Document Actions

Classical Archaeology

 

Degree Programmes

News

 

Invitation to a Guest Lecture by Prof. Philipp Kobusch (Rostock)

The Chair of Classical Archaeology at Justus Liebig University Giessen cordially invites you to a guest lecture:

Speaker: Prof. Philipp Kobusch (Rostock)
Title: The So-Called Kore of Kallipolis: On the Restoration of Ancient Cult Statues
Date: Tuesday, 16 June 2026, 6 p.m. (c.t.)
Venue: Margarete-Bieber-Saal, Ludwigstraße 34, 35390 Giessen

About the Lecture: In Greek religious practice, cult statues represented the deity and therefore served as the focal point of a wide range of ritual acts and prayers. Their exceptional and elevated status is reflected in numerous ancient texts, and many cult images were associated with miracle stories that attest to the perceived power and significance of these statues. Yet only a relatively small number of examples have survived, most of them in a highly fragmentary state. The statue of the Kore discovered at Kallipolis in the 1970s is arguably the best-preserved example from ancient Greece. This lecture seeks to demonstrate that the statue underwent extensive restoration already in antiquity and explores the implications of this finding for our understanding of the treatment of cult images and of ancient conceptions of what constituted a cult statue.

 

Call for Applications: Neukirch Awards for Outstanding Academic Research

The Dr. Dieter and Sigrun Neukirch Foundation supports outstanding academic research, particularly doctoral dissertations as well as Master's theses and theses submitted as part of German state examination degree programs, in the fields of: Classical Archaeology, Classical Languages, and Geography at JLU.

The Dr. Dieter and Sigrun Neukirch Award may only be granted to members and affiliates of Justus Liebig University Giessen (JLU). Work submitted by former members of the university may also be considered, provided that it was completed during their time at JLU Giessen.

At the time of application, the research work must be fully completed and should generally not be more than one year old.

Applications are now being accepted. The application deadline is 31 August 2026. The awards will be presented at the Academic Ceremony at the end of November 2026. Further information on the application procedure can be found here.

 

Epic Fails – Tragic Heroes, Antiheroes, and Ambivalent Figures

When we think of ancient myths, the images that usually come to mind are those of radiant heroes and all-powerful gods. Yet a closer look reveals a far more complex and shadowy world: one populated by tragic figures, antiheroes, and monsters against their will. Many of these stories are, in fact, stories of different kinds of failure.
The exhibition explores the great moments of such “epic fails” in three thematic sections:

Hubris and self-inflicted downfall – when arrogance, overconfidence, or the pursuit of power paves the way to ruin.
Loss of control and emotional extremes – when love, passion, hatred, or madness unleash their destructive force.
Inescapable fate – when even the greatest heroes cannot evade the downfall destined for them.

The Special Exhibition Epic Fails invites visitors to rediscover well-known myths as stories about transgression, defeat, and the ambivalence of heroism.