Alexander Batson
Alexander is a PhD student working in Early Modern European History. His interests include intellectual history, legal history, and history of political thought. His dissertation, tentatively titled “The Greek Influence on European Imperial Thought, 1500-1700” examines classical Greece as an inspiration and model for European imperial ideology in this period. Particular areas of focus include the impact that reception of classical Greece made on ideas of sea power, maritime law, colonial strategy, and European ideas of barbarism, civilization, slavery, and conquest.
Alexander is also interested in the Greek aspects of the European Renaissance more broadly, including the reception, editions, and translations of classical Greek works in Reformation political and religious contexts. In addition, he studies medieval and early modern jurisprudence, including Spanish scholasticism and legal humanism, as well as Reformation theologies of just violence and resistance. He is also working on a translation of Philip Melanchthon’s Latin ethical works.
Department: History