John Noël Dillon

John Noël Dillon's picture
Senior Lector I (Classics and Divinity School)
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I am a classical philologist and Roman historian; I received my PhD in Classics here at Yale in
2008. Although I’ve worked most extensively on the administration of the Later Roman Empire
and Roman law, my special interests also include textual criticism, Roman Republican religion,
Roman numismatics, Greek literature of the Imperial period, and medieval and early modern
Latin literature and culture. I also have extensive pragmatic experience in translation.
 
After I graduated, I taught classics and ancient history at the University of Heidelberg (in
German!), the University of Exeter, and Peking University. I then took a hiatus of several years
with my family in Berkeley, California. During this time, I worked mainly as a scholarly
translator, translating hundreds articles, reference articles, and several scholarly monographs into English—primarily manuscripts in German, but also French and Italian and (typically cited as sources) Ancient Greek and Latin.
 
In 2017, I joined the faculty of the Yale Divinity School as Lecturer in Latin, where I taught and continue to teach Medieval Latin. In addition to joining the Classics faculty as senior lector in 2023, I am now also officially core faculty of Medieval Studies.
 
My publications include The Justice of Constantine: Law, Communication, and Control (2012), “Book I” of The Code of Justinian: A New Annotated Translation, with Parallel Latin and Greek (2016), and “The Emperor’s New Prose: The Style of Diocletian’s Legislation,” in Diocleziano: la frontiera giuridica dell’imperio (2018).
 
My most recent major translation projects are Markus Friedrich’s The Jesuits: A History (Princeton University Press, 2022), Hans-Ulrich Wiemer’s Theodoric the Great (Yale University Press, 2023), and Lisa Regazzoni, Things of History (forthcoming with Routledge).
 
Currently, I am producing a new translation of the Theodosian Code for Cambridge University Press.