Today!
Today!
Last October I jeopardised my hard-earned reputation for a lifetime of dissipation by starting to go to the gym after a near-fatal fall. Just to reassure my friends that some things donβt change, hereβs my favourite gym kit. And I still drink lots of wine to recover from workouts
What a great time I had picking up the International Hellenic Prize, awarded by Matthew Lodge, the British Ambassador to Greece, on Saturday. Surprise reunion with old RHUL comrade Chris Kremmydas was particularly gratifying.
After brutality at Istanbul Airport (Turkish Airlines) followed by far worse at Paris Charles de Gaulle (Easyjet) this month, a joy to be flown on time with charm by Aegean Airlines to a queue-free passport experience in Athens & this bouquet my hosts had ordered to my hotel room
I just love the illustrations to the Sirens chapter in James Joyceβs ULYSSES by Richard Hamilton, born 24 February 1922. The Sirensβ eyes are distinctly bird like
Image shows the invitation to the award ceremony starting at 7pm in Cotsen Hall, American School of Classical Studies in Athens. It also shows the links for in-person and online attendance via Zoom, as available on the IHP website.
If you're interested in attending the IHP award ceremony in Athens on Feb 28th for this year's prizewinner
@edithmayhall.bsky.social, please visit our website to register to attend in person or online - this is not an event to miss!
internationalhellenicprize.org
On #WhoopingCraneDay2026 what better than a case from Sparta which gives you a Medusa with excellent lash-separating mascara and Sphinxes as well as cranes?
Had a lovely time filming a documentary about the Odyssey in Paris today. Less impressed by six hour delay at Charles de Gaulle airport on return voyage. There were some monstrously rude Gauls opposing all our progress at Passports so missed the home bound flight.
Now on BBC Radio 4, the episode of YOU'RE DEAD TO ME on Hypatia that I contributed to bbc.com/audio/play/l...
And hereβs a quick video with me, Olga Koch, and @edithmayhall.bsky.social telling you more about this weekβs episode of YOUβRE DEAD TO ME on BBC Sounds & Radio 4
Want to support teaching of ancient ethics in prisons? Here's a blog with a link to JustGiving. Β£10 buys course material for 4 prisoners. @durhamclassics.bsky.social edithorial.blogspot.com/2026/02/anci...
Hive Mind! Iβm looking for someone with excellent WordPress expertise to get my website (edithhall.co.uk) up to date, on a paid-for basis, and then regularly update it. Please DM me if you feel you can help. I would also be grateful for pointers to anyone who might suit.
π ICYMI: Prof. Edith Hall and Prof. Arlene Holes-Henderson started the year in Manchester, training prison educators in the delivery of Aristotleβs ethics.
Yes! Our guest professor, Edith Hall, talked about it in her βNuance Windowβ at the end of our Aristotle episode of BBC YOUβRE DEAD TO ME
When its 0924 in the morning and you've already given a talk on Classics and social & environmental justice to high school students across China
#History Hypatia of Alexandria: mathematician, martyr and feminist icon
You're Dead to Me
Sat 10:00
BBC Radio 4
@gregjenner.bsky.social is joined by Professor @edithmayhall.bsky.social and Olga Koch to learn about the life of mathematician Hypatia of Alexandria.
www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m...
Will do! Blog coming soon!
n my experience, most specialists in Greek comedy have zero sense of humour; the funny one all do tragedy. This miserable-looking if not paranoid Thalia, Muse of Comedy, 3rd c. CE, in Rhodes, seems to be setting a trend. More pictures of Thalia to follow.
Congrats π₯ @edithmayhall.bsky.social Epic of the Earth: Reading Homer's Iliad in the Fight for a Dying World Longlisted for the Anglo-Hellenic League's Runciman Award #Blueskybooks
Edith will be with us in May
View full programme here: www.campdenmayfestivals.co.uk/literature/e...
I like the comic & tragic masks on this 1814 visualisation by Anne-Louis Girodet Trioson, btd 1767, of youthful winged Muses of Comedy & Tragedy, but dislike this misspelling (in Greek, bottom right) of Euripides. No Shakespeare/Goethe/ Alfieri (natch) beside French dramatic titans!
John Collier, born 27 Jan 1850, painted Clytemnestra after the murders twice: in 1882 after seeing an Oxford production of AGAMEMNON, and 1913, after excavations at Knossos had revealed bare-breasted ladies in art. Not that he needed encouragement. Many of his other works are boobfests.
Greek friends, Philhellenes! If you'd like to attend this event on Sat. Feb. 28 at 1900 in Athens, either in person or virtually, please register. It'll be wonderful to have you with me and the nonpareil Hellenists in the best sense Alicia Stallings and Ioanna Karamanou
Writing about ghosts in fragmentary Greek tragedies. Here's Medea's dad Aeetes as a ghost labelled EIDOLON AETOU telling her to get on with some murders, and Glaucus, little Prince of Crete, resuscitated in his tomb by the Corinthian seer Polyidus after drowning in a vat of honey
On #GoodMemoryDay, here's the goddess who can help. Mnemosyne, mother of the Muses on an Antioch mosaic in the Worcester Art Museum, Mass. Nicely sceptical expression. Perhaps she's trying to remember the names of all her nine daughters. I have difficulties with far fewer.
Am I right that there is not a single woman on Trumpβs βBoard of Peaceβ for Gaza? Incomprehensible given what women have been through there.
Wonderful party for Michael Silk, the βDaddy Coolβ of Ancient Greek and most other literature, at Kingβs College London last night. Fiona Macintosh and David Ricks beautifully edited the Festschrift that the pictured persons contributed to
Great idea! Not yet but I will think about it!
On #AppreciateADragonDay, my favourite ancient example. In one version of the Argonaut myth, the Colchian dragon guarding the golden fleece first ate and then disgorged Jason when Athena intervened. Fabulous teeth/scales. Red-figured cup made in Athens c. 580 BCE, now in Vatican
Eugène Carrière, born 16th January 1849, "Priam at the feet of Achilles" (1876). Gets their mutual sorrow and the gloom and filth of military tent cities over better than many other depictions of this famous scene in Iliad 24
Chuffed that Epic of the Earth: Reading Homer's Iliad in the Fight for a Dying World is longlisted for the Anglo-Hellenic League's Runciman Award. The climate crisis makes me think this my least unimportant book. I still need more ££ to keep the prison education initiative running so let's hope....