Conference

Ancient Persia and the West

8:30 am–6:30 pm 306 Royce Hall
Ancient Persia and the West

About the Event

The Pourdavoud Center for the Study of the Iranian World and the Getty Research Institute are co-organizing a one-day symposium to be held on April 25, 2018 at the Pourdavoud Center, UCLA. Presenters will include invited speakers and the current Getty Villa Scholars, whose projects focus on the encounters of ancient Iran with the classical world.

The Getty Scholars Program at the Villa for the 2017–18 and the 2018–19 years address the political, intellectual, religious, and artistic relations between Persia, Greece, and Rome from the ninth century BC to AD 651. The Greeks viewed the Persian Empire, which reached from the boarders of Greece to India, as a vastly wealthy and powerful rival and often as an existential threat. When the Macedonian king Alexander the Great finally defeated the Persians in 331 BC, Greek culture spread throughout the Near East, but native dynasties—first the Parthian (247 BC—AD 224) and then the Sasanian (AD 224—651)—soon reestablished themselves. The rise of the Roman Empire as a world power quickly brought it, too, into conflict with Persia, despite the common trade that flowed through their territories.

Image: Bust of Dionysos (Seleucid Empire/Bactrian Kingdom, Third to mid-Second Century BCE). Arts of the Hellenized East (2015)

Event Videos

Achaemenid Anatolia and the Creation of Empire

Elspeth Dusinberre, University of Colorado

East of the Euphrates: The Contribution of Sasanian History to Theorizing Late Antiquity

Albert de Jong, University of Leiden

Ex Oriente Lux? A Eurasian Perspective on the Formation of the Roman Empire

Miguel John Versluys, Leiden University

Fearless Ērānšahr: Sasanian Coinage in Context of Roman Relations

Touraj Daryaee, University of California, Irvine

Fish Out of Water: Greek Deportees, Persian Empires, and the Classical Mediterranean

Jake Nabel, Pennsylvania State University

Lost Hellenistic Sculptures ‘Rediscovered’ in Mesopotamia and Iran

Vito Messina, University of Torino

The Eye of the King Comes to Athens: Persia in the Greek Imagination

Daniel Beckman, Princeton University

The Persianization of Greek Myth

Margaret Miller, University of Sydney

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Conference

Humanities