Anna M. Sitz is a Postdoc at the Universität Heidelberg in Germany, where she is leading a project on inscriptions at Greek sanctuaries. She comes from the US originally and completed her PhD at UPenn in 2017 with a dissertation titled “The Writing on the Wall: Inscriptions and Memory in the Temples of Late Antique Greece and Asia Minor.” This research combined epigraphic and archaeological approaches to explore the continued use and preservation of ancient, pagan inscriptions in the early Christian world. She is especially interested in the role that inscriptions played in the religious and social changes that took place in the late Roman empire. During her PhD, she spent two years in Athens at the ASCSA (American School of Classical Studies at Athens) and also held a CAORC Mediterranean Fellowship in Ankara at ARIT (American Research Institute in Turkey). In addition to Phoenix, she has done research on Byzantine Kappadokia and is currently leading the excavation of a medieval Christian cemetery at Labraunda in Karia. Her teaching at Heidelberg introduces students to subjects such as “Paganism in Late Antiquity,” “Constantine the Great,” and “Greek Identity in Asia Minor.”