Followed by a reception from 4:30-5:30pm
The last two decades have witnessed a significant change in the landscape of epigraphic research. Digital resources such as the Epigraphic Database Roma, the Clauss Slaby Datenbank, and Roman Inscriptions of Britain allow students and scholars to conduct large-scale searches and have begun to facilitate new kinds of research.
In this seminar, we will explore the different types of resources now available to the epigrapher (database, aggregator, digitized print volume, etc.) and discuss the advantages of each. We will then focus on Pompeii and consider how this site offers a detailed archaeological background against which to analyze the town’s epigraphic output.
Rebecca Benefiel is Professor of Classics at Washington and Lee University, where she teaches Latin literature and Roman archaeology. Her research focuses on the social and cultural history of the Roman Empire, particularly as seen through epigraphy. She has authored numerous articles and co-edited the volumes Inscriptions in the Private Sphere in the Greco-Roman World (2016, Brill) and Inscriptions and the Epigraphic Habit: The Epigraphic Cultures of Greece, Rome, and Beyond, (2023, Brill). She is currently co-editing the forthcoming Oxford Handbook to Pompeii and Environs (Oxford University Press). Dr. Benefiel has been a national lecturer for the Archaeological Institute of America, a Kluge Fellow at the Library of Congress, a Fellow of the American Academy of Rome, and President of the American Society of Greek and Latin Epigraphy. She isDirector of The Ancient Graffiti Project (ancientgraffiti.org), which is editing and makingaccessible thousands of handwritten inscriptions from the first century.
Her work has been featured in National Geographic, USA Today, Science News, Forbes, and Smithsonian magazines. She has been interviewed on NPR’s Radio IQ, and on documentary television programs on the History Channel, PBS, and the Smithsonian Channel.
