Tag: Rome

  • Nation & World

    A detailed narrative of Rome

    Harvard’s Joseph Connors took listeners on a virtual tour of two of Rome’s most iconic spaces, the Piazza Navona and the Piazza San Pietro, also known as St. Peter’s Square.

    5 minutes
  • Nation & World

    Roman history, trowel by trowel

    A Harvard undergrad learns by doing, digging through a Roman historical site during a summer excavation program.

    4 minutes
  • Nation & World

    A new face at the Vatican

    After Argentinian Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio was elected pope on Wednesday, Harvard analysts weighed in on what his selection, as the Vatican’s first Jesuit and first South American leader, could mean for the future of the Roman Catholic Church.

    7 minutes
  • Nation & World

    Italian honor

    Martin Karplus, Theodore William Richards Professor Emeritus at Harvard University and Professeur Conventionne at the Universite de Strasbourg, has been awarded the Antonio Feltrinelli International Prize in Chemistry by the Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei. The award was presented at the Academy in Rome on Nov. 11.

    1 minute
  • Nation & World

    The naked truth

    Archaeologist studies classical Greek art, including nudity, and what it reveals about the cultures interpreting it.

    5 minutes
  • Nation & World

    Ernst Badian, professor of history emeritus, 85

    Professor Ernst Badian, John Moors Cabot Professor of History Emeritus, died on Feb. 1.

    2 minutes
  • Nation & World

    Adrian Staehli named Loeb Professor of Classical Archaeology

    Archaeologist Adrian Staehli, whose work has challenged conventional interpretations of nudity and the human body in ancient Greek and Roman art, has been named James Loeb Professor of Classical Archaeology at Harvard University, effective next Jan. 1.

    2 minutes
  • Nation & World

    When gentrification occurs in City of the Seven Hills

    History and modernity collide in Monti, a neighborhood in Rome, and the local way of life is falling victim to the impact. Michael Herzfeld, professor of anthropology in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, explores the changing landscape of this ancient neighborhood in a new ethnography about this district within Italy’s capital city.

    4 minutes
  • Nation & World

    Scholars give us antiquity — the colorized version

    For artists of the Renaissance, the key to truth and beauty lay in the past. Renaissance artists assiduously studied the sculptures and monuments of Greece and Rome and emulated them in their own work. The inspiration they found in those ancient models has echoed down the centuries, influencing the appearance of Western art and architecture…

    6 minutes
  • Nation & World

    A denarius in hand is worth two in a book

    On exhibit at the Harvard University Art Museums are wide and deep collections that range from ancient Greece statuary to Ottoman textiles to Max Beckmann masterpieces to contemporary American graphic arts. As stunning and numerous as are the objects on display, significant portions of the museums’ collections are not always up on the walls but…

    1 minute