Armand D'Angour

Armand D'Angour
Born (1958-11-23) 23 November 1958 (age 66)
London
Academic background
ThesisThe dynamics of innovation: newness and novelty in the Athens of Aristophanes (1998)
Doctoral advisorPeter Lunt
Richard Janko
Alan Griffiths
Academic work
InstitutionsJesus College, Oxford
Websitewww.armand-dangour.com

Armand D'Angour (born 23 November 1958) is a British classical scholar and classical musician, Professor of Classics at Oxford University and Fellow and Tutor in Classics at Jesus College, Oxford. His research embraces a wide range of areas across ancient Greek culture, and has resulted in publications that contribute to scholarship on ancient Greek music and metre, innovation in ancient Greece, Latin and Greek lyric poetry, the biography of Socrates and the status of Aspasia of Miletus. He writes poetry in ancient Greek and Latin, and was commissioned to compose odes in ancient Greek verse for the 2004 and 2012 Olympic Games.

D'Angour has conducted research into the sounds of ancient Greek music (since 2013), aiming to recreate the sound of the earliest substantial notated document of Greek music (from Euripides' drama Orestes), and to establish connections with much later Western musical traditions.[1]

D'Angour's book Socrates in Love (2019) presents new evidence for a radically revisionist historical thesis regarding the role of Aspasia of Miletus in the development of Socrates' thought. How to Innovate: An Ancient Guide to Creative Thinking (2021) distils for the general reader some of the findings relating to innovation explored in his academic monograph The Greeks and the New: Novelty in Ancient Greek Imagination and Experience (Cambridge 2011).

  1. ^ D'Angour, Armand (31 July 2018). "Ancient Greek music: now we finally know what it sounded like". The Conversation. Retrieved 20 February 2022.