 Mae gweithio'r gweithio'r ddweud ymgyrchu gyda'r gweithio ddod yn unigol ac mae'n ddim yn ffocws i'r gyflawni gweithio greithiolau i'w dynnu, a oed yn y 5th ymgyrch, BCE. Mae'n ddim yn ddweud y gweithio'r gweithio dechydig yw Lleidon Cersu Gweithio, a'n ddweud yma'u bachio a'r ddweud yma'r ddweud i'r gweithio. Mae gweithio'r gweithio'r gweithio yma yn y gallu cynnigau'r gweithio yn eu rôl. Felly mae'n eich swyddan nhw'n ffocsiw ar yr hwn y bwrth cyfosibol ac yn tyfnodol ar gyfer hwnnw i'r effaith hyn yn fwy. I'r ddafyn cysylltu am hwnnw i'r hunain, rwy'n gweinyddio i dil am gwrthbwynyddiaeth Ithu succeeding mediadau Ddysgog, iddyn ni'n ddataethau nad yw dysgu o'r pryd yn fwrdd digital o'r map. Mae'r pwgrifції i'r cysylltu i ddataeth艾. Rydyn ni'n ffyrdd am y gallu gweinyddio i ddau o'r gwybyddion ar gyfer y gymdeithasol, I'm now looking to scope out a plan for the second half to start to write my thesis. What drew me to this subject was having the opportunity after a commercial career to come to the ancient world through the Open Universities Masters course. My tutors were really encouraging in helping me to find the area that I was passionate about. I had a bit of a light bulb moment with Thucydides when I was reading his account of the debated Athens about whether they're going to go and attack Sicily or not. And I felt like I was really there and it was that sense of presence that made me want to explore the sensory aspects of his work. I think this research is important to other people because quite often in the media we see abstract references to concepts such as the Thucydides trap which is a political term. I think by drawing out the human dimension through the physicality and the emotional side of the narrative we start to think about the things that make us human. And in Thucydides' work we're allowed to hold up a lens to our own society because we've got that distance both in time and culture. It allows us to reflect back more on our very charged political times at the moment. What I'm most excited about in my research is the work that I've done on looking at how sensory theories from archaeology can be applied to a literary text. Thucydides is often seen as quite conceptual but by bringing across these theories from other parts of the discipline I feel we're really getting new insights into the work. I've been really lucky in my level of support from the Open University. I've got three fantastic supervisors all of whom have got different areas of expertise but work really well together as a team. I get ad hoc support from other members of the department and lots of opportunities to present my work. What this experience has meant to me personally is that I've had the chance to investigate an innovative writer in a new way. I've had the chance to share my research and I've got to meet some fantastic people through the Open University. Not only within the field of classical studies but also on a wider basis and from all over the world.