We define our subject as the study of the material legacy of the Mediterranean region and adjacent areas in antiquity, with a particular focus on Greek, Roman and Late Antique periods, a breadth that is unique amongst the German speaking universities. Key methodologies include interdisciplinary working with iconography, architecture, ceramics, artefacts, palaeo-environmental evidence, documentary sources, and traces of ancient landscapes. Key themes include investigation of religious, social and economic structures; cultural interactions and identities; daily life in antiquity; and the continuing legacies of the ancient world on our modern one. Our discipline encourages us to explore how cultural elements were shared, transmitted, and transformed across both space (our geographical vision ranges from Mesopotamia to Iberia, and from the Sahara to the Baltic Sea) and time (our chronological spans from the Minoan Age c.2000 BCE to 800 CE), as well as being creatively reimagined today.

 News

Reconstructing Histories through the Transmission of Material Culture

Ringvorlesung

Dienstag, 30. Mai 2017 um 18 Uhr c.t.


Catherine Brooke Penaloza Patzak, BA MA (Institut für Geschichte, Universität Wien)


 

Identifying black-glazed pottery productions in the central Mediterranean: 
an interdisciplinary approach

International Workshop

Vienna, Institute of Classical Archaeology, 10th March 2017

"Material Culture Studies" an der Universität Wien

Ringvorlesung im Sommersemester 2017

Von Emanuel Stöckler bis Graf Lanckoroński

Die Stifterinnen und Stifter der Archäologischen Sammlung der Universität Wien

Ausstellung in der Archäologischen Sammlung der Universität Wien ...