BC
Topics include include the rise of the kingdom of Macedon, the end of the Achaemenid Empire, and the development of successor states in the Mediterranean, Mesopotamia & Iran, and Central Asia. - History 111F: Achaemenid Persia from Cyrus to Alexander, 550-330 BC
Topics include the development of Achaemenid imperialism, economic and social history of the empire, art and architecture, and cultural interactions amongst Persians, Greeks, and others. Next offered in 2025-26, probably Fall 2025. - History 111R: Research Seminar in Ancient History
Research seminar for history majors. Participants write a 15-20 page paper. Next offered in 2025-26, probably Winter 2026. - History 111T: Topics in Ancient History
Upper-division lecture course; topics vary by quarter. - History 201E: Reading Seminar in Ancient History
Recent topics: Greek and Near Eastern Economies and Societies; Ancient Greece and Early China; Xenophon’s Anabasis in Achaemenid Context; Entangled Histories of Greece & Iran - History 203A & 203B: Research Seminar in Comparative Ancient History
Upcoming topic: The Ancient Mediterranean, Babylonia, Iran, Central Asia, and China. Winter-Spring 2025
Honors and Awards
- Harold J. Plous Award, UCSB, 2005-2006
- Academic Senate Distinguished Teaching Award, UCSB, 2003-2004
- Peace Studies Program Fellow, Cornell University, 1998
- James Rignall Wheeler Fellow, American School of Classical Studies at Athens, 1996-1997
Professional Activities
- Managing Committee Member, American School of Classical Studies at Athens
- Vice President (2003-2019, 2023-2026), Santa Barbara Society, Archaeological Institute of America
Archaeological Fieldwork
- Mitrou Archaeological Project. Field School Co-Director, 2005.
- Cornell Halai and East Lokris Project. Excavation Staff, 1999-2004.
Media Appearances and Public History
- What does it take to be a History professor? ‘Ōlelo Community Media. Wahiawa, HI.
- John Wesley Gilbert at Lake Junalaska. The Mountaineer. Waynesville, NC.
- The Cyrus Cylinder and Ancient Persia. Hellenic Public Radio 91.5FM, New York, NY.
- Persian History in California Public Schools. Pacifica Radio KPFA 94.1 Berkeley, CA.
- Ancient Persia in the California Middle School Curriculum. Los Angeles Times.
- What do you know about Ancient Persia? ‘Ōlelo Community Media. Wahiawa, HI.
- History Advocates: A Community Effort for Accurate Portrayal of Persian History in California Schools.
- The King and Us: Perspectives on Cyrus of Anshan. The Octavian Report, NY.
- The Archaeological Site of Skarkos on Ios (video).
Web Links and Resources
- Association of Ancient Historians
The premier professional organization of ancient historians in North America. - Achéménet
Essential research tools, publications, and information for the study of Achaemenid Persia. Founded by Prof. Pierre Briant. - The American School of Classical Studies at Athens
A center for research and teaching since 1881, the ASCSA is the oldest U.S. overseas research institution. - Encyclopaedia Iranica
A research tool for studying Iranian civilization and culture from ancient times to the present. - UCLA Pourdavoud Center for the Study of the Iranian World
Features a wide-ranging series of events with leading speakers on Iranian history, literature, and culture from ancient to modern times; many events are recorded. - Cuneiform Digital Library Initiative
Texts, translations, commentaries, and bibliographies. - Collège de France: lectures on Achaemenid History
Watch recorded lectures by Pierre Briant, Mark Garrison, and Michael Jursa. - University of Chicago: Preserving Persepolis
Includes a 12-minute video with aerial photos and 3D reconstructions of ancient Persepolis. - Internet Resources for Ancient History and Classics
Links to databases, bibliographies, and other research tools for studying ancient history. - Attic Inscriptions Online
Texts, translations, and commentaries for hundreds of Athenian inscriptions. - War: a documentary by Gwynne Dyer
A classic 1983 series on warfare and warriors from ancient to modern times.