All AHMA students must take one AHMA seminar during Stage I of the program, normally in the first two years. The AHMA seminar is offered annually by two participating faculty members of AHMA who belong to different home departments. The following AHMA seminars will be or have been offered in the recent past.
2022-23: Demystifying Funerary Landscapes, Identities and Receptions in Egypt and Etruria. Professors Rita Lucarelli (MELC) and Lisa Pieraccini (History of Art). Spring 2023.
2021-22: The Senses in Antiquity. Professors Diliana Angelova (History and History of Art) and Benjamin Porter (MELC). Spring 2022.
2019-20: Gods and Gold: Sacred Economies of Early Greece. Professors Kim Shelton (Classics) and Emily Mackil (History). Spring 2020.
2018-19: Josephus. Professors Daniel Boyarin (NES) and Duncan MacRae (Classics). Fall 2018.
2017-18: Greek Economies: The Documentary Evidence. Professors Emily Mackil (History) and Nikolaos Papazarkadas (Classics). Spring 2018.
2015-16: Comparative Urbanism in the Ancient World. Professors Carlos Noreña (History) and Carol Redmount (Near Eastern Studies). Spring 2016.
2014-15: Ancient Boiotia: History, Epigraphy, and Culture. Professors Emily Mackil (History) and Nikolaos Papazarkadas (Classics). Spring 2015.
2013-14: Etruscan Cities. Professors Ted Peña (Classics) and L. Pieraccini (Art History). Fall 2013.
2012-13: The City of Rome: Topography and Urban History. Professors Carlos Noreña (History) and Ted Peña (Classics). Spring 2013.
2011-12: Making Things in the Iron Age Levant: An Investigation into Materials, Craft and Production. Professors Marian Feldman (Art History/NES) and Benjamin Porter (NES)
2010-11: Greece and the Near East in the Iron Age. Professors Marian Feldman (Art History/NES) and Andrew Stewart (Art History/Classics)
2009-10: Sectarianism to Heresiology in Second Temple JudaismProfessors Ron Hendel (NES) and Holger Zellentin (Jewish Studies, Graduate Theological Union)
2008-9: Greek Economies: The Documentary Evidence. Professors Emily Mackil (History) and Nikolaos Papazarkadas (Classics).
2007-8: Regarding Graeco-Roman Egypt: Text and Image, Reading and Viewing in a Multi-Cultural Society Professors Chris Hallett (Art History) and Todd Hickey (Classics)