The Dining Gaul (and His Phrygian Dishes)

Activity Type: 
Lecture
Presenter: 
Shannon Stewart
Date: 
Wednesday, March 18, 2015 - 16:30
Event Status: 
As Scheduled
Location: 
1500 Posvar Hall

University of Pittsburgh Department of Classics and the Pittsburgh Chapter of the Archaeological Institute of America:
“The Dining Gaul (and His Phrygian Dishes)"

Shannon Stewart
AIA Lecturer

Although Ancient authors had little interest in recording the details of daily life of the Gauls, excavation and research has generated a large corpus of relevant data especially from Hellenistic houses (333-189 BCE) at Gordion, an archaeological site in central Turkey. When considered together, the evidence reveals much about food in its original quotidian context and even more about the residents themselves: what they ate and drank, how it was prepared and served, and how and why these culinary customs changed over time.

Shannon Stewart has excavated in Israel, Cyprus, Turkey and Albania. Her areas of specialization are Hellenistic pottery, the archaeology of domestic life, "Hellenization," and Anatolia in the First Millenium BCE.

Wednesday, March 18, 2015
4:30 p.m.
1500 Wesley W. Posvar Hall
Free to the public

UCIS Unit: 
European Studies Center