The Pottery Production of Ephesos: Looking at distribution maps and Quantification

Ephesos has been claimed as one of the most important pottery production centres in Hellenistic and Roman times in the Eastern Mediterranean. But is this assumption really based on the archaeological record or not much more on wishful thinking of archaeologists? Going through typical Ephesian wares and looking at quantity and distribution the myth of an export oriented ceramic industry will be re-examined and the concept of a world connected by pots discussed.

Sabine Ladstätter studied Classical Archaeology, Prehistory, Protohistory and Ancient History at the Universities of Graz and Vienna, culminating in a Master's degree (University of Graz) in 1992 and a Doctoral degree at the University of Vienna in 1997. Between 1997-2007 she held the position of Research Assistant at the Institute for the Cultural History of Antiquity at the Austrian Academy of Sciences. After her Habilitation at the University of Vienna in 2007 she moved to the Austrian Institute of Archaeology, the directorship of which she assumed in 2009. At the same time, the directorship of the excavations at Ephesos was assigned to her. Awards for Scientist of the Year in 2011 in Austria, and for the best popular scientific book in Austria in 2014, are proof of her engagement in the areas of scientific communication and public outreach. She is a member of the German Archaeological Institute and of the Archaeological Institute of America, as well as numerous national and international scientific and editorial boards, and is a referee for leading research promotion institutions. Visiting professorships at the Ecole Normale Superieur de Paris (2016) and Stanford University (2019) underscore her engagement in the fields of education and teaching, also attested by her supervision of academic degrees at a variety of European universities.

Date
Thu February 14th 2019, 5:00 - 7:00pm
Location
Archaeology Center
Event Sponsor
Archaeology Center
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