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The Ph.D. program in Ancient History is no longer admitting students. The program is operated and supervised by a Director of Graduate Studies (currently Professor Graham Oliver (Classics and History) in consultation with an Executive Committee comprised of other Brown faculty in Ancient History, currently Professors John Bodel and Graham Oliver (Classics and History), Ken Sacks (History and Classics), Johanna Hanink and Adele Scafuro (Classics), and Associate Professors Amy Russell (Classics and History) and Jonathan Conant (History and Classics).

Tenured faculty contributing to the program, in addition to the ancient historians mentioned previously, are drawn from the departments of Classics: History: Amy Remensnyder (European Middle Ages); Archaeology: Peter van Dommelen (Western Mediterranean, Phoenician-Punic archaeology); Felipe Rojas (Greek and Roman Anatolia); Egyptology and Assyriology: Laurel Bestock (Egyptology); Matthew Rutz (social and political history of Late Bronze Age Syria; Babylonian/Assyrian documents), and John Steele (Exact Sciences, Mesopotamia); Religious Studies: Michael Satlow (Hellenistic and Roman Judaism), Susan Harvey (early Christianity, Syriac), and Nancy Khalek (early Islam). Untenured faculty who contribute to the program include, in History: Brian Lander (Qin and Han China, environmental history).

Students will select courses that develop areas of interest that suit their specific needs. Apart from courses in the ancient languages and histories, students will take the graduate colloquium on historical methodologies in the Department of History (typically in semester three), and, in the Department of Classics, the proseminar on methodologies and ancillary disciplines (typically semester one). Students in the program are expected to demonstrate, through successful completion of an appropriate course or a written exam, competence in (a) one ancillary field (normally one of the following: epigraphy, archeology, numismatics, papyrology, or art history) and (b) two literature/author Classics courses (including one poetry or literature survey course).

Students are expected to take the preliminary exam by the end of the sixth semester.   This exam will consist of a three-hour oral examination in two major fields:  Greek history (from the archaic to the end of the Hellenistic period) and Roman history (from the beginning to Justinian).  There will be one examiner in each field and one presider; the other members of the Ancient History faculty are invited to attend.

After passing the preliminary exam, students will choose a dissertation topic in ancient history. The dissertation committee will consist of three faculty who are best able to advise the student on the chosen topic; at least two of these must be among the program’s contributing faculty. No later than three months after passing the Preliminary Exam, students will submit a written dissertation prospectus, a substantial essay setting forth the problematique, a plan of research, and bibliography. This will be assessed by two Faculty members. 

Students who have graduated from the program have found employment in both academic and non-academic positions:

Kelly Nguyen (2021) IDEAL Provostial Fellow and Lecturer in Classics, Stanford University

Joseph Kurz (2017) Teacher, Francis Parker School, San Diego

Dominic Machado (2017)  Assistant Professor of Classics, College of the Holy Cross

Bryan Brinkmann (2016)  Lecturer, Modern and Classical Languages, Missouri State University

David Yates (2010) Associate Professor of Classical Studies, Millsaps College