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Dr.
Michael Cosmopoulos
Hellenic Government-Karakas Foundation Chair of Greek Studies and
Professor of Archaeology.
As of August 2001, Dr. Michael Cosmopoulos is the Hellenic
Government-Karakas Foundation Professor of Greek Studies and Professor
of Archaeology at UM-St. Louis. Before coming to St. Louis, he was
Professor of Classics and Director of the Centre for Hellenic
Civilization of the University of Manitoba, in Canada.
Education
Professor Cosmopoulos studied Greek Archaeology, Ancient History, and
Classical Languages at the University of Athens (B.A., summa cum laude,
1981), the University of Sorbonne-Paris IV (D.E.U.G., 1983), and
Washington University in St. Louis (M.A. 1986, Ph.D. 1989). He also
holds a Diploma in Underwater Archaeology from the Council of Europe
(1984).
Research
and Teaching
Professor Cosmopoulos’ research interests are the
social, political,
and cultural history of ancient Greece, about which he was published
ten books and more than seventy articles and scholarly papers in
international journals. He has excavated at several ancient sites in
Greece and Ukraine, including Mycenae, Pylos, Epidauros, Ancient
Corinth, Ithaca, Oropos, and Olbia.
Currently, he directs three major fieldprojects in Greece: the Eleusis
Archaeological Project, which studies the origins of ancient Greek
mystery cults; the Iklaina
Archaeological
Project, which investigates
the origins of federalism in ancient Greece; and the Oropos Survey
Project, which explores the rural history of ancient Greek city-states.
For his research accomplishments he has been awarded the Canada Rh Award for Outstanding
Contributions to Scholarship and Research in the
Humanities.
At UM-St. Louis Professor Cosmopoulos teaches courses on Greek culture,
archaeology, mythology, and history. In Manitoba he taught a wide range
of courses, ranging from Greek language and literature to Greek
Religion. His teaching extends beyond the classroom and in the field,
where in the last twelve years he has trained several hundred students
in archaeological theory and methodology and in Greek archaeology and
history. In recognition of his teaching, the University of Manitoba has
awarded him a Merit Award for
Teaching (1991) and the prestigious Olive
Beatrice Stanton Award for Excellence in Teaching (1999). In
2001 he
was recommended for the national “Canadian Professor of the Year
Award”. In 2003 he was awarded the Archaeological
Institute of America Award for Excellence in Teaching.
Professional
Activities
Currently Dr. Cosmopoulos is an Academic
Trustee of the Archaeological
Institute of America; a member of the
Managing Committee of the American
School of Classical Studies at
Athens; and a life member of the Archaeological Society of Athens.
At
the University of Manitoba he served as Vice-Provost of University
College and founding Director of the Centre for Hellenic Civilization.
Also he has served as President of the Winnipeg Society of the
Archaeological Institute of America and of the Classical Association of
Manitoba, and Vice-President of the Archaeological Institute of Canada.
Greek
Studies
Dr. Cosmopoulos has worked intensely for the promotion of Greek Studies
in North America. In 1993, in close cooperation with the Consulate
General of Greece in Toronto and the Pan-Macedonian Association of
Ontario he founded the Pan-Macedonian
Association of Manitoba, of which
he served as first president. In 1995 he founded the Centre
for
Hellenic Civilization of the University of Manitoba, the only
university centre in Canada, dedicated to the study of ancient,
medieval, and modern Greece. In 1998, he established the Canadian
Committee for the Restitution of the Parthenon Marbles. He has
been
recommended by the Greek Embassy in Ottawa to receive the Order of
Phoenix Decoration by the President of Greece. Since 1996 he has been
included in the Canadian edition of Who
is Who.
Contact information:
E-mail: cosmopoulos@umsl.edu
Tel. (314) 516-6241
Fax (314) 516-7235
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