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Sarah H. Davies

Sarah H. Davies

Associate Professor of History

Ph.D.
University of Texas at Austin
2012

M.A. 
University of Texas at Austin
2005

B.A.
Middlebury College
2003

  • International relations, imperialism, and historiography in the ancient Mediterranean
  • Rise of Rome as an interstate power, from 3rd to 1st centuries BCE
  • Cultural and political interactions in the Hellenistic period
  • Receptions of antiquity and constructions of the "Classical"
  • Carthage and the Punic Wars; Roman North Africa

Fall 2025

  • (HIST-180) Antiqui-tea: Spilling the Ancient Mediterranean
  • (HIST-226) Meet the Ancient 'Greeks'
  • (HIST-393) Horizons of Autocracy: Rome & Augustus

Spring 2026

  • (GENS-176) Making Powerful Arguments: Rebel Declassical
  • (HIST-215) Special Topics: The Rasenna ('Etruscans')

      100-level

      • (HIST-160) Seminar: Troy & the Trojan War
      • (HIST-180) Antiqui-tea: Spilling the Ancient Mediterranean
      • (GENS-145, 146, 176) The First-Year Experience / Seminar: Confronting the “Classical”

      200-level

      • (HIST-215) Special Topics: Pompeii, Beyond the Time Capsule (now HIST-165)
      • (HIST-215) Special Topics in Ancient History: Who Owns Antiquity?
      • (ARTH/CLAS/HIST-224) Powerful Art/ifacts: Greece & Rome
      • (HIST-225) Cleopatra: History & Myth
      • (HIST-226) Meet the Ancient Greeks
      • (HIST-227) Meet the Ancient Romans
      • (HIST/CLAS-280) The “Other” Greece & Rome

      300- and 400-level

      • (HIST-320) Alexander & the Hellenistic World
      • (HIST-330) Hail Caesar? The Roman Revolution
      • (HIST-331) Carthage & Rome
      • (HIST-401) Senior Colloquium: (Un)learning Imperialism
      • (HIST-489) Seminar. House of Mirrors: Roman Imperialism (now HIST-393)
      • (HIST-498) Honors Thesis

      Book

      Rome, Global Dreams, & the International Origins of an Empire. Brill, Impact of Empire series, 35. 

      Peer-Reviewed Articles

      2019. "Weaving a Map of 'Global' Empire: Second-Century BCE Origins of Mediterraneanism." Mediterranean Studies 27.1: 1-35.

      2014. "Beginnings and Endings: 146 BCE as an Imperial Moment, from Polybius to Sallust." in R. Rita Marchese and F. Tutrone (eds.). Evil, Progress, and Fall: Moral Readings of Time and Cultural Development in Roman Literature. EPEKEINA vol. 4, n. 1-2, pp. 177-218. ()

      2013. "Carthage, Corinth, and 146 BCE: Shifting Paradigms of Roman Imperium." Ancient Borderlands International Graduate Student Conference (2010), Beyond Borders: Ancient Societies and their Conceptual Frontiers. University of California, Santa Barbara, California. ()

      2011. "An Augustan Period Altar at Carthage: Freedman Status and Roman Provincial Identity." in S. Morton and D. Butler (eds.). It's Good to Be King - The Archaeology of Power & Authority. 41st (2008) Annual Chacmool Archaeological Conference, University of Calgary, Alberta, Canada. Calgary: Chacmool Archaeological Association, The Department of Archaeology, University of Calgary, pp. 213-224.