- Home
- People
- Facility
- Projects
- Scholarly Products
- Resources
- UC Berkeley Resources
- Archaeological Research Facility (ARF)
- Berkeley Institute for Data Science (BIDS)
- Center for Digital Archaeology (CODA)
- Center for the Tebtunis Papyri (CTP)
- Department of Classics
- Graduate Group in Ancient History and Mediterranean Archaeology (AHMA)
- Phoebe Apperson Hearst Museum of Anthropology (PAHMA)
- UC Berkeley Libraries
- Other Resources
- Aegean Material Culture Lab
- Amphorae ex Hispania
- Archaeological Leather Group
- Archaeometry Laboratory, University of Missouri Research Reactor
- Artefacts: Encycolpédie en ligne des petites objets archéologiques
- Barbican Research Associates
- Big Data on the Roman Table
- Corning Museum of Glass
- Discard Studies
- Fabrics of the Central Mediterranean
- Fautores Rei Cretariae Romanae
- HEROM – Journal on Hellenistic and Roman Material Culture
- Immensa Aequora
- INSTRUMENTUM
- Journal of Roman Archaeology
- Karanis Housing Project
- Laboratory for Traditional Technology
- Levantine Ceramics Project
- Lychnology
- Open Context
- Oxford Roman Economy Project
- Portable Antiquities Scheme
- Roman Finds Group
- Roman Glassmakers
- ROMARCH
- Société Française d’Étude de la Céramiqe Antique en Gaule
- Story of Stuff
- Study Group for Roman Pottery
- The International Molinological Society
- Token Communities in the Ancient Mediterranean
- Worked Bone Research Group
- UC Berkeley Resources
- Announcements
- Support
- Contact
Aaron Brown
Aaron Brown has been a student in the Graduate Program in Classical Archaeology at UC Berkeley since 2013.
His research interests include the art and archaeology of Roman and pre-Roman Italy, ancient foodways, text-based archaeology, household archaeology, urbanism, and visual culture.
He has been a member of the Pompeii Artifact Life History Project since 2014 and has excavated at the following sites in Italy: Cerveteri, Cetamura del Chianti, Rofalco, and Morgantina. During the Spring of 2018 Aaron completed an internship at the Museo Nazionale di Villa Giulia in Rome.
His PhD project involves a comparative study of foodways at Pompeii during the Samnite and Roman periods.
Email: adbrown@berkeley.edu
