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Petros Tsagklis

History, University of Nottingham

Thesis title:

Free Laconians: contested identities in a Greek Koinon during the Imperial Ages (21 BC – AD 297)

In the world of “Pax Romana” strategically located coastal cities and harbours in Greece experienced unprecedented development and wealth. Among them, twenty-four cities of Laconia (the territory of Sparta in antiquity) in southern Greece threw off restrictive Spartan control in 21 BC and formed the independent confederacy of the Koinon of Free Laconians (Eleutherolakōnes). Over the last 30 years scattered historians and archaeologists have debated the Koinon’s nature, its relationship to Sparta, and its potential role within the political and cultural landscape of the Roman world, without producing a comprehensive synthesis of the extant evidence nor reaching definite conclusions.

The project employs a novel cross-disciplinary methodology, bridging history, epigraphy, literary sources, archaeology and network analysis, in order to break new ground in reconstructing the history of the Eleutherolaconian confederacy, with a specific focus on its identities as a distinct political and cultural entity in a local (Laconian), regional (Peloponnesian) and global (Roman – Mediterranean) context. Moreover, the project highlights the complex processes in the formation of identity within alliances and federations in antiquity, filling a substantial gap in ancient Greek and Roman history and culture. 


Research Area

  • History

Publications


  • Book: "Asopus: an ancient capital sleeps in the Laconian Gulf" ("Ασωπός μια αρχαία πρωτεύουσα κοιμάται στον Λακωνικό"), in Greek, publications "Herodotus", 2015. 
  • Book: "Between Mani and Tsakonia: Kalyvia of Phoiniki and the unknown hinterland of Monemvasia (17th - early 20th century AD)" ["Μεταξύ Μάνης και Τσακωνιάς: Τα Καλύβια Φοινικίου και η άγνωστη μονεμβασιώτικη ενδοχώρα (17ος -αρχές 20ου αιώνα)"], in Greek, publications "Graphi", 2024.   
  • Article: "Gladiators. The most famous slaves of Antiquity" ("Μονομάχοι. Οι πιο διάσημοι δούλοι της Αρχαιότητας"), in Greek, Post Augustum 8 (2024), pp. 38-56. 

Other Research Interests

  • Archaeology
  • Classics
  • Anthropology

Memberships

  • Member of the "Centre of Spartan & Peloponnesian Studies" (CSPS) of the Univeristy of Nottingham.
  • Member of the "Society for Laconian Studies" at Athens.
  • Member of the "SlaVEgents Research Project: Enslaved persons in the making of societies and cultures in Western Eurasia and North Africa, 1000 BCE - 300 CE" (2023-2028) under the funding of the European Research Council (Principal Investigator: Kostas Vlassopoulos).