Professor Satterfield received a BA in Classics from the University of Alabama in 2002, and a Ph.D. in Classics from Princeton University in 2008. Her dissertation was entitled "Rome鈥瞫 Own Sibyl: The Sibylline Books in the Roman Republic and Early Empire." Her primary fields of research include Roman republican religion (especially prodigy and expiation) and Roman republican history.
SELECTED PUBLICATIONS
- 鈥淭丑别 Prodigies of 17 B.C.E. and the Ludi Saeculares,鈥 Transactions of the American Philological Association 146.2, pp. 325-48, Autumn 2016.
- 鈥淟ivy and the Pax Deum,鈥 Classical Philology 111.2, pp. 165-76, April 2016.
- 鈥淧rodigies, the Pax Deum, and the Ira Deum,鈥 Classical Journal 110.4, pp. 431-45, April/May 2015.
- 鈥淭丑别 Viri Sacris Faciundis and the Consulship,鈥 Classical World 107.2, pp. 217-35, Winter 2014.
- 鈥淟ivy and the Timing of Expiation in the Roman Year,鈥 Histos 6, pp. 67-90, July 2012.
- 鈥淚ntention and Exoticism in Magna Mater鈥檚 Introduction to Rome,鈥 Latomus 71, pp. 373-91, May 2012.
- 鈥淣otes on Phlegon's Hermaphrodite Oracle,鈥 Rheinisches Museum f眉r Philologie 154.1, pp. 117-24, April 2011.
- 鈥淭丑别 Sibylline Books,鈥 鈥淭丑别 Pax Deorum,鈥 鈥淭丑别 Quindecemviri Sacris Faciundis,鈥 鈥淐umae鈥: in the Routledge Dictionary of Ancient Mediterranean Religions, Eric Orlin, Lisbeth Fried, Nicola Denzey Lewis, and Michael Satlow (eds.)
Education
B.A., University of Alabama (Phi Beta Kappa)
Ph.D., Princeton University
Ph.D., Princeton University
Associate Professor and Chair of Ancient Mediterranean Studies