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DTSTAMP:20260521T171739Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230224T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230224T160000
SUMMARY:“Making Space for the Gods: Religious Spaces in the Ancient Greek House,
	” Hannah Smagh
DESCRIPTION:\nHannah Smagh\, assistant teaching professor of classics an
	d ancient Mediterranean studies at Penn State\n\nNumerous gods were wors
	hipped in the ancient Greek house\, but few if any permanent sacred spac
	es were set aside for their rituals. Rather than permanent architecture\
	, sacred space in the Greek house appears to have been defined by the pe
	rformance of rituals using small portable objects or multi-functional st
	ructures. By using a spatial approach to analyze the effects of these ob
	jects involved in ritual performance\, we can gain a richer understandin
	g of the domestic religious landscape and investigate its relationship w
	ith religious practices on the larger public stage.\n\nFor more details:
	 https://events.la.psu.edu/event/making-space-for-the-gods/
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<html><head></head><body><p><i><b>Hannah Sm
	agh</b>, assistant teaching professor of classics and ancient Mediterran
	ean studies at Penn State</i></p><p>Numerous gods were worshipped in the
	 ancient Greek house, but few if any permanent sacred spaces were set as
	ide for their rituals. Rather than permanent architecture, sacred space 
	in the Greek house appears to have been defined by the performance of ri
	tuals using small portable objects or multi-functional structures. By us
	ing a spatial approach to analyze the effects of these objects involved 
	in ritual performance, we can gain a richer understanding of the domesti
	c religious landscape and investigate its relationship with religious pr
	actices on the larger public stage.</p><p>For more details: <a href='htt
	ps://events.la.psu.edu/event/making-space-for-the-gods/'>https://events.
	la.psu.edu/event/making-space-for-the-gods/</a></p></body></html>
LOCATION:102 Weaver Building
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