Rachel Mairs

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OccupationsClassicist, ancient historian
EducationUniversity of Cambridge
DisciplineClassics
Sub-discipline
Multilingualism and literacy
Rachel Mairs
OccupationsClassicist, ancient historian
Academic background
EducationUniversity of Cambridge
Academic work
DisciplineClassics
Sub-discipline
Multilingualism and literacy
InstitutionsUniversity of Reading

Rachel Mairs is a classical scholar, ancient historian and linguist. She is a professor of Classics and Middle Eastern Studies at University of Reading. Her research focuses ancient multilingualism, with a focus on the interaction between Greeks and "non-Greeks" in Hellenistic Egypt and on Central Asia.[1]

Rachel Mairs received her MPhil and PhD from the Faculty of Classics, University of Cambridge. Her 2006 PhD thesis, Ethnic Identity in the Hellenistic Far East, focused on Greeks in Bactria-Sogdiana, Arachosia and India, and became part of her monograph published by University of California Press in 2014.[2] Her other books on the ancient world include The Archaeology of the Hellenistic Far East: A Survey (2011) and The Graeco-Bactrian and Indo-Greek World (2020).[3] She has also published an open-access book, Arabic Dialogues: Phrasebooks and the Learning of Colloquial Arabic, 1798-1945 (2024) with University College London Press.[4] She co-runs the academic blog Everyday Orientalism, which works to highlight the legacies of colonialism in papyrology and classics.[5]

Awards and recognition

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