Amherst Folger Humanities Fellow Campbell Hannan reflects on the interdisciplinary process of developing educational resources on Dumbarton Oaks and the United Nations
Samet Budak traces scholarly networks and intellectual traditions of Byzantine, Ottoman, and Arab philosophers
Lihong Liu traces the history and art historiographical significance of the Lion Grove Garden in Suzhou across dynasties
Patricia Chirinos Ogata examines sites of unsuccessful Wari imperial expansion in the northern highlands of Peru
Amber N. Wiley tells the story and legacy of Black historic preservation during the Bicentennial
David Gyllenhaal considers how late antique Christian and early Islamic communities sought divine meaning in catastrophes
Joe Glynias sheds light on the Byzantine legacy in the Middle East through writings from eleventh-century Antioch
Emanuel Fiano studies the intellectual history of early Christianity and the “parting of the ways” between Judaism and Christianity in late antiquity
Samantha L. Martin reappraises the spatiality of democracy in the Athenian agora and its legacy
Molly Greene writes the first history of the Pindus Mountains under Ottoman rule
Danielle S. Willkens uses reality capture technologies to preserve sites of protest in Alabama
Diane Allen brings the legacy of Maroon communities that lived in New Orleans’s bayous to wetlands restoration projects
Rosabella Alvarez-Calderón examines contested heritage and the ways we teach about historic urban landscapes in Lima, Peru
David Lentz revises our understanding of ancient Maya land, water, and forest management
Bat-ami Artzi interprets and contextualizes the messianic Andean iconography of the Vilcabamba Piece