WEDNESDAY 19/11/2014 12.00–14.00 Registration Welcome Talk: Prof. Daša Bartoňková (Brno)

Transcription

WEDNESDAY 19/11/2014 12.00–14.00 Registration Welcome Talk: Prof. Daša Bartoňková (Brno)
WEDNESDAY 19/11/2014
12.00–14.00
Registration
Welcome Talk: Prof. Daša Bartoňková (Brno)
Classical Literatures and Languages
14.00–14.50
Keynote speaker:
Prof. Antonio Stramaglia
(Cassino)
‘Submerged’ themes and the textual transmission of ancient declamation
Chair: Prof. Daša Bartoňková (Brno)
15.00–15.25
Ilona Chruściak (Wrocław)
The non-verbal behavior of characters in the Iliad as a form of prolepsis
15.25–15.50
Krista Rodkey (Bloomington)
Herodotus’s oracles: moral and rational responses to ambiguity
15.50–16.15
Daniel Bajnok (Budapest)
“You all know...”: Aeschines’s argumentation in Against Timarchus
Ecfrasi e declamazioni ‘sbagliate’: Pseudo-Dionigi di Alicarnasso, Sugli errori che si commettono nelle declamazioni, 17
16.15–16.40
16.40–17.05
Giovanna Longo
(Liceo classico “Tito Livio”)
Coffee break
Classical Literatures and Languages
Chair: Prof. Antonio Stramaglia (Cassino)
17.05–17.30
Edita Wolf (Prague)
Marcus Aurelius and non-tragic theatre
17.30–17.55
Katalin Boreczky (Budapest)
Josephus Flavius on the creation of Adam: an attempt to reconcile two traditions?
17.55–18.20
Juraj Franek (Brno)
Omnibus omnia: the reception of Socrates in early Christian literature
18.20–18.45
19.00
Kamil Cyprian Choda (Krakow)
Apocalypse now? Gregory of Tours’ ambiguous eschatology
Welcome Drink
THURSDAY 20/11/2014
Classical Literatures and Languages
Chair: Prof. László Takács (Piliscsaba)
08.30–08.55
Tomáš Jeniš (Brno)
Intrusive inquisitiveness: tracing the motive of curiosity
08.55–09.20
Tereza Tomšů (Brno)
09.20–09.45
Natália Gachallová (Brno)
09.45–10.10
10.10–10.35
Ádám Rung (Budapest)
The myth of Perseus and Andromeda in two Latin translations of Aratos’ Phaenomena
Rhetoric and philosophy in the age of the Second Sophistic: real conflict or fight for
controversy?
Time is out of joint – as usual. Reading Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are dead as Plautine
comedy
Coffee break
Classical Literatures and Languages
Chair: Prof. Antonín Bartoněk (Brno)
10.35–11.00
Edoardo Middei (Rome, Köln)
Gli antroponimi sabellici in *-ai̭ os.
11.00–11.25
Ilaria Liberati (Rome)
L’oleandro nell’ambiente mediterraneo, tra vicende linguistiche e culturali
11.25–11.50
11.50–13.20
Andrea Barta (Budapest)
Tongue like a sword: some remarks on the Aquincum curse tablet
Lunch
Medieval studies
13.20–14.10
Keynote speaker:
Prof. Jolanda Ventura
(Orléans)
14.20–14.45
Helena Polehlová
(Hradec Králové)
14.45–15.10
Judita Matějová (Brno)
Constantine the African on Pharmacy: toward a reconstruction of Practica Pantegni II
Chair: Prof. Jana Nechutová (Brno)
Vita Sancti Wilfridi: selected aspects of language
The medieval illuminated manuscript of Factorum ac dictorum memorabilium libri IX by
Valerius Maximus (BSB Clm 21224)
15.10–15.35
15.35–16.00
Jana Kaderová (Brno)
Michael Pragensis’s treatise De custodia virginitatis: a literary analysis
Coffee break
Medieval studies
Chair: Prof. Jolanda Ventura (Orléans)
16.00–16.25
Zuzana Lukšová (Brno)
Die Synodalpredigt von Jan Hus Diliges Dominum Deum
16.25–16.50
Soňa Žákovská (Brno)
16.50–17.15
19.00
Eva Pauerová (Prague)
Die Briefform in dem Briefsteller Formularius epistolarum
Le tyran face au martyr: l’inspiration sénécaine dans Costis sive Catharis Partheno-Martyr
Alexandrina d’Arnoldus Engel S.J. (1620–1690)
Conference dinner
FRIDAY 21/11/2014 *
Ancient History and Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies
How to reverse decline of an empire? Two Byzantine case studies: Heraclius and Alexios
Komnenos
Chair: Prof. Jarmila Bednaříková (Brno)
08.30–09.00
Keynote speaker:
Dr. Marek Meško (Brno)
09.00–09.25
Michaela Senkova (Leicester)
09.25–09.50
Lukáš Kubala (Brno)
09.50–10.15
10.15–10.40
Manolis Pagkalos (Leicester)
10.40–11.05
Jana Malaníková (Brno)
11.05–11.30
Markéta Melounová (Brno)
11.30–11.55
11.55–13.00
Silvie Šimordová (Brno)
13.00–13.25
Hana Coufalová (Brno)
The theme of a vigorous noble juvenile in the literature of the Komnenian period
13.25–13.50
Katalin Delbó (Budapest)
Performance in den byzantinischen Romanen des 12. Jahrhunderts und das theatron
Male infertility in ancient Greece
Managing the empire: distinctive policies and means of control in the mid-5th century
Athenian arche according to epigraphic evidence
King Areus I of Sparta: memory, past and projection through coinage
Coffee break
Ancient History and Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies
Chair: Prof. Jarmila Bednaříková (Brno)
Law in Livy’s book VII
Protection of the imperial majesty in the Roman principate
The diplomatic relations between Visigoths, Franks and Byzantines at the end of the 6th
century. The role of forgotten prince Athanagild.
Lunch
Ancient History and Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies
Chair: Dr. Marek Meško (Brno)
13.50–14.15
14.30/16.00
19.00/19.30
Kristýna Knapková (Brno)
Achilleas Tzartzanos and his contribution to the Greek language question
Visit to Cathedrale, Ossarium or Janáček’s House
For those interested: Leoš Janáček: The Makropulos Affair (opera) / concert of Brno Philharmonic orchestra (WOLFGANG
AMADEUS MOZART Così fan tutte KV 588; overture ALFRED SCHNITTKE Concerto grosso n. 1; JOSEF MATĚJ concert
for trombone and orchestra; WOLFGANG AMADEUS MOZART Symphony n. 36 C dur KV 425 „Linzer“)
* Under the auspices of the project Employment of Newly Graduated Doctors of Science for Scientific Excellence