Find a research supervisor in inter-state religion in the Ancient World In 'Staff' StaffStaff by research area Back to 'Classics, Ancient History and Archaeology' Staff in the Department of Classics, Ancient History and Archaeology who supervise PhD/MA by Research in the area of inter-state religion in the Ancient World. Dr Andrew Bayliss Associate Professor in Greek HistoryHead of the Department of Classics, Ancient History and Archaeology Athenian politics, Alexander the Great, the early Hellenistic period, and Sparta Dr Hannah Cornwell Associate Professor in Ancient History Roman History, especially political aspects of the Roman Republic and Early Principate, Imperial ideology, International Relations and diplomacy, and interdisciplinary approaches to history and material culture Dr William Mack Senior Lecturer in Ancient Greek History and Culture Ancient political institutions, interstate relations, the Greek city-states, and epigraphic culture Classics, Ancient History and Archaeology staff research supervision areas Byzantine, Ottoman and modern Greek studies Egyptology Heritage History, literature and culture of Classical and Hellenistic Greece History, literature and culture of the Late Republic and Early Empire History of rhetoric Inter-state religion in the Ancient World Mortuary and Funerary Archaeology Prehistoric and early historic Europe Reception of the Ancient World Religion and ritual Urbanism and the ancient city Wetland archaeology and environments of Northwest Europe
Dr Andrew Bayliss Associate Professor in Greek HistoryHead of the Department of Classics, Ancient History and Archaeology Athenian politics, Alexander the Great, the early Hellenistic period, and Sparta
Dr Hannah Cornwell Associate Professor in Ancient History Roman History, especially political aspects of the Roman Republic and Early Principate, Imperial ideology, International Relations and diplomacy, and interdisciplinary approaches to history and material culture
Dr William Mack Senior Lecturer in Ancient Greek History and Culture Ancient political institutions, interstate relations, the Greek city-states, and epigraphic culture