Notes on Contributors
Corinne Bonnetis professor of ancient
history in the University of Toulouse and
member of the Institut Universitaire de
France. She works on the religions of the
ancient Mediterranean world, and on the
interactions between them. She has pub-
lished several books on the Phoenician
and Punic religious environment (recently,
with H. Niehr,Religionen in der Umwelt
des Alten Testaments II: Phönizier, Punier,
Aramäer. Stuttgart 2010) (French transla-
tion, 2014) and on the intellectual history
of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
Most recently she has published in 2014Les
enfants de Cadmos. Le paysage religieux de
la Phénicie hellénistique. Paris: De Boccard.
Emeritus ProfessorTrevor R. Bryceis an
honorary research consultant in the Uni-
versity of Queensland, Australia, and a
fellow of the Australian Academy of the
Humanities. He is the author of numer-
ous books and articles on the ancient Near
East, includingThe Kingdom of the Hittites
andTheWorldoftheNeo-HittiteKingdoms,
both published by Oxford University Press.
Anna C. F. Collaris assistant professor of
Classical Archaeology at Aarhus University
in Denmark. Her current research focuses
on Syrians, migration, and social networks
as part of a major Danish research project
exploring the emergence of pilgrimage and
sacred travel in the ancient Mediterranean.
Her first book,Religious Networks in the
Roman Empire: The Spread of New Ideas,
was published by Cambridge University
Press in 2013 and has been selected as a
finalist in the American Academy of Reli-
gion’s Best First Book in the History of
Religion award.
Nancy T. de Grummondis M. Lynette
Thompson Distinguished Research Profes-
sor at Florida State University and direc-
tor of excavations at the Etruscan/Roman
site of Cetamura del Chianti. She is the
author ofEtruscan Myth, Sacred History
and Legend(Philadelphia 2006) and editor
and author, with Erika Simon, ofThe Reli-
gion of the Etruscans(Austin 2006). Her
current research centers on Etruscan reli-
gion, myth, and writing.