“Explaining Disasters in Late Antiquity (ca. 300-700 CE)”
Kristina Sessa, Ohio State University
Wed, 11/6 · 4:30 pm—6:00 pm · 103 Scheide Caldwell
The Committee for the Study of Late Antiquity; Seeger Center for Hellenic Studies
This paper will toggle between modern and late ancient explanatory frameworks for material disasters, with the goal of gaining further insight into how late Roman authors interpreted how, why, and for what reasons ruinous events like earthquakes, plagues, and urban sieges damaged and disrupted their communities. Among other interventions, it will demonstrate that late Romans were both capable of and invested in a wide range of epistemological paradigms and did not always explain disasters providentially through recourse to divine agency.