I’m an Assistant Professor of Roman Law with a background in Classical Philology and Literary Studies. I work in the in-between, where law and literature borrow each other’s tricks.
I gave my academic heart to Roman jurists and wrote a book on utilitas in their thought. I teach law students Latin in Latin and trace legal echoes in Roman satire.
I like how interpretation sharpens when you let the words bite back, take ideas seriously but not grimly, and believe that joy and rigor can share a desk.
Roman Jurisprudence
Legal Interpretation, Argumentation, and Thinking
(Roman) Law and Literature
Ancient Rhetoric
Roman Satire
Celebrating publishing my monograph, 'Utilitas in Roman Jurists' Legal Interpretation', which will be published by Franz Steiner Verlag. This English translation of my doctoral thesis was made possible through the support of the Doctoral Research Grants from the University of Lodz.
Delving into late antique imperial constitutions within the ERC Consolidator Grant Project "Understanding Late Antique Top-Down Communication: A Study of Imperial Constitutions" (AntCoCo) led by Prof. Dr. Dr. Dr. Peter Riedlberger.
Iusculum: A Latin course for lawyers, taught partially in Latin, aimed at introducing law students to Latin in a novel and immersive manner
The project In a Distorting Mirror? Law as Presented in Roman Satire supported by the Polish National Science Centre (grant number 2021/41/N/HS2/02500), which explores the portrayal of law in Roman satirical literature.
Index 2.0 - the project aiming at creating a digital platform to facilitate text-critical studies of Roman law, leveraging the Index Interpolationum. The research team includes Marton Ribary (Royal Holloway), Giuseppe Di Donato (Edinburgh Napier), Julien Danneau (UCLouvain), and myself.