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Faculty of Classics

 

Biography

I am currently a Teaching Associate in Ancient History at the Faculty, as well as Director of Studies in Classics for Sidney Sussex (Prelim & IA). Previously I taught at King’s College London, where I also completed my PhD. Prior to this I studied at Durham and Corpus Christi College, Oxford.

Research

My core research concerns the identities of early Christian subjects of the Roman empire, and particularly how they navigated the relationship between their religious, social, and political loyalties. My PhD examined the ways in which Christian authors of the second and third centuries AD engaged with Roman imperial justice as a response to persecution, and I am currently working on turning this into a monograph with CUP. On a similar topic, with James Corke-Webster I recently published a joint-edited special issue of the journal Zeitschrift für Antikes Christentum exploring Justin Martyr and his negotiation of Roman imperialism, which can be read here: https://www.degruyter.com/journal/key/zach/28/1/html. Other work-in-progress includes studies on the presentation of Roman military figures in the Christian martyr acts, and on the processes by which narratives of persecution were produced from communal trauma in the ancient world.

 

Beyond this, I am interested in Roman governance—particularly the administration of justice, and the role of voluntary associations—and the place of the Roman army in society.

Publications

Key publications: 

Articles:

Forthcoming 2025: 'A telling terminus technicus in the Codex Bezae's Latin text of Acts', Journal of Theological Studies.

Forthcoming 2024: 'Pudens, Optio Carceris: Roman military figures and their narrative function in the Passion of Perpetua', The Classical Quarterly.

2024: ‘Read it in Rome: miracles, documents, and an empire of knowledge in Justin Martyr’s First Apology’, Zeitschrift für Antikes Christentum 28/1: 21–48 (https://doi.org/10.1515/zac-2024-0002).

2024: ‘Pontius’ conscience: Pilate’s afterlives and apology for empire in John Chrysostom's Antioch’, The Journal of Late Antiquity 17/1: 3–34 (https://doi.org/10.1353/jla.2024.a926279).

2022. ‘A flagrant fabrication? Deconstructing the tradition of collegia fabrum as voluntary fire-brigades in the Roman empire’, Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte 71/3: 337–361 (https://doi.org/10.25162/historia-2022-0012).

2018: ‘A foot in both camps: the civilian suppliers of the army in Roman Britain’, Theoretical Roman Archaeology Journal 1/1. (https://doi.org/10.16995/traj.355).

Chapters:

2024: ‘The early Church and war: the witness of Tertullian’, in I. Polinskaya, A. James, and I. Papadogiannakis (eds.), Religion and War from Antiquity to Early Modernity. London: Bloomsbury, 242–261

Reviews:

‘P. McKechnie, Christianizing Asia Minor’, The Journal of Ecclesiastical History 71/3: 607–609. (https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022046920000366).

Teaching and Supervisions

Teaching: 

I teach ancient history at all undergraduate levels, convene an MPhil seminar on the reality and representation of violence in the imperial period, and supervise research students studying Christianity in the early Roman empire, and experiences of Roman imperialism more broadly.

Teaching Associate in Classics (Ancient History)
Director of Studies in Classics for Sidney Sussex (Prelim & IA)
Not available for consultancy

Affiliations

Latest news

Senior Curator: Mediterranean Antiquities

28 April 2025

The Faculty and the Fitzwilliam Museum and are seeking to appoint a Senior Curator of Mediterranean Antiquities. The post-holder will be the curatorial and research lead for the Fitzwilliam's substantial collection of Mediterranean antiquities, and will also be a senior member of the Faculty of Classics: 20% of the role...

Ralegh Radford Rome Award

3 April 2025

The Faculty is delighted to report that Jonathan Steward has been awarded the Ralegh Radford Rome Award, BSR, for Lent Term 2026.

Pat Story

2 April 2025

We are very sad to pass on the news of the death of Pat Story on 25th March, after a short illness. Pat has been the single most important figure in classics education for the last 50 years and her passing marks the end of an era. There will be a celebration of her life in Hughes Hall at 2pm on Saturday 17 May. All are...

VIEWS Visiting Fellowships and Remote Inclusivity Fellowships

31 March 2025

The Faculty is pleased to announce that the UKRI funded VIEWS project has launched this year’s visiting fellowship competition, with a new virtual fellowship aimed at tackling inequalities in academia alongside the usual competition. For more information see here . The deadline for both competitions is Friday 23rd May 2025...