Research Interests

Greek and Roman history and archaeology; Greek and Latin epigraphy with an emphasis on the inscriptions of Macedonia and Thrace; civic and social institutions; religion and cults; historical geography; archaeological monuments and the topography of Philippi and Eastern Macedonia.


Research Projects

1997–
Publication of the Corpus of the Greek and Latin Inscriptions of Philippi – Corpus des Inscriptions Grecques et Latines de Philippes (from the 4th century BC to Late Antiquity), an international research project involving the Ephorate of Antiquities of Kavala, the French School at Athens, the Swiss School of Archaeology in Greece, and the National Hellenic Research Foundation (TERA).
Angelos Zannis is responsible for the forthcoming Volume I: La cité macédonienne (357/6 - 42 avant J.-C.), supported by a scholarship from the French School at Athens (Fonds de Dotation de l’École française d’Athènes) in 2016 and by research conducted at the Fondation Hardt in Geneva, funded by the Fondation Hardt and the University of Fribourg, Switzerland (2021-2022).

2014–
Publication of the ancient Greek inscriptions from the systematic excavation of the archaeological site of ancient Pistyros at Pontolivado, Kavala, directed by Dr Stratis Papadopoulos, Honorary Director of Antiquities, Hellenic Ministry of Culture.

2024–
Greek Fragmentary Tragedians Online, directed by Andreas Antonopoulos, Assistant Professor in the Department of Philology, University of Ioannina: member of the Advisory Committee.

2024–
Collaboration with archaeologist Vissarion Bachlás (Ephorate of Antiquities of Chalkidiki) on the study and publication of inscribed pithoi from the ongoing excavation of a villa rustica of the Late Roman Imperial period in the rural area of Afytos, Kassandra, Chalkidiki.

1996
“Description, Mapping, and Recording and Evaluation of Archaeological Sites along the Egnatia Motorway.” Research project of the Research Committee of the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki in collaboration with Egnatia Odos S.A., directed by Prof. M. Tiverios (Aristotle University of Thessaloniki).