![]() for Cyzicus): some recorded figures look too large (e.g. for Cnidus), but the latter are not always reliable (e.g. Piraeus) or statements by geographers (e.g. For some we have clear epigraphic evidence (e.g. Evidence of numbers is clearly important. David Blackman (University of Oxford): “Some questions on military harbours”Ībstract: Shipsheds are a diagnostic feature of military harbours. Vincent Gabrielsen (SAXO Institute, Copenhagen University): “Crewing ancient Greek fleets: Manpower demand and institutional innovation”ġ6:15h. Dorothea Rohde (Universität Bielefeld): “The trierarchy in Athens in the 4th century BC: What motivated the Athenian liturgists to spend large sums on the fleet?”ġ7:15h. Fernando Echeverría (Universidad Complutense de Madrid): “Managing warships and fleets in the Homeric world”ġ6:45h. Chiara Maria Mauro (Universidad Complutense de Madrid): “Greek fleets in transition: Changes in shipbuilding between the 8th and the 5th centuries BC”ġ6:15h. ![]() Pascal Olejniczak (independent researcher) and Emmanuel Nantet (University of Haifa): “Auxiliary ships in Greek and Roman fleets”ġ7:15h. Mills McArthur (Southern Adventist University): “Military campaigns and the location of shipbuilding in Antiquity”ġ6:45h. * Times: GMT-4 (New York), GMT+1 (London), GMT+2 (Madrid), GMT+3 (Tel Aviv)Īccess to the sessions will be opened 15 minutes before the startġ6:15h. Managing Warships and Fleets in Ancient Greece ![]()
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