Their achievements may have inspired every generation from Homer to Hollywood, but many of us still know less than we think we do about the Ancient Greeks, a Cambridge 探花直播 Classicist will argue听this week.

In his inaugural lecture as Cambridge鈥檚 new Leventis Professor of Ancient Greek Culture, Professor Paul Cartledge will suggest that one of the biggest challenges facing scholars of the period is the need to put right many factual inaccuracies which most people still believe to be true.

探花直播idea that the Greeks were technologically backward, that they invented something resembling modern democracy, or even that there was an 鈥淎ncient Greece鈥 in any real sense, are all commonly held myths which his presentation will seek to address. 探花直播lecture, which will take place on Monday, February 16th at 5pm is free and open to all.

Professor Cartledge will argue that we need to reassess the Ancient Greeks鈥 legacy, and question how far our existing knowledge of their civilisation is the product of Hollywood 鈥 rather than Hellenic 鈥 culture.

探花直播Leventis Professorship is both a new chair and a new kind of chair in its own right. While there have been plenty of Professors of both Ancient History and Modern Greece, there has never before been a Professor dedicated specifically to the study of Ancient Greek culture.

探花直播position is also the first chair in Classics to have been established at Cambridge since World War II. Professor Cartledge will study more than 1,000 years of Greek Cultural Achievements, highlighting the lasting influence that they continue to have on modern society.

鈥 探花直播Greeks are in many fundamental ways the key cultural ancestors of us in the West, particularly in areas such as science, politics, philosophy and the performing arts,鈥 he said.

鈥淲hat we tend to forget is that their culture was also very different in fundamental ways. For example, many people fail to understand that there was no such thing as an 鈥楢ncient Greece鈥, but lots of different Greek communities and cities 鈥 about 1,000 at any one time. Each one of these had its own cultural identity.鈥

As well as examining common misconceptions about the Ancient Greeks, the lecture will also touch on the influence of Hollywood in misshaping our understanding of their civilisation 鈥 but also inspiring enthusiasm to study it.

Professor Cartledge, for example, was a consultant on the 2007 movie '300' 鈥 a depiction of the Spartan stand at Thermopylae which was as flawed as it was gruesome 鈥 but admits that such films can be beneficial in a wider sense.

鈥淪uch movies can excite a genuine and ultimately even a scholarly passion for studying the ancient Spartans,鈥 he said. 鈥淪ince becoming involved with '300' I have had official requests for copies of my book, 'Thermopylae, 探花直播Battle That Changed 探花直播World', from US marines!鈥

探花直播new chair has been endowed by a generous donation from the Cyprus-based Leventis Foundation. Established in 1979 as a result of provisions made by Anastasios G. Leventis, this organisation aims to support educational, cultural, artistic and philanthropic causes with an emphasis on Greek and Cypriot cultural heritage.

探花直播lecture is entitled 鈥楩orever Young: Why Cambridge Has a Professor of Greek Culture鈥. It is being dedicated to the late Constantinos 鈥淒ino鈥 Leventis, who studied Classics at Clare College, where Professor Cartledge is a Fellow. 探花直播Foundation has also established a graduate scholarship fund for Classics at Clare.

探花直播talk will be held at 5pm on February 16th in the Mill Lane Lecture Theatre at, 3, Mill Lane, Cambridge. 探花直播event is free and open to all.


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