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The Department of Classics is proud of its long and honorable tradition as
one of the four original departments created at the foundation of
the University in
1847. The first building of the University, Old Capitol,
reflects in its design the importance Iowans have always attached to the intellectual
and artistic inheritance from the cultures of ancient Greece and Rome. This is where the first Classics courses were taught. Two classicists, Amos Noyes Currier (1898-1899) and Hunter Rawlings
III (1988-1995), have served as University presidents.
The faculty
publish and teach in areas
spanning the ancient Mediterranean, from the Bronze Age
through late antiquity, and on to the reception of the Classical
tradition in western culture. The Department also sponsors an excavation,
in Gangivecchio, Sicily. We maintain close interdisciplinary connections to the departments of Anthropology, Art,
History, Communication Studies, Comparative Literature, History, Philosophy,
Religious Studies, Rhetoric, the Translation Workshop, and the Project in the
Rhetoric of Inquiry (POROI). The University of Iowa Libraries' holdings in Classics are among the most extensive in the United States. |