The IGRCT promotes research into all aspects of Greco-Roman culture from antiquity to the present day. It has the tradition of antiquity at the core of its academic mission, but it is alive to the concept that the modern world shapes what we think of antiquity just as much as antiquity informs modernity. It embraces research from multiple fields, including history of all kinds, archaeology, literary studies, art history and philosophy, and has a particular focus on research that explores the intersections of the ancient and modern.
The Institute was formed in 2004 through the merger of the Bristol Institute of Hellenic and Roman Studies, founded in 2000 by Robert Fowler, and the Bristol Centre for the Classical Tradition, founded by the late Thomas Wiedemann. It achieves its aims by hiring postdoctoral research fellows and supporting their research, inviting distinguished scholars to give seminars and lectures, holding symposia and conferences, cultivating international links with other scholars and organisations, and supporting the development of research projects in the faculty.
The work of the Institute would be impossible without the generous contributions of individual and corporate donors, and we would like to express our gratitude for their continued support.
Image: Bronze Head of Hypnos, 1-2nd century AD, Roman copy of Hellenistic Original, British Museum.
News
- Farewell to IGRCT Director Ellen O’Gorman 1 July 2025
- Welcome to new IGRCT Director: Laura Jansen 26 June 2025
- We are hiring! Applications now open for Student Internship position 30 October 2024