- Epigraphic poetry, Greek and Latin prosody and metrics, Greek Epigraphy, Classical philology, Greek Literature, Greek and Roman Epigraphy, and 15 moreClassics, Epigraphy, Latin Epigraphy, Digital epigraphy, Greek and Roman Imperial Literature, Ancient Education, Digital Humanities, Greek and Roman Art and Architecture, Ancient History, Hellenistic poetry, Bithynia, Hellenistic epigram, Mosaics, Greek Epigram, and Early Medieval Archaeologyedit
- Ph.D. student in Classical Studies and Archaeology – University of Pisa (38th cycle) My research project focuses on the literary forms and metrics of Greek metrical inscriptions... morePh.D. student in Classical Studies and Archaeology – University of Pisa (38th cycle)
My research project focuses on the literary forms and metrics of Greek metrical inscriptions from the Imperial age (1st-3rd century AD).
2020-2022 MA in Classics – University of Pisa / Scuola Normale Superiore
2017-2020 BA in Classics – University of Bolognaedit - Gianfranco Agosti (University of Pisa), Enrico Magnelli (University of Florence)edit
Edition, translation, and commentary of the epitaphs for the Bithynian officer Menas fallen in battle (Steinepigramme 09/05/16 = Peek, GVI 1965).
Research Interests:
Voiceless writing? Epigrams, performance and oral poetry, Università di Bologna – Alma Mater Studiorum, FICLIT, 30th-31st May 2024.
Research Interests:
Signa manent. Il segno tra testo, layout e significato, Napoli, 9-10 novembre 2023
Research Interests:
New Voices on Anatolia, 19–20th September, 2023. Faculty of Classics, University of Oxford.
Convegno internazionale 'Ut ipse dixit. Tradizione indiretta, cover-text e citazione di testi'. Parma, 3-4 aprile 2023
A rich production of epigraphic poetry written in Greek flourished in the territories of the Greco-Roman world during the Imperial age (late first century BC - early fourth century AD). A corpus of about two thousand Greek metrical... more
A rich production of epigraphic poetry written in Greek flourished in the territories of the Greco-Roman world during the Imperial age (late first century BC - early fourth century AD). A corpus of about two thousand Greek metrical inscriptions exhibits significant diversity in the geographical, socio-historical, archaeological contexts, and the literary aspects.
There is currently no repository that allows for easy collection of data on the inscriptions from the corpus. The inscriptions are indeed scattered across various editions, which are often incomplete due to the discovery of new inscriptions following publication.
The aim of the database is to gather the Greek metrical inscriptions from the Imperial Age into a single collection, providing the following data: references to the editions and images, type of inscription, geographic provenance, dating, support, length of the text, meter, layout (in relation to the metrical structure), clients and recipients, author (when known).
It will be possible to expand the corpus at any time, whether new inscriptions are discovered or new editions of already known inscriptions are published. By including external links, a network of digital resources will be created.
As a future perspective, it would be desirable to expand the database to include the Greek metrical inscriptions from the Archaic and Classical Period, Hellenistic Period and Late Antiquity.
Persistent identifier of the database: https://arpi.unipi.it/handle/11568/1232688
There is currently no repository that allows for easy collection of data on the inscriptions from the corpus. The inscriptions are indeed scattered across various editions, which are often incomplete due to the discovery of new inscriptions following publication.
The aim of the database is to gather the Greek metrical inscriptions from the Imperial Age into a single collection, providing the following data: references to the editions and images, type of inscription, geographic provenance, dating, support, length of the text, meter, layout (in relation to the metrical structure), clients and recipients, author (when known).
It will be possible to expand the corpus at any time, whether new inscriptions are discovered or new editions of already known inscriptions are published. By including external links, a network of digital resources will be created.
As a future perspective, it would be desirable to expand the database to include the Greek metrical inscriptions from the Archaic and Classical Period, Hellenistic Period and Late Antiquity.
Persistent identifier of the database: https://arpi.unipi.it/handle/11568/1232688