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Ancients and Moderns<br />

Anglo-American Conference <strong>of</strong> Historians<br />

5-6 July 2012, Senate House, London<br />

The Trustees <strong>of</strong> the British Museum. All right reserved.


Events<br />

A5 Headline<br />

Sub header 7pt<br />

Foreword<br />

Events<br />

A5 Headline<br />

Sub header 7pt<br />

Contents<br />

With the Olympics upon us in the UK it seems an appropriate moment to think<br />

more broadly about the ways in which the classical world resonates in our<br />

own times, and how successive epochs <strong>of</strong> modernity since the Renaissance<br />

have situated themselves in relation to the various ancient civilisations. From<br />

political theory to aesthetics, across the arts <strong>of</strong> war and <strong>of</strong> peace, to concepts<br />

<strong>of</strong> education, family, gender, race and slavery, it is hard to think <strong>of</strong> a facet <strong>of</strong><br />

the last millennium which has not been informed by the ancient past and<br />

through a range <strong>of</strong> media, including museums, painting, poetry, film and the<br />

built environment.<br />

For our 81st Anglo-American conference we are joining with the <strong>Institute</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />

Classical Studies to showcase the full extent <strong>of</strong> work on classical receptions,<br />

welcoming not only those scholars who work on Roman, Greek and Judaeo-<br />

Christian legacies and influences, but also historians <strong>of</strong> the ancient kingdoms<br />

and empires <strong>of</strong> Asia and pre-Colombian America.<br />

Conference programme 3<br />

Publishers’ fair 12<br />

Film session 12<br />

Policy forum 12<br />

Pimlott lecture 13<br />

Conference information 13<br />

Food: the 2013 Anglo-American conference 13<br />

How to get <strong>here</strong> 14<br />

Miles Taylor, Director <strong>of</strong> the IHR<br />

Accessibility and special needs 15<br />

Acknowledgements 15<br />

1 2


Thursday 5th July<br />

9.30am<br />

Registration<br />

10.00am<br />

Welcome<br />

Events<br />

A5 Headline<br />

Sub header 7pt<br />

Registration will be taking place in the Crush hall<br />

Welcome from Pr<strong>of</strong>essor John North (<strong>Institute</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />

Classical Studies)<br />

The use <strong>of</strong> classics in<br />

the modern military<br />

Bedford room, Senate<br />

House<br />

Events<br />

A5 Headline<br />

Sub header 7pt<br />

Chair: Brian Holden Reid (King’s College London)<br />

Paul Ramsey (Calgary, Canada) A response to Plato’s<br />

Republic: military education and the study <strong>of</strong> war in<br />

Britain<br />

Eugenia C Kiesling (United States Military Academy)<br />

Seeking a classical legacy: ancient historians and<br />

pr<strong>of</strong>essional military education in the United States<br />

Beveridge hall<br />

10.15am<br />

Plenary lecture<br />

Beveridge hall<br />

11.30am<br />

Parallel panels<br />

Body, place, planet:<br />

ancient and modern<br />

airs<br />

Gordon room, Senate<br />

House<br />

Chair: Hugh Bowden (King’s College London)<br />

Paul Cartledge (Cambridge) Olympic renascences: how<br />

democratic were the ancient Olympics?<br />

Start <strong>of</strong> morning panel sessions<br />

Chair: Jean-Baptiste Fressoz (Imperial College London)<br />

Brenda S Gardenour (Saint Louis College <strong>of</strong> Pharmacy)<br />

Ensouled flesh, embodied air: the persistence <strong>of</strong> the<br />

permeable body and the fear <strong>of</strong> foul air from ancient<br />

medicine to modernity<br />

Vladimir Janković (Manchester) Vitruvius at work:<br />

reflections on the history <strong>of</strong> wind in urban design<br />

Early modern<br />

humanism and the<br />

Greco-Roman tradition<br />

Torrington room, Senate<br />

House<br />

Andreas Stradis (Bristol) Possessed by our times: the<br />

place <strong>of</strong> Thucydides in US higher pr<strong>of</strong>essional military<br />

education from 1972<br />

Chair: Matt Phillpott (<strong>Institute</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Historical</strong> <strong>Research</strong>)<br />

DeAnn DeLuna (University College London) A classical<br />

world well lost: Fabian Philipps on a modern breed <strong>of</strong><br />

landlord in seventeenth-century England<br />

María Gabriela Huidobro (Universidad Andres Bello,<br />

Chile) Classical tradition in the epic poetry on Arauco’s<br />

war<br />

Marco Romani Mistretta (Scuola Normale Superiore,<br />

Pisa) T<strong>here</strong> is a pleasure in the pathless woods:<br />

tradition as challenge in Politian’s Silvae<br />

Evangelos Sakkas (Queen Mary, University <strong>of</strong> London)<br />

Harrington’s mixed constitution and neo-Roman<br />

populism<br />

Ancient tyranny<br />

and early modern<br />

governance<br />

Bloomsbury room, Senate<br />

House<br />

James R Fleming (Colby College, Maine) Carbon ‘die’<br />

oxide: spiritus lethalis and toxic climate pneuma<br />

Chair: Peter Lake (Vanderbilt)<br />

Darcy Kern (Georgetown) Tyrant or rex inutilis: debating<br />

definitions <strong>of</strong> kingship in Renaissance England<br />

Rei Kanemura (Cambridge) Debating tyrannicide in<br />

early Jacobean England<br />

Collectors <strong>of</strong><br />

antiquities and their<br />

interpretations <strong>of</strong> the<br />

past<br />

S261, Senate House<br />

Chair: Adriana Turpin (IESA/Warwick)<br />

Leon Lock (Louvain) Sculptors collections in the late<br />

seventeenth century: Flemish sculptors and Rome<br />

Adriano Aymonino (Buckingham) Aristocratic splendour:<br />

Hugh Smithson Percy (1712–1786) and Elizabeth<br />

Seymour Percy (1716–1776), 1st Duke and Duchess <strong>of</strong><br />

Northumberland. A case study in patronage, collecting<br />

and society in eighteenth-century Britain<br />

Jamie Gianoutsos (Johns Hopkins) A chaste Virginia:<br />

tyranny and the corruption <strong>of</strong> law in Jacobean England<br />

Chiara Teolato (Roma Tre) Souvenirs <strong>of</strong> the antique:<br />

collecting and display the Z<strong>of</strong>foli’s small bronzes in<br />

England (1760–1800)<br />

3 4


1.00pm<br />

Lunch<br />

Events<br />

A5 Headline<br />

Film screening<br />

Sub header 7pt<br />

Beveridge hall<br />

2.00pm<br />

Plenary lecture<br />

Beveridge hall<br />

3.00pm<br />

Parallel panels<br />

Reformation and early<br />

Christianity<br />

Torrington room, Senate<br />

House<br />

Revolution and empire<br />

Silvia Davoli (Wallace Collection) Dr Gottlieb Wilhelm<br />

Leitner (1840-1899) dispersed collection <strong>of</strong> Gandhara<br />

sculptures: Lahore, London, Florence and Berlin<br />

Lunch will be served in the Macmillan hall<br />

Muscles, marathons and Mario Bava: The Giant <strong>of</strong><br />

Marathon (1959)<br />

This session, presented by Dr Kim Shahabudin<br />

(Reading) will begin with an introductory talk on the<br />

film and the contexts <strong>of</strong> its production, followed by the<br />

screening <strong>of</strong> an extended clip.<br />

For further details, see page 11.<br />

Chair: Rosemary Sweet (Leicester)<br />

Mark Lewis (Stanford) Nationalising antiquity in China<br />

Start <strong>of</strong> afternoon panel sessions<br />

Chair: Peter Webster (<strong>Institute</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Historical</strong> <strong>Research</strong>)<br />

Matt Phillpott (<strong>Institute</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Historical</strong> <strong>Research</strong>) Ancient<br />

and early modern martyrs: a reformation reappraisal <strong>of</strong><br />

Britain’s Roman heritage as told by John Foxe<br />

Celestina Savonius-Wroth (Indiana, University <strong>of</strong><br />

Bloomington) Ancients and moderns in the apologetics<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Church <strong>of</strong> England, c.1660-c.1725<br />

Károly Goda (Münster) The world never lost: the<br />

antique heritage <strong>of</strong> urban processions in fourteenth- to<br />

sixteenth-century central Europe<br />

Chair: James Moore (British University in Egypt)<br />

Events<br />

A5 Headline<br />

Empires old and new<br />

Bedford Sub room, header Senate<br />

7pt<br />

House<br />

4.30pm<br />

Refreshments<br />

4.45pm<br />

Plenary lecture<br />

Beveridge hall<br />

6.00pm<br />

Pimlott lecture<br />

Beveridge hall<br />

7.00pm<br />

Reception<br />

Sanja Perovic (King’s College London) Ancient, primitive,<br />

revolutionary? The ‘Revolutionary Romanticism’ <strong>of</strong> Les<br />

barbus<br />

Phiroze Vasunia (Reading) Burke, empire, revolution<br />

Chair: Vivian Bickford-Smith (<strong>Institute</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Historical</strong><br />

<strong>Research</strong>)<br />

John Hilton (KwaZulu-Natal) Theodor Mommsen, British<br />

imperialism and the South African war <strong>of</strong> independence<br />

(1899-1902)<br />

Arthur Weststeijn (Royal Netherlands <strong>Institute</strong>, Rome)<br />

Late humanism and the ideological origins <strong>of</strong> Dutch<br />

colonialism<br />

Stephen Hodkinson (Nottingham) The Spartan and<br />

Soviet empires in 1980s U.S. intelligence analysis<br />

Richard Warren (Durham) Tacitean national heroes in<br />

nineteenth-century art<br />

Refreshments will be served in the Macmillan Hall<br />

Chair: Georgios Varouxakis (Queen Mary, University <strong>of</strong><br />

London)<br />

David Womersley (Oxford) Antiquity and modernity:<br />

Gibbon’s changing thoughts<br />

Chair: Claire Langhamer (Sussex)<br />

Jean Seaton (Westminster) The BBC and national life:<br />

the insider or outsider?<br />

For further details, see page 12.<br />

OUP will host a reception<br />

following the Pimlott lecture<br />

Bloomsbury room, Senate<br />

House<br />

Nicholas Cole (Oxford) The utility <strong>of</strong> classical models for<br />

American revolutionaries<br />

Macmillan and Crush halls<br />

5 6


Friday 6th July<br />

9.30am<br />

Registration<br />

Events<br />

A5 Headline<br />

10.00am<br />

Sub header 7pt<br />

Plenary lecture<br />

Beveridge hall<br />

11.00am<br />

Refreshments<br />

11.30am<br />

Parallel panels<br />

Homer reborn: epic<br />

ideals and cultural<br />

conflict in the<br />

eighteenth century<br />

Torrington Room, Senate<br />

House<br />

Registration will be taking place in the Crush hall<br />

Chair: Charles Burnett (Warburg <strong>Institute</strong>)<br />

Sanjay Subrahmanyam (UCLA) Ancients, moderns and<br />

muslims: reflections on Europe and India<br />

Refreshments will be served in the Macmillan hall<br />

Start <strong>of</strong> morning panel sessions<br />

Chair: Catherine Tite (Regina, Canada)<br />

Anastasia Bakogianni (Open University) Penelope on a<br />

pedestal: the epic heroine in eighteenth-century visual<br />

culture<br />

James Moore (British University in<br />

Egypt) Troy under siege, Homer under<br />

siege? Reflections on the search for<br />

Troy and the Homeric controversy in<br />

the late eighteenth century<br />

Classical philosophy<br />

and scholarship in the<br />

age <strong>of</strong> liberalism<br />

Events<br />

A5 Headline<br />

Gordon room, Senate<br />

House<br />

Religion, Sub revolution<br />

header 7pt<br />

and antiquity<br />

Bloomsbury room, Senate<br />

House<br />

Staging the classics<br />

Bedford room, Senate<br />

House<br />

Callum Barrell (Queen Mary, University <strong>of</strong> London) Past<br />

minds, present problems: historicism and Hellenism in<br />

mid-Victorian thought<br />

Antis Loizides (Cyprus) Radicalising Plato: James Mill’s<br />

reading <strong>of</strong> the Athenian philosopher<br />

Chair: James Lees (<strong>Institute</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Historical</strong> <strong>Research</strong>)<br />

Justin Biel (Minnesota) Superstition without idolatry:<br />

probable strictures from Richard Johnson on Sir William<br />

Jones’s ‘Gods <strong>of</strong> Greece, Italy, and India’<br />

Jean-Baptiste Goyard (Université de Versailles Saint<br />

Quentin) ‘Subjects <strong>of</strong> curiosity, [rather] than <strong>of</strong> use or<br />

information’? The Greek leagues in the debates on the<br />

US Constitution<br />

Matthijs Lok (Amsterdam) ‘Le véritable berceau des<br />

muses’ : antiquity in French counter-revolutionary<br />

thought (1786-1800)<br />

Chair: Peter Webster (<strong>Institute</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Historical</strong> <strong>Research</strong>)<br />

Daniel Snowman (<strong>Institute</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Historical</strong> <strong>Research</strong>)<br />

Re-dressing Salome and Elektra: how Covent Garden<br />

represented the ancient world to twentieth-century<br />

opera audiences<br />

Joseph Walsh (University College Dublin) Yeats, British<br />

censorship and the race to stage Oedipus Tyrannus<br />

Ian Macgregor Morris (Independent<br />

writer, Salzburg) Recreating the<br />

siege: Troy in eighteenth-century<br />

political culture<br />

1.00pm<br />

Lunch<br />

Jonathan Black (Kingston) ‘A Whisper from the<br />

Ancients’: ancient and modern in British inter-war<br />

public memorial sculpture<br />

Helen Roche (Cambridge) Xenophon and the Nazis<br />

Lunch will be served in the Macmillan hall<br />

7 8


Policy forum<br />

Events<br />

A5 Headline<br />

Sub header 7pt<br />

The Classics Now<br />

Compère: Miles Taylor (<strong>Institute</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Historical</strong> <strong>Research</strong>)<br />

Jeannie Cohen (Classics for all)<br />

Julie Wilkinson (Cambridge School Classics Project)<br />

Tanya Moodie (Royal Academy <strong>of</strong> Dramatic Art)<br />

Carol Cragoe (Independent architectural advisor)<br />

This forum is open to all and attendance is free.<br />

Events<br />

A5 Headline<br />

Sub header 7pt<br />

Classical landscapes<br />

and modern identities<br />

Dave Day (Manchester<br />

Metropolitan University)<br />

Romanticising the classical: the<br />

late nineteenth-century amateur<br />

athlete<br />

Mike O’Mahony (Bristol)<br />

Modernising Myron: the reception<br />

and reinvention <strong>of</strong> the discobolus<br />

in the era <strong>of</strong> the modern Olympic<br />

games<br />

Chair: Simon Trafford (<strong>Institute</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />

<strong>Historical</strong> <strong>Research</strong>)<br />

2.00pm<br />

Parallel panels<br />

Start <strong>of</strong> afternoon panel sessions<br />

Bedford room, Senate<br />

House<br />

David Marsh (Birkbeck) The last<br />

map <strong>of</strong> Troy? An exact delineation<br />

<strong>of</strong> London, 1658<br />

The classical world<br />

and the world <strong>of</strong><br />

‘Democraticall<br />

Gentlemen’:<br />

republicanism in<br />

England, 1640–1700<br />

Torrington room, Senate<br />

House<br />

Ancient medicine and<br />

physick<br />

Gordon room, Senate<br />

House<br />

Chair: Katherine Harloe (Reading)<br />

Rachel Foxley (Reading) Harrington on the forms <strong>of</strong><br />

popular government<br />

Markku Peltonen (Helsinki) Classics and the coming <strong>of</strong><br />

the English Civil War<br />

S-J Savonius-Wroth (Helsinki) The ancient ideal <strong>of</strong> civic<br />

friendship in seventeenth-century England<br />

Chair: Catharine Edwards (Birkbeck)<br />

Samantha Sandassie (Queen’s University, Belfast)<br />

Water drinking in seventeenth-century England<br />

Lisa Jarman (Exeter) Galen in early modern England:<br />

medicine and the role <strong>of</strong> ancient authority<br />

3.30pm<br />

Refreshments<br />

4.00pm<br />

Plenary lecture<br />

Beveridge hall<br />

David McOmish (Glasgow) A<br />

classical identity: the unifying<br />

power <strong>of</strong> the ancient world in a<br />

divided land heritage as told by<br />

John Foxe<br />

Lucy Pollard, Degenerate Greeks?<br />

Attitudes <strong>of</strong> seventeenth-century<br />

travellers to contemporary Greeks<br />

Refreshments will be served in the<br />

Macmillan Hall<br />

Chair: Catharine Edwards<br />

(Birkbeck)<br />

Constanze Güthenke (Princeton)<br />

Classical scholarship and the<br />

transatlantic<br />

9<br />

Modern olympisms and<br />

ideas <strong>of</strong> antiquity<br />

Bloomsbury room, Senate<br />

House<br />

Chair: Dion Georgiou (Queen Mary, University <strong>of</strong><br />

London)<br />

Martin Polley (Southampton) Between Zeus and<br />

Coubertin: Olympia and the British<br />

6.00pm<br />

Conference<br />

reception<br />

Macmillan and Crush halls<br />

To mark the close <strong>of</strong> the 81st<br />

Anglo-American Conference <strong>of</strong><br />

Historians, a wine and canapé<br />

reception will take place in the<br />

Macmillan and Crush halls.<br />

If you would like to attend, please<br />

RSVP to ancientsandmoderns@<br />

lon.ac.uk


Publishers’ fair<br />

Pimlott lecture<br />

The IHR will host its regular publishers’ fair which<br />

will take place alongside the conference in the Crush<br />

Hall <strong>of</strong> Senate House. The fair will feature major<br />

Events<br />

A5 Headline<br />

international publishers as well as specialist Classics<br />

publishers. Delegates will have an opportunity to buy<br />

the latest Sub header books 7pt at discounted rates, and to speak to<br />

the various publishers and editors in attendance.<br />

Film session<br />

Thursday 5th July, 1pm, Beveridge hall<br />

Muscles, marathons and Mario Bava: The Giant <strong>of</strong><br />

Marathon (1959)<br />

While Roman epics are among the most familiar film<br />

representations <strong>of</strong> history, ancient Greek history is<br />

less <strong>of</strong>ten seen. The Giant <strong>of</strong> Marathon takes as its<br />

subject the Persian Wars <strong>of</strong> the 5th century BCE and,<br />

for its inspiration, the legendary messenger Pheidippides<br />

and his feat <strong>of</strong> athletic endurance. However it<br />

also carries more modern messages for its target Italian<br />

audience.<br />

Thursday 5th July, 6pm, Beveridge hall<br />

Events<br />

A5 Headline<br />

In honour <strong>of</strong> the late Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Ben Pimlott, Twentieth Century British History,<br />

the Centre for Contemporary British History and Oxford Journals have<br />

established the annual Pimlott lecture series.<br />

Sub header 7pt<br />

The 2013 Pimlott lecture will be presented<br />

by Jean Seaton (Westminster) on the<br />

subject <strong>of</strong> ‘The BBC and national life: the<br />

insider or outsider?’<br />

The lecture will be followed by a wine reception, sponsored by Oxford<br />

University Press. If you would like to attend, please RSVP to<br />

IHR.Events@sas.ac.uk.<br />

Conference information<br />

Further information on registering for the conference can be found on our<br />

website: www.history.ac.uk/aach12. Attendees can collect their delegate<br />

packs and badges from the registration desks at the conference.<br />

If you have any queries, please contact the IHR Events Office at<br />

ancientsandmoderns@lon.ac.uk or on 020 7862 8756.<br />

The session, presented by Dr Kim Shahabudin<br />

(Reading) will begin with an introductory talk on the<br />

film and the contexts <strong>of</strong> its production, followed by<br />

the screening <strong>of</strong> an extended clip.<br />

Food in History: The 2013 Anglo-American<br />

Conference<br />

11<br />

Policy forum<br />

Friday 6th July, 1pm, Beveridge Hall<br />

A policy forum will be held on the subject <strong>of</strong> The<br />

Classics Now on Friday lunchtime. It will feature<br />

contributions from the Cambridge School Classics<br />

Project, RADA, Classics for all, and from an independent<br />

architectural advisor. The forum is open to all and<br />

attendance is free.<br />

Bloomsbury Publishing<br />

Join us in July 2013 for the 82nd Anglo-American Conference <strong>of</strong> Historians, as<br />

we serve up a two-day conference devoted to the history <strong>of</strong> food. We are what<br />

we eat, yet it has only been relatively recently that food has become a major<br />

subject <strong>of</strong> historical study. From famine to feast, from grain riots to TV cookery<br />

programmes, dieting to domesticity, food features in almost every aspect <strong>of</strong><br />

human societies since prehistoric times.<br />

Our conference seeks to catch the finest flavours <strong>of</strong> recent scholarship for your<br />

delectation. Please look out for the conference call for papers in the autumn. In<br />

the meantime, for any enquiries, please contact the IHR Events <strong>of</strong>fice at<br />

IHR.Events@sas.ac.uk.<br />

12


GOODGE PL<br />

ROW<br />

E<br />

S T R E E T<br />

S<br />

S T R E E T<br />

R STREET<br />

REET<br />

BOLSOVER STREET<br />

CARBURTON<br />

GT TITCHFIELD STREET<br />

Charles<br />

Bell House<br />

How Great Portland to get <strong>here</strong><br />

Sites <strong>of</strong> Interest<br />

Wolfson<br />

The conference will be taking Cafés/UCL Unions place at Senate House, London.<br />

<strong>Institute</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />

Orthopaedics<br />

CLIPSTONE ST<br />

OGLE STREET<br />

FOLEY STREET<br />

Wolfson<br />

Jules<br />

Thorn<br />

CLIPSTONE MEWS<br />

Street<br />

STREET<br />

NEW CAVENDISH STREET<br />

Events<br />

FITZROY<br />

A5 Headline<br />

Fitzroy<br />

CONWAY STREET<br />

STREET<br />

Sub header 7pt<br />

STREET<br />

CLEVELAND<br />

Courtauld<br />

Bland<br />

Sutton<br />

RIDING HOUSE STREET<br />

NASSAU ST<br />

MORTIMER<br />

FORD STREET<br />

BERNERS STREET<br />

STREET<br />

STREET<br />

NEWMAN<br />

Telecom<br />

Tower<br />

Windeyer<br />

<strong>Institute</strong><br />

TOTTENHAM<br />

W A R R E N S T R E E T<br />

Square<br />

Gardens<br />

SQUARE<br />

49<br />

Ramsay<br />

Hall<br />

99<br />

Astor<br />

College<br />

FITZROY<br />

M A P L E S T R E E T<br />

RATHBONE PL<br />

CHARLOTTE STREET<br />

HOWLAND STREET<br />

CHITTY ST<br />

STREET<br />

W H I T F I E L D S T R E E T<br />

W H I T F I E L D S T<br />

Warren Street<br />

G R A F T O N<br />

Goodge<br />

Street<br />

D R U M M O N D<br />

T O T T E N H A M C O U R T R O A D<br />

Brook<br />

House<br />

ALFRED PLACE<br />

Schafer<br />

House<br />

W A Y<br />

UNIVERSITY STREET<br />

H U N T L E Y S T R E E T<br />

CHENIES STREET<br />

G O W E R<br />

M A L E T S T R E E T<br />

BYNG<br />

PLACE<br />

ENDSLEIGH GDNS<br />

Faber<br />

<strong>Institute</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />

Brunel<br />

Building<br />

<strong>Institute</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />

English Studies<br />

Gallery<br />

Advanced<br />

SOAS<br />

Legal Studies<br />

Remax<br />

Central University<br />

London <strong>Institute</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />

House<br />

RUSSELL<br />

School Classical Studies<br />

Registry<br />

<strong>of</strong> London<br />

<strong>of</strong> Hygiene<br />

<strong>Institute</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />

<strong>Institute</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />

<strong>Historical</strong> <strong>Research</strong><br />

Commonwealth<br />

Studies<br />

SOAS<br />

Senate <strong>Institute</strong> <strong>of</strong> Germanic & Romance Studies<br />

Academic<br />

House <strong>Institute</strong> <strong>of</strong> Musical <strong>Research</strong><br />

Services<br />

<strong>Institute</strong> <strong>of</strong> Philosophy<br />

SOAS<br />

Russell<br />

BEDFORD<br />

Square<br />

Gardens<br />

STORE STREET<br />

S T R E E T<br />

Cruciform<br />

CHENIES MEWS<br />

STREET<br />

RIDGEMOUNT<br />

SQUARE<br />

PLACE<br />

NORTH GOWER STREET<br />

<strong>Institute</strong>s <strong>of</strong> the School <strong>of</strong> Advanced Study<br />

Student Accommodation<br />

Other University <strong>of</strong> London Prankerd Buildings<br />

Railway Stations<br />

Underground Stations<br />

One-Way Streets<br />

Rayne Building<br />

MORTIMER<br />

MARKET<br />

CENTRE<br />

CAPPER STREET<br />

TORRINGTON<br />

Hospital (NHS)<br />

Euston<br />

Square<br />

Bedford<br />

Square<br />

Gardens<br />

Rockefeller<br />

BEDFORD AVE<br />

Arthur<br />

Tattersall<br />

House<br />

S T R E E T<br />

EUSTON STREET<br />

STEPHENSON WAY<br />

GOWER PLACE<br />

Waterstone's<br />

Bookshop<br />

ULU<br />

(University <strong>of</strong><br />

London Union)<br />

GORDON GORDON STREET<br />

M E L T O N S T R E E T<br />

E U S T O N R O A D<br />

Slade<br />

College<br />

Hall<br />

BLOOMSBURY STREET<br />

222<br />

UCL<br />

MALET PLACE<br />

The Wellcome<br />

Trust<br />

GOWER CT<br />

Church<br />

<strong>of</strong> Christ<br />

the King<br />

TORRINGTON SQ<br />

Birkbeck<br />

College<br />

TAVITON STREET<br />

SQUARE<br />

ENDSLEIGH STREET<br />

GORDON SQ ENDSLEIGH PL TAVISTOCK SQ<br />

The Rubin Building<br />

31<br />

<strong>Institute</strong> for the<br />

Study <strong>of</strong> the Americas<br />

Gordon<br />

Square<br />

Tavistock<br />

Gardens<br />

Square<br />

Gardens<br />

SOAS<br />

MONTAGUE PLACE<br />

British<br />

Museum<br />

Slade<br />

<strong>Research</strong><br />

Centre<br />

Connaught<br />

Hall<br />

GORDON SQ<br />

WOBURN<br />

Drayton<br />

House<br />

Warburg <strong>Institute</strong><br />

SQUARE<br />

EUSTON<br />

<strong>Institute</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />

Education<br />

MONTAGUE STREET<br />

EUSTON SQUARE<br />

TAVISTOCK<br />

BEDFORD WAY<br />

Bentham<br />

House<br />

Gideon<br />

Schreier<br />

House<br />

TAVISTOCK SQ<br />

26 Bedford<br />

Way<br />

SQUARE<br />

SOAS<br />

BEDFORD PL<br />

Hotel<br />

EVERSHOLT ST<br />

UPPER WOBURN PLACE<br />

SQUARE<br />

WOBURN PLACE<br />

SOUTHAMPTON ROW<br />

DUKES ROAD<br />

TAVISTOCK PL<br />

CORAM ST<br />

BERNARD ST<br />

Russell<br />

Square<br />

BURTON STREET<br />

GUILFORD ST<br />

Alexandra<br />

House<br />

HERBRAND STREET<br />

QUEEN<br />

0 metres 200<br />

N<br />

FLAXMAN TERR<br />

BURTON<br />

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SQUARE<br />

C A R T W R I G H T<br />

C H A L T O N S T R E E T<br />

M A R C H M O N T S T R E E T<br />

23<br />

<strong>Institute</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />

Neurology<br />

Rockefeller<br />

Medical<br />

Library<br />

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Brunswick<br />

Shopping<br />

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O S S U L S T O N S T R E E T<br />

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Canterbury<br />

Hall<br />

Commonwealth<br />

Hall<br />

LEIGH STREET<br />

KENTON KENTON<br />

STREET STREET<br />

MARBLEDON<br />

PLACE<br />

HANDEL<br />

STREET<br />

GREN ST<br />

John<br />

Dodgson<br />

House<br />

H U N T E R S T R E E T<br />

Great Ormond Street<br />

Hospital for Children<br />

GT ORMOND STREET<br />

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Acknowledgements<br />

Royal National<br />

The IHR would like to thank Throat, the Nose John & Cohen Foundation for their support in<br />

<strong>Institute</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />

Ear Hospital<br />

Laryngology<br />

holding this year’s conference. and Otology We would also like to thank Adam Matthew<br />

330<br />

Centre for<br />

Auditory <strong>Research</strong><br />

Digital for funding the postgraduate Ear bursaries made available this year.<br />

<strong>Institute</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />

Neurology 1<br />

Chandler<br />

House<br />

2<br />

Human<br />

Communication<br />

Science<br />

International<br />

Hall<br />

M I D L A N D<br />

R O A D<br />

E U S T O N R O A D<br />

LANS TER<br />

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School <strong>of</strong><br />

Pharmacy<br />

CONDUIT ST<br />

WAKEFIELD STREET<br />

STREET<br />

C o r a m ’ s<br />

F i e l d s<br />

<strong>Institute</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />

Child Health<br />

30<br />

LAM BS<br />

T O N B R I D G E S TREET<br />

R O A D<br />

P A N C R A S<br />

C R O M E R S T R E E T<br />

R E G E N T<br />

S Q U A R E<br />

A R G Y L<br />

HENRIETTA<br />

MEWS<br />

St.<br />

George's Gardens<br />

MECK<br />

G U I L F O R D<br />

DOUGHTY<br />

DOUGHTY<br />

MILLMAN STREET<br />

PL<br />

MEWS<br />

S T C H A D ' S S T R E E T<br />

S T R E E T<br />

H A R R I S O N S T R E E T<br />

HEATHCOTE STREET<br />

MECKLENBURGH<br />

Wolfson<br />

Centre<br />

Goodenough<br />

Club<br />

SQUARE<br />

DOUGHTY<br />

STREET<br />

B I R K E N H E A D<br />

SIDMOUTH STREET<br />

Egypt<br />

Exploration<br />

Society<br />

S T R E E T<br />

KING'S<br />

CROSS<br />

Langton<br />

Close<br />

CALEDONIAN ST<br />

Y O R K W A Y<br />

Eastman<br />

Dental<br />

256<br />

<strong>Institute</strong><br />

Eastman<br />

Dental<br />

Hospital<br />

G R A Y ' S I N N R O A D<br />

International<br />

Centre for<br />

Excellence<br />

in Dentistry<br />

S W I N T O N S T R E E T<br />

A C T O N S T R E E T<br />

FREDERICK STREET<br />

LANGTON<br />

CLOSE<br />

W R E N S T R E E T<br />

WICKLOW<br />

<strong>Institute</strong><br />

C U B I T T<br />

S T R E E T<br />

Frances<br />

Gardner<br />

House<br />

CALTHORPE STREET<br />

STREET<br />

B A L F E S T R E E T<br />

KING’S CROSS<br />

WHARFDALE ROAD<br />

C A L E D O N I A N R O A D<br />

ROAD<br />

PENTONVILLE ROAD<br />

KING’S<br />

BRITANNIA ST<br />

FARRINGDON RD<br />

K I L L I C K S T R E E T<br />

ROAD<br />

CROSS<br />

G R E A<br />

W H A R T O N S T R E E T<br />

L L O Y D<br />

C A L S H O T S T R E E T<br />

B A K E R<br />

M A R G E R Y S T R E E T<br />

P E N T O N R<br />

I S E<br />

P E R C Y S T R E E T<br />

S T R E E T<br />

James<br />

Lighthill<br />

House<br />

R O S E B E R Y A V E N U E<br />

Senate House<br />

RUSSELL STREET<br />

LT. RUSSELL<br />

STREET<br />

B L O O M S B U R Y W A Y<br />

For more information on how to find Senate House, please visit the IHR<br />

website at www.history.ac.uk/contact.<br />

17<br />

GREAT<br />

NEW OXFORD ST<br />

MUS STREET<br />

BURY PLACE<br />

SQUARE<br />

BLOOMSBURY<br />

BLOO<br />

PL<br />

SOUTHAMPTON<br />

OLD GLOUC ST<br />

BOSWELL STREET<br />

T H E O B A<br />

NORTH ST<br />

L D<br />

' S<br />

HARPUR ST<br />

R O A D<br />

GTJAME'SST<br />

NORTHINGTON STREET<br />

T H E O B A L D ' S<br />

R O A D<br />

13


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T: +44 (0)207 862 8756<br />

E: ancientsandmoderns@lon.ac.uk<br />

Copyright: Page 7: ‘Books on Table’, ©shutterstock.com/Yellowj; ‘Letter and a quill’ , ©shutterstock.com/Laborant; ‘Pre-christian latin writing<br />

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