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Dr David Pritchard
Dr

David Pritchard

Email: 
Phone: 
+61 7 336 53338
Mobile: 
0401 955 160

Overview

Background

David M. Pritchard is Associate Professor of Greek History at the University of Queensland (Australia), where he has chaired the Discipline of Classics and Ancient History. He has obtained 15 research fellowships in Australia, Denmark, France, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom and the United States of America. In 2022-3, he was a research fellow in the Nantes Institute for Advanced Study (France). Associate Professor Pritchard is currently the lead chief investigator on a large project that is funded by the Australian Research Council. He is the author of Athenian Democracy at War (Cambridge University Press 2019), Sport, Democracy and War in Classical Athens (Cambridge University Press 2013) and Public Spending and Democracy in Classical Athens (University of Texas Press 2015). Associate Professor Pritchard has edited The Athenian Funeral Oration: After Nicole Loraux (Cambridge University Press 2024) and War, Democracy and Culture in Classical Athens (Cambridge University Press 2010), and co-edited Sport and Festival in the Ancient Greek World (Classical Press of Wales 2003). He has also published 65 journal articles and book chapters. Associate Professor Pritchard has an h-index of 21 and more than 1600 known citations. He has obtained the equivalent of 2 million Australian dollars in research funding. Associate Professor Pritchard speaks on the radio and regularly writes for newspapers around the world. His 50 op.-eds have appeared in, among other outlets, Die Süddeutsche Zeitung (Germany), Le Monde (France), Le Figaro (France), Ouest-France, The Conversation (France), Kathimerini (Greece), Scroll.in (India), The Age (Australia), The Australian and Politike (Brazil). He obtained his PhD in Ancient History from Macquarie University (Australia).

Availability

Dr David Pritchard is:
Available for supervision
Media expert

Qualifications

  • Doctor of Philosophy of Ancient History, Macquarie University
  • Doctor of Philosophy, Macquarie University

Research interests

  • Fourth-Century Athens at War: After Claude Mossé

    This co-edited volume is a major contribution to the rewriting of Athenian history after 404 BC. Traditionally, historians of classical Greece understood the fourth century as a period of steep decline. Claude Mossé – the pioneering French ancient historian – did the most promote the view that fourth-century Athens never recovered from its crushing defeat in the Peloponnesian War. For Mossé, this decline had a clear military dimension: postwar Athens was no longer a military success and hence could not stop the rise of Philip II and Alexander the Great. In the last 40 years, there has been a general rewriting of this traditional view. We now know that fourth-century Athens quickly recovered economically and politically. Nonetheless, we still do not have a new comprehensive assessment of the military record of postwar Athens. Fourth-Century Athens at War provides this new detailed picture. It brings together 18 leading Hellenists to study all aspects of Athenian warfare between 404 and 322. Project-members met at a major conference in Nantes (France) in 2023. Routledge has already expressed the firmest-possible interest in publishing our volume. Fourth-Century Athens at War will probably appear in 2025. This project is also funded by the Australian Research Council.

  • Society and Democracy in Classical Athens

    The major project on which I will focus after 2023. I will seek up to 2.5 million € of funding for this major 5-year project from the Australian Research Council, the European Research Council, the British Academy and/or the UK’s Arts and Humanities Research Council. The project will include 2 postdoctoral research fellows and 2 doctoral students. It will thoroughly explore the symbiosis of society and democracy in classical Athens. Classical Athenians generally divided themselves into 2 social classes: the rich and the poor. They did not use these terms vaguely to describe the prosperity of some relative to others. Rather the terms described 2 distinct social groups who, in reality, had different ways of life and public obligations. Vital as this class distinction was, ancient historians have not thoroughly analysed how it operated practically and how it interacted with democratic politics. Drawing especially on the sociology of Pierre Bourdieu, I will analyse how individual Athenians carefully performed their respective class positions and how some of them successfully moved from one class to another. My monograph will also study how democratic politics allowed the poor to redefine this social distinction and to enact public policies in tune with their evolving class-related perceptions. The project’s 4 other members will study afresh the other social groups of classical Athens: Attic women, metics and slaves. In addition to 3 monographs and 2 doctoral theses, there will be a major international conference leading to an edited volume of 20 or so chapters.

  • The Athenian Funeral Oration: After Nicole Loraux

    Classical Athens staged a funeral oration almost every year for dead combatants. In 1981, Nicole Loraux transformed our understanding of this literary genre. Her The Invention of Athens showed how it reminded the Athenians who they were as a people. Loraux demonstrated how each funeral speech helped them to maintain the same self-identity for more than a century. In spite of this, The Invention of Athens was far from complete. Loraux played down authorship as a subject because it made it easier for her to prove that the funeral speeches were part of a long-stable tradition. But it also meant that her book ignored important questions about all of them. The funeral oration was striking for being thoroughly pro-war. The Invention of Athens never compared it to the other literary genres that Athenian democracy sponsored. Consequently, Loraux could not prove whether they ever counterbalanced the funeral oration’s cultural militarism. I have brought together 20 Hellenists from across the world to finish Loraux’s book. Cambridge University Press published our edited volume of 554 pages in 2024. The Athenian Funeral Oration: After Nicole Loraux answers the important questions that Loraux ignored. It completes the intertextual analysis that is simply missing in The Invention of Athens. What emerges is a speech that had a much greater political impact than Loraux ever imagined. This edited volume puts the study of war in Athenian culture on a completely new footing.

  • The Children of Athena: The Armed Forces of Classical Athens

    Classical Athens perfected participatory democracy, while many plays from there are still staged today. This ancient Greek state is rightly famous for these remarkable political and cultural successes. Much less well known is the other side of Athenian history. Classical Athens completely transformed warfare and quickly became a superpower. The Athenian armed forces were simply unmatched in their size and professionalism. In spite of this striking military success, there is still no book-length study of how the Athenian people waged their almost nonstop wars. I have signed a contract with CUP to publish this monograph. In 431 BC, Pericles famously spoke about the numbers in each branch of the Athenian armed forces. The Armed Forces of Classical Athens fills this significant gap in Athenian historiography by going behind this political leader’s famous numbers. My book studies the institutional history of each of Athens’s 4 military corps as well as the legal and social background of corps-members. It explores how they were recruited and generally thought about their military service. The book reveals for the first time the common concepts and practices that the Athenian people used to manage their armed forces. I have already written two thirds of The Armed Forces of Classical Athens. Cambridge University Press will publish this fourth monograph of mine in 2025. This project is funded by the Australian Research Council.

Research impacts

Democratic Athens was the most important Greek state of the classical world. The major public activities of the classical Athenians were politics, religious festivals and wars. In each activity, Athens was a runaway success. It developed democracy to a far higher level than any other ancient state. It became one of the ancient world’s superpowers. It staged more festivals than any other polis. My research has significantly advanced our knowledge of all 3 activities. I have studied extensively how the Athenians waged their almost nonstop wars. I have published the most detailed analysis of the extent of participation in their games. I have investigated how the conception of sport and war with a common set of concepts impacted on the public standing of both activities. I have shown how the military and the cultural innovations of the Athenians were direct products of their democracy. I have completed the first exhaustive investigation, since August Böckh, of how much they spent on their 3 major public activities.

Works

Search Professor David Pritchard’s works on UQ eSpace

149 works between 1991 and 2024

101 - 120 of 149 works

2012

Other Outputs

What is the Point of Olympic Glory?

David M. Pritchard (2012, 05 07). What is the Point of Olympic Glory? The Herald Sun 24-25.

What is the Point of Olympic Glory?

2012

Other Outputs

Olympians Rated Highest When Sport and War Were the Only Stage

David M. Pritchard (2012, 05 04). Olympians Rated Highest When Sport and War Were the Only Stage The Courier-Mail 32-33.

Olympians Rated Highest When Sport and War Were the Only Stage

2012

Journal Article

Athletics in satyric drama

Pritchard, David M. (2012). Athletics in satyric drama. Greece and Rome, 59 (1), 1-16. doi: 10.1017/S0017383511000210

Athletics in satyric drama

2012

Other Outputs

'Athletic participation, training and adolescent education'

Pritchard, David M. (2012). 'Athletic participation, training and adolescent education'.

'Athletic participation, training and adolescent education'

2012

Conference Publication

What was the point of Olympic victory?

Pritchard, David (2012). What was the point of Olympic victory?. A Conference on Olympic Athletes: Ancient and Modern, St. Lucia, QLD, Australia, 6-8 July 2012. St. Lucia, QLD, Australia: The School of History, Philosophy, Religion and Classic, The University of Queensland.

What was the point of Olympic victory?

2012

Other Outputs

Aristophanes and De Ste. Croix: The value of old comedy as evidence for Athenian popular culture

Pritchard, David (2012). Aristophanes and De Ste. Croix: The value of old comedy as evidence for Athenian popular culture.

Aristophanes and De Ste. Croix: The value of old comedy as evidence for Athenian popular culture

2012

Journal Article

Public honours for Panhellenic sporting victors in democratic Athens

Pritchard, David M. (2012). Public honours for Panhellenic sporting victors in democratic Athens. Nikephoros, 25, 209-220.

Public honours for Panhellenic sporting victors in democratic Athens

2012

Journal Article

Aristophanes and de Ste. Croix: the value of old comedy as evidence for Athenian popular culture

Pritchard, David (2012). Aristophanes and de Ste. Croix: the value of old comedy as evidence for Athenian popular culture. Antichthon, 46, 14-44. doi: 10.1017/S0066477400000137

Aristophanes and de Ste. Croix: the value of old comedy as evidence for Athenian popular culture

2012

Journal Article

Costing festivals and war: spending priorities of the Athenian democracy

Pritchard, D. M. (2012). Costing festivals and war: spending priorities of the Athenian democracy. Historia - Zeitschrift fur Alte Geschichte, 61 (1), 18-65.

Costing festivals and war: spending priorities of the Athenian democracy

2010

Journal Article

The incongruous athletes of satyric drama

Pritchard, David (2010). The incongruous athletes of satyric drama. Classicum, 36 (2), 11-22.

The incongruous athletes of satyric drama

2010

Journal Article

War, democracy and culture in classical Athens

Pritchard, David (2010). War, democracy and culture in classical Athens. Online Opinion

War, democracy and culture in classical Athens

2010

Journal Article

Costing the armed forces of Athens during the Peloponnesian War

Pritchard, David (2010). Costing the armed forces of Athens during the Peloponnesian War. Ancient History: Resources for Teachers, 37 (2), 125-135.

Costing the armed forces of Athens during the Peloponnesian War

2010

Book Chapter

Sport, war and democracy in classical Athens

Pritchard, David (2010). Sport, war and democracy in classical Athens. Sport in the cultures of the ancient world. (pp. 64-97) edited by Zinon Papakonstantinou. Abingdon Oxon, U.K.: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.

Sport, war and democracy in classical Athens

2010

Conference Publication

War, democracy and culture in Classical Athens

Pritchard, David (2010). War, democracy and culture in Classical Athens. ASCS 31 [2010], Perth, WA, Australia, 2-5 February 2010. Perth, WA, Australia: The University of Western Australia.

War, democracy and culture in Classical Athens

2010

Journal Article

The position of Attic women in democratic Athens

Pritchard, David (2010). The position of Attic women in democratic Athens. QHistory, 2010, 16-29.

The position of Attic women in democratic Athens

2010

Book Chapter

The symbiosis between democracy and war: The case of ancient Athens

Pritchard, David (2010). The symbiosis between democracy and war: The case of ancient Athens. War, democracy and culture in classical Athens. (pp. 1-62) edited by David Pritchard. Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press.

The symbiosis between democracy and war: The case of ancient Athens

2009

Other Outputs

Costing Festivals and War: Spending Priorities of the Classical Athenian Democracy

Pritchard, David (2009). Costing Festivals and War: Spending Priorities of the Classical Athenian Democracy.

Costing Festivals and War: Spending Priorities of the Classical Athenian Democracy

2009

Journal Article

Sport, war and democracy in classical Athens

Pritchard, David (2009). Sport, war and democracy in classical Athens. The International Journal of the History of Sport, 26 (2), 212-245. doi: 10.1080/09523360802513272

Sport, war and democracy in classical Athens

2009

Journal Article

Costing the Great Panathenaia in the early fourth century BC

Pritchard, David (2009). Costing the Great Panathenaia in the early fourth century BC. Classicvm, XXXV, 8-15.

Costing the Great Panathenaia in the early fourth century BC

2009

Other Outputs

Sport, War and Democracy in Classical Athens

Pritchard, David M. (2009). Sport, War and Democracy in Classical Athens.

Sport, War and Democracy in Classical Athens

Funding

Current funding

  • 2020 - 2025
    From Where the Fine Warships Come: Democratic Athens at War
    ARC Discovery Projects
    Open grant

Past funding

  • 2024 - 2025
    Fourth-Century Athens at War: After Claude Mosse
    Estate of the Late Nicholas Anthony Aroney
    Open grant
  • 2019 - 2020
    'From Where the Fine Warships Come': Democratic Athens at War
    The Collegium de Lyon Research Residency
    Open grant
  • 2017 - 2018
    Democracy and War in Ancient Athens
    University of Strasbourg Institute of Advanced Study
    Open grant
  • 2017 - 2018
    The Athenian Funeral Oration Project
    Fritz Thyssen Foundation Travel Subsidies
    Open grant
  • 2015 - 2016
    War and Democracy in Ancient Athens and Today
    University of Strasbourg Institute of Advanced Study
    Open grant
  • 2014
    Cultural perceptions of violence in the Hellenistic world
    UWA-UQ Bilateral Research Collaboration Award
    Open grant
  • 2011 - 2012
    ResTEach 2011 0.2 FTE School of History, philosophy, Religion and Classics
    UQ ResTeach
    Open grant
  • 2009
    The Impact of Democracy on the War-Making of Fifth-Century Athens
    UQ Early Career Researcher
    Open grant
  • 2008 - 2010
    Sport, War and Democracy in Classical Athens
    UQ New Staff Research Start-Up Fund
    Open grant

Supervision

Availability

Dr David Pritchard is:
Available for supervision

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Supervision history

Current supervision

  • Master Philosophy

    Peace and War in the Public Discourse of Democratic Athens

    Principal Advisor

    Other advisors: Professor Alastair Blanshard

  • Master Philosophy

    Democracy at War: The Military Reforms of Fourth-Century Athens

    Principal Advisor

    Other advisors: Dr Annabel Florence

  • Doctor Philosophy

    War and Politics in Archaic Athens: A Reassessment

    Principal Advisor

    Other advisors: Professor Alastair Blanshard

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Democracy and Religion in Classical Athens

    Principal Advisor

    Other advisors: Professor Alastair Blanshard

  • Master Philosophy

    Peace and War in the Public Discourse of Democratic Athens

    Principal Advisor

    Other advisors: Professor Alastair Blanshard

Completed supervision

Media

Enquiries

Contact Dr David Pritchard directly for media enquiries about:

  • Ancient Democracy
  • Ancient Greece
  • Ancient History
  • Ancient Sport
  • Ancient Warfare
  • Classical Athens
  • Democracy
  • The Ancient Olympics

Need help?

For help with finding experts, story ideas and media enquiries, contact our Media team:

communications@uq.edu.au