Catharine Edwards
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catharineedwards.bsky.social
Catharine Edwards
@catharineedwards.bsky.social

Prof.of Classics/Ancient History at Birkbeck. Rome and the ancient Romans, especially Seneca and Cicero.

Catharine Harmon Edwards is a British ancient historian and academic. She is Professor of Classics and Ancient History at Birkbeck College, University of London. She is a specialist in Roman cultural history and Latin prose literature, particularly Seneca the Younger. .. more

History 32%
Political science 20%

Excited to see my new book on the Hutchinson Heinemann website:
www.penguin.co.uk/books/451418...

The beautiful Baltic:

Stockholm’s archipelago is full of charming, classically inspired summer houses:

In Gamla Stan, Stockholm, Aeneid 5.709-10 ‘wherever fate pulls or hauls us, there let us go’:

So thrilled about Birkbeck's wonderful new Carena Institute!

Very much looking forward to being part of a panel on Female letter writers and addressees in Graeco-Roman antiquity organised by @janjasoldo.bsky.social and @gavinkellylatin.bsky.social at the Celtic Classics Conference in Coimbra next week:
So pleased that we have MA funding available this year for our MA Archaeology & Heritage Programme. Please spread the word (or get in touch if you have questions)!
www.bbk.ac.uk/student-serv...
The Carena Institute of Sustainable Archaeologies Postgraduate Scholarships - Birkbeck, University of London
Find out more about the Carena Institute postgraduate scholarships with project themes and how to apply.
www.bbk.ac.uk

This woman is a biscuit-crafting genius!
Almost done! I couldn’t leave out this edible assortment of medieval tiles from the British Museum.

The biscuit recipe was inspired by flavours from the same period: honey, ginger, and clove.

Reposted by Catharine Edwards

Almost done! I couldn’t leave out this edible assortment of medieval tiles from the British Museum.

The biscuit recipe was inspired by flavours from the same period: honey, ginger, and clove.

A privilege to encounter the wolf and Marcus Aurelius before the Capitoline Museums opened (filming a piece on Roman decadence for ARTE):

This Roman monument in Athens - the Tower of the Winds - resonates well with the theme of our colloquium on Seneca’s Natural Questions (winds feature prominently in Book 5):

This movie - whose title is inspired by Seneca’s Natural Questions - is quite something, though maybe not to the taste of Seneca purists…

Very much looking forward to taking part - with some world-leading Seneca experts - in what I am sure will be a fascinating colloquium on the Natural Questions in Athens this week:
www.sia.gr/en/events.ph...

An amazingly rich deposit which suggests significant Iron Age links between elites in the north of England and continental Europe.
The Historic England press release gives a more detailed overview of the finds and their significance: historicengland.org.uk/whats-new/ne...

(And pictures of @proftommoore.bsky.social doing some excellent CT scan pointing.)
Iron Age Hoard Discovery Alters Our Understanding of Life in Britain 2,000 Years Ago | Historic England
The Melsonby Hoard, a vast deposit of more than 800 items, provides an archaeological time capsule from the Iron Age around 2,000 years ago.
historicengland.org.uk
Hellenic Society & Roman Society Online Course

6.00pm - 7.30pm (UK time) + recordings will be available

Professor Tim Cornell: The Origins of Rome

Session 1. Wednesday 2 April.

www.hellenicandromanlibrary.org/Events/Event...
The Hellenic and Roman Library > Events > Event Registration
www.hellenicandromanlibrary.org

Thrilled to have just received the rather lovely hard copy of the new edition of my *The politics of immorality in Ancient Rome* reissued with a generous foreword by Caroline Vout and a new intro by me in the *Cambridge Classical Classics* series.

Very honoured to be named here - and in such distinguished company! Coincidentally *The politics of immorality* has just been reissued with a generous foreword by C.Vout and new intro by me in the *Cambridge Classical Classics* series.

Reposted by Catharine Edwards

Very excited that my copy of Francesca Martelli's new Cicero book has arrived. A gorgeous cover, too:

It's graduation season @bbkhistorical.bsky.social! Many congratulations to my lovely and v brainy sister-in-law Dr Frances Wedgwood who now also has an MA in Medical Humanities!

What an excellent devil!

Enchanting - but often poignant - Tirzah Garwood exhibition at @dulwichgallery.bsky.social . Such a distinctive view of the world.

This will be a real treat!
Coming soon...my next book, which features another adventure in Roman Scotland! This time I travelled along a Roman road from the Borders to up Perthshire and beyond, searching for evidence of the Agricolan invasion and the elusive site of Scotland's first recorded battle.

Reposted by Catharine Edwards

Is this England's best doorway? Leading into the tower of the Holy Trinity in Colchester, it was built in the 11th century but is constructed from Roman bricks plundered from the ruins of the ancient city of Camulodunum #AdoorableThursday

Reposted by Catharine Edwards

Coming soon...my next book, which features another adventure in Roman Scotland! This time I travelled along a Roman road from the Borders to up Perthshire and beyond, searching for evidence of the Agricolan invasion and the elusive site of Scotland's first recorded battle.

Marcus Antonius and Cleopatra are bemused: