Coming Events

“18th Annual Kolb Junior Fellows Spring Colloquium”
3 May 2024
2:00-4:00PM Widener Auditorium
This year’s Kolb Society Junior Fellows Spring Colloquium will be a hybrid event held in person and virtually. Please join us Friday, May 3, 2024, at 2:00pm (Eastern Time) for three presentations from Kolb Junior Fellows.

Zoom Details Join Zoom Meeting https://upenn.zoom.us/j/923682540 60?pwd=Tm1MZUN0MHRKQ0x0ai9 MNFVLQjNyUT09 Meeting ID: 923 6825 4060 Passcode: 441558

For information on the Kolb Society see: https://web.sas.upenn.edu/kolbsociety/

WELCOME Holly Pittman, PhD, Faculty Chair, Senior Fellow

INTRODUCTION OF NEWLY ELECTED JUNIOR FELLOWS

PRESENTATIONS

James Gross (AAMW) Taxation, Commerce and the Economic Experience of Empire in Late Roman Sicily

Chelsea Cohen (ANTH) Tracing Landscape Changes through Maritime Construction in the 18th-century Middle Atlantic

John Sigmier (AAMW) Indigenous Expertise and Architectural Innovation in the Earthwork Theaters of Roman Gaul




“Lost City, Forgotten Country”
2 April 2024
Donald Blakeslee
4:30-6pm Weidner Auditorium
In 1601, a small Spanish army stumbled upon a community that the soldiers estimated held 20,000 people. Today, the population of the same spot is around half of that. Ancestors of today’s Wichita tribe, the city of Etzanoa was just one of a number of similar communities in the place called Quivira. Etzanoa lay along both banks of the Walnut River for about five miles. A similar-sized community lay a few miles north of it, and Francisco Vasquez de Coronado had seen at least a dozen more in central Kansas in 1541.
Today, Quivira is nearly forgotten, its real history shrouded in myth, but in 1601, it was the economic center of what is now the southern United States. Its residents supplied bison products literally from coast to coast. A Mojave man from southwestern Arizona described it to a Spaniard in 1541, while in 1540, people in eastern Arkansas told De Soto’s men that residents in the great towns there could help them get to New Spain because they had translators who spoke the language of the Aztecs. This presentation will survey what we now know about the place and what happened to it.