Roman Britain
Guest Lectures
•
1h 3m
When the Romans invaded Britain in 55 and again in 54 BC, Caesar and his men found a land of unfriendly Britons and unwelcoming weather. His incursions led to war, exchange, and trade. By 43 AD Claudius received the surrender of British tribes, and large areas of the country would become part of the Roman Empire.
This video lecture will examine the reasons for the Roman interest in this land of mists, and explore the cultural changes that took place in Britain under Roman occupation.
I like the first (and only) slide here for the image, but if you don’t like it, there is also this modern Hadrian in front of the bit of Roman wall left on Tower Hill in London.
Dr. Meghan Callahan has lived and worked in London since 2006. Like Rocky, she earned her Master’s degree in Art History from Syracuse University as a Florence Fellow. She has a Ph.D. in Art History from Rutgers University. Meghan is the Assistant Director for Teaching and Learning at Syracuse University London, where she has taught art history and history classes on Italian Art in London and the UK; Women and Art: London and UK; and Underground London.
She worked on the reinstallation of the Medieval and Renaissance Galleries at the Victoria and Albert Museum, and then with the sculpture dealer Patricia Wengraf. Meghan has published various articles and essays on the architectural patronage of the 16th-century mystic nun Sister Domenica da Paradiso, miraculous paintings in Renaissance Florence, and Italian Renaissance and Baroque sculpture.
Up Next in Guest Lectures
-
A Thin Line Between Tragedy and Comed...
Just as there can be a thin line between love and hate, so too can several of Shakespeare’s best-known plays dance on the border between comedy and tragedy, thanks to the lively contrasts and dynamic energies of their Italian style. The avant-garde Italian drama of Shakespeare’s time also enabled...
-
Michelangelo: The Early Years
Michelangelo (1475-1564) has an unusual training for an artist of his time insofar as his first training was with a humanist scholar (his father had grand plans for him), followed by apprenticeship in a painting workshop, followed by participation in the Medici sculpture garden where he met sculp...
-
The Art of the Deals: Artists, Banker...
The Renaissance in Florence was the product of a perfect storm of wealthy bankers, talented artists, ingenious financial instruments, and a new attitude toward money. This new attitude took its cues not from age-old religious injunctions against usury but instead from the even more ancient ideas ...