Graduate Supervisor

Faculty of Arts and Science

Greek and Roman religions; mystery cults; Roman associations (collegia); Romanization in the Western Provinces; Christian origins.

Faculty of Arts and Science

D130 Macintosh-Corry Hall

Late Antiquity, Syriac, Papyrology, Photogrammetry, and GIS.

Faculty of Arts and Science

501 Watson Hall

Cultural interactions and discourses of ethnicity and indigeneity in ancient Greece, Anatolia and the Near East; slavery in the Greco-Roman world and the Near East; calendars, festivals, divination, and other aspects of religion in ancient Greece, Anatolia and the Near East; Greek epigraphy; digital humanities (especially enhancing decipherment and text encoding).

Faculty of Arts and Science

502 Watson Hall

Urbanization and state formation; Greek colonies; Etruscans; pre-Roman cultures of South Italy; ancient imperialism; multiculturalism in the Roman empire; early and republican Rome.

Faculty of Arts and Science

Late Antiquity and Middle & Late Byzantine history.

Faculty of Arts and Science

513 Watson Hall

Greek literature, comparative literature, and literary criticism.

Faculty of Arts and Science

514 Watson Hall

Roman history, Early Imperial Senators, Roman Gaul, Latin Epigraphy

Faculty of Arts and Science

503 Watson Hall

Ancient science and epistemology; Greek and Roman philosophy; astronomy, astrology, mathematics, and medicine; 'scientization' of race and gender.

Faculty of Arts and Science

512 Watson Hall

Roman archaeology, Nabataean culture, the Roman Near East, cultural relations between Roman soldiers and indigenous peoples, the religious practices of Roman soldiers, ancient bath houses and bathing technology, ceramic building materials, petroglyphs and graffiti, the history of archaeology, the history of Queen's Classics Department.

Faculty of Arts and Science

509 Watson Hall

Magna Graecia, Greek archaeology, ancient bronzes, classical tradition, field archaeology, ancient polychromy, Numismatics, social status of artisans and artists, inter-ethnic relationships and guest-friendship through the medium of art.