Hazel Dodge | Trinity College Dublin (original) (raw)
Papers by Hazel Dodge
Oxford University Press eBooks, 1998
An academic directory and search engine.
The American Historical Review, Jun 1, 2011
John Wiley & Sons, Inc. eBooks, Nov 8, 2013
The Encyclopedia of Ancient History, Oct 26, 2012
Greek and Roman building practice was everywhere based on locally available materials. Keywords: ... more Greek and Roman building practice was everywhere based on locally available materials. Keywords: archaeology; arts and architecture; urban history
John Wiley & Sons, Inc. eBooks, Nov 8, 2013
This chapter provides an overview of the uses and structural history of the Colosseum, the larges... more This chapter provides an overview of the uses and structural history of the Colosseum, the largest amphitheatre constructed in the Roman world. Romans knew it as the ‘Amphitheatrum Flavium’, after the dynasty of emperors responsible for its construction. It continued in use even after the fall of Rome, with games still popular into the sixth century. The chapter examines the evidence for naumachiae during the inaugural games and concludes that it is most unlikely that the Colosseum area was flooded to a practical depth. It also reviews the evidence for the accommodation of spectators and its reflection of Roman society.
The Classical Review, 2018
the triumph: the textual and visual evidence she cites for the overwhelming experience a full Cir... more the triumph: the textual and visual evidence she cites for the overwhelming experience a full Circus must have offered mostly relates to venationes, gladiatorial games and chariot races. P. has diminished the impact of someof her conclusions aboutmonuments,memory and identity by tying them too closely to the single circumstance of the triumph. There are clear connections between these buildings, the triumph and (for example) the Roman culture of victory, but they need to be more subtly drawn. P.’s methodology, particularly her use of memory studies, would be well suited to exploring them, but her focus on the triumph skews her analysis.
Christesen/A Companion to Sport and Spectacle in Greek and Roman Antiquity, 2013
Oxford University Press eBooks, 1998
An academic directory and search engine.
The American Historical Review, Jun 1, 2011
John Wiley & Sons, Inc. eBooks, Nov 8, 2013
The Encyclopedia of Ancient History, Oct 26, 2012
Greek and Roman building practice was everywhere based on locally available materials. Keywords: ... more Greek and Roman building practice was everywhere based on locally available materials. Keywords: archaeology; arts and architecture; urban history
John Wiley & Sons, Inc. eBooks, Nov 8, 2013
This chapter provides an overview of the uses and structural history of the Colosseum, the larges... more This chapter provides an overview of the uses and structural history of the Colosseum, the largest amphitheatre constructed in the Roman world. Romans knew it as the ‘Amphitheatrum Flavium’, after the dynasty of emperors responsible for its construction. It continued in use even after the fall of Rome, with games still popular into the sixth century. The chapter examines the evidence for naumachiae during the inaugural games and concludes that it is most unlikely that the Colosseum area was flooded to a practical depth. It also reviews the evidence for the accommodation of spectators and its reflection of Roman society.
The Classical Review, 2018
the triumph: the textual and visual evidence she cites for the overwhelming experience a full Cir... more the triumph: the textual and visual evidence she cites for the overwhelming experience a full Circus must have offered mostly relates to venationes, gladiatorial games and chariot races. P. has diminished the impact of someof her conclusions aboutmonuments,memory and identity by tying them too closely to the single circumstance of the triumph. There are clear connections between these buildings, the triumph and (for example) the Roman culture of victory, but they need to be more subtly drawn. P.’s methodology, particularly her use of memory studies, would be well suited to exploring them, but her focus on the triumph skews her analysis.
Christesen/A Companion to Sport and Spectacle in Greek and Roman Antiquity, 2013
An academic directory and search engine.
Archaeological Monographs of the British School at …, Jan 1, 1992
by Jacopo Tabolli, Hazel Dodge, Sheira Cohen, Alessandra Piergrossi, Maureen Carroll, Sian Halcrow, Iefke van Kampen, David Stifter, Anthony Tuck, Marcello Mogetta, Adriano Orsingher, Francesca Fulminante, Michele Guirguis, maria antonietta fugazzola delpino, Rosana Pla Orquín, Marijke Gnade, Massimo Cultraro, and Suellen Gauld
The Department of Classics at Trinity College Dublin is pleased to announce the international con... more The Department of Classics at Trinity College Dublin is pleased to announce the international conference ‘From invisible to visible: new data and methods for the archaeology of infant and child burials in pre-Roman Italy’ to be held at Trinity College Dublin on 24-25 April 2017, with the support of the Trinity Long Room Hub, the School of Histories and Humanities, the Italian Cultural Institute in Dublin and Fàilte Ireland, and in collaboration with the Centre for Gender and Women's Studies and the Trinity Research in Childhood Centre. This conference is part of the research project “Childhood and the Deathly Hallows: Investigating Infant and Child Burials in Pre-Roman Italy (c. 1000-500BC)”, funded by the Irish Research Council and carried out by Dr. Jacopo Tabolli.
On the basis that an infant and child tomb is itself an archaeological entity, whose analysis cuts across disciplines - mainly archaeology, bio-archaeology and anthropology, but also philology, ancient literature, gender studies, pedagogy, medical humanities and digital humanities - and in order to promote an interdisciplinary approach, the conference at Trinity College Dublin involves scholars from international institutions, experienced in interdisciplinary methods, in order to create a network specifically focused on the analysis of childhood in ancient societies. The role of this network is to function as an interdisciplinary incubator, offering a platform for dialogue between disciplines around infant and child burials.
We have invited scholars working on the archaeology of Italy from the Early Iron Age through the Archaic Period (c. 1000–500 BC) to present the results of their recent researches on the topic of infant and child burials.
We envision that this platform can be a model for other archaeological studies in the future as well as ideal for developing a new methodological approach to the excavation of infant and child tombs, following best practices in archaeology.
Publication plan
The prestigious series of Studies in Mediterranean Archaeology (SIMA) has already agreed to publish the proceedings of the conference.
For further information please email Jacopo Tabolli (tabollij@tcd.ie) or Hazel Dodge (hdodge@tcd.ie).