MARCO MAIURO
Structure:
Dipartimento di STORIA ANTROPOLOGIA RELIGIONI ARTE SPETTACOLO
SSD:
STAN-01/B

Notizie

Marco Maiuro

A.A. 2024/2025

Modalità di svolgimento dei corsi

 

Si avvisano gli studenti interessati che i corsi di Storia Romana (Laurea triennale in Storia Antropologia Religioni L42, Laurea Magistrale in Scienze Storiche, LM84, Laurea Magistrale in Culture e Religioni, LM64), ciascuno da 6 CFU, saranno tutti impartiti nel secondo semestre dell'A.A. 24/25, con inizio il giorno Martedì 25.2.25.

 

 

Storia Romana (Culture e Religioni, LM64):

martedì 16-18, Aula Riunioni, Edificio di Lettere

giovedì 10-12, Aula D Egittologia

Codice corso Classroom:

35s4zis

Link:

https://classroom.google.com/c/MjMxNTEyMjI1NTla?cjc=35s4zis

 

 

Storia Romana (Scienze Storiche, LM84):

martedì 10-12, Aula C , Lettere e culture moderne

giovedì 12-14, Aula D Egittologia

Codice corso Classroom:

zh37ij7

Link:

https://classroom.google.com/c/MjEzNTI5OTMwMzJa?cjc=zh37ij7

 

Storia Romana SAR (Storia Antropologia Religioni L42):

martedì, 12-14, Aula V Lettere

giovedì 14-16, Aula V Lettere

Codice corso Classroom:

lcwr3ff

Link:

https://classroom.google.com/c/MjMxNTEyMTYwNDNa?cjc=lcwr3ff

 

 

Materiali, programmi, e ogni altra comunicazione concernente i corsi saranno discussi nelle prime lezioni, e poi ripetuti, se richiesto, nelle lezioni successive.

 

Per quanto riguarda il ricevimento, esso sarà esclusivamente in modalità da remoto, e tutti gli studenti (di laurea triennale e magistrale) sono pregati di attenersi scrupolosamente a questa indicazione, e devono prenotarsi via email per fissare un appuntamento.

 

 

 

 

Orari di ricevimento

Il ricevimento per l'aa 24/25 si terrà esclusivamente online, previa prenotazione via email.

Curriculum

Marco Maiuro (CV breve, 2025)
Marco Maiuro is Professor of Roman History at Sapienza, University of Rome, Ordinary Member of the Academia Europaea, former full Professor and currently Adjunct Professor of History at Columbia University in the city of New York. He obtained a PhD from the University of Trieste and the French CNRS; he was recipient of several post-doctoral fellowships, from the Italian Academy for Advanced Studies in the US (twice) to the A. von Humboldt Foundation, the Gerda Henkel Foundation, the Marie Curie Fellowship.
He works mainly on social and economic history topics, with special emphasis on demographic, monetary, agrarian and fiscal history. He has written a monograph on the economics of public land in the Principate, and edited 10 volumes on topics related to economic and social history of the ancient world. He is planning a monograph completing the study of public goods in the late antique period. He has recently edited the Oxford Handbook of Pre-Roman Italy (1000-49 BCE), a 900 page volume with 50 chapters, which is intended to be a point of reference for historical research in the domain of Italic and pre-Roman history; he is currently editing the Oxford Handbook of the Economies of the Greek and Roman World, the manuscript of which is nearing completion. This latest work by several hands (with A. Bresson and E. Lo Cascio among others) aims to become a milestone in a field of study open like few others to contamination with other disciplines (economics, sociology, demography, environmental studies etc.).
In his research he has dealt mainly with the Roman age (archaic, republican, imperial and late imperial); however, he has also written on Greek and Hellenistic history, early middle ages and the history of historiography. He has written articles on historical problems centered on Italy, North Africa, Anatolia and Egypt and has published or commented on documents relevant to the above topics (inscriptions, both Greek and Latin and in pre-Roman languages, papyri, archival sources, literary sources in various Mediterranean languages). His research on demography has produced some pieces whose focus spans from protohistoric to high medieval data, encompassing and dealing with matters such as urbanization rate, carrying capacity, dietary patterns, economic performance.
He is co-director of the Pragmateiai series (Edipuglia), the only academic series devoted exclusively to social and economic history of the Mediterranean basin. He serves as referee for monographs on economic and social history of the ancient world for Oxford University Press, for Cambridge University Press, and is on the Editorial Board of the Liverpool Series on Ancient History.
He is also involved in outreach and promotes the dissemination of the teachings of ancient history to a wider audience in multidisciplinary (communication, leadership, change management) lifelong learning contexts.