Next Conference
Hosted by Midwest Ancient Warfare Network (MAWN)
June 22-24, 2023
Hybrid online, Sioux Falls
Check back soon for a call for papers.
For more information contact
IAWC 22 Panels
Thursday, June 23
Panel: Arms and tactics
- Stabbing with sicae and sibynae: Arms, armour and tactics of Illyrian hoplites Florian Feil, Ph.D. student, University of Trier
- The Sparabara: Reassessing Achaemenid Persian Infantry Equipment and Tactics Jeffrey Rop, University of Minnesota Duluth
Panel: Herodotus and Xenophon
- "Attitudes towards Killing in War in Xenophon’s Writings“ Lennart Gilhaus, University of Bonn
- Secretive Spartans: Herodotus’ views towards secret communication in Persia and Sparta and its effect on post-Herodotean sources Martine Diepenbroek, Research Associate at the University of Johannesburg.
Panel: Changing views of war
- Warriors who neither know victory nor defeat from Messapia: the reliefs on the base from Ugento Carlo Lualdi, Ph.D. candidate, Warwick University currently in annual exchange at La Sapienza University, Rome.
- One Final Siege: The Trojan War as the Expedition’s Capstone Ronald Blankenborg, Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen, the Netherlands Violence on Archaic and Classical Crete: A New Perspective through Digital Humanities Jesse Obert, Ph.D. candidate, University of California, Berkeley
Panel: Women in war
- Feminine Valor: The Empress’s virtues in Roman Propaganda Julia Wetzel, Ph.D. student, University of North Texas
- "Dying for ‘doing’: Mythical Athenian heroines in times of war." Ioannis Mitsios, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens Women’s Agency in Hellenistic Warfare: Queens on the Battlefield. Hatin Boumehache Erjali, PhD Candidate and Predoctoral Fellow, University of the Basque Country.
Panel: Aspects of war
- Hans Delbrück and the Study of Ancient Warfare Roel Konijnendijk, University of Edinburgh
- Traumatic Brain Injury in Roman War Brendan McCarthy, Utah Valley University
- Great Power Rivalry in Sixth Century BCE China John F. Sullivan, University of Hawaii
Panel: Late Rome
- The Mechanics of Battle in the Sixth-Century (CE) Roman Empire Conor Whateley, University of Winnipeg
- Chaotic Endeavors: Gallienus’ Efforts in Saving Rome in the Crisis of the Third Century Avery Sage, South Dakota State University
- Iranian Historical Traditions and the Campaigns of Gordian III and Galerius Byron Waldron, University of Sydney
Friday, June 24
Panel: Classical reception
- The Appropriation of women in Classical Literature in support of the Great War by the Girls’ Own paper Phyllis Brighouse, University of Liverpool
- From Julius Caesar to the Bletchley Park: The Journey of Caesar Cipher from Republican Rome to the Machine Age Amanthee Pussepitiya, University of Peradeniya
- When East Meets West: European Empires’ Recruitment of Muslim Fighters from Ancient to Modern Times Otman Bychou, Sultan Moulay Slimane University, Morocco
Panel: Christian War
- Ancient warfare and sacrorum canonum contemptores Despina Iosif, Hellenic Open University and College
- Year in Athens Re-evaluating Tertullian’s Attitudes towards Warfare and Soldiering Joshua Littell, Ph.D. student, University of Exeter
Panel: Hannibal and the Punic Wars
- Illa uero pars calliditatis egregia et ab omni reprehensione procul remota... Hannibal, the Carthaginians and the stratagems in Valerius Maximus Gabriele Brusa, University of Pavia, PhD candidate
- Questioning the “decisive battle” model: the case of the Metaurus Fabrizio Biglino, Universitá degli Studi di
- Torino The Seeds of Sedition: Hannibal’s Italian Strategy and the Social War Charles W. Oughton, Brigham Young University
Panel: Sicily and Carthage
- Deterrence and Self-representation: the Roman Headquarters at Syracuse Borja Vertedor Ballesteros, PhD Candidate, University of the Balearic Islands
- Xanthippos’ arrival in Carthage as an underappreciated catalyst in the First Punic War Dan Powers, University of Nebraska-Omaha
Panel: Small wars and tactics
- Defeating the ‘Other Romans of Central Italy’: Explaining Roman Strategic Success in the Samnite Wars Henry Moore, Ph.D. candidate, the Centre for War Studies at the University of Hull.
- “Fighting Skirmishes, Small Wars and Irregular engagements in Ptolemaic Egypt.” Paul Johstono, U.S. Air Force's Air Command and Staff College in Montgomery, Alabama.
Panel: Ships, logistics and organization
- The Impact of the Tacfarinian Revolt Beyond Africa Jared Kreiner, Christopher Newport University The battle of Panium: A reassessment Graham Wrightson, South Dakota State University.
- The classification of Classical and Hellenistic ships of the Mediterranean Bryant Ahrenberg, Ph.D. Candidate, University of Auckland.
Saturday, June 25
Panel: War in literature
- Scripturus bella regum cum gentibus adversis (HF I Praef.): Wars, battles and violence in the first book of Historia Francorum. Davide Vago, Università degli Studi di.
- Genova War at night: Valerius Flaccus’ imitative technique in the nyktomachy described at 3.14-272 Lorenzo Vespoli, Université de Genève, PhD Candidate.
- From battle to text: The word Actium in Latin literature as resource for identity and geographic monumentality Nelson Henrique da Silva Ferreira, Centre of Classical and Humanistic Studies of University of Coimbra.
Panel: Weapons and ships
- Homer’s Boar Tusk Helmets Samuel Azzopardi, University of Malta.
- A Roman Icon: Depicting an Accurate Image of the Scutum Avery Sage, South Dakota State University Get to the Point: What Questions Should We Ask About a Spear? Sean Manning, Independent Scholar.
Panel: Roman military policy
- Punishing Deserters and Traitors in Roman Warfare 700 BC – AD 120 Gaius Stern, University of California, Berkeley.
- The Suspension of the War-Tax (Tributum): A Short-Sighted Decision? François Gauthier, University of British Columbia.
- The Roman Triumph and Collective Military Identity during the Republic. Jon Manley, Ph.D. candidate, Indiana University, Bloomington.