International Congress on the Study of
the Middle Ages
Congrès international d’études sur le Moyen Âge
Internationaler Kongress zum Mittelalter
Congresso internazionale di studi sul Medioevo
Congreso Internacional sobre la Edad Medieval
Internationaal congres voor de studie van de Middeleeuwen
(c. 300-1500)
Monday 03 - Thursday 06 July 2023
This programme is available in alternative formats, e.g.
Braille, large print, etc., on request.
For more information and the latest news about IMC 2023,
please visit www.imc.leeds.ac.uk
This edition of the IMC Programme was published on
15 May 2023.
Changes made after this date can be found on the IMC
website, virtual platform, and IMC 2023 App.
Table of Contents
Introduction
Welcome........................................................................................5
About the IMC..................................................................................8
Before the IMC
Registration
&
Payment....................................................................9
Accommodation at the IMC................................................................12
Check-in Times & Accommodation Contact Details............................17
At the IMC
Accessibility..................................................................................20
Travel to and around Leeds............................................................22
Coronavirus (COVID-19).....................................................................23
Meals
&
Dietary
Requirements.......................................................24
Wellbeing & Health..........................................................................26
Things to Do on Campus................................................................27
Making Leeds Medieval.....................................................................29
Networking
&
Socialising................................................................30
Policies
Disciplinary Policy...............................................................................31
Social Media Policy............................................................................32
Policy on Dignity & Mutual Respect................................................33
Bursaries
&
Awards........................................................................34
Queries & Information
Arrival & Connection Information.....................................................35
IMC
Timetables................................................................................36
Queries & Contact Details................................................................37
IMC 2023 App.................................................................................38
Advice for Speakers & Moderators.....................................................40
Maps
2
Map
1:
On-Campus
Accommodation...............................................18
Map
2:
Off-Campus
Accommodation...............................................19
Map
3:
Campus
Map....................................................................39
Medieval Studies at Leeds...............................................................42
International Medieval Research....................................................46
Acknowledgements........................................................................49
IMC 2023 Administrative Structure................................................51
Index to Sessions by Thematic Strands..........................................52
Sunday 02 July
Events, Excursions, Performances & Workshops..................................57
Monday 03 July
Events, Excursions, Performances & Workshops..................................59
09.00-10.30...................................................................................63
11.15-12.45..................................................................................65
13.15-14.00................................................................................85
14.15-15.45................................................................................87
16.30-18.00..............................................................................106
19.00-20.00..............................................................................129
19.00 onwards................................................................................139
Tuesday 04 July
Events, Excursions, Performances & Workshops...............................141
09.00-10.30...............................................................................142
11.15-12.45..............................................................................162
13.15-14.00..............................................................................181
14.15-15.45..............................................................................182
16.30-18.00..............................................................................202
19.00-20.00..............................................................................221
20.00 onwards................................................................................230
Wednesday 05 July
Events, Excursions, Performances & Workshops.................................233
09.00-10.30............................................................................234
11.15-12.45..............................................................................255
13.15-14.00..............................................................................277
14.15-15.45..............................................................................278
3
16.30-18.00..............................................................................299
19.00-20.00..............................................................................320
20.00 onwards.................................................................................327
Thursday 06 July
Events, Excursions, Performances & Workshops.................................329
09.00-10.30..............................................................................330
11.15-12.45..............................................................................351
13.15-14.00...........................................................................372
14.15-15.45.............................................................................373
15.45 onwards................................................................................391.
Friday 07 July
Workshops..........................................................................392
Tuesday 11 July
Workshops..........................................................................392
Events & Excursions......................................................................393
Events...........................................................................................393
Excursions......................................................................................423
Exhibitions & Bookfairs.................................................................432
Receptions...........................................................................435
Index of Papers by Subject Area..................................................436
Index of Participants by Name.....................................................446
IMC 2024 Call for Papers..............................................................465
4
Welcome
I am delighted to present to you the programme for the International Medieval
Congress 2023. This summer’s Congress will welcome over 2,300 actively-involved
participants, with its academic programme featuring 714 sessions, keynotes, and
round table discussions.
After last year’s first hybrid event, we are looking forward to continue to build on the
experience and, once again, have all sessions, keynotes, and round table discussions
accessible both in person and virtually – for those of us who are unable to travel. The
pandemic has certainly changed our lives and the ways we engage and network with
each other. While we are only starting to work out new ways of working and exchanging
academic ideas through new formats, we hope to provide an excellent offer for both
in-person and virtual attendance.
A huge part of IMC 2023 is its Special Thematic Strand on ‘Networks & Entanglements’.
It has clearly attracted a lot of interest from medievalists of all disciplines, showing that
networks and entanglements are omnipresent in almost all areas of Medieval Studies.
We have 420 sessions and round table discussions relating to the special thematic
strand, subdivided into 38 sub-strands. Our thanks go to Johannes Preiser-Kapeller
(Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien)
who expertly and patiently managed to review all proposals and structure them into
such a coherent and comprehensive set of sessions.
We are delighted to welcome our keynote speakers. The Congress will open with a
double lecture by Robert Gramsch-Stehfest (Historisches Institut, Friedrich-SchillerUniversität Jena) and Anna Somfai (Department of Medieval Studies, Central European
University, Budapest/Wien), with the first lecture on ‘‘Big Data’ in History?: The Use
of Social Network Analysis in Medieval Studies - Challenges and Perspectives’ and the
second on ‘Medieval Manuscripts: Physical and Intellectual Networks Entwined’. On
Monday lunchtime, Sarit Shalev-Eyni (Department of Art History, Hebrew University
of Jerusalem) will continue with ‘Interreligious Networks: Book Art, Material Culture,
and Jewish-Christian Cooperation’. On Tuesday lunchtime, Verena Krebs (Historisches
Institut, Ruhr-Universität Bochum) will present a lecture on ‘‘So, Who Killed the
Elephant?’: Tracing African-European Entanglements in the Age of the ‘Global Middle
Ages’’. Then, on Wednesday lunchtime, David Zbíral (Centrum pro digitální výzkum
náboženství / Dissident Networks Project (DISSINET), Masarykova univerzita, Brno)
will present a lecture on ‘Beyond Connected Dots: The Future of Network Analysis
in Medieval Studies’. Finally, on Thursday lunchtime, Minoru Ozawa (College of Arts,
Rikkyo University, Tokyo) will speak on ‘The Making of Ship-Centred Communities in
the Viking Age: Social Units, Maritime Networks, and the Global Entanglements of
Historiography’.
In addition to the focus on ‘Networks & Entanglements’, we are pleased to welcome
a number of special lectures and events. This year’s Early Medieval Europe lecture
will be presented by Caroline Goodson (Faculty of History / King’s College, University
of Cambridge), entitled ‘Urban Ecologies of the Early Middle Ages’ and the annual
Medieval Academy of America lecture will be given by Elina Gertsman (Department of
Art History & Art, Case Western Reserve University, Ohio) on ‘Somatic Entanglements’.
As last year, we will be using the same core buildings: Clarendon Building, Esther
Simpson Building, Maurice Keyworth Building, Michael Sadler Building, Newlyn Building,
Parkinson Building, Stage@leeds, and University House. As always, we appreciate your
feedback - good and bad - about these rooms, which may influence future use of these
venues.
5
This year, we have worked hard to bring back more excursions, performances, and
workshops – all of which were heavily restricted in recent years. We have activities
including bookbinding, embroidery, and spinning workshops, a combat workshop, a
workshop on Gesso, an introduction to the astrolabe, an arms and armour replica
handling session in conjunction with the Society of Combat Archaeology, an open-mic
night, as well as three drop-in sessions at the Treasures Gallery in conjunction with
Leeds University Library’s Special Collections team, sampling some of the medieval
riches of their collection.
On the last day of the Congress, our ‘Making Leeds Medieval’ events will take place
around University Square where - once again - we will bring a number of medievalinspired activities to the main campus, with displays of crafts and local produce as
well as live entertainment including cannon and combat displays, falconry, music, and
re-enactments. The celebration will conclude with an informal dance workshop with
guidance from the Arbeau Dancers.
This year’s programme of events offers a wide range of choice including a performance
by Peter Bull, and dramatic performances by the Lords of Misrule and Daisy Black,
and a concert by Trouvère. Our programme for excursions includes visits to Mount
Grace and Guisborough Priory, Bolton Abbey, Byland Battlefield, the Royal Armouries
Museum, Shibden Hall, All Saints North Street in York, Tickhill Castle and Conisbrough.
There will be two workshops on Friday 7 July, one on making a tasselled pouch or
purse, co-ordinated by Tanya Bentham, and the other one on ‘Medieval Records and
the National Archives’, co-ordinated by The National Archives, Kew.
The main infrastructure for 2023 will remain similar to previous years:
Accommodation and meals: we have secured a number of additional accommodation
sites providing options for all budgets and requirements - all the details can be found
on our website. However, it is highly likely that the most popular options will sell out
quickly, and we recommend early booking to ensure your preferred accommodation
option.
Bookfair: The main Bookfair will take place in the Parkinson Court - all in one place
and at the heart of the Congress. The Second-Hand and Antiquarian Bookfair and the
Craft Fair will take place in the Leeds University Union Building and University Square.
Tea & Coffee: Complimentary tea & coffee will be served all throughout the Congress
at key break times in the Parkinson Court, the Esther Simpson Building, the Maurice
Keyworth Building and on University Square. We strongly encourage delegates to bring
a reusable water bottle or coffee cup for use at the tea and coffee stations and water
coolers on campus. Reusable coffee cups and water bottles are also available to buy on
campus, including from the IMC Souvenir stand in Leeds University Union.
Social spaces: There will be plenty of social spaces around campus, in particular in
and around the University Square. The Leeds University Union Old Bar will be open for
IMC Delegates throughout the Congress with late licenses from Sunday to Wednesday
evening. The Old Bar will also order extra supplies of our traditional Congress Ale! This
is in addition to the other social spaces around campus, including the cafe at the IMC
Bookfair in the Parkinson Building, Common Ground in Leeds University Union, and the
Esther Simpson Building cafe.
Session recording: One bonus feature of a fully-hybrid events is that all sessions
can be recorded and made available for future viewing. This will enrich the choice of
sessions for participants, with the ability to watch all sessions as recordings after the
IMC. For the IMC 2023 we intend to make all sessions available to view by registered
6
participants to the IMC – these recordings will be available until the end of August
2023.
The Call for Sessions and Papers for IMC 2024 (01-04 July 2024), with its special
thematic strand ‘Crisis’, can be found on at our website at imc.leeds.ac.uk. The proposal
system will be available online at the beginning of June, and by that time we will also
have more detailed proposal guidelines available.
We feel that this year’s programme once again presents a wealth of riches, with a lot to
offer for everyone, showing that Medieval Studies is promoting international discussion
and debate, and moving in a more cohesive direction than ever before. Despite some
of the ongoing global challenges and issues, we are glad to see that Medieval Studies is
very much alive. My colleagues and I look forward to welcoming you to the IMC in July.
Axel E. W. Müller
Director, International Medieval Congress
7
About the IMC
The IMC provides an interdisciplinary
forum for sharing ideas relating to all
aspects of the Middle Ages.
Organised
and
administered
by
the Institute for Medieval Studies (IMS) at
the University of Leeds, the IMC has
worked since its inception in 1994 to
cultivate the field of medieval studies
by bringing together researchers from
different countries, backgrounds, and
disciplines, and by providing opportunities
for
networking
and
professional
development in an open and inclusive
environment.
As the largest conference of its kind in
Europe, the IMC regularly attracts more
than 2,500 medievalists from all over
the world. Since the COVID-19 pandemic
began, the in-person conference has been
supplemented by opportunities for remote
participation.
As in previous years, the academic
programme is complemented by a variety
of concerts, exhibitions, and excursions
which are open to delegates and the
public alike, as well as delegate social and
networking opportunities.
The IMC seeks to foster a scholarly
community by providing spaces for
networking and socialising both online
and on campus. This year’s IMC will be
the 30th in its history and will take place
from Monday 03 - Thursday 06 July 2023.
Structure and Organisation
Academic support for the IMC is provided
by
an
international
Programming
Committee, where individual members act
8
as specialists for particular programming
strands. They are responsible for
assessing proposals, collating paper
proposals into coherent sessions, and
proposing keynote speakers. For more
information, see the IMC website: www.
imc.leeds.ac.uk/about/programming.
The IMC is also supported by its Standing
Committee, comprising academic staff,
students, and early career scholars from
the Institute for Medieval Studies. They
advise on academic matters such as
selection of new Programming Committee
members and each year’s special
thematic strand, as well as advising the
IMC administration team on strategic,
operational, and developmental issues.
Institute for Medieval Studies
The IMS is home to a thriving community
of more than 50 medievalists, as well
as an outstanding library. It offers
interdisciplinary MA and PhD study,
including innovative language teaching
and
research
skills
training
(see
pp. 42-44).
As well as the IMC, the IMS is responsible
for producing the International Medieval
Bibliography (IMB). Since its launch
in 1967, the IMB has proved to be an
invaluable research tool, which is available
online for researchers worldwide (see
p. 45).
The IMS also acts as series editor for
International Medieval Research (IMR),
which publishes selected papers given at
previous IMCs. So far, 26 IMR volumes
have been produced (see pp. 46-47).
Registration & Payment
We recommend you complete
registration as early as possible.
your
The deadline for registrations is Friday
05 May 2023. Any registrations received
after this date are at the discretion of the
IMC and will be subject to a late fee.
Registration will close on Wednesday
14 June 2023. Registration after this
date and during the Congress will not be
possible.
All attendees, speakers, moderators,
organisers, respondents, and round table
participants must register online in order
to attend IMC 2023 either virtually or inperson. It will not be possible to access any
aspect of IMC 2023 without registering.
Registrations are not transferable.
A variety of in-person rates will be
available, including day rates. All inperson rates include full access to
the virtual platform, including session
recordings. Due to technical limitations,
day rates for virtual attendance will not
be available.
How to Register
You can book and pay for your registration,
including accommodation, meals, events,
and excursion tickets through our website:
www.imc.leeds.ac.uk/register.
Payments are processed in GBP (£) and
can be made by Switch/Maestro, Visa, or
MasterCard.
Once you have registered, you will
receive an automated acknowledgement
email which will contain your registration
confirmation number and a summary of
your booking.
Please keep a note of your registration
number as you may need it when
contacting us about your registration.
To amend or cancel your registration,
please follow the instructions in your
acknowledgement email.
All registrations are subject to our
Registration Terms and Conditions: www.
imc.leeds.ac.uk/register/terms.
Other Payment Methods
Payment by credit/debit card over the
telephone may be possible in exceptional
circumstances.
If
you
experience
difficulties registering, please email imc@
leeds.ac.uk for further guidance.
If you are only able to pay by invoice
or bank transfer, please contact the
IMC before registering so we can send
you instructions about completing your
registration. Failure to contact us in
advance will mean that your registration
cannot be processed.
This service incurs an additional fee to
cover administrative costs.
We are unable to accept payments by
cash, cheque, or postal order.
Concessionary Registration Fees
Reduced fees are available for students,
retired, low-waged, or unwaged scholars.
You will be asked to upload proof of your
status when you register online using this
category. If you are unable to do this,
you must supply your evidence to us as a
scanned document attached to an email.
For more information on accepted proofs
of status, go to www.imc.leeds.ac.uk/
registrations/proofofstatus.
Low-Waged Delegates
If you consider yourself to be earning a
low wage, you can apply to register at
the concessionary rate. On registration
for the concessionary rate, you will
be prompted to provide a supporting
statement. We will assess your eligibility
on a case-by-case basis, and you will
be prompted to send us some evidence
of your income, employment status (in
particular, precarity of employment), or
other relevant financial circumstances.
Additionally, concessionary rates will be
available for delegates from certain lowincome countries.
9
Changing Mode of Participation
In line with our Cancellation Policy, if you
must switch from in-person to virtual
participation, please let us know by Friday
05 May 2023 in order to receive a refund
of the difference between the in-person
and virtual Programming and Registration
Fee, together with any other bookings
made with the IMC (e.g. accommodation,
food, events, excursions etc.), minus a
£25 administration fee.
While it will still be possible for attendees
to switch mode of participation after
Friday 05 May 2023, due to financial
commitments
to
external
service
providers, no refund shall be payable
after this point.
Cancellations
Cancellations received by email to
imc@leeds.ac.uk on or before Friday 05
May 2023, 23.59 BST will secure a full
refund, minus a £50 cancellation fee.
Refunds will not be made for cancellations
received after Friday 05 May 2023,
23.59 BST.
Please inform the IMC administration and
your session organiser(s) immediately
if you are obliged to withdraw from the
programme. This is in order to allow time
for alternative arrangements to be made,
or a replacement paper to be sought via
our Late Call for Papers which can be
found at www.imc.leeds.ac.uk/imc-2023/
latecall.
Cooling-Off Period
Until Friday 21 April 2023, all items
purchased through the IMC are subject to
a 14-day cooling-off period. This means
that after you have completed your
payment, you can contact the IMC to
cancel your booking within 14 days and
receive a full refund. After this period, the
standard cancellation policy will apply.
Bursary Recipients
If you have been awarded an IMC
bursary, you will receive an email shortly
before registrations open detailing how
10
to register online and claim your bursary.
Ensure you follow these instructions
carefully in order to automatically deduct
the value of your bursary from your total
booking cost.
Unsuccessful Bursary Applicants
If you applied for a bursary but did not
receive one, we will be in touch shortly
before registrations open. For IMC 2023,
we are pleased to offer registration at
the concessionary rate to all bursary
applicants, subject to provision of suitable
proof of status.
Friends & Family Members
Non-participating friends and family
members can only attend the one session
in which their friend or family member
is speaking without having to pay the
relevant Programming and Registration
Fee. If they wish to attend any other
sessions, they will need to register as a
delegate and pay the relevant fee.
You can request a friend or family member
registration when registering online.
We will then make them a special name
badge, which will be included in your
registration pack.
Children at the IMC and Family
Registration
Unfortunately, the IMC cannot provide
assistance with childcare. However,
children are welcome to accompany their
parents or guardians. Children under 18
must be supervised by their parent or
guardian at all times, including at IMC
events.
11
Accommodation at the IMC
We offer a variety of accommodation
options that can be booked online when
you register, including a number of halls
of residence on and off campus, as well
as special inclusive rates at a number of
nearby hotels.
All options include bed, breakfast, and
unlimited WiFi.
Halls of Residence
Accommodation on campus is very limited:
we recommend that you book as early as
possible to reserve a room. We cannot
guarantee on-campus accommodation.
University halls of residence offer
rooms for single occupancy only. Rooms
cannot be shared. If you would like to
have a room next to a friend or family
member, please make this clear when you
register. Although we will do our best to
accommodate your request, this cannot
be guaranteed.
Staff at halls of residence try to allocate
shared bathroom facilities to delegates of
the same gender, but this may not always
be possible. Please contact us if you have
any queries or concerns.
Delegates staying in halls of residence
also have access to the University’s sports
facilities at theEdge, including a wellequipped gym, swimming pool, squash
courts, and even a climbing wall.
Smoking is not permitted in any University
halls of residence. Additionally, between
08.00 and 18.00, you are asked not to
smoke anywhere outside on campus.
For the time being, vaping outside is
permitted on the smokefree campus.
City Centre Hotels
Single, twin, double, and family rooms
are available in hotel accommodation.
For all shared rooms, please provide the
IMC with the names of all guests when
registering, as we are required to provide
the names of all guests to the hotels.
Parking for hotel accommodation cannot
be booked through the IMC. Where
12
applicable, parking must be arranged
directly with the hotel.
If you would like to extend your stay at
any of these hotels beyond the dates of
the IMC, please contact the hotel directly
to arrange this.
Please note that owing to international
cricket matches taking place in Leeds
during IMC week, we anticipate that
accommodation across the city may sell
out faster than in previous years.
Family Accommodation
Children are welcome to accompany their
parents or guardians to the IMC. Children
under 18 must be supervised by their
parent or guardian at all times, including
at IMC events.
A limited number of rooms suitable for
families are available at the Ibis Styles
Leeds City Centre Arena. We recommend
early booking if you would like to
reserve one. Please read the occupancy
information carefully to ensure that the
room can accommodate your family.
If you would like to book a family room
in any other accommodation, contact
the hotel directly. However, if you need
a cot for an infant, most hotels have a
limited supply of these; we recommend
requesting one as early as possible.
You can find details of all halls of
residence and hotel options on the
following pages, or view full details
online at www.imc.leeds.ac.uk/imc2023/delegates/accommodation/.
Luggage Store
Alongside luggage storage facilities at all
university accommodation and hotels, a
luggage store will be available on campus
throughout the IMC. Check our website or
ask at the Information & Payments Desk
in the LUU Foyer for more details.
For information on how to collect your
registration pack, visit our website.
13
Charles Morris Hall: Storm Jameson
Court
Devonshire Hall
Award-winning
ensuite
accommodation in the
campus, including fully
rooms.
A University of Leeds-owned hall of
residence in a quiet neighbourhood
1.4 km (0.9 miles) from campus, a
20-minute walk or 5-minute bus
journey.
University
heart of
accessible
• £62.00 per night: single occupancy,
ensuite, breakfast included
• £62.00
per
night:
single
occupancy,
ensuite,
breakfast
included [Accessible]
14
• £42.00 per night: single occupancy,
shared
bathroom,
breakfast
included
• £54.50 per night: single occupancy,
ensuite, breakfast included
Ellerslie Global Residence
Lyddon Hall
On-campus student halls situated
in converted terraced houses and
annexes offering ensuite and shared
bathroom options.
A converted 19th-century main hall
situated on campus with an adjacent
annexe of converted 19th-century
townhouses.
• £43.50
per
night:
shared
bathroom,
single
occupancy,
breakfast included
• £56.00 per night: ensuite, single
occupancy, breakfast included
• £43.50
per
night:
shared
bathroom,
single
occupancy,
breakfast included
• £56.00 per night: ensuite, single
occupancy, breakfast included
Ibis Styles Leeds Arena
The Queens Hotel
The Ibis Styles Leeds City Centre Arena
is located 1.4 km (0.9 miles) from the
University campus, a 20-minute walk.
The Queens Hotel is located 1.6 km
(1 mile) from the University campus,
a 20-minute walk.
• £100.00 per night: single or double
occupancy,
double/twin
room,
ensuite, breakfast included
• £120.00
per
night:
multioccupancy, family room, ensuite,
breakfast included
• £155.00
per
night:
single
occupancy, double room, ensuite,
breakfast included
• £175.00
per
night:
double
occupancy, double/twin room,
ensuite, breakfast included
Ibis Leeds Centre Marlborough St
Please turn the page for more hotel
options and for contact information for all
accommodation options.
The Ibis Leeds Hotel is located 1.6 km
(1 mile) to the south of the University
campus, which is a 20-minute walk.
• £80.00 per night: single occupancy,
double or twin room, ensuite,
breakfast included
• £85.00
per
night:
double
occupancy, double or twin room,
ensuite, breakfast included
15
Radisson Blu Hotel Leeds
Roomzzz Leeds City West
The Radisson Blu Hotel is approximately
1 km (0.7 mile) from the University
campus, a 15-minute walk.
• £134.00 per night (SaturdayMonday), £204.00 per night
(Tuesday-Thursday):
single
occupancy, double room, ensuite,
breakfast included
• £151.00 per night (SaturdayMonday), £221 per night (TuesdayThursday):
double
occupancy,
double / twin room, ensuite,
breakfast included
Roomzzz Leeds City West Aparthotel is
located 1.3 km (0.8 mile) to the south
of the University campus, which is a
20-minute walk.
• £75.00 per night: single
or
double occupancy, double/twin
room, ensuite, breakfast included
Alternative Accommodation
If you would like to book your own accommodation, Visit Leeds (www.visitleeds.co.uk)
can provide information and resources.
16
Check-In & Contact Details
Accommodation Check-In Times
Location
Check In
Check Out
University Halls of Residence
After 14.00
By 10.00
Ibis Leeds Centre Marlborough Street
After 15.00
By 12.00 (midday)
Ibis Styles Leeds City Centre Arena
After 15.00
By 12.00 (midday)
Queens Hotel
After 15.00
By 11.00
Radisson Blu
After 15.00
By 12.00 (midday)
Roomzzz Aparthotel Leeds City West
After 15.00
By 11.00
If you have booked a multi-site stay, you must vacate your room by the time stipulated
above. Luggage storage is available, see www.imc.leeds.ac.uk/imc-2023/delegates/
luggage/.
Accommodation Contact Details
Charles Morris Hall (Storm Jameson
Court)
Ibis Leeds Centre Marlborough St.
Mount Preston Street
University of Leeds
LEEDS LS2 9JP
Tel: +44 (113) 343-2750
23 Marlborough Street
LEEDS LS1 4PB
Tel: +44 (113) 396-9000
https://all.accor.com/hotel/3652/index.
en.shtml
Devonshire Hall
Ibis Styles Leeds City Centre Arena
Cumberland Road
LEEDS LS6 2EQ
Tel: +44 (113) 275-1265
Wade Lane
LEEDS LS2 8NJ
Tel: +44 (113) 831-4530
Email: h9687-re@accor.com
https://all.accor.com/hotel/9687/index.
en.shtml
Ellerslie Global Residence
Lyddon Terrace
LEEDS LS2 9LQ
Tel: +44 (113) 343-1802
Lyddon Hall
Off Cromer Terrace
LEEDS LS2 9JW
Tel: +44 (113) 343-7697
The Queens Hotel
City Square
LEEDS LS1 1PJ (use LS1 4DY for sat-nav)
Tel: +44 (113) 243-1323
www.thequeensleeds.co.uk
Radisson Blu Hotel
1 The Light
LEEDS LS1 8TL
Tel: +44 (113) 236-6000
www.radissonhotels.com/en-us/hotels/
radisson-blu-leeds
Roomzzz Aparthotel Leeds City West
2 Burley Rd,
LEEDS LS3 1JB
Tel: +44 (113) 233-0400
www.roomzzz.com/locations/leeds-citywest
Please note that all details are correct at the time of publishing. All information here is
freely available online and accessible on the webpages of the individual accommodations.
17
Map 1: On-Campus Accommodation
To Devonshire Hall
60
22
LIF
TO
NP
LA
CE
UNIV
ERS
ITY
SQU
ARE
28 29
32
12
Woodhouse Lane
and Merrion Centre
Car Parks
30
Ibis Marlborough St
Hotel & Roomzzz
Leeds City West
86
P
P
101
P
Key
86. Charles Morris Hall:
Storm Jameson Court
22. Ellerslie Hall
12. Esther Simpson Building
32. Leeds University Union
30. Lyddon Hall
18
60. Parkinson Building
29. Refectory
28. University House
101. theEdge Sport and
Fitness Centre
Rail Station,
City Centre
Hotels
Map 2: Off-Campus Accommodation
Key
DEVONSHIRE
HALL
Accommodation
ad
nd
Landmarks
Ro
rla
be
m
➔
Cu
HE
E
GL
IN
AD
Y
De
v
on
Ro
a
d
PARKINSON BUILDING
(MAIN CONGRESS BUILDING)
ad
ks
Ro
ar
St
M
Le
ic
es
te
rP
la
ce
UNIVERSITY
OF LEEDS
CAMPUS
LEEDS ARENA
ROOMZZZ
LEEDS CITY WEST
CIVIC
HALL
MILLENIUM
SQUARE
MERRION
SHOPPING
CENTRE
LCM
CATHEDRAL
TOWN
HALL
ART
GALLERY
THE
LIGHT
ST
JOHNS
SHOPPING
CENTRE
RADISSON BLU HOTEL
IBIS LEEDS
HOTEL
IBIS STYLES LEEDS CITY
CENTRE ARENA
SHOPPING
CENTRE
LEEDS GENERAL
INFIRMARY
AY
NW
IO
LEEDS CITY
COLLEGE
RR
ME
WOODHOUSE
SQUARE
CITY
SQUARE
VICTORIA
QUARTER
SHOPPING
VICTORIA GATE
SHOPPING CENTRE
KIRKGATE
MARKET
TRINITY
SHOPPING
CENTRE
WEST
YORKSHIRE
PLAYHOUSE
COACH /
BUS
STATION
QUEENS HOTEL
LEEDS CITY
RAIL
STATION
ROYAL
ARMOURIES
19
For AC to check/update
Accessibility
We are committed to ensuring all
delegates can fully participate in IMC
events and sessions.
‘Disabled Building Access’ filter (under the
Facilities tab) on the University’s campus
map: www.leeds.ac.uk/campusmap.
Please let us know if you have any specific
requirements, for example, information
in alternative formats, such as Braille or
large print, or if you have any building
access needs. We will do our best to
meet your requests. It would be helpful
to know about any such requirements
before Friday 05 May 2023.
Many session rooms contain assistive
listening systems, for which you will need
to borrow a receiver. If the room does
not have one of these systems, we can
provide a portable induction loop. Please
contact us in advance if you need to use
either of these services.
We will ask about your accessibility needs
via our confidential online registration
form and we will follow up personally with
any delegate who lets us know that they
have access needs.
Session Rooms
We endeavour to make sure IMC session
rooms are wheelchair accessible. Please
contact the IMC or ask at the Information
and Payments Desk for maps of all
accessible routes on campus.
Access reports on University buildings are
conducted individually as building work
is completed across campus. However,
access information on most buildings used
for the IMC is available via AccessAble:
www.accessable.co.uk/organisations/
university-of-leeds.
The locations of accessible entrances to all
University buildings can be found using the
20
Accommodation
Fully
accessible
accommodation
is
available at Charles Morris Hall: Storm
Jameson Court and at city centre hotels.
We recommend booking early if you
need accessible accommodation. Please
provide as much information as possible
when making your booking so we can
help with any requirements you have, or
contact us beforehand if you would like to
discuss your options.
Parking
A limited amount of on-campus parking
in disabled bays is available for delegates
who hold a valid EU blue badge or
international equivalent. This costs £7.00
per day and can be booked when you
register online. We recommend booking
your parking space as early as possible.
You will need to display both your blue
badge and your parking permit when you
arrive. Your permit does not reserve a
particular parking space. Maps of disabled
parking on campus can be provided on
request.
Gender Neutral and Accessible
Bathrooms
All single-room accessible toilets on
campus are gender neutral. These will be
signposted in all buildings used for IMC
events.
Additional gender-neutral toilets are also
available in most IMC buildings. These will
be clearly marked on IMC signage.
Virtual Accessibility
Regardless of how you are planning to
participate in the IMC, we will ask for your
accessibility needs via our confidential
online registration form and follow up
personally with any delegate who indicates
that they have access needs.
If you need to see the speaker’s face
in order to lip read, you can ‘Pin’ any
speaker to your screen both via the web
interface and Zoom app. This means you
can see their face full-screen so long as
their camera is turned on.
For this reason, we request that all
speakers, both in-person and virtual,
keep their cameras on and clearly face
the camera while presenting. If a speaker
cannot be clearly seen, the Zoom chat can
be used to alert our virtual support team
who will attempt to notify the speaker.
Closed Captioning
Automatic closed captioning will be
available for all IMC 2023 sessions. To
turn on automatic captioning, you simply
click ‘CC’ on the menu bar within the
Zoom app.
Delegates
watching
recordings
of
sessions may also enable these automatic
captions in the same way. Alternatively,
automatically generated captions on
recordings can be enabled via Google
Chrome: blog.google/products/chrome/
live-caption-chrome.
We recognise that this solution may not
suit every attendee, and that a wide
variety of free-to-use or subscriptionbased speech-to-text systems are now
available for mobile devices. To find out
more about how we can help you access
these services, please visit www.leeds.
ac.uk/imc-2023/delegates/access.
IMC sessions will be held via our virtual
platform’s Zoom integration, which also
has the option for a hearing person to
provide captions during live sessions
which can then be viewed by deaf/hard
of hearing attendees. If you are a hearing
person who wishes to assist with providing
closed captions during live sessions,
please email imc@leeds.ac.uk.
If you have any concerns about accessing
IMC 2023 as a deaf / hard of hearing
person, or have any other accessibility
needs, please get in touch and we will
endeavour to support you in any way
we can. So that we can provide the best
support we can, we would be grateful if
you could contact us prior to registering
by emailing imc@leeds.ac.uk with ‘Access
Query’ in the subject line.
21
Travel to & around Leeds
Getting here: Leeds is centrally located
in the north of the UK, with good rail,
coach, and road connections to London,
Manchester, and other major cities. The
nearest airports are Leeds Bradford (45
mins by bus) and Manchester (1h30 by
train).
Find out more about travel to and from
Leeds on our website: www.imc.leeds.
ac.uk/imc-2023/delegates/plan-yourvisit.
Parking: Only available on campus for
blue badge holders. University rules mean
that all car users must pay for parking
even with a blue badge. For parking
options near campus, visit www.imc.
leeds.ac.uk/imc-2023/delegates/parking.
Local Bus: Leeds has an extensive
network of local buses. Tickets can be
purchased from the driver in cash, while
most buses also accept contactless card
payments. Frequent services run from
Leeds Bus and Coach Station (X84, 27,
29, 6, or 8) and Leeds Rail Station (1 or
1B) to the University of Leeds campus.
Use the West Yorkshire Metro Journey
Planner to plan your journey: www.
wymetro.com/plan-a-journey.
Taxi: Private hire taxis must be booked
in advance. The University recommends
Arrow Cars (+44 (113) 258-5888), or City
Cabs (+44 (113) 246-9999).
Taxi ranks can also be found at Leeds Rail
Station (main exit), Leeds Bus and Coach
Station (Dyer St), The Light Shopping
Centre, and in front of the Parkinson
Building.
By Bike: The University has designated
cycle parking where you can secure your
bicycle. You will need to bring a bike chain
or lock.
On Foot: Leeds railway station, Bus and
Coach Station, and all IMC accommodation
are within walking distance of the
University campus.
Use Google Maps to plan a walking
route to campus: www.tinyurl.com/IMCParkinson.
22
Coronavirus (COVID-19)
We advise all travellers coming from
overseas to review the UK Government
guidance here: www.gov.uk/guidance/
travel-to-england-from-another-countryduring-coronavirus-covid-19. It is vital
that you review this information regularly
and ensure you have the most up-to-date
information to be able to adhere to the
rules in force at the time of travel.
You should not attend if you have recently
tested positive for or are experiencing any
symptoms of coronavirus or any other
infectious disease.
Coronavirus Control Measures on
Campus
It is possible that control measures may
be reintroduced as a result of either a
spike in cases or the emergence of a new
variant. At present, we can only continue
to plan the IMC and advise delegates
based on current legislation.
Here at the University of Leeds, the
University community remains aware of
the risk that coronavirus presents and
asks that attendees and staff continue
to take a community-focused and
responsible approach to controlling the
spread of the virus.
Therefore, we ask that if you have
symptoms of coronavirus – or any other
infectious disease such as a cold, flu, or
stomach bug – that you do not attend the
IMC. In these circumstances, we will do
our best to facilitate virtual participation
in line with our Registration Terms &
Conditions.
We recognise that individuals may choose
to take certain precautions, such as
continuing to wear a face covering. In
line with our Policy on Dignity and Mutual
Respect, we ask that all attendees are
mindful and considerate of the needs of
others. Remember that there may be
many reasons why someone may choose
to wear a face covering.
We will keep delegates updated via our
website: www.imc.leeds.ac.uk/imc-2023/
delegates/coronavirus-information.
23
GREAT FOOD
at the heart of the IMC
Great Food at Leeds welcomes you to the Leeds
International Medieval Congress 2023. We have
a range of delicious food options for you to enjoy
during your visit.
Lunch
Credit
£6.50
Street
Food Hut
on the precinct
2 Course
Buffet Dinner
at the Refectory
£15.50
THE REFECTORY
COFFEE BARS
The Refectory will be open
from 7am to 8pm serving
breakfast (7am to 10am),
lunch (11:30am to 3pm) and
dinner (6pm to 8pm), using
locally-sourced ingredients.
A range of delicious sandwiches, snacks and drinks can be bought
from our café bars around campus.
STREET FOOD HUT
Our Chef’s street food
including meat and vegetarian
options will be available
outside the Refectory. Open
from 11:30am to 2pm.
• Hugo – located on the precinct, open from 8am to 4pm
• Parkinson Court Café – located in the Parkinson Building, open
from 8:30am to 6pm
• Esther Simpson Café – located in the Esther Simpson building,
open from 8:30am to 5pm
• The Edit Room – located on the ground floor of the Edward
Boyle Library, open from 8:30am to 4pm
• 1915 – located in the Sir William Henry Bragg Building, open
from 8:30am to 4pm
All of the above areas accept the IMC lunch credit voucher
GREAT
FOOD
at
LEEDS
www.leeds.ac.uk/gfal
@greatfoodleeds
Meals & Dietary Requirements
Breakfast
Dinner
For on-campus accommodation, breakfast
will be served in the Refectory. If you are
staying in IMC hotel accommodation or
Devonshire Hall, breakfast will be served
in the dining hall, restaurant, or reception
area of your accommodation.
Delegates who have pre-booked dinner
tickets can enjoy a hot two-course meal
served in the Refectory, 18.00-20.00,
Sunday-Thursday.
How to Book
IMC delegates can purchase meal tickets
for lunches and dinners when they register
online. We cannot guarantee any meals
that are not booked in advance, and it
is not possible to buy, sell, or exchange
unwanted tickets when you arrive.
If pre-booking, please provide as much
detail as possible about any dietary
requirements when you register. We will
pass these on to the relevant catering
teams, who will do their best to meet
your needs. Unfortunately, we cannot
always guarantee that this will be possible
- especially if we are not informed before
Friday 05 May 2023.
You may also buy food from various
outlets on campus during the Congress
and pay by cash or debit/credit card.
Lunch
If you pre-book lunch, you will receive a
daily QR code voucher in your delegate
pack. These café lunch credit vouchers
may be used at any of the on-campus
venues featured on the Great Food At
Leeds advert on the previous page.
Special IMC meal deals to the value of the
voucher will be available or you can spend
the credit on any other food or drink items
at these sites during their opening hours.
Details of where café lunch credit can be
spent and pre-booked dinners served can
be found on our website: www.imc.leeds.
ac.uk/imc-2023/delegates/meals.
If you did not pre-book dinner, you can
buy dinner using cash or debit/credit card
from the Refectory.
Kosher Meals
To provide kosher meals, the University
orders meals in advance from a specialist
supplier. This means that you must select
Kosher options at registration and pay the
applicable fee. Please book well in advance
to ensure we can meet your needs.
Eating on Campus
Coffee bars selling hot and cold
sandwiches can be found in the Esther
Simpson Building, Laidlaw Library, Edward
Boyle Library (the Edit Room), Parkinson
Building, and Maurice Keyworth Building.
A number of cafés, bars, and shops are
also open on campus. Old Bar and Terrace
Bar in Leeds University Union serve hot
food all day, while cold sandwiches,
salads, and drinks can be purchased from
the Co-Op shop. Meals are also available
to buy from the Refectory.
Reuseable Bottles and Cups
If you have a reuseable water bottle or
coffee cup, please bring it with you to
use the tea and coffee stations and water
coolers on campus.
You can also pre-order an IMC-branded
reuseable coffee cup and other items
when you register online!
Pre-orders will be available for collection
on arrival.
Delegates who did not pre-book lunch are
welcome to buy food using cash or debit/
credit card from these outlets.
25
Wellbeing & Health
Quiet Room
University House: De Grey Room
Monday 03 July
09.00-20.00
Tuesday 04 July
09.00-20.00
Wednesday 05 July
09.00-20.00
Thursday 06 July
09.00-17.00
This room will be open as a quiet place for
relaxing away from the lively atmosphere
of the IMC. Please bring along anything
you may need in order to take a break in
your own company.
The quiet room is not intended as a
space for socialising or practising your
paper: please respect the needs of other
delegates. Instructions on using the room
will be available inside.
Lactation Room
University House: Woodsley Room
Monday 03 July
09.00-20.00
Tuesday 04 July
09.00-20.00
Wednesday 05 July
09.00-20.00
Thursday 06 July
09.00-17.00
Prayer Spaces and Faith-Based
Support
A
number
of
prayer
and
quiet
contemplation spaces are available across
campus.
• Emmanuel
Centre:
A
central
space managed by the Universities’
Chaplaincy in Leeds, where you can
drop in to use the chapel for quiet
contemplation and prayer.
• Islamic prayer room: Cemetery
Lodge is located on St George’s Field,
close to the Fine Art Building. It is
managed by Leeds University Union
Islamic Society.
• Jewish Chaplaincy: Hillel House
Synagogue on Springfield Mount is
home to the Leeds University Union
Jewish Society, offering regular
morning prayer services and Orthodox
and Egalitarian Friday night services.
Download a list of contacts for different
faiths across Leeds from www.tinyurl.
com/faithcontactleeds.
This room is a private, comfortable space,
close to a sink and accessible bathroom.
It will provide facilities for attendees who
are breastfeeding and need to express
milk during the day. A fridge, labels, paper
towels, and wet wipes will be provided.
Medical Advice
Eating and Dietary Requirements
The University is committed to the health
and wellbeing of our staff, students, and
visitors.
You are welcome to eat during sessions
and in session rooms if you need to do so.
If you are booking meal tickets, there
is space to give us information on your
dietary requirements during registration.
Unfortunately, we cannot guarantee that
the University will be able to meet any
special dietary requirements not provided
before Friday 05 May 2023.
Find more information on finding a
pharmacy, GP, or urgent medical care on
p. 37.
Smokefree Campus
You must not smoke or vape inside
University buildings including entrances,
covered walkways, and doorways.
Between 08.00 and 18.00, the campus is
smoke free. You are asked not to smoke
anywhere outside on campus. For the
time being, vaping outside is permitted
on the smokefree campus.
For more information,
hr.leeds.ac.uk/smoking.
26
please
visit
Things to Do on Campus
IMC Bookfair
The IMC Bookfair is open in Parkinson
Court throughout the IMC. Take advantage
of special conference discounts and meet
publishers and distributors.
For virtual attendees, the Bookfair will
take place on the virtual event platform.
Details of publishers exhibiting at IMC
2023 both in-person and online can be
found on pp. 432-433.
Second-Hand & Antiquarian Bookfair
Meet book dealers and browse a wide
variety of titles in the Leeds University
Union Foyer, Sunday-Tuesday. Find out
more on p. 434.
Medieval Craft Fair
Come to University Square and Leeds
University Union Foyer on Wednesday
and Thursday to discover hand-crafted
items inspired by medieval production
techniques and aesthetics. Meet the
exhibitors and learn about the techniques
involved in making these exquisite and
unique items. Find out more on p. 433.
Events, Excursions & Workshops
Our diverse programme of events,
excursions, performances, and workshops,
is open to the public and delegates. Find
out
more:
www.imc.leeds.ac.uk/imc2023/events/.
During the IMC, Leeds University Library’s
Special Collections team will run special
drop-ins for delegates to see medieval
treasures from their collections. Find out
more on pp. 393-431.
Souvenirs
Take home a memento of your trip to
Leeds! Reuseable cups, canvas bags, and
IMC notepads will be available to preorder when you register.
The souvenir stall will be located in Leeds
University Union throughout the IMC for
purchases and pre-order collections.
27
Location: Parkinson Building
Location: Parkinson Building
Open: Tuesday-Saturday, 10.00-17.00.
Free admission.
Open: Tuesday-Saturday, 10.00-17.00.
Free admission.
The Stanley & Audrey Burton Gallery is an
oasis of calm at the heart of the University
of Leeds campus.
The Treasures of the Brotherton Gallery
is the public face of the world-renowned
Special Collections held at the University
of Leeds.
During IMC 2023, the below exhibition
will be taking place:
Arcadia for All? Contemporary British
Landscape Painting
This group exhibition, guest curated
by Judith Tucker and Geraint Evans,
examines the status of landscape painting
in Britain in the 21st century. Diverse
artists explore both ‘real’ landscapes
and representations of landscape, and
through this, address key issues of our
time: political, aesthetic and ecological.
Find out more via our website: www.
tinyurl.com/stanley-audrey-info.
The
permanent
display
contains
many highlights, including beautiful
illuminated medieval manuscripts and
rare early printed books from across
the globe. Special Collections holds an
unprecedented five collections which
have been identified as nationally or
internationally significant through the Arts
Council England Designation Scheme.
During 2023, the Treasures of the
Brotherton gallery will also be hosting the
following exhibition:
Shifting Borders: A Journey to the
Centre of our World(s)
Take a journey across borders and travel
from Leeds to Venice and Jerusalem
via the Sun and Moon. This distinctive
exhibition, curated by Chris Taylor,
Professor of Fine Art Practice, explores
how artists, authors and collectors map,
document and envisage the world in
which they live, and beyond.
Find out more via our website: www.
tinyurl.com/shifting-borders-brotherton.
Drop-In Sessions
Parkinson Building: Treasures of the
Brotherton Gallery
Monday 03 July, 12.00-14.00
Tuesday 04 July, 12.00-14.00
Wednesday 05 July, 12.00-14.00
Join us for a drop-in session to see
medieval
treasures
from
Special
Collections at the University of Leeds.
Special Collections staff will be in the
Treasures of the Brotherton Gallery with a
selection of highlights from the collections
for delegates to examine close up.
Find out more at library.leeds.ac.uk/galleries
28
Making Leeds Medieval
Thursday 06 July, 10.30-18.00,
University Square
As IMC 2023 comes to a close, come
and discover all that Making Leeds
Medieval has to offer. Performances,
demonstrations, and a bustling medieval
craft fair will turn University Square into a
vibrant medieval-inspired scene.
Demonstrations & Displays
Experience an exciting collection of
demonstrations and displays, including
the ever-popular live combat displays and
birds of prey.
Meet the demonstrators, view replica
weaponry and armour, and see majestic
birds of prey including falcons and hawks
up close.
Historical & Archaeological Societies
Fair
Pop in to Leeds University Union Foyer
for a chance to find out more about
various independent groups involved in
preserving local and national history in
Leeds, Yorkshire, and the UK.
Medieval Craft Fair
Our Medieval Craft Fair continues for a
second day. Come along and browse a
wide variety of stalls, chat with exhibitors
about
their
production
techniques,
and maybe even take home a unique,
medieval-inspired, and hand-crafted gift
for yourself or someone you know.
Medieval Performances
Following the final academic sessions,
we are delighted to host performances of
medieval music and other demonstrations.
The programme for Making Leeds Medieval
will be available online closer to the time:
www.imc.leeds.ac.uk/imc-2023/events/
makingleedsmedieval/.
Further details about Making Leeds
Medieval will be available via the virtual
event platform, the IMC 2023 app, and
on campus.
29
Networking & Socialising
Every year the majority of our delegates
tell us that they attend the IMC for the
networking and socialising aspects of
the conference. In light of this, we have
ensured a number of spaces are available
on campus for medievalists to get to know
each other more informally.
Parkinson Court, Parkinson Building
(60)
• Every day while Bookfair is open
• Complimentary tea and coffee all day
for IMC delegates
• Centre of the IMC Bookfair
• Café open selling a selection of cakes,
snacks, and sandwiches
Esther Simpson Building Foyer (12)
• Every day throughout the IMC
• Complimentary tea and coffee all day
• Café open selling a selection of cakes,
snacks, and sandwiches
IMC Social Space, University Square
(A)
•
•
•
•
Every day throughout IMC
Outdoor seating
Close to various catering options
Complimentary tea and coffee during
the day
Old Bar & Terrace Bar, Leeds
University Union (32)
• Every day until 02.00, food served
until 22.00
• ‘Traditional British pub’ feel in Old Bar
• Both serve alcoholic drinks, pub food,
and soft drinks
• Indoor and outdoor seating available
Common Ground, Leeds University
Union (32)
• Social and networking space with a
café selling a wide variety of drinks
and snacks, 08.00-18.00 daily
• Lounge area open from 08.00 till late
as an alcohol-free social space
Find social and networking spaces using
the numbers/letters above on the campus
map on p. 39.
30
Disciplinary Policy
It is of the utmost importance to us
that everyone involved with the IMC
experiences a safe, inclusive, and
welcoming environment in which to share
their research and make the most of
networking and social spaces.
The IMC takes any contravention of
its policies very seriously and wants
all delegates to feel able to report any
incidents of inappropriate, threatening, or
harassing behaviour. We do not tolerate
harassment or bullying against any
delegate, exhibitor, or member of staff,
via any medium, either in person, via the
conference platform, or via social media.
We treat all allegations seriously and
with the utmost confidentiality. We
will investigate all incidents fully and
keep all those involved updated with
developments and outcomes. These
outcomes may include removal from the
IMC event or virtual platform and removal
of the right to register and attend future
IMCs and associated events (for a limited
or indefinite period of time).
We hope that you will find the IMC
a
friendly,
safe,
and
welcoming
environment. In the event of experiencing
or witnessing an incident which breaches
any of our policies, or if you experience,
or are made aware of, inappropriate
behaviour or conduct during the IMC,
please report your concerns to a member
of IMC staff.
We recognise that sometimes it is
not possible to report incidents at the
time. Therefore, following the IMC,
incidents can be reported via email to
imc@leeds.ac.uk. A member of staff will
contact you within two working days to
acknowledge receipt of the report and
outline the next steps.
The IMC has developed a detailed
Disciplinary Policy to investigate reported
contraventions of IMC policies. You can
view our full Disciplinary Policy at www.
imc.leeds.ac.uk/policies/disciplinarypolicy.
31
Social Media Policy
Please respect the wishes of individual
speakers. If the speaker is happy for you
to tweet about their paper:
• Use the year-specific hashtag, i.e.
#IMC2023, so that Twitter users can
see all tweets related to the event.
There will be a variety of ways to discuss
the exciting research presented at IMC
2023 both in person and virtually.
Delegates use social media as a way
of sharing research knowledge with
the public and allowing people who
cannot attend the session to follow and
participate in discussion.
Twitter is the most common social media
channel for this purpose. Users of Twitter
can search for or click on any hashtag
and see all tweets that include it, allowing
them to follow the IMC or individual
conversations related to it. They can
also see every tweet posted by other
public Twitter users, whether it includes a
hashtag or not.
This policy focuses on Twitter, but
platforms such as Facebook and Instagram
are also used by some researchers. The
same principles apply to all social media
channels used to talk about IMC 2023,
including the public and private video and
text-based messaging tools integrated
into the IMC virtual event platform.
Many of our delegates tweet regularly,
and you should expect other delegates to
tweet about your paper unless you have
expressly requested otherwise.
Session organisers will be asked to
contact the speakers in their session to
ask if they would prefer not to be tweeted
about. Moderators should make this clear
at the start of the session, but they may
also wish to remind audiences during
questions / comments to make sure
latecomers are aware.
32
• Use the specific hashtag for your
session, which will be #s followed
by the number of the session, e.g.
#s9999. This allows Twitter users
to focus on tweets related to that
session.
• Clearly attribute the content of the
tweet to the speaker and mention
them by at least their surname. If
they have a Twitter account and you
know their Twitter handle, include
their Twitter handle instead.
• Always
separate
your
own
comments about a topic from those of
the speaker or any other participants.
If you quote anyone directly, use
quotation marks. Twitter now sets a
280-character limit, which provides
more space to credit speakers fully.
• Listen carefully to the speaker and
reflect the content of the paper fairly
and accurately.
• Be respectful and constructive.
Feel free to engage with the speaker’s
ideas, ask questions, and suggest
areas of further research, but please
do not tweet anything you would not
be willing to say in the Q&A session
after the paper. Twitter is a public
forum where anyone can follow each
conversation.
You may also decide to add to the
conversation by tweeting links to relevant
articles, the speaker’s presentation, their
online profile, or other resources. If you
do, links can be shortened using sites
such as www.tinyurl.com. Please note
that pages, recordings, files, and content
within the IMC virtual platform will only
be viewable by registered delegates.
Policy on Dignity & Mutual Respect
The IMC seeks to create a safe and
productive environment for everyone,
irrespective of race (including caste,
ethnic or national origin, nationality,
or colour), gender, gender identity and
expression, age, sexual orientation,
disability, physical appearance, religion,
pregnancy or maternity status, marriage
or civil partnership status, or any other
characteristic or perceived characteristic.
To ensure that everyone can make the
most of the academic, networking, and
social opportunities that the IMC offers,
the organisers expect all delegates,
exhibitors, and staff to adhere to our
Policy on Dignity & Mutual Respect at
all conference venues and conferencerelated social events both in person and
virtually, as well as online and in any form
of social media.
The IMC is a diverse international event,
and attendees come from a variety of
different backgrounds with a wide range
of opinions and perspectives. Please
be mindful of this and appreciate that
behaviours and comments that seem
harmless to you may impact other people
in different ways.
We do not tolerate any form of harassment
or bullying against any delegate, exhibitor,
or member of staff, whether in person or
online.
If you feel you are being harassed or
bullied, notice harassing or bullying
behaviour, or have any other concerns,
please contact a member of IMC staff
immediately. We value your attendance
and take all reports seriously and wish
to ensure that all delegates feel safe
throughout the IMC.
If you are asked to stop a behaviour
which is deemed to be inappropriate, we
will expect you to comply immediately.
We reserve the right to take action against
people who violate these standards, which
may include expelling offenders from the
IMC with no refund, or banning them from
future events.
We use the definitions of harassment,
sexual harassment, and bullying used by
the University of Leeds in its Policy on
Dignity & Mutual Respect. All visitors to
the University of Leeds are also expected
to comply with this policy and the
University’s Equality & Inclusion Policy.
Harassment: Unwanted conduct that has
the purpose or effect of either violating
another person’s dignity or creating
an intimidating, hostile, degrading,
humiliating, or offensive environment for
that person.
Sexual harassment: Unwanted verbal,
visual, or physical conduct of a sexual
nature, or other conduct based on sex,
which affects a person’s working or
learning conditions or creates a hostile
or humiliating working or studying
environment for that person.
Bullying:
Offensive,
intimidating,
malicious,
or
insulting
behaviour
which intentionally or unintentionally
undermines, humiliates, denigrates, or
injures the recipient.
Read or download the University of Leeds
Policy on Dignity & Mutual Respect:
www.hr.leeds.ac.uk/info/6/support_for_
staff/260/dignity_and_mutual_respect.
Read or download the University of Leeds
Equality & Inclusion Policy: www.equality.
leeds.ac.uk.
33
Bursaries & Awards
IMC Bursary Fund
The IMC Bursary Fund was established
in 1994 as part of our commitment to
widening participation at the IMC. The
IMC Bursary deadline is in October every
year and applications are made online via
the IMC website.
The Bursary Fund is available to delegates
from outside Western Europe, students,
independent
scholars,
retired,
and
unwaged scholars. The bursaries awarded
for IMC 2023 will cover the full value of
the Registration and Programming Fee.
IMC Bursary Recipients
For IMC 2023 a total amount of £20,000
was awarded. 377 applications were
received and 132 applicants were awarded
bursaries. For this year’s Congress,
bursaries were awarded to participants
from
Argentina,
Armenia,
Austria,
Bangladesh, Belgium, Brazil, Canada,
Croatia, Czechia, Egypt, France, Georgia,
Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland,
India, Ireland, Italy, Kosovo, Lebanon, the
Netherlands, Norway, Pakistan, Poland,
Portugal, Romania, Slovenia, Spain,
Sudan, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, the
UK, Ukraine, and the USA.
If you feel able to support the IMC Bursary
Fund, you can do so when registering to
attend the IMC. Even small contributions
make a great impact.
Templar Heritage Trust Bursaries
We would like to thank the Templar
Heritage Trust (THT) for offering three
bursaries to IMC delegates.
THT operates as part of the Charities
Aid Foundation and makes a number of
grants each year in support of academic
research and the conservation of historic
buildings. It takes a particular interest
in the literary, architectural, and cultural
legacy of the medieval Knights Templar
and their period in history.
Sieglinde Hartmann Prize for German
Language and Literature
Thanks to the generosity of Sieglinde
Hartmann, a long-standing supporter of
the IMC, a new prize was instituted for
the 2018 Congress which continues to be
awarded annually.
The prize of £250 is awarded each year for
the best abstract for any paper proposal
in the field of medieval German language
and/or medieval German literature.
Leeds Medieval Studies Endowment
Fund
Miriam Czock Memorial Fund
The Institute for Medieval Studies received
a substantial bequest from a fellow
medievalist which enabled us to establish
the Leeds Medieval Studies Endowment
Fund in 2008. Part of this fund directly
contributes to the IMC Bursary Fund,
further assisting medievalists in need of
financial support to attend the Congress.
In addition, it provides scholarships for
MA and PhD students at the Institute for
Medieval Studies, internship opportunities,
and support for other activities in the
medieval studies community.
Set up in honour of Miriam Czock (19762020), a brilliant medievalist, dedicated
university teacher, and long-standing
attendant of the IMC, the bursary is
awarded to two PhD students or postdocs
For further information about leaving a
legacy or other ways of making a donation
to the International Medieval Congress
and Medieval Studies at Leeds, please
email imc@leeds.ac.uk.
Awards and Prizes
We are keen to work with individuals
and organisations who are interested in
providing further support for individuals
who would not otherwise be able to
attend the IMC. If you or someone you
know would be interested in participating
in this way, please get in touch.
34
in the fields of early and high medieval
history who have applied to the IMC
Bursary Fund.
Registration Pack Collection
Sunday 02 July
@ Leeds University Union
10.00-21.00
Monday 03 July
@ Parkinson Building Foyer
08.00-19.30
Tuesday 04 July
@ Parkinson Building Foyer
08.00-18.00
Wednesday 05 July
@ Parkinson Building Foyer
08.00-18.00
Thursday 06 July
@ Parkinson Building Foyer
08.00-13.00
Arrival & Connection Information
In-Person Attendance
Virtual Attendance
In-person delegates will need to collect
their registration packs before attending
sessions, events, or excursions.
All registered delegates will receive joining
instructions for the virtual platform prior
to IMC. This email will come from our
virtual event platform, rather than from
the usual IMC account, and we will write
to all delegates from our usual email
address shortly prior to sending the
invites out.
Your pack includes your name badge,
which is your pass to the IMC. Delegates
not displaying their IMC name badge may
be refused admission to IMC sessions or
activities. The University of Leeds campus
is a busy environment: you will therefore
be required to wear your name badge at
all times for security reasons.
Packs are collectable from the locations
given above unless you have requested
to collect your pack from your first night’s
university accommodation.
If you did not request your pack to go to
your accommodation, you can find where
to collect your pack above.
Got bags? Details of our luggage store
can be found here: www.imc.leeds.ac.uk/
imc-2023/delegates/luggage.
When you receive this link, please use it
straight away to log in and set up your
profile. The link is unique to you and
cannot be shared with others.
When you first log in, you will be prompted
to check your details are correct and
configure your virtual profile and agree to
the platform’s Terms and Conditions.
Sessions you are involved in will
automatically appear in your ‘My Agenda’
and you can also add other sessions that
you wish to attend to this private list.
For guidance on navigating the virtual platform, accessing sessions remotely, or
viewing session recordings, please visit: www.imc.leeds.ac.uk/imc-2023/delegates.
35
IMC Timetables
Accommodation
See p. 17 for accommodation check-in times and contact details.
Information and Payments Desk
Location
Sunday
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Refectory Foyer
10.00-22.00
07.00-22.00
07.00-22.00
07.00-22.00
07.00-20.00
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
10.00-19.30
08.30-18.30
08.30-18.30
08.30-13.00
08.00-19.00
08.00-17.00
10.30-19.00
10.30-18.00
What’s On
Location
IMC Bookfair
Sunday
Parkinson
Building:
Parkinson Court
Second-Hand
Leeds
16.00-
Bookfair
University
21.00
Medieval Craft
University
Fair
Square & Leeds
Union: Foyer
University
Union: Foyer
Making Leeds
University
Medieval
Square
Historical &
Leeds
Archarological
University
Societies Fair
Union: Foyer
10.30-18.00
10.30-18.00
Facilities
Location
Lactation
University House:
Room
Woodsley Room
Quiet
University House:
Room
de Grey Room
Lunch
Café Lunch Credit,
Sunday
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
09.00-20.00
09.00-20.00
09.00-20.00
10.00-17.00
09.00-20.00
09.00-20.00
09.00-20.00
09.00-17.00
12.00-14.00
12.00-14.00
12.00-14.00
12.00-14.00
18.00-20.00
18.00-20.00
18.00-20.00
18.00-20.00
see list below
Dinner
Refectory
18.00-20.00
Café Lunch Credit can be used anytime during café opening hours on the day of validity
at any University of Leeds café or street food hut on campus.
Café Lunch Credit can be used in the Refectory and the following venues:
Esther Simpson Café (Esther Simpson Building), Streetfood Hut & HUGO (both located
on University Square), Parkinson Café (Parkinson Building), 1915 (Sir William Henry
Bragg Building), and the Edit Room (Edward Boyle Library).
Please note Café Lunch Credit cannot be used in Café Nero and Leeds University Union
venues such as Co-Op, Common Ground, Old Bar, or the Terrace.
36
Queries & Contact Details
Before the IMC
Medical Treatment
Information about attending the IMC and
presenting your paper can be found on
our website: www.imc.leeds.ac.uk.
NHS walk-in centres offer convenient
access to treatments for minor illnesses
and injuries.
If you have any queries before the IMC
about your paper, registration, meals,
events, accommodation, or excursion
bookings, please contact us at:
Please either call NHS 111 (for nonemergency
medical
treatment
and
advice) or call the Centre directly prior to
attending.
Email: imc@leeds.ac.uk
Tel: +44 (113) 343-3614
The nearest walk-in centre to campus is:
Our office is staffed 09.00-17.00, Monday
to Friday. Outside of these times, please
leave a message including your contact
details and we will get back to you.
Post:
Emergencies
In the event of an emergency on campus,
please dial 999 or 112 to contact the
UK emergency services (e.g. police, fire,
ambulance/paramedic).
At the IMC
10.00-22.00
Monday 03 July
07.00-22.00
Tuesday 04 July
07.00-22.00
Wednesday 05 July
07.00-22.00
Thursday 06 July
07.00-20.00
Immediately afterwards, please contact
the University of Leeds Security team
by calling +44 (113) 343-2222 (or
32222 from any university telephone).
They will be able to assist in directing the
emergency services to the incident.
During the IMC, the Information and
Payment Desk located in the Refectory
Building will be your first point of contact
for queries regarding any aspect of your
booking.
Please note that payments can only be
taken 08.00-19.00 each day.
For general queries, you can also contact
the Information Desk in the Parkinson
Building.
Pharmacy
The Pharmacy Group
166 Woodhouse Lane
Parkinson Building)
LEEDS LS2 9HB UK
(opposite
www.leedsth.nhs.uk/stay-well/walk-incentres/
Open: 08.00-20.00, every day.
IMC Administration
Institute for Medieval Studies
Parkinson 1.03
University of Leeds
LEEDS LS2 9JT UK
Sunday 02 July
Shakespeare Medical Practice
Cromwell Mount
LEEDS LS9 7TA UK
Tel: +44 (113) 295-1132
Off campus, please ring 999 or 112 to
contact the emergency services.
Emergency Medical Care
If you are experiencing a medical
emergency, you can visit the Emergency
Department at Leeds General Infirmary.
Access to the Emergency Department is
via the Jubilee Wing on Calverley Street.
For
more
information
see
www.leedsth.nhs.uk/a-z-of-services/
emergency-medicine.
the
Open: 09.00-18.00, Monday-Friday
37
IMC 2023 App
Regardless of whether you are attending
in person or virtually, we hope you find
the IMC 2023 mobile app helpful.
• Opportunities
to
connect
with
colleagues professionally and socially
offline and online
The app provides up-to-date information
on all aspects of the IMC 2023 Programme,
including:
• Your virtual profile, which you can
update throughout the Congress
• Live updated schedule including the
latest changes to the programme
throughout the week
• View recordings of sessions up till 31
August 2023
• Maps & guides to find your way around
campus
• Details of publishers at the IMC
Bookfair, including opportunities to
browse virtual publishers’ stalls and
contact them directly
• Exclusive virtual-only exhibitors and
discounts from our Bookfair publishers
and exhibitors
• Essential information about all aspects
of attending the IMC in person or
virtually
38
The app is accessible on Apple and
Android devices, and can also be accessed
via your desktop/laptop device (PC/Mac).
You can find out more and download the
www.imc.leeds.ac.uk/imcapp
here:
2023/app/.
The app is designed to complement the
IMC Programme Book, a copy of which
will be available for collection by those
delegates who ordered one at registration.
Please note that the latest updates and
changes to the programme will only be
available via the IMC virtual platform,
the IMC 2023 app, and on screens in
Parkinson Court and the Refectory Foyer.
Map 3: Campus Map
To Devonshire Hall
53
19
36
20
22
57
LIF
TO
NP
59
60
LA
CE
UNIV
A
B
29 732
C
28
30
31
83
ERS
15
ITY
12
To Ibis Marlborough
&
Ibis HotelStand
85
InnWest
Express
RoomzzzHoliday
Leeds City
SQU
ARE
Woodhouse Lane
& Centre
Car Parks
62
63
To Rail
Station &
Hotels
86
P
P
101
P
Key
59.
20.
15.
86.
83.
62.
22.
12.
57.
Brotherton Library
Clarendon Building
Charles Thackrah Building
Charles Morris Hall: Storm
Jameson Court
Edward Boyle Library
Emmanuel Centre
Ellerslie Hall
Esther Simpson Building
Great Hall
95.
63.
32.
30.
A.
19.
85.
60.
C.
29.
Health Sciences Library
Laidlaw Library
Leeds University Union
Lyddon Hall
IMC Social Space
Maurice Keyworth Building
Newlyn Building
Parkinson Building
Beech Grove Plaza
Refectory
31. stage@leeds
36. Textiles Computer
Cluster (24hr)
53. William Bragg Building
101. theEdge Sport and
Fitness Centre
28. University House
B. University Square
39
Advice for Speakers & Moderators
Setup Information for All In-Person
Speakers
Since IMC 2023 will be a hybrid event, all
speakers must use Zoom to share their
slides, rather than sharing them directly
with the in-room audience.
This is to ensure that delegates connecting
remotely can see your visual aids and
so that your slides are included in the
session recordings.
We recommend that you practice your
presentation prior to your session,
ensuring that you are comfortable
with sharing your screen in Zoom and
navigating through your slides.
For more information on how to share your
slides via Zoom, as well as information on
presentation formats, please visit www.
imc.leeds.ac.uk/imc-2023/speakers.
Preparing Your Presentation
• Make sure your paper is presented
within the allotted time (20 minutes
for sessions with three papers and
15 minutes for sessions with four
papers).
• Support your paper with a PowerPoint
or other presentation using the Zoom
‘Screen share’ option.
• Use PowerPoint’s built-in captioning
system to add automatic live captions
to your presentation.
• Make sure that all materials you use
are clearly legible for delegates with
visual impairments. We recommend
using the guidelines on making
40
presentations accessible from Sight
www.sightadvicefaq.org.
Advice:
uk/independent-living/technology/
accessible-presentations.
• Upload a copy of your slides, or a
short summary of your talk, plus any
supporting materials which you are
happy to share via the ‘Files’ section
on the ‘Session Details’ page of the
virtual event platform.
• You may wish to produce a PDF
copy of your presentation, or paper
text in large print for delegates with
visual impairments and have these
available in the room, or uploaded via
the ‘Manage’ button on the ‘Session
Details page’ in advance.
Advice for Speakers
Our advice to speakers is to make your
presentation as accessible as possible.
• Arrive 30 minutes before the session
to prepare, load your slides, and
familiarise yourself with the in-room
PC.
• If technical difficulties occur and you
are unable to present your paper at
all, it will not be possible to reschedule
your paper.
• Ensure you have any video, audio, or
weblinks you need loaded and ready
before you begin speaking.
• Speak clearly and slowly so that
everyone in the room and at home
can follow your paper. The language
in which you are speaking may not be
the first language of everyone in the
audience.
• If you are presenting your paper
in a language other than English,
we recommend producing a short
handout summarising the key points
of your paper in English.
• Ensure you describe any images or
visual aids used in your presentation so
that it is accessible for any attendees
with visual impairments.
• It is likely that there will be members
of
the
audience
with
hearing
impairments or who rely upon lipreading. Therefore, please ensure
that you are facing the camera head
on and that your face fully appears on
the screen.
• Before you begin speaking, check that
you are audible to remote attendees
by asking attendees to give you a
thumbs up or post in the chat.
• Ensure that the camera frames your
face as closely as possible, that you
are well lit, and your face can be
clearly seen. Keep your camera on
throughout your presentation.
Advice for Moderators
The main duties of a session moderator
are to:
• Be present in / logged in to the session
room 30 minutes before your session
begins to welcome speakers and
ensure they are all set up correctly.
• Introduce each speaker, being aware
there may be non-specialists in the
audience.
• Inform the audience whether the
speakers are happy for the audience
to tweet about their paper or discuss
it on social media.
• Make sure each speaker finishes their
paper on time, and to be assertive on
this issue if necessary.
• Make sure the session starts and
finishes on time.
• Familiarise
yourself
with
using
common functions in Zoom (e.g.
raising hands, enabling and disabling
attendee microphones/cameras) in
order to ensure both in-person and
remote speakers’ presentations run
smoothly.
• Ensure
background
noise
and
disturbances
during
speakers’
presentations both virtually and inperson are minimised.
• Initiate and moderate questions and
discussion after the papers, ensuring
all speakers and audience members
adhere to our Policy on Dignity and
Mutual Respect.
• Monitor the session chat for questions
from virtual attendees, either asking
questions sent by text on their
behalf or prompting them to turn on
their microphone/camera to speak,
dependent on available facilities in the
room and your own preference.
• Alert your Session Room Organiser if
you become aware of any harassing,
bullying, or otherwise inappropriate
behaviour whether in the room, the
virtual room, or via the chat function.
• Ask questions if they are not
forthcoming from the audience.
• Repeat questions from the in-room
audience to ensure they are audible
for virtual attendees, or ask those with
questions to come to the microphone
at the front to ask their question.
• Make sure all delegates leave the room
at the end of the session, and inform
the IMC team should any problems
arise.
• Complete our feedback form which will
be given to you as the session ends.
We strongly recommend that moderators
contact all the speakers in their session
before the IMC to get to know each
speaker’s paper and research.
Session Room Support
A team of Session Room Organisers
(SROs), will be available to assist
speakers and moderators throughout
the Congress. A dedicated team will also
support speakers in wholly virtual and
hybrid sessions.
SROs will be available around campus to
ensure session rooms are set up correctly,
to keep rooms tidy, to ensure temperature
and lighting are comfortable, to ensure
water is available for speakers, and that
the correct equipment is provided.
Both in-room and virtual teams will be
able to assist with basic technical queries
and support.
SROs will try to resolve any issues, but they
may need to request additional technical
support either from on-campus IT support
or our virtual platform helpdesk.
Please make sure you are familiar with the
basic functions of the equipment you are
using before your presentation. Both inroom and virtual SROs will be assigned to
multiple rooms and so will not be able to
help every speaker with their equipment.
41
Medieval Studies at Leeds
A Unique Environment
For over 50 years, the University of Leeds
has combined exceptional interdisciplinary
teaching and research with a close-knit
community. Our staff and students have
access to some of the best resources for
the study of the medieval period.
Internationally renowned for its specialism
in Medieval Studies, Leeds is home to the
Institute for Medieval Studies (IMS) and
the International Medieval Bibliography
(IMB), as well as the IMC.
As a hub of outstanding research, we
are committed to developing the next
generation of medievalists and pushing
the boundaries of academic knowledge
and impact, including enabling students to
study the medieval world beyond Europe.
With resources such as the world-class
Brotherton Library and the archives
of Ripon Cathedral and the Yorkshire
Archaeological and Historical Society
based at the University, and the British
Library’s Boston Spa Reading Room
nearby, our students have access to some
of the best medieval resources in the UK.
Many of the library’s medieval manuscripts
can now be viewed online: library.leeds.
ac.uk/info/1500/special_collections.
The IMS has a long-standing cooperation
with the Royal Armouries and Leeds
City Museum and Galleries, as well as
other regional heritage organisations. In
addition, we have also a close association
with the Centre d’études supérieures de
civilisation médiévale at the Université de
Poitiers.
MA Medieval Studies
PhD Medieval Studies
The IMS also offers a range of paid
internships for which students can
apply in areas such as academic
publishing, bibliography, and libraries,
helping underpin our graduates’ career
development.
Master of Arts: Medieval Studies
Full-time (12 months) & part-time (24
months)
Our MA programme focuses on building
core skills necessary for postgraduate
study and interdisciplinary analysis of the
Middle Ages. Each student completes a
10,000-word dissertation on an area of
their choice, supervised on an individual
basis by one of Leeds’ world-leading
academic staff.
At Leeds, we are proud to provide one
of the most thorough groundings in
medieval languages available in the UK.
All MA students are required to take at
least one module of Latin, dependent on
their ability. A beginner, within a year, can
become a confident reader through our
intensive course. We can also offer Arabic,
Old and Middle English, Old French,
Middle High German, Old Norse, Persian,
and Turkish.
Our teaching and supervision expertise
spans 1,000 years - our students can
choose to tailor their course to a specific
theme or spread their interests across our
full range of options. IMS students also
have the opportunity to attend the IMC
free of charge.
This focus on research and analytical
skills equips our graduates for success
in doctoral study or in the workplace.
IMS alumni work across the world in
leading academic institutions, heritage
organisations, and in areas such as
journalism, publishing, marketing, and
business.
MS 102, Brotherton Library, University of Leeds. John
Sintram, Sermons, c. 1425
42
Medieval Studies at Leeds
MA Compulsory Modules
All MA students are required to take:
• Research Methods and Bibliography
• Palaeography
• Medieval Latin
MA Option Modules
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
The Margins of Medieval Art
Medieval Bodies
Arthurian Legend: Medieval to Modern
The Hadith: History, Criticism, and Canonisation
Religious Communities and the Individual Experience of
Religion, 1200-1500
Lifecycles: Birth, Death, and Illness in the Middle Ages
Art of the Silk Roads
The Medieval Tournament: Combat, Chivalry, and
Spectacle in Western Europe, 1100-1600
Gender, Power, and the Supernatural: Saints and Their
Cults
Making History: Archive Collaborations
Please note optional modules on offer may change from year
to year, based on staff availability and other factors.
Doctoral Research in Medieval
Studies
The IMS supervises doctoral research on
interdisciplinary medieval topics across
a wide range of subjects, including:
literature, with specialisms in Dante,
Anglo-Norman, Latin, medieval English,
Old Norse, and French; Christianity,
including the papacy, monastic life and
culture, mendicants, the cult of saints,
mysticism, and clerical life and culture;
medicine; disability and animal studies;
warfare, arms and armour, chivalry and
tournaments, and the Crusades; Arabic
historiography; the Baltic, East-Central
Europe, Byzantium, and the Indian Ocean;
Jewish-Christian cultural relations, Hebrew
illuminated manuscripts, monuments,
and art; gender studies; courtly culture;
history of the book; music and liturgy;
and the use and abuse of medievalism in
modern times.
students have the opportunity to take
taught modules in research methods,
medieval Latin, and other medieval
and modern languages to support their
engagement with scholarship.
IMS research students always have two
co-supervisors to help to shape the
student’s project, give bibliographical
and methodological guidance, and advise
throughout their research. Each student
presents an annual paper on their work
in progress at a research seminar in the
IMS, and is able to attend the IMC free
of charge. Research students are also
encouraged to give papers at national and
international conferences.
Our research degrees are designed to
prepare doctoral researchers for a career
in academia. IMS first-year research
43
Medieval Studies at Leeds
Clockwise, from left: IMS members on a New Year’s Day trip to Lud’s Chapel in Staffordshire; IMS excursion
to Kirkstall Abbey; church tower at Jarrow, Tyne and Wear; carvings at Ripon Cathedral; sculpture at Lastingham
church
A Community of Scholars
Medieval Studies at Leeds is, first and
foremost, a community of scholars, joined
together in their pursuit of knowledge.
Students can join the Leeds University
Union Medieval Society, where film nights,
lectures, and trips are organised. The
Medieval Group, initially established in
1952, brings together staff, students, and
members of the public for seminars and
workshops. Reading groups for languages
such as Old English, French, and Italian
are an informal way for staff and students
to discuss medieval sources. At the heart
of this community is the Le Patourel
Room, a dedicated study space for IMS
postgraduate students. The IMS is also
home to the free-access journal Leeds
Medieval Studies, originating in 1936.
Alongside this, the IMS maintains a
strong interest in public engagement. It
hosts the annual IMS Open Lecture series,
which brings a range of speakers to Leeds
to talk to staff, students, and members
44
of the public about the latest research on
the Middle Ages. Other medieval studies
events are organised across Leeds’
Faculty of Arts, Humanities & Cultures and
by local heritage organisations, not least
the exhibitions and lectures hosted by the
Royal Armouries and Leeds Museums and
Galleries.
Located in Yorkshire, Leeds is a thriving
modern city with its own medieval sites,
such as Kirkstall Abbey, and a strong
interest in heritage. Yorkshire, the
largest county in the UK, has a variety of
medieval sites including abbeys, castles,
and settlements. The city of York, with
its strong Viking and medieval past, is
easily accessible by car, bus, and train
from Leeds. As part of the White Rose
consortium, we are partnered with the
Universities of Sheffield and York to fund
the best research in the north of England.
Find out more about the IMS: ahc.leeds.
ac.uk/medieval.
Medieval Studies at Leeds
International Medieval Bibliography
The International Medieval Bibliography
(IMB), based at Leeds since 1967, is the
world’s leading multi-disciplinary database
of medieval studies. Produced by an
editorial team at the University of Leeds
and supported by some 40 contributors
worldwide, it covers periodical literature
and miscellany volumes published in
Europe, North America, South America,
Australasia, Japan, and South Africa.
The printed IMB appears once a year,
covering
most
recent
publications,
totalling over 1,100 pages per issue.
The complete cumulative bibliography is
available online via Brepols Publishers.
IMB-Online contains over 530,000 records
of articles, review articles, and scholarly
notes on all aspects of medieval studies;
it covers publications in over 30 different
languages and is updated quarterly. The
online interface allows for sophisticated
searching with controlled vocabulary,
hierarchical indexes, and authority lists
comprising over 120,000 index terms.
Find out more at ahc.leeds.ac.uk/
m e d i e va l - r e s e a r c h - i n n ova t i o n / d o c /
international-medieval-bibliography.
Guests discover old print editions of the IMB at the
2017 exhibition marking its 50th anniversary
Call for Contributors
The editorial team is looking for individuals
or organisations to become contributors
to join its existing range of partners
throughout the world. Contributors
take responsibility for identifying and
cataloguing publications relating to
specific subjects or geographical areas
and are rewarded with free subscriptions
to the IMB (online or print), as well as
other free publications and benefits.
Contributors are sought for national,
regional, and local history in Brazil, Chile,
Cyprus, Denmark, France, Germany,
Greece, Israel, Italy, Korea, Latvia,
Lithuania, Luxembourg, Mexico, the
Netherlands, Portugal, Serbia, Sweden,
Ukraine, and the Middle East/North Africa.
Thematic contributors (who may be based
anywhere) are particularly sought for art
history, humanism, Italian literature,
French literature, German literature,
Islamic studies, Jewish studies, linguistics,
numismatics, and music.
If you are interested in finding out more
about becoming a contributor to the IMB,
contact the Editorial Director, Alan V.
Murray, a.v.murray@leeds.ac.uk.
Index cards from the early days of the IMB. More than
530,000 records are now in IMB-Online
45
International Medieval Research
The International Medieval Research series (IMR) is a continuing success,
with 26 volumes published and several more in production. Proposals are
warmly invited for future volumes in the series, which has a strong emphasis
on the interdisciplinary study of the Middle Ages.
Published by Brepols, IMR volumes have consisted primarily of articles based on papers
read during IMC sessions, complemented by additional contributions that are closely
linked with the themes chosen for the original sessions. Themes may be drawn from
the special thematic strand of a particular year or other special interests where a
coherent volume can be proposed.
Proposing a Volume
Anyone is eligible to propose a volume in the IMR series. The person who makes the
proposal should either be willing to edit the volume themselves or nominate an editor.
The Editorial Board will consider an informal proposal first before deciding whether to
invite you to submit a formal proposal for consideration by Brepols.
The formal proposal, which should not exceed 5 pages, follows a proforma and would
include the following information at minimum:
• Title of the work
• Author(s)
• Detailed breakdown of contents by
article
• The work set within the tradition of
scholarship on the topic
•
•
•
•
Readership to which it is directed
Rationale for the volume
Language(s) of articles
Special requirements (tables,
illustrations, maps)
A volume should consist of 10-20 selected, edited papers with a coherent organising
principle. Papers should be 5,000-8,000 words. Articles have been published in English,
French, German, Italian, and Spanish.
If you would like to propose a future volume or receive further information on the
process, contact imrseries@leeds.ac.uk.
46
Recent IMR Volumes
• IMR 26: Rewriting History in the Central Middle Ages, 900-1250, eds. Chris P. Lewis
and Emily Winkler (2022)
• IMR 25: ‘Otherness’ in the Middle Ages, eds. Hans-Werner Goetz and Ian N. Wood
(2022)
• IMR 24: Pleasure in the Middle Ages, eds. Naama Cohen-Hanegbi and Piroska Nagy
(2018)
• IMR 23: Miracles in Canonization Processes: Structures, Functions,
Methodologies, eds. Christian Krötzl and Sari Katajala-Peltomaa (2018)
and
• IMR 22: Approaches to Poverty in Medieval Europe: Complexities, Contradictions,
Transformations, c. 1100–1500, ed. Sharon Farmer (2016)
• IMR 21: Travel and Mobilities in the Middle Ages: From the Atlantic to the Black
Sea, eds. Marianne O’Doherty and Felicitas Schmieder (2015)
• IMR 20: The Tree: Symbol, Allegory, and Mnemonic Device in Medieval Art and
Thought, eds. Pippa Salonius and Andrea Worm (2014)
• IMR 19: Problems and Possibilities of Early Medieval Charters, eds. Jonathan Jarrett
and Allan Scott McKinley (2013)
• IMR 18: Medieval Lifecycles: Continuity and Change, eds. Isabelle Cochelin and
Karen Smyth (2013)
• IMR 17: Behaving like Fools: Voice, Gesture, and Laughter in Texts, Manuscripts,
and Early Books, eds. Lucy M. Perry and Alexander Schwarz (2010)
• IMR 16: Representations of Power in Medieval Germany, 800-1500, eds. Björn
Weiler and Simon MacLean (2006)
• IMR 15: Languages of Love and Hate: Conflict, Communication, and Identity in the
Medieval Mediterranean World, eds. Sarah Lambert and Helen J. Nicholson (2012)
IMR Series Editorial Board
• Axel E. W. Müller, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds,
Executive Editor
• John B. Dillon, Memorial Library, University of Wisconsin-Madison
• Richard K. Emmerson, Department of Art History, Florida State University
• Christian Krötzl, Department of History & Philosophy, University of Tampere
• Chris P. Lewis, Department of History, King’s College London / Institute of Historical
Research, University of London
• Pauline Stafford, School of History, University of Liverpool / Institute for Medieval
Studies, University of Leeds
Find out more about the latest IMR volumes here:
www.brepols.net/Pages/BrowseBySeries.aspx?TreeSeries=IMR
47
Notes
2023
We would like to thank the following
organisations for their support:
The University of Leeds
Institute for Medieval Studies
School of English
School of Fine Art, History of Art & Cultural Studies
School of History
School of Languages, Cultures & Societies
School of Philosophy, Religion & History of Science
Conference & Events Office
Leeds University Library
Early Medieval Europe
Medieval Academy of America
Leeds City Council
Templar Heritage Trust
Universities’ Chaplaincy in Leeds
49
Notes
International Medieval Congress 2023
IMC Staff
Axel E. W. Müller
Congress Director
Fiona Livermore
Congress Manager
Marta Cobb
Senior Congress Officer
Hector Roddan
Congress Officer
Sharna Connolly
Conference & Events
Administrator
Adam Cook
Congress Officer
Polina Orlova
Congress Liaison Assistant
IMC Standing Committee
Julia Barrow
Catherine J. Batt
Emma Cayley
Alaric Hall
Emilia Jamroziak
Catherine E. Karkov
IMC Programming Committee
Johannes PreiserAndrew Galloway
Nadia Altschul
Kapeller
Cornell University
Independent Scholar,
Österreichische Akademie
Florianopolis
Sieglinde Hartmann
der Wissenschaften, Wien
Universität Würzburg
Bettina Bildhauer
Diane J. Reilly
University of St Andrews
Anne-Marie Helvétius
Indiana University,
Université Paris 8,
Pavel Blažek
Bloomington
Vincennes-Saint-Denis
Academie Věd České
Flocel
Sabaté Curull
Republiky, Praha
Charles Insley
Universitat de Lleida
University of Manchester
Brenda M. Bolton
Danuta Shanzer
University of London
Gerhard Jaritz
Universität Wien
Central European
Elma Brenner
University, Budapest/Wien Dominique Stutzmann
Wellcome Collection,
Centre National de la
London
Kurt Villads Jensen
Recherche Scientifique
Stockholms universitet
Emma Campbell
(CNRS), Paris
University of Warwick
Dolores Jørgensen
Shaun
Tougher
Catherine A. M. Clarke Universitetet i Stavanger
Cardiff University
University of London
Chris Lewis
Sam Turner
University of London
Alexandra F. C. Cuffel
Newcastle University
Ruhr-Universität Bochum
María Dolores López
Jo van Steenbergen
Pérez
Daniel J. DiCenso
Universiteit Gent
College of the Holy Cross, Universitat de Barcelona
Steven
A. Walton
Massachusetts
Gert Melville
Michigan Technological
Technische Universität
Cora Dietl
University
Dresden
Justus-Liebig-Universität
Diane
Watt
Gießen
Marco Mostert
University of Surrey
Universiteit Utrecht
Simon Forde
Jarosław Wenta
Arc Humanities Press,
Cary J. Nederman
Uniwersytet Mikołaja
Leeds
Texas A&M University,
Kopernika, Toruń
College Station
Yaniv Fox
Annemarieke
Bar-Ilan University,
Åslaug Ommundsen
Willemsen
Ramat Gan
Universitetet i Bergen
Rijksmuseum van
Helen Fulton
Oudheden, Leiden
University of Bristol
51
Strand Index
Networks & Entanglements, 1: Africa
111, 211, 311, 511, 611, 699, 711, 811
Networks & Entanglements, 2: Art 129,
229, 329, 529, 629, 729, 829, 1029, 1046,
1129, 1229, 1329, 1429, 1529, 1629, 1729
Networks & Entanglements, 19: France
138, 533, 633, 733, 833
Networks & Entanglements, 3: Authors
124, 136, 527, 627, 727, 827, 1127
Networks & Entanglements, 20: Gender
125, 225, 325, 525, 625, 725, 807, 825,
1021, 1025, 1121, 1125, 1221, 1225,
1321, 1325, 1525, 1625, 1725
Networks & Entanglements, 4: Balkan
Peninsula 1011, 1111, 1211, 1311, 1611,
1711
Networks & Entanglements, 21:
Hagiography 819, 1020, 1120, 1220,
1320
Networks & Entanglements, 5: Body &
Health 133, 228, 437, 528, 628, 728, 828,
841, 901, 1028, 1128, 1228, 1328, 1537
Networks & Entanglements, 22:
Iberian Peninsula 117, 317, 517, 617,
717, 718, 817, 818, 1517, 1617, 1717
Networks & Entanglements, 6: British
Isles 112, 212, 312, 338, 512, 612, 712,
812, 1012, 1112, 1138, 1212, 1238, 1248,
1312, 1412, 1438, 1512, 1612, 1712
Networks & Entanglements, 23:
Inscriptions 1230, 1330, 1530, 1630,
1730
Networks & Entanglements, 7:
Byzantium 113, 213, 313, 513, 613, 713,
813, 1013, 1113, 1213, 1313, 1513, 1613,
1713, 1737
Networks & Entanglements, 8: Central
Europe 114, 137, 214, 314, 414, 514,
614, 714, 814, 1014, 1103, 1114, 1214,
1314, 1514, 1614, 1714
Networks & Entanglements, 9:
Charters 519, 619, 719, 1019, 1119,
1219, 1319, 1520, 1620, 1720
Networks & Entanglements, 10:
Comparative Power 130, 230, 238, 330,
530, 630, 730, 830, 930, 1030, 1130
Networks & Entanglements, 11:
Crusades 116, 216, 316, 416, 1216, 1316,
1416, 1616, 1716
Networks & Entanglements, 12: Digital
1, 135, 235, 315, 335, 435, 735, 835, 935,
1435, 1535, 1635, 1735
Networks & Entanglements, 13:
Diplomacy 535, 1035, 1135, 1235, 1335
Networks & Entanglements, 14:
Divergence 120, 220, 320, 620, 720, 820,
1037, 1237, 1337
Networks & Entanglements, 15:
Economy 110, 310, 410, 510, 610, 710,
810, 1010, 1310
Networks & Entanglements, 16:
Emotions 127, 227, 327, 637, 1227, 1327,
1527, 1627, 1727
Networks & Entanglements, 17:
Environment 217, 626, 726, 826, 1026,
1126, 1226, 1326, 1426
Networks & Entanglements, 18:
Eurasia 215, 343, 515, 516, 615, 616,
715, 716, 815, 816, 915, 1015, 1115,
52
1116, 1215, 1306, 1315, 1511, 1515,
1516, 1615, 1715
Networks & Entanglements, 24:
Intellectual 131, 231, 237, 331, 337, 431,
531, 631, 831, 926, 1231, 1246, 1331,
1346, 1531, 1631, 1731, 1733
Networks & Entanglements, 25:
Islamicate World 210, 1110, 1510, 1610,
1710
Networks & Entanglements, 26: Jewish
Studies 119, 199, 219, 319, 419, 1003,
1137, 1519, 1619, 1719
Networks & Entanglements, 27: Local
Power 824, 1024, 1124, 1224, 1324
Networks & Entanglements, 28:
Loyalty & Power 224, 324, 524, 624,
724, 1524, 1624, 1724
Networks & Entanglements, 29:
Manuscripts 132, 232, 332, 532, 632,
638, 732, 738, 832, 1132, 1232, 1332,
1732
Networks & Entanglements, 30:
Material 233, 323, 333, 1033, 1133, 1233,
1333, 1533, 1633, 1733
Networks & Entanglements, 31:
Medievalism 236, 336, 536, 635, 636,
736, 836, 927, 936, 1036, 1136, 1236,
1336, 1636, 1736
Networks & Entanglements, 32:
Mediterranean 118, 318, 518, 618, 1017,
1018, 1117, 1118, 1217, 1218, 1317,
1318, 1518, 1542, 1618, 1718
Networks & Entanglements, 33:
Mobility 122, 222, 322, 522, 622, 722,
822, 1022, 1122, 1222, 1322
Networks & Entanglements, 34:
Narratives 126, 226, 326, 520, 537, 548,
721, 731, 821, 1526, 1648, 1626, 1738
Networks & Entanglements, 35:
Religious Institutions 105, 134, 205,
Strand Index
234, 305, 328, 334, 534, 634, 734, 834,
1034, 1134, 1234, 1334
Networks & Entanglements, 36:
Scandinavia 806, 1032, 1532, 1628,
1632, 1699, 1728
Networks & Entanglements, 37: Spaces
123, 223, 523, 623, 723, 823, 1023, 1027,
1123, 1223, 1448, 1523, 1623, 1723
Networks & Entanglements, 38:
Spiritual 121, 221, 321, 421, 521, 621,
1521, 1522, 1621, 1622, 1721, 1722
Archaeology 102, 133, 202, 302, 602,
802, 1002, 1102, 1202, 1223, 1330, 1502,
1514, 1523, 1533, 1602, 1614, 1633,
1702, 1714
Art & Architecture 111, 115, 129, 134,
145, 148, 229, 233, 245, 327, 333, 345,
506, 529, 629, 729, 745, 829, 845, 901,
1001, 1002, 1011, 1029, 1044, 1046,
1101, 1102, 1111, 1129, 1144, 1201,
1209, 1211, 1217, 1229, 1230, 1239,
1245, 1301, 1311, 1315, 1329, 1330,
1338, 1401, 1429, 1502, 1529, 1533,
1545, 1602, 1611, 1629, 1645, 1647,
1702, 1729, 1741, 1745
Byzantine Studies 106, 113, 115, 206,
213, 227, 306, 313, 329, 506, 513, 516,
522, 535, 606, 616, 706, 713, 716, 722,
813, 816, 829, 1006, 1013, 1018, 1106,
1113, 1117, 1118, 1122, 1206, 1213,
1217, 1218, 1222, 1230, 1307, 1313,
1318, 1330, 1513, 1515, 1520, 1528,
1613, 1615, 1620, 1630, 1713, 1715,
1720, 1737
Central & Eastern European Studies
103, 122, 125, 133, 203, 222, 302, 303,
322, 345, 414, 503, 603, 614, 703, 714,
814, 1011, 1041, 1046, 1103, 1111, 1203,
1211, 1233, 1301, 1303, 1311, 1401,
1514, 1525, 1611, 1614, 1623, 1625,
1714, 1723, 1725
Church History & Canon Law 120, 122,
136, 142, 220, 234, 320, 328, 505, 534,
605, 612, 613, 631, 634, 645, 705, 718,
720, 721, 733, 734, 805, 834, 840, 940,
1004, 1005, 1034, 1104, 1105, 1113,
1134, 1145, 1204, 1205, 1235, 1237,
1304, 1305, 1337, 1340, 1505, 1506,
1518, 1534, 1605, 1606, 1705, 1706,
1710, 1742
Crusades 104, 116, 204, 216, 304, 316,
416, 503, 504, 604, 704, 804, 819, 1043,
1216, 1316, 1416, 1502, 1504, 1539,
1610, 1616, 1638, 1639, 1716, 1739
Culture & Society 103, 119, 126, 127,
131, 142, 144, 219, 226, 227, 240, 241,
Daily Life 123, 128, 134, 141, 223, 241,
341, 510, 541, 610, 641, 710, 741, 810,
824, 1041, 1141, 1203, 1241, 1341, 1441,
1509, 1541, 1641, 1741, 1742
Drama 346, 544, 729, 843, 1025, 1227,
1612, 1642
Early Medieval England 101, 124, 201,
212, 226, 301, 312, 441, 501, 601, 701,
801, 945, 1025, 1033, 1038, 1133, 1138,
1238, 1302, 1338, 1438, 1501, 1601,
1612, 1701
Gender & Sexuality 105, 107, 125, 207,
216, 218, 225, 302, 307, 325, 342, 501,
507, 525, 536, 601, 607, 625, 630, 707,
725, 807, 812, 825, 830, 833, 1006, 1007,
1016, 1018, 1021, 1025, 1105, 1107,
1121, 1125, 1136, 1140, 1207, 1217,
1221, 1225, 1238, 1307, 1321, 1325,
1327, 1446, 1507, 1525, 1539, 1607,
1625, 1627, 1703, 1707, 1725, 1626, 1727
Geography & Settlement Studies 141,
202, 317, 518, 523, 540, 541, 618, 622,
623, 702, 722, 723, 802, 823, 1002, 1026,
1028, 1102, 1123, 1223, 1441, 1502, 1602
Global Medieval Studies 107, 111, 211,
213, 215, 302, 307, 311, 343, 346, 403,
411, 511, 515, 516, 542, 611, 615, 616,
642, 704, 711, 715, 716, 742, 803, 811,
815, 825, 830, 842, 903, 915, 942, 1015,
1110, 1115, 1116, 1202, 1215, 1306,
1307, 1315, 1343, 1347, 1443, 1507,
1511, 1515, 1516, 1527, 1528, 1615, 1715
Strand Index
Celtic Studies 102, 112, 202, 338, 512,
612, 712, 812, 1132, 1248, 1601, 1603,
1703
242, 243, 244, 248, 319, 323, 326, 327,
341, 342, 419, 420, 431, 442, 507, 508,
520, 523, 541, 543, 606, 608, 620, 623,
640, 643, 704, 708, 718, 723, 737, 803,
808, 821, 823, 824, 837, 841, 1002, 1018,
1027, 1029, 1036, 1037, 1039, 1102,
1118, 1126, 1129, 1141, 1146, 1203,
1208, 1218, 1226, 1227, 1229, 1231,
1244, 1245, 1308, 1318, 1326, 1327,
1329, 1442, 1502, 1504, 1522, 1524,
1528, 1534, 1541, 1612, 1622, 1624,
1641, 1704, 1712, 1722, 1724, 1733,
1741, 1743, 1748
Government, Law & Institutions 108,
122, 138, 208, 224, 240, 308, 324, 411,
503, 519, 524, 530, 533, 619, 624, 625,
630, 633, 640, 718, 719, 724, 730, 740,
830, 840, 930, 940, 1010, 1012, 1013,
1014, 1019, 1030, 1035, 1037, 1112,
1113, 1119, 1121, 1130, 1135, 1140,
1212, 1213, 1219, 1235, 1240, 1303,
1309, 1312, 1313, 1314, 1319, 1335,
1340, 1425, 1509, 1510, 1520, 1525,
1534, 1540, 1609, 1610, 1625, 1640,
1712, 1717, 1725, 1740
Hagiography & Religious Writing 106,
121, 127, 139, 148, 206, 221, 225, 227,
239, 306, 321, 327, 339, 421, 439, 509,
53
Strand Index
517, 520, 521, 602, 603, 621, 701, 712,
739, 817, 819, 820, 843, 1020, 1045,
1109, 1120, 1220, 1230, 1239, 1320,
1330, 1332, 1339, 1506, 1521, 1532,
1537, 1603, 1606, 1621, 1632, 1706,
1721, 1746
Health & Medicine 228, 242, 342, 437,
442, 528, 542, 628, 641, 642, 728, 742,
828, 842, 942, 1043, 1128, 1228, 1242,
1328, 1342, 1442, 1527, 1537, 1637, 1642
Historiography (Medieval & Modern)
101, 130, 210, 230, 231, 330, 335, 403,
435, 441, 444, 526, 604, 705, 725, 804,
837, 903, 915, 926, 940, 943, 946, 948,
1008, 1019, 1022, 1040, 1108, 1119,
1127, 1141, 1243, 1343, 1425, 1426,
1429, 1441, 1443, 1538, 1616, 1638,
1701, 1738
Islamic World 107, 118, 143, 207, 210,
238, 243, 307, 311, 343, 502, 542, 602,
606, 615, 622, 642, 702, 742, 802, 842,
942, 1007, 1110, 1125, 1126, 1202, 1222,
1307, 1510, 1511, 1610, 1719
Jewish Studies 109, 119, 219, 237, 301,
318, 319, 419, 514, 543, 643, 711, 743,
818, 843, 1003, 1023, 1127, 1137, 1519,
1617, 1619, 1719
Language & Literature - Comparative
126, 146, 201, 206, 218, 301, 326, 331,
342, 442, 520, 530, 540, 606, 607, 620,
621, 637, 643, 731, 732, 810, 826, 837,
843, 944, 946, 1125, 1146, 1148, 1225,
1231, 1327, 1331, 1336, 1446, 1526,
1527, 1535, 1536, 1603, 1627, 1631,
1636, 1646, 1626, 1727, 1731, 1736
Language & Literature - Germanic 316,
347, 521, 621, 637, 831, 1521, 1546,
1721, 1732
Language & Literature - Middle English
140, 141, 242, 326, 342, 442, 521, 548,
648, 701, 744, 820, 1036, 1136, 1236,
1325, 1327, 1332, 1512, 1526, 1535,
1612, 1637, 1646, 1746
Language & Literature - Romance
Vernacular 146, 246, 326, 346, 520, 527,
537, 540, 546, 607, 627, 646, 727, 746,
804, 827, 833, 846, 1107, 1246, 1346,
1526, 1535, 1617, 1627, 1635, 1626, 1740
Late Antique & Early Medieval Studies
106, 108, 109, 114, 138, 201, 208, 209,
214, 301, 302, 306, 308, 309, 314, 334,
348, 401, 403, 502, 508, 509, 516, 517,
528, 534, 535, 601, 602, 608, 609, 613,
616, 620, 628, 645, 702, 705, 708, 709,
716, 719, 720, 728, 737, 802, 805, 808,
809, 816, 821, 828, 903, 1008, 1009,
1015, 1021, 1022, 1024, 1030, 1033,
1108, 1109, 1122, 1124, 1132, 1133,
1143, 1147, 1208, 1209, 1221, 1224,
54
1233,
1321,
1509,
1618,
1235,
1324,
1518,
1622,
1237,
1333,
1522,
1708,
1239,
1337,
1542,
1709,
1308, 1309,
1339, 1508,
1608, 1609,
1722
Latin Writing 109, 124, 209, 214, 309,
314, 332, 530, 1027, 1127, 1438, 1531,
1601, 1603, 1631, 1709, 1731
Literacy & Communication 122, 215,
218, 222, 431, 548, 630, 740, 801, 821,
946, 1024, 1042, 1048, 1107, 1124, 1142,
1219, 1224, 1230, 1306, 1319, 1322,
1324, 1330, 1520, 1530, 1620, 1630,
1643, 1720, 1730, 1738
Manuscript Studies 108, 114, 132, 136,
137, 146, 147, 208, 214, 232, 308, 314,
315, 332, 337, 347, 532, 538, 621, 632,
638, 701, 717, 731, 732, 738, 831, 832,
838, 1009, 1027, 1043, 1048, 1124, 1132,
1219, 1229, 1232, 1247, 1302, 1319,
1332, 1346, 1347, 1447, 1529, 1546,
1547, 1629, 1647, 1728, 1735
Material Culture 115, 117, 148, 229, 233,
323, 333, 339, 340, 538, 616, 629, 638,
738, 743, 745, 838, 845, 1033, 1117,
1133, 1202, 1233, 1245, 1321, 1329,
1333, 1347, 1448, 1523, 1545, 1628,
1645, 1702, 1724, 1745
Medievalism & Reception of the Middle
Ages 140, 144, 236, 336, 344, 444, 514,
536, 544, 635, 636, 714, 726, 736, 744,
807, 836, 844, 927, 936, 944, 1036, 1102,
1136, 1236, 1243, 1336, 1536, 1602,
1636, 1644, 1736, 1744
Mediterranean World 117, 118, 238,
248, 318, 348, 502, 511, 516, 519, 539,
602, 619, 639, 702, 713, 743, 802, 822,
1011, 1018, 1023, 1035, 1111, 1118,
1211, 1217, 1218, 1222, 1311, 1317,
1318, 1519, 1530, 1619, 1630, 1717,
1718, 1730, 1737
Monasticism & Religious Life 102, 105,
121, 123, 125, 134, 139, 202, 203, 205,
213, 221, 225, 239, 303, 305, 320, 321,
329, 339, 439, 531, 539, 631, 639, 739,
833, 834, 839, 1020, 1039, 1045, 1103,
1120, 1139, 1227, 1234, 1239, 1247,
1334, 1339, 1516, 1618, 1739
Music & Liturgy 346, 517, 617, 717, 728,
748, 817, 848, 1029, 1044, 1144, 1528,
1541, 1608
Philosophy & Political Thought 243,
246, 322, 522, 526, 530, 609, 626, 726,
826, 926, 943, 1003, 1031, 1038, 1047,
1116, 1131, 1240, 1331
Scandinavian Studies 103, 135, 242,
244, 342, 344, 603, 736, 806, 1032, 1042,
1044, 1142, 1144, 1232, 1234, 1243,
1244, 1333, 1334, 1344, 1532, 1544,
1628, 1632, 1644, 1701, 1704, 1728, 1744
Strand Index
Science, Technology & Military History
222, 237, 337, 340, 504, 512, 547, 604,
626, 647, 716, 726, 747, 748, 803, 826,
847, 848, 1012, 1112, 1132, 1135, 1148,
1204, 1212, 1304, 1312, 1348, 1412,
1448, 1513, 1542, 1611, 1613, 1624,
1639, 1648, 1713, 1739, 1748
Social & Economic History 110, 112,
113, 119, 128, 137, 141, 203, 210, 217,
219, 240, 303, 310, 318, 319, 328, 337,
419, 504, 510, 518, 610, 618, 710, 737,
741, 810, 824, 841, 1010, 1014, 1016,
1017, 1030, 1041, 1114, 1123, 1130,
1140, 1201, 1203, 1207, 1214, 1241,
1310, 1317, 1341, 1344, 1517, 1543,
1544, 1545, 1643, 1733, 1743
Sources & Resources 135, 136, 147, 235,
247, 302, 315, 335, 347, 411, 435, 441,
444, 445, 505, 541, 605, 735, 835, 838,
915, 927, 930, 935, 936, 945, 948, 1019,
1040, 1119, 1132, 1141, 1216, 1247,
1316, 1416, 1425, 1429, 1435, 1438,
1447, 1514, 1523, 1540, 1623, 1640,
1723, 1740
Theology & Biblical Studies 104, 114,
120, 204, 214, 220, 232, 304, 332, 421,
531, 545, 604, 609, 613, 703, 709, 720,
721, 820, 1031, 1038, 1047, 1109, 1131,
1138, 1145, 1147, 1501, 1506, 1547,
1606, 1646, 1706, 1732
Strand Index
55
Journals from CHICAGO
Speculum
Gesta
A Journal of Medieval
Studies
Journal of the
Warburg and
Courtauld
Institutes
An Interdisciplinary
Journal
Modern Philology
Critical and Historical
Studies in Literature,
Medieval through
Contemporary
journals.uchicago.edu
56
Early Modern
Women
Renaissance
Drama
Events & Excursions: Sunday 02 July
Second-Hand & Antiquarian Bookfair
Leeds University Union, 16.00-21.00
Browse antiquarian, rare and second-hand
books from a wide variety of booksellers.
See p. 434 for more details.
Workshops
A
Stitch
in
Time:
Embroidery
Workshop, University House: De Grey
Room, 10.00-16.00
Learn German brick stitch with living
historian and re-enactor Tanya Bentham.
Excursions
Two
‘Secret’
Yorkshire
Castles:
Tickhill and Conisbrough, Departs
Parkinson Steps, 09.30
Visit two little-visited castles, including
the well-preserved motte at Tickhill
which is not normally open to the
public. Led by Kelly deVries (Loyola
University, Maryland) and Robert C.
Woosnam-Savage (Royal Armouries).
Bolton Abbey, Departs Parkinson Steps,
13.00
Book-Binding Workshop, University
House, Beechgrove Room, 13.00-17.00
Discover limp ledger binding techniques with
professional book-binder Linette Withers.
‘Draw thy sword right’: Combat
Workshop, Refectory, 13.30-16.00
Back by popular demand - learn to fight
medieval-style! Led by Dean Davidson and
Stuart Ivinson from Kunst des Fechtens
International.
Explore the bucolic Bolton Priory, set in
a bend on the River Wharf, and discover
how the buildings were modified over
time. Let by Jenny Alexander (University
of Warwick).
Performances
Musical Instruments of the Middle
Ages: A Show-and-Tell Session,
University House: Beechgrove Room,
19.30-21.00
Do you know the difference between a
gittern and a guitar? Find out with de
Mowbraye’s Musicke as they show their
full collection of medieval instruments.
Sunday
For more information on these and all other events, excursions, workshops,
performances and other activities taking place during IMC 2023, please visit
pp. 393-431.
57
Journals from CHICAGO
English
Literary
Renaissance
Getty
Research Journal
Isis
Metropolitan
Museum
Journal
A Journal of
the History of
Science Society
History of
Humanities
History of
Religions
Osiris 37
The Papers of the
Bibliographical
Society of
America
Translating
Medicine across
Premodern Worlds
Res
Source
Spenser Studies
Anthropology and
Aesthetics
Notes in the History
of Art
A Renaissance
Poetry Annual
journals.uchicago.edu
58
I Tatti Studies in
the Italian
Renaissance
Events & Excursions: Monday 03 July
IMC Bookfair
Parkinson Building, 10.00-19.30
Join our publisher’s for the IMC Bookfair
Reception from 18.00-19.00 today.
Second-Hand & Antiquarian Bookfair
Leeds University Union, 08.00-19.00
Browse antiquarian, rare and second-hand
books from a wide variety of booksellers.
See p. 434 for more details.
Events
Medieval Society Pub Quiz, Leeds
University Union: Old Bar, 20.00-21.00
Get your best medieval brain on and join
LUU Medieval Society for the infamous
pub quiz.
Excursions
Highlights from Leeds University
Library Special Collections, Parkinson
Building: Treasures of the Brotherton
Gallery, 12.00-14.00
Join us for a drop-in session. Special
Collections staff will be on hand with a
selection of medieval highlights from the
collections for delegates to examine close
up.
Monday
Bringing together publishers, editors,
authors and readers. The IMC Bookfair is
one of the highlights of the programme.
See pp. 432-433 for more details.
Workshops
The
Medieval
Podcast
Live!,
Stage@leeds: Stage 3, 20.30-21.30
Join Danièle Cybulskie for a live recording
of The Medieval Podcast with her most
popular guest, Eleanor Janega.
‘The key to Paradise is prayer’: A
Workshop for the Islamic Astrolabe,
Stage@leeds: Stage 1, 19.00-20.30
A hands-on introduction to the Islamic
astrolabe, led by astronomy professor
Kristine Larsen.
Royal Armouries, Departs Parkinson
Steps 13.30
An opportunity to visit the British national
collection of arms and armour. It contains
the finest collection of medieval arms and
armour in Britain.
Performances
‘Hammers, strings, and whistles’:
Musical Instruments of the Middle
Ages, University House: Beechgrove
Room, 13.00-14.00
Peter Bull will show how medieval artworks
depict musical instruments, alongside
a demonstration of various instruments
using modern reproductions.
The Art of the Medieval Minstrel,
Stage@leeds: Stage 2, 20.30-21.30
Join Peter Bull for a performance of
medieval dance music from across
Europe.
For more information on these and all other events, excursions, workshops,
performances and other activities taking place during IMC 2023, please visit
pp. 393-431.
59
New from
Chicago
Textual Magic
Charms and Written Amulets
in Medieval England
Katherine Storm
Hindley
Fragments of a
World
Eleanor of
Aquitaine, as It
William of Auvergne and His Was Said
Medieval Life
Lesley Smith
Cloth £36.00
Cloth £36.00
Lives of the Great
The Varnish and the
Languages
Glaze
Arabic and Latin in the
Truth and Tales about the
Medieval Queen
Karen Sullivan
Cloth £36.00
Nominal Things
Painting Splendor with Oil,
1100–1500
Medieval Mediterranean
Bronzes in the Making of
Medieval China
Marjolijn Bol
Karla Mallette
Jeffrey Moser
Paper £28.00
Cloth £40.00
Temptation
Transformed
Defining Nature’s
Limits
The Story of How the
Forbidden Fruit Became an
Apple
The Roman Inquisition and
the Boundaries of Science
Azzan Yadin‑Israel
Cloth £36.00
Cloth £44.00
Earthquakes and
Gardens
Saint Hilarion’s Cyprus
Virginia Burrus
Class 200: New Studies in
Religion
Neil Tarrant
Cloth £22.00
Paper £22.00
Forthcoming in Fall 2023
Medieval Marvels
and Fictions in the
Latin West and
Islamic World
Michelle Karnes
Paper £24.00
Waste and the
Wasters
Poetry and Ecosystemic
Thought in Medieval
England
Eleanor Johnson
Fixers
Agency, Translation, and
the Early Global History of
Literature
Zrinka Stahuljak
Paper £28.00
Paper £24.00
CHICAGO
The University of Chicago Press
press.uchicago.edu
Trade Enquiries to Yale Representation Ltd. yalerep@yaleup.co.uk 020 7079 4900
60
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023
SECOND-HAND AND ANTIQUARIAN BOOKFAIR
LEEDS UNIVERSITY UNION: FOYER
08.00-19.00
Bennett & Kerr Books - Old, rare, and scholarly books on medieval studies, including Late
Antiquity and Byzantium, early medieval English and Old Norse, manuscript studies, art,
architecture, and archaeology.
Chevin Books - Second-hand and rare books, specialising in works on history, military,
arts, and Yorkshire.
Donald Munro - British and European history, church and vernacular architecture,
ecclesiology, archaeology and settlement.
Matthew Butler Books - Medieval history, architectural history, and
archaeology books.
Northern Herald Books - Scholarly books on medieval studies with general economic and
social history.
Pinwell Books - All aspects of the Middle Ages from archaeology to religion, as well as
Roman Britain, Northumbria & Scotland.
Salsus Books - A large stock of academic books, including medieval history, particularly
Byzantine studies and liturgy.
Unsworth Antiquarian Booksellers - Rare and scholarly books on the humanities, with
an antiquarian focus on early printing, classical Antiquity, the Middle Ages and Renaissance,
and British history and topography.
Monday
Delegates and the public are invited to browse second-hand and antiquarian volumes from
across medieval studies and related disciplines at our three-day specialist Second-Hand and
Antiquarian Bookfair. The following booksellers will be among those exhibiting:
Further exhibitors will be confirmed via the IMC website, virtual event platform, and IMC
2023 app.
The IMC Bookfair is open from 10.00 until 19.30 in Parkinson Court: Make sure you pop
in to meet with publishers, browse their latest titles, network, discuss future projects, and, of
course, access exclusive IMC discounts!
Confirmed in person and virtual exhibitors include:
Amsterdam
Combined
University Press
Academic
Arc Humanities
Publishers
Press
De Gruyter
Austrian Academy
Edinburgh
of Sciences Press
University Press
BAR Publishing
Harvard University
Boydell & Brewer
Press
Bloomsbury
Liverpool University
Academic/
Press
Bloomsbury Digital
Manchester
Resources
University Press
Brepols
Oxbow Books &
Brill
Casemate UK
British Online
Oxford University
Archives
Press
Cambridge
Palgrave Macmillan
University Press
Penn State
Ceramicon
University Press
Cistercian
Princeton University
Publications
Press
Punctum Books
Routledge
Royal Armouries
Publishing
Schwabe Verlag
Basel/Berlin
Shaun Tyas
Publishing
Trivent Publishing
University of
Chicago Press
University of
Michigan Press
University of
Toronto Press
University of Wales
Press
Yale University
Press
61
NEW BOOKS FROM LEUVEN UNIVERSITY PRESS
www.lup.be - info@lup.be
MEDIEVAL HISTORY
The Body as a
Mirror of the Soul
Physiognomy from
Antiquity to the
Renaissance
Edited by Lisa Devriese
Pietro d’Abano,
Expositio
problematum (XIX)
Édition, introduction
et notes critiques et
explicatives
£45.00
ISBN 9789462702929
Mediaevalia Lovaniensia
Edited by Christian
Meyer
Petrus de Alvernia
Questiones super
I-VII libros
Politicorum
Summistae The
Commentary
Tradition on Thomas
Aquinas’ Summa
Theologiae from
the 15th to the 17th
Centuries
Edited by Marco Toste
£175.00
ISBN 9789462703186
Ancient and Medieval
Philosophy
£39.00
ISBN 9789462702776
Mediaevalia Lovaniensia
Edited by Lidia Lanza
and Marco Toste
£109.00
ISBN 9789462702622
Ancient and Medieval
Philosophy
Immanent
Transcendence
Francisco Suárez’s
Doctrine of Being
Aristotle and the
Ontology of St.
Bonaventure
Victor Salas
£45.00
ISBN 9789462703568
Ancient and Medieval
Philosophy
Open Access ebook
£75.00
ISBN 9789462703551
Ancient and Medieval
Philosophy
Franziska van Buren
HOW TO ORDER
Order fulfilment and representation in the UK and Europe: IPS UK https://www.ingrampublisherservices.co.uk/ - IPSUK.Cservs@ingramcontent.com
Sales representation USA: Cornell University Press - www.cornellpress.cornell.edu
Order fulfilment USA: Longleaf Services, Inc. - customerservice@longleafservices.org
ORDER ONLINE AT WWW.LUP.BE
62
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Titles &
Speakers:
Details:
Monday
Introduction:
1
Esther Simpson Building: LG08
KEYNOTE LECTURES 2023: ‘BIG DATA’ IN HISTORY?: THE USE OF SOCIAL
NETWORK ANALYSIS IN MEDIEVAL STUDIES - CHALLENGES AND
PERSPECTIVES’ (Language: English)
Robert Gramsch-Stehfest, Historisches Institut, Friedrich-SchillerUniversität Jena
‘MEDIEVAL MANUSCRIPTS: PHYSICAL AND INTELLECTUAL NETWORKS
ENTWINED’ (Language: English)
Anna Somfai, Department of Medieval Studies, Central European
University, Budapest/Wien
Johannes Preiser-Kapeller, Institut für Mittelalterforschung,
Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
‘BIG DATA’ IN HISTORY?: THE USE OF SOCIAL NETWORK ANALYSIS IN
MEDIEVAL STUDIES - CHALLENGES AND PERSPECTIVES
The rapid development of computer technologies has great
consequences for the humanities. Medieval Studies are confronted with
new digital tools and methods which fundamentally change the
traditional workflow of historical research. One particularly promising
instrument of Digital Humanities is Social Network Analysis (SNA), a
quantitative approach to study various types of entanglements in the
past. But many open questions remain, to name only a few: which
instruments of SNA are appropriate for Medieval Studies? Which new
insights can be gained? Are there typical restrictions set by the scarcity
and ambiguity of sources? What is the cost-benefit-ratio of SNA studies,
which usually demand the elaborate gathering of a large quantity of
data? My keynote will discuss these questions while demonstrating some
best practice examples and defining a feasible framework of network
research in Medieval Studies. Particular attention will be paid to an
appropriate network modelling of historical scenarios and the potential
of modern text mining technologies for efficient data gathering.
Details of the keynote lecture are continued on the next page…
63
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
MEDIEVAL MANUSCRIPTS: PHYSICAL AND INTELLECTUAL NETWORKS
ENTWINED
In this lecture I will address the genesis and working of what I consider
the physical and intellectual networks embedded in and based on
manuscripts. Medieval manuscripts are physical objects that have
transmitted texts and images in specific instances and provide us now
with evidence concerning the mindsets, interests, and scholarship of
those who produced and used them. They testify to a physical
transmission process as well as embodying an intellectual reception
history through textual and visual glosses, shedding light on the
development of concepts and exchange of ideas.
Medieval manuscripts were handwritten, designed mentally as well as
physically. Thus, the flexibility involved in the process of creating new
copies of texts allowed individual scribes to introduce designs and tools
that facilitated the best ways to transfer ideas, targeting a time- and
topic-specific readership. Further additions over time of textual and
visual glosses also brought the readers’ reflection into the manuscript,
enriching it and adding layers to what had originally been in place.
Manuscripts thus created a physical network, one that grew out of the
intricacies of the physical process of copying from exemplar(s) and
linking often distant manuscripts while transmitting a text or a body of
texts. The resulting links that can be now traced provide the story of the
physical connections, the physical network. The annotator-readers
contributed with their gloss, their ad hoc remarks or doodles to a
headspace shared over time and space. They impacted on each other
and reacted to the ideas introduced by fellow readers as they engaged
with what met their eyes and minds. Their engagement created yet
another network, one of an intellectual kind. The physical and intellectual
networks converged in the body of the manuscript. I shall in the present
talk, by looking at case studies, discuss the relationship between these
two networks and highlight the element of connection in the creative acts
of physical copying and intellectual engagement.
Please note that admission to this event will be on a first-come, firstserved basis as there will be no tickets. Please ensure that you arrive as
early as possible to avoid disappointment.
COFFEE BREAK: 10.30-11.15
Coffee and Tea will be available on a self-serve basis at the following locations:
Esther Simpson Building: Foyer
Maurice Keyworth Building: Foyer
Parkinson Building: Bookfair
University Square: IMC Social Space
64
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 101-b:
Paper 101-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 102-a:
Paper 102-b:
Paper 102-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 103-a:
Paper 103-b:
Paper 103-c:
Monday
Paper 101-a:
101
Parkinson Building: Room B.22
THINKING ABOUT HISTORY THROUGH OLD ENGLISH LITERATURE
Catalin Taranu, Institut für Anglistik, Amerikanistik und Keltologie,
Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn
Clare A. Lees, Institute of English Studies, School of Advanced Study,
University of London
Educating Apollonius: The Role of Historia in Old English Prose
(Language: English)
Jennifer Lorden, Department of English, College of William & Mary,
Virginia
Wulf and Eadwacer Reloaded: John of Antioch and the Starving
Wife of Odoacer (Language: English)
Ian Shiels, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
The Figure in the Carpet: Narrative Structure and Theories of
History in Old English Heroic Poetry (Language: English)
Catalin Taranu
102
Esther Simpson Building: 2.09
CISTERCIANS IN IRELAND, I
Cîteaux: Commentarii cistercienses
Terryl N. Kinder, Cîteaux: Commentarii cistercienses, Pontigny
Terryl N. Kinder
Within and beyond the Pale: Who Were the Irish Cistercians?
(Language: English)
David E. Thornton, Department of History, Bilkent University, Ankara
Discovering the ‘Cemetery Gate’ of St Mary’s Abbey (Language:
English)
Paul Duffy, Irish Archaeological Consultancy, County Wicklow / School
of Archaeology & Ancient History, University of Leicester
Excavations at St Mary’s Abbey, Dublin: The Archaeology of a
Dissolved Urban Monastery (Language: English)
Edmond O’Donovan, Edmond O’Donovan & Associates, County Wicklow
103
Esther Simpson Building: 1.08
ETHNICITY AND ETHNIC RELATIONS IN NORTHEASTERN EUROPE IN THE LATE
MEDIEVAL PERIOD
Solveig Marie Wang, Lehrstuhl für Nordische Geschichte, Universität
Greifswald
Solveig Marie Wang
Ethnicity as a Social Concept?: Non-Germans in Medieval Livonia
between Rich Research Tradition and New Approaches
(Language: English)
Gustavs Strenga, Historisches Institut, Universität Greifswald
Neglected Entanglements: A Reassessment of the Saami-Norse
Dichotomy in Medieval Fennoscandia (Language: English)
Erik Wolf, Historisches Institut, Universität Greifswald
Between Vinðland and Garðaríki: Notions of Slavonic Ethnicities
in Old Norse Literature (Language: English)
Carina Damm, Leibniz-Institut für Geschichte und Kultur des östlichen
Europa, Leipzig
65
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 104-a:
Paper 104-b:
Paper 104-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 105-a:
Paper 105-b:
Paper 105-c:
Paper 105-d:
66
104
Maurice Keyworth Building: G.02
CRUSADE KILLING: REGULATED OR INDISCRIMINATE?, I
Centrum för medeltidsstudier, Stockholms universitet
Kurt Villads Jensen, Centrum för medeltidsstudier, Stockholms
universitet
Paula Pinto-Costa, Departamento de História e de Estudos Políticos e
Internacionais / Centro de Investigação Transdisciplinar ‘Cultura,
Espaço e Memória’ (CITCEM), Universidade do Porto
The Concept of Cruelty in the Sources of the First Crusade
(Language: English)
Sini Kangas, History, Philosophy & Literary Studies Unit, Faculty of
Social Sciences, Tampere University
Salvation through Slaughter (Language: English)
John France, Department of History, Swansea University
Sanctified Violence? Parisian Exegesis, Treatises, and Sermons
on Killing (Language: English)
Jessalynn Bird, Department of Humanistic Studies, Saint Mary’s
College, Notre Dame, Indiana
105
Clarendon Building: 1.02
MENDICANT NETWORKS, I: NUNS
Robert Friedrich, Lehrstuhl für Allgemeine Geschichte des Mittelalters,
Universität Greifswald and Cornelia Linde, Lehrstuhl für Allgemeine
Geschichte des Mittelalters, Universität Greifswald
Anne Greule, Professur für Mittelalterliche Geschichte, Historisches
Seminar, Universität Erfurt
The Beginnings of the Women’s Movement in Carmel: Between
History and Legendae (Language: English)
Mario Alfarano, Institutum Carmelitanum, Roma
Ecce haereditas mihi ablata: Dominican Nunneries in Saxonia
and Their Relations with Their Territorial Lords (Language:
English)
Miriam Peuker, Lehrstuhl für Allgemeine Geschichte des Mittelalters,
Universität Greifswald
The Dominican Nuns of Zaragoza and Valencia and Their
Relationship with the Kings and Queens of Aragon (Language:
English)
Robert Friedrich
Poor Clares on the Way of St James: Cultural Landscapes and
Memory in the Iberian Peninsula (Language: English)
Araceli Rosillo-Luque, Ancient Collections, Arxiu-Biblioteca dels
Franciscans de Catalunya, Barcelona / Tàcita Muta, Universitat de
Barcelona
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Paper 106-b:
Paper 106-c:
Paper 106-d:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 107-a:
Paper 107-b:
Monday
Moderator:
Paper 106-a:
106
Parkinson Building: Room B.09
PUNITIVE MIRACLES IN LATE ANTIQUITY AND THE EARLY MIDDLE AGES, I
Wydział Historii, Uniwersytet Warszawski
Juliana Santos Dinoa Medeiros, Wydział Historii, Uniwersytet
Warszawski and Robert Wiśniewski, Wydział Historii, Uniwersytet
Warszawski / Department of Classics, University of Reading
Robert Wiśniewski
A Widow’s Curse of Her Ten Children in a 5 th-Century Testimony
in Augustine (Language: English)
Sophie Lunn-Rockliffe, Faculty of Divinity / Peterhouse, University of
Cambridge
Cunning, Tricks, and Mockery: Punitive Miracles in the Early
Byzantine Miracle Collections (Language: English)
Julia Doroszewska, Wydział Historii, Uniwersytet Warszawski / Wydział
Humanistyczny, Uniwersytet Śląski w Katowicach
Saints as Punishers in Early Medieval Caucasia (Language:
English)
Nikoloz Aleksidze, Department of Social Sciences, Free University of
Tbilisi
The Just-Deserts of Irreverence in the Missionary Hagiography
of the 9th and 10th Centuries (Language: English)
Ian N. Wood, School of History, University of Leeds
107
Esther Simpson Building: LG08
UPPITY MEDIEVAL WOMEN ACROSS THE GLOBE, I
Anita Obermeier, Department of English Language & Literature,
University of New Mexico, Albuquerque and Doaa Omran, Department
of English Language & Literature, University of New Mexico,
Albuquerque
Doaa Omran
The Gynecological Wisdom of Trotula of Salerno (Language:
English)
Maylene Cotto Andino, Centro de Lenguas, Universidad de Castilla-La
Mancha, Toledo
The Female Companion: Women’s Transmission of Religious
Knowledge in Early Islam (Language: English)
Amina Hussain, Department of English, Modern European & Asian
Languages, Khwaja Moinuddin Chishti Language University, Uttar
Pradesh
67
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
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Paper 108-a:
Paper 108-b:
Paper 108-c:
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Paper 109-a:
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68
108
Parkinson Building: Room B.10
LAW AND EMPIRE: THE CAPITULARIES OF LOUIS THE PIOUS, 814-840, I
Nordrhein-Westfälische Akademie der Wissenschaften und der Künste
Karl Ubl, Historisches Institut, Universität zu Köln
Steffen Patzold, Seminar für mittelalterliche Geschichte, Eberhard Karls
Universität Tübingen
The Capitularies of Louis the Pious: Innovations and Departures
(Language: English)
Jennifer R. Davis, Department of History, Catholic University of
America, Washington, DC
Two and a Half Manuscripts: The Capitularies of the Collectio
Augustana (Language: English)
Sören Kaschke, Historisches Institut, Universität zu Köln
Judicial Ordeals in the Capitularies of Louis the Pious, 814-820:
The Impact of Intellectual Discourse and Political Debate
(Language: English)
Benedikt Lemke, Historisches Institut, Universität zu Köln
109
Parkinson Building: Room B.08
THE FORMATION OF DISCOURSE COMMUNITIES IN LATE ANTIQUITY, 500700, I: IBERIA
Kay Boers, Departement Geschiedenis en Kunstgeschiedenis,
Universiteit Utrecht and Becca Grose, Department of History, University
of York
Rebecca Maloy, College of Music, University of Colorado, Boulder
A Change of Terms: Discourses of Diverse Liturgies in Visigothic
Iberia (Language: English)
Molly Lester, History Department, United States Naval Academy,
Maryland
Christian Political Discourse in Visigothic Iberia: Theory and
Practice beyond Contradiction (Language: English)
Paulo Pachá, RomanIslam - Center for Comparative Empire &
Transcultural Studies, Universität Hamburg / Instituto de História,
Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro
Jews and Jesus as Visigothic Catholicism’s objets petit a: An
Ontotheological Discourse on the Concept of ‘Human Nature’
(Language: English)
Michael J. Kelly, Department of Comparative Literature, State
University of New York, Binghamton
110
Michael Sadler Building: LG.16
NETWORKS OF TRADE AND ECONOMIC ENTANGLEMENTS IN EUROPE AND THE
ISLAMIC WORLD
IMC Programming Committee
Maya Shatzmiller, Department of History, University of Western Ontario
Capillary Banking: Weaving the Credit Networks in 13th-Century
Genoa (Language: English)
Skarbimir Prokopek, Laboratoire de Médiévistique Occidentale de Paris
(LaMOP - UMR 8589), Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne
The Economic Rise of the Šibenik Noble Family Divnić in the 15 th
Century: A Case Study (Language: English)
Nataša Mučalo, State Archive, Šibenik
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
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Paper 111-b:
Paper 111-c:
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Paper 112-a:
Paper 112-b:
Paper 112-c:
Monday
Moderator:
Paper 111-a:
111
Esther Simpson Building: 3.01
MEDIEVAL AFRICAN ENTANGLEMENTS, I: ART HISTORIES IN THE AGE OF THE
‘GLOBAL MIDDLE AGES’
2022 Dan David Prize Funding
Solomon Gebreyes Beyene, Hiob Ludolf Zentrum für Äthiopistik, AsienAfrika-Institut, Universität Hamburg
Andrea Achi, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
Ceramics, Ornamentation, and Artistic Connectivity along the
Swahili Coast: Challenges for Transcultural Art Histories of the
‘Global Middle Ages’ (Language: English)
Vera-Simone Schulz, Kunsthistorisches Institut, Max-Planck-Institut,
Firenze
Africa / Medieval: Entanglements in Museums (Language: English)
Kathleen Bickford Berzock, Block Museum, Northwestern University,
Illinois
‘Budomel’s Imperative’: Toward a Decolonial African Art
Historiography of Late Medieval Encounters (Language: English)
Noah Michaud, School of Art & Art History, University of Florida
112
Esther Simpson Building: 3.02
NETWORKS IN MEDIEVAL IRELAND AND BEYOND
Holly E. Shipton, School of History, Anthropology, Philosophy & Politics,
Queen’s University Belfast
James Davis, School of History, Anthropology, Philosophy & Politics,
Queen’s University Belfast
Lordship across the Sea: Transnational Manorial Management
from Leinster to Norfolk (Language: English)
Holly E. Shipton
The Pilgrimage to St Patrick’s Purgatory: Linking Late Medieval
Lough Derg with Down, Dublin, and Beyond (Language: English)
Tara Shields, School of History, Anthropology, Philosophy & Politics,
Queen’s University Belfast
Swapping Churches?: Clerical Networks and Benefice Exchanges
in the North of Ireland, c. 1300-c. 1530 (Language: English)
Louise Moffett, School of Archaeology & Palaeoecology / School of
Natural & Built Environment, Queen’s University Belfast
69
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
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Paper 114-a:
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70
113
Stage@leeds: Stage 1
MOVING BYZANTIUM, I: PROFESSIONAL MOBILITY WITHIN THE BYZANTINE
EMPIRE
Moving Byzantium: Mobility, Microstructures & Personal Agency in
Byzantium, Universität Wien
Claudia Rapp, Institut für Byzantinistik & Neogräzistik, Universität Wien
/ Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische Akademie der
Wissenschaften, Wien
Claudia Rapp
How Byzantine Sailors Experienced Maritime Mobility (Language:
English)
Zeynep Olgun, Faculty of History, University of Cambridge
An Assortment of Harbours or a Network of Naval Bases?: The
Dispersal of Maritime Forces in the Middle Byzantine Period
(Language: English)
Christos G. Makrypoulias, Independent Scholar, Athens
Dynamics of Movement: Villager Agency in the Byzantine
Countryside (Language: English)
Mark Pawlowski, Department of Classics & Letters / School of Visual
Arts, University of Oklahoma
A Law unto Themselves: Social Mobility of 6th-Century Bankers
in (Legal) Comparative Perspective (Language: English)
David Rockwell, Department of Medieval Studies, Central European
University, Budapest/Wien
114
Clarendon Building: GR 01
SCHOLARLY PRACTICES IN CAROLINGIAN EAST FRANCIA: ACTORS,
NETWORKS, KNOWLEDGE EXCHANGE, I
Project ‘Margins at the Centre: Book Production & Practices of
Annotation in the East Frankish Realm’, Institut für
Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften,
Wien
Cinzia Grifoni, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
Astrid Breith, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
The Spread of Commented Editions of the Bible in Carolingian
East Francia (Language: English)
Cinzia Grifoni
The Antecedents: Unity and Diversity in the Greek Catenae on
Psalms - Why with Reference to the Author? (Language: English)
Uta Heil, Institut für Kirchengeschichte, Christliche Archäologie und
Kirchliche Kunst, Universität Wien
Studying the End Times in Carolingian East Frankish Schools
(Language: English)
Gaëlle Bosseman, Département Histoire, Université de Namur
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
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Paper 115-b:
Paper 115-c:
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Paper 116-a:
Paper 116-b:
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Monday
Paper 115-a:
115
Clarendon Building: 1.06
TRACING MATERIAL IDENTITIES IN THE EASTERN MEDIEVAL WORLD
Mary Jaharis Center for Byzantine Art & Culture
Rachel Catherine Patt, Stanley J Seeger Center for Hellenic Studies,
Princeton University
Nava Streiter, Department of History of Art, Bryn Mawr College,
Pennsylvania
Beardless Bishops: Reflections on Identity in the Chalice of the
Patriarchs (Language: English)
Lora Webb, ANAMED, Koç University Research Center for Anatolian
Civilizations
Shifting Identities: Late Antique Sarcophagi from Senators to
Saints (Language: English)
Alexis Gorby, School of Archaeology / St John’s College, University of
Oxford
Materials Matter: Glimpses of Classical Heritage in Byzantine
Luxury Arts (Language: English)
Rachel Catherine Patt
116
Newlyn Building: GR.07
THE CRUSADING MOVEMENT IN THE HOLY ROMAN EMPIRE, I: NETWORKS
AND TRADITIONS
Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Alan V. Murray, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Jason T. Roche, Department of History, Politics & Philosophy,
Manchester Metropolitan University
To Follow My Ancestors: German Bishops and the Tradition of
Crusading, 11th-13th Centuries (Language: English)
Roman Tischer, Fachbereich Geschichts- und Kulturwissenschaften,
Justus-Liebig-Universität Gießen
German Crusaders between the Canonical Crusades, 1104-1217
(Language: English)
James Doherty, Department of History, University of Birmingham
Like Father like Son?: A Network Analysis of Participants in
Frederick Barbarossa’s and Henry VI’s Crusades (Language:
English)
Daniel Franke, Department of Social & Behavioral Sciences, Richard
Bland College of William & Mary, Virginia
71
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
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Paper 117-a:
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Paper 118-a:
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Paper 119-a:
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72
117
Esther Simpson Building: 2.07
ANALYSING THE TANGIBLE TO DECIPHER THE INTANGIBLE: APPROACHES TO
MATERIALITY IN MEDIEVAL SPAIN
Hannah Thomson, Department of Art History & Architecture, University
of California, Los Angeles
Tori Schmitt, Department of Art History & Architecture, University of
California, Los Angeles
Piedra sangrante and Spaces of Privilege in the Cathedral of
Ávila (Language: English)
Hannah Thomson
‘Such infernal clothes’: Moral Decay and the Spiritual
Condemnation of Fashion in Late Medieval Spain (Language:
English)
Haley Schroer, Department of History, University of Texas, Austin
Masons’ Marks: Sources of Information for the Organisation of
Medieval Workshops (Language: English)
Teresa Martínez Martínez, Department of History of Art, University of
Warwick
118
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.31
MEDIEVAL NETWORKING AND PRESTIGE IN THE ISLAMIC WORLD AND
BYZANTIUM, 12TH-13TH CENTURIES
IMC Programming Committee
Ekaterini Mitsiou, Institut für Byzantinistik & Neogräzistik, Universität
Wien
‘Using every tool at his disposal’: Dubays b. Sadaqa’s Guide to
12th-Century Networking (Language: English)
Eric J. Hanne, Department of History, Florida Atlantic University, Boca
Raton
Rebuilding Networks in Byzantium after 1204: The Case of
Niketas Choniates (Language: English)
Ferhat Sezer Kurtoğlu, Department of History, Boğaziçi University,
Istanbul
Intra-Family Collaboration and Networking in the Medieval
Muslim World: The Evidence of Ibn al-Adim of Aleppo (Language:
English)
Yaacov Lev, Department of Middle Eastern History, Bar-Ilan University,
Ramat Gan
119
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.09
JEWISH / NON-JEWISH ENTANGLEMENTS AND NETWORKS, I: ECONOMIC
ASPECTS
MedievalJewishStudiesNow!
Dean A. Irwin, Independent Scholar, Warrington
Birgit Wiedl, Institut für jüdische Geschichte Österreichs, St Pölten
‘But no heir came forward to redeem the pledge’: Strategies of
Risk Management in Jewish Credit Transactions From Late
Medieval Austria (Language: English)
Eveline Brugger, Institut für jüdische Geschichte Österreichs, St Pölten
Minors and Anglo-Jewish Moneylending Transactions in the 13th
Century (Language: English)
Dean A. Irwin
Negotiating Debt Restructuring between Castilian Jewish
Lenders and Secular Authorities (Language: English)
Alexander Mimoun, Histoire, les Langues, les Littératures et
l’Interculturel (HLLI - UR 4030), Université Littoral Côte d’Opale
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
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Paper 120-b:
Paper 120-c:
Session:
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Paper 121-a:
Paper 121-b:
Paper 121-c:
Monday
Moderator:
Paper 120-a:
120
Newlyn Building: GR.01
NETWORKS OF DISSENT AND PERSECUTION, I: CIRCULATION AND
DISTORTION OF NORMATIVE RELIGIOUS DISCOURSES
School of History, Queen Mary University of London
Delfi I. Nieto-Isabel, School of History, Queen Mary University of
London
Lucy Sackville, Department of History, University of York
Misinterpreting Origen: Holiness and Heresy of the Ante-Nicene
Theologian in the High Middle Ages (Language: English)
Rachel Ernst, Department of History, Georgia State University, Atlanta
Permeable Network of Discourses: How Images, Ideals, and
Ideas Were Transmitted through the Various Works of Bernard
of Clairvaux (Language: English)
Stamatia Noutsou, Independent Scholar, København
Going against the Flow?: Religious Women and Responses to
Proximity Anxiety in 12th-Century Germany (Language: English)
Andra-Nicoleta Alexiu, Historisches Seminar, Westfälische WilhelmsUniversität Münster
121
Stage@leeds: Stage 3
MEDIEVAL MYSTICS: NETWORKS, RELATIONSHIPS, AND INFLUENCES, I
Mysticism & Lived Experience Network
Amanda Langley, School of History, Queen Mary University of London
Lydia Shahan, Committee on the Study of Religion, Harvard University
Networks of Political Activism: William Flete and the English
Legacy of Catherine of Siena’s Active Ministry (Language: English)
Nicola Estrafallaces, School of Critical Studies (English Language &
Linguistics), University of Glasgow
‘In her kendly cuntre’: Margery as Transnational Network
Builder (Language: English)
Kendra Slayton, Department of English, Clemson University, South
Carolina
‘Why takist thou not this deepli?’: Consoling and Castigating
Unfeeling in The Festis and the Passion of Oure Lord Ihesu Crist
(Language: English)
Rowan Wilson, Faculty of English Language & Literature, University of
Oxford
73
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
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Paper 122-a:
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Paper 123-a:
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122
Esther Simpson Building: 2.08
NETWORKS AND ENTANGLEMENTS BETWEEN THE CENTRE AND PERIPHERY IN
THE LATE MIDDLE AGES: ITALIANS AND ULTRAMONTANES, I - CLERGYMEN
Anna Horeczy, Instytut Historii im. Tadeusza Manteuffla, Polskiej
Akademii Nauk, Warszawa and Adam Zapała, Instytut Historii im.
Tadeusza Manteuffla, Polskiej Akademii Nauk, Warszawa
Julia Verkholantsev, Department of Russian & East European Studies,
University of Pennsylvania
Paving the Road to the Cardinalate: Polish Network-Building in
the Papal Curia through the Example of Zbigniew Oleśnicki
(Language: English)
Adam Zapała
The Correspondence of Ippolito d’Este with His Officials from
Hungary (Language: English)
Ilona Kristóf, Department of Antiquities & Middle Ages, Károly
Eszterházy Catholic University, Eger
Polish-Roman Relations in the Light of Roman Notarial Records,
15th - Early 16th Centuries (Language: English)
Andreas Rehberg, Instituto Storico Germanico di Roma
John of Capistrano and the Hussites (Language: English)
Petra Mutlová, Filozofická fakulta, Ústav klasických studií, Masarykova
univerzita, Brno and Pavel Ševčík, Filozofická fakulta, Ústav klasických
studií, Masarykova univerzita, Brno
123
Newlyn Building: 1.07
PEOPLE, ORGANISATIONS, AND SPACE AS NETWORK COMPONENTS, I:
NETWORKS OF PERSONS AND ORGANISATIONS IN BURGUNDY, 10TH-13TH
CENTURIES
SHMESP: Société des historiens médiévistes de l’enseignement
supérieur public
Dominique Stutzmann, Institut de Recherche et d’Histoire des Textes
(IRHT), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Paris
Dominique Stutzmann
Biography and Network Analysis: Methodological Issues around
the ‘Networked Life-Course’ (Language: English)
Isabelle Rosé, Département d’histoire / Tempora (UR 7468), Université
Rennes 2
Monasteries and Networks of Dependencies in 9th-11th-Century
Burgundy: Juxtaposition, Overlapping, Confrontation (Language:
English)
Noëlle Deflou-Leca, Département d’histoire / Laboratoire d’Etudes sur
les Monothéismes (LEM - UMR 8584), Université Grenoble Alpes
Mediation and Institutional Networks: The Cistercian Abbey of
Bellevaux in the County of Burgundy in the 13th Century
(Language: English)
Vincent Corriol, Département d’histoire / Temps, Mondes, Sociétés
(TEMOS - UMR 9016), Le Mans Université
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
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Paper 124-a:
Paper 124-c:
Session:
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Paper 125-a:
Paper 125-b:
Paper 125-c:
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Paper 126-a:
Paper 126-b:
Paper 126-c:
Monday
Paper 124-b:
124
Newlyn Building: 1.01
NETWORKS, MATERIALITIES, AND INTERTEXTUALITIES IN GILDAS
Ceræ: An Australasian Journal of Medieval & Early Modern Studies
IMC Programming Committee
Gwendolyne Knight, Historiska institutionen, Stockholms universitet
‘Non Britannia sed Romania’: Rediscovering Roman and PostRoman Britain in the Early Middle Ages (Language: English)
Katrina Knight, Department of History, Emory University, Atlanta
The Courtenay Compendium: A New Witness of Gildas’ De
excidio Britanniae (Language: English)
Luca Larpi, Independent Scholar, Firenze
‘Pardo similis moribus et nequitiis discolor’: Leopards, Morality,
and Tattoos in Gildas’ De Excidio Brittaniae (Language: English)
Erica Steiner, Faculty of Arts & Social Sciences (Celtic Studies),
University of Sydney
125
Esther Simpson Building: 3.08
THE BEGUINES OF ŚWIDNICA AND THE NETWORK OF THE DAUGHTERS OF
ODELINDIS
Centrum studiów mediewistycznych, Katolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana
Pawła II
Paweł Kras, Centrum studiów mediewistycznych, Katolicki Uniwersytet
Lubelski Jana Pawła II
Sean L. Field, Department of History, University of Vermont
From Cologne to Świdnica: The Rise and Spread of the
Daughters of Odelindis in Central Europe (Language: English)
Paweł Kras
The Beguines of Świdnica: A Community beyond the Realm of
the Written Word? (Language: English)
Anna Adamska, Instituut voor Cultuurwetenschappelijk Onderzoek,
Universiteit Utrecht
‘They ride on the back of the Holy Trinity […]’: Beguines and the
Trinitarian Debates of the Late Middle Ages (Language: English)
Tomasz Gałuszka, Wydział Historii i Dziedzictwa Kulturowego,
Uniwersytet papieskiego Jana Pawła II, Kraków
126
Clarendon Building: 1.03
NETWORKS AND ENTANGLEMENTS OF BORDER IDENTITIES, I: HISTORICAL
PERSPECTIVES
Medieval & Early Modern Centre, University of Sydney / Centre for
Medieval Studies, University of Bristol
Emma Knowles, Department of English, University of Sydney and Jan
Shaw, Department of English, University of Sydney
Jan Shaw
Welsh Marcher Lords and British History in the Late Middle Ages
(Language: English)
Helen Fulton, Centre for Medieval Studies, University of Bristol
The Plight of the Poor: The Entanglements of Border Identities
in the Work of William Langland (Language: English)
Gabrielle Baalke, Department of Theology & Religious Studies,
University of Nottingham
Progenies of the High Fire: Legendary Identities in Borderland
Scandinavia according to Þorsteins saga Víkingssonar
(Language: English)
Piergiorgio Consagra, Department of Icelandic & Comparative Cultural
Studies, University of Iceland, Reykjavík
75
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
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Paper 127-a:
Paper 127-b:
Paper 127-c:
Session:
Title:
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Paper 128-a:
Paper 128-b:
Paper 128-c:
Session:
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Paper 129-a:
Paper 129-b:
Paper 129-c:
76
127
Esther Simpson Building: 2.12
ENTANGLEMENTS OF FAITH AND THE SENSES, I: TOUCHING MARY(AN)
DEVOTION IN THE MIDDLE AGES
Andrea-Bianka Znorovszky, Departamento de Historia Medieval,
Moderna y Contemporánea, Universidad de Salamanca
Andrea-Bianka Znorovszky
Art, Faith, and ‘Clinging to’ Mary among Poor Clares in Central
Europe (Language: English)
Agnieszka Patała, Instytut Historii Sztuki, Uniwersytet Wrocławski
Maria lactans, Maria doctrix: Touching Mary’s Breasts and
Female Teaching in the Prayerbook of Constanza de Castilla
(Language: English)
Katherine Smith, Faculty of Medieval & Modern Languages, University
of Oxford
Pieta occulis: The Representation of Marian Sorrow in Early
Medieval English Manuscripts from the 10th to the 11th Century
(Language: English)
Julia María García Morales, Departamento de Historia del Arte,
Universidad de Murcia
128
Clarendon Building: 1.01
WORK AND WORKERS ON LAND AND SEA, 1000-1400
Grace Owen, Faculty of Humanities, Arts & Social Sciences, University
of Exeter
Stuart Pracy, Department of History & Archaeology, University of
Exeter
The Status and Role of Workers on English Manors, 1000-1200
(Language: English)
Chris Lewis, Institute of Historical Research, University of London
Running a Tight Ship: Crew Roles and Responsibilities, c.1000
(Language: English)
Rebecca Tyson, Department of History, University of Bristol
Examining a Local Economic Network: The Remuneration of
Manorial Officials in Later Medieval England (Language: English)
Grace Owen
129
Parkinson Building: Room 1.08
NETWORKS OF ART AND PATRONAGE IN LATE MEDIEVAL WESTERN EUROPE
IMC Programming Committee
Zuzana Bolerazká, Katolická teologická fakulta, Univerzita Karlova,
Praha
The Myth of Sabina von Steinbach: The Creation of a Prolific
Female Sculptor (Language: English)
Lauren Beck, Department of History of Art, University of York
Van Eyck’s Visual Sources, Burgundian Ideology, and the Figure
of Charlemagne (Language: English)
Susan Frances Jones, New College of the Humanities, Northeastern
University, London
A Tale of Two Late Medieval Psalters (Language: English)
Daniel Bennett Page, Independent Scholar, Omaha, Nebraska
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Paper 130-a:
Paper 130-b:
Paper 130-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 131-a:
Paper 131-b:
Paper 131-c:
Paper 131-d:
Monday
Moderator:
130
Michael Sadler Building: LG.10
THE PRACTICE OF HISTORY: NETWORKS AND CONNECTIONS, C. 950-1300,
I
Centre for Research in Historiography & Historical Culture, Aberystwyth
University
Björn Weiler, Department of History & Welsh History, Aberystwyth
University
Jacqueline M. Burek, Department of English, George Mason University,
Virginia
The Place of Forgetting?: Robertians / Capetians and the
Transmission of Family History at Saint-Martin de Tours, 886990 (Language: English)
Tomasz Dalewski, Histoire, Archéologie, Littérature des mondes
chrétiens et musulmans médiévaux (CIHAM - UMR 5648), Université
Jean Moulin Lyon III
‘Hic deficit regnum Caroli magni’: Remembering Dynasties in
11th-Century Sens (Language: English)
Sarah Greer, University of Hull
Carolingian Connections: Reading about Attila the Hun in the
13th Century (Language: English)
Eric Wolever, Mittelalterliche Geschichte, Universität Kassel
131
Parkinson Building: Room B.11
PROPHETIC NETWORKS AND ENTANGLEMENTS
Frances Courtney Kneupper, Department of History, University of
Mississippi
Felicitas Schmieder, Historisches Institut, FernUniversität in Hagen
Rome Delivered: Prophecy, Conversion, and Reform in the
Mediterranean World (Language: English)
Michele Lodone, Dipartimento di Studi Linguistici e Culturali, Università
degli Studi di Modena e Reggio Emilia
In Troubled Times: Short Prophecies and Their Critics - Between
Counterargument and Parody (Language: English)
Petra Waffner, Historisches Institut, FernUniversität in Hagen
Lucia da Narni, Maria de Santo Domingo, and the Circulation of
Prophecy (Language: English)
Eleonora Cappuccilli, Villa i Tatti, Harvard Center for Italian
Renaissance Studies, Harvard University
The Interchange between Text and Orality in the Prophecies of
Constance of Rabastens and Marie Robine (Language: English)
Frances Courtney Kneupper
77
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
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Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 132-a:
Paper 132-b:
Paper 132-c:
Session:
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Paper 133-a:
Paper 133-b:
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Paper 134-a:
Paper 134-b:
Paper 134-c:
78
132
Clarendon Building: 2.08
MANUSCRIPTS IN MOTION AND THE CIRCULATION OF TEXTS
IMC Programming Committee
Khodadad Rezakhani, Leiden University Institute for Area Studies
(LIAS), Universiteit Leiden
From the Shadows into the Light: The Networks that Circulated
Ad Incorrupta Pontificum Nomina Conservanda throughout
Europe between c. 1145 and c. 1325 (Language: English)
Marie-Thérèse Champagne, Department of History & Philosophy,
University of West Florida
The Networks behind the Transportation of the Middle Persian
Psalter (Language: English)
Mina Salehi, Centre for the Study of Manuscript Cultures (CSMC),
Exzellenzcluster 'Understanding Written Artefacts', Universität Hamburg
Hidden Stories about Hidden Stories: Pandemic Pedagogy in
Local / Global Networks (Language: English)
Elizabeth Abraham, Centre for Criminology & Sociolegal Studies,
University of Toronto and Alexandra Bolintineanu, Centre for Medieval
Studies, University of Toronto
133
Newlyn Building: LG.02
ENTANGLED BURIALS: THE ANALYSIS OF MEDIEVAL CEMETERIES
IMC Programming Committee
David Stocker, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Early Medieval Chambered Graves from Poland in the European
Arena: Connections, Discussions, and Speculations (Language:
English)
Patrycja Godlewska, Szkoła Doktorsk Nauk Humanistycznych,
Teologicznych i Artystycznych Academia Artium Humaniorum,
Uniwersytet Mikołaja Kopernika, Toruń
Genetic and Social Identity in the Vandal and Byzantine
Cemeteries of Carthage, Tunisia (Language: English)
Reed Morgan, Department of History, Harvard University / Department
of Archaeogenetics, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology,
Leipzig
134
Michael Sadler Building: LG.15
THE ENTANGLED PARISH: EXPRESSIONS OF PAROCHIAL IDENTITY
Centre for Medieval Studies, University of Exeter
Ellie March, Department of Archaeology & History, University of Exeter
Bernhard Hollick, Institutt for arkeologi, konservering og historie,
Universitetet i Oslo
A Window into Faith: An Examination of Stained Glass, the
Parish Church, and Its Community (Language: English)
Lydia Fisher, Department of Archaeology & History / Department of Art
History & Visual Culture, University of Exeter
Illuminating the Parish: An Interdisciplinary Case Study of the
Shared Monastic-Parochial Church in Tewkesbury,
Gloucestershire (Language: English)
Ellie March
Independence and Identity: Conflict and Parochial Rights
between the Late Medieval Church and Chapelry (Language:
English)
Paul Carley-Annear, Department of Archaeology & History, University of
Exeter
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Paper 135-b:
Paper 135-c:
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Moderator:
Paper 136-a:
Paper 136-b:
Paper 136-c:
Paper 136-d:
Monday
Sponsor:
Organiser:
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Paper 135-a:
135
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.32
NETWORK ANALYSIS FOR MEDIEVALISTS, I: KINSHIP NETWORKS IN
ICELAND AND ORKNEY
Social Network Analysis Researchers of the Middle Ages (SNARMA)
Matthew H. Hammond, Department of History, King’s College London
Matthew H. Hammond
I’ll Make a Landnámsmaðr out of You: A Social Network Analysis
of Primary, Secondary, and Dependant Settlers in Iceland as
Portrayed in Landnámabók (Language: English)
Cassidy Croci, Centre for the Study of the Viking Age, University of
Nottingham
An Analysis of the Relationships of Characters in the Icelandic
Saga according to Chronological Order and Geographic Distance
(Language: English)
Shintaro Yamada, Department of Area Studies, Graduate School of Arts
& Sciences, University of Tokyo
‘These people all come into the saga later[…]’: Social Network
Analysis and the Genealogies of Orkneyinga saga (Language:
English)
Tom Fairfax, School of English / Centre for the Study of the Viking Age,
University of Nottingham
136
Newlyn Building: GR.02
ENTANGLEMENTS IN CANON LAW: ‘BURCHARD’S DEKRET DIGITAL’
Project ‘Burchards Dekret Digital’, Akademie der Wissenschaften und
der Literatur, Mainz
Melanie Panse-Bulchwalter, Mittelalterliche Geschichte, Universität
Kassel and Elena Vanelli, Mittelalterliche Geschichte, Universität Kassel
Melanie Panse-Bulchwalter
The Project ‘Burchards Dekret Digital’: An Introduction
(Language: English)
Melanie Panse-Bulchwalter
Entangled Codices: Inter-Manuscript Dependencies in
Burchard’s Decretum (Language: English)
Daniel Gneckow, Mittelalterliche Geschichte, Universität Kassel
Blood Ties and Manuscripts: Trees of Consanguinity in
Burchard’s Decretum (Language: English)
Elena Vanelli
Towards a Digital Edition of Burchard’s Decretum (Language:
English)
Michael Schonhardt, Mittelalterliche Geschichte, Universität Kassel
79
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
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Paper 137-a:
Paper 137-b:
Paper 137-c:
Session:
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Paper 138-a:
Paper 138-b:
Paper 138-c:
Paper 138-d:
80
137
Michael Sadler Building: LG.19
MOBILE MANUSCRIPTS, STABLE NETWORKS: WRITTEN SOURCES AS
CONNECTING ELEMENTS IN THE LATE MEDIEVAL HOLY ROMAN EMPIRE
Ulla Kypta, Fakultät für Geisteswissenschaften, Universität Hamburg
Paul Schweitzer-Martin, Abteilung Mittelalterliche Geschichte, LudwigMaximilians-Universität München
Traveling Manuscripts: The Minutes of the Hanse Diets as a
Cornerstone of the Cooperation between Towns (Language:
English)
Ulla Kypta
Manuscripts Traveling with Craftsmen: Writing and Its Influence
on Social and Professional Networking (Language: English)
Julia Bruch, Historisches Institut, Universität zu Köln
Undercover between Covers: Shedding Light on Unknown Colour
Suppliers of Emperor Maximilian I (Language: English)
Katharina M. Hofer, Institut für Geschichte, Universität Wien
138
Clarendon Building: 2.01
ELITE ENTANGLEMENTS AND PLACES OF POWER IN WEST FRANCIA, 8501050
Thomas A. E. Greene, Department of History, Anthropology &
Philosophy, University of North Georgia and Orsolya Varró, Department
of Medieval History, Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest
Thomas A. E. Greene
Königsnähe and the Counts in the Late 9th Century (Language:
English)
Cullen Chandler, Department of History, Lycoming College,
Pennsylvania
When There’s No One Left to Count On: The Comital Structures
of Mâcon and Freising within Local Networks of Power, 10th-11th
Centuries (Language: English)
Isaac Smith, Sonderforschungsbereich 923 ‘Bedrohte Ordnungen’,
Eberhard Karls Universität Tübingen
Bishops or Pawns?: The Limits of Episcopal Power in 10th- and
11th-Century Aquitaine (Language: English)
Orsolya Varró
Royal Authority and Monastic Gifts: Robert the Pious, Fleury,
and the Relics of St Denis (Language: English)
James Drysdale Miller, Faculty of History, University of Oxford
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Paper 139-b:
Paper 139-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 140-a:
Paper 140-b:
Paper 140-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 141-a:
Paper 141-b:
Paper 141-c:
Monday
Moderator:
Paper 139-a:
139
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.33
CONCEPTUALISING PILGRIMAGE, I: REFLECTIONS ON MEDIEVAL
PILGRIMAGE
History Research Centre, Manchester Metropolitan University
Philip A. Booth, Department of History, Politics & Philosophy,
Manchester Metropolitan University and Marci Freedman, Independent
Scholar, Toronto
Sarah Fry, Department of History, University of Winchester
Pilgrims, Celebrants, Itinerants: Understanding Medieval Jewish
‘Pilgrims’ (Language: English)
Marci Freedman
The Stink of Rome: Early Modern Protestants Reflect on
Medieval Pilgrimage (Language: English)
Emily Christine Price, School of History, Classics & Archaeology,
Newcastle University
‘Very Real Pilgrims’?: Seeking the Medieval in the Post-Medieval
Pilgrim Experience (Language: English)
Kathryn Hurlock, Department of History, Politics & Philosophy,
Manchester Metropolitan University
140
Newlyn Building: LG.01
POST-MEDIEVAL USES AND ADAPTATIONS OF MEDIEVAL BRITISH
LITERATURE
IMC Programming Committee
Mariana Lopez, School of Arts & Creative Technologies, University of
York
Gildas Zoomed and Transported (Language: English)
Susan Ford, Independent Scholar, Canberra
Blue, a Lament for the Sea: A Creative Practice Paper (Language:
English)
Liz Macwhirter, Department of Theology & Religious Studies /
Department of Creative Writing, University of Glasgow
Teaching Medieval Tales to Modern Students: A Study of Broken
Families and Orphaned Children in Middle English Romance
(Language: English)
Charmae Cottom, Department of English, Kent State University, Ohio
141
Stage@leeds: Stage 2
OUTCOMES OF LATE MEDIEVAL MOBILITY
IMC Programming Committee
Gerhard Jaritz, Department of Medieval Studies, Central European
University, Budapest/Wien
Fraudulent Goods and Foreign Artisans: Aliens in Late Medieval
London’s Craft Guild Regulations (Language: English)
Bethany Donovan, Department of History, University of Michigan
Piers Plowman: Langland’s Response to Anti-Mobility
Legislation (Language: English)
Andrew William Hamilton, School of History, Anthropology, Philosophy
& Politics, Queen’s University Belfast
‘Emotions in motion’: Narrating Strength, Endurance, and Fear
in French and Burgundian Aristocratic Travelogues, 1350-1550
(Language: English)
Nathalie Franckaerts, Faculteit Letteren en Wijsbegeerte, Universiteit
Antwerpen
81
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
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Paper 142-a:
Paper 142-b:
Paper 142-c:
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Paper 143-a:
Paper 143-b:
Paper 143-c:
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Paper 144-a:
Paper 144-b:
Paper 144-c:
82
142
Michael Sadler Building: Rupert Beckett Theatre
THE ART OF RULING PEOPLE AND PLACES
Neslihan Şenocak, Department of History, Columbia University
Melanie Brunner, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
The Emergence of Pastoral Power in Late Antique Italy
(Language: English)
Neslihan Şenocak
Making the Anthropocene in Medieval Christendom (Language:
English)
Amanda Power, Faculty of History, University of Oxford
Governance of Saints: Cistercian Communities and Their
Approach to Saints in the Later Middle Ages (Language: English)
Emilia Jamroziak, Institute for Medieval Studies / School of History,
University of Leeds
143
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.06
SALVATION AND THE LAW IN THE MEDIEVAL ISLAMIC WORLD
IMC Programming Committee
Fozia Bora, School of Languages, Cultures & Societies - Arabic, Islamic
& Middle Eastern Studies, University of Leeds
The Entanglements of Riches: Medieval Muslim Disputes on the
Salvation of ‘Abd al-Rahman ibn ‘Awf (Language: English)
Alena Kulinich, Department of Asian Languages & Civilizations, Seoul
National University / Faculty of Asian & Middle Eastern Studies,
University of Oxford
The Legal Framework of Ǧihād in Aghlabid Sicily, 827-909
(Language: English)
Hossameldin Ali, Fach Geschichte, Universität Konstanz
Qadi-Amir Relations in the Mamluk State (Language: English)
Songül Akyurt, Department of History, İzmir Kâtip Çelebi University
144
Newlyn Building: 1.02
NARRATIVE AND LITERARY NETWORKS: EXOTISM, MAGIC, AND WITCHCRAFT
FROM TEXT TO SCREEN
Marina Montesano, Dipartimento di Civiltà Antiche e Moderne,
Università degli Studi di Messina
Debora Moretti, Centre for Renaissance & Early Modern Studies,
University of York
Witches and Movies: A Contemporary Gaze (Language: English)
Marina Montesano
Connections between the Human and Non-Human Sphere: A
Comparative Study of Magical Practices and Magic Operators in
The Last Kingdom, Vikings, and The 13th Warrior, in Their
Literary Versions and the Historical and Archaeological Primary
Sources (Language: English)
Debora Moretti
Rethinking Medieval History in the Comics: An Analysis of Don
Rosa’s Work (Language: English)
Vincenzo Tedesco, Dipartimento di Civiltà Antiche e Moderne,
Università degli Studi di Messina
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Paper 145-a:
Paper 145-b:
Paper 145-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 146-a:
Paper 146-b:
Paper 146-c:
Monday
Moderator:
145
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.04
MEDIEVAL ARCHITECTURE AS DISGUISED SYMBOLISM, I
Zentrum für Mittelalterstudien (ZEMAS), Otto-Friedrich-Universität
Bamberg
Nathalie-Josephine von Möllendorff, Institut für Archäologie,
Denkmalwissenschaften und Kunstgeschichte, Otto-FriedrichUniversität Bamberg
Christof Rolker, Zentrum für Mittelalterstudien (ZEMAS) / Institut für
Geschichtswissenschaften und Europäische Ethnologie, Otto-FriedrichUniversität Bamberg
The Iconology of Timber: On the Materiality of Wood and Timber
Constructions in Medieval Paintings (Language: English)
Thomas Eißing, Institut für Archäologische Wissenschaften,
Denkmalwissenschaften und Kunstgeschichte, Otto-FriedrichUniversität Bamberg
The Iconography of Architecture: Painted Architecture as Stage,
Frame, and Symbol (Language: English)
Nathalie-Josephine von Möllendorff
Disguised Architecture: Urban Topographies in the Trionfo della
Morte (Language: English)
Jörg-Peter Riekert, Independent Scholar, Berlin
146
Esther Simpson Building: 2.11
MONEY AND GIFT-GIVING IN THE ROMAN DE LA ROSE AND ITS MEDIEVAL
ADAPTATIONS
Hanne Jaeken, Onderzoekseenheid Literatuurwetenschap, KU Leuven
Anne Reynders, Onderzoekseenheid Vertaalwetenschap, KU Leuven
The Gift of Self in Le Roman de la Rose (Language: English)
Maybelle Leung, Department of English, York University, Toronto
Money and Gift-Giving in the Brabantine Rose (Language: English)
Anne Reynders
Pieces in Place: A Reconstruction of the Dutch Transmission of
the Roman de la Rose (Language: English)
Annelynn Koenders, Boekwetenschap, Universiteit van Amsterdam
83
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
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Paper 147-a:
Paper 147-b:
Paper 147-c:
Paper 147-d:
Session:
Title:
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Moderator:
Paper 148-a:
Paper 148-b:
Paper 148-c:
147
Esther Simpson Building: 1.01
FALLING APART AND COMING TOGETHER: FRAGMENTS IN CODICOLOGY AND
BOOK HISTORY
Stanford Libraries / Text Technologies
Agnieszka Backman, Institutionen för nordiska språk, Uppsala
universitet
Mark Saltveit, Independent Scholar, Vermont
The Multi- and Interdisciplinary Relevance of Fragment Studies:
Two Cases from a State Archive in Italy (Language: English)
Alessandra Molinari, Dipartimento di Scienze della Comunicazione,
Studi Umanistici e Internazionali (DISCUI), Università degli Studi di
Urbino Carlo Bo
Structure, Style, and Substance in the Beauvais Missal
(Language: English)
Lisa Fagin Davis, Medieval Academy of America, Massachusetts
Hiding Fragmentation: Selling Medieval Persian Manuscripts to
Foreigners (Language: English)
Dagmar Anne Riedel, Bodleian Library, University of Oxford / Centre for
the Study of Muslim Societies, Columbia University
The Digital Reframing of a Study Collection: A Case Study of
Stanford Libraries, M0299 (Language: English)
Agnieszka Backman
148
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.03
RELICS AND RELIQUARIES IN MEDIEVAL IBERIA, C. 1000-1400: STORIES,
PLACES, AND IDENTITIES
American Academy of Research Historians of Medieval Spain (AARHMS)
Jesús Rodríguez Viejo, Faculteit der Letteren, Rijksuniversiteit
Groningen
Jesús Rodríguez Viejo
Forging Imaginary Journeys: Iconographic Script on the Arca
Santa of Oviedo (Language: English)
Kristen Racaniello, Graduate Center, City University of New York
A Portrait of an Artist as Key to Unlocking St Emilian’s Casket
(Language: English)
Maeve Marta O’Donnell, Department of Music, University of Bristol
Painted Wooden Saintly Coffins from Late Medieval Spain
(Language: English)
Ireneu Visa Guerrero, Departament d’Història i Història de l’Art,
Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Tarragona
LUNCH: 12.00-14.00
Take some time to enjoy lunch with colleagues.
If you have pre-ordered Café Lunch Credit for today, your QR code voucher can be used
anytime during café opening hours on the day of validity at the locations listed on p. 24.
84
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 13.15-14.00
Session:
Title:
Speaker:
Details:
Monday
Introduction:
199
Esther Simpson Building: LG08
KEYNOTE LECTURE 2023: INTERRELIGIOUS NETWORKS: BOOK ART,
MATERIAL CULTURE, AND JEWISH-CHRISTIAN COOPERATION (Language:
English)
Sarit Shalev-Eyni, Department of Art History, Hebrew University of
Jerusalem
Johannes Preiser-Kapeller, Institut für Mittelalterforschung,
Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
The 13th- and 14th-century Jewish communities scattered in various
urban localities in Christian Europe were distinctive social entities
connected to one another in a network encompassing a shared geocultural area. At the same time, economic, social, and cultural networks
and forms of entanglement between Jews and their Christian neighbours
developed locally. A look at these urban dynamics through the lens of
the production of book art and material culture exposes some aspects of
significant interreligious cooperation. To exemplify the diversity of this
broad phenomenon, cases from two different geo-cultural domains are
discussed and compared: the German areas of the Holy Roman Empire
and the Iberian Peninsula.
The case of Esslingen is the focus of the first part of my paper. Esslingen,
situated on the Neckar River, was an imperial city, having received
official city rights under Emperor Frederick II. During the second half of
the 13th century, the city witnessed a boom in local construction and
artistic activity that peaked around 1300. Extraordinary local material
and textual evidence points to different modes of interreligious
collaboration in the making of manuscripts, ranging from the sharing of
professional frames by Jews and Christians to the use of Christian artists
as illuminators of Hebrew manuscripts. Other modes of interreligious
networks developed in Castile, where there were no urban commercial
book markets. The first school of Hebrew illumination was consolidated
in Toledo in parallel with the emergence of book art in the court of Alfonso
el Sabio (1252-1284), together with a variety of intellectual activities in
which Jews were involved. Due to the close connections between the
royal centres of Toledo and Burgos, the new visual tradition moved
northward. The close connection to the court is discernible also in
monumental architecture, and these two aspects together exposed a
dynamic web of contacts, in which artisans, royals, and Jewish officials
played a role.
Please note that admission to this event will be on a first-come, firstserved basis as there will be no tickets. Please ensure that you arrive as
early as possible to avoid disappointment.
85
86
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
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Organiser:
Paper 201-a:
Paper 201-b:
Paper 201-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 202-a:
Paper 202-b:
Paper 202-c:
Session:
Title:
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Moderator:
Paper 203-a:
Paper 203-b:
Paper 203-c:
Monday
Moderator:
201
Parkinson Building: Room B.22
EARLY MEDIEVAL RIDDLES, I
The Riddle Ages
Megan Cavell, Department of English Literature, University of
Birmingham and Jennifer Neville, Department of English, Royal
Holloway, University of London
Alaric Hall, Institute for Medieval Studies / School of English, University
of Leeds
Twisted Sisters in Boniface’s Riddles (Language: English)
Megan Cavell and Jennifer Neville
Didactic Musicality in Exeter Book Riddles 7 and 8 (Language:
English)
Iona Lister, Department of English, University of Toronto
Listening for Runes in the Multimodal Exeter Book Riddle 17
(Language: English)
Peter Ramey, Department of English, Communication & Global
Languages, Northern State University, South Dakota
202
Esther Simpson Building: 2.09
CISTERCIANS IN IRELAND, II
Cîteaux: Commentarii cistercienses
Terryl N. Kinder, Cîteaux: Commentarii cistercienses, Pontigny
David Bell, Department of Religious Studies, Memorial University of
Newfoundland
The Legacy of St Mary’s Abbey in the Streetscape and Lands of
Dublin City and County (Language: English)
Geraldine Stout, National Monuments Service, Ireland
Cistercian Ideals in the West of Ireland: The Landscape of
Corcomroe Abbey, County Clare (Language: English)
Silvina Martin, School of Archaeology, University College Dublin
Excavations of a Cistercian Grange at Stalleen in the Boyne
Valley, County Meath (Language: English)
Matthew Stout, School of History & Geography, Dublin City University
203
Esther Simpson Building: 1.08
CLOISTER, REFORM, AND TOWN: RELIGIOUS COMMUNITIES AND LAITY IN
15TH-CENTURY CENTRAL EUROPE, I
EXPRO Project No. 20-08389X ‘Observance Reconsidered: Uses &
Abuses of the Reform (Individuals, Institutions, Society)’ / Katedra
historie, Filozofická fakulta, Univerzita Palackého, Olomouc
Judit Majorossy, Filozofická fakulta, Univerzita Palackého, Olomouc /
Institut für Österreichische Geschichte, Universität Wien and Michaela
Antonín Malaníková, Filozofická fakulta, Univerzita Palackého, Olomouc
Emilia Jamroziak, Institute for Medieval Studies / School of History,
University of Leeds
From Dominicans to Augustinian Canonesses: The Community of
St Laurenz in the Sacred Topography and Social Network of
15th-Century Vienna (Language: English)
Christina Lutter, Institut für Österreichische Geschichtsforschung,
Universität Wien
A Blueprint of Reformation?: John of Capistrano in Michael of
Carinthia’s Chronica fratrum minorum (Language: English)
Florin Leonte, Katedra klasické filologie, Univerzita Palackého, Olomouc
The Roots and the Chosen Ones: Observant Iconography in
Bohemian Monasteries (Language: English)
Kateřina Horníčková, Filozofická fakulta, Univerzita Palackého, Olomouc
87
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 204-a:
Paper 204-b:
Paper 204-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 205-a:
Paper 205-b:
Paper 205-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 206-a:
Paper 206-b:
Paper 206-c:
88
204
Maurice Keyworth Building: G.02
CRUSADE KILLING: REGULATED OR INDISCRIMINATE?, II
Centrum för medeltidsstudier, Stockholms universitet
Kurt Villads Jensen, Centrum för medeltidsstudier, Stockholms
universitet
Kurt Villads Jensen
Portugal in the 12th and 13th Centuries: Intercultural Practices in
a Crusading Space (Language: English)
Paula Pinto-Costa, Departamento de História e de Estudos Políticos e
Internacionais / Centro de Investigação Transdisciplinar ‘Cultura,
Espaço e Memória’ (CITCEM), Universidade do Porto
The Battle of Las Navas de Tolosa (Language: English)
Miguel Gómez, Department of History, University of Dayton, Ohio
Conquering Paradise?: The Heavenly City as a Political Blueprint
in 13th-Century Toledo (Language: English)
Peter J. A. Jones, Departamento de Historia, Universidad Complutense
de Madrid
205
Clarendon Building: 1.02
MENDICANT NETWORKS, II: TEXTS
Robert Friedrich, Lehrstuhl für Allgemeine Geschichte des Mittelalters,
Universität Greifswald and Cornelia Linde, Lehrstuhl für Allgemeine
Geschichte des Mittelalters, Universität Greifswald
Robert Friedrich
United with the Blessed: Liturgical Orations for Mendicant
Saints in 13th-Century Missals (Language: English)
Innocent Smith, St Mary’s Seminary & University, Baltimore, Maryland
A 13th-Century Mystical Sermon on the Eucharist (Language:
English)
Paul Chandler, Holy Spirit Seminary, Brisbane / Carmelite Order
A New Version of Sedens super flumina: Antimendicant Polemic
in a Monastic Chronicle (Language: English)
Mark Thakkar, St Andrews Institute of Mediaeval Studies, University of
St Andrews
206
Parkinson Building: Room B.09
PUNITIVE MIRACLES IN LATE ANTIQUITY AND THE EARLY MIDDLE AGES, II
Wydział Historii, Uniwersytet Warszawski
Juliana Santos Dinoa Medeiros, Wydział Historii, Uniwersytet
Warszawski and Robert Wiśniewski, Wydział Historii, Uniwersytet
Warszawski / Department of Classics, University of Reading
David Hunter, Department of Theology, Boston College, Massachusetts
Punitive Miracles of the Child Jesus: What Does the Textual
Transmission of the Infancy Gospel of Thomas tell us?
(Language: English)
Marijana Vuković, Institut for Historie, Syddansk Universitet, Odense
The Grotesque Body in Hell and in Punitive Miracles Stories in
the Byzantine Hagiographical Literature (Language: English)
Emmanouela Grypeou, Institutionen för etnologi religionshistoria och
genusvetenskap, Stockholms universitet
Punishing Magicians through Miracles: The Motif of Trial by Fire
in Greek Hagiography (Language: English)
Julie Van Pelt, Faculteit Letteren en Wijsbegeert, Universiteit Gent
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Paper 207-b:
Paper 207-c:
Paper 207-d:
Session:
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Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 208-a:
Paper 208-b:
Paper 208-c:
Monday
Moderator:
Paper 207-a:
207
Esther Simpson Building: LG08
UPPITY MEDIEVAL WOMEN ACROSS THE GLOBE, II
Anita Obermeier, Department of English Language & Literature,
University of New Mexico, Albuquerque and Doaa Omran, Department
of English Language & Literature, University of New Mexico,
Albuquerque
Anita Obermeier
The Maid Women: An Arrow in the Bottom of Familial Ties
(Language: English)
Sarmad Majeed Mohammed, College of Art, University of Anbar,
Ramadi
La Latina y la Católica: Advocates for Women’s Education or
Accidental Scholars? (Language: English)
Linda Gonzalez, Department of Languages & Literature, Eastern New
Mexico University
Maysun bt. Bahdal and Political Marriage in Early Islam
(Language: English)
Sarah O. Abou-Zied, Independent Scholar, Penicuick
From Harīm to Dominance: Al-Sayyīdah Šāġāb in Control of the
Abbasid Caliphate (Language: English)
Waleed Ahmed Abdulsalam Taha, Department of English, Ahram
Canadian University, Cairo
208
Parkinson Building: Room B.10
LAW AND EMPIRE: THE CAPITULARIES OF LOUIS THE PIOUS, 814-840, II
Nordrhein-Westfälische Akademie der Wissenschaften und der Künste
Karl Ubl, Historisches Institut, Universität zu Köln
Stefan Esders, Friedrich-Meinecke-Institut, Freie Universität Berlin
Debating Simony under Louis the Pious: The Evidence of
Capitularies and Conciliar Canons (Language: English)
Lioba Geis, Historisches Institut, Universität zu Köln
‘Ut omnis ordo ecclesiarum secundum legem romanam vivat’:
Churchmen between Roman Law and Lombard Professiones
iuris in Northern Italy, c. 800-1000 (Language: English)
Federico Feletti, Dipartimento di Scienze Storiche, Geografiche e
dell’Antichità, Università degli Studi di Padova
On Lupus (not of Ferrières): The Unravelling of Entangled
Fragments and Other News from the Italian Capitulary Tradition
(Language: English)
Britta Mischke, Historisches Institut, Universität zu Köln
89
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 209-a:
Paper 209-b:
Paper 209-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 210-a:
Paper 210-b:
Paper 210-c:
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Session:
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Organiser:
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Paper 211-a:
Paper 211-b:
Paper 211-c:
90
209
Parkinson Building: Room B.08
THE FORMATION OF DISCOURSE COMMUNITIES IN LATE ANTIQUITY, 500700, II: GAUL
Kay Boers, Departement Geschiedenis en Kunstgeschiedenis,
Universiteit Utrecht and Becca Grose, Department of History, University
of York
Hope Williard, University Library, University of Lincoln
Famula Dei: Discourses of Service to God in the Epigraphy of
Early Medieval Gaul (Language: English)
Lisa Bailey, Department of Classics & Ancient History, University of
Auckland
Do I Know You?: Uncertainty, Epistemology, and Community in
Merovingian Gaul (Language: English)
Jake Purcell, American Historical Association
From Gallia to Francia?: Roman Discourses of 6th-Century Gaul
(Language: English)
Jonathan Arnold, Department of History, University of Tulsa, Oklahoma
210
Clarendon Building: 1.06
NETWORKS AND GROUP IDENTITY IN MEDIEVAL ISLAMIC SOCIETY
Deborah Tor, Department of History, University of Notre Dame, Indiana
Hugh Kennedy, School of Languages, Cultures & Linguistics, School of
Oriental & African Studies, University of London
Land Disputes among the ‘Alid Network of Yanbu (Language:
English)
Sean W. Anthony, Department of Near Eastern Languages & Cultures,
Ohio State University
Making Communities in Early Islamic Local Histories (Language:
English)
Harry Munt, Department of History, University of York
The Development of Chivalric Futuwwa Networks in Classical
Islamic Society (Language: English)
Deborah Tor
Hugh Kennedy
211
Esther Simpson Building: 3.01
MEDIEVAL AFRICAN ENTANGLEMENTS, II: AFRO-EUROPEAN
ENTANGLEMENTS
2022 Dan David Prize Funding
Andrea Achi, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
Abidemi Babatunde Babalola, British Museum, London
Elckerlijc (c. 1495) Revisited: Assessing the Conflict between
the Sacrament of Penance, Plenary Indulgences, and the AfroEuropean Entanglements Produced by the Aeterni Regis (1481)
(Language: English)
Michele Wells-De Vos, Independent Scholar, Leiden
Gaming Networks: Did Medieval Africans Play Chess? (Language:
English)
Krisztina Ilko, Faculty of History, University of Oxford
The Queen of Sheba as African Self and Other in Medieval
Literatures (Language: English)
Jillian Stinchcomb, School of Historical Studies, Institute for Advanced
Study, Princeton
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 212-b:
Paper 212-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 213-a:
Paper 213-b:
Paper 213-c:
Monday
Paper 212-a:
212
Michael Sadler Building: Rupert Beckett Theatre
TEXTUAL NETWORKS IN EARLY MEDIEVAL ENGLAND: MAPPING
INTERTEXTUAL, MULTICULTURAL, AND DIACHRONIC ENTANGLEMENTS, I
Tom Revell, Faculty of English / Balliol College, University of Oxford
Francisco J. Rozano-García, School of English & Creative Arts,
University of Galway
Unlocking Wisdom in Old English Poetry (Language: English)
Amy Faulkner, Department of English Language & Literature, University
College London
Galnes and Unclænnes: Tracking Lust and Impurity Language
beyond Old English (Language: English)
Claire Poynton-Smith, School of English, Trinity College Dublin
From Where Comes the Sad-Voiced Cuckoo?: Disentangling a
Cryptic Poetic Trope in Old English and Early Welsh Poetry
(Language: English)
Eric Lacey, Department of English & Creative Writing, University of
Winchester
213
Stage@leeds: Stage 1
MOVING BYZANTIUM, II: MOBILITY BEYOND THE BYZANTINE BORDERS CLERICS, PILGRIMS, AND NOBILITY
Moving Byzantium: Mobility, Microstructures & Personal Agency in
Byzantium, Universität Wien
Claudia Rapp, Institut für Byzantinistik & Neogräzistik, Universität Wien
/ Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische Akademie der
Wissenschaften, Wien
Nikolaos Zagklas, Institut für Byzantinistik & Neogräzistik, Universität
Wien
‘Pilgrim Functionaries’ and ‘Imagined Communities’ in Middle
Byzantium and Song China (Language: English)
Nicholas J. B. Evans, Institute for Medieval Studies / School of History,
University of Leeds and Ruisen Zheng, Department of History, King’s
College London
Networks beyond Byzantium: Echoes of the Monothelete
Controversy in the Post-Roman West (Language: English)
Sihong Lin, School of Humanities, University of Glasgow
Between Armenia, Byzantium, and Cilicia: Migrations and
Changes in Identity among the Armenian High Nobility in the
Light of New Data, 9th-12th Centuries (Language: English)
Samvel Grigoryan, Mesrop Mashtots Research Institute of Ancient
Manuscripts, Yerevan
91
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
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Paper 214-a:
Paper 214-b:
Paper 214-c:
Session:
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Paper 215-a:
Paper 215-b:
Paper 215-c:
92
214
Clarendon Building: GR 01
SCHOLARLY PRACTICES IN CAROLINGIAN EAST FRANCIA: ACTORS,
NETWORKS, KNOWLEDGE EXCHANGE, II
Project ‘Margins at the Centre: Book Production & Practices of
Annotation in the East Frankish Realm’, Institut für
Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften,
Wien
Cinzia Grifoni, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
Cinzia Grifoni
An Unresearched Fragment of Priscian’s Ars: The Materiality of
the Book (Language: English)
Michela Perino, ERC Project ‘Priscian’s Ars Grammatica in European
Scriptoria (PAGES)’, Dipartimento di Scienze dell’Antichità, Università
degli Studi di Roma ‘La Sapienza’ and Chiara Rosso, ERC Project
‘Priscian’s Ars Grammatica in European Scriptoria (PAGES)’,
Dipartimento di Scienze dell’Antichità, Università degli Studi di Roma
‘La Sapienza’
An Unresearched Fragment of Priscian’s Ars: The Philological
Approach (Language: English)
Camilla Poloni, ERC Project ‘Priscian’s Ars Grammatica in European
Scriptoria (PAGES)’, Dipartimento di Scienze dell’Antichità, Università
degli Studi di Roma ‘La Sapienza’
The Irish Interpretations of the Gospel of Matthew and Their
Complex Interplay (Language: English)
Lucia Castaldi, Dipartimento di Studi Umanistici e del Patrimonio
Culturale, Università degli Studi di Udine
215
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.31
MATERIALITY AND IMMATERIALITY OF INFORMATION EXCHANGE IN
EURASIA, 500-1000
Università degli studi di Salerno
Francesca Dell’Acqua, Dipartimento di Scienze del Patrimonio Culturale
(DISPAC), Università degli Studi di Salerno
Clemens Gantner, Institut für Österreichische Geschichtsforschung,
Universität Wien
Hearsay concerning Byzantium in Papal Letters to the
Carolingians (Language: English)
Jeffrey P. A. Berland, Medieval Institute, University of Notre Dame,
Indiana / École Pratique des Hautes Études (EPHE), Paris
Reading the Elephant: Animals as Geographical Texts in Late
Antiquity (Language: English)
Sam Ottewill-Soulsby, Institutt for arkeologi, konservering og historie,
Universitetet i Oslo
Governing by Writing: The Transmission and Reception of Tang
Imperial Edicts (Language: English)
Chen Xie, Independent Scholar, London
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Paper 216-b:
Paper 216-c:
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Paper 217-a:
Paper 217-b:
Paper 217-c:
Session:
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Organiser:
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Paper 218-a:
Paper 218-b:
Paper 218-c:
Monday
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 216-a:
216
Newlyn Building: GR.07
THE CRUSADING MOVEMENT IN THE HOLY ROMAN EMPIRE, II: NARRATIVE
AND MOTIVATION
Northern Network for the Study of the Crusades
Alan V. Murray, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Graham A. Loud, School of History, University of Leeds
The Early Crusades and Knightly Military Service in the Holy
Roman Empire (Language: English)
Marco Krätschmer, Institut für Mittelalterliche Geschichte, PhilippsUniversität Marburg
The So-Called Ansbert and the Historia de expeditione Friderici
imperatoris as a Research Problem (Language: English)
Mikuláš Netík, Katedra Historie, Masarykova univerzita, Brno /
Historisches Seminar, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
Recipient of a 2023 Templar Heritage Trust Bursary
The Marginalisation of Women Crusaders in German
Translations of Robert the Monk, c. 1450-1500 (Language:
English)
Georg Strack, Institut für Mittelalterliche Geschichte, PhilippsUniversität Marburg
217
Esther Simpson Building: 2.07
MEDIEVAL ENTANGLEMENTS BETWEEN HUMANS AND THE ENVIRONMENT
IMC Programming Committee
Amanda Power, Faculty of History, University of Oxford
Building in Winchester: Entanglement, Materiality, and Opera
manuum (Language: English)
Christina M. Heckman, Department of English & World Languages,
Augusta University, Georgia
The Environmental Impacts of the Late Medieval English Leather
Network (Language: English)
Erin Kurian, Department of History, University of Waterloo, Ontario
Meekness Entangled: The Boundaries between Meekness and
the Environment (Language: English)
Merridee Bailey, Faculty of History, University of Oxford
218
Michael Sadler Building: LG.16
ACTING LIKE A (NOBLE) LADY: LIVES, LITERACY, AND LITERARY AGENCY
IMC Programming Committee
Rachel Stone, Department of History, King’s College London / Library,
Learning Resources & Information, University of Bedfordshire
Noblewomen and Their Reading in 5th-Century Europe
(Language: English)
Michael Hanaghan, Institute for Religion & Critical Inquiry, Australian
Catholic University, Melbourne
A Literary Hint at the Reading of Agnes and Radegund of
Poitiers: Echoes of Martianus Capella in Venantius Fortunatus’
De Virginitate (Language: English)
Benjamin Wheaton, Department of Historical Studies, University of
Toronto, Mississauga
A Study in Late Medieval Queenship: French Queens’ Literary
Agency (Language: English)
Sofya Nikiforova, Centre for History, University of the Highlands &
Islands
93
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
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Organiser:
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Paper 219-a:
Paper 219-b:
Paper 219-c:
Paper 219-d:
Session:
Title:
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Paper 220-a:
Paper 220-b:
Paper 220-c:
94
219
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.09
JEWISH / NON-JEWISH ENTANGLEMENTS AND NETWORKS, II:
INSTITUTIONAL ASPECTS
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Hannah Teddy Schachter, Department of Jewish History, Hebrew
University of Jerusalem
Eveline Brugger, Institut für jüdische Geschichte Österreichs, St Pölten
Towards Expulsion Revisited: Jewish Living Conditions on the
Iberian Peninsula, 14th-15th Centuries (Language: English)
Sandra Schieweck, Historisches Seminar, Ludwig-MaximiliansUniversität München
Jewish Life in the Queens’ Lands in 12th- to 14th-Century France
and Castile (Language: English)
Hannah Teddy Schachter
Episcopal Networks of Aid for Jewish Converts in 14th Century
France and Spain (Language: English)
Paola Tartakoff, Department of Jewish Studies, Rutgers University, New
Jersey
From Rhine, Seine, to Tauber: Rabbi Meir of Rothenburg’s
Foundation of a New Judicial Institution in the 13th Century
(Language: English)
Moishi Chechik, Department of Talmud & Halakha, Hebrew University of
Jerusalem
220
Newlyn Building: GR.01
NETWORKS OF DISSENT AND PERSECUTION, II: DYNAMICS OF INFORMATION
EXTRACTION AND EXCHANGE IN REPRESSIVE CONTEXTS
School of History, Queen Mary University of London
Delfi I. Nieto-Isabel, School of History, Queen Mary University of
London
Reima Välimäki, School of History, Culture & Arts Studies, University of
Turku
Lay Religious Talk and the Transmission of Allegedly Heretical
Information in Languedocian Inquisition Records (Language:
English)
Saku Pihko, Trivium - Tampere Centre for Classical, Medieval & Early
Modern Studies, Tampere University
Networks of Authority and Solidarity: Ordering the Massacre at
Avignonet in 1242 (Language: English)
Claire Taylor, Department of History, University of Nottingham
On the Heresy Grapevine: Transmitting Knowledge of
Condemned Texts (Language: English)
Justine Trombley, Department of History, Durham University
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 221-a:
Paper 221-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 222-a:
Paper 222-b:
Paper 222-c:
Monday
Paper 221-b:
221
Stage@leeds: Stage 3
MEDIEVAL MYSTICS: NETWORKS, RELATIONSHIPS, AND INFLUENCES, II
Mysticism & Lived Experience Network
Amanda Langley, School of History, Queen Mary University of London
Laura Saetveit Miles, Institutt for fremmedspråk, Universitetet i Bergen
Networks of Concern and Care: Hildegard of Bingen and Her
Female Correspondents (Language: English)
Christina Grundmann, School of History, University of St Andrews
‘Ascensus et descensus’: Lullian Mysticism’s Debt to St
Bonaventure (Language: English)
Diego Gorini Gonzalez, Dipartimento di filologia classica e scienze
filosofiche, Università del Salento, Lecce
‘We Don’t Talk about Francis’: Margery Kempe’s Networks of
Influence in Rome (Language: English)
Einat Klafter, Zvi Yavetz School of Historical Studies, Tel Aviv University
222
Esther Simpson Building: 2.08
NETWORKS AND ENTANGLEMENTS BETWEEN THE CENTRE AND PERIPHERY IN
THE LATE MIDDLE AGES: ITALIANS AND ULTRAMONTANES, II - SCHOLARS
Anna Horeczy, Instytut Historii im. Tadeusza Manteuffla, Polskiej
Akademii Nauk, Warszawa and Adam Zapała, Instytut Historii im.
Tadeusza Manteuffla, Polskiej Akademii Nauk, Warszawa
Michael Lo Piano, Independent Scholar, New Haven
From the Psychology of Vision to the Geocentric Model: Spaces
of Scientific Imagination and the Educational Trips of Polish
Ultramontanes to Padua on the Examples of Witelon and
Copernicus (Language: English)
Mirosław Lenart, Instytut Nauk o Literaturze, Uniwersytet Opolski
Aldo Manuzio and the Italian Intellectual Network of Cracow
University at the Turn of the 15th and 16th Centuries (Language:
English)
Anna Horeczy
Mapping with Text: Geospatial Hierarchy and Identity in
Giovanni Villani’s Nuova Cronica (Language: English)
Kun Xu, Università di Firenze, Dipartimento di Storia, Archeologia,
Geografia, Arte e Spettacolo (SAGAS), Università di Firenze /
Department of History, Peking University
95
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
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Paper 223-a:
Paper 223-b:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
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Paper 224-a:
Paper 224-b:
Paper 224-c:
Session:
Title:
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Moderator:
Paper 225-a:
Paper 225-b:
Paper 225-c:
96
223
Newlyn Building: 1.07
PEOPLE, ORGANISATIONS, AND SPACE AS NETWORK COMPONENTS, II:
NETWORKS, TIME, AND SPACE
SHMESP: Société des historiens médiévistes de l’enseignement
supérieur public
Dominique Stutzmann, Institut de Recherche et d’Histoire des Textes
(IRHT), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Paris
Dominique Stutzmann
The Networks of History Writing in Aquitaine, 8th-12th Centuries
(Language: English)
Julien Bellarbre, Héritages: Culture/s, Patrimoine/s, Création/s (UMR
9022), CY Cergy Paris University / Centre de Recherche
Interdisciplinaire en Histoire, Histoire de l’art, Anthropologie et
Musicologie (UR 15507), Université de Limoges
Untangling Heritages in Landscapes and Road Networks:
Medieval Spaces at the Crossroads of Disciplines and
Temporalities (Language: English)
Magali Watteaux, Département d’histoire / Tempora (UR 7468),
Université Rennes 2
224
Newlyn Building: 1.01
LOYALTY AS NETWORKS, I: LOYALTY AND POLITY
Haskins Society / Battle Conference on Anglo-Norman Studies
Hannah Boston, School of Humanities & Heritage, University of Lincoln
Alice Taylor, Department of History, King’s College London
Loyalty and Impersonal Kingship in 10th-Century England
(Language: English)
Richard Purkiss, Independent Scholar, Abingdon
Bonds of Loyalty in the Chronicles of the Polish Long 12 th
Century (Language: English)
Michał Machalski, Department of Medieval Studies, Central European
University, Budapest/Wien
Loyalty and Lèse-majesté: The Invocation of Roman Law in
Scottish Oaths of Allegiance (Language: English)
Jennifer McHugh, Department of History, Lancaster University
225
Esther Simpson Building: 3.08
FEMALE NETWORKS: HOLY WOMEN AND THEIR COMMUNITIES
IMC Programming Committee
Robin Gatel, Department of History, Trinity College Dublin
Anastasiya, the Kyivan Wife of Hungarian King Andrew I: The
Networks and Entanglements of Yaroslav the Wise, the Kyivan
Emperor, and His Impacts on Restoring the Christian Monarchy
in Hungary (Language: English)
Sándor Földvári, Faculty of Humanities, University of Debrecen /
Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest
Reasons for a Rule: Women’s Communities and the Spread of
the Dominican Third Order (Language: English)
Adrian Kammerer, Seminar für Mittlere und Neuere Geschichte, GeorgAugust-Universität Göttingen
Paschal Spirituality in Context and Reform (Language: English)
Ann Marie Caron, Department of Philosophy & Religious Studies,
College of Mount Saint Vincent, New York
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Paper 226-b:
Paper 226-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 227-a:
Paper 227-b:
Paper 227-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 228-a:
Paper 228-b:
Paper 228-c:
Monday
Moderator:
Paper 226-a:
226
Clarendon Building: 1.03
NETWORKS AND ENTANGLEMENTS OF BORDER IDENTITIES, II: RELIGION
AND PLACE
Medieval & Early Modern Centre, University of Sydney / Centre for
Medieval Studies, University of Bristol
Emma Knowles, Department of English, University of Sydney and Jan
Shaw, Department of English, University of Sydney
Helen Fulton, Centre for Medieval Studies, University of Bristol
The Borders of the Ends of the Earth: Geography and the
Evangelisation of Europe (Language: English)
Samuel Cardwell, Centre for Medieval Studies, University of Toronto
Moving through the Mearcland: Navigating Borders in Old
English Religious Poetry (Language: English)
Emma Knowles
God Save the Queens: Carthage in the Old English Martyrology
(Language: English)
Luisa Ostacchini, Exeter College, University of Oxford
227
Esther Simpson Building: 2.12
ENTANGLEMENTS OF FAITH AND THE SENSES, II: HEARING MARY(AN)
DEVOTION IN THE MIDDLE AGES
Andrea-Bianka Znorovszky, Departamento de Historia Medieval,
Moderna y Contemporánea, Universidad de Salamanca
Andrea-Bianka Znorovszky
Salvation through the Senses: Mary in the Thought of Anselm of
Canterbury (Language: English)
Angelo Maria Vitale, Pontificia Facoltà Teologica dell’Italia Meridionale,
Napoli
People in the Otherworld Seen and Heard: The Relationship
between Mary and the Sinners in the Apocalypse of the
Theotokos (Language: English)
Piruza Hayrapetyan, Department of Medieval Studies, Central European
University, Budapest/Wien
The Perception of Marian Proximity in Post-Byzantine Art
(Language: English)
Ioannis Siopis, Department of History, Ionian University, Corfu
228
Clarendon Building: 1.01
NETWORKS OF DISEASE, CHARITY, AND MEDICINE
IMC Programming Committee
Eleanor Price, Eastman School of Music, University of Rochester, New
York
Infectious Assemblages: Plague, Leprosy, and Bodily
Porousness in Late Medieval Middle English Sermons (Language:
English)
Sadegh Attari, Department of English Literature, University of
Birmingham
Visualising Medieval Medical Ingredient Networks (Language:
English)
Erin Connelly, School of Life Sciences, University of Warwick
The Network of Medicine, Music, and the Church in Medieval
York (Language: English)
Wendy J. Turner, Department of History, Anthropology & Philosophy,
Augusta University, Georgia
97
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 229-a:
Paper 229-b:
Paper 229-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 230-a:
Paper 230-b:
Paper 230-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 231-a:
Paper 231-b:
Paper 231-c:
98
229
Parkinson Building: Room 1.08
MATERIAL ENTANGLEMENTS IN MEDIEVAL ITALIAN ART
Nancy M. Thompson, Department of Art, St Olaf College, Minnesota
Gerd Micheluzzi, DFG-Kolleg-Forschungsgruppe ‘Imaginarien der Kraft’,
Universität Hamburg
Nicola Pisano and the Symbiotic Nature of Craft (Language:
English)
Luca Palozzi, Dipartimento di Civiltà e Forme del Sapere, Università di
Pisa
A Matter of Movement: Aristotle and Tactile Pheonomena in
Trecento Painting (Language: English)
Gerd Micheluzzi
Networks and Materials: Stained Glass at Santa Croce in
Florence (Language: English)
Nancy M. Thompson
230
Michael Sadler Building: LG.10
THE PRACTICE OF HISTORY: NETWORKS AND CONNECTIONS, C. 950-1300,
II
Centre for Research in Historiography & Historical Culture, Aberystwyth
University
Björn Weiler, Department of History & Welsh History, Aberystwyth
University
Sarah Greer, University of Hull
Invisible Narrative or Only Visible Material?: On the Historical
Construction of Political Self-Understanding in Word, Social
Space, and Image Based on the German Reich Chancellor
Rainald of Dassel (Language: English)
Jan Lemmer, Historisches Institut, Ruhr-Universität Bochum
‘Balduinus primus bonae memoriae’: Using the Past in the Royal
Chancelry of Jerusalem, 1118-1192 (Language: English)
Tomasz Pełech, Instytut Historyczny, Uniwersytet Wrocławski / Centre
d’Histoire Espaces et Cultures (CHEC - EPR 1001), Université Clermont
Auvergne
Letters and the Forging of Political Connections in the Cronica
Sicilie, c. 1347 (Language: English)
Susannah Bain, Faculty of History / Jesus College, University of Oxford
231
Michael Sadler Building: LG.19
CIRCULATIONS OF INFORMATION AND NETWORKS OF KNOWLEDGE, I
IMC Programming Committee
Nicoletta Rozza, Dipartimento di Studi Umanistici Sezione di Scienze
dell’Antichità, Università degli Studi di Napoli - Federico II
Networks and the Spread of Knowledge of Cornwall in the 12 th
Century (Language: English)
David Iain Lees, Department of History & Welsh History, Aberystwyth
University
‘The utterance of Antiquity’: Saxo Grammaticus’ Sources for the
Gesta Danorum (Language: English)
Haley Guepet, School of Divinity, History, Philosophy & Art History,
University of Aberdeen
Networks of Intertwined Sources in the Auchinleck Anonymous
Short English Metrical Chronicle (Language: English)
Sibilla Siano, Dipartimento di Studi Linguistici e Letterari, Università
degli Studi di Padova
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Paper 232-b:
Paper 232-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 233-a:
Paper 233-b:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 234-a:
Paper 234-b:
Paper 234-c:
Paper 234-d:
Monday
Moderator:
Paper 232-a:
232
Clarendon Building: 2.08
MANUSCRIPTS AND ECCLESIASTICAL NETWORKS IN THE HIGH MIDDLE AGES,
I: READING THE VOICE OF AUTHORITY
Forskargruppe i mellomalderfilologi, Universitetet i Bergen
Åslaug Ommundsen, Institutt for lingvistiske, litterære og estetiske
studier, Universitetet i Bergen
Åslaug Ommundsen
Entanglements in Authority: Networking Manuscripts of the
Homiliary of Angers in the Alps (Language: English)
Aidan Conti, Institutt for lingvistiske, litterære og estetiske studier,
Universitetet i Bergen
From Victorines to Cistercians: Continental Networks Reflected
in Scandinavian Manuscript Material (Language: English)
Synnøve Midtbø Myking, Institutt for lingvistiske, litterære og estetiske
studier, Universitetet i Bergen
Chartres and Normandy: How Manuscripts and Library History
Can Be Used to Trace Monastic Networks (Language: English)
Veronika Drescher, Sammlung von Handschriften und alten Drucken,
Österreichische Nationalbibliothek, Wien
233
Newlyn Building: LG.02
THE CIRCULATION OF COMMODITIES AND MATERIAL NETWORKS ACROSS
MEDIEVAL EUROPE
IMC Programming Committee
Mohamed Ouerfelli, Institut de recherches et d’études sur les mondes
arabes et musulmans (IREMAM - UMR 7310), Aix Marseille Université
Marble Stones for Merchants’ Homes: Relief Sculptures from
Medieval Venetian Palace Façades (Language: English)
Ella Sophie Beaucamp, Institut für Kunstgeschichte, LudwigMaximilians-Universität München
Entangled Itineraries: A Case Study of Panni Tartarici (Language:
English)
Nan Han, School of Humanities, Central Academy of Fine Arts, Beijing
234
Clarendon Building: 2.01
DIVINE CONNECTIONS: PERSPECTIVES ON REGIONAL RELIGIOUS NETWORKS
Archiv der Erzdiözese Salzburg
Marlene Ernst, Lehrstuhl für Digital Humanities, Universität Passau
Siegrid Schmidt, Interdisziplinäres Zentrum für Mittelalter und
Frühneuzeit (IZMF), Paris-Lodron-Universität Salzburg
Papal Charters in a Digital Age (Language: English)
Marlene Ernst
Sacred Networks: Canonisation Processes in Central Europe Support Groups and Protagonists (Language: English)
Wolfgang Neuper, Archiv der Erzdiözese, Salzburg
Benedictine Communication Networks in the Early 16th Century
(Language: English)
Gerald Hirtner, Archiv der Erzabtei St. Peter Salzburg
Networking beyond Death: The Tradition of Confraternitas on
the Example of the Confraternity Book of the Cathedral Chapter
of Gurk (Language: English)
Veronika Polloczek, Archiv der Diözese Gurk, Katholische Kirche
Kärnten
99
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 235-a:
Paper 235-b:
Paper 235-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 236-a:
Paper 236-b:
Session:
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Paper 237-a:
Paper 237-b:
100
235
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.32
NETWORK ANALYSIS FOR MEDIEVALISTS, II: KINSHIP AND POWER IN 13THTH
TO 15 -CENTURY EUROPE
Social Network Analysis Researchers of the Middle Ages (SNARMA)
Matthew H. Hammond, Department of History, King’s College London
Sébastien de Valeriola, Département des Sciences de l’Information et
de la Communication (SIC), Université Libre de Bruxelles
Navigation through a Changing Political Landscape: Networks,
Power, and Spatiality (Language: English)
Thomas Neijman, Historiska institutionen, Stockholms universitet
Whispers at the Merchant’s Wedding: Marriage and Politics in
the Venetian Network of Francesco Datini (Language: English)
Nicolò Zennaro, Departement Geschiedenis, Universiteit Antwerpen
Modelling Networks of Lay Support for Scottish Border
Monasteries (Language: English)
Matthew H. Hammond
236
Michael Sadler Building: LG.15
MEDIEVALISM IN THE MODERN WORLD, I: FAR-RIGHT ENTANGLEMENTS
Eleanor Cox, Department of History, University of Nottingham
Jasmin Higgs, Department of English, University of Nottingham
‘We’re Coming Home!’: Viking References on Danish Social
Media during UEFA Euro 2020 (Language: English)
Brian Egede-Pedersen, Independent Scholar, Nykøbing Falster
Appropriating Romantic Rhetoric in White Nationalist
Medievalisms (Language: English)
Vanessa K. Iacocca, School of English, Drama & Film, University
College Dublin
237
Newlyn Building: GR.02
ENTANGLEMENTS BY NUMBERS: NETWORKS OF ASTRONOMY AND
MATHEMATICS
IMC Programming Committee
Michaela Wiesinger, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
The Destombes Astrolabe: A Mozarabic Copy from 10th-Century
al-Andalus (Language: English)
Thomas Freudenhammer, Independent Scholar, Berlin
Lost in Translation: The Arabic, Latin, and Hebrew Versions of
Pseudo-Euclid’s Book of Mirrors (Language: English)
Sabine Arndt, Heidelberger Akademie der Wissenschaften
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 238-b:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 239-a:
Paper 239-b:
Paper 239-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 240-a:
Paper 240-b:
Paper 240-c:
Monday
Paper 238-a:
238
Parkinson Building: Room B.11
ENTANGLED RULES AND NETWORKS OF POWER IN THE ISLAMIC AND
ORTHODOX MEDIEVAL WORLD
IMC Programming Committee
Sebastian Kolditz, Institut für Byzantinistik und Neogräzistik,
Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität Münster
Berbers Entangled: Power and Identity in Zirid Granada, 10381090 (Language: English)
Mateusz Wilk, Wydział Nauk o Kulturze i Sztuce, Uniwersytet
Warszawski
Ruling the Εmpire through Networks in the 14th Century: The
Friendship, Kinship, and Patronage Networks of John
Kantakouzenos (Language: English)
George Michailidis, Department of History & Archaeology, National &
Kapodistrian University of Athens
239
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.33
CONCEPTUALISING PILGRIMAGE, II: CREATING PLACE AND PILGRIMAGE
History Research Centre, Manchester Metropolitan University
Philip A. Booth, Department of History, Politics & Philosophy,
Manchester Metropolitan University and Marci Freedman, Independent
Scholar, Toronto
Kathryn Hurlock, Department of History, Politics & Philosophy,
Manchester Metropolitan University
Pilgrimage to Canterbury: Contestation, Piety, and Politics at
the 1420 Jubilee (Language: English)
John Jenkins, Centre for Pilgrimage Studies, University of York
Murder Near the Cathedral: William of Perth and the Perilous
Road to Rochester (Language: English)
Suzanne C. Hagedorn, Department of English, College of William &
Mary, Virginia
The Miracles of Sainte Foy Priory, Longueville-sur-Scie,
Normandy in the Early-12th Century: Charter Evidence for the
Healing Hand of St Faith and the Priory as a Place of Pilgrimage
(Language: English)
Sarah Fry, Department of History, University of Winchester
240
Stage@leeds: Stage 2
THE PEOPLE OF 1381
Society for Fourteenth-Century Studies
Helen Lacey, Mansfield College, University of Oxford
Justine Firnhaber-Baker, St Andrews Institute of Mediaeval Studies,
University of St Andrews
‘King and ruler of all inquests’: Networks of Corruption in Late
14th-Century Middlesex (Language: English)
Andrew Prescott, School of Critical Studies (English Language &
Linguistics), University of Glasgow
Prosopography and the People of 1381 (Language: English)
Helen K. S. Killick, International Capital Market Association Centre
(ICMA), University of Reading
Rebel Voices and the People of 1381 (Language: English)
Helen Lacey
101
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
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Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 241-a:
Paper 241-b:
Paper 241-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 242-a:
Paper 242-b:
Paper 242-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 243-a:
Paper 243-b:
Paper 243-c:
102
241
Newlyn Building: LG.01
THE ADAPTATION OF THE SACRED IN DIFFERING SPATIAL CONTEXTS
Leicester Medieval Research Centre
Crystal Hollis, Department of Archaeology & History, University of
Exeter
Abigail Ford, Leicester Medieval Research Centre, University of
Leicester
Beyond Personal Reliquaries?: English Late Medieval Jewellery
to Enclose, Contain, and Enshrine (Language: English)
Caroline Croasdaile, Department of Archaeology, University of Oxford
Bringing Divine Protection Home: The Spatial Performance of
Medieval Charms against Thieves (Language: English)
Heather Taylor, Centre for Medieval & Early Modern Studies (MEMS),
University of Kent
Dr Matthew Knightley: ‘Sometyme Rector of Cosyngton’
(Language: English)
Alison Fearn, Independent Scholar, Loughborough
242
Esther Simpson Building: 3.02
TRAUMA AND RECOVERY, I: TRAUMA DISCOURSE AND ITS LIMITS
Grace Elizabeth O’Duffy, St John’s College, University of Oxford
Adam Kelly, Faculty of English, University of Oxford
Medieval Melancholies: A New North European Tradition?
(Language: English)
Adam Kelly
Sexual Violence in the Old Norse Stjórn: How to Translate
Biblical Accounts of Rape? (Language: English)
Natasha Bradley, Lincoln College, University of Oxford
‘Myselven can not telle why the sothe’: Speaking Pain and Gain
in Chaucer’s Book of the Duchess (Language: English)
Pamela Yee, Department of English, University of Rochester, New York
243
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.06
TRANSLATING CONCEPTS ACROSS RELIGIOUS BOUNDARIES
IMC Programming Committee
Eduardo Manzano Moreno, Instituto de Historia, Consejo Superior de
Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC), Madrid
A Research on the Process of Translating Rhètorikè in the
Islamic World (Language: English)
Mohammad Ahmadi, Department of Intercultural Communication,
Japan Women’s University, Tokyo
The Stucco Technique between Islamic and Byzantine Culture: A
Case Study of Khirbat al-Mafjar and Some Monuments in Italy
(Language: English)
Siyana Georgieva, Dipartimento dei Beni Culturali: Archeologia, Storia
dell’Arte, del Cinema e della Musica (DBC), Università degli Studi di
Padova
Axis Mundi: The Seven-Chamber Uterus at the Centre of the
World (Language: English)
Baylee Staufenbiel, Department of History, Florida State University
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 244-a:
Paper 244-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 245-a:
Paper 245-b:
Paper 245-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 246-a:
Paper 246-b:
Paper 246-c:
Monday
Paper 244-b:
244
Newlyn Building: 1.02
ENTANGLEMENTS OF BELIEF IN MEDIEVAL SCANDINAVIA
Centrum för medeltidsstudier, Stockholms universitet
Gwendolyne Knight, Historiska institutionen, Stockholms universitet
Felix Lummer, Independent Scholar, Reykjavík
Entangled Conflict in 15th-Century Danish Religion: Sermons,
Amulets, and the Meaning of Magic (Language: English)
Clara Dalsgaard Hansen, Independent Scholar, København
Tangling with the Undead: Encounters with the Walking Dead in
Bárðar saga Snæfellsáss and Flóamanna saga (Language: English)
Chris Latham, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Tangling Together Law and Saga: Magic and the Paranormal in
Medieval Iceland (Language: English)
Gwendolyne Knight
245
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.04
MEDIEVAL ARCHITECTURE AS DISGUISED SYMBOLISM, II
Zentrum für Mittelalterstudien (ZEMAS), Otto-Friedrich-Universität
Bamberg
Nathalie-Josephine von Möllendorff, Institut für Archäologie,
Denkmalwissenschaften und Kunstgeschichte, Otto-FriedrichUniversität Bamberg
Nathalie-Josephine von Möllendorff
Gold-Forged Architecture: Reliquaries as the Homestead of the
Holy (Language: English)
Katharina Beichler, Institut für Kunstwissenschaft, Hochschule für
Bildende Künste Braunschweig
Ephemeral Architecture: Printed Ephemeral Architecture as
Sites of Mediation and Negotiation (Language: English)
Ivo Raband, Kunsthistorisches Seminar, Universität Hamburg
Invented Architecture: Medievalism in the Stage Design of the
Italian Opera (Language: English)
Maurice Chales de Beaulieu, Independent Scholar, Wien
246
Esther Simpson Building: 1.01
THE IDEAL MONARCH IN THE MIDDLE AGES
IMC Programming Committee
Emma Cayley, School of Languages, Cultures & Societies - French,
University of Leeds
The Death and Bloody End of Tyrants: ‘Dying well’ as Defined by
the De Principis Instructione (Language: English)
Emily Abercrombie, School of History, University of Liverpool
Illustrations of Royalty in La Queste Del Saint Graal: Galahad
and King Arthur (Language: English)
Monica Oanca Ruset, Facultatea de Limbi și Literaturi Străine,
Universitatea din Bucureşti
Christina de Pizan and Her Non-Fighting King (Language: English)
Kamil Ernazarov
103
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 247-a:
Paper 247-b:
Paper 247-c:
Paper 247-d:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 248-a:
Paper 248-b:
Paper 248-c:
Paper 248-d:
104
247
Esther Simpson Building: 2.11
DATA-FY THAT: FOUR WAYS (AND REASONS) TO TURN MEDIEVAL SOURCES
INTO DATA
Traveler’s Lab, Wesleyan University, Connecticut
Jesse W. Torgerson, College of Letters, Wesleyan University,
Connecticut
David Gary Shaw, Department of History, Wesleyan University,
Connecticut
Planting Whole Rows: Solutions for Incomplete Agricultural
Data (Language: English)
Kathryn Benevento Jasper, Department of History, Illinois State
University
Understanding Medieval English Courts as Arenas of Social
Interaction: From People and Practices to Data and Networks
(Language: English)
Silke Schwandt, Fakultät für Geschichtswissenschaft, Philosophie und
Theologie, Universität Bielefeld
Landscapes of Empire: Visualising Geographic Data from the
Chronicle of Theophanes (Language: English)
Jesse W. Torgerson
A Computational Network Analysis of the Song of Roland
(Language: English)
Jakub Kabala, Department of History & Digital Studies, Davidson
College, North Carolina and Thomas Warren, Department of History &
Digital Studies, Davidson College, North Carolina
248
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.03
RITUALS AND SPACES OF PUNISHMENT IN MEDIEVAL CULTURE
Network for Medieval Arts & Rituals (NetMAR) / Zentrum für
Mittelalterstudien, Otto-Friedrich-Universität Bamberg
Ingrid Bennewitz, Lehrstuhl für Deutsche Philologie des Mittelalters,
Otto-Friedrich-Universität Bamberg and Michaela Pölzl, Institut für
Germanistik, Otto-Friedrich-Universität Bamberg
Stavroula Constantinou, Centre for Medieval Arts & Rituals, University
of Cyprus, Nicosia
The Ritual of Punishment in Frankish and Venetian Cyprus
(Language: English)
Marina Ilia, Independent Scholar, Nicosia
The Space of Punishment in Byzantine Passions and Miracle
Tales (Language: English)
Andria Andreou, Centre for Medieval Arts & Rituals, University of
Cyprus, Nicosia
A Space for Divine Punishment: Babylon in the Visual and
Textual Cultures of 13th-Century Castile (Language: English)
Sara Moure López, Departamento de Historia da Arte, Universidade de
Santiago de Compostela
Languages of Shame: The Pillory and Its Impact on
Metaphorical Ways of Speaking (Language: English)
Gerlinde Gangl, Fakultät Geistes- und Kulturwissenschaften, OttoFriedrich-Universität Bamberg
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
TEA BREAK: 15.45-16.30
Tea and Coffee will be available on a self-serve basis at the following locations:
Monday
Esther Simpson Building: Foyer
Maurice Keyworth Building: Foyer
Parkinson Building: Bookfair
University Square: IMC Social Space
105
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 301-a:
Paper 301-b:
Paper 301-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 302-a:
Paper 302-b:
Paper 302-c:
Paper 302-d:
106
301
Parkinson Building: Room B.22
EARLY MEDIEVAL RIDDLES, II
The Riddle Ages
Megan Cavell, Department of English Literature, University of
Birmingham and Jennifer Neville, Department of English, Royal
Holloway, University of London
Jennifer Neville
Moddor monigra cynna: Motherhood in the Exeter Book Riddles
(Language: English)
Kayla Shea, Department of English, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Sexual Riddles, Spiritual Readings: Thematic Links and Double
Entendre in the Enigmata of Tatwine (Language: English)
Alexandra Zhirnova, Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse & Celtic,
University of Cambridge
A Hairy Woman Gives Birth to a Bald Child…: Eggs, Birds, and
(Mostly) Early Medieval West Eurasian Riddles (Language:
English)
Alaric Hall, Institute for Medieval Studies / School of English, University
of Leeds
302
Newlyn Building: 1.07
NEW RESEARCH ABOUT WOMEN AND THEIR KIN IN THE EARLY MEDIEVAL
STEPPE: GENETIC, ARCHAEOLOGICAL, AND HISTORICAL RESULTS
HistoGenes: ERC Synergy Grant Project No 856453
Clemens Gantner, Institut für Österreichische Geschichtsforschung,
Universität Wien
Clemens Gantner
Introduction: Histogenes (Language: English)
Walter Pohl, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische Akademie
der Wissenschaften, Wien
What Genetics Can Tell Us about Women and Their Kin
(Language: English)
Zuzana Hofmanová, Max-Planck-Institut für evolutionäre Anthropologie,
Leipzig / Ústav archeologie a muzeologie, Masarykova univerzita, Brno
How do Biological Kin Groups Relate to the Burial Evidence
(Language: English)
Bendeguz Tobias, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
Women of the Eurasian Steppe and Their Kin in Latin, Greek,
and Chinese Written Sources (Language: English)
Sandra Wabnitz, Institut für österreichische Geschichtsforschung,
Universität Wien
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Moderator:
Paper 303-a:
Paper 303-b:
Paper 303-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 304-a:
Paper 304-b:
Paper 304-c:
Monday
Organiser:
303
Esther Simpson Building: 1.08
CLOISTER, REFORM, AND TOWN: RELIGIOUS COMMUNITIES AND LAITY IN
TH
15 -CENTURY CENTRAL EUROPE, II
EXPRO Project No. 20-08389X ‘Observance Reconsidered: Uses &
Abuses of the Reform (Individuals, Institutions, Society)’ / Katedra
historie, Filozofická fakulta, Univerzita Palackého, Olomouc
Kateřina Horníčková, Filozofická fakulta, Univerzita Palackého, Olomouc
and Judit Majorossy, Filozofická fakulta, Univerzita Palackého, Olomouc
/ Institut für Österreichische Geschichte, Universität Wien
Paweł Kras, Centrum studiów mediewistycznych, Katolicki Uniwersytet
Lubelski Jana Pawła II
Reform, Social Climate, and the Religiosity of Late Medieval
Urban Communities: Examples of Wiener Neustadt, Ödenburg,
and Pressburg (Language: English)
Judit Majorossy
The Reformer Katherina von Mülheim’s Journey from
Nuremberg to Moravia: Female Dominican Monasteries in 15thCentury Urban Culture (Language: English)
Klára Mezihoráková, Ústav dějin umění, Akademie věd České republiky,
Praha
Transformations and Forms of Piety of Moravian Towns(wo)men
in the 15th Century: The Example of Brno and Olomouc
(Language: English)
Michaela Antonín Malaníková, Filozofická fakulta, Univerzita Palackého,
Olomouc
304
Maurice Keyworth Building: G.02
CRUSADE KILLING: REGULATED OR INDISCRIMINATE?, III
Centrum för medeltidsstudier, Stockholms universitet
Kurt Villads Jensen, Centrum för medeltidsstudier, Stockholms
universitet
Sini Kangas, History, Philosophy & Literary Studies Unit, Faculty of
Social Sciences, Tampere University
Pathways to Violence: The Influence of Memory and History at
the Battle of the Springs of Cresson (Language: English)
Ronan O’Reilly, Department of History, Royal Holloway, University of
London
Recipient of a 2023 Templar Heritage Trust Bursary
Pilgrims and / or Pillagers: Crusading Attitudes in Profectio
Danorum (Language: English)
Paul Theissen, Department of History, University of Iceland, Reykjavík /
Institut für Geschichte, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin
Making the Landscape Sacred (Language: English)
Kurt Villads Jensen
107
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 305-a:
Paper 305-b:
Paper 305-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 306-a:
Paper 306-b:
Paper 306-c:
108
305
Clarendon Building: 1.02
MENDICANT NETWORKS, III: UNIVERSITIES
Robert Friedrich, Lehrstuhl für Allgemeine Geschichte des Mittelalters,
Universität Greifswald and Cornelia Linde, Lehrstuhl für Allgemeine
Geschichte des Mittelalters, Universität Greifswald
Cornelia Linde
Mapping Polemical Text Networks: Analysing the Structure and
Content of Polemical Treatises from the Early Secular-Mendicant
Controversy (Language: English)
Sita Steckel, Historisches Seminar, Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität
Münster
Networking and Entanglement: The Early Carmelite Scholastics
at the Medieval University (Language: English)
Simon F. Nolan, Faculty of Philosophy, St Patrick’s Pontifical University,
Maynooth / Carmelite Order
A Forced Foundation: The Mendicants’ Role in the Foundation of
a University in Toulouse in the 13th Century (Language: English)
Maria-Elena Kammerlander, Lehrstuhl für Mittelalterliche Geschichte,
Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg
306
Parkinson Building: Room B.09
PUNITIVE MIRACLES IN LATE ANTIQUITY AND THE EARLY MIDDLE AGES, III
Wydział Historii, Uniwersytet Warszawski
Juliana Santos Dinoa Medeiros, Wydział Historii, Uniwersytet
Warszawski and Robert Wiśniewski, Wydział Historii, Uniwersytet
Warszawski / Department of Classics, University of Reading
Carine van Rhijn, Departement Geschiedenis en Kunstgeschiedenis,
Universiteit Utrecht
Punitive and Healing Miracles in the Life of Maurilius (Language:
English)
Juliana Santos Dinoa Medeiros
Ritual Violence: Punitive Miracles in Early Byzantine Miracle
Collections (Language: English)
Stavroula Constantinou, Centre for Medieval Arts & Rituals, University
of Cyprus, Nicosia
Were Some Saints More Punitive Than Others? (Language:
English)
Bryan Ward-Perkins, Faculty of History, University of Oxford
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Paper 307-b:
Paper 307-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 308-a:
Paper 308-b:
Paper 308-c:
Respondent:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 309-a:
Paper 309-b:
Respondent:
Monday
Moderator:
Paper 307-a:
307
Esther Simpson Building: LG08
UPPITY MEDIEVAL WOMEN ACROSS THE GLOBE, III
Anita Obermeier, Department of English Language & Literature,
University of New Mexico, Albuquerque and Doaa Omran, Department
of English Language & Literature, University of New Mexico,
Albuquerque
Doaa Omran
St Euphrosyne of Polatsk: A Ray of Light in the Age of Darkness
(Language: English)
Marina Ragachewskaya
Medieval or Modern?: Muslim Women Writers in Pre-Modern
India (Language: English)
Sabiha Huq, Department of English, Khulna University, Bangladesh
Analysis and Investigation of Khayami’s Thoughts in Mahsati
Ganjawi’s Quatrains (Language: English)
Jahangir Amiri, Department of Arabic Language & Literature, Razi
University, Kermanshah and Tayebeh Amirian, Department of Arabic
Language & Literature, Razi University, Kermanshah
308
Parkinson Building: Room B.10
LAW AND EMPIRE: THE CAPITULARIES OF LOUIS THE PIOUS, 814-840, III
Nordrhein-Westfälische Akademie der Wissenschaften und der Künste
Karl Ubl, Historisches Institut, Universität zu Köln
Rob Meens, Departement Geschiedenis en Kunstgeschiedenis,
Universiteit Utrecht
On the Use of Capitulary Texts in the Time of Louis the Pious
(Language: English)
Shigeto Kikuchi, School of Humanities & Sociology, University of Tokyo
Perspectives and Attitudes Towards the Unfree in the
Capitularies of Louis the Pious (Language: English)
Dominik Leyendecker, Historisches Institut, Universität zu Köln
The Critical Edition: Results and Open Questions (Language:
English)
Karl Ubl
Mayke de Jong, Utrecht Centre for Medieval Studies, Universiteit
Utrecht
309
Parkinson Building: Room B.08
THE FORMATION OF DISCOURSE COMMUNITIES IN LATE ANTIQUITY, 500700, III: A COMPARATIVE APPROACH
Kay Boers, Departement Geschiedenis en Kunstgeschiedenis,
Universiteit Utrecht and Becca Grose, Department of History, University
of York
Yaniv Fox, Department of General History, Bar-Ilan University, Ramat
Gan
Zaragoza, Gregory the Great, and the Formation of Discourse
Communities in 7th-Century Iberia (Language: English)
Kay Boers
Trickle Down Virtues?: Models of Inscribed Communities in
North African and Gallic Epigraphy (Language: English)
Becca Grose
Danuta Shanzer, Institut für Klassische Philologie, Mittel- und
Neulatein, Universität Wien
109
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 310-a:
Paper 310-b:
Paper 310-c:
Paper 310-d:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 311-a:
Paper 311-b:
Paper 311-c:
110
310
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.31
APPROACHES TO MEDIEVAL MARKET STRUCTURE
Marie D’Aguanno Ito, Department of History & Art History, George
Mason University, Virginia
Marie D’Aguanno Ito
Medieval English Markets: New Directions, New Ideas (Language:
English)
James Davis, School of History, Anthropology, Philosophy & Politics,
Queen’s University Belfast
Brokers and Market Makers in the Middle Ages (Language:
English)
Tony Moore, International Capital Market Association (ICMA) Centre,
University of Reading
Medieval Markets Structure: Factors, Agents, and
Intermediaries (Language: English)
Antoni Furio, Departament d’Història Medieval i Ciències i Tècniques
Historiogràfiques, Universitat de València
Determining Essential Elements of Medieval Market Structure
(Language: English)
Marie D’Aguanno Ito
311
Esther Simpson Building: 3.01
MEDIEVAL AFRICAN ENTANGLEMENTS, III: RECONSTRUCTING ISLAMICATE
ENTANGLEMENTS
2022 Dan David Prize Funding
Abidemi Babatunde Babalola, British Museum, London
Solomon Gebreyes Beyene, Hiob Ludolf Zentrum für Äthiopistik, AsienAfrika-Institut, Universität Hamburg
From ‘Haha’ to ‘Mecca’: Pilgrim Entanglements and Affective
Networks of Travel from Medieval Africa (Language: English)
Muhamed Riyaz Chenganakkattil, Department of Humanities & Social
Sciences, Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi
Reconstructing Adal: The Archaeology of the Medieval Muslim
Sultanates in the Horn of Africa (Language: English)
Jorge de Torres Rodríguez, Instituto de Ciencias del Patrimonio,
Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, Santiago de
Compostela
The Battle Of Ksar El-Kebîr, before and after: The Ottoman
Empire and Portugal’s Presence in Morocco (Language: English)
Hava Önalan, Institute of Social Sciences, Department of History,
Istanbul University
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 312-a:
Paper 312-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 313-a:
Paper 313-b:
Paper 313-c:
Monday
Paper 312-b:
312
Michael Sadler Building: Rupert Beckett Theatre
TEXTUAL NETWORKS IN EARLY MEDIEVAL ENGLAND: MAPPING
INTERTEXTUAL, MULTICULTURAL, AND DIACHRONIC ENTANGLEMENTS, II
Claire Poynton-Smith, School of English, Trinity College Dublin
Tom Revell, Faculty of English / Balliol College, University of Oxford
Editing for Play: Restorative Retention in the Exeter Book
Riddles (Language: English)
Kyle Smith, Department of English, University of Wisconsin-Madison
How (Un)Translatable Was Old English Poetry? (Language:
English)
Michael Lysander Angerer, Faculty of English, University of Oxford
Sinew-Bonds and Flying Machines: Intertextual Bodies in Early
Medieval English Depictions of Weland the Smith (Language:
English)
Caroline R. Batten, Department of English, University of Pennsylvania
313
Stage@leeds: Stage 1
MOVING BYZANTIUM, III: THE FRAGMENTATION AND (RE-)ENTANGLEMENT
OF 13TH-CENTURY ANATOLIA
FWF-Project ‘Entangled Charters of Anatolia’, Abteilung
Byzanzforschung, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
Johannes Preiser-Kapeller, Institut für Mittelalterforschung,
Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
Claudia Rapp, Institut für Byzantinistik & Neogräzistik, Universität Wien
/ Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische Akademie der
Wissenschaften, Wien
Mapping the Prosopographical Networks of the Lascarid Realm,
1204-1261 (Language: English)
Ekaterini Mitsiou, Institut für Byzantinistik & Neogräzistik, Universität
Wien
Greek Christian Networks in Muslim Anatolia: Noble Courts,
Cities, and Countryside (Language: English)
Rustam Shukurov, Abteilung Byzanzforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
Entangled Charters of Anatolia, 1200-1300: Networks of
Charters as Webs of World-Ordering after Crisis (Language:
English)
Johannes Preiser-Kapeller
111
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 314-a:
Paper 314-b:
Paper 314-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 315-a:
Paper 315-b:
Paper 315-c:
112
314
Clarendon Building: GR 01
SCHOLARLY PRACTICES IN CAROLINGIAN EAST FRANCIA: ACTORS,
NETWORKS, KNOWLEDGE EXCHANGE, III
Project ‘Margins at the Centre: Book Production & Practices of
Annotation in the East Frankish Realm’, Institut für
Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften,
Wien
Cinzia Grifoni, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
Maximilian Diesenberger, Institut für Mittelalterforschung,
Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
Glosses and Glossaries: An Insight into the Relationship
between Working Tools in Studies on Priscian (Language: English)
Franck Cinato, Laboratoire d’histoire des théories linguistiques (HTL UMR 7597), Université Paris Cité / Université Sorbonne Nouvelle /
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Paris
Isidore and the Germans in the Early Middle Ages (Language:
English)
Helmut Reimitz, Department of History, Princeton University
Hrabanus Maurus’s Commentary on the Lamentations:
Reception and Re-Uses (Language: English)
Roberto Gamberini, Dipartimento di Scienze Umane, Sociali e della
Salute, Università degli Studi di Cassino e del Lazio Meridionale
315
Esther Simpson Building: 2.09
MODELING FOR CODICOLOGY, HERALDRY, AND PALAEOGRAPHY
IMC Programming Committee
Dominique Stutzmann, Institut de Recherche et d’Histoire des Textes
(IRHT), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Paris
Medieval Manuscripts in Flemish Collections: Modeling
Codicological Descriptions for a New Database of Medieval
Manuscripts in Flanders (Language: English)
Godfried Croenen, Vlaamse Erfgoedbibliotheken, Antwerpen
Coats of Arms Entangled in Their Contexts: The Representation
and Analysis of the Use of Coats of Arms in the Middle Ages with
the Digital Heraldry Ontology (Language: English)
Torsten Hiltmann, Institut für Geschichtswissenschaften, HumboldtUniversität zu Berlin and Philipp Schneider, Institut für
Geschichtswissenschaften, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin
Tangled Methods, Tangled Scribes: Mixing Quantitative and
Qualitative Methods in Scribal Hand Analysis (Language: English)
Sebastian Dows-Miller, Faculty of Medieval & Modern Languages,
University of Oxford
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Paper 316-b:
Paper 316-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 317-a:
Paper 317-b:
Paper 317-c:
Monday
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 316-a:
316
Newlyn Building: GR.07
THE CRUSADING MOVEMENT IN THE HOLY ROMAN EMPIRE, III:
RECRUITMENT, RETURN, AND COMMEMORATION
Professur für Mittelalterliche Geschichte, Justus-Liebig-Universität
Gießen
Stefan Tebruck, Historisches Institut, Justus-Liebig-Universität Gießen
Alan V. Murray, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Advertisement for the Third Crusade in the Holy Roman Empire
(Language: English)
Marcel Singer, Institut für Mittelalterliche Geschichte, PhilippsUniversität Marburg
Pilgrimage to the Holy Land and the Bohemian Concept of the
Heavenly Jerusalem (Language: English)
Martin Wihoda, Department of History, Masarykova univerzita, Brno
Heimkehrende Kreuzfahrer: Erinnerung, Memoria, Grablege
(Language: Deutsch)
Stefan Tebruck
317
Esther Simpson Building: 2.07
FROM PEACE TO WAR: THE ROLE OF SMALL FRONTIER TOWNS IN BUILDING
NETWORKS BETWEEN PORTUGAL AND CASTILE, 14TH-16TH CENTURIES
Project ‘FRONTOWNS: Think Big on Small Frontier Towns: Alto Alentejo
& Alta Extremadura Leonesa (13th-16th Centuries)’ / Instituto de
Estudos Medievais (IEM), Universidade Nova de Lisboa
Adelaide Millán da Costa, Instituto de Estudos Medievais (IEM),
Universidade Nova de Lisboa / Departamento de Ciências Sociais e
Gestão, Universidade Aberta
Filipa Roldão, Centro de História, Universidade de Lisboa
Trade and Transport Networks in Alto Alentejo Small Border
Towns: Agents, Buildings, and Routes (Language: English)
Gonçalo Melo da Silva, Instituto de Estudos Medievais (IEM),
Universidade Nova de Lisboa and Thiago Tolfo, Instituto de Estudos
Medievais (IEM), Universidade Nova de Lisboa
Mobility Networks in Alta Extremadura Rural Border Towns:
People and Infrastructure (Language: English)
Luís Clemente-Quijada, Departamento de Ciencias Históricas,
Universidad de Chile, Santiago de Chile
The Paths of War: The Geography of Warfare and Mobility in the
Alentejo-Extremadura Region, c. 1300-c. 1480 (Language:
English)
João Rafael Nisa, Centro de História da Sociedade e da Cultura,
Universidade de Coimbra
113
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 318-a:
Paper 318-b:
Paper 318-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 319-a:
Paper 319-b:
Paper 319-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 320-a:
Paper 320-b:
Paper 320-c:
114
318
Clarendon Building: 1.01
COMMUNITIES, NETWORKS, AND AUTHORITIES IN THE MEDITERRANEAN
IMC Programming Committee
James Wilson, Zukunftskolleg / Fach Geschichte, Universität Konstanz
Prayers for the Emperor(s) in (Late) Byzantium: Reflections on
the Relationship between Basileia and Ekklesia (Language:
English)
Mihail Mitrea, Institutul de Studii Sud-Est Europene, Academia Română,
București
After Conquest in Angevin Bari, Sicily (Language: English)
Peter Michael Michelli, Department of History, University of California,
Berkeley
Provisioning the Mediterranean: Muslim Sicily’s Economic and
Social Landscape in the Genizah Merchants’ Letters (Language:
English)
Ksenia Ryzhova, Department of History, Princeton University
319
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.09
JEWISH / NON-JEWISH ENTANGLEMENTS AND NETWORKS, III: SOCIAL
ASPECTS
Institut für jüdische Geschichte Österreichs, St Pölten
Birgit Wiedl, Institut für jüdische Geschichte Österreichs, St Pölten
Hannah Teddy Schachter, Department of Jewish History, Hebrew
University of Jerusalem
Between Gossip and Lawsuit: The Multitude of Jewish-Christian
Entanglements in the Urban Settings of Medieval Ashkenaz
(Language: English)
Birgit Wiedl
Jewish-Christian Interfaith Oaths in Medieval Europe (Language:
English)
Andreas Lehnertz, Universität Trier
Jewish Wet Nurses, Conversas, and Christian Infants: Racialised
Objections From the Later Middle Ages (Language: English)
Irven Resnick, Department of Philosophy & Religion, University of
Tennessee, Chattanooga
320
Newlyn Building: GR.01
NETWORKS OF DISSENT AND PERSECUTION, III: FLUIDITY AND
CONNECTIONS IN RELIGIOUS IDENTITY CONSTRUCTION
School of History, Queen Mary University of London
Delfi I. Nieto-Isabel, School of History, Queen Mary University of
London
Michael Bailey, Department of History, Iowa State University
Coming to Terms: Beguins, Beguines, Tertiaries, Beghards, and
the Network Boundary Problem in the 14th Century (Language:
English)
Delfi I. Nieto-Isabel
The Life of Clare of Rimini as a Case Study in the Flow of
Controversial Religious Claims (Language: English)
Sean L. Field, Department of History, University of Vermont
Sisters of Odelind: A Hidden Network of Beguines and Sisters
Becomes Visible (Language: English)
Letha Böhringer, Historisches Institut / Forschungsstelle Geschichte
Kölns, Universität zu Köln
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 321-a:
Paper 321-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 322-a:
Paper 322-b:
Paper 322-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 323-a:
Paper 323-b:
Monday
Paper 321-b:
321
Stage@leeds: Stage 3
MEDIEVAL MYSTICS: NETWORKS, RELATIONSHIPS, AND INFLUENCES, III
Mysticism & Lived Experience Network
Amanda Langley, School of History, Queen Mary University of London
Amanda Langley
Looking with the Eye of Understanding: Agency, Gender, and
Optics in The Showings of Julian of Norwich (Language: English)
Abigail Palmisano, Department of English, Loyola University Chicago,
Illinois
‘Medieval Nuns: What do they know? Do they know things? Let’s
find out!’ - Knowledge Transmission across Female Monastic
Networks in Late Medieval Europe (Language: English)
Verena Puth, Institutionen för kultur och estetik, Stockholms universitet
Silencing the Ineffable: The Hidden Traces of John of the Cross’s
Mystical Experiences (Language: English)
Zsuzsanna Szugyiczki, Department of Religious Studies, University of
Szeged
322
Esther Simpson Building: 2.08
NETWORKS AND ENTANGLEMENTS BETWEEN THE CENTRE AND PERIPHERY IN
THE LATE MIDDLE AGES: ITALIANS AND ULTRAMONTANES, III - HUMANISM
Anna Horeczy, Instytut Historii im. Tadeusza Manteuffla, Polskiej
Akademii Nauk, Warszawa and Adam Zapała, Instytut Historii im.
Tadeusza Manteuffla, Polskiej Akademii Nauk, Warszawa
Anna Adamska, Instituut voor Cultuurwetenschappelijk Onderzoek,
Universiteit Utrecht
Humanist Oration on St Jerome: Rhetorical Exercise or
Transmission of Knowledge? (Language: English)
Anja Božič, Department of Medieval Studies, Central European
University, Budapest/Wien
Humanist Library of Jan Długosz, 1415-1480: New Discoveries
and Current Research (Language: English)
Zdzisław Koczarski, Pracownia Łaciny Średniowiecznej, Instytut Języka
Polskiego Polskiej Akademii Nauk, Kraków
Philippus Complatonicus: Filippo Buonaccorsi, Marsilio Ficino,
and Humanist Social Networks between Italy, Ruthenia, and the
Polish Crown Lands (Language: English)
Michael Lo Piano, Independent Scholar, New Haven
323
Clarendon Building: 1.06
CLERICS, NOBLES, AND PILGRIMS: DISENTANGLING SENSORY PERCEPTIONS
OF MATERIALITY
Centrum för medeltidsstudier, Stockholms universitet
Karl Lysén, Historiska institutionen, Stockholms universitet and Meike
Wiedemann, Institut für Kunstgeschichte, Ludwig-Maximilians
Universität München
Gregory J. Leighton, Wydział Nauk Historycznych, Uniwersytet Mikołaja
Kopernika, Toruń
‘To tread irreverently upon with my shod feet...’: Jerusalem
Pilgrims at the Stone of Unction (Language: English)
Karl Lysén
Clerics between Kingdom and Heaven: The Self as an Image in
Swedish Hospitaller Seals (Language: English)
Wilhelm Ljungar, Medeltidsmuseet, Stockholm
115
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 324-a:
Paper 324-b:
Paper 324-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 325-a:
Paper 325-b:
Paper 325-c:
116
324
Newlyn Building: 1.01
LOYALTY AS NETWORKS, II: FAMILIAL AND POLITICAL LOYALTIES
Haskins Society / Battle Conference on Anglo-Norman Studies
Hannah Boston, School of Humanities & Heritage, University of Lincoln
Andrew Wareham, School of Humanities & Social Sciences, University
of Roehampton
Grappling with Literary Loyalty in 10th-Century Germany
(Language: English)
Chris Halsted, Department of History, University of Maryland
Loyalty and Loyalties in Early 11th-Century Norway (Language:
English)
Karl Christian Alvestad, Institutt for kultur, religion og samfunnsfag,
Fakultet for humaniora, idretts- og utdanningsvitskap, Universitetet i
Sørøst-Norge, Notodden
‘Elle aymera et honourera les parens de son seigneur’: Queens
and Conflicting Loyalties in France and England, 13th-14th
Centuries (Language: English)
Louise Gay, Laboratoire Pléiade (EA 7338), Université Sorbonne Paris
Nord
325
Esther Simpson Building: 3.08
LEARNED AND HERETICAL WOMEN AND THEIR NETWORKS IN THE ISLAMIC
AND WESTERN MIDDLE AGES
IMC Programming Committee
Victoria Turner, Department of French / St Andrews Institute of
Mediaeval Studies, University of St Andrews
Feminine Network of Knowledge: Shuhdah al-Kātibah (d.
574/1178) and Her Role in Medieval Arabic Book Formation
(Language: English)
Jalal abd Alghani, Department of Arabic Language & Literature, Achva
Academic College, Ashdod, Israel
The Place of Women in the Heretical Narratives of Languedoc,
Lombardy, and the Rhineland in the 11th and 12th Centuries
(Language: English)
Robin Gatel, Department of History, Trinity College Dublin
Christine de Pizan’s City of Ladies, 1405: A Proto-Feminist
Network of Women (Language: English)
Maria Yvonne Bancila, Facultatea de Limbi și Literaturi Străine,
Universitatea din București
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Paper 326-b:
Paper 326-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 327-a:
Paper 327-b:
Paper 327-c:
Paper 327-d:
Monday
Moderator:
Paper 326-a:
326
Clarendon Building: 1.03
NETWORKS AND ENTANGLEMENTS OF BORDER IDENTITIES, III: ARTHURIAN
IMAGININGS
Medieval & Early Modern Centre, University of Sydney / Centre for
Medieval Studies, University of Bristol
Emma Knowles, Department of English, University of Sydney and Jan
Shaw, Department of English, University of Sydney
Samuel Cardwell, Centre for Medieval Studies, University of Toronto
Cutting Guenevere Adrift: Located Men and Dislocated Women
in Malory’s Morte Darthur (Language: English)
Jan Shaw
Merlin in the Middle: Place, Time, and Text in Layamon’s Brut
(Language: English)
Jordan Church, School of Art, Communication & English, University of
Sydney
The Boy Who Wouldn’t Grow Up: Age and Masculinity in Ystoria
Gereint uab Erbin (Language: English)
Eleanor Smith, Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse & Celtic, University
of Cambridge
327
Esther Simpson Building: 2.12
ENTANGLEMENTS OF FAITH AND THE SENSES, III: SEEING MARY(AN)
DEVOTION IN THE MIDDLE AGES
Andrea-Bianka Znorovszky, Departamento de Historia Medieval,
Moderna y Contemporánea, Universidad de Salamanca
Andrea-Bianka Znorovszky
‘Ecce Virgo concipiet filium’: Picturing the Conception in the
Middle Ages (Language: English)
Michele Celentano, Dipartimento di Lettere, Arti e Scienze Sociali,
Università degli Studi ‘Gabriele D’Annunzio’, Chieti-Pescara
The Virgin Mary as an Educational Image?: Reflection on the
Panel Painting of the Presentation of Mary to the Temple from
the Bayerisches Nationalmuseum in Munich (Language: English)
Mina Miyamoto, Kunsthistorisches Institut, Paris-Lodron-Universität
Salzburg
Looking or Praying?: Iconographic Networks of the Visitation
(Language: English)
Megumi Tanabe, Institute of Oriental & Occidental Studies, Kansai
University, Osaka
The Way of the Senses in Bernard of Clairvaux’s In laudibus
Virginis Matris (Language: English)
Maria Borriello, Dipartimento di Scienze del Patrimonio Culturale,
Università degli Studi di Salerno
117
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 328-a:
Paper 328-b:
Paper 328-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 329-a:
Paper 329-b:
Paper 329-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 330-a:
Paper 330-b:
Paper 330-c:
118
328
Michael Sadler Building: LG.16
NETWORKING THE DIOCESE: MATERIAL TRANSACTIONS IN EARLY AND HIGH
MEDIEVAL BISHOPRICS
Philipp Winterhager, Institut für Geschichtswissenschaften, HumboldtUniversität zu Berlin
Bastiaan Waagmeester, Seminar für mittelalterliche Geschichte,
Eberhard Karls Universität Tübingen
Temporal Wealth and Eternal Needs: Some Thoughts on the
Temporalities of Ecclesiastical Economies in the Earlier Middle
Ages (Language: English)
Stephan Bruhn, German Historical Institute London (GHIL)
Poor, Meek, Mourning... but Successful: Archiepiscopal
Strategies in Vulkuld’s Life of Bardo of Mainz (Language: English)
Philipp Winterhager
Fiefs and Mortgages: Material Transactions in the Episcopal
Charters of Bamberg in the 12th and 13th Century (Language:
English)
Sebastian Kalla, Lehrstuhl für Mittelalterliche Geschichte, AlbertLudwigs-Universität Freiburg
329
Parkinson Building: Room 1.08
THE CITY, THE DESERT, AND THE EREMITIC IDEAL: NETWORKS AND
NARRATIVES IN ITALIAN AND BYZANTINE VISUAL CULTURE
Amelia Hope-Jones, Department of History of Art, University of
Edinburgh
Megan McNamee, Edinburgh College of Art, University of Edinburgh
The Heavenly Ladder between East and West (Language: English)
Amelia Hope-Jones
In the Land of the Thebaids: Woman as Exemplar (Language:
English)
Denva Gallant, Department of Art History, University of Delaware
Experiencing the Desert in Urban Constantinople: Eremitic
Retreat as Exemplar in Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana, MS Vat.
gr. 1927 (Language: English)
Courtney Tomaselli, Interdisciplinary Honors Program, Loyola University
Chicago, Illinois
330
Michael Sadler Building: LG.10
THE PRACTICE OF HISTORY: NETWORKS AND CONNECTIONS, C. 950-1300,
III
Centre for Research in Historiography & Historical Culture, Aberystwyth
University
Björn Weiler, Department of History & Welsh History, Aberystwyth
University
Charlie Rozier, School of History, University of East Anglia
Strange Bedfellows Flogging a Dead Horse: The Gang that
Discriminated against Henry V (Language: English)
Gerhard Lubich, Historisches Institut, Ruhr-Universität Bochum
‘Harold lies not here’: Rewriting History in the Vita Haroldi
(Language: English)
Jacqueline M. Burek, Department of English, George Mason University,
Virginia
Reading Adam of Bremen in Medieval Germany (Language:
English)
Erik G. Niblaeus, Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse & Celtic,
University of Cambridge
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 331-a:
Paper 331-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 332-a:
Paper 332-b:
Paper 332-c:
Monday
Paper 331-b:
331
Michael Sadler Building: LG.19
CIRCULATIONS OF INFORMATION AND NETWORKS OF KNOWLEDGE, II
IMC Programming Committee
David Iain Lees, Department of History & Welsh History, Aberystwyth
University
The Intertwining of Knowledge: The Latin Language as a Vehicle
for Scientific Dissemination between the 12th and 13th Centuries
(Language: English)
Nicoletta Rozza, Dipartimento di Studi Umanistici Sezione di Scienze
dell’Antichità, Università degli Studi di Napoli - Federico II
Chivalric Information Networks: Transmissions of the Moral
through the Story’s and the Reader’s World (Language: English)
Kathleen Burt, Department of English, Middle Georgia State University
Archival Storage in Amsterdam during the 15th and 16th
Centuries (Language: English)
Erik Schmitz, Sectie Presentatie en participatie, Afdeling Publiek,
Stadsarchief Amsterdam
332
Clarendon Building: 2.08
MANUSCRIPTS AND ECCLESIASTICAL NETWORKS IN THE HIGH MIDDLE AGES,
II: SEEING THE LIGHT THROUGH HONORIUS
Forskargruppe i mellomalderfilologi, Universitetet i Bergen
Åslaug Ommundsen, Institutt for lingvistiske, litterære og estetiske
studier, Universitetet i Bergen
Synnøve Midtbø Myking, Institutt for lingvistiske, litterære og estetiske
studier, Universitetet i Bergen
Honorius Augustodunensis: Manuscripts and Readers in 12thCentury Austria (Language: English)
Christoph Egger, Institut für Österreichische Geschichtsforschung,
Universität Wien
Who Needs the Clavis physice? (Language: English)
Katharina Kaska, Sammlung von Handschriften und alten Drucken,
Österreichische Nationalbibliothek, Wien
Illuminating the North: Honorius and His Gem (Language:
English)
Åslaug Ommundsen
119
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 333-a:
Paper 333-b:
Paper 333-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 334-a:
Paper 334-b:
Paper 334-c:
Respondent:
120
333
Newlyn Building: LG.02
TEXTILES AND GARMENTS ENTANGLED AND DISENTANGLED
Discussion, Interpretation & Study of Textile Arts, Fabrics & Fashion
(DISTAFF)
Tina Anderlini, Centre d’Études Supérieures de Civilisation Médiévale
(CESCM - UMR 7302), Université de Poitiers
Gale Owen-Crocker, Department of English Literature & Creative
Writing, School of Arts, Languages & Cultures, University of Manchester
Iconographic Evolution through the Sogdians Exchanges
between the 7th and 10th Centuries (Language: English)
Jade Clerc-Dejour, POuvoirs, LEttres, Normes (POLEN - EA 4710),
Université d’Orléans
Belts Entangled: Different Meanings of a Symbolic Accessory
(Language: English)
Tina Anderlini
Clothing Entanglement: How the Accessory Illustrates the
Divinities in the Case of Testard’s Échecs amoureux moralisés,
Paris, Bibliothèque nationale de France, MS Français 143
(Language: English)
Élodie Gidoin-Barale, Centre d’Études Supérieures sur la Fin du Moyen
Âge (CESFiMA) / POuvoirs, LEttres, Normes (POLEN - EA 4710),
Université d’Orléans
334
Clarendon Building: 2.01
ECCLESIASTICAL NETWORKS AND ACTORS: LINKING LATE ANTIQUE AND
EARLY MEDIEVAL LIFEWORLDS
Veronika Egetenmeyr, Institut für Geschichte, Universität KoblenzLandau
Roland Steinacher, Institut für Alte Geschichte und Altorientalistik,
Universität Innsbruck
Between Toledo, Carthage, and Constantinople: The Balearics in
the Later 6th Century (Language: English)
James M. Harland, Bonn Center for Dependency & Slavery Studies,
Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn
By the Book: Keeping Ecclesiastical Networks Alive through
Manuscripts in the Early Medieval West (Language: English)
Mateusz Fafinski, Max-Weber-Kolleg für kultur- und
sozialwissenschaftliche Studien, Universität Erfurt
With Friends like These: The Lifeworld of 6 th-Century
Mediterranean Elites (Language: English)
Jakob Riemenschneider, Institut für Alte Geschichte und Altorientalistik,
Universität Innsbruck
Uta Heil, Institut für Kirchengeschichte, Christliche Archäologie und
Kirchliche Kunst, Universität Wien
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Paper 335-b:
Paper 335-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 336-a:
Paper 336-b:
Paper 336-c:
Monday
Moderator:
Paper 335-a:
335
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.32
NETWORK ANALYSIS FOR MEDIEVALISTS, III: METHODOLOGICAL ISSUES
‘Data-driven Humanities’ Contact Group, FNRS / Social Network
Analysis Researchers of the Middle Ages (SNARMA)
Sébastien de Valeriola, Département des Sciences de l’Information et
de la Communication (SIC), Université Libre de Bruxelles
Matthew H. Hammond, Department of History, King’s College London
The Impact of Source Gaps on the Structural Balance of
Networks: A Case Study of the 12th-Century Holy Roman Empire
(Language: English)
Clemens Beck, MEPHisto (Modelle, Erklärungen und Prozesse in den
historischen Wissenschaften), Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena
Using the Triangular Model to Visualise the Evolution of
Dynamic Networks: A Case Study of the Ypres Credit Networks
(Language: English)
Sébastien de Valeriola
Dealing with the Heterogeneity of Interpersonal Relationships
in the Middle Ages: A Few Lessons Learned from the Case of the
Investiture Struggle in Cambrai-Arras (Language: English)
Nicolas Ruffini-Ronzani, Département d’histoire, Université de Namur /
Archives de l’Etat de Namur
336
Michael Sadler Building: LG.15
MEDIEVALISM IN THE MODERN WORLD, II: PUBLIC ENGAGEMENT AND
NETWORKING
Eleanor Cox, Department of History, University of Nottingham
Edmund van der Molen, Department of History, University of
Nottingham
Mario Monicelli between the Middle Ages and Medievalism: The
Case of Bertoldo, Bertoldino, and Cacasenno (Language: English)
Andrea Feliziani, Dipartimento di Scienze storiche e orientalistiche,
Università di Bologna
Shifting Characterisations of Witchcraft in Western Pop Culture
(Language: English)
Ruthann Mowry, Rare Book & Manuscript Library, University of Illinois
at Urbana Champaign
Daring to Look at the Other through History: The Impact of
Dwarves’ Depiction in Medieval French Manuscripts on our
Society (Language: English)
Florent Réthoré, Department of French & Italian, University of
Colorado, Boulder
121
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 337-a:
Paper 337-b:
Paper 337-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 338-a:
Paper 338-b:
Paper 338-c:
122
337
Newlyn Building: GR.02
FROM I TO 1: USING HINDU-ARABIC INSTEAD OF ROMAN NUMERALS - A
CULTURAL SHIFT AND ITS INFLUENCE ON SCHOLARLY AND ECONOMIC
NETWORKS IN 14TH- AND 15TH-CENTURY VIENNA
Michaela Wiesinger, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
Julia Bruch, Historisches Institut, Universität zu Köln
1, 2, 3: Finger, Crutch, and Pig Tail - A Late Medieval Mnemonic
Verse on the Form of the Hindu-Arabic Numerals (Language:
English)
Christina Jackel, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
V, 6, Siben: The Usage of Latin and Arabic Numerals within the
Klosterneuburg Abbey Account Books (Language: English)
Sarah Deichstetter, Institut für Mittelalterforschung / Abteilung Schriftund Buchwesen, Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
9, X, 11: Numeratio and the Difficulty of Using Hindu-Arabic
Numerals (Language: English)
Michaela Wiesinger
338
Parkinson Building: Room B.11
IRISH SEA NETWORKS IN THE EARLY MIDDLE AGES
Irish Sea in the Middle Ages Research Network
Marios Costambeys, Department of History, University of Liverpool
Rebecca Thomas, School of History, Archaeology & Religion, Cardiff
University
Intellectual Networks between the Irish Sea World and
Continental Europe around 800: The Feast of All Saints
(Language: English)
Marios Costambeys
O Germane, Where Art Thou?: St Germanus of Auxerre in the
Earliest Insular Traditions (Language: English)
Eoghan Ahern, Institute of Irish Studies, University of Liverpool
Queens and Connections around the Irish Sea, 950-1050
(Language: English)
Charles Insley, Centre for Medieval & Early Modern Studies /
Department of History, School of Arts, Languages & Cultures,
University of Manchester
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Paper 339-b:
Paper 339-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 340-a:
Paper 340-b:
Paper 340-c:
Respondent:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 341-a:
Paper 341-b:
Paper 341-c:
Monday
Moderator:
Paper 339-a:
339
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.33
CONCEPTUALISING PILGRIMAGE, III: MATERIALITY AND PILGRIMAGE
History Research Centre, Manchester Metropolitan University
Philip A. Booth, Department of History, Politics & Philosophy,
Manchester Metropolitan University and Marci Freedman, Independent
Scholar, Toronto
John Jenkins, Centre for Pilgrimage Studies, University of York
The Cult of the Virgin Mary in Parish, Domestic, and Pilgrimage
Contexts: Comparative Analysis of Objects Associated with
Marian Devotion in Late Medieval London (Language: English)
Eliot Benbow, School of History, Queen Mary University of London
The Legacy of Parallel Pilgrimages East and West: Passports,
Souvenirs, and Guidebooks (Language: English)
Janice Farley, Department of Fine Arts, City University of New York
Pictorial / Pictographic Sources for Medieval Islamic Pilgrimage
(Language: English)
Sakina Halvadwala, Department of AICH & Archaeology, Deccan
College Post Graduate & Research Institute, Mumbai
340
Stage@leeds: Stage 2
RECRUITING ARMIES, KNIGHTS, AND MATERIAL CULTURE IN 14TH-CENTURY
ENGLAND
Society for Fourteenth-Century Studies
Helen Lacey, Mansfield College, University of Oxford
Helen Lacey
Possessing Arms and Armour in Late 14th-Century England
(Language: English)
Chris Woolgar, Department of History, University of Southampton
‘For the purpose of punishing the injuries inflicted upon the
king’s people’: Recruiting Armies for the Conflict in England,
1321-1322 (Language: English)
Andy King, Department of History, University of Southampton
A Close Run Thing?: The Battle of Burton Bridge, 1322 - A
Reassessment (Language: English)
Anthony Gross, Institute of Historical Research, University of London
Katherine J. Lewis, Department of Communication & Humanities,
University of Huddersfield
341
Newlyn Building: LG.01
RITUALS OF DYING AND CARE OF THE DEAD
IMC Programming Committee
Gerhard Jaritz, Department of Medieval Studies, Central European
University, Budapest/Wien
Dignitas non moritur: The Funeral Processions of Deceased
Medieval Kings (Language: English)
Balázs Danka, Faculty of Humanities & Social Sciences, University of
Szeged
Funerary Areas as a ‘Meeting Point’ in the North-Western Part
of the Iberian Peninsula (Language: English)
Laura Blanco-Torrejón, Departamento de Historia, Universidade de
Santiago de Compostela
Losing your Head: Representing the Dying Body in Medieval
Manuscripts - The Example of Judith Beheading Holofernes
(Language: English)
Estelle Guéville, Faculty of Medieval Studies, Yale University
123
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 342-a:
Paper 342-b:
Paper 342-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 343-a:
Paper 343-b:
Paper 343-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 344-a:
Paper 344-b:
Paper 344-c:
124
342
Esther Simpson Building: 3.02
TRAUMA AND RECOVERY, II: RECOVERY THROUGH CULTURAL AND
NARRATIVE FRAMEWORKS
Grace Elizabeth O’Duffy, St John’s College, University of Oxford
Adam Kelly, Faculty of English, University of Oxford
‘Some say that she had killed herself out of unhappiness’:
Granting Women Recovery in the Old Norse Family Sagas
(Language: English)
Grace Elizabeth O’Duffy
The Wanderer: Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder and Survivor
Guilt in Early English Warrior Culture (Language: English)
Chad White, Department of History, University of Louisville, Kentucky
Historical and Generational Trauma in the Matter of Arthur and
Native American Resistance Narratives: A Comparative
Exploration (Language: English)
Wallace Cleaves, Department of English, University of California,
Riverside
343
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.03
CREATIVE MOBILITY: NETWORKS AND NOMADIC POWER IN PRE-MODERN
EURASIA
Angus Russell, Faculty of Modern & Medieval Languages & Linguistics,
University of Cambridge
Catherine Holmes, Faculty of History, University of Oxford
Shi’is, Sayyids, and Local Elites in Mongol Iran (Language:
English)
Edith X. Chen, Exeter College, University of Oxford
Qarakhanid Networks (Language: English)
Dilnoza Duturaeva, Department of History, University of York
Mongol Legacies and Political Networks in 15th-Century Rus’
(Language: English)
Angus Russell
344
Newlyn Building: 1.02
VIKINGISM: VIKING AGE SCANDINAVIANS ENTANGLED IN MODERN BRITISH
AND NORTH AMERICAN MEDIA
Tom Grant, Instituut voor Cultuurwetenschappelijk Onderzoek,
Universiteit Utrecht
Johanna Hoorenman, Departement Talen, Literatuur en Communicatie,
Universiteit Utrecht
His / Her Viking Blood: Cultural Heritage, Citizenship, and
Belonging in Viking Romance Novels (Language: English)
Johanna Hoorenman
Neil Gaiman in the Context of 21st-Century Vikingism (Language:
English)
Tom Grant
Sigrid Undset and the ‘Mouldy Viking Romanticism’ of Wartime
America (Language: English)
Jonathan Hui, School of Humanities, Nanyang Technological University
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Paper 345-b:
Paper 345-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 346-a:
Paper 346-b:
Paper 346-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 347-a:
Paper 347-b:
Paper 347-c:
Monday
Moderator:
Paper 345-a:
345
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.04
TRACKING A WORKSHOP: RESEARCH INTO THE ARTISTIC PRODUCTION IN
LATE MEDIEVAL BOHEMIA
Lenka Panušková, Oddělení středověku, Ústav dějin umění, Akademie
věd České republiky, Praha
Lenka Panušková
The Annunciation of the Vyšší Brod Cycle and Its Copy: The
Question of Artistic Networks in Prague in the 1340s (Language:
English)
Lenka Panušková
Karlštejn Workshops from the Perspective of an Artistic
Commission (Language: English)
Barbora Uchytilová, Katolická teologická fakulta, Univerzita Karlova,
Praha
Book Illumination: The Art of Collaboration (Language: English)
Maria Theisen, Institut für Mittelalterforschung / Abteilung Schrift- und
Buchwesen, Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
346
Esther Simpson Building: 2.11
MUSIC, BORDERS, AND EXCHANGE
IMC Programming Committee
William T. Flynn, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Intertextuality and Intermelodicity in 13th-Century Music:
Crossing Repertoires and Re-Evaluating Networks (Language:
English)
Anne Ibos-Augé, Institut de recherche en Musicologie (IReMus - UMR
8223), Sorbonne Université, Paris
‘Arras into a Scottish Pub’: Borders of Language, Nation, and
Genre in a 13th-Century French Motet (Language: English)
Eleanor Price, Eastman School of Music, University of Rochester, New
York
When Charlemagne Meets Karalman: Reading Karalman
Charitam as a Transcultural Hybrid (Language: English)
Jemsy Claries Alex, Department of Comparative Literature &
Translation Studies, Ambedkar University, Delhi
347
Esther Simpson Building: 1.01
AMBRASER HELDENBUCH 2022: AN ENTANGLEMENT OF MEDIEVAL TEXTS,
DIGITALLY PROCESSED
Interdisziplinäres Zentrum für Mittelalter und Frühneuzeit (IZMF),
Paris-Lodron-Universität Salzburg
Siegrid Schmidt, Interdisziplinäres Zentrum für Mittelalter und
Frühneuzeit (IZMF), Paris-Lodron-Universität Salzburg
Jutta Baumgartner, Archiv der Erzdiözese, Salzburg
Collected or Composed: The Texts and Contexts in the Ambraser
Heldenbuch (Language: English)
Siegrid Schmidt
The First Entire Transcription of the Late Medieval Codex
Ambraser Heldenbuch (Language: English)
Aaron Tratter, Institut für Amerikastudien, Universität Innsbruck
A Reflection on Word Separation in Unique Texts of the
Ambraser Heldenbuch (Language: English)
Veronika Führer, Independent Scholar, Alkoven
125
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 348-a:
Paper 348-b:
Paper 348-c:
126
348
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.06
LATE ANTIQUE ECONOMIES OF AND BEYOND THE MEDIEVAL MEDITERRANEAN
IMC Programming Committee
Jaume Marcé Sánchez, Institut de Recerca en Cultures Medievals
(IRCVM), Universitat de Barcelona
The 6th-Century Monastic Economy according to the Letters of
Gregory the Great (Language: English)
Roy Flechner, School of History, University College Dublin
Financing the Conquest: The Economy of the Sasanian Conquest
of the Eastern Mediterranean, 610-630 (Language: English)
Khodadad Rezakhani, Leiden University Institute for Area Studies
(LIAS), Universiteit Leiden
Paying the Army during the Last Century of the Western Roman
Empire (Language: English)
Ralph Mathisen, Department of History, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 18.00-19.00
DINNER: 18.00-20.00
Take some time to enjoy your evening meal with colleagues.
Refectory 18.00-20.00
Monday
MONDAY 03 JULY
RECEPTION AT PARKINSON COURT
HOSTED BY
THE IMC ADMINISTRATION AND THE IMC EXHIBITORS
PARKINSON BUILDING: PARKINSON COURT
18.00-19.00
All delegates are very welcome to enjoy a drink to celebrate the opening of the IMC 2023 and
its Bookfair. The Bookfair will remain open until 19.30 to allow you time to meet and network
with colleagues, publishers, and booksellers.
127
The Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies coordinates, supports,
and promotes the wealth of resources and opportunities at Saint Louis
University for scholars and students of the medieval world. These include:
NEH Research Fellowships. Residential
fellowships are available throughout the
academic year for those who can make use of
Saint Louis University resources such as the
Vatican Film Library, the Rare Book and
Manuscript Collections, or the general
collections.
Ph.D. Programs in Medieval History, Medieval
Literature, Medieval Philosophy, and Medieval
Christianity.
St. Francis Xavier College Church,
Saint Louis University
Conferences, Lectures, and Symposia. Each year the Center sponsors
dozens of events of interest to medievalists. These include the Annual
Saint Louis Conference on Manuscript Studies, the CMRS Annual
Lecture, and the Crusades Studies Forum.
The Annual Symposium on
Medieval and Renaissance Studies
Our annual conference in June offers a convenient summer
venue in North America for scholars in all disciplines to
present papers, organize sessions, and participate in
roundtables. For more information go to smrs-slu.org.
To learn more visit us online at slu.edu/cmrs
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 19.00-20.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Speaker:
Details:
Monday
Introduction:
401
Esther Simpson Building: LG08
ANNUAL EARLY MEDIEVAL EUROPE LECTURE: URBAN ECOLOGIES OF THE
EARLY MIDDLE AGES (Language: English)
Early Medieval Europe
Caroline Goodson, Faculty of History / King's College, University of
Cambridge
Francesca Tinti, Departamento de Filología e Historia, Universidad del
País Vasco - Euskal Herriko Unibertsitatea, Vitoria-Gasteiz, and Charles
West, Department of History, University of Sheffield
Cities and urban life played key roles in the structures and dynamics of
life in early medieval Europe. Networks of political authorities, knowledge
formation, and production and exchange worked through urban sites.
City-living, and people’s experience of it, also determined certain social
forms. This lecture will examine the context of life in early medieval
cities, where people lived in close proximity to one another, among
particular plantlife and urban animals, with competition for resources and
collective interests at play.
The journal Early Medieval Europe provides an indispensable source of
information and debate on the history of Europe from the later Roman
Empire to the 11th century. The journal promotes the interdisciplinary
discussion of all aspects of the early Middle Ages across the entire
continent, from Iceland to the Mediterranean, as well as interactions
between Europe and places beyond it. Early Medieval Europe is unique
in its chronological, methodological, and geographical scope, and is
essential reading for students and scholars of the early medieval world.
Further information is available at
onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/14680254.
Please note that admission to this event will be on a first-come, firstserved basis as there will be no tickets. Please ensure that you arrive as
early as possible to avoid disappointment.
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Purpose:
403
Esther Simpson Building: 2.12
ISLANDS OF THE NEXT ATLANTIC: A FORUM ON FUTURES FOR NORTH
ATLANTIC EARLY MEDIEVAL STUDIES - A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
Islands of the North Atlantic (IONA)
Georgia Henley, Department of English, Saint Anselm College, New
Hampshire and Matthew Hussey, Department of English, Simon Fraser
University, British Columbia
Josh Davies, Department of English, King’s College London
In 2016, the ‘Seafaring: Islands of the North Atlantic’ (IONA) conference
in Denver tried out an experimental model for an academic gathering,
with workshops, labs, and seminars designed to break down the
institutional barriers between disciplines and fields. IONA expanded in
Vancouver in 2019, with focuses on Indigenous critical challenges to old
assumptions and on antiracist scholarship and teaching. The pandemic
put IONA in hibernation, but this open forum discussion, run by Josh
Davies and Matt Hussey (of the IONA steering committee), on its future
will explore questions of the role of a creative and scholarly organisation
in medieval studies, and more importantly, what forms that organisation
should take and what it should offer.
All IONA members and those interested are invited to discuss the future
of early medieval studies as a field and the best role for a small
grassroots group like IONA in that future.
129
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 19.00-20.00
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Purpose:
410
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.31
MEDIEVAL MARKET STRUCTURE: A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
Marie D’Aguanno Ito, Department of History & Art History, George
Mason University, Virginia
Marie D’Aguanno Ito
This round table session will further the discussion of issues considered
during the panel on medieval market structure, opening the dialogue to
a wider audience. The session considers conceptual and historical
approaches and perspectives, essential market features, examples from
research, and the future of market structure studies. The session will
seek the audience’s perspective, and encourage the development of a
framework for market structure studies. It seeks a common
understanding of key market features and the language used, both
medieval and modern. It will foster the development of a network and
resources for medieval market structure studies.
Participants include James Davis (Queen’s University Belfast), Antoni
Furio (Universitat de València), Tony Moore (University of Reading), and
Jaco Zuijderduijn (Lunds universitet).
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Purpose:
411
Esther Simpson Building: 2.11
NOBLESSE OBLIGE: ‘BARONS’ AND THE PUBLIC GOOD IN MEDIEVAL AFROTH
TH
EURASIA, 10 -14 CENTURIES - A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
Arts & Humanities Research Council
Gregory Lippiatt, Department of Archaeology & History, University of
Exeter
Gregory Lippiatt
The portrayal of non-royal elites in medieval historiography is often a
negative one, imagined as they are to be inherently ‘selfish’ actors
impeding the progressive creation of a benevolent and centralised state.
The Noblesse Oblige research network is interrogating this perception
through a transnational comparative investigation encompassing Europe,
Asia, and Africa. This round table discussion, composed of network
participants, will discuss the findings of the project so far and examine
some of the challenges and opportunities raised by the exploration of the
political role of ‘barons’ across different conceptions of ‘commonwealth’.
Participants include Amira K. Bennison (University of Cambridge),
Maximilian Lau (University of Oxford), Angus Russell (University of
Cambridge), and Adam Simmons (Nottingham Trent University).
130
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 19.00-20.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Monday
Moderator:
Purpose:
414
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.03
MEDIEVAL CENTRAL EUROPE ENTANGLED: THE OXFORD HANDBOOK OF
MEDIEVAL CENTRAL EUROPE - A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
Medieval Central Europe Research Network (MECERN)
Nada Zečević, Centre for the Study of the Balkans / Department of
History, Goldsmiths, University of London
Nada Zečević
Medieval Central Europe is a region of dynamic interaction that
connected its core kingdoms (Hungary, Bohemia, and Poland) with the
shores of the Baltic, Adriatic, and the Black Sea, entangling it, at the
same time, with the European West and other medieval cultures. Longlasting, but frequently reshaped by modern geo-strategic agendas, these
interactions were often neglected by historiography and public
knowledge, thus prompting the region’s stereotypical image as marginal
and ‘forgotten’. The round table discusses the diversity of the region’s
entanglements revealed by the recently published Oxford Handbook of
Medieval Central Europe, aiming at prompting further interdisciplinary
collaborative debate about this region and its role in the global medieval
world.
Participants include Marie-Madeleine de Cevins (Université Rennes 2),
Emilia Jamroziak (University of Leeds), Gerhard Jaritz (Central European
University, Budapest/Wien), Gábor Klaniczay (Central European
University, Budapest/Wien), Micheala Antonín Malaníková (Palacký
University, Olomouc), Beata Możejko (Uniwersytet Gdański), and Daniel
Ziemann (Central European University, Budapest/Wien).
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Purpose:
416
Esther Simpson Building: 2.09
THE CRUSADING MOVEMENT IN THE HOLY ROMAN EMPIRE: DEVELOPMENTS
AND DESIDERATA - A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
Northern Network for the Study of the Crusades
Alan V. Murray, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Alan V. Murray
Although Germany produced numerous crusaders and pilgrims, the place
of the empire within the crusade movement has been relatively little
studied in scholarship until recently. Despite the appearance of important
monographs, conference proceedings, and exhibition catalogues over the
last two decades, there is still a need for investigations of many key
personalities and sources as well as particular regions and social groups.
In this round table discussion, historians who have produced recent
monographs or source translations relating to Germany and the crusades
will discuss important trends in research and highlight desiderata for
future scholarship. The round table discussion invites further
contributions and questions on all relevant topics, including: networks of
crusaders and the wider political, social, and economic framework of
crusading; regional origins and social status of crusaders, their
motivation and preparations (vows, regencies, pious donations, finance);
the effects of crusade participation on the families and regions of origins
of crusaders within the Empire (e.g. religious foundations and acquisition
of relics); narratives in Latin and German: crusade appeals and sermons,
historiographical, hagiographical, and literary texts and their authors.
Participants include Daniel Franke (Richard Bland College of William &
Mary, Virginia), Graham A. Loud (University of Leeds), Jason T. Roche
(Manchester Metropolitan University), and Stefan Tebruck (JustusLiebig-Universität Gießen).
131
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 19.00-20.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Purpose:
419
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.09
JEWISH / NON-JEWISH ENTANGLEMENTS AND NETWORKS, IV: A ROUND
TABLE DISCUSSION
Martin Buber Society of the Humanities & Social Sciences
Andreas Lehnertz, Universität Trier
Andreas Lehnertz
Economic, institutional, and social interactions between Jews and
Christians were manifold. The crowded living situation of medieval
European cities made such encounters a daily life experience. In this
round table discussion we will sum up our discussions from the three
sessions on Jewish / Non-Jewish Entanglements and Networks. You are
invited to join us for further discussion beyond the papers delivered.
Participants include Eveline Brugger (Institut für jüdische Geschichte
Österreichs, St Pölten), Alex Novikoff (Kenyon College, Ohio), Irven
Resnick (University of Tennessee, Chattanooga), Paola Tartakoff
(Rutgers University, New Jersey), and Birgit Wiedl (Institut für jüdische
Geschichte Österreichs, St Pölten).
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Purpose:
420
Maurice Keyworth Building: G.02
LIVING ON THE EDGE: TRANSGRESSION, EXCLUSION, AND PERSECUTION IN
THE MIDDLE AGES - A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
School of History, Queen Mary University of London / Universidad del
País Vasco - Euskal Herriko Unibertsitatea
Delfi I. Nieto-Isabel, School of History, Queen Mary University of
London
Laura Miquel Milian, Departamento de Filología e Historia, Universidad
del País Vasco - Euskal Herriko Unibertsitatea, Vitoria-Gasteiz
This round table discussion shares the title with an edited collection
published in September 2022, and its goal is to present the different
perspectives involved in producing a volume that focuses on defining
what the margins of medieval society were, on who defined them, and
on the consequences of challenging those margins. To do so, the round
table discussion will gather the editors as well as authors, reviewers,
readers, and publishers to start a conversation on the direction of current
studies on medieval transgression.
Participants include Michael Bailey (Iowa State University), Rachel Ernst
(Georgia State University, Atlanta), Sean L. Field (University of
Vermont), Robert Forke (De Gruyter, Berlin), Delfi Nieto-Isabel (Queen
Mary University of London), and Stamatia Noutsou (Independent
Scholar, Købnhavn).
132
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 19.00-20.00
Session:
Title:
Monday
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Purpose:
421
Esther Simpson Building: 3.01
MYSTICAL NETWORKING: FOUNDING AND SUSTAINING SCHOLARLY
NETWORKS IN MEDIEVAL RELIGION - A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
Mystical Theology Network / Mysticism & Lived Experience Network
Lydia Shahan, Committee on the Study of Religion, Harvard University
Lydia Shahan
This round table is a joint initiative of the coordinators of the Mystical
Theology Network, founded in 2011, and the Mysticism & Lived
Experience Network, founded in 2020. The participants will stage a
conversation about founding and sustaining scholarly networks and
academic communities both within and outside the bounds of the
university, drawing on their own experiences, achievements, and
challenges. While the conversation will consider how the study of
medieval mystical texts, traditions, and figures has lent itself particularly
well to these collaborations, the discussion will be broadly oriented
towards fostering conversations and relationships across disciplinary
borders, reframing the idea of ‘networking’ from transaction to
community building.
Participants include John Arblaster (Universiteit Antwerpen), Einat
Klafter (Tel Aviv University), Amanda Langley (Queen Mary University of
London), and Louise Nelstrop (Protestantse Theologische Universiteit,
Amsterdam / University of Oxford).
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Purpose:
431
Esther Simpson Building: 1.08
PERSPECTIVES ON EDUCATIONAL COMMUNITIES IN THE HIGH MIDDLE AGES:
FOUR NEW BOOKS - A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
Babette Hellemans, Afdeling Geschiedenis, Rijksuniversiteit Groningen
Sita Steckel, Historisches Seminar, Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität
Münster
This round table discussion, presented by four authors who recently
finished a monograph on cultures of education in the High Middle Ages,
concerns the diversity of learning, power structures of knowledge,
relationships between laypeople and monks / nuns, and the
interrelatedness between men, women, and children. The representation
of the long 12th-century Renaissance as a key reference to ideologies
about individuality has triggered a static image of this period as the
crème-de-la-crème of intellectual medieval history, which has little to do
with the diverse and vibrant emancipatory forces that took place in
education. Our panel will address these kinds of representations as well
as their impact on teaching and research.
Participants include Babette Hellemans (Rijksuniversiteit Groningen),
Micol Long (Università degli Studi di Padova), Emily Ward (University of
Edinburgh), and Claudia Wittig (Martin-Luther-Universität HalleWittenberg).
133
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 19.00-20.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Purpose:
435
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.32
NETWORK ANALYSIS FOR MEDIEVALISTS, IV: DO WE NEED A PROPERLY
HISTORICAL NETWORK ANALYSIS? - A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
‘Data-Driven Humanities’ Contact Group
Sébastien de Valeriola, Département des Sciences de l’Information et
de la Communication (SIC), Université Libre de Bruxelles
Nicolas Ruffini-Ronzani, Département d’histoire, Université de Namur /
Archives de l’Etat de Namur
The purpose of this round table discussion is to discuss the need for a
properly historical network analysis. The main question will therefore be:
are the tools developed for other disciplines, and in particular for other
types of data, necessarily suitable for the study of historical dossiers? Is
a ‘one size fits all’ approach appropriate, or should existing tools be
developed, adapted, or particularised? Another similar question
submitted to the participants concerns the particular nature of medieval
sources.
Participants include Sébastien de Valeriola (Université Libre de
Bruxelles), Robert Gramsch-Stehfest (Friedrich-Schiller-Universität
Jena), Isabelle Rosé (Université Rennes 2), and Nicolas Ruffini-Ronzani
(Université de Namur / Archives de l’Etat de Namur).
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Purpose:
437
Esther Simpson Building: 2.07
NETWORKS OF NON-TRADITIONAL HEALING AND KNOWLEDGE: A ROUND
TABLE DISCUSSION
Medica: Society for the Study of Healing in the Middle Ages
Anna M. Peterson, Facultad de Medicina, Universidad de Cantabria
Anna M. Peterson
Acknowledging that the study of pre-modern medicine has often focused
on orthodox knowledge and formal networks of communication, this
round table discussion seeks to focus on informal networks of care and
methods of healing not traditionally included in studies of medieval and
early modern health and healing.
Participants include Montserrat Cabré i Pairet (Universidad de Cantabria),
Nichola Harris (State University of New York, Ulster), Fiona Lillian Knight
(University of Cambridge), Joshua Rice (Royal Holloway, University of
London), and Kristin Uscinski (State University of New York, Purchase).
134
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 19.00-20.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Monday
Purpose:
439
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.33
CONCEPTUALISING PILGRIMS AND PILGRIMAGE, C. 300-1600, IV: A
ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
History Research Centre, Manchester Metropolitan University
Marci Freedman, Independent Scholar, Toronto
Philip A. Booth, Department of History, Politics & Philosophy,
Manchester Metropolitan University
The purpose of this round table discussion is to investigate the extent
that the terms ‘pilgrim’ and ‘pilgrimage’ as concepts in the Middle Ages
changed over time, in space, and between religions. Often, there is a
huge gulf between what motivated individuals to undertake pious travel,
what they were doing, and what they were trying to achieve. Not only
did pilgrim experiences, actions, and definitions change across time and
space, but the spaces and places which served as the goal of a medieval
pilgrim were also transient, evolving, and sometimes completely
intangible. Here we place ‘pilgrims’ and ‘pilgrimage’ at the centre of the
discussion to see how these terms are reflected in language, materiality,
the development of pilgrimage sites and routes, etc. Doing so will help
to better understand what these concepts encompass, considering everincreasing desire to revive the act of pilgrimage in the contemporary
world. This round table discussion will serve as a summary of a series of
panels held during the IMC, as well as a follow-up to an international
conference held at Manchester Metropolitan University in July 2022. It
will discuss current trends and debates, as well as future trajectories for
researching medieval pilgrimage.
Participants include Kajal Bawa (Department of History, University of
Delhi), Philip A. Booth (Manchester Metropolitan University), Marci
Freedman (Independent Scholar, Toronto), Kathryn Hurlock (Manchester
Metropolitan University), John Jenkins (University of York), and Andrew
T. Jotischky (Royal Holloway, University of London).
135
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 19.00-20.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Purpose:
441
Esther Simpson Building: 2.08
(RE)BUILDING NETWORKS FOR POSTGRADUATE, EARLY CAREER, AND
INDEPENDENT SCHOLARS IN EARLY MEDIEVAL ENGLISH STUDIES - A ROUND
TABLE DISCUSSION
TOEBI: Teachers of Old English in Britain & Ireland
Francisco J. Rozano-García, School of English & Creative Arts,
University of Galway
Catherine A. M. Clarke, Institute of Historical Research, University of
London
This session brings together scholars from a broad range of different
countries, institutions, and backgrounds to discuss the challenges of
building and re-establishing scholarly networks and academic
communities in the face of the current moment of deep reflection
undergone by the field of early medieval English studies. By addressing
issues such as isolation, lack of resources, lack of representation, or
miscommunication between scholars in precarious positions and
academic institutions and organisations, this round table discussion is a
fundamental first step towards building a more inclusive and dynamic
academic network based on collaboration, collegiality, and mutual
support, which might potentially lead to the creation of new initiatives
and collaborative effort across professional organisations.
Participants include Michael Bintley (Birkbeck, University of London),
Rachel A. Burns (University of Oxford / University of St Andrews), Alison
Elizabeth Kililea (Independent Scholar, Cork), Sergio López Martínez
(Universidad de Oviedo), Elise Louviot (Université de Reims ChampagneArdenne), and Claire Poynton-Smith (Trinity College Dublin).
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Purpose:
442
Esther Simpson Building: 3.02
TRAUMA AND RECOVERY, III: A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
Grace Elizabeth O’Duffy, St John’s College, University of Oxford
Adam Kelly, Faculty of English, University of Oxford
This round table discussion will feature all the participants from the twopart ‘Trauma and Recovery’ series of sessions. By assembling the
speakers of such a diverse array of papers, we seek to discuss both
medieval literature as a site for representations of trauma and recovery,
and the means by which these representations are approached in the
academic field. We want to ask and begin to answer questions about the
treatment of such a sensitive topic as an academic subject, and how we
as academics ought to think and write about trauma in a way that is
academically sound and thorough, while also delicate, sensitive, and
thoughtful.
Participants include Natasha Bradley (University of Oxford), Wallace
Cleaves (University of California, Riverside), Adam Kelly (University of
Oxford), Grace Elizabeth O’Duffy (University of Oxford), Chad White
(University of Louisville, Kentucky), and Pamela Yee (University of
Rochester, New York).
136
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: 19.00-20.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Monday
Moderator:
Purpose:
444
Esther Simpson Building: 1.01
PODCASTS, BLOGS, AND VIDEO ESSAYS: DIGITAL MEDIEVAL STUDIES FOR
THE MASSES? - A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
Coding Codices
Hannah Busch, Instituut voor Geschiedenis, Universiteit Leiden /
Instituut voor Nederlandse Geschiedenis, Koninklijke Nederlandse
Akademie van Wetenschappen, Amsterdam
Hannah Busch
Digital medieval studies as a subfield of digital humanities is
characterised by various disciplines as well as a high number of
international collaborations, and is populated by scholars with different
educational backgrounds: from scholars trained as medievalists who
implemented digital components only during their postgrad studies to
scholars that approached medieval studies through their technical skills.
This development in medieval studies inspires different approaches of
communication between scholars and towards the public, such as
podcasts, blog posts, and video essays.
This round table discussion brings together scholars from this domain to
discuss their own experiences with the above mentioned formats. How
has this changed their own views on scholarship and scientific outreach?
How can scholars benefit from participating in those formats in terms of
public outreach and network building? Does the digital turn in medieval
studies result in an emerging importance of public outreach and science
communication for both traditional scholarship and digital humanities?
Participants include Sebastian Dows-Miller (University of Oxford),
Ségolène Gence (University of Kent), Tessa Gengnagel (Universität zu
Köln), Estelle Guéville (Yale University), Catrin Haberfield (Stanford
University), and James B. Harr (Christian Brothers University,
Tennessee).
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Purpose:
445
Virtual Session
THE INTERNATIONAL MEDIEVALIST: PERSPECTIVES ON RESEARCHING,
TEACHING, AND NETWORKING IN THE AGE OF GLOBALISATION - A ROUND
TABLE DISCUSSION
Graduate Student Committee, Medieval Academy of America
Maria S. Thomas, Afdeling Kunst en Cultuur, Geschiedenis, Oudheid,
Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Maria S. Thomas
This session will bring together medievalists based at institutions around
the world to discuss their experiences at developing their careers and
fostering professional networks locally and internationally. What are
some of the challenges that they face in networking and collaborating
with medievalists within and outside their countries? How helpful are
social media (Twitter, Facebook) and forums such as academia.edu and
LinkedIn in establishing meaningful connections? How easy or difficult is
it to translate social connections into collaborations and multinational /
interdisciplinary projects? How have domestic and international
discussions and developments informed your research methodologies
and teaching experiences?
Participants include Muntazir Ali (University of Delhi / Archaeological
Survey of India), Elizabeth Liendo (Guilford College / Shanghai School
International Division), and Özlem Eren (University of WisconsinMadison).
137
SAVE THE DATE
October 3-5, 2024
Saint Louis University - Madrid Campus
Madrid, Spain
MONDAY 03 JULY 2023: AFTER 19.00
MONDAY 03 JULY
RECEPTION
HOSTED BY
UNIVERSITY HOUSE: GREAT WOODHOUSE ROOM
19.00-20.00
Monday
CENTRE FOR MEDIEVAL ARTS & RITUALS, UNIVERSITY OF CYPRUS
The Network for Medieval Arts & Rituals (NetMAR; a H2020 project, grant agreement no.
951875) cordially invites all IMC delegates for a glass of wine or non-alcoholic drink. NetMAR is
a new, international, and cross-disciplinary network and looks forward to seeing existing
members and including new ones.
MONDAY 03 JULY
RECEPTION
HOSTED BY
CENTRE FOR MEDIEVAL RESEARCH, UNIVERSITY OF LEICESTER
UNIVERSITY HOUSE: LITTLE WOODHOUSE ROOM
20.00-21.00
IMC delegates are warmly invited to join staff and students of the University of Leicester’s Centre
for Medieval Research for drinks and nibbles, and to find out more about our current research
projects.
MONDAY 03 JULY
RECEPTION
HOSTED BY
EARLY MEDIEVAL EUROPE
ESTHER SIMPSON BUILDING: FOYER
20.00-21.00
The annual Early Medieval Europe lecture is followed by a reception, sponsored by the journal.
Please come along to meet the editors and other researchers working in the early medieval
field.
139
SISMEL · EDIZIONI DEL GALLUZZO
www.sismel.it · order@sismel.it
MICROLOGUS
Nature, Sciences and Medieval Societies
TEXTS AND STUDIES
CASSIODORO, Complexiones
SERIES
MICHELE SAVONAROLA, De balneis et termis
Ytalie
Edited by S. PASALODOS REQUEJO · PB · € 94,00
Edited by P. GATTI. Translation by M. DE
LAZZER · HB · € 66,00
GUIDO FABA, Gemma purpurea
Edited by M. VESCOVO · HB · € 58,00
ANTONELLA SANNINO, Reading William of
Auvergne · PB · € 36,00
STAVROS LAZARIS, Le Physiologus grec.
I. La réécriture de l’histoire naturelle antique · PB · € 40,00
II. Donner à voir la nature ·
PB
· € 85,00
ALBERTINO MUSSATO, De lite inter Naturam
et Fortunam
Edited by B. FIACCHINI · HB · € 76,00
BARTHOLOMEUS, Glose super Isagogen
Iohannitii
Edited by F. WALLIS · PB · € 102,00
JOURNAL
31 (2023), Philosophy, Sciences
and Arts at the Court of Robert of
Anjou
PB · € 90,00
- 2023, Aristotle’s De Sensu in
the Latin Tradition, 1250-1650
PB · € 90,00
SPECIAL ISSUE
DANTE ALIGHIERI
ATTI DEGLI INCONTRI SULLE
OPERE DI DANTE
IV. De vulgari eloquentia ·
Monarchia. Edited by C. BOLOGNA and F. FURLAN · PB · € 54,00
V. Commedia · Inferno. Edited by P. ALLEGRETTI, M. CICCUTO, G. LEDDA · PB · € 54,00
***
Il latino di Dante
Essays ed. by P. CHIESA and F. FAVERO · PB · €
34,00
Carmina Ratisponensia
Edited by M. PAVONI · PB · € 42,00
IL CICLO DI GUIRON LE
COURTOIS. ROMANZI IN
DEL SECOLO XIII
PROSA
Roman de Meliadus.Parte prima. Edited by L. CADIOLI and S. LECOMTE · HB ·
€ 80,00
Roman de Meliadus. Parte seconda.
Edited by S. LECOMTE · HB · € 95,00
REPERTORIES
MEDIAEVAL LATIN TEXTS AND
THEIR TRANSMISSION
Te.Tra 7
Edited by L. CASTALDI and V.
MATTALONI
HB · € 90,00
M I R A B I L E . Digital Archives for Medieval Culture
w w w. m i r a b i l e w e b . i t
150,000 Manuscripts · 19,750 Authors · 396,000 Bibliographic Records
140
Events & Excursions: Tuesday 04 July
IMC Bookfair
Parkinson Building, 08.30-18.30
Bringing together publishers, editors,
authors and readers. The IMC Bookfair is
one of the highlights of the programme.
See pp. 432-433 for more details.
Second-Hand & Antiquarian Bookfair
Leeds University Union, 08.00-17.00
Performances
Ludus Danielis: Music and Tales
from the Play, Stage@leeds: Stage 1,
20.30-22.00
Performed by Trouvère and featuring
gourgeous melodies as well as being a
great bit of story-telling!
Workshops
Highlights from Leeds University
Library Special Collections, Parkinson
Building: Treasures of the Brotherton
Gallery, 12.00-14.00
Events
Dante: Libri Nuovi - Eight Artists’
Books, Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.31,
13.00-14.00
Join us for a drop-in session. Special
Collections staff will be on hand with a
selection of medieval highlights from the
collections for delegates to examine close
up.
A presentation exploring new works
produced in response to Dante’s life and
poetry.
How
to
Create
Your
Podcast,
Stage 3, 19.00-20.30
Medieval Open Mic Night, Emmanuel
Centre: Claire Chapel, 20.00-22.00
No actual microphone (that would be
silly!). Share anything you have always
wanted to share, or simply sit back and
enjoy a variety of fare from poetry to
music, song, sagas, and more.
Excursions
and
Monetize
Stage@leeds:
Tuesday
Browse antiquarian, rare and second-hand
books from a wide variety of booksellers.
See p. 434 for more details.
Danièle Cybulskie and Peter Konieczny
explain hw to create and monetize your
own medieval-themed podcast.
Bow & Blade Live!,
Stage 3, 20.30-21.30
Stage@leeds:
Kelly DeVries and Michael Livingston
record a live episode of their podcast
about battles, seiges, and military history.
Byland Battlefield, Departs Parkinson
Steps 13.00
‘Their thread of life is spun’: A
Spinning Workshop, University House:
Beechgrove Room, 19.00-21.00
Visit the site of this significant battle in
the Scottish War of Independence. Led by
author Harry Pearson.
Learn the basics of spinning wool on
a hand spindle. Led by Carey Fleiner
(University of Winchester).
For more information on these and all other events, excursions, workshops,
performances and other activities taking place during IMC 2023, please visit
pp. 393-431.
141
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
The IMC Bookfair is open 08.30-18.30 in Parkinson Court: Make sure you pop in to
meet with publishers, browse their latest titles, network, discuss future projects, and, of
course, access exclusive IMC discounts! See pp. 432-433 for full details.
SECOND-HAND AND ANTIQUARIAN BOOKFAIR
LEEDS UNIVERSITY UNION: FOYER
08.00-17.00
Delegates and the public are invited to browse second-hand and antiquarian volumes from
across medieval studies and related disciplines at our three-day specialist Second-Hand and
Antiquarian Bookfair. The following booksellers will be among those exhibiting:
Bennett & Kerr Books - Old, rare, and scholarly books on medieval studies, including Late
Antiquity and Byzantium, early medieval English and Old Norse, manuscript studies, art,
architecture, and archaeology.
Chevin Books - Second-hand and rare books, specialising in works on history, military,
arts, and Yorkshire.
Donald Munro - British and European history, church and vernacular architecture,
ecclesiology, archaeology and settlement.
Matthew Butler Books - Medieval history, architectural history, and
archaeology books.
Northern Herald Books - Scholarly books on medieval studies with general economic and
social history.
Pinwell Books - All aspects of the Middle Ages from archaeology to religion, as well as
Roman Britain, Northumbria & Scotland.
Salsus Books - A large stock of academic books, including medieval history, particularly
Byzantine studies and liturgy.
Unsworth Antiquarian Booksellers - Rare and scholarly books on the humanities, with
an antiquarian focus on early printing, classical Antiquity, the Middle Ages and Renaissance,
and British history and topography.
Further exhibitors will be confirmed via the IMC website, virtual event platform, and IMC
2023 app.
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 501-a:
Paper 501-b:
Paper 501-c:
142
501
Parkinson Building: Room B.22
EPIC WOMEN: WOMEN’S VOICES IN EARLY MEDIEVAL ENGLISH LITERATURE
Medieval & Early Modern Studies, Flinders University, Adelaide
Erin Sebo, Department of English, Creative Writing & Australian Studies,
Flinders University, Adelaide
Erin Sebo
More Than an Exemplar: The Lives of Holy Women in Early
Medieval England (Language: English)
Kiera Donnelly, School of History, Australian National University,
Canberra
Why Are Women’s Voices Muted in Beowulf? (Language: English)
M. Wendy Hennequin, Department of Languages, Literature &
Philosophy, Tennessee State University
Entanglements, Secular, and Spiritual: The Old English Elene and
Judith as Mediating Earthly and Spiritual Tensions (Language:
English)
Cassandra Schilling, College of Humanities, Arts & Social Sciences,
Flinders University, Adelaide
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 502-a:
Paper 502-b:
Paper 502-c:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 503-a:
Paper 503-b:
Paper 503-c:
503
Michael Sadler Building: LG.16
POWER AND RELIGIOUS REALITY ON THE PERIPHERY OF THE MEDIEVAL
LATIN AND ORTHODOX WORLD
IMC Programming Committee
Piotr Oliński, Wydział Nauk Historycznych, Uniwersytet Mikołaja
Kopernika, Toruń
Religious Warfare and Rulership on the Periphery of Medieval
Latin Europe (Language: English)
Dušan Zupka, Institute of History, Slovak Academy of Sciences,
Bratislava
Female Sanctity and Virginity: St Kinga of Poland as Portrayed
in Her Vitae (Language: English)
Karolina Morawska, Wydział Historii, Uniwersytet Warszawski
Small Ruler, Big Network: Alexios Slav in the Rhodopes, 12071230 (Language: English)
Francesco Dall’Aglio, Institute for Historical Studies, Bulgarian Academy
of Sciences, Sofia
Tuesday
Session:
Title:
502
Clarendon Building: 2.08
ROMANISLAM, I: IMPERIAL STRUCTURES AND REPRESENTATIONS
RomanIslam - Center for Comparative Empire & Transcultural Studies
Paulo Pachá, RomanIslam - Center for Comparative Empire &
Transcultural Studies, Universität Hamburg / Instituto de História,
Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro
Paulo Pachá
‘The Gangs of Numidia’: Creating Cohesion in North African
Tribal Societies, 3rd Century BCE - 7th Century CE (Language:
English)
Daniel Syrbe, Historisches Institut, FernUniversität in Hagen
From the Roman Pons to Islamic Qanṭara (Language: English)
Joud Nassan Agha, Asien-Afrika Institut / RomanIslam - Center for
Comparative Empire & Transcultural Studies, Universität Hamburg
Visigothic Ariminianism: Universal Christian Confession or
Fossilized Cult Tradition? (Language: English)
Volker Menze, Department of Medieval Studies, Central European
University, Budapest/Wien
143
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 504-a:
Paper 504-b:
Paper 504-c:
Paper 504-d:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 505-a:
Paper 505-b:
Paper 505-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 506-a:
Paper 506-b:
144
504
Esther Simpson Building: 2.09
THE SPOILS OF WAR: PLUNDER AND PROFIT IN MEDIEVAL WARFARE
Northern Network for the Study of the Crusades
Connor Wilson, Department of History, Politics & Philosophy,
Manchester Metropolitan University
John France, Department of History, Swansea University
Money, Mendicancy, and Mercenaries in the Early Crusading Era,
c. 1100-c. 1200 (Language: English)
Matthew Bennett, School of History & Archaeology, University of
Winchester
The Role of Plunder in Portuguese Warfare in North Africa,
1415-1521 (Language: English)
Paulo Alexandre Mesquita Dias, Instituto de Estudos Medievais (IEM),
Universidade Nova de Lisboa
Battlefield Spoils and Looted Treasure in the Early Latin
Narratives of the First Crusade (Language: English)
Connor Wilson
From Umayyad Madinat al-Zahra to Almohad Seville: The
Plunder and Reuse of Andalusi Capitals (Language: English)
Nausheen Hoosein, Department of History of Art, University of York
505
Esther Simpson Building: LG08
CLAVIS CANONUM, I
Monumenta Germaniae Historica, München / Clavis canonum Project
Christof Rolker, Zentrum für Mittelalterstudien (ZEMAS) / Institut für
Geschichtswissenschaften und Europäische Ethnologie, Otto-FriedrichUniversität Bamberg
Danica Summerlin, Department of History, University of Sheffield
Doing Canon Law History in the Digital Ages: The Clavis
Canonum Database and Its Wiki (Language: English)
Clemens Radl, Monumenta Germaniae Historica, München
The Salzburg Codex in an Intellectual Network of Canon Law
Textual Production in the Long 10th Century (Language: English)
Benjamin Wand, Center for Medieval & Renaissance Studies, Saint
Louis University, Missouri
Sancta sex, septem, octo: The List of Ecumenical Councils in the
Middle Ages, 6th to 16th Centuries (Language: English)
Christof Rolker
506
Esther Simpson Building: 1.08
THE ORIGINS, LIFE, AND AFTERLIFE OF BYZANTINE ARTISTIC FORMULAE
IMC Programming Committee
Eva Cersovsky, Abteilung für Mittelalterliche Geschichte, Universität zu
Köln
Riflessi di Bisanzio: La decorazione in terraccotta nell’area
ravennate (Language: Italiano)
Paola Novara, Museo Nazionale di Ravenna
Models and Themes of Norman-Byzantine Visual Culture in Late
Gothic Sicily (Language: English)
Licia Buttà, Departement Història i Història de l’Art, Universitat Rovira i
Virgili, Tarragona
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
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Paper 507-a:
Paper 507-b:
Paper 507-c:
Paper 508-a:
Paper 508-b:
Paper 508-c:
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Paper 509-a:
Paper 509-b:
Paper 509-c:
508
Newlyn Building: GR.02
TASTE AND DISGUST IN LATE ANTIQUITY, I: ART AND SENSATION
Postgraduate & Early-Career Late Antiquity Network
Ella Kirsh, Department of Classics, Brown University
Henry Anderson, Department of Classics, Ancient History, Religion &
Theology, University of Exeter
Beyond Taste: The Integration of Speech into the Sensorium in
the Post-Roman West (Language: English)
John Merrington, All Souls College, University of Oxford
Hygiene, Shame, and Disgust in Early Christian Bathing Culture
(Language: English)
Liza Davis, Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology & the Ancient World,
Brown University
Reccopolis in the 6th and 21st Centuries: A Taste for Empire, Late
Antique and Modern (Language: English)
Paul Aste, Department of History, Brown University
Tuesday
Session:
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507
Esther Simpson Building: 2.12
LEARNED MASCULINITIES
Fiona Lillian Knight, Faculty of History, University of Cambridge and
Savannah Pine, Independent Scholar, El Paso, Texas
Kirsty Day, School of History, Classics & Archaeology, University of
Edinburgh
The New Man and the Male Zeal for Learning: Anthropological
Thought, Education, and Gender in the Monastic Ideals of St
Odo of Cluny and St Abbo of Fleury (Language: English)
Karolina Białas, Wydział Nauk o Kulturze i Sztuce, Uniwersytet
Warszawski
Our Mother the University: Familial Structures and Masculine
Models in the Medieval University (Language: English)
Elena Rossi, Magdalen College, University of Oxford
Vulnerability, Knowledge, and Masculinity in Three Late
Medieval Gynecological Tracts (Language: English)
Sarah Friedman, Department of English, University of WisconsinMadison
509
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.33
TAMING THE SAINTS IN THE EARLY MIDDLE AGES
Network for the Study of Late Antique & Early Medieval Monasticism
Jim Walker, Historisches Seminar, Universität Zürich
Anne-Marie Helvétius, Département d’Histoire, Université Paris 8,
Vincennes-Saint-Denis
Gregory of Tours and His Holy Troublemakers (Language: English)
Albrecht Diem, Department of History, Syracuse University, New York
Going Rogue: Priests, Authority, and Cultic Innovation
(Language: English)
Yaniv Fox, Department of General History, Bar-Ilan University, Ramat
Gan
Dubious Priests and Wild Hermits: Taming the Rural Clergy
(Language: English)
Jim Walker
145
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
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Paper 510-a:
Paper 510-b:
Paper 510-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 511-a:
Paper 511-b:
Session:
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Paper 512-a:
Paper 512-b:
Paper 512-c:
146
510
Newlyn Building: LG.02
EVERYDAY ENTANGLEMENTS: DEBT AND OBLIGATION, 1200-1500, I
Sarah McKeagney, Department of History, University of York
Elizabeth Hardman, Department of History, Bronx Community College,
City University of New York
Social Networks Set Up or Revealed by Fidejussiones, Plegeriae,
and Cross Guarantees in Northern France, 12th-14th Centuries
(Language: English)
Thomas Lacomme, Département d’Histoire, Université Paris Nanterre
Reckoning and Credit in 15th-Century England (Language: English)
Tom Johnson, Department of History, University of York
Credit Risks: Insolvency and Usury in Late Medieval Italy
(Language: English)
So Nakaya, Graduate School of Humanities, Osaka University
511
Esther Simpson Building: 2.11
MEDIEVAL AFRICAN NETWORKS, I: CHRISTIAN ETHIOPIA
2022 Dan David Prize Funding
Verena Krebs, Historisches Institut, Ruhr-Universität Bochum
Andrea Achi, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
Embellished Ethiopian Royal Churches with Mediterranean
World Signs (Language: English)
Deresse Ayenachew Woldetsadik, Institut de Recherches et d’Études
sur les Mondes Arabes et Musulman (IREMAM - UMR 7310), AixMarseille Université / Department of History & Heritage Management,
Debre Berhan University, Ethiopia
Royal Ideology in Christian Ethiopian Chronicles of the 15 th and
16th Centuries (Language: English)
Felege-Selam Solomon Yirga, Department of History, University of
Tennessee, Knoxville
512
Parkinson Building: Room B.09
NETWORKS AND ENTANGLEMENTS IN MEDIEVAL WALES, I: NETWORKS IN
POLITICS AND ECONOMICS
Mortimer History Society
Amy Reynolds, School of History, Law & Social Sciences, Bangor
University
Amy Reynolds
Hostages in Medieval Wales (Language: English)
Rebecca Thomas, School of History, Archaeology & Religion, Cardiff
University
Supplying Both Sides: What Did the Glyndwr Rebellion Take
from England? (Language: English)
Adam Chapman, Victoria County History, Institute of Historical
Research, University of London
A Network of Cattle Ranches: The Vaccary Enclosure System in
Early Medieval Wales (Language: English)
Caroline Bourne, Graduate Centre for Medieval Studies, University of
Reading
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 513-a:
Paper 513-b:
Paper 513-c:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 514-a:
Paper 514-b:
Paper 514-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 515-a:
Paper 515-b:
Paper 515-c:
514
Esther Simpson Building: 2.07
DIVERSE SOURCES, SHARED HISTORIES: SHOWCASING ENTANGLED
HISTORIES FROM MEDIEVAL REGENSBURG
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
Eva Haverkamp-Rott, Jüdische Geschichte und Kultur, Historisches
Seminar, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
Eva Haverkamp-Rott
‘Economic Entanglement in Medieval Regensburg’ in a Showcase
(Language: English)
Eva Haverkamp-Rott
‘Immigration to Medieval Regensburg’ in a Showcase (Language:
English)
Astrid Riedler-Pohlers, Jüdische Geschichte und Kultur, Historisches
Seminar, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
‘Jewish Tombstones in Christian Facades’ in a Showcase
(Language: English)
Susanne Weigand, Jüdische Geschichte und Kultur, Historisches
Seminar, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
Tuesday
Session:
Title:
513
Parkinson Building: Room B.11
THE ANCIENT NOVELS IN BYZANTIUM: CULTURAL NETWORKS, READERSHIP,
AND EMOTIONS
Mircea Duluș, Institutul de Studii Sud-Est Europene, Academia Română,
București
Claire Rachel Jackson, Vakgroep Letterkunde, Universiteit Gent
Heliodorus in the Margin (Language: English)
Nunzio Bianchi, Dipartimento di Ricerca e Innovazione Umanistica,
Università degli Studi di Bari Aldo Moro
Framing Conflicting Emotions: The Ancient Novels and the
Byzantine Thought-World (Language: English)
Mircea Duluș
Introducing the Novel Echoes Database of References to the
Ancient Novels, 200-1200 (Language: English)
Nicolò D’Alconzo, Vakgroep Letterkunde, Universiteit Gent and Koen De
Temmerman, Vakgroep Letterkunde, Universiteit Gent
515
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.32
CHINGGISID RIPPLES, I: MATERIAL ENTANGLEMENTS ACROSS MONGOL
EURASIA
Geoffrey Humble, School of Medicine, University of Leeds and Márton
Vér, Seminar für Turkologie und Zentralasienkunde, Georg-AugustUniversität Göttingen
Geoffrey Humble
Word, Image, and Story in 14th-Century Eurasia: Tuq Temür’s
Kuizhangge Academy Collections (Language: English)
Francesca Fiaschetti, Institut für Österreichische Geschichtsforschung,
Universität Wien
Uyghur Networks in Ilkhanid Iran (Language: English)
Márton Vér
A New Hypothesis on the Use of Gunpowder in Hülegü’s Iran
Campaign (Language: English)
Anil Yasin Oğuz, Department of Letters, Erzurum Technical University
147
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
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Paper 516-a:
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Paper 516-c:
Session:
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Paper 517-a:
Paper 517-b:
Paper 517-c:
148
516
Clarendon Building: 1.02
ROMAN AND SASANIAN NETWORKS AND ENTANGLEMENTS, I: FOREIGN
RELATIONS AND GEOPOLITICS ACROSS THE MEDITERRANEAN AND CENTRAL
ASIA
Cardiff Centre for Late Antique Religion & Culture, Cardiff University /
British Institute of Persian Studies
Domiziana Rossi, School of History, Archaeology & Religion, Cardiff
University and Sean Strong, School of History, Archaeology & Religion,
Cardiff University
Eve MacDonald, School of History, Archaeology & Religion, Cardiff
University
Huns and Persians against Theodosius II (Language: English)
Fernando López Sánchez, Departmento de Prehistoria, Historia Antigua
y Arqueología, Universidad Complutense de Madrid
Ērānshahr and Kušānšahr: The Redefinition of the East in the
Early Sāsānian Period (Language: English)
Stefan Härtel, Institut für Iranistik, Freie Universität Berlin
The Sasanians at the Collapse of the Ostrogothic Kingdom
(Language: English)
Illas Ali Torrico, Departamento de Prehistoria, Historia Antigua y
Arqueología, Universidad Complutense de Madrid
517
Stage@leeds: Stage 3
CULTURAL AND RELIGIOUS NETWORKS IN MEDIEVAL IBERIA, I: AUTHORING
ASCETICS
University of Bristol / Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen
Kati Ihnat, Afdeling Geschiedenis, Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen
Molly Lester, History Department, United States Naval Academy,
Maryland
Situating Sanctity: Braulio’s Life of Aemilian in Context
(Language: English)
Jamie Wood, School of Humanities & Heritage, University of Lincoln
Visions of the Desert in Suevic Gallaecia: The Enigma of
Paschasius’ Liber geronticon (Language: English)
David Addison, All Souls College, University of Oxford
The Articulation of Confessorship in the Old Hispanic Rite: St
Martin of Tours (Language: English)
Rebecca Maloy, College of Music, University of Colorado, Boulder
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 518-a:
Paper 518-b:
Paper 518-c:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 519-a:
Paper 519-b:
Paper 519-c:
519
Esther Simpson Building: 2.08
BUILDING NETWORKS AT THE NOTARIAL OFFICE IN LATE MEDIEVAL
CATALONIA, I
Jaume Marcé Sánchez, Institut de Recerca en Cultures Medievals
(IRCVM), Universitat de Barcelona and Jordi Saura-Nadal, Departament
d’Història i Arqueologia, Universitat de Barcelona
Jaume Marcé Sánchez
Business, Family, Property, and Public Notary in the 13 th
Century: Networks in Puigcerdà and Its Territory (Language:
English)
Daniel Piñol-Alabart, Departament d’Història i Arqueologia, Universitat
de Barcelona
Socio-Economic Dynamics and Networks through a Notarial
Register: Pere de Santamaría, 1387-1413 (Language: English)
Pol Navarro-Costa, Departament d’Història i Arqueologia, Universitat de
Barcelona
Notaries and Patrimony: Clientele Representativity in a Rural
Notary’s Office in Rupià in the 14th Century (Language: English)
Jordi Saura-Nadal
Tuesday
Session:
Title:
518
Michael Sadler Building: Rupert Beckett Theatre
URBANITY AND NETWORKS IN ITALY, 12TH-15TH CENTURIES, I: HUMAN
NETWORKS
Solène Minier, Centre Roland Mousnier (CRM - UMR 8596), Sorbonne
Université, Paris
Catherine Rideau-Kikuchi, Dynamiques patrimoniales et culturelles
(DYPAC), Université Versailles Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines, Université
Paris-Saclay
Maddalena Scrovegni and the Others: Female Upper-Class
Networks and the Rise of Charitable Institutions in Early
Renaissance Veneto (Language: English)
Solène Minier
The Dead and Political Networks in Late Medieval Italian Cities
and Beyond (Language: English)
Caitlin John, Department of History, University College London
Union, Mutual Acquaintance, or Competition: Was There an
Italian Network in 14th- and 15th-Century London? (Language:
English)
Baptiste Puget, Laboratoire interdisciplinaire des énergies de demain
(LIED), Université Paris-Cité
149
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
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Paper 520-a:
Paper 520-b:
Paper 520-c:
Session:
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Paper 521-a:
Paper 521-b:
Session:
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Paper 522-a:
Paper 522-b:
Paper 522-c:
150
520
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.06
ENTANGLEMENTS BETWEEN THE COMICAL AND THE SACRED IN MEDIEVAL
ARABIC, GREEK, AND WESTERN LITERATURES
IMC Programming Committee
Emma Campbell, School of Modern Languages & Cultures - French
Studies, University of Warwick
Entangling Holiness with Foolishness: The Theme of Pious Fool
in Medieval Arabic and Greek Hagiographies (Language: English)
Zhicheng Ye, School of Languages, Cultures & Linguistics, School of
Oriental & African Studies, University of London
Strange Entanglement: Sacred and Comical in Le Roman de
Renart (Language: English)
Daria Akhapkina, Centre for the Study of the Renaissance, University of
Warwick
The Tangled Network of Medieval Parody and How AI Can Help
(Language: English)
Bryant White, Department of French & Italian, Vanderbilt University,
Tennessee
521
Newlyn Building: GR.01
NETWORKS AND ENTANGLEMENTS IN LATE MEDIEVAL AND EARLY MODERN
PRAYER CULTURES, I: CASE STUDIES
Late Medieval & Early Modern Prayer Cultures Network
Carolin Gluchowski, Faculty of Medieval & Modern Languages,
University of Oxford
Carolin Gluchowski
Titus Brandsma and the Mystical Entanglements of the Middle
Ages (Language: English)
Marcin Polkowski, Instytut Literaturoznawstwa, Katolicki Uniwersytet
Lubelski Jana Pawła II
Imagining the Spiritual Childhood of Jesus: Plurimediality and
Prayer in a Middle Dutch Incunable (Language: English)
Lieke Andrea Smits, Ruusbroecgenootschap, Universiteit Antwerpen
522
Michael Sadler Building: LG.10
RE-EVALUATING THE 11TH CENTURY, I: INTELLECTUAL NETWORKS AND
CULTURAL ENTANGLEMENTS THROUGH BYZANTINE TEXTUAL PRODUCTION
RELEVEN (Re-Evaluating the 11th Century), Universität Wien
Aleksandar Anđelović, Institut für Geschichte, Universität Wien
Lewis Read, Institut für Geschichte, Universität Wien
(Neo)Platonism between Intellectual, Monk, and Patriarch:
Plato and Neoplatonic Sources in Michael Psellos’ Letters to and
Funeral Oration on Ioannes Xiphilinos (Language: English)
Aleksandar Anđelović
The Concept of Arts and Science in Eustratius’ Commentary on
Aristotle’s Posterior Analytics II 19: Reappraisal (Language:
English)
Dunja Milenković, Department of Medieval Studies, Central European
University, Budapest/Wien
Tales about Faithful Friends: Some Aspects of the Byzantine
Reception of the Kalila wa-Dimna (Language: English)
Alessandra Guido, Dipartimento di Scienze dell’Antichità, Università
degli Studi di Roma ‘La Sapienza’
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 523-a:
Paper 523-b:
Paper 523-c:
Paper 524-b:
Paper 524-c:
Session:
Title:
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Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 525-a:
Paper 525-c:
Paper 525-d:
524
Newlyn Building: 1.01
LOYALTY AS NETWORKS, III: LOYALTY, SERVICE, AND ADVICE
Haskins Society / Battle Conference on Anglo-Norman Studies
Hannah Boston, School of Humanities & Heritage, University of Lincoln
Hannah Boston
Bought Loyalty?: The Reeves of Æthelred II (Language: English)
Chelsea Shields-Más, Department of History & Philosophy, State
University of New York, Old Westbury
Land and Loyalty in Normandy and England, 1087-1135
(Language: English)
Alex Dymond, Corpus Christi College, University of Oxford
The Loyal Critic: Admonitio at the Courts of 12th-Century English
and German Kings (Language: English)
Ryan Kemp, Institut für Geschichtswissenschaft, Rheinische FriedrichWilhelms-Universität Bonn
Tuesday
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 524-a:
523
Clarendon Building: 1.03
MAPPINGS, I: MONSTROUS RACES ON THE MARGINS
Felicitas Schmieder, Historisches Institut, FernUniversität in Hagen and
Dan Terkla, Department of English, Illinois Wesleyan University
Felicitas Schmieder
Foot Upside Down: How Sciapods Came to Inhabit the Antipodes
(Language: English)
Kaila Yankelevich, Instituto de Filología y Literaturas Hispánicas ‘Dr
Amado Alonso’, Universidad de Buenos Aires
Mapping Gog and Magog in the Medieval World: New
Approaches to Ethnic, Religious, and Political Discourses in
Apocalyptic Thought (Language: English)
Veronika Wieser, DFG-Kolleg-Forschungsgruppe 2496 ‘Migration und
Mobilität in Spätantike und Frühmittelalter’, Eberhard Karls Universität
Tübingen
A Macrobian Map Model?: Looking at 13th-Century Mappaemundi
Through the Lens of ‘Monstrous Men’ (Language: English)
Catherine Megan Crossley, Department of History, University of
Liverpool
525
Newlyn Building: GR.07
NOBLEWOMEN NETWORK, I: NETWORKS AND COMMUNITIES
Noblewomen Network
Harriet Kersey, Research Development, Canterbury Christ Church
University and Charlotte Pickard, Faculty of Arts & Social Sciences,
Open University, Cardiff / ‘Exploring the Past Pathway’, Cardiff
University
Charlotte Pickard
Isabella of France and the Interaction of Socio-Political
Networks and Agency (Language: English)
Audrey Covert, Department of History, Trinity College Dublin
Elite Service and Noblewomen’s Friendship Networks in Later
Medieval England (Language: English)
Caroline Dunn, Department of History & Geography, Clemson
University, South Carolina
The Social Network of Anne of Foix-Candale, Queen Consort of
Hungary (Language: English)
János Éliás, Faculty of Arts & Humanities, University of Debrecen and
Imre Solt Varga, Faculty of Arts & Humanities, University of Debrecen
151
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 526-a:
Paper 526-b:
Paper 526-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 527-a:
Paper 527-b:
Paper 527-c:
Paper 527-d:
152
526
Stage@leeds: Stage 2
FINDING THE MIDDLE AGES IN THE DAWN OF EVERYTHING
Anarchist Approaches to the Middle Ages
Bee Jones, Faculty of History, University of Oxford and Moritz
Wallenborn, Historisches Seminar, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität
München
Stamatia Noutsou, Independent Scholar, København
The Anarchic Puppet: David Graeber, Medieval Humour, and
Object Performance (Language: English)
Michelle Oing, Department of Art & Art History, Stanford University
Anarchy and the Archive: The Medieval Deep Past (Language:
English)
Ron Makleff, Department of Political Science, Middlebury College,
Vermont
The Late Medieval Agenda of Hierarchy in the Holy Roman
Empire (Language: English)
Monika Veronika Eisenhauer, Independent Scholar, Zwingenberg
527
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.31
NETWORKS AND ENTANGLEMENTS IN DANTE’S WORKS, I
Institute for Medieval Studies / Centre for Dante Studies, University of
Leeds
Carmen Costanza, School of Languages, Cultures & Societies - Italian,
University of Leeds
Elisabeth Trischler, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Cino the grande assente in the Commedia: Between the
Correspondence and the Distance (Language: English)
Marialaura Pancini, Dipartimento di Studi Umanistici, Università per
Stranieri di Siena
Crossroads of Dante’s and Guittone’s Networks (Language:
English)
Giulia Maria Gliozzi-Wilkins, Center for Italian Studies, University of
Notre Dame, Indiana
Entanglements with Poets from the Present and the Past
(Language: English)
Julie Van Peteghem, Hunter College, City University of New York
Social Entanglements and Networks in 13th- and 14th-Century
Tuscany and Dante (Language: English)
Camilla Bambozzi, School of Languages, Cultures & Societies - Italian,
University of Leeds
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 528-a:
Paper 528-b:
Paper 528-c:
Moderator:
Paper 529-a:
Paper 529-b:
Paper 529-c:
529
Parkinson Building: Room B.10
MEDIEVAL ART, NETWORKS, AND SOURCES: SOME RECENT RESEARCH
Consultant Archivist Ltd
Ellie Pridgeon, Consultant Archivist Ltd / Institute of Continuing
Education, University of Cambridge
Chris Lewis, Institute of Historical Research, University of London
The Arnolfini Whereabouts (Language: English)
Alexandra Fried, Institutionen för kulturvetenskaper, Göteborgs
universitet
Networks and Sources: The Murals in the Guild Chapel at
Stratford-upon-Avon (Language: English)
Miriam Gill, Leicester Vaughan College, University of Leicester /
Institute of Continuing Education, University of Cambridge /
Department of Continuing Education, University of Oxford
Oxfordshire Wall Paintings: Contextualising Chantry Chapels
(Language: English)
Ellie Pridgeon
Tuesday
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
528
Michael Sadler Building: LG.15
CULTURES OF HEALING IN LATE ANTIQUITY AND THE (MOSTLY) EARLY
MIDDLE AGES, I: PLACES AND SPACES OF HEALING
ReMeDHe - Working Group for Religion, Medicine, Disability, Health &
Healing in Late Antiquity / Beyond Beccaria Project
Claire Burridge, Department of History, University of Sheffield and
Carine van Rhijn, Departement Geschiedenis en Kunstgeschiedenis,
Universiteit Utrecht
Peregrine Horden, All Souls College, University of Oxford
From Asklepieion to Kosmidion: Healing Networks in Late
Antiquity (Language: English)
Mark Beumer, First Faculty of Medicine, Institute for History of Medicine
& Foreign Languages, Univerzita Karlova, Praha
Imagined Healing Spaces in Byzantine Monastic Literature:
Between Metaphor and Medicine (Language: English)
Jonathan Zecher, Institute for Religion & Critical Inquiry, Australian
Catholic University, Victoria
Health and Risk in Late Medieval Vernacular Miracles (Language:
English)
Janna Coomans, Onderzoekinstituut voor Geschiedenis en
Kunstgeschiedenis (OGK), Universiteit Utrecht
153
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 530-a:
Paper 530-b:
Paper 530-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 531-a:
Paper 531-b:
Paper 531-c:
154
530
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.09
NETWORKING MEDIEVAL MONARCHY, I: IDEOLOGICAL NETWORKS OF
MONARCHY
Royal Studies Network
Elena Woodacre, Department of History, University of Winchester
Simon Lambe, Department of History, School of Law and Social
Sciences, London South Bank University
Mythological Inheritance as Royal Legitimation in Sovereignty
Disputes over Britain during the Reign of Edward I (Language:
English)
Lucy Moloney, Centre for Medieval & Renaissance Studies, Monash
University, Victoria
King Aldfrith of Northumbria and Book Exchange: Mastering
Social Networks and Subverting Advisory Ideals (Language:
English)
Donal John Angus Macaulay, Faculty of History, University of Oxford
Normalising the Non-Mundane: The Transmission of Morality in
the Wonder Tales of Gervase of Tilbury’s Otia Imperialia
(Language: English)
Christopher White, School of Historical & Philosophical Inquiry,
University of Queensland
531
Michael Sadler Building: LG.19
CARTHUSIAN ENTANGLEMENTS IN MYSTICAL REFORM AND INTELLECTUAL
NETWORKS
Cartusiana / Cusanus Society of UK & Ireland
Tom Gaens, Ruusbroecgenootschap, Universiteit Antwerpen and
Stephen J. Molvarec, School of Theology & Ministry, Boston College,
Massachusetts
John Arblaster, Ruusbroecgenootschap, Universiteit Antwerpen
Intellectual Networks and Authorities: How Denys the
Carthusian in his Scripture Commentaries Utilised Thomas
Aquinas and Nicholas of Lyra (Language: English)
William P. Hyland, School of Divinity, University of St Andrews
Ecclesia semper reformanda: Mystical Reform in Nicholas of
Cusa and Denys the Carthusian (Language: English)
Simon Burton, School of Divinity, University of Edinburgh
New Books for New Ideas: The Production and Transmission of
Texts Within the Benedictine Network of the Melk Reform
(Language: English)
Astrid Breith, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 532-a:
Paper 532-b:
Paper 532-c:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 533-a:
Paper 533-b:
Paper 533-c:
533
Esther Simpson Building: 3.01
PERSONAL AND POLITICAL NETWORKS IN LATE MEDIEVAL FRANCE,
C. 1200-C. 1500, I: ROYAL AND ANTI-ROYAL NETWORKS
Katharine Bennett, Department of History, University of York and
Nathan Meades, St Andrews Institute of Mediaeval Studies, University
of St Andrews
Justine Firnhaber-Baker, St Andrews Institute of Mediaeval Studies,
University of St Andrews
Networks of Wisdom: Giles of Rome’s De Regimine Principum at
the Court of the Capetian Kings (Language: English)
Susie Heywood, Department of History, King’s College London
Entangled in Flames: The Failure of Charles VI’s Personal and
Political Network to Uphold Royal Dignity at the Ball of the
Burning Men (Language: English)
Victoria Barlow, Independent Scholar, High Wycombe
The ‘Praguerie’ Rising of 1440 and Rebellious Networks in
Valois France (Language: English)
Andrew Green, Department of History, Durham University
Tuesday
Session:
Title:
532
Clarendon Building: 1.01
ENTANGLEMENTS OF INFORMATION: MEDIEVAL BOOK COLLECTIONS AND
THEIR NAVIGATION CHARTS, I - TRANSFERS OF KNOWLEDGE
‘Book of Books’ Project, Københavns Universitet
René Hernández Vera, Institut for Nordiske Studier og Sprogvidenskab,
Københavns Universitet
S. C. Kaplan, Department of French & Italian, University of California,
Santa Barbara
Miscellaneous Books and Transfer of Knowledge among Female
Religious Communities, 13th-16th Centuries (Language: English)
Mercedes Pérez Vidal, Departamento de Historia y Teoría del Arte,
Universidad Autónoma de Madrid
The World of the Compiler: Patristic Sermon Collections as
Witnesses to Early Medieval Library Collections (Language:
English)
Shari Boodts, Radboud Institute for Culture & History (RICH), Radboud
Universiteit Nijmegen
Liturgical Books in Slavic Monastery Collections (Language:
English)
Victoria Legkikh, Sprachzentrum, Technische Universität München
155
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 534-a:
Paper 534-b:
Paper 534-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 535-a:
Paper 535-b:
Paper 535-c:
156
534
Newlyn Building: 1.07
MEDIEVAL PAPACY, 500-1500, I: LATE ANTIQUE AND EARLY MEDIEVAL
PAPAL NETWORKS
Callum A. Jamieson, School of Humanities (History), University of
Glasgow
Rebecca A. C. Rist, Department of History, University of Reading
Papacy, Canon Law Collections, and Institutional Networks in
the Early Middle Ages (Language: English)
Andrea Antonio Verardi, Department of Philosophy, History & Art
Studies, University of Helsinki / Facoltà di Storia e Beni Culturali della
Chiesa, Pontificia Università Gregoriana, Roma
Epistemology and Papal Networks: Monasticism in the Letters of
Gregory the Great (Language: English)
Nikolas O. Hoel, Department of History, Northeastern Illinois University
A Saintly Bishop for a Pious Ruler: The Cult of Pope Sylvester in
Late Medieval Moldavia and Its Entangled Sources (Language:
English)
Andrei Dumitrescu, Department of Medieval Studies, Central European
University, Budapest/Wien
535
Clarendon Building: 1.06
POLITICAL NETWORKS AND ECCLESIASTICAL ENTANGLEMENTS IN THE 350S
Nicola Holm, Department of Classics, Ancient History, Religion &
Theology, University of Exeter
Richard Flower, Department of Classics, Ancient History, Religion &
Theology, University of Exeter
Magnentius and the Meanings of Liberation in 350 (Language:
English)
Rebecca Usherwood, Department of Classics, Trinity College Dublin
Networks Not Working?: Episcopal Entanglements in Imperial
Politics in the Roman West under the Constantinian Emperors
(Language: English)
Mark Humphries, Centre for Medieval & Early Modern Research
(MEMO), Swansea University
Filial Entanglements: The Case of Constantius Gallus (Language:
English)
Nicola Holm
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 536-a:
Paper 536-b:
Paper 536-c:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 537-a:
Paper 537-b:
Paper 537-c:
537
Parkinson Building: Room 1.08
LITERARY ENTANGLEMENTS: ARTHURIAN MOTIFS AND CHARACTERS IN THE
IBERIAN PENINSULA
Rafaela Silva, Departamento de Turismo, Património e Cultura,
Universidade Portucalense Infante D. Henrique (UPT), Porto / Instituto
de Filosofia, Universidade do Porto
Ana Sofia Laranjinha, Department of Humanities, Universidade Aberta /
Instituto de Filosofia, Universidade do Porto
The Queen and Her Knights: Social Entanglements in Iberian
Arthurian Literature (Language: English)
Eduarda Rabaçal, Instituto de Filosofia, Universidade do Porto
Galaaz: rédempteur de la chevalerie ou allégorie d’un disciple
du Christ (Language: Français)
Rafaela Silva
What Remains after Avalon?: Arthurian Interfigurality in 16 thCentury Portuguese Prose Fiction (Language: English)
Pedro Monteiro, Faculdade de Letras, Universidade do Porto
Tuesday
Session:
Title:
536
Esther Simpson Building: 1.01
THE MIDDLE AGES IN MODERN GAMES, I: GENDERED NETWORKS AND
ENTANGLEMENTS
Centre for Medieval & Renaissance Research, University of Winchester
Robert Houghton, Centre for Medieval & Renaissance Research,
University of Winchester and Mariana Lopez, School of Arts & Creative
Technologies, University of York
Mariana Lopez
‘One immortal woman and her daughters’: Networks of Witches
in Medievalist Fantasy RPGs (Language: English)
Tess Watterson, Department of Historical & Classical Studies, University
of Adelaide
Motherhood and Masculinity in Assassin’s Creed II and Kingdom
Come: Deliverance (Language: English)
Poppy Tester, Department of History, English, Linguistics & Music,
University of Huddersfield
Gendered Networks inside and outside Medieval Games
(Language: English)
Katherine J. Lewis, Department of Communication & Humanities,
University of Huddersfield
157
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 538-a:
Paper 538-b:
Paper 538-c:
Paper 538-d:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 539-a:
Paper 539-b:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 540-a:
Paper 540-b:
Paper 540-c:
158
538
Parkinson Building: Room B.08
MATERIALITY OF MANUSCRIPTS, I: BOOKMAKING
Katarzyna Anna Kapitan, Linacre College, University of Oxford and N.
Kıvılcım Yavuz, Institute for Medieval Studies / School of History,
University of Leeds
Hannah Ryley, Balliol College, University of Oxford
Ruling and Pricking in Irish Manuscripts up to 900: An
Evaluation of Practice (Language: English)
Nicole Volmering, Department of History / School of Education, Trinity
College Dublin
The Materiality of Late Medieval Manorial Accounts in Northern
England (Language: English)
Abby Armstrong, Sonderforschungsbereich 933 ‘Materiale
Textkulturen’, Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg
The Materiality of St Evroul Charter Roll (Language: English)
Thomas Roche, Archives départementales de l’Eure / Groupe de
Recherche d’Histoire (GRHis), Université de Rouen Normandie
Law of Numbers?: Quantifying Statuta Angliæ Manuscripts
(Language: English)
Stephanie J. Lahey, Centre for Medieval Studies / Old Books New
Science Lab, University of Toronto
539
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.03
MENDICANTS AND THE URBAN MEDITERRANEAN, I
Jon Paul Heyne, Department of History, University of Dallas, Texas
Jon Paul Heyne
Prayer, Sex, and Politics in an Adriatic City-State: The
Dominicans in Venice, c. 1380-c. 1440 (Language: English)
Austin Powell, Department of Classics, University of California, Davis
Between the Convent and the People: Miraculous Objects,
Shared Devotions, and the Reform of Female Mendicancy in Late
Medieval Portugal (Language: English)
Paula Cardoso, Instituto de Estudos Medievais (IEM), Universidade
Nova de Lisboa
540
Clarendon Building: 2.01
‘THE WATER IS WIDE’: CREATING, IMAGINING, AND NAVIGATING WATER
IN OLD ENGLISH AND OLD FRENCH TEXTS
Leonie V. Hicks, School of Humanities & Educational Studies,
Canterbury Christ Church University
Rebecca Tyson, Department of History, University of Bristol
The Wave-Tossed Course of Time: Deep Seas as Generative
Space in Early Medieval England (Language: English)
Michael Bintley, Department of English, Theatre & Creative Writing,
Birkbeck, University of London
Watery Crossings: Imaginative and Practical Voyages across the
British Archipelago (Language: English)
Laura Bailey, Faculty of History / King’s College, University of
Cambridge
Wace, Water, and Movement (Language: English)
Leonie V. Hicks
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 541-a:
Paper 541-b:
Paper 541-c:
Moderator:
Paper 542-a:
Paper 542-b:
Paper 542-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 543-a:
Paper 543-b:
Paper 543-c:
542
Maurice Keyworth Building: G.02
DISEASE IN THE MEDIEVAL ISLAMICATE WORLD, I: ORIGINS AND IMPACTS
Nahyan Fancy, Department of History, DePauw University, Indiana and
Monica Green, Independent Scholar, Phoenix, Arizona
Sean W. Anthony, Department of Near Eastern Languages & Cultures,
Ohio State University
The Impact of the Justinianic Plague on Long Run Economic
Development in The Middle East: Post-Plague Fertility and
Human Capital (Language: English)
Maya Shatzmiller, Department of History, University of Western Ontario
A Metaphor for Contagion in Qusṭā ibn Lūqā’s Book of Contagion
(Al-Kitāb fi-l-I’dā’) (Language: English)
Shahrzad Irannejad, Graduiertenkolleg 1876 ‘Frühe Konzepte von
Mensch und Natur’, Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz
Records of Plague in 13th-Century Syriac Sources from the
Mongol Period (Language: English)
Salam Rassi, School of Divinity, University of Edinburgh
Tuesday
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
541
Esther Simpson Building: 3.08
ENVIRONMENTS OF CHANGE: NATURE AND THE HUMAN EXPERIENCE IN LATE
MEDIEVAL SUSSEX
Claire Kennan, Department of History, Queen’s University, Ontario
Erin Kurian, Department of History, University of Waterloo, Ontario
Experiencing Climate Change on a Local Level: Environmental
Management on Two 14th-Century English Manors (Language:
English)
Andrew Moore, Department of History, University of Waterloo, Ontario
Chronicling Climate Change: Contemporary Understandings of
Late Medieval Natural Disaster (Language: English)
Claire Kennan
Foundations for Linked Data in Historical Building Information
Models and Immersive Historical Environments (Language:
English)
Zack Macdonald, Archives & Special Collections, Western University,
London, Ontario
543
Esther Simpson Building: 3.02
‘INCONSOLABLE’: MEMORY AND FORGETFULNESS OF JEWISH COMMUNITIES
IN MEDIEVAL EUROPE
Shamma Boyarin, Department of English, University of Victoria, British
Columbia
Joseph Isaac Lifshitz, Shalem College, Jerusalem
The Stones of Basel (Language: English)
Eva Frojmovic, School of Fine Art, History of Art & Cultural Studies /
Centre for Jewish Studies / Institute for Medieval Studies, University of
Leeds
Language of Destruction: Multilingualism in 12th-Century
Lamentations Commentaries (Language: English)
Ruth Nisse, Department of English, Wesleyan University, Middletown,
Connecticut
Memory in the Margin: English Piyyut in French Manuscripts
(Language: English)
Shamma Boyarin
159
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 544-a:
Paper 544-b:
Paper 544-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 545-a:
Paper 545-b:
Paper 545-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 546-a:
Paper 546-b:
Paper 546-c:
160
544
Newlyn Building: 1.02
19TH-CENTURY MEDIEVALISM: HISTORIOGRAPHY, TRANSLATION, AND
ARCHITECTURE
IMC Programming Committee
Michael Evans, Faculty of Social Science, Delta College, Michigan
Rome and the Pornocracy of the Early 10th Century (Language:
English)
Brian James Merlo, Department of History, Saint Louis University,
Missouri
Medieval Mystery Plays in the Age of Darwin (Language: English)
H. M. Cushman, Department of English & Comparative Literature,
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Civic Medievalism and the Cityscape: Thomas Walter Harding’s
Leeds (Language: English)
Jennifer McIlwrath Hurst, School of History, University of Leeds
545
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.04
ABRAHAM IN MEDIEVAL THEOLOGY
Internationale Gesellschaft für theologische Mediävistik (IGTM)
Pavel Blažek, Filosofický ústav, Akademie věd České republiky, Praha
Karl Ubl, Historisches Institut, Universität zu Köln
Abraham at the Crossroads of Logic and Theology (Language:
English)
Wojciech Wciórka, Wydział Filozofii, Uniwersytet Warszawski
Stephen Langton on Abraham, Faith, and Merit (Language:
English)
Magdalena Bieniak, Wydział Filozofii, Uniwersytet Warszawski
Sarah and Hagar: Abraham’s Polygamy in 13th- and 14th-Century
Theology (Language: English)
Pavel Blažek
546
Clarendon Building: GR 01
POETRY AND COMMUNICATION, 14TH-16TH CENTURIES, I: THEORIES AND
DEBATES
Estelle Doudet, Faculté des lettres, Université de Lausanne
Natalia Wawrzyniak, Section de français, Université de Lausanne
Dialogues on Orators: Debates on Vulgar Eloquence during the
15th Century (Language: English)
Estelle Doudet
‘Parfait orateur, pouethe insigne, des Muses amateur’: In
Search of the Orateurs of the South West of France (Language:
English)
Lucien Dugaz, Faculté des lettres, Université de Lausanne
Allegorical Architecture as a Framework for Rhetoric: Lemaire
de Belges and Clément Marot (Language: English)
Dariusz Krawczyk, Instytut Romanistyki, Uniwersytet Warszawski /
Laboratoire Analyses littéraires et histoire de la langue (ALITHILA - ULR
1061), Université de Lille
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 547-a:
Paper 547-b:
Paper 547-c:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 548-a:
Paper 548-b:
Paper 548-c:
548
Newlyn Building: LG.01
SOCIAL ENTANGLEMENTS: FRIENDSHIP, FAMILY, AND SOCIETY IN MEDIEVAL
ENGLISH WRITING
IMC Programming Committee
Marco Mostert, Utrecht Centre for Medieval Studies, Universiteit Utrecht
Violent Families: Tension between Entanglement and Hierarchy
in Laȝamon’s Brut (Language: English)
Josh Pittman, Department of English, Bluefield University, Virginia
Woven Alliances: The Case of 15th-Century Gentry Letters
(Language: English)
Beatriz Breviglieri Oliveira, Departamento de História, Universidade de
Lisboa / Departamento de História, Universidade de São Paulo
Thomas Hoccleve and the Problem of Counternormative Poetics
(Language: English)
Scott Russell, Department of English, Simon Fraser University, British
Columbia
Tuesday
Session:
Title:
547
Stage@leeds: Stage 1
ARMS, ARMOUR, AND THE ARTS OF COMBAT, I: MULTI-DISCIPLINARY
APPROACHES TO THE STUDY OF ARMS, ARMOUR, AND COMBAT
Karen Watts, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Jacob H. Deacon, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
How to Defeat Your Opponent in Combat at the End of the
Middle Ages and in the Early Modern Era: The Purpose of
Techniques in Fencing and Wrestling Treatises (Language:
English)
Pierre-Henry Bas, Institut de Recherches Historiques du Septentrion
(IRHiS - UMR 8529), Université de Lille / Textes, représentations,
archéologie, autorité et mémoires de l'Antiquité à la Renaissance
(TrAme - UR 4284), Université de Picardie Jules-Verne, Amiens
‘Father, may I borrow a horse?’: Networks and Identities in Late
Medieval Tournaments (Language: English)
Samuel Bradley, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Armour and Adaptability: Portuguese Equipment during the Late
15th and Early 16th Centuries (Language: English)
António Oliveira, Faculdade de Letras, Universidade de Coimbra
COFFEE BREAK: 10.30-11.15
Coffee and Tea will be available on a self-serve basis at the following locations:
Esther Simpson Building: Foyer
Maurice Keyworth Building: Foyer
Parkinson Building: Bookfair
University Square: IMC Social Space
161
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 601-a:
Paper 601-b:
Paper 601-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 602-a:
Paper 602-b:
Paper 602-c:
162
601
Parkinson Building: Room B.22
GENDER AND IDENTITY IN AND AROUND EARLY MEDIEVAL LITERATURE
IMC Programming Committee
M. Wendy Hennequin, Department of Languages, Literature &
Philosophy, Tennessee State University
Domestic Roles and Political Influence: Judith of Bavaria as
Patron in the Poetry of Ermoldus Nigellus, c. 827 (Language:
English)
Carey Fleiner, Department of History, University of Winchester
Liminality and Self-Alienation in The Wanderer and The Wife’s
Lament (Language: English)
Karin Olsen, Department of English Language & Culture,
Rijksuniversiteit Groningen
‘Filium peperit nobilissima regina’: Patronage, Authorship, and
the Maternal Body in the Encomium Emmae Reginae (Language:
English)
Katheryne Morrissette, Department of English, University of Toronto
602
Clarendon Building: 2.08
ROMANISLAM, II: IMPERIAL RELIGION VERSUS LOCAL BELIEFS
RomanIslam - Center for Comparative Empire & Transcultural Studies
Nathalie Klinck, RomanIslam - Center for Comparative Empire &
Transcultural Studies, Universität Hamburg
Daniel Syrbe, Historisches Institut, FernUniversität in Hagen
‘The indispensable archives of memory’: Sectarian
Hagiographical (Re-)Writing during the Donatist Controversy
(Language: English)
Eric Fournier, Department of History, West Chester University of
Pennsylvania
Martyrs on Tour: The Cults of Salsa of Tipasa and Marciana of
Caesarea between North Africa and the Iberian Peninsula
(Language: English)
Nathalie Klinck and Alice van den Bosch, Department of Classics,
Ancient History, Religion & Theology, University of Exeter
Roman Polytheism in Provincia Baetica during the Late Empire,
Late 3rd-4th Centuries (Language: English)
José Carlos López Gómez, Departamento de Ciencias Históricas e
Historiográficas, Universidad de Málaga
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 603-a:
Paper 603-b:
Paper 603-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 604-a:
Paper 604-b:
Paper 604-c:
Paper 604-d:
604
Esther Simpson Building: 2.09
THEOLOGY OF HISTORY AND INTELLECTUAL CULTURES OF WAR IN THE LONG
MIDDLE AGES
Graduiertenkolleg 2304, ‘Byzanz und die euromediterranen
Kriegskulturen: Austausch, Abgrenzung und Rezeption’ Johannes
Gutenberg Universität Mainz
Lorenz Kammerer, Graduiertenkolleg 2304 ‘Byzanz und die
euromediterranen Kriegskulturen: Austausch, Abgrenzung und
Rezeption’, Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz
Ludger Körntgen, Historisches Seminar, Johannes GutenbergUniversität Mainz
Christianity and Warfare in Orosius’ Historiae Adversum
Paganos (Language: English)
Sonja Ulrich, Graduiertenkolleg 2304 ‘Byzanz und die euromediterranen
Kriegskulturen: Austausch, Abgrenzung und Rezeption’, Johannes
Gutenberg-Universität Mainz
The Role of God in the Chronicon Salernitanum’s Report on the
Arab Siege of Salerno, 871-872 (Language: English)
Bart Peters, Graduiertenkolleg 2304 ‘Byzanz und die euromediterranen
Kriegskulturen: Austausch, Abgrenzung und Rezeption’, Johannes
Gutenberg-Universität Mainz
God’s Property as a Motif of Just War in the Context of the
Crusades (Language: English)
Marco Büttner, Graduiertenkolleg 2304 ‘Byzanz und die
euromediterranen Kriegskulturen: Austausch, Abgrenzung und
Rezeption’, Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz
Interpreting Military Defeat during the Second Hussite War
(Language: English)
Lorenz Kammerer
Tuesday
Respondent:
603
Michael Sadler Building: LG.16
CONNECTING TO THE HOLY: LEGITIMISING POWER THROUGH THE CULT OF
SAINTS - NORWAY AND POLAND BEFORE 1300
Norway Grants Project ‘Symbolic Resources & Political Structures on
the Periphery: Legitimisation of the Elites in Poland & Norway, c. 10001300’
Steffen Hope, Institutt for arkeologi, konservering og historie,
Universitetet i Oslo and Grzegorz Pac, Wydział Historii, Uniwersytet
Warszawski
Grzegorz Pac
Internal and External Mission in the Hagiographies of St Olaf
and St Adalbert (Language: English)
Kacper Bylinka, Wydział Historii, Uniwersytet Warszawski
Female Advocates of Conversion: Remembering the Role of
(Holy) Women in the Christianisation of Poland and Norway
(Language: English)
Anna Dryblak, Wydział Historii, Uniwersytet Warszawski
A Connection with the Past through Re-Actualisation of Saints:
The Liturgical Presentations of St Sunniva and St Stanislaus
(Language: English)
Steffen Hope
Gábor Klaniczay, Department of Medieval Studies, Central European
University, Budapest/Wien
163
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 605-a:
Paper 605-b:
Paper 605-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 606-a:
Paper 606-b:
Paper 606-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 607-a:
Paper 607-b:
Paper 607-c:
164
605
Esther Simpson Building: LG08
CLAVIS CANONUM, II
Monumenta Germaniae Historica, München / Clavis canonum Project
Danica Summerlin, Department of History, University of Sheffield
Christof Rolker, Zentrum für Mittelalterstudien (ZEMAS) / Institut für
Geschichtswissenschaften und Europäische Ethnologie, Otto-FriedrichUniversität Bamberg
Canon Law and Theology before the Concept of ‘Theology’
(Language: English)
David L. D’Avray, Jesus College, University of Oxford
Canon Law in Early Medieval Italian Hagiography, c. 600-800
(Language: English)
Abner Chacon, Department of History, Saint Louis University, Missouri
The Clavis Canonum Database: New Perspectives for the Study
of Jewish Medieval History (Language: English)
Amélie Sagasser, Deutsches Historisches Institut Paris
606
Esther Simpson Building: 1.08
RHETORICS OF CHANGE: LITERARY AGENCY IN THE TUMULTUOUS 15TH
CENTURY
Austrian Science Fund (FWF), Project V919
Nathanael Aschenbrenner, Department of History, University of
California, San Diego and Krystina Kubina, Abteilung Byzanzforschung,
Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
Nathanael Aschenbrenner and Krystina Kubina
A Poet Emperor: The Case of Manuel II Palaiologos, 1350-1425
(Language: English)
Siren Çelik, History Department, Marmara University, Istanbul
Restoring Athens in Medici Florence: Humanist Claims to the
Greek Cultural Legacy (Language: English)
Louis Verreth, Faculteit der Geesteswetenschappen, Universiteit Leiden
When Whipping Boy Turns Hegemon: The Inauspicious AntiSafavid Agitation of Fadlallah Ruzbihani Khunji, 1487-1509
(Language: English)
Georg Leube, School of Historical Studies, Institute for Advanced
Study, Princeton
607
Esther Simpson Building: 2.12
GENDER AND KNIGHTHOOD IN MEDIEVAL ROMANCE
IMC Programming Committee
Catherine J. Batt, School of English, University of Leeds
Household Tools, Witches’ Weapons: The Fight of the Old Hags
in the Roman de Perceforest (Language: English)
Ana Inés Aldazabal, Independent Scholar, Buenos Aires
Gendered Mobilities in the Book of the Knight Zifar (Language:
English)
Mechthild Albert, Iberoromanische Literatur- und Kulturwissenschaft,
Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn
Bound to Be Free: Knots, Textiles, and the Regulation of Drives
in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight (Language: English)
Trevor Hope, Faculty of Human & Social Sciences, Yaşar University,
Izmir
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 608-a:
Paper 608-b:
Paper 608-c:
Paper 609-b:
Paper 609-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 610-a:
Paper 610-b:
Paper 610-c:
609
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.33
CAROLINGIAN RECEPTIONS OF AUGUSTINE’S TEXTS AND IDEAS
Jesse Keskiaho, Department of History, University of Helsinki
Matthieu Pignot, Département d’histoire, Université de Namur
Using and Not Using Augustine to Think about the Soul by
Alcuin and His Circle (Language: English)
Jesse Keskiaho
Augustine’s Notion of Worldly Rule and Its Influence on
Carolingian Political Advice (Language: English)
Sophia Mösch, Käte Hamburger Kolleg Münster ‘Legal Unity &
Pluralism’, Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität Münster
The Patristic Past and the Presence of the Fathers in Works by
Paschasius Radbertus (Language: English)
Josh Timmermann, Department of History, University of British
Columbia, Vancouver
Tuesday
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 609-a:
608
Newlyn Building: GR.02
TASTE AND DISGUST IN LATE ANTIQUITY, II: INCLUSION AND EXCLUSION
Postgraduate & Early-Career Late Antiquity Network
Ella Kirsh, Department of Classics, Brown University
Henry Anderson, Department of Classics, Ancient History, Religion &
Theology, University of Exeter
Trends and Transitions: Cultural Identity Networks in the Late
Antique Trans-Rhine (Language: English)
Teifion Gambold, School of History, Archaeology & Religion, Cardiff
University
‘Taste and see’: Cultivating an Appetite for Late Antique Visual
Aesthetics in Miracles of Bread and Wine (Language: English)
Miriam Hay, Institute of Classical Studies, School of Advanced Study,
University of London
‘He died as he taught!’: The Death of ‘Heretics’ and the Feeling
of Disgust in Late Antiquity (Language: English)
Karl Heiner Dahm, Department of Classics, King’s College London
610
Newlyn Building: LG.02
EVERYDAY ENTANGLEMENTS: DEBT AND OBLIGATION, 1200-1500, II
Sarah McKeagney, Department of History, University of York
Sarah McKeagney
Women, Financial Obligations, and Legal Institutions in 15 thCentury Comtat Venaissin (Language: English)
Elizabeth Hardman, Department of History, Bronx Community College,
City University of New York
Credit and Debt on the Peripheries of Latin Europe: Credit
Markets in the Cities of the Southern Baltic Coast in the Late
Middle Ages (Language: English)
Cezary Kardasz, Instytut Historii i Archiwistyki, Uniwersytet Mikołaja
Kopernika, Toruń
Women in Credit Markets: The Case of Late Medieval Valencia
(Language: English)
Laura Peris Bolta, Departamento de Historia Medieval y Ciencias y
Técnicas Historiográficas, Universitat de València
165
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 611-a:
Paper 611-b:
Paper 611-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 612-a:
Paper 612-b:
Paper 612-c:
166
611
Esther Simpson Building: 2.11
MEDIEVAL AFRICAN NETWORKS, II: SAHARAN NETWORKS
2022 Dan David Prize Funding
Verena Krebs, Historisches Institut, Ruhr-Universität Bochum
Felege-Selam Solomon Yirga, Department of History, University of
Tennessee, Knoxville
Paris, Tunis… Njimi?: African Entanglements around the 1270
Crusade (Language: English)
Sarah M. Guérin, Department of the History of Art, University of
Pennsylvania
Africa’s East-West Trade Route: Art, Goods, People, and Ideas
(Language: English)
Suzanne Blier, Department of History of Art & Architecture /
Department of African & African American Studies, Harvard University
It’s All Greek to Me: Distinguishing Old Nubian Translation
Practices through Qualitative and Quantitative Methods
(Language: English)
Vincent W. J. van Gerven Oei, Punctum books
612
Parkinson Building: Room B.09
NETWORKS AND ENTANGLEMENTS IN MEDIEVAL WALES, II: RELIGIOUS
NETWORKS
Mortimer History Society
Amy Reynolds, School of History, Law & Social Sciences, Bangor
University
Jennifer Bell, School of History, Law & Social Sciences, Bangor
University
A Network of Abbeys: The Spread of the Cistercian Order in
Wales (Language: English)
Amy Reynolds
‘Comrades and fellow-scholars’: Graduates and Their Networks
in 12th- and 13th-Century Wales (Language: English)
Rhun Emlyn, Department of History & Welsh History, Aberystwyth
University
Medieval Welsh Bishops and Their Political Networks (Language:
English)
Shaun David McGuinness, School of History, Law & Social Sciences,
Bangor University
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 613-a:
Paper 613-b:
Paper 613-c:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 614-a:
Paper 614-b:
Paper 614-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 615-a:
Paper 615-b:
614
Esther Simpson Building: 2.07
SOCIAL ELITES IN CENTRAL EUROPE: INTELLECTUAL AND LITERARY
FORMATION AT THE END OF THE MIDDLE AGES
IMC Programming Committee
Piotr Oliński, Wydział Nauk Historycznych, Uniwersytet Mikołaja
Kopernika, Toruń
Les rois polyglottes? Comment les rois européens du Moyen Âge
ont-ils communiqué avec leurs sujets? (Language: Français)
Jerzy Pysiak, Wydział Nauk o Kulturze i Sztuce, Uniwersytet
Warszawski
A Patient’s Travel Narrative: Jan of Jenštejn’s Illnesses and
Treatments in Bohemia and Beyond (Language: English)
Patrick Outhwaite, Department of English Language & Culture,
Rijksuniversiteit Groningen
Stephen the Great of Moldavia, 1457-1504: Networks of Power,
Entanglements of Politics (Language: English)
Andrei Pogăciaș, Independent Scholar, Bucharest
Tuesday
Session:
Title:
613
Parkinson Building: Room B.11
ENTANGLEMENTS IN ANTIOCH: RELIGIOUS AND CULTURAL INTERSECTIONS
TH
TH
IN THE 4 AND 5 CENTURIES
Studies in Late Antiquity
Darlene Brooks Hedstrom, Departments of Classical & Mediterranean
Studies / Department of Near Eastern & Judaic Studies, Brandeis
University, Massachusetts
Nicola Holm, Department of Classics, Ancient History, Religion &
Theology, University of Exeter
More than a Metaphor?: Julian and Himerius on the Cult of
Paideia (Language: English)
Jeremy J. Swist, Department of Classical Studies, Brandeis University,
Massachusetts
Straight from the Golden Mouth: Negotiating between
Antiochene Christians and Roman Christian Authorities
(Language: English)
Andrea Scardina, Department of Religious Studies, University of Iowa
The Enemy You Know: Polemic, Instruction, and Apology in
Theodoret of Cyrrhus’ Episcopate (Language: English)
Peter Gerard Miller, Department of Classics, University of Iowa
615
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.32
CHINGGISID RIPPLES, II: HISTORIOGRAPHY AND RHETORIC OF RULE
ACROSS MONGOL EURASIA
Geoffrey Humble, School of Medicine, University of Leeds and Márton
Vér, Seminar für Turkologie und Zentralasienkunde, Georg-AugustUniversität Göttingen
Márton Vér
Toluid Framing and Islamicate Truth Claims in the Tarikh-i
Jahangusha (Language: English)
Jan Jelinowski, Groupe d’études orientales, slaves et néo-helléniques
(GEO - UR 1340), Université de Strasbourg / Instytut Historii im.
Tadeusza Manteuffla, Polskiej Akademii Nauk, Warszawa
When Did the Mongol Era Start?: Interpreting the Rise of
Chinggis Khan through Chronological Calculation (Language:
English)
Qiao Yang, Max-Planck-Institut für Wissenschaftsgeschichte, Berlin
167
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 616-a:
Paper 616-b:
Paper 616-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 617-a:
Paper 617-b:
Paper 617-c:
168
616
Clarendon Building: 1.02
ROMAN AND SASANIAN NETWORKS AND ENTANGLEMENTS, II: ANALYSING
THE MATERIAL CULTURE IN UNCOVERING CULTURAL, ECONOMIC, AND
POLITICAL NETWORKS
Cardiff Centre for Late Antique Religion & Culture, Cardiff University /
British Institute of Persian Studies
Domiziana Rossi, School of History, Archaeology & Religion, Cardiff
University and Sean Strong, School of History, Archaeology & Religion,
Cardiff University
Eve MacDonald, School of History, Archaeology & Religion, Cardiff
University
Roman-Sasanian Relationships and the Rise and Fall of IndoRoman Trade (Language: English)
Lev Cosijns, Independent Scholar, Pardes Hana and Haggai
Olshanetsky, Altertumswissenschaften, Universität Basel
Late Antique Silver Vessels from Georgia: Reflection on the
Political and Cultural Interactions between Rome, Persia, and
the Kingdom of Iberia (Language: English)
Lana Chologauri, Faculty of Humanities, Ivane Javakhishvili Tbilisi State
University
Northern Mesopotamian Stamped Pottery and Local Trade
Networks (Language: English)
Alexander Tamm, Arbeitsbereich Vorderasiatische Archäologie,
Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz
617
Stage@leeds: Stage 3
CULTURAL AND RELIGIOUS NETWORKS IN MEDIEVAL IBERIA, II:
TRANSITION AND ROMANISATION OF THE IBERIAN SANCTORALE
University of Bristol / Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen
Kati Ihnat, Afdeling Geschiedenis, Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen
Maeve Marta O’Donnell, Department of Music, University of Bristol
Keys to the Romanisation of the Sanctorale in the Monastery of
San Millán de la Cogolla and Its Transmission in the Late Middle
Ages (Language: English)
Santiago Ruíz Torres, Departamento de Didáctica de la Expresión
Musical, Plástica y Corporal, Universidad de Salamanca / Universidad
Complutense de Madrid
Hispanic Rite Vestiges or Identity Markers for Christians in the
Iberian Península? (Language: English)
Raquel Rojo Carrillo, Faculty of Music, University of Cambridge
Processional Chant in Two Medieval Graduals from the
Cathedral of Toledo (Language: English)
David Andrés Fernández, Departamento de Musicología, Universidad
Complutense de Madrid
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 618-a:
Paper 618-b:
Paper 618-c:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 619-a:
Paper 619-b:
Paper 619-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 620-a:
Paper 620-b:
Paper 620-c:
619
Esther Simpson Building: 2.08
BUILDING NETWORKS AT THE NOTARIAL OFFICE IN LATE MEDIEVAL
CATALONIA, II
Jaume Marcé Sánchez, Institut de Recerca en Cultures Medievals
(IRCVM), Universitat de Barcelona and Jordi Saura-Nadal, Departament
d’Història i Arqueologia, Universitat de Barcelona
Jordi Saura-Nadal
Networks of Care for the Elderly in Medieval Catalonia: An
Approach from Notarial Documentation (Language: English)
Mireia Comas Via, Departament d’Història i Arqueologia, Universitat de
Barcelona
Networks of Charity: A Study on Notaries at the Service of
Medieval Hospitals (Language: English)
Jaume Marcé Sánchez
The Role of Notaries in Making Networks of Credit in Late
Medieval Catalonia (Language: English)
Laura Miquel Milian, Departamento de Filología e Historia, Universidad
del País Vasco - Euskal Herriko Unibertsitatea, Vitoria-Gasteiz
Tuesday
Session:
Title:
618
Michael Sadler Building: Rupert Beckett Theatre
URBANITY AND NETWORKS IN ITALY, 12TH-15TH CENTURIES, II: SPATIAL
NETWORKS
Pierre Vey, Centre Jean Mabillon, École Nationale des Chartes, Paris
Marie Fontaine-Gastan, Analyse comparée des pouvoirs (ACP - EA
3350), Université Gustave Eiffel
Neighbourhood Networks in 13th-Century Tuscany (Language:
English)
Hugo Raine, Department of History, University College London
The Po Plain: A Hydraulic Network as a Model for an Urban
Network? (Language: English)
Hugo Vidon, Laboratoire de Médiévistique Occidentale de Paris (LaMOP
- UMR 8589), Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne
The Impact of Networks on a City’s Identity: Milan and Pavia,
14th-15th Centuries (Language: English)
Ludmila Nelidoff, Centre Roland Mousnier (CRM - UMR 8596), Sorbonne
Université, Paris
620
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.06
BETWEEN THE OLD AND THE NEW: CULTURAL ENTANGLEMENTS IN
ECCLESIASTICAL TEXTS
Adrián Israel Rodríguez Avila, Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse &
Celtic, University of Cambridge
Erik G. Niblaeus, Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse & Celtic,
University of Cambridge
Between Grammar and Musical Performance: The Reception of
Tonus in Aurelian of Réôme (Language: English)
Sergio Embleton Márquez, Facultad de Filosofía y Letras, Universidad
Nacional Autónoma de México
Veraldar saga: An Icelandic Reconstruction of the History of the
World (Language: English)
Beatrice Bedogni, Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse & Celtic,
University of Cambridge
Beyond the Textual Error: The Child Thor and the ‘Karlavagn’
(Language: English)
Adrián Israel Rodríguez Avila
169
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 621-a:
Paper 621-b:
Paper 621-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 622-a:
Paper 622-b:
Paper 622-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 623-a:
Paper 623-b:
Paper 623-c:
170
621
Newlyn Building: GR.01
NETWORKS AND ENTANGLEMENTS IN LATE MEDIEVAL AND EARLY MODERN
PRAYER CULTURES, II: PSALMS AND PSALM TRANSLATIONS
Late Medieval & Early Modern Prayer Cultures Network
Carolin Gluchowski, Faculty of Medieval & Modern Languages,
University of Oxford
Carolin Gluchowski
Psalteriums, Souters, and Something In-Between: Multilingual
Psalm Cultures of the Low Countries, c. 1450-1520 (Language:
English)
Renske Hoff, Utrecht Centre for Medieval Studies, Universiteit Utrecht
12th- and 13th-Century Old French Prose Psalm Translations: An
Attempt at Representation of Textual Affinities (Language:
English)
Kinga Lis, Katedra Historii Języka Angielskiego i Translatoryki, Katolicki
Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana Pawła II
Northern German Textual Networks: A Case Study of the
Psalters and Psalter Translations from the Cistercian Convent of
Medingen (Language: English)
Carolin Gluchowski
622
Michael Sadler Building: LG.10
RE-EVALUATING THE 11TH CENTURY, II: CHANGING PERCEPTIONS OF PLACE
AND SPACE IN RESPONSE TO NETWORKS AND ENTANGLEMENTS
RELEVEN (Re-Evaluating the 11th Century), Universität Wien
Lewis Read, Institut für Geschichte, Universität Wien
Aleksandar Anđelović, Institut für Geschichte, Universität Wien
Armenians in the 1070s: New Perspectives on Entanglements
between Byzantium and the Seljuk Turks (Language: English)
Lewis Read
Between Baghdad and Samarkand: An East Syriac View of the
11th Century (Language: English)
Benjamin Sharkey, Faculty of History, University of Oxford
Known Unknowns: Looking North from the Islamic Imperial
Centres in the 11th Century (Language: English)
Kieran Hagan, Department of Islamic & Middle Eastern Studies,
University of Edinburgh
623
Clarendon Building: 1.03
MAPPINGS, II: MEDIEVAL SPACE - LISTS, ROLLS, AND TOPOGRAPHIC DATA
Felicitas Schmieder, Historisches Institut, FernUniversität in Hagen and
Dan Terkla, Department of English, Illinois Wesleyan University
Christoph Mauntel, Abteilung Mittelalterliche Geschichte, LudwigMaximilians-Universität München
Topographical Lists in Late Medieval Pilgrim Reports to Rome
(Language: English)
Alicia Wolff, Historisches Seminar, Ruprecht-Karls-Universität
Heidelberg
Mapping Interactions on the Gloucester Roll (Language: English)
Matthew Boyd Goldie, Department of English, Rider University, New
Jersey
Quedlinburg and Medieval Maps (Language: English)
Thomas Wozniak, Seminar für mittelalterliche Geschichte, Eberhard
Karls Universität Tübingen
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 624-a:
Paper 624-b:
Paper 624-c:
Moderator:
Paper 625-a:
Paper 625-b:
Paper 625-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 626-a:
Paper 626-b:
Paper 626-c:
625
Newlyn Building: GR.07
NOBLEWOMEN NETWORK, II: LEGAL AND DIPLOMATIC
Noblewomen Network
Harriet Kersey, Research Development, Canterbury Christ Church
University and Charlotte Pickard, Faculty of Arts & Social Sciences,
Open University, Cardiff / ‘Exploring the Past Pathway’, Cardiff
University
Harriet Kersey
‘All for one and one for all’: Wardship, Lineage, and Dynastic
Strategy in Mid 13th-Century England (Language: English)
Adrian Jobson, School of History, University of East Anglia
Noblewomen’s Networks across 12th- and 13th-Century Iberia:
How Women as Diplomatists and Property Owners Participated
in the Formation of the Economic and Legal Institutions of
Iberia (Language: English)
Claire Dwyer, Department of History, University of Columbia
Guilty as Charged?: Female Culpability for Treason in 15 thCentury Scotland (Language: English)
Rachel Meredith Davis, Centre for History, University of the Highlands &
Islands / School of Humanities, Social Sciences & Law, University of
Dundee
Tuesday
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
624
Newlyn Building: 1.01
LOYALTY AS NETWORKS, IV: LOYALTY AND IDENTITY
Haskins Society / Battle Conference on Anglo-Norman Studies
Hannah Boston, School of Humanities & Heritage, University of Lincoln
Chris Lewis, Institute of Historical Research, University of London
Creating South-Western Loyalties in the Kingdoms of the ‘West
Saxons’, the ‘Anglo-Saxons’, and ‘England’ (Language: English)
Ryan Lavelle, School of History & Archaeology, University of Winchester
Loyalty to the System?: Exile and Return in Pre-Conquest
England (Language: English)
Mary Blanchard, Department of History, Ave Maria University, Florida
Loyal Kings: The Duty ‘to be lyke to thy progenytours’
(Language: English)
Eleanor Bailey, Department of History, University of Sheffield
626
Stage@leeds: Stage 2
NATURAL ENTANGLEMENTS, I: CONFUSED PERCEPTIONS IN THE MIDDLE
AGES
Global Perspectives on the History of Natural Philosophy (GPHNP)
Nicola Polloni, Hoger Instituut voor Wijsbegeerte, KU Leuven
Grégory Clesse, Institut des Civilisations, Arts et Lettres, Université
catholique de Louvain
‘Stuff, as dreams are made on’: Medieval Philosophers on
Delusional Dreams (Language: English)
Véronique Decaix, Départment de philosophie, Université Paris 1
Panthéon-Sorbonne
The Sound of Silence: Using Confused Perceptions to Conceive
Metaphysical Principles (Language: English)
Nicola Polloni
Natural, Intentional, Physical, or Spiritual?: The Being of
‘Species’ and Fluctuating Categories in Medieval Thought
(Language: English)
Yael Kedar, Department of Multidisciplinary Studies, Tel Hai College
171
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 627-a:
Paper 627-b:
Paper 627-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 628-a:
Paper 628-b:
Paper 628-c:
Paper 628-d:
172
627
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.31
NETWORKS AND ENTANGLEMENTS IN DANTE’S WORKS, II
Institute for Medieval Studies / Centre for Dante Studies, University of
Leeds
Elisabeth Trischler, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Camilla Bambozzi, School of Languages, Cultures & Societies - Italian,
University of Leeds
About Dante and the Poetic Circle in Ravenna: Guido Novello da
Polenta and the Model of the Vita Nuova (Language: English)
Camilla Canonico, Dipartimento di Studi letterari, Filosofici e Storia
dell’arte, Università degli Studi di Roma ‘Tor Vergata’
Lyric Subjectivity, Poetic Networks: Dante in the San Francisco
Renaissance (Language: English)
Valentina Mele, School of Languages, Cultures & Societies - Italian,
University of Leeds
The ‘Volume’ as Symbol of Personal and Poetic Evolution in
Dante’s Works (Language: English)
Elisa Bisson, Medieval Institute, University of Notre Dame, Indiana
628
Michael Sadler Building: LG.15
CULTURES OF HEALING IN LATE ANTIQUITY AND THE (MOSTLY) EARLY
MIDDLE AGES, II: BELIEF IN HEALING, BELIEF AND HEALING
ReMeDHe - Working Group for Religion, Medicine, Disability, Health &
Healing in Late Antiquity / Beyond Beccaria Project
Claire Burridge, Department of History, University of Sheffield and
Carine van Rhijn, Departement Geschiedenis en Kunstgeschiedenis,
Universiteit Utrecht
Jonathan Zecher, Institute for Religion & Critical Inquiry, Australian
Catholic University, Victoria
Can Medicine Be Dis-Entangled?: Definitions, Margins, and
Contradictions in Early Medieval Manuscripts (Language: English)
Meg Leja, Department of History, State University of New York,
Binghamton
Charms in the Margins: An Analysis of Early Medieval Latin
Charms as a Part of Their Manuscript Contexts (Language:
English)
Tim Hertogh, Humanistiske fakultet, Universitetet i Oslo
Disability in Carolingian Medical Recipes (Language: English)
Jutta Lamminaho, Onderzoekinstituut voor Geschiedenis en
Kunstgeschiedenis (OGK), Universiteit Utrecht
Visual Rhetoric and Reliability Clauses in Medical Manuscripts
(Language: English)
Irene van Renswoude, Boekwetenschap, Faculteit der
Geesteswetenschappen / Huygens Instituut, Universiteit van
Amsterdam
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 629-a:
Paper 629-b:
Paper 629-c:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 630-a:
Paper 630-b:
Paper 630-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 631-a:
Paper 631-b:
630
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.09
NETWORKING MEDIEVAL MONARCHY, II: THE NETWORKS OF QUEENS AND
ROYAL WOMEN
Royal Studies Network
Elena Woodacre, Department of History, University of Winchester
Elena Woodacre
The Diplomatic Networks of the Queens of Portugal, 1248-1525
(Language: English)
Inês Olaia, Centro de História / Faculdade de Letras, Universidade de
Lisboa
The Diplomatic Networks of Princesses in Medieval Portugal:
The Case of Branca de Portugal, 1259-1321 (Language: English)
Cristina Merendeiro, Departamento de História, Estudos Europeus,
Arqueologia e Artes, Universidade de Coimbra
Queen Adelaide of Maurienne’s Family Entanglements
(Language: English)
Myra Miranda Bom, Department of History, Royal Holloway, University
of London / Department of History, University of Cambridge
Tuesday
Session:
Title:
629
Parkinson Building: Room B.10
LINKING MEDIEVAL BRONZE DOORS: MAKING, SENSING, DOCUMENTATION
Marianne Mödlinger, Institut für Realienkunde des Mittelalters und der
frühen Neuzeit, Paris-Lodron-Universität Salzburg / Dipartimento di
Chimica e Chimica Industriale, Università degli Studi di Genova, Italy
Judith Utz, Institut für Realienkunde des Mittelalters und der frühen
Neuzeit, Paris-Lodron-Universität Salzburg
The Iconology of Technique and Material in Medieval Bronze
Doors (Language: English)
Heike Schlie, Institut für Realienkunde des Mittelalters und der frühen
Neuzeit, Paris-Lodron-Universität Salzburg
Image-based Metric and Semantic Modelling of Medieval Bronze
Doors (Language: English)
Martin Fera, Novetus GmbH, Wien
Artistic Creativity and Cultural Emulation: The Medieval Church
Doors of Svaneti, Georgia (Language: English)
Thomas Kaffenberger, Département d’histoire de l’art et d’archéologie,
Université de Fribourg
631
Michael Sadler Building: LG.19
MONASTIC INTELLECTUAL NETWORKS FROM THE CAROLINGIANS TO THE
MENDICANTS
IMC Programming Committee
Toshio Ohnuki, Faculty of Humanities & Social Sciences, Tokyo
Metropolitan University
Anti-Judaism and Early Medieval Monastic Reform: A Case of
Entangled Discourses? (Language: English)
Hannah W. Matis, Virginia Theological Seminary, Alexandria
The Reception of the Decretal Periculoso in Hospitaller
Nunneries in the Iberian Peninsula in the 14th Century
(Language: English)
Anna Katarzyna Dulska, Instituto Cultura y Sociedad, Universidad de
Navarra, Pamplona
173
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 632-a:
Paper 632-b:
Paper 632-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 633-a:
Paper 633-b:
Paper 633-c:
174
632
Clarendon Building: 1.01
ENTANGLEMENTS OF INFORMATION: MEDIEVAL BOOK COLLECTIONS AND
THEIR NAVIGATION CHARTS, II - COLLECTING AND COLLECTORS
‘Book of Books’ Project, Københavns Universitet
René Hernández Vera, Institut for Nordiske Studier og Sprogvidenskab,
Københavns Universitet
René Hernández Vera
The Canonici Collection on the Road: From the Island of Rab to
Oxford - A Case Study (Language: English)
Saša Potočnjak, Faculty of Humanities & Social Sciences, University of
Rijeka
Hands Entangled: Writing, Copying, Correcting, and Rewriting
Hernando Colón’s Libro de los epítomes (Language: English)
Matilde Malaspina, Den Arnamagnæanske Samling, Institut for Nordiske
Studier og Sprogvidenskab, Københavns Universitet
Disentangling a Historical Library: the ‘Book of Books’ Database
(Language: English)
Alessandro Gnasso, Institut for Nordiske Studier og Sprogvidenskab,
Københavns Universitet
633
Esther Simpson Building: 3.01
PERSONAL AND POLITICAL NETWORKS IN LATE MEDIEVAL FRANCE, C.
1200-C. 1500, II: OFFICIAL AND DIPLOMATIC NETWORKS IN AND AROUND
FRANCE
Katharine Bennett, Department of History, University of York and
Nathan Meades, St Andrews Institute of Mediaeval Studies, University
of St Andrews
Claudia Wittig, Institut für Geschichte, Martin-Luther-Universität HalleWittenberg
Up and Down, Side to Side: Fugitives and Officials along and
across the Rhône, c. 1200-1400 (Language: English)
Charles Steinman, Department of History, Columbia University
‘Subaltern’ Royal Officers as a Network of Intermediaries
between ‘Town’ and ‘Crown’?: The View from Lyon and Toulouse
(Language: English)
Nathan Meades
Negotiating Diplomatic Networks in 13th-Century ChampagneNavarre (Language: English)
Jillian Bjerke, Department of History & Art History, McDaniel College,
Maryland
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 634-a:
Paper 634-b:
Paper 634-c:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 635-a:
Paper 635-b:
Paper 635-c:
635
Clarendon Building: 1.06
ENTANGLED HISTORIES: PARTICIPATORY MEDIEVALISM AND THE INVISIBLE
WORLDS PROJECT
AHRC Project ‘Invisible Worlds: Exploring the Legend of Alderley Edge’
Victoria Flood, Department of English Literature, University of
Birmingham
Victoria Flood
An Emotional History of Place: The Contested Medievalisms of
Alderley Edge (Language: English)
Victoria Flood
Imagining the Site-Specific: Medieval as Subject, Theory, and
Praxis (Language: English)
Catherine A. M. Clarke, Institute of Historical Research, University of
London
Entangling the Audience, the User, and the Historian (Language:
English)
Andrew B. R. Elliott, Independent Scholar, Lincoln
Tuesday
Session:
Title:
634
Newlyn Building: 1.07
MEDIEVAL PAPACY, 500-1500, II: PAPAL NETWORKS WITH THE
TH
TH
PERIPHERY IN THE 12 -14 CENTURIES
Benedict Wiedemann, Fitzwilliam College, University of Cambridge
Benedict Wiedemann
A Network Node in the North: Archbishop Thurstan and Papal
Authority (Language: English)
Dan Armstrong, St Andrews Institute of Mediaeval Studies, University
of St Andrews
Networks of Papal Justice: The Selection of Papal JudgesDelegate in 12th-Century England (Language: English)
Callum A. Jamieson, School of Humanities (History), University of
Glasgow
Holy See and Marriage Dispensations in the Kingdom of Hungary
(Language: English)
Tudor Stefanescu, Dipartimento di Storia, Patrimonio Culturale,
Formazione e Societa, Università degli Studi di Roma ‘Tor Vergata’
175
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
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Moderator:
Paper 636-a:
Paper 636-b:
Paper 636-c:
Session:
Title:
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Paper 637-a:
Paper 637-b:
Paper 637-c:
176
636
Esther Simpson Building: 1.01
THE MIDDLE AGES IN MODERN GAMES, II: DESIGN ENTANGLEMENTS
BETWEEN MEDIEVAL AND MODERN
Centre for Medieval & Renaissance Research, University of Winchester
Robert Houghton, Centre for Medieval & Renaissance Research,
University of Winchester and Mariana Lopez, School of Arts & Creative
Technologies, University of York
James Baillie, Institut für Geschichte, Universität Wien / Institut für
Iranistik, Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
Modern Thinking through Medieval World-Building?: An
Exploration of Fire Emblem - Three Houses (Language: English)
Rebecca Chircop, Independent Scholar, Mitcham
‘Women. Don‘t. Sell.’: Females in the Creation, Storyline, and
Marketing of Digital Games with Medieval Content (Language:
English)
Vlad Cotuna, Fachbereich Geschichte, Paris-Lodron-Universität Salzburg
and Ron Heckler, Abteilung Politik & Geschichte, Deutsche Gesellschaft
e.V., Berlin
Immodern Entanglements: Medievalism as Method in Critical
Adaptive Game Design (Language: English)
Sarah-Nelle Jackson, Department of English Language & Literatures,
University of British Columbia
637
Parkinson Building: Room 1.08
ENTANGLEMENTS OF LOVE AND THEIR SPATIAL SETTINGS IN ARTHURIAN
ROMANCES
Oswald von Wolkenstein-Gesellschaft
Sieglinde Hartmann, Institut für Germanistik, Julius-Maximilians
Universität Würzburg
Sieglinde Hartmann
Layers of Entanglement in Wolfram’s Titurel (Language: English)
Miriam Strieder, Independent Scholar, Greifswald
Locating Love: The Meadow in Pleier’s Meleranz (Language:
English)
Manuel Hoder, Lehrstuhl für deutsche Philologie, Julius-MaximiliansUniversität Würzburg
Untangling the Figure of Famurgan in Hartmann von Aue’s Erec
(Language: English)
Philip Liston-Kraft, Department of Germanic Languages & Literatures,
Harvard University
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 638-a:
Paper 638-b:
Paper 638-c:
Paper 638-d:
Paper 639-b:
Paper 639-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 640-a:
Paper 640-b:
Paper 640-c:
639
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.03
MENDICANTS AND THE URBAN MEDITERRANEAN, II
Jon Paul Heyne, Department of History, University of Dallas, Texas
Austin Powell, Department of Classics, University of California, Davis
Franciscans and Dominicans in the Communities of Late
Medieval Dalmatia (Language: English)
Igor Razum, Department of Medieval Studies, Central European
University, Budapest/Wien
Mendicant Convents in the Aegean Sea: The Visual and Material
Impact on Urban and Insular Dynamics, 13th-16th Centuries
(Language: English)
Panayota Volti, Département d’histoire de l’art et de l’archéologie,
Université Paris Nanterre
Masters of Negotiation in the Cities of the Sultans: Mendicants
in Mamluk Egypt (Language: English)
Jon Paul Heyne
Tuesday
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 639-a:
638
Parkinson Building: Room B.08
MATERIALITY OF MANUSCRIPTS, II: ENTANGLEMENTS
Katarzyna Anna Kapitan, Linacre College, University of Oxford and N.
Kıvılcım Yavuz, Institute for Medieval Studies / School of History,
University of Leeds
Katarzyna Anna Kapitan
Handmade, Remade, Repurposed: In situ Manuscript Fragments
(Language: English)
N. Kıvılcım Yavuz
A Late Medieval Multilingual Medical Almanac: A User’s
Perspective (Language: English)
Dorthe Duncker, Institut for Nordiske Studier og Sprogvidenskab,
Københavns Universitet and Anne Mette Hansen, Den
Arnamagnæanske Samling, Institut for Nordiske Studier og
Sprogvidenskab, Københavns Universitet
Pedigrees and Rolls: A Perfect Fit (Language: English)
Matthias Kuhn, Sonderforschungsbereich 933 ‘Materiale Textkulturen’,
Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg
Mixed Materials in Late Medieval Books (Language: English)
Hannah Ryley, Balliol College, University of Oxford
640
Newlyn Building: 1.02
ROYAL AND IMPERIAL IDENTITIES
IMC Programming Committee
Francesca Petrizzo, School of Humanities, University of Glasgow /
Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Subversion in Perino del Vaga’s Fall of the Giants, Villa Andrea
Doria, Genoa (Language: English)
Nurit Golan, Cohn Institute for the History & Philosophy of Science &
Ideas, Tel Aviv University
Charles d’Orléans’ Social Networks (Language: English)
Holly Barbaccia, Department of English, Georgetown College, Kentucky
Entangled Identities: Queen Amalesuintha and the Education of
Athalaric (Language: English)
Anna Akselevich Obibok, Faculty of Humanities, Hebrew University of
Jerusalem
177
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
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Paper 641-a:
Paper 641-b:
Paper 641-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
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Paper 642-a:
Paper 642-b:
Paper 642-c:
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Paper 643-a:
Paper 643-b:
Paper 643-c:
178
641
Esther Simpson Building: 3.08
WORDS AND THINGS: RECONSTRUCTING FOODWAYS FROM MEDIEVAL
VOCABULARY AND THE MATERIAL RECORD
Mathias Blobel, Avdeling for kulturhistorie, Universitetsmuseet i Bergen
Mathias Blobel and Bethany Rogers, School of Humanities, University of
Iceland, Reykjavík
Mincing Words: Insights into Western Norwegian Foodways
from Narrative and Non-Narrative Written Sources (and a Little
Bio-Archaeology) (Language: English)
Mathias Blobel
Milk Moo-Stache: Hoarding Butter-Based Riches in Medieval
Iceland (Language: English)
Bethany Rogers
Recipes, Ingredients, Objects, and Gestures from Collections of
Recipes from the Late Middle Ages in Spain (Language: English)
Julia Roumier, Institut Universitaire de France, Paris / Poétiques et
Politiques des Pays ibériques et Amérique latine (AMERIBER - UMR
3656), Université Bordeaux Montaigne
642
Maurice Keyworth Building: G.02
DISEASE IN THE MEDIEVAL ISLAMICATE WORLD, II: OBSERVING AND
REMEMBERING PLAGUE
Nahyan Fancy, Department of History, DePauw University, Indiana and
Monica Green, Independent Scholar, Phoenix, Arizona
André Filipe Oliveira da Silva, Centro de Investigação Transdisciplinar
‘Cultura, Espaço e Memória’ (CITCEM), Universidade do Porto
How the Black Death Became ‘Global’: Plague Focalisation and
Epidemic Perceptions in the 14th Century (Language: English)
Monica Green
Observing Others at the End of the World: Arabic Accounts of
the Black Death (Language: English)
Adam Talib, Department of Arab & Islamic Civilizations, American
University in Cairo
Recycling Prayers in Exile: A Hebrew Plague Liturgy Moves from
Mallorca to the Maghreb (Language: English)
Susan Einbinder, Department of Literatures, Cultures & Languages,
University of Connecticut
643
Clarendon Building: 2.01
MEDIEVAL BLOOD, C. 1000-1450
Patrick Cowley, King’s College, University of Cambridge
Ben Hatchett, Faculty of History, University of Cambridge
Entangling the Physical and Conceptual: The Complex
Phenomenon of Medieval Jewish Menstruation (Language:
English)
Rosalie Bernheim, School of Modern Languages, University of St
Andrews
Drink Me!: The Transfer of Knowledge through Blood-Drinking in
the Norse Eddas (Language: English)
Natalie Hopwood, Independent Scholar, Cambridge
‘To knawe þe wanes [to] late blode’: An Unnoticed Version of a
Middle English Verse Phlebotomy Tract (DIMEV 6287) in Oxford,
Bodleian Library, MS Ashmole 1438 (Language: English)
Caleb Prus, School of Medicine & Dentistry, University of Rochester,
New York
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
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Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 645-a:
Paper 645-b:
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Title:
Paper 646-b:
Paper 646-c:
Session:
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Organiser:
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Paper 647-a:
Paper 647-b:
Paper 647-c:
646
Clarendon Building: GR 01
POETRY AND COMMUNICATION, 14TH-16TH CENTURIES, II: GROUPS AND
COLLECTIVE PRACTICES
Estelle Doudet, Faculté des lettres, Université de Lausanne
Lucien Dugaz, Faculté des lettres, Université de Lausanne
Poetry and Communication at the Court of Margaret of Austria
(Language: English)
Chloé Gumy, Faculté des lettres, Université de Lausanne
‘L’art subtil des orateurs’ (Crétin): A Study of the Concept of
Subtilité in the Grands rhétoriqueurs’ Funeral Laments around
1500 (Language: English)
Benjamin Reynes, Faculté des lettres, Université de Lausanne /
Département Lettres et Sciences humaines, Université Paris Cité
Orators or Story-Tellers?: Theater Makers in the Service of the
City in Romand Territories, 15th-16th Centuries (Language:
English)
Natalia Wawrzyniak, Section de français, Université de Lausanne
Tuesday
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 646-a:
645
Esther Simpson Building: 3.02
FACETS OF CLERICAL POWER IN THE LONG MIDDLE AGES
Episcopus: Society for the Study of Bishops & Secular Clergy in the
Middle Ages
William Campbell, Department of History, University of Pittsburgh,
Greensburg
Benjamin Wand, Center for Medieval & Renaissance Studies, Saint
Louis University, Missouri
The Audientia episcopalis as Instrument of Local Power and
Dignity during Late Antiquity (Language: English)
Mohamed-Arbi Nsiri, Département d’Histoire, Université Paris Nanterre
Caesarius of Arles: The Bishop as a Watchman (Language:
English)
Martina Carandino, Faculty of History, University of Oxford
647
Stage@leeds: Stage 1
ARMS, ARMOUR, AND THE ARTS OF COMBAT, II: THE PRODUCTION,
FUNCTION, AND SIGNIFICANCE OF ARMOUR
Iason-Eleftherios Tzouriadis, Royal Armouries, Leeds
Iason-Eleftherios Tzouriadis
A Foreign Guy with One Eye on the Field of Verneuil, 17 August
1424 (Language: English)
Ralph Moffat, Kelvingrove Art Gallery & Museum, Glasgow Museums
Along the Street of Smiths: Armourers and the Artistic Networks
of Late Medieval Augsburg (Language: English)
Chassica Kirchhoff, Detroit Institute of Arts
Armour Decoration as an Identifier of Origin (Language: English)
Karen Watts, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
179
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
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Title:
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Paper 648-a:
Paper 648-b:
Paper 648-c:
648
Newlyn Building: LG.01
BEAUTY, DEATH, AND THE FEMININE IN MIDDLE ENGLISH TEXTS:
DANGEROUS DESIRES?
IMC Programming Committee
Kenna L. Olsen, Department of English, Mount Royal University, Alberta
Beyond the Death Drive: Criseyde’s Desire for Nonexistence in
Chaucer’s Troilus and Criseyde (Language: English)
Caitlin Mahaffy, Department of English, Utah State University
‘Criseyda, in widewes habite blak’: Troy and the Feminine as the
Eastern Other in Troilus and Criseyde (Language: English)
Woo Ree Heor, Department of English, City University of New York
In Ugliness There Is Beauty: On Correlation Between the
Aesthetic Concepts in Middle English (Language: English)
Natalia Cziganj, Faculté des Langues, Cultures et Sociétés, Université
de Lille
LUNCH: 12.00-14.00
Take some time to enjoy lunch with colleagues.
If you have pre-ordered Café Lunch Credit for today, your QR code voucher can be used
anytime during café opening hours on the day of validity at the locations listed on p. 24.
TUESDAY 04 JULY
DANTE: LIBRI NUOVI - EIGHT ARTISTS’ BOOKS
HOSTED BY
LEEDS CENTRE FOR DANTE STUDIES
MAURICE KEYWORTH BUILDING: 1.31
13.00-14.00
A presentation exploring new book works produced by eight artists in response to Dante, his life,
and poetry.
180
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 13.15-14.00
Session:
Title:
Speaker:
Introduction:
Details:
Tuesday
699
Esther Simpson Building: LG08
KEYNOTE LECTURE 2023: ‘SO, WHO KILLED THE ELEPHANT?’ - TRACING
AFRICAN-EUROPEAN ENTANGLEMENTS IN THE AGE OF THE ‘GLOBAL MIDDLE
AGES’ (Language: English)
Verena Krebs, Historisches Institut, Ruhr-Universität Bochum
Johannes Preiser-Kapeller, Institut für Mittelalterforschung,
Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
The study of Eurasian interaction has long been established in Medieval
Studies, most notably in Mediterranean history. In more recent years,
the Indian Ocean has also become the subject of increasing scholarly
attention. However, the same cannot be said about what we call ‘Africa’
today - the integration of agents, realms, and networks anchored south
of the Mediterranean into the concept of the ‘Global Medieval’ remains
an ongoing challenge for the field. Often, this has been attributed to an
assumed dearth of sources. But is that really the case? Or have we,
perhaps, just not been asking the right questions?
In this keynote, I trace the histories of two very different objects to
uncover a web of medieval entanglements that reached from the Niger
to the Saar and Moselle rivers, and from modern-day France to the
highlands of the Horn of Africa. The first is a German ivory carving of
Christ in Majesty, made for a man called Eberhard in the early 1100s;
the second, a painted enamel of two kings with an inscription in the old
Ethiopian language of Gǝʿǝz, commissioned by Ethiopian Queen Naʿod
Mogäsa from a Western European workshop in the early 1500s.
While these objects have been known to scholarship for many decades,
only their style and artistic value have received attention. The question
of the local conditions and long-distance networks required to bring these
items into existence, however, has been insufficiently addressed by
medievalists. Only very recently have scholars begun to ask about the
material origin of an ivory such as Eberhard’s, tracing its source to the
African Savannah elephant.
Yet: who hunted the elephant? And who traded its tusk to a peripheral
region in what is today Germany? What insights may we glean by
cooperating with scholars far outside our disciplines? And,
simultaneously, how and why was the Ethiopian queen’s enamel created
in the first place? For what purpose was it brought to early 16 th-century
Solomonic Ethiopia? As I will argue, questions such as these can help us
shine a light onto a larger, long-ignored history of African-European
connections in the medieval period and provide new ways to integrate
research on African realms, agents, and networks into the emerging field
of the ‘Global Middle Ages’.
Please note that admission to this event will be on a first-come, firstserved basis as there will be no tickets. Please ensure that you arrive as
early as possible to avoid disappointment.
181
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 701-a:
Paper 701-b:
Session:
Title:
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Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 702-a:
Paper 702-b:
Paper 702-c:
Paper 702-d:
182
701
Newlyn Building: GR.01
SOUL AND BODY LITERATURE
Antonio Lenzo, Department of English, Stanford University
Antonio Lenzo
Generating Death: The Poetics of Reproduction in English Soul
and Body Literature, 1150-1225 (Language: English)
Antonio Lenzo
Napier XXIX (Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS Hatton 113, fols 66r73r): A ‘Soul and Body’ Homily and Its Middle English Readers
(Language: English)
Claudio Cataldi, Facoltà di Studi classici, linguistici e della formazione,
Università degli Studi di Enna ‘Kore’
702
Clarendon Building: 2.08
ROMANISLAM, III: TRANSFORMING CITIES
RomanIslam - Center for Comparative Empire & Transcultural Studies
Antonia Bosanquet, RomanIslam - Center for Comparative Empire &
Transcultural Studies, Universität Hamburg
Antonia Bosanquet
City of Suburbs?: Islamic Palermo / Balarm and Its Extramural
Districts (Language: English)
Dana Katz, RomanIslam - Center for Comparative Empire &
Transcultural Studies, Universität Hamburg / Madrid Institute for
Advanced Study
The City and Its Satellites: The Transformation of the Urban
Territorium in the Hispanic Provinces after the Fall of Rome
(Language: English)
Pablo C. Díaz Martínez, Departamento de Prehistoria, Historia Antigua y
Arqueología, Universidad de Salamanca
Reuse in Post-Roman Western Societies: A Comparative
Approach between Christian and Islamic Attitudes towards
Recycling and Spolia (Language: English)
Jorge Elices Ocón, Departamento de Historia Medieval, Centro de
Ciencias Humanas y Sociales (CCHS), Consejo Superior de
Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC), Madrid
Islamic Foundations as Military Cities (Language: English)
Stefan Heidemann, RomanIslam - Center for Comparative Empire &
Transcultural Studies, Universität Hamburg
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 703-a:
Paper 703-b:
Paper 703-c:
Paper 703-d:
Paper 704-a:
Paper 704-b:
Paper 704-c:
704
Esther Simpson Building: 2.09
IDEOLOGIES AND IDENTITIES IN CONQUEST AND CRUSADE
IMC Programming Committee
Sini Kangas, History, Philosophy & Literary Studies Unit, Faculty of
Social Sciences, Tampere University
The Self and the Others, or Christians and Pagans in the
Chronicles of the Teutonic Order of the 14th Century (Language:
English)
Yanina Ryier, Wydział Pedagogiczny, Instytut Neofilologii, Akademia
Ignatianum w Krakowie
A Crusading State of Mind: Capetian Crusading and Visions of
Mediterranean Sovereignty in the 12th and 13th Centuries
(Language: English)
Darren Henry-Noel, Department of History, Queen’s University, Ontario
The Colonial Era Roots of the Medieval Islamic ‘CounterCrusade’ (Language: English)
James Wilson, Zukunftskolleg / Fach Geschichte, Universität Konstanz
Tuesday
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
703
Michael Sadler Building: LG.16
RE-EVALUATING JOHN WYCLIFFE IN BOHEMIA
Lollard Society
Patrick Outhwaite, Department of English Language & Culture,
Rijksuniversiteit Groningen
Michael van Dussen, Department of English, McGill University, Montréal
Wycliffe in Late Medieval Bohemia Revisited (Language: English)
Martin Dekarli, Filozofická Fakulta, Univerzita Hradec Králové
The Influence of Wycliffe’s Theory of Universals on Prague
Masters: An Example of Stanislav of Znojmo and His Treatise De
universalibus (Language: English)
Jakub Šenovský, Evangelická teologická fakulta, Univerzita Karlova,
Praha
Wycliffe’s Legacy of Peace in 15th-Century Bohemia (Language:
English)
Martin Pjecha, Centrum Medievistických Studií, Akademie věd České
republiky, Praha
Stanislav of Znojmo’s Treatises on Wycliffe’s Summa de Ente
(Language: English)
Stephen Lahey, Department of Classics & Religious Studies, University
of Nebraska, Lincoln
183
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 705-a:
Paper 705-b:
Paper 705-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 706-a:
Paper 706-b:
Paper 706-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 707-a:
Paper 707-b:
Paper 707-c:
184
705
Esther Simpson Building: LG08
PENANCE, CANON LAW, AND HISTORIOGRAPHY IN 8TH-CENTURY NEUSTRIA
Roland Zingg, Historisches Seminar, Mittelalterliche Geschichte,
Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz
Roland Zingg
More than One Archetype from Corbie?: Remarks on the
Transmission of Collectio Vetus Gallica and Paenitentiale
Excarpsus Cummeani (Language: English)
Ludger Körntgen, Historisches Seminar, Johannes GutenbergUniversität Mainz
Coincidence, Mistake, or New Creation?: Textual Changes in the
additiones of the Collectio Vetus Gallica (Language: English)
Helena Geitz, Historisches Seminar, Johannes Gutenberg-Universität
Mainz
Reflexes of Canon Law in the Liber historiae Francorum
(Language: English)
Roland Zingg
706
Parkinson Building: Room 1.08
DYNASTY AND COURT CULTURE IN BYZANTIUM AND THE NEAR EAST, I: THE
LATE ANTIQUE COURT
Cardiff Centre for Late Antique Religion & Culture, Cardiff University
Shaun Tougher, School of History, Archaeology & Religion, Cardiff
University
Shaun Tougher
Traveling Emperors: Which Court Follows (Language: English)
Danielle Slootjes, Afdeling Geschiedenis, Europese studies en
religiewetenschappen, Universiteit van Amsterdam
Gallus Caesar: Life in Antioch (and Beyond) (Language: English)
Nicholas Baker-Brian, School of History, Archaeology & Religion, Cardiff
University
‘Woe in many ways…’: Child-Emperors and the Challenges of
Court (Ceremonial) in Late Antiquity (Language: English)
Christian Rollinger, Fachbereich Geschichte, Politikwissenschaft &
Altertumswissenschaften, Universität Trier
707
Parkinson Building: Room B.22
MODELS OF MASCULINITY IN LATE MEDIEVAL NORTHERN EUROPE
Bobbi Sutherland, Department of History, University of Dayton, Ohio
Miguel Gómez, Department of History, University of Dayton, Ohio
Brothers-in-(Masculine)-Law: Policing Piety and Masculine
Reputation (Language: English)
Marita von Weissenberg, Department of History, Xavier University, Ohio
‘A man, but what sort? A knight or a burgher?’: Examining
Masculinity in the Ménagier (Language: English)
Bobbi Sutherland
Young Men, Public Order, and Prosecuting ‘Rudeness’ in Late
Medieval Bruges (Language: English)
Mireille Juliette Pardon, History Department, Berea College, Kentucky
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 708-a:
Paper 708-b:
Paper 708-c:
Paper 709-a:
Paper 709-b:
Paper 709-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 710-a:
Paper 710-b:
Paper 710-c:
709
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.33
FAITH, THEOLOGY, AND IDEALS OF LIVING IN THE LATE ROMAN EMPIRE
IMC Programming Committee
Nicola Holm, Department of Classics, Ancient History, Religion &
Theology, University of Exeter
‘Dangerous’ Boundaries between Faiths in Late Antiquity
(Language: English)
Giuseppe Pascale, Dipartimento di Scienze religiose, Università
Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Milano
Through the ‘Gates of Paradise’: Eucherius, Ontology, and the
Late Ancient Monastery of Lérins (Language: English)
Matthew Baker, Department of History, University of Tennessee,
Knoxville
The Reception of Augustine’s City of God in Orosius’ Against the
Pagans (Language: English)
Cédrik Michel, Department of Classics & Ancient History, Durham
University
Tuesday
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
708
Newlyn Building: GR.02
TASTE AND DISGUST IN LATE ANTIQUITY, III: ELITE LIFE
Postgraduate & Early-Career Late Antiquity Network
Henry Anderson, Department of Classics, Ancient History, Religion &
Theology, University of Exeter
Ella Kirsh, Department of Classics, Brown University
Symmachus’ Taste in Epistolary Practice: Breuitas and Maturum
aliquid et comicum (Language: English)
Maria Lubello, Dipartimento di Storia, Archeologia, Geografia, Arte e
Spettacolo, Università degli Studi di Firenze
‘Ne gustus quidem causa’: Barbarians and Roman Tastes - A
Note about Codex Justinianus 4.41.1 (373) (Language: English)
Paolo Costa, Dipartimento di Giurisprudenza, Università degli Studi di
Genova / Facoltà Biblica, Pontificio Istituto Biblico di Roma
A Taste of Wine at the Court of Athalaric: Some Remarks from
Cassiodorus, Variae XII, 4 on the Spread of Vinum rusticum in
Ostrogothic Italy (Language: English)
Daniele Reano, Classe di lettere e filosofia, Scuola Normale Superiore di
Pisa
710
Newlyn Building: LG.02
EVERYDAY ENTANGLEMENTS: DEBT AND OBLIGATION, 1200-1500, III
Sarah McKeagney, Department of History, University of York
Tom Johnson, Department of History, University of York
Credit Relations in the Welsh Marches, 1490-1520 (Language:
English)
Rachael Harkes, Department of History, Durham University
Engines of Piety: The Wills of the Register ‘Baldwyne’ as a
Network of Debt and Obligation (Language: English)
Matthew E. Davis, Institute of Medieval & Early Modern Studies,
Durham University
An Economy of ‘Stuff’: Material Debt in English Church Courts,
1450-1500 (Language: English)
Sarah McKeagney
185
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 711-a:
Paper 711-b:
Paper 711-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 712-a:
Paper 712-b:
Paper 712-c:
186
711
Esther Simpson Building: 2.11
MEDIEVAL AFRICAN NETWORKS, III: CONNECTIVITY
2022 Dan David Prize Funding
Verena Krebs, Historisches Institut, Ruhr-Universität Bochum
Andrea Achi, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
The Early Islamic Maghreb: New Administrative Centres in
Medieval Africa (Language: English)
Michelle Al-Ferzly, Department of History of Art, University of Michigan
Resituating Jewish Art in Byzantine North Africa (Language:
English)
Pratima Gopalakrishnan, Department of Classics, University of Texas,
Austin and Naila Razzaq, Department of Religious Studies, Yale
University
Political Insurgency and State Formation in Northeast Africa:
Insights from Judeo-Arabic and Old Nubian Documentary
Sources (Language: English)
Craig Perry, Department of Middle Eastern & South Asian Studies,
Emory University, Georgia
712
Parkinson Building: Room B.09
NETWORKS AND ENTANGLEMENTS IN MEDIEVAL WALES, III: THE SPREAD
OF SAINTS’ CULTS AND OTHER LEGENDS
Bangor University
Amy Reynolds, School of History, Law & Social Sciences, Bangor
University
Adam Chapman, Victoria County History, Institute of Historical
Research, University of London
Poets, Patrons, and the Cults of Local Saints in Late Medieval
Wales (Language: English)
Barry James Lewis, School of Celtic Studies, Dublin Institute for
Advanced Studies
The Topographical Networks for the Saints’ Cults of South Wales
(Language: English)
Jennifer Bell, School of History, Law & Social Sciences, Bangor
University
Trioedd Ynys Prydein: Theme, History, and Performance
(Language: English)
Nia Wyn Jones, School of History, Law & Social Sciences, Bangor
University
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 713-a:
Paper 713-b:
Paper 713-c:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 714-a:
Paper 714-b:
Paper 714-c:
714
Esther Simpson Building: 2.07
STATE, CAPITAL, AND SOCIAL POWER NETWORKS: HOW EASTERN CENTRAL
EUROPEAN AND BALKAN HISTORY HAPPENED
Uniwersytet Mikołaja Kopernika, Toruń
Piotr Paweł Pranke, Instytut Historii i Archiwistyki, Uniwersytet Mikołaja
Kopernika, Toruń
Emilia Jamroziak, Institute for Medieval Studies / School of History,
University of Leeds
Trade and Power Networks: The First Piast Dynasty and the
Creation of the State in East-Central Europe (Language: English)
Mariusz Ciszak, Independent Scholar, Poznań and Piotr Paweł Pranke
Visions of Nation in the Medieval Period in Slavic
Historiography: 11th-Century Austro-Hungary (Language: English)
Tomasz Lis, Instytut Historii, Uniwersytet Jagielloński, Kraków
Legends and Myths in Contemporary Politics: The Legitimacy of
Power in Contemporary Poland (Language: English)
Marcin Lisiecki, Katedra Komunikacji, Mediów i Dziennikarstwa /
Instytut Badań Informacji i Komunikacji / Wydział Filozofii i Nauk
Społecznych, Uniwersytet Mikołaja Kopernika, Toruń
Tuesday
Session:
Title:
713
Parkinson Building: Room B.11
‘NO ISLAND IS AN ISLAND’: THE BYZANTINE INSULAR NETWORKS FROM
LATE ANTIQUITY TO THE MEDIEVAL PERIOD
Zeynep Olgun, Faculty of History, University of Cambridge and Luca
Zavagno, Department of History, Bilkent University, Ankara
Zeynep Olgun
Insularity, Communication, and Literary Geography in the
Aegean after 1204: Michael Choniates’ Letters from Kea
(Language: English)
John Kee, Department of the Classics, Harvard University
Connectivity and Insularity: The Case Study of the Monastery
Island of Patmos (Language: English)
Marie-Myriam Carytsiotis, Le Laboratoire d’Archéologie Médiévale et
Moderne en Méditerranée, Aix-Marseille Université
Late for Dinner: Heterotopy, Heterochrony, and Early Medieval
Port Society (Language: English)
Ian Randall, Department of Philosophy, University of British Columbia,
Vancouver
187
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 715-a:
Paper 715-b:
Paper 715-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 716-a:
Paper 716-b:
Paper 716-c:
188
715
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.32
CHINGGISID RIPPLES, III: NETWORKS AND INSTITUTIONS ACROSS MONGOL
EURASIA
Geoffrey Humble, School of Medicine, University of Leeds and Márton
Vér, Seminar für Turkologie und Zentralasienkunde, Georg-AugustUniversität Göttingen
Geoffrey Humble
Yuan-Koryŏ Relations Seen through Intermarriage: The Theory
of the ‘One-Way, Two-Way Marriages’ between Kublai Khan’s
Descendants in the 13th and 14th Centuries (Language: English)
Gulsen Kilci, Laboratoire Chine, Corée, Japon (CCJ - UMR 8173),
Université Paris-Cité
The Aqa and the Khan: A Social and Political Affair (Language:
English)
Toby Jones, Institute for Area Studies, Universiteit Leiden
A Network Analysis of Yuan Officials and Its Implications for the
‘Sinicization’ of the Mongols (Language: English)
Wonhee Cho, Graduate School of Korean Studies, Academy of Korean
Studies, Gyeonggi-do
716
Clarendon Building: 1.02
ROMAN AND SASANIAN NETWORKS AND ENTANGLEMENTS, III: IDENTIFYING
NETWORKS AND COMMUNITIES AT COURT AND WITHIN THE MILITARY
Cardiff Centre for Late Antique Religion & Culture, Cardiff University /
British Institute of Persian Studies
Domiziana Rossi, School of History, Archaeology & Religion, Cardiff
University and Sean Strong, School of History, Archaeology & Religion,
Cardiff University
Domiziana Rossi
Military Communities on the Frontiers of 6th-Century Rome and
Persia: A Comparative Study (Language: English)
Conor Whately, Department of Classics, University of Winnipeg
Relics for the Royals: Holy Objects and the Ruling Families
between the Eastern Roman and the Sasanian Empire (Language:
English)
Alexander Thies, Historisches Institut, Universität Bern
Emperor Maurice and His Eastern Generals: Military Careers and
Networks along the Roman-Sasanian Frontier (Language: English)
Sean Strong
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 717-a:
Paper 717-b:
Paper 717-c:
Moderator:
Paper 718-a:
Paper 718-b:
Paper 718-c:
718
Michael Sadler Building: Rupert Beckett Theatre
NETWORKING RELIGION AND DIPLOMACY IN MEDIEVAL PORTUGAL
Instituto de Estudos Medievais (IEM), Universidade Nova Lisboa
Paulo Esmeraldo Catarino Lopes, Instituto de Estudos Medievais (IEM),
Universidade Nova de Lisboa and João Luís Fontes, Instituto de Estudos
Medievais (IEM), Universidade Nova de Lisboa / Centro de Estudos de
História Religiosa, Universidade Católica Portuguesa, Lisboa
Tiago Viúla de Faria, Instituto de Estudos Medievais (IEM),
Universidade Nova de Lisboa
Linking Italy and Portugal: Networks of Power and Reform
around Gomes Eanes, the Abbot of Florence, 1419-1441
(Language: English)
Paulo Esmeraldo Catarino Lopes
Formal and Informal Networks: The Portuguese Diplomatic
Panorama during the Reign of King Dinis, 1279-1325 (Language:
English)
Diana Martins, Instituto de Estudos Medievais (IEM), Universidade Nova
de Lisboa
Lay Patronage and the Networks of Religious Renewal in
Portugal, 14th-15th Centuries (Language: English)
Maria Filomena Pimentel de Carvalho Andrade, Departamento de
Ciências Sociais e de Gestão, Universidade Aberta and João Luís Fontes
Tuesday
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
717
Stage@leeds: Stage 3
CULTURAL AND RELIGIOUS NETWORKS IN MEDIEVAL IBERIA, III: IBERIAN
LITURGICAL MANUSCRIPTS
University of Bristol / Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen
Kati Ihnat, Afdeling Geschiedenis, Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen
Kati Ihnat
Identification of Music Scribes and Their Roles in the 10 thCentury Old Hispanic Manuscript Madrid, Real Academia de la
Historia, MS 30 (Language: English)
Emma C. Hornby, Department of Music, University of Bristol
Old Hispanic Music Notation: Notational Style, Vocabulary, and
Grammar in Madrid, Real Academia de la Historia, MS 30
(Language: English)
Marcus Jones, Department of Music, University of Bristol
San Lorenzo de El Escorial, Real Biblioteca, MS I.III.16:
Identification of a Monastic Breviary of the 12th Century
(Language: English)
Juan Pablo Rubio Sadia, Pontifical Institute of Liturgy, Pontificio Ateneo
Sant’ Anselmo, Roma
189
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 719-a:
Paper 719-b:
Paper 719-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 720-a:
Paper 720-b:
Paper 720-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 721-a:
Paper 721-b:
Paper 721-c:
190
719
Clarendon Building: 1.06
NETWORKS IN EARLY MEDIEVAL CHARTERS: POWER, POLITICS, AND
SOCIETY
Jonathan Dell Isola, Department of History, Catholic University of
America, Washington, DC
Levi Roach, Department of Archaeology & History, University of Exeter
The Politics of Place: Location and Networks in the Charters of
Lothar I (Language: English)
Elina Screen, Trinity College, University of Oxford
Memory, Empire, and Bottom-Up Networks between Kings in
10th-Century Rheims (Language: English)
Fraser McNair, Center for Advanced Studies, Eberhard Karls Universität
Tübingen
Elites in the Charters of Arnulf of Carinthia: Networks and
Power (Language: English)
Jonathan Dell Isola
720
Esther Simpson Building: 3.02
NETWORKS OF RELIGIOUS DEBATES IN THE MEDIEVAL CHRISTIAN WORLD
IMC Programming Committee
Jan Vandeburie, School of History, Politics & International Relations,
University of Leicester
(De)Constructing ‘Semipelagianism’: Processes of Othering and
Networking in the Early Middle Ages (Language: English)
Dorothee Schenk, Lehrstuhl für Kirchengeschichte, Theologische
Fakultät, Georg-August-Universität Göttingen
Network Failure: How St Boniface Inadvertently Fell into Sin
(Language: English)
Mark David Laynesmith, Chaplaincy, University of Reading
Thomas of Cantimpré’s Saints: Networks of Knowledge for
Positive Coping with Religious Struggles (Language: English)
Scott Harrower, Department of History, Ethics & Theology, Ridley
College, Victoria
721
Esther Simpson Building: 1.08
ENTANGLEMENTS OF RELIGIOUS PRACTICES AND NARRATIVE NETWORKS IN
THE MEDIEVAL CHRISTIAN WORLD
IMC Programming Committee
Cosima Clara Gillhammer, Christ Church College, University of Oxford
The Medieval Narrative of the Lustful Heretic and the
Reformers: An (Unconscious) Entanglement (Language: English)
Aneke Dornbusch, Evangelisch-Theologische Fakultät, Rheinische
Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn
Liturgical Networking and the Formation of the Armenian
Eucharistic Rite: Nerses of Lambron’s Liturgical Commentary as
a Case Study (Language: English)
Gregory Shokhikyan, Department of Theology & Religious Studies,
University of Nottingham
Clarissan Networks and Observant Entanglements: An
Investigation on the 15th-Century Rediscovery of the Rule of St
Clare (Language: English)
Andrea Mancini, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 722-a:
Paper 722-b:
Paper 722-c:
Moderator:
Paper 723-a:
Paper 723-b:
Paper 723-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Purpose:
723
Clarendon Building: 1.03
MAPPINGS, III: BORDERS - MENTAL AND MAPPED
Felicitas Schmieder, Historisches Institut, FernUniversität in Hagen and
Dan Terkla, Department of English, Illinois Wesleyan University
Felicitas Schmieder and Dan Terkla
Where Europe Ends: On the Function of Continental Borders on
Medieval Word Maps (Language: English)
Christoph Mauntel, Abteilung Mittelalterliche Geschichte, LudwigMaximilians-Universität München
Termini Europae: Where, When, and How Does ‘Our’ Continent
Feature on Medieval Maps and in Medieval Prophecy? (Language:
English)
Felicitas Schmieder
Harmony Belies Tension: Mapping the Mediterranean from the
Other Islamicate Side (Language: English)
Karen Pinto, Department of Religious Studies, University of Colorado,
Boulder
Tuesday
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
722
Michael Sadler Building: LG.10
RE-EVALUATING THE 11TH CENTURY, III: THE MOVEMENT OF PEOPLE IN
TH
11 -CENTURY EUROPE
RELEVEN (Re-Evaluating the 11th Century), Universität Wien
Márton Rózsa, Institut für Geschichte, Universität Wien
Katalin Prajda, Institut für Geschichte, Universität Wien
Moving Individuals and Royal Power at the Dawn of the
Christian State of Hungary (Language: English)
Márton Rózsa
Greek-Latin Translators, 1050-1150: The Questions of Location,
Movement, and Patronage (Language: English)
Péter Bara, Church History Research Team, Institute of History,
Research Centre for the Humanities, Eötvös Loránd Research Network,
Budapest
Moving Bishops and the Empire in Byzantium, 11th-12th
Centuries (Language: English)
Jack Roskilly, Laboratoire de Orient et Méditerranée (UMR 8167),
Sorbonne Université, Paris
724
Newlyn Building: 1.01
LOYALTY IN THE MIDDLE AGES: A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
Haskins Society / Battle Conference on Anglo-Norman Studies
Chris Lewis, Institute of Historical Research, University of London
Alice Taylor, Department of History, King’s College London
The round table discussion links four sessions organised by Hannah
Boston on Loyalty as Networks and three by Chris Lewis on Loyalty as
Entanglements. Loyalty is surprisingly neglected as a topic in its own
right, given that so many historians write about the particular loyalties
of men and their lords, or subjects and their kings. There are other ways
of using loyalty as a way of understanding human behaviour and human
emotions in the Middle Ages: loyalty to family members, ancestors, the
recently dead, monastic communities, saints, places, ideals, and many
other things. Several of these aspects will have been explored in the
sessions. The round table discussion will bring together participants in all
the sessions and others interested in thinking about loyalty in new ways.
Participants include Hannah Boston (University of Lincoln), Chris Lewis
(University of London), and Emily Winkler (University of Oxford).
191
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 725-a:
Paper 725-b:
Paper 725-c:
Paper 725-d:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 726-a:
Paper 726-b:
Paper 726-c:
192
725
Newlyn Building: GR.07
NOBLEWOMEN NETWORK, III: REPRESENTATIONS
Noblewomen Network
Harriet Kersey, Research Development, Canterbury Christ Church
University and Charlotte Pickard, Faculty of Arts & Social Sciences,
Open University, Cardiff / ‘Exploring the Past Pathway’, Cardiff
University
Abby Armstrong, Sonderforschungsbereich 933 ‘Materiale
Textkulturen’, Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg
The Wolf of Alençon: How the Power of a Noblewoman Terrified
Norman Churchmen (Language: English)
Crescida Jacobs, Department of History, Houston Community College,
Texas
Intimacy as Sacred Space: Humanising the Cruel Maiden-King in
Sigurðar saga þögla (Language: English)
Michael Micci, Faculty of Icelandic & Comparative Cultural Studies,
University of Iceland, Reykjavík
Queen Margaret of Scotland in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
(Language: English)
Kathryn Green, Department of Comparative Humanities, University of
Louisville
Personal Data: Elite Women in Iberian Historiography
(Language: English)
Marija Blašković, Departament d’Humanitats, Universitat Pompeu
Fabra, Barcelona
726
Stage@leeds: Stage 2
NATURAL ENTANGLEMENTS, II: NEGLECTED VOICES IN PRE-MODERN
SCIENCES
Centre d’Études sur le Moyen Âge et la Renaissance, Université
catholique de Louvain
Grégory Clesse, Institut des Civilisations, Arts et Lettres, Université
catholique de Louvain
Grégory Clesse
The Sense of Nature and Divination: William of Auvergne,
Cornelius Agrippa, and Tommaso Campanella (Language: English)
Antonella Sannino, Dipartimento di Scienze Umane e Sociali, Università
degli Studi di Napoli L’Orientale
Non-Standard Conditions in the Description of Local Motion in
Richard Swineshead’s Liber calculationum (Language: English)
Robert Podkoński, Katedra Historii Filozofii, Uniwersytet Łódzki
Richard Kilvington’s Methodology of Natural Science (Language:
English)
Elżbieta Jung, Instytut Filozofii, Uniwersytet Łódzki
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 727-a:
Paper 727-b:
Paper 727-c:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 728-a:
Paper 728-b:
Paper 728-c:
728
Michael Sadler Building: LG.15
CULTURES OF HEALING IN LATE ANTIQUITY AND THE (MOSTLY) EARLY
MIDDLE AGES, III: HEALING SUBSTANCES, HOLY SUBSTANCES, AND THEIR
POINTS OF INTERSECTION
ReMeDHe - Working Group for Religion, Medicine, Disability, Health &
Healing in Late Antiquity / Beyond Beccaria Project
Claire Burridge, Department of History, University of Sheffield and
Carine van Rhijn, Departement Geschiedenis en Kunstgeschiedenis,
Universiteit Utrecht
Carine van Rhijn
Perfume among the Perishing: A Pharmacological Approach to
Incense in Early Christian Ritual (Language: English)
John Penniman, Department of Religious Studies, Bucknell University,
Pennsylvania
Healing and the Holy: Fontwater as Liturgical Material and
Medical Cure in the Early Middle Ages (Language: English)
Carolyn Twomey, Department of History, St Lawrence University, New
York
Sacred Substances: Materia medica in and of the Church
(Language: English)
Claire Burridge
Tuesday
Session:
Title:
727
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.31
NETWORKS AND ENTANGLEMENTS IN DANTE’S WORKS, III
Institute for Medieval Studies / Centre for Dante Studies, University of
Leeds
Carmen Costanza, School of Languages, Cultures & Societies - Italian,
University of Leeds
Camilla Bambozzi, School of Languages, Cultures & Societies - Italian,
University of Leeds
Architectural Entanglements in Dante’s Commedia and
Chaucer’s House of Fame (Language: English)
Elisabeth Trischler, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Scientia and ‘pan de li angeli’: Dante’s Entangled Knowledge
(Language: English)
Carmen Costanza
At the Crossroads of Medicine, Philosophy, and Literature:
Geothermal Areas as an Inspiration for Dante’s Inferno
(Language: English)
Antonio Raschi, Istituto per la BioEconomia, Consiglio Nazionale delle
Ricerche, Firenze
193
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 729-a:
Paper 729-b:
Paper 729-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 730-a:
Paper 730-b:
Paper 730-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 731-a:
Paper 731-b:
Paper 731-c:
194
729
Esther Simpson Building: 2.12
NETWORKS OF ARTISANRY: ENTANGLED OBJECTS, COLOURS, AND
PAINTINGS
IMC Programming Committee
Meredith Cohen, Department of Art History, University of California, Los
Angeles
Silk as a Catalyst to Determine Trade Routes between East and
West in the 6th Century (Language: English)
Nusret Burak Özsoy, Department of History, Erzurum Technical
University
The Colour of the French Monarchy: The Network of Blue
Pigment in the 13th Century (Language: English)
Ningning Zou, Department of History, Chinese University of Hong Kong
Networks of Narrative: The N-Town Play Burial of Christ and
Guarding of the Sepulcher and Parish Church Wall Paintings
(Language: English)
Therese Novotny, Department of English, Modern Languages &
Philosophy, Carroll University, Wisconsin
730
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.09
NETWORKING MEDIEVAL MONARCHY, III: ROYAL NETWORKING,
INFLUENCE, AND AUTHORITY WITHIN THE REALM
Royal Studies Network
Elena Woodacre, Department of History, University of Winchester
Patrik Pastrnak, Katedra historie, Univerzita Palackého, Olomouc
‘The whole royal retinue floated on the waters’: Reassessing
Royal Mobility in the Regnum Francorum (Language: English)
Samuel Barber, Department of Art History & Architectural Studies,
Mount Holyoke College, Massachusetts
Redefining Authority: Transformations of Royal Power in
Medieval Bohemia, 1378-1471 (Language: English)
Václav Žůrek, Centrum Medievistických Studií, Akademie věd České
republiky, Praha
The Royal Women of Wiltshire: Early Medieval English
Queenship in Regional Perspective (Language: English)
Jonathan Tickle, Department of History, School of Arts, Languages &
Cultures, University of Manchester
731
Michael Sadler Building: LG.19
READING TEXTS, READING BODIES: THE PRACTICAL LITERACY OF MATERIAL
ENTANGLEMENTS
Miente Pietersma, Afdeling Geschiedenis, Rijksuniversiteit Groningen
Catrien Santing, Afdeling Geschiedenis, Rijksuniversiteit Groningen
The Eye Guiding the Hand Guiding the Blade: Interaction
between Body and Mind in Late Medieval Fighting Manuals
(Language: English)
Miente Pietersma
Recipes for the Good Life: From Hairdye and Gin to Prayers
(Language: English)
Catrien Santing
Of Hands, Hooves, and Health: Writing about Human-Equine
Care Work (Language: English)
Isabelle Schuerch, Historisches Institut, Universität Bern
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 732-a:
Paper 732-b:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 733-a:
Paper 733-b:
Paper 733-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 734-a:
Paper 734-b:
Paper 734-c:
733
Esther Simpson Building: 3.01
CLERICAL NETWORKS AND ROYAL DIPLOMACY IN THE CAPETIAN WORLD
Graduate Centre for Medieval Studies, University of Reading /
Episcopus: Society for the Study of Bishops & Secular Clergy in the
Middle Ages
Mark Hewett, Graduate Centre for Medieval Studies, University of
Reading and Cheryl Midson, Graduate Centre for Medieval Studies,
University of Reading
Lindy Grant, Department of History, University of Reading
Ivonian Influence on the French Episcopate in the Later Reign of
King Philip I of France, 1060-1108 (Language: English)
Mark Hewett
Irish, Capetian, or Plantagenet?: The Canonisation of St
Laurence of Dublin (St Laurent d’Eu) and Its Royal and Clerical
Diplomacy, 1180-1227 (Language: English)
Jesse Harrington, School of History, University College Cork
Envoys, Confessors, and Spies: The Dominican Order and the
Crusades of Louis IX (Language: English)
Cheryl Midson
Tuesday
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
732
Clarendon Building: 1.01
ENTANGLEMENTS OF INFORMATION: MEDIEVAL BOOK COLLECTIONS AND
THEIR NAVIGATION CHARTS, III - NETWORKS OF READERSHIP
‘Book of Books’ Project, Københavns Universitet
René Hernández Vera, Institut for Nordiske Studier og Sprogvidenskab,
Københavns Universitet
Mercedes Pérez Vidal, Departamento de Historia y Teoría del Arte,
Universidad Autónoma de Madrid
Creating a Popular Saint for a Noble Laity: Approaching
Patronage and Production in the Vie de Colette (Language:
English)
Marisa Michaud, Centre for Medieval Studies, University of York
Textual Strategies and the Interpretive Community of Hernando
Colón’s Libro de los epítomes (Language: English)
René Hernández Vera
734
Newlyn Building: 1.07
MEDIEVAL PAPACY, 500-1500, III: LATE MEDIEVAL PAPACY AND PAPAL
NETWORKS
Dan Armstrong, St Andrews Institute of Mediaeval Studies, University
of St Andrews
Melanie Brunner, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
The Vertex of a Large Pyramid: Pope Eugene IV and His Papal
Family, 1431-1447 (Language: English)
Albert Cassanyes Roig, Departament de Ciències Històriques i Teoria de
les Arts, Universitat de les Illes Balears, Mallorca
Old Wine in New Bottles: Pope Nicholas V, the Bull Romanus
pontifex, and the Revival of Crusading Ideology (Language:
English)
Daniele Battistelli, Dipartimento di Storia Antropologia Religioni Arte
Spettacolo, Università degli Studi di Roma 'La Sapienza'
Linking Portugal and Rome: An Approach to the Portuguese
Cardinals’ Networks in the 15th Century (Language: English)
André Moutinho Rodrigues, Laboratoire de Médiévistique Occidentale de
Paris (LaMOP - UMR 8589), Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne
195
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 735-a:
Paper 735-b:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 736-a:
Paper 736-b:
Paper 736-c:
Paper 736-d:
196
735
Parkinson Building: Room B.10
NETWORKED DATA: COLLECTING, MANAGING, AND ANALYSING RELATIONAL
DATA IN MEDIEVAL STUDIES, I
Centrum pro digitální výzkum náboženství / Dissident Networks Project
(DISSINET), Masarykova univerzita, Brno
Robert L. J. Shaw, Centrum pro digitální výzkum náboženství,
Masarykova univerzita, Brno and David Zbíral, Centrum pro digitální
výzkum náboženství / Dissident Networks Project (DISSINET),
Masarykova univerzita, Brno
David Zbíral
Analysing Messy Data: How to Structure Vague, Incomplete, or
Ambiguous Source Material in nodegoat (Language: English)
Pim van Bree, LAB1100, Den Haag
Computer-Assisted Semantic Text Modelling (CASTEMO) and the
InkVisitor Environment: From Sentences in a Source to
Statements in a Database (Language: English)
Robert L. J. Shaw
736
Esther Simpson Building: 1.01
THE MIDDLE AGES IN MODERN GAMES, III: SCANDINAVIAN, CELTIC AND
ISLAMIC ENTANGLEMENTS
Centre for Medieval & Renaissance Research, University of Winchester
Robert Houghton, Centre for Medieval & Renaissance Research,
University of Winchester and Mariana Lopez, School of Arts & Creative
Technologies, University of York
Mariana Lopez
Our Middle Ages: Perception of the Playable Past among Czech
Gamers (Language: English)
Jan Kremer, Centrum medievistických studií, Akademie věd České
republiky, Praha
Skyrim and the Viking Stereotype (Language: English)
Andrew M. Alliger, Independent Scholar, New York
Facts or Falsehoods?: Representations of Viking Warfare and
Conflict in Action-Adventure Games (Language: English)
Jessica Nutt, School of History, Classics & Archaeology, University of
Edinburgh
‘The (Digital) Suppressor of the Followers of the Cross’:
Simulating Saladin and the Crusades in Video Games (Language:
English)
Juan Manuel Rubio Arévalo, Department of Medieval Studies, Central
European University, Budapest/Wien
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 737-a:
Paper 737-b:
Paper 737-c:
Moderator:
Paper 738-a:
Paper 738-b:
Paper 738-c:
Paper 738-d:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 739-a:
Paper 739-b:
738
Parkinson Building: Room B.08
MATERIALITY OF MANUSCRIPTS, III: NETWORKS
Katarzyna Anna Kapitan, Linacre College, University of Oxford and N.
Kıvılcım Yavuz, Institute for Medieval Studies / School of History,
University of Leeds
N. Kıvılcım Yavuz
Networks and Collection Development Policies of the Cistercian
Order in the 12th and 13th Centuries (Language: English)
Dominique Stutzmann, Institut de Recherche et d’Histoire des Textes
(IRHT), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Paris
Changing Contexts: Production and Circulation of Old Norse
Manuscripts (Language: English)
Katarzyna Anna Kapitan
Vectors of Transmission: Studying Latin Patristic Sermon
Collections in the Age of Data Science (Language: English)
Gleb Schmidt, ERC Project ‘Patristic Sermons in the Middle Ages
(PASSIM)’, Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen
Experimental Visualisation of Manuscripts from a Diachronic
Perspective (Language: English)
Jan Odstrčilík, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
Tuesday
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
737
Newlyn Building: 1.02
DEFINING SUBALTERNITIES, I: WORK, UNFREEDOM, AND UNCOVERING
EXPERIENCE
Global Medieval Peasants Research Network
Stuart Pracy, Department of History & Archaeology, University of
Exeter
Stuart Pracy
Reimagining Artist Workshops in Lombard Italy (Language:
English)
Rachel Danford, College of Arts & Media, Marshall University, West
Virginia
Beyond Elite Craftsmen: Rural Smiths of the Carolingian World
(Language: English)
Alexandre Beaudet, Département des sciences historiques, Université
Laval, Québec
Labour and Social Ties in Early Medieval England (Language:
English)
Stuart Pracy
739
Maurice Keyworth Building: G.02
PILGRIM POSSIBILITIES, I: PILGRIMAGE AND DANGER
History Research Centre, Manchester Metropolitan University
Kathryn Hurlock, Department of History, Politics & Philosophy,
Manchester Metropolitan University
Marci Freedman, Independent Scholar, Toronto
By Sea and by Land: The Spiritual Benefits of Dangerous and
Difficult Travel (Language: English)
Philip A. Booth, Department of History, Politics & Philosophy,
Manchester Metropolitan University
The Pilgrim Experience of East Roman Border Controls
(Language: English)
Lucas McMahon, Department of History, Princeton University
197
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 740-a:
Paper 740-b:
Paper 740-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 741-a:
Paper 741-b:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 742-a:
Paper 742-b:
Paper 742-c:
198
740
Clarendon Building: 2.01
CODEX COMMUNITIES?: BOOK-USE IN LATE MEDIEVAL URBAN
ADMINISTRATIONS
Hanna Nüllen, Institut für Geschichte, Martin-Luther-Universität HalleWittenberg
Christian Liddy, Department of History, Durham University
Civic Memory or Civic Administration?: Rolls and Books in
English and Irish Municipal Archives, c. 1300-1500 (Language:
English)
Eliza Hartrich, School of History, University of East Anglia
Custumals, Cartularies, and Council Minutes: Books as Tools of
Knowledge Production in Late Medieval Urban Administrations
(Language: English)
Hanna Nüllen
Are Town Books Reliable Witnesses of the Past?: Critical
Considerations on the Categories ‘Note’, ‘Transcript’, and ‘Fair
Copy’ Based on the Libri Civitatis and Libri Obligationum of
Görlitz, c. 1300-1500 (Language: English)
Christian Speer, Institut für Geschichte, Martin-Luther-Universität
Halle-Wittenberg
741
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.04
SERVICE PROVIDERS?: HORSES, NURSES, AND MONKS IN LATER MEDIEVAL
EUROPE
IMC Programming Committee
Alice Choyke, Independent Scholar, Budapest
Brothers in Business: The Role of Venetian Monasteries in the
Development of Maritime Trade, 950-1220 (Language: English)
Elena Shadrina, Department of History, Harvard University
Networks of Nourishment: Finding, Employing, and Retaining
Wet-Nurses in Late Medieval Lucca (Language: English)
Christine E. Meek, Department of History, Trinity College Dublin
742
Virtual Session
DISEASE IN THE MEDIEVAL ISLAMICATE WORLD, III: PLAGUE’S LEGACIES
Nahyan Fancy, Department of History, DePauw University, Indiana and
Monica Green, Independent Scholar, Phoenix, Arizona
Nükhet Varlık, Department of History, Rutgers University, Newark
Reusing and Revisiting the Signs and Effects of Plague during
the Second Pandemic (Language: English)
Nahyan Fancy
Ibn Ḥajar’s Merits of the Plague as an Exemplary Work of a
Hadith Scholar’s Synthetic Method (Language: English)
Mairaj Syed, Department of Religious Studies, University of California,
Davis
The Spice Trade and the Origins of the Plague in the Medieval
Islamic Social Imaginary (Language: English)
Joel Blecher, Department of History, George Washington University,
Washington, DC
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 743-a:
Paper 743-b:
Paper 743-c:
Paper 744-b:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 745-a:
Paper 745-b:
Paper 745-c:
744
Esther Simpson Building: 3.08
MEDIEVALIST MOVIES AND MEDIA: ROBIN HOOD AND BEOWULF
IMC Programming Committee
Andrew B. R. Elliott, Independent Scholar, Lincoln
‘They hate us for our freedom’: Robin Hood on Crusade
(Language: English)
Heather Blurton, Department of English, University of California, Santa
Barbara
Bloody Sacrifices, Rune Reading, Rituals, and Mythology:
Revisiting the Theme of Pagan Worship in Historical Fiction
Inspired by Beowulf (Language: English)
Katarzyna Myśliwiec, Wydział Neofilologii, Instytut Anglistyki,
Uniwersytet Warszawski
Tuesday
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 744-a:
743
Esther Simpson Building: 2.08
SOCIAL, CULTURAL, AND REGIONAL TEXTILE NETWORKS OF IBERIA
Discussion, Interpretation & Study of Textile Arts, Fabrics & Fashion
(DISTAFF)
Nahum Ben Yehuda, Department of Land of Israel Studies &
Archaeology, Bar-Ilan University, Ramat Gan
Gale Owen-Crocker, Department of English Literature & Creative
Writing, School of Arts, Languages & Cultures, University of Manchester
The Evolution of Dress in Portugal through Tailoring Price
Tables, 13th-16th Centuries (Language: English)
Joana Isabel Sequeira, Lab2PT / INT2Past, Universidade do Minho
Cashmere Goat Hair Textiles in Don Isaac Abravanel’s
Commentary to Exodus (Language: English)
Nahum Ben Yehuda
Byzantine and Islamic Textile Fragments in Iberian Settings:
Two Overlooked Cases from Calahorra and Palencia (Language:
English)
Verónica Carla Abenza Soria, Universidad Complutense de Madrid
745
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.06
MAKING AS METHOD: MEDIEVAL MATERIALS, I
Jess Bailey, Department of History of Art, University College London
and Lauren Rozenberg, Department of History of Art, University College
London
Millie Horton-Insch, Department of History of Art, University College
London
Ink, Gold, and Gunpowder: Materialities of Military
Representation in the High Middle Ages (Language: English)
Jess Bailey
Parchment Guts: The Materiality of Late Medieval Anatomical
Texts (Language: English)
Lauren Rozenberg
Touching Excess: Queering Femininity in the Folds (Language:
English)
Baylee Woodley, Department of History of Art, University College
London
199
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 746-a:
Paper 746-b:
Paper 746-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 747-a:
Paper 747-b:
Paper 747-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 748-a:
Paper 748-b:
Paper 748-c:
200
746
Clarendon Building: GR 01
POETRY AND COMMUNICATION, 14TH-16TH CENTURIES, III: AUTHORSHIP
AND INDIVIDUAL PRACTICES
Estelle Doudet, Faculté des lettres, Université de Lausanne
Estelle Doudet
Authorship and Agency in Nicaise Ladam’s Poetry, 1465-1547
(Language: English)
Benedetta Salvati, Section de français, Université de Lausanne
Cretin and the Practice of Invective Discourse (Language: English)
Ellen Delvallée, Litt&Arts (UMR 5316), Université Grenoble Alpes /
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Grenoble
The Orator Facing Music: Molinet and Lemaire de Belges
(Language: English)
Adeline Desbois-Ientile, UFR de Langue Française, Sorbonne Université,
Paris
747
Stage@leeds: Stage 1
ARMS, ARMOUR, AND THE ARTS OF COMBAT, III: EDGED WEAPON
TYPOLOGY, MATERIALITY, AND IDENTITY
Iason-Eleftherios Tzouriadis, Royal Armouries, Leeds
Iason-Eleftherios Tzouriadis
The Weapons Hoard from Mamilla, Jerusalem, and Its
Contribution to the Study of the Early Byzantine Spathas
(Language: English)
Errikos Maniotis, Department of Archaeology & Museology, Masarykova
univerzita, Brno
The Reformer’s Sword or Propaganda Fabrication? (Language:
English)
Adrian Baschung, Museum Altes Zeughaus, Solothurn
The Rapier: Technology and Martiality, or the Deadly Dance of
Form and Function (Language: English)
Marc Gener-Moret, Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Metalúrgicas,
Madrid
748
Newlyn Building: LG.01
THE BELLIPHONIC, I: SOUNDS OF WAR
DFG Projekt ‘Der laute Krieg und die Laute des Krieges: Belliphonie im
Mittelalter’
Martin Clauss, Institut für Europäische Geschichte, Technische
Universität Chemnitz
Gesine Mierke, Institut für Germanistik, Otto-Friedrich-Universität
Bamberg
Loud, Louder, War: How to Create a Medieval Battle Soundcape
(Language: English)
Hannah Potthoff, DFG Projekt ‘Der laute Krieg und die Laute des
Krieges: Belliphonie im Mittelalter’, Technische Universität Chemnitz
Fragor, Horror, Metus: Sonic Warfare in the Late Middle Ages
(Language: English)
Raphael Stepken, DFG Projekt ‘Der laute Krieg und die Laute des
Krieges: Belliphonie im Mittelalter’, Technische Universität Chemnitz
Listening to Medieval Warfare: About Methodical Problems of
the Belliphonic (Language: English)
Martin Clauss
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
TEA BREAK: 15.45-16.30
Tea and Coffee will be available on a self-serve basis at the following locations:
Esther Simpson Building: Foyer
Maurice Keyworth Building: Foyer
Parkinson Building: Bookfair
University Square: IMC Social Space
Tuesday
201
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 801-a:
Paper 801-b:
Paper 801-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 802-a:
Paper 802-b:
Paper 802-c:
202
801
Newlyn Building: GR.01
TRACING THE STEPS OF OLD ENGLISH IN MEMORY OF DONALD G. SCRAGG
Stanford Manuscript Sciences
Elaine Treharne, Department of English, Stanford University
Gale Owen-Crocker, Department of English Literature & Creative
Writing, School of Arts, Languages & Cultures, University of Manchester
On Scragg’s Conspectus: Tracing Old English Scribes (Language:
English)
Stewart J. Brookes, Bodleian Library, University of Oxford
Movement in Old English Poetry (Language: English)
Jill A. Frederick, Department of English, Minnesota State University
Moorhead
‘The Best Words in the Best Order’: Vercelli Book Verse and its
Digital Reclamation (Language: English)
Martin Foys, Department of English, University of Wisconsin-Madison
802
Clarendon Building: 2.08
ROMANISLAM, IV: COMPARATIVE EMPIRE AND TRANSCULTURAL STUDIES
RomanIslam - Center for Comparative Empire & Transcultural Studies
Paulo Pachá, RomanIslam - Center for Comparative Empire &
Transcultural Studies, Universität Hamburg / Instituto de História,
Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro
Antonia Bosanquet, RomanIslam - Center for Comparative Empire &
Transcultural Studies, Universität Hamburg
A Transcultural City in Transformation: Roman Corduba’s
Urbanism and Society, 1st Century BCE-4th Century CE (Language:
English)
Sabine Panzram, RomanIslam - Center for Comparative Empire &
Transcultural Studies, Universität Hamburg
Continuity and Changes in Mentality, Beliefs, and Urban
Topography: From the Colonia Patricia to Late Antique Corduba,
5th-8th Centuries (Language: English)
José Antonio Garriguet-Mata, Departamento de Historia del Arte,
Arqueología y Música, Universidad de Córdoba and Alberto León Muñoz,
Departamento de Historia del Arte, Arqueología y Música, Universidad
de Córdoba
Life beyond the City Walls: Urban Infrastructure in Islamic
Córdoba’s Western Suburbs (Language: English)
Carmen González Gutiérrez, Departamento de Historia del Arte,
Arqueología y Música, Universidad de Córdoba
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 803-a:
Paper 803-b:
Paper 803-c:
Paper 804-b:
Paper 804-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 805-a:
Paper 805-b:
Paper 805-c:
804
Esther Simpson Building: 2.09
COLONIALISM IN DANTE AND IN CRUSADING
Ceræ: An Australasian Journal of Medieval & Early Modern Studies
IMC Programming Committee
Gwendolyne Knight, Historiska institutionen, Stockholms universitet
Dante’s Protocolonial: Sound, Vernacular, Otherness (Language:
English)
Clare Louise Harmon, Department of Cultural Studies & Comparative
Literature, University of Minnesota
Latin Legal Treatises and the Populations of the Levant, 10991291 (Language: English)
Jennifer Mary Pearce, School of Arts & Humanities, Nottingham Trent
University
A Postcolonial Reading of Crusading in the Holy Land (Language:
English)
Alaric Powell, Department of History, Saint Louis University, Missouri
Tuesday
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 804-a:
803
Newlyn Building: 1.01
MAGIC, ASTROLOGY, SPELLS AS A WAY TO TACKLE FEAR?: EARLY AND LATE
MEDIEVAL PERSPECTIVES
Beata Możejko, Instytut Historii, Uniwersytet Gdański
Piotr Oliński, Wydział Nauk Historycznych, Uniwersytet Mikołaja
Kopernika, Toruń
Apotropaic and Protective Practices in Medieval Nubia
(Language: English)
Magdalena Łaptaś, Instytut Historii Sztuki, Uniwersytet Kardynała
Stefana Wyszyńskiego, Warszawa
Medieval Astrology: Science or Magic? (Language: English)
Sylwia Konarska-Zimnicka, Wydział Humanistyczny, Uniwersytet Jana
Kochanowskiego, Kielce
Church and Science: Relations and Cooperation between
Bishops and People of Science in Late Medieval Poland
(Language: English)
Zofia Wilk-Woś, Wyższa Szkoła Bankowa w Toruniu
805
Esther Simpson Building: LG08
CANON LAW, I: LAW-MAKING AND MAKING LAW IN THE EARLIER MIDDLE
AGES
Iuris Canonici Medii Aevi Consociatio (ICMAC)
Greta Austin, Department of Religious Studies, University of Puget
Sound, Washington and Kathleen Cushing, Department of History,
Keele University
Bruce C. Brasington, Department of History, West Texas A&M
University, Canyon
Penance and Penitential Law in Three Cases of Synodal
Legislation in Carolingian Lombardy (Language: English)
Giulia Laboranti, Independent Scholar, Pavia
Episcopal Office and Gregorian Authority in 10th-Century
England (Language: English)
Edward Roberts, School of History, University of Kent
Negotiating Law in 10th- and 11th-Century Church Councils
(Language: English)
Kathleen Cushing
203
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 806-a:
Paper 806-b:
Paper 806-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 807-a:
Paper 807-b:
Paper 807-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 808-a:
Paper 808-b:
Paper 808-c:
204
806
Esther Simpson Building: 2.08
NORTHERN NETWORKS: RELIGIOUS ENTANGLEMENTS WITHIN AND BEYOND
MEDIEVAL SCANDINAVIA
IMC Programming Committee
Erik Opsahl, Institutt for historiske og klassiske studier, Norges teknisknaturvitenskapelige universitet, Trondheim
The Ring of Telensibus: A History of the Roman Catholic
Ecclesiastical Province of Nidaros to 1537 (Language: English)
Michael Tobin, Independent Scholar, Baltimore, Maryland
The Office of St Botvid: How to Venerate a Regional Saint in
Medieval Sweden (Language: English)
Karin Lagergren, Linnéuniversitetet, Växjö
Swedish Envoys to Rome in the Late Middle Ages (Language:
English)
Michael Frost, Istituto Svedese di studi classici, Roma
807
Parkinson Building: Room B.22
ENTANGLEMENTS ACROSS TIME: QUEER PERSPECTIVES ON THE MIDDLE AGES
AND ON LATER INTERPRETATIONS OF THE MIDDLE AGES
IMC Programming Committee
Emma Fearon, Department of History, Nottingham Trent University
Clerical Hegemonic Masculinity in the Eyewitness Testimony of
the 1170 Martyrdom of St Thomas Becket (Language: English)
James Edward McHale, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of
Leeds
Connecting with the Modern: The Queer Medieval (Mystical)
Network by the Man Who Was Dorian Gray (Language: English)
Wei-cheng Chu, Department of Foreign Languages & Literatures,
National Taiwan University
Vi-te Elena querida em doce calma: The Case of Sóror Maria do
Céu and Her Madre Helena da Cruz’s Biography, 1721-1722
(Language: English)
Maria Pinho, Instituto de Filosofia, Universidade do Porto
808
Newlyn Building: GR.02
TASTE AND DISGUST IN LATE ANTIQUITY, IV: SOCIAL STATUS
Postgraduate & Early-Career Late Antiquity Network
Henry Anderson, Department of Classics, Ancient History, Religion &
Theology, University of Exeter
Nicola Holm, Department of Classics, Ancient History, Religion &
Theology, University of Exeter
Per manum mediatoris: Taste and Discernment in Documentary
Shorthand (Language: English)
Ella Kirsh, Department of Classics, Brown University
‘You will find all pleasures and tastes in this book’: Influencing
Aristocratic Culture in Quodvultdeus of Carthage’s Book of the
Promises and Predictions of God (Language: English)
James Duncan, Department of History, University of Liverpool
Public Disgust, Heresy, and Theodosian Court Politics (Language:
English)
Henry Anderson
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 809-a:
Paper 809-b:
Respondent:
Paper 810-b:
Paper 810-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 811-a:
Paper 811-b:
810
Newlyn Building: LG.02
EVERYDAY ENTANGLEMENTS: DEBT AND OBLIGATION, 1200-1500, IV
Sarah McKeagney, Department of History, University of York
Tim Wingard, Centre for Medieval Studies, University of York
Charitable Credit: Public Banks and Moral Economy in Late
Medieval Italy (Language: English)
Sama Mammadova, Department of History, Harvard University
Dante and Milton’s Respective Usuries: Difference and
Uniformity in The Divine Comedy and Paradise Lost (Language:
English)
Alexander Schmid, Department of Political Science, Louisiana State
University
Affectionate Responsibility and Neighbourly Love: Mercantile
Virtue in the Shipman’s Tale (Language: English)
Shauna Roach, Department of English, University of Bristol
Tuesday
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 810-a:
809
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.33
MANUSCRIPTS AND MONASTIC MOBILITY IN THE CAROLINGIAN PERIOD
Network for the Study of Late Antique & Early Medieval Monasticism
Albrecht Diem, Department of History, Syracuse University, New York
Albrecht Diem
From Ligugé to Lorsch: Pseudo-Ephraem’s Dicta and their
Transmission (Language: English)
Matthieu van der Meer, Department of Languages, Literatures &
Linguistics, Syracuse University, New York
Manuscripts on the Move: Monasteries, Travel, and the
Circulation of Texts (Language: English)
Clare Woods, Department of Classical Studies, Duke University, North
Carolina
Rutger Kramer, Onderzoeksinstituut voor Geschiedenis en
Kunstgeschiedenis, Universiteit Utrecht
811
Esther Simpson Building: 2.11
MEDIEVAL AFRICAN NETWORKS, IV: FROM GHANA TO MALI TO SONGHAI
2022 Dan David Prize Funding
Felege-Selam Solomon Yirga, Department of History, University of
Tennessee, Knoxville
Verena Krebs, Historisches Institut, Ruhr-Universität Bochum
Eunuchs, Empire, and the Culture of Power in Songhay and the
Late Medieval Dār al-Islām (Language: English)
Mathilde Montpetit, Department of History, New York University
The So-Called ‘Tomb’ of Askia Muhammad: Pilgrimage, Politics,
and Colonial Myth (Language: English)
Mark Dike DeLancey, Department of History of Art & Architecture,
DePaul University, Chicago
205
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 812-a:
Paper 812-b:
Paper 812-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 813-a:
Paper 813-b:
Paper 813-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 814-a:
Paper 814-b:
Paper 814-c:
206
812
Parkinson Building: Room B.09
NETWORKS AND ENTANGLEMENTS IN MEDIEVAL WALES, IV: NETWORKS IN
LITERATURE
Amy Reynolds, School of History, Law & Social Sciences, Bangor
University
Nia Wyn Jones, School of History, Law & Social Sciences, Bangor
University
Geoffrey of Monmouth’s Des Gestis Britonum as a History of the
Welsh (Language: English)
Laury Sarti, Historisches Seminar, Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg
March in the Marches: Rhiannon and Boundary Defining in the
First Branch of the Mabinogi (Language: English)
Marisa Mills, School of Humanities, University of Southern Mississippi
Branwen Uerch Llŷr and Her Broken Heart: Reading the Second
Branch of the Mabinogi through Memory and Trauma (Language:
English)
Matheus Campos, Departamento de Letras e Linguistica, Universidade
Federal de Goiás
813
Parkinson Building: Room B.11
MULTILAYERED COMMUNITIES OR COMPETING NETWORKS IN THE EASTERN
MEDITERRANEAN?
Nathan Websdale, Wolfson College, University of Oxford
Catherine Holmes, Faculty of History, University of Oxford
Macedonian Networks in 11th-Century Byzantium (Language:
English)
Arie Neuhauser, Independent Scholar, Jerusalem
Community and Outsiders in Late Antique Egypt (Language:
English)
Nikolaos Tzoumerkas, Department of History, Royal Holloway,
University of London
Epirote, Bulgarian, Vlach, or Romaíoi?: Attacks and Defences of
the Ethnicity of the Entangled Communities of the Despotate of
Epiros (Language: English)
Nathan Websdale
814
Esther Simpson Building: 2.07
THE ENTANGLEMENTS OF HIERARCHY AND CHRISTIAN AUTHORITY IN
EASTERN EUROPE, C. 11TH-15TH CENTURIES
Vera Gagarina, Faculty of Modern & Medieval Languages & Linguistics /
Trinity College, University of Cambridge
Monica White, Department of Russian & Slavonic Studies, University of
Nottingham
Religion as a Point of Neighbourly Contention: Christian and
Heathen Entanglements between Scandinavians and Their
Slavic Neighbours during the 10th-13th Centuries (Language:
English)
Natalia Radziwillowicz, School of English, University of Nottingham
Spiritual Families as Networks: A Case Study on Rus’
Monasticism, 11th-15th Centuries (Language: English)
Pauline Vasselle, School of Cultures, Languages & Area Studies /
Department of Modern Languages & Cultures, Russian & Slavonic
Studies, University of Nottingham
Early Rus’ Canonical Authors: Their Work and Methodology
(Language: English)
Vera Gagarina
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 815-a:
Paper 815-b:
Respondent:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 816-a:
Paper 816-b:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 817-a:
Paper 817-b:
Paper 817-c:
816
Clarendon Building: 1.02
ROMAN AND SASANIAN NETWORKS AND ENTANGLEMENTS, IV: CHRISTIAN
NETWORKS AND CONFLICT ACROSS PHYSICAL, LANGUAGE, AND SPIRITUAL
BORDERS
Cardiff Centre for Late Antique Religion & Culture, Cardiff University /
British Institute of Persian Studies
Domiziana Rossi, School of History, Archaeology & Religion, Cardiff
University and Sean Strong, School of History, Archaeology & Religion,
Cardiff University
Domiziana Rossi
Where Now the Imperator?: The Subversion of Empire through
Imperial Language in The Martyrdom of Julius the Veteran
(Language: English)
J. R. Hane, Yale Divinity School, Yale University
Objects as Indicators of the Roles of Christians in Late Antique
Regional and Long-Distance Networks (Language: English)
Ute Verstegen, Christliche Archäologie, Friedrich-Alexander-Universität
Erlangen-Nürnberg
Tuesday
Session:
Title:
815
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.32
CHINGGISID RIPPLES, IV: LINEAGE AND ARISTOCRACY ACROSS MONGOL
EURASIA
Geoffrey Humble, School of Medicine, University of Leeds and Márton
Vér, Seminar für Turkologie und Zentralasienkunde, Georg-AugustUniversität Göttingen
Márton Vér
The Line of Quyidu: A Kereyid Aristocratic Lineage from
Mongolia to Iran, or How the Mongol Military System Worked
(Language: English)
Simon Berger, Centre d’Études Turques, Ottomanes, Balkaniques et
Centrasiatiques (CETOBaC), Institut Nationale des Langues et
Civilisations (INaLCO), Paris
Fifteen Weddings and Two Funerals: Networks and Questions in
a Mongol-Era Tombstone (Language: English)
Geoffrey Humble
Márton Vér
817
Stage@leeds: Stage 3
CULTURAL AND RELIGIOUS NETWORKS IN MEDIEVAL IBERIA, IV: MAKING
MARTYRS IN LITURGY AND HAGIOGRAPHY
University of Bristol / Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen
Kati Ihnat, Afdeling Geschiedenis, Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen
Rebecca Maloy, College of Music, University of Colorado, Boulder
Martyrs by Numbers: Mining the Liturgical Commons (Language:
English)
Melanie Shaffer, Departement Geschiedenis, Kunstgeschiedenis en
Oudheid, Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen
Death of a Martyr: Violence and Suffering in Liturgy and
Hagiography (Language: English)
Kati Ihnat
Martyrs in al-Andalus: The Evidence from the Cordoban
Calendar (Language: English)
Cathrien Hoijinck, Departement Geschiedenis, Kunstgeschiedenis en
Oudheid, Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen
207
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 818-a:
Paper 818-b:
Paper 818-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 819-a:
Paper 819-b:
Paper 819-c:
Paper 819-d:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 820-a:
Paper 820-b:
Paper 820-c:
208
818
Michael Sadler Building: Rupert Beckett Theatre
CONVERSO ENTANGLEMENTS IN 15TH-CENTURY CASTILE
Bert Carlstrom, School of History, Queen Mary University of London and
Thomas Hendrik Kaal, Historisches Seminar, Goethe-Universität
Frankfurt am Main
Rosa Vidal Doval, School of Languages, Linguistics & Film, Queen Mary
University of London
Entanglement through Separation: The Religious Instruction of
Conversos in 15th-Century Castile (Language: English)
Bert Carlstrom
A Secret Network?: Castilian Conversos and the Spread of
Popular Averroism (Language: English)
Thomas Hendrik Kaal
Seville’s Inquisition Network, c. 1474-c. 1516 (Language: English)
Eduardo Benítez-Inglott y Ballesteros, Faculty of History, University of
Oxford
819
Clarendon Building: 1.06
NETWORKS AND ENTANGLEMENTS IN THE CULT OF SAINTS
Marco Institute for Medieval & Renaissance Studies, University of
Tennessee, Knoxville / Hagiography Society / Episcopus: Society for
the Study of Bishops & Secular Clergy in the Middle Ages
Samantha Kahn Herrick, Department of History, Syracuse University,
New York and Lauren L. Whitnah, Marco Institute for Medieval &
Renaissance Studies, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Courtney Luckhardt, Department of History, University of Southern
Mississippi
Networks of Northumbrian Saints in the 12 th Century (Language:
English)
Lauren L. Whitnah
Martyrdom, Memory, and Reform: The Hirsau Network and
Crusader Saints in the 12th Century (Language: English)
John Eldevik, History Department, Hamilton College, New York
Lazarus, Medieval Autun, and the Crusades (Language: English)
Yossi Maurey, Department of Musicology, Hebrew University of
Jerusalem
Narrative Networks and Entanglements in Apostolic
Hagiography (Language: English)
Samantha Kahn Herrick
820
Esther Simpson Building: 3.02
WYCLIFFITE ENTANGLEMENTS: TEXTS, VISIONS, AND REVISIONS
Lollard Society
Cosima Clara Gillhammer, Christ Church College, University of Oxford
Michael van Dussen, Department of English, McGill University, Montréal
Revisiting Evidence for John Trevisa’s Authorship of the Later
Version of the Wycliffite Bible (Language: English)
Elizabeth Solopova, Faculty of English Language & Literature, University
of Oxford
Translation, Interpretation, and Devotion in the Wycliffite
Psalms (Language: English)
Audrey Southgate, Merton College, University of Oxford
Developing a Vocabulary of Interpretation: The Wycliffite
Glossed Gospel on Mark (Language: English)
Cosima Clara Gillhammer
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 821-a:
Paper 821-b:
Paper 821-c:
Paper 822-a:
Paper 822-b:
Paper 822-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 823-a:
Paper 823-b:
Paper 823-c:
822
Esther Simpson Building: 1.08
MEDIEVAL ITALIANS OUTSIDE OF ITALY
Carrie Beneš, Division of Social Sciences, New College of Florida
Paul Oldfield, School of Arts, Languages & Cultures, University of
Manchester
Italy Unbound: Being an Italian Abroad in the Civic Chronicle
Corpus (Language: English)
Laura K. Morreale, Independent Scholar, Washington, DC
Florence in Tunis, Ancona on the Black Sea: An Italian
Geography of the Mediterranean in Manuscripts of Goro Dati’s
La sfera (Language: English)
Carrie Beneš
Affiliation and Belonging in the Medieval Mediterranean:
Networks and Identities in Genoese Notarial Sources (Language:
English)
Jeffrey Miner, Department of History, Western Kentucky University
Tuesday
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
821
Michael Sadler Building: LG.10
MARGINAL GROUPS AND THE WRITTEN WORD IN THE MEROVINGIAN WORLD
Ophelia Norris, Internationales Doktorandenkolleg Philologie, LudwigMaximilians-Universität München and Eduard Visintini,
Graduiertenkolleg 2304 ‘Byzanz und die euromediterranen
Kriegskulturen: Austausch, Abgrenzung und Rezeption’, Johannes
Gutenberg-Universität Mainz
Marco Mostert, Utrecht Centre for Medieval Studies, Universiteit Utrecht
Jewish Epitaphs in Merovingian Gaul: Identity and Identification
(Language: English)
Ophelia Norris
Unfreedom in the Merovingian Church: The Use of Ecclesiastical
Concepts and Terminology (Language: English)
Eduard Visintini
The Role of Women in Late Antique and Early Medieval
Penitential Books (Language: English)
Henriette von Harnier, Bonn Center for Dependency & Slavery Studies,
Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn
823
Clarendon Building: 1.03
MAPPINGS, IV: CONNECTING IDEAS - MEDIEVAL MAPPING / MAPS AS
SOURCES OF INFORMATION EXCHANGE
Felicitas Schmieder, Historisches Institut, FernUniversität in Hagen and
Dan Terkla, Department of English, Illinois Wesleyan University
Felicitas Schmieder
The Vercelli Mappa Mundi: Analogue Networks and Not-SoDigital Interfaces (Language: English)
Helen Davies, Department of English, University of Colorado, Colorado
Springs and Heather Gaile Wacha, School of Library & Information
Studies, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Nascent Nissology: Mapping the Self in the Liber insularum
Archipelagi by Cristoforo Buondelmonti (Language: English)
Beatrice Blümer, Historisches Institut, Universität Kassel /
Kunsthistorisches Institut in Florenz
Noah’s Sons on Maps as Clues to the Circulation of Manuscripts
and Geographical Knowledge in the 8th-12th Centuries (Language:
English)
Julie Richard Dalsace, Laboratoire de Médiévistique Occidentale de Paris
(LaMOP - UMR 8589), Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne
209
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 824-a:
Paper 824-b:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 825-a:
Paper 825-b:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 826-a:
Paper 826-b:
Paper 826-c:
210
824
Parkinson Building: Room 1.08
ENTANGLED COMMUNITIES AND SOCIAL NETWORKS IN THE FACE OF
CONFLICT AND DISASTER
IMC Programming Committee
Charles West, Department of History, University of Sheffield
Emotional Responses to Crises, Disaster, and Suffering in alAndalus (Language: English)
Ana María Carballeira-Debasa, Escuela de Estudios Árabes, Consejo
Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC), Granada
The Entanglement of Natural Disasters in John of Rupescissa’s
Apocalyptic Scheme (Language: English)
Ben Hatchett, Faculty of History, University of Cambridge
825
Newlyn Building: GR.07
NOBLEWOMEN NETWORK, IV: AGENCY AND PATRONAGE
Noblewomen Network
Harriet Kersey, Research Development, Canterbury Christ Church
University and Charlotte Pickard, Faculty of Arts & Social Sciences,
Open University, Cardiff / ‘Exploring the Past Pathway’, Cardiff
University
Louise J. Wilkinson, School of Humanities & Heritage, University of
Lincoln
What Do Noblewomen Do All Day?: Continuity and Change in
Western Europe, 400-1500 (Language: English)
Rachel Stone, Department of History, King’s College London / Library,
Learning Resources & Information, University of Bedfordshire
Queen of Heaven, Queen of Bohemia: Patronage of Religious
Writing by Abbess Kunigunde as a Means of Self-Promotion
(Language: English)
Tomáš Weissar, Kabinet pro Klasická studia Filosofického ústavu,
Akademie věd České republiky, Brno
826
Stage@leeds: Stage 2
NATURAL ENTANGLEMENTS, III: CROSSING LITERATURE, NATURAL
SCIENCE, AND PHILOSOPHICAL FICTION IN MEDIEVAL WRITING
Centre d’Études sur le Moyen Âge et la Renaissance, Université
catholique de Louvain
Antonella Sciancalepore, Centre d’études sur le Moyen Âge et la
Renaissance, Université catholique de Louvain
Antonella Sciancalepore
Questions of Form in the Poetic Philosophy of the Romance of
the Rose (Language: English)
Jonathan Morton, Department of French & Italian, Tulane University,
New Orleans
Great Pieces of Turf (Language: English)
Kellie Robertson, Department of English, University of Maryland
Empire and Nature: Texts on Alexander the Great, Variety, and
the Order of the Cosmos in Southern Italy, 10th-13th Centuries
(Language: English)
Michele Campopiano, Department of English & Related Literature,
University of York
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 827-a:
Paper 827-b:
Paper 827-c:
Paper 827-d:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 828-a:
Paper 828-b:
Paper 828-c:
828
Michael Sadler Building: LG.15
CULTURES OF HEALING IN LATE ANTIQUITY AND THE (MOSTLY) EARLY
MIDDLE AGES, IV: HEALING BEYOND THE ‘CLASSICS’
ReMeDHe - Working Group for Religion, Medicine, Disability, Health &
Healing in Late Antiquity / Beyond Beccaria Project
Claire Burridge, Department of History, University of Sheffield and
Carine van Rhijn, Departement Geschiedenis en Kunstgeschiedenis,
Universiteit Utrecht
Claire Burridge
Classical Medical Instruments in Early Medieval Recipes:
Authority, Adaptation, and Innovation (Language: English)
Jeffrey Doolittle, Department of History, Fordham University
Medicine as Wisdom and Knowledge in the Early English
Kingdoms (Language: English)
James T. Palmer, St Andrews Institute of Mediaeval Studies, University
of St Andrews
Early Medieval Healthscapes: A Manuscript Approach (Language:
English)
Carine van Rhijn
Tuesday
Session:
Title:
827
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.31
NETWORKS AND ENTANGLEMENTS IN DANTE’S WORKS, IV
Institute for Medieval Studies / Centre for Dante Studies, University of
Leeds
Camilla Bambozzi, School of Languages, Cultures & Societies - Italian,
University of Leeds
Carmen Costanza, School of Languages, Cultures & Societies - Italian,
University of Leeds
The Prophet of Dreams: Dante’s Entanglement with the Book of
Daniel (Language: Italiano)
Emanuele Di Silvestro, Dipartimento di Studi Umanistici, Università
degli Studi di Macerata
The Allegorical Hybridism of the Divine Comedy (Language:
English)
Matteo Maselli, Dipartimento di Studi Umanistici, Università degli Studi
di Macerata
Gli appellativi di Virgilio nella Commedia (Language: Italiano)
Ruoci Song, Dipartimento di Filologia classica e italianistica, Università
di Bologna
Affiliation and Authority in Dante’s Commedia (Language: English)
Madeline Fox, Department of English Language & Literature, University
of Michigan
211
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 829-a:
Paper 829-b:
Paper 829-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 830-a:
Paper 830-b:
Paper 830-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 831-a:
Paper 831-b:
Paper 831-c:
212
829
Esther Simpson Building: 2.12
ENTANGLEMENTS OF SENSES AND NETWORKS OF IMAGES IN BYZANTINE AND
WESTERN MEDIEVAL ART
IMC Programming Committee
Lora Webb, ANAMED, Koç University Research Center for Anatolian
Civilizations
Entangled Threads: Byzantine Embroidered Aëres and Epitaphioi
from the 14th and 15th Centuries (Language: English)
Catherine Volmensky, Department of Art History, Visual Art & Theory,
University of British Columbia, Vancouver
Networking the Senses: The Circulation of Voice Portrayals in
Late Medieval Tympana (Language: English)
Yael Elias, Institut für Europäische Kunstgeschichte, Ruprecht-KarlsUniversität Heidelberg
The Circulation of Iconographic Models between France and the
Byzantine Empire in the 12th-13th Centuries (Language: English)
Elias Feitosa de Amorim Junior, L’École d’Histoire de l’Art et
d’Archéologie, Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne
830
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.09
NETWORKING MEDIEVAL MONARCHY, IV: THE MATRIMONIAL AND SOCIAL
NETWORKS OF MONARCHY
Royal Studies Network
Elena Woodacre, Department of History, University of Winchester
Lucinda Dean, Centre for History, University of the Highlands & Islands,
Dornoch
The Best Laid Plans?: Byzantine Marital Networks and the
Demise of the Komnenian Dynasty (Language: English)
Erin L. Jordan, Department of History, Colorado State University, Fort
Collins
Princess in the Steppe: The Diplomatic Network of Political
Marriages in Early Medieval China and Inner Asia (Language:
English)
Julia Escher, Asien-Orient-Institut, Universität Zürich
The Social Network of Anne of Cleves and Susanna Horenbout
(Language: English)
Valerie Schutte, Independent Scholar, Beaver Falls, Pennsylvania
831
Michael Sadler Building: LG.19
HUNT - FIGHT - DIVINE: PRAGMATIC WRITINGS AS ENTANGLEMENTS OF
THEORY AND PRACTICE
Eric Burkart, Fachbereich Geschichte, Politikwissenschaft &
Altertumswissenschaften, Universität Trier
Eric Burkart
The Left-Out Knowledge in Medieval German Hunting Treatises
(Language: English)
Simone Schultz-Balluff, Germanistisches Institut, Martin-LutherUniversität Halle-Wittenberg
The Textualisation of Martial Arts: How Fighting Practices
Became an Object of Theoretical Knowledge (Language: English)
Eric Burkart
Magical Treasure Hunting: A Learned Practice (Language: English)
Marco Heiles, Centre for the Study of Manuscript Cultures (CSMC),
Exzellenzcluster 'Understanding Written Artefacts', Universität Hamburg
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 832-a:
Paper 832-b:
Respondent:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 833-a:
Paper 833-b:
Paper 833-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 834-a:
Paper 834-b:
Paper 834-c:
833
Esther Simpson Building: 3.01
NETWORKS OF SONG AND STORY: MEDIEVAL FRENCH CONVENTS AND THEIR
SECULAR INVOLVEMENTS
Rachel Golden, School of Music, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Katherine Kong, Independent Scholar, McLean, Virginia
‘Hope and true love, Please carry me there’: Longing and
Traversal in Li solaus qui en moy luist (Language: English)
Rachel Golden
De la gloriouse fenix: Animality, (Ir)rationality, and Gender in
13th Century Marian Song (Language: English)
Áine Palmer, Department of Music, Yale University
Telling Tales in the Livre du Dit de Poissy (Language: English)
Katherine Kong
Tuesday
Session:
Title:
832
Clarendon Building: 1.01
ENTANGLEMENTS OF INFORMATION: MEDIEVAL BOOK COLLECTIONS AND
THEIR NAVIGATION CHARTS, IV - SERMON COLLECTIONS
‘Book of Books’ Project, Københavns Universitet
René Hernández Vera, Institut for Nordiske Studier og Sprogvidenskab,
Københavns Universitet
Alessandro Gnasso, Institut for Nordiske Studier og Sprogvidenskab,
Københavns Universitet
The Volumina Noua of St Gall: An Early Medieval Exercise in
Gathering, Compiling, and Editing Homiliaries (Language: English)
Zachary Morgan Guiliano, Faculty of History, University of Oxford
Carolingian Sermons in Northern Italy: Influences of the
Bavarian Collection within Padua’s Homiliaries (Language:
English)
Elisa Furlan, Dipartimento di Scienze Storiche, Geografiche e
dell’Antichità, Università degli Studi di Padova
Shari Boodts, Radboud Institute for Culture & History (RICH), Radboud
Universiteit Nijmegen
834
Newlyn Building: 1.07
MEDIEVAL PAPACY, 500-1500, IV: ANTI-POPES, SCHISM, AND
INQUISITION
Callum A. Jamieson, School of Humanities (History), University of
Glasgow
Callum A. Jamieson
Pope or Anti-Pope?: Schism and the Medieval Papacy (Language:
English)
Rebecca A. C. Rist, Department of History, University of Reading
‘Angelic Papacy’ and Roman Papacy in the 14th Century:
Different Approaches to Church Reform in Spiritual Franciscan
Prophecies (Language: English)
Marco Giardini, Section des Sciences Religieuses, École Pratique des
Hautes Études, Paris
Entangled Give-and-Take Relationships between the Curia and
the Dominican Order in the 13th Century (Language: English)
Asami Kobayashi, Department of Comprehensive History, Shujitsu
University, Okayama
213
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 835-a:
Paper 835-b:
Paper 835-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 836-a:
Paper 836-b:
Paper 836-c:
214
835
Parkinson Building: Room B.10
NETWORKED DATA: COLLECTING, MANAGING, AND ANALYSING RELATIONAL
DATA IN MEDIEVAL STUDIES, II
Centrum pro digitální výzkum náboženství / Dissident Networks Project
(DISSINET), Masarykova univerzita, Brno
Robert L. J. Shaw, Centrum pro digitální výzkum náboženství,
Masarykova univerzita, Brno and David Zbíral, Centrum pro digitální
výzkum náboženství / Dissident Networks Project (DISSINET),
Masarykova univerzita, Brno
Davor Salihović, Centrum pro digitální výzkum náboženství / Dissident
Networks Project (DISSINET), Masarykova univerzita, Brno
Geographical Assertions: Applying the STAR Model to Record
Perceptions of Place and Space (Language: English)
Tara L. Andrews, Institut für Geschichte, Universität Wien
Gleanings from Applications for the Graph-Based Exploration of
Cultural Heritage Collections (Language: English)
Marten Düring, Luxembourg Centre for Contemporary & Digital History
(C²DH), Université du Luxembourg
Mapping the Digital Medieval with Recogito (Language: English)
Elton Barker, Faculty of Arts & Social Sciences, Open University, Milton
Keynes and Rainer Simon, Digital Insight Lab, Austrian Institute of
Technology (AIT), Wien
836
Esther Simpson Building: 1.01
THE MIDDLE AGES IN MODERN GAMES, IV: TEACHING, RESEARCH, AND
OUTREACH THROUGH NETWORKS AND ENTANGLEMENTS
Centre for Medieval & Renaissance Research, University of Winchester
Robert Houghton, Centre for Medieval & Renaissance Research,
University of Winchester and Mariana Lopez, School of Arts & Creative
Technologies, University of York
Katherine J. Lewis, Department of Communication & Humanities,
University of Huddersfield
Player-Archivist Entanglements: Engaging Video Game Lore
Communities through Tangential Learning Tools (Language:
English)
Luca Arruns Panaro, Faculty of Icelandic & Comparative Cultural
Studies, University of Iceland, Reykjavík
How to Model an Early Medieval Political System: A Survey and
a Proposal (Language: English)
Arturo Mariano Iannace, Scuola IMT Alti Studi, Lucca
Sonic Medievalisms in Audio Games: An Exploration of Design
and Accessibility Strategies (Language: English)
Mariana Lopez
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 837-a:
Paper 837-b:
Paper 837-c:
Moderator:
Paper 838-a:
Paper 838-b:
Paper 838-c:
838
Parkinson Building: Room B.08
MATERIALITY OF MANUSCRIPTS, IV: POSSIBILITIES AND CHALLENGES
Katarzyna Anna Kapitan, Linacre College, University of Oxford and N.
Kıvılcım Yavuz, Institute for Medieval Studies / School of History,
University of Leeds
Dominique Stutzmann, Institut de Recherche et d’Histoire des Textes
(IRHT), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Paris
Applying Handwritten Text Recognition to the Distinctiones
Collections: Building a Broad Model for Fine-Tuning with
eScriptorium (Language: English)
Svetlana Yatsyk, CIHAM - Histoire, archéologie, littératures des mondes
chrétiens et musulmans médiévaux (UMR 5648), Université Paris
Sciences et Lettres
Digital Mimesis: A Digital Edition in Service of a Digital Facsimile
(Language: English)
Michael Treschow, Department of English & Cultural Studies, University
of British Columbia, Okanagan
A Roll May Scroll but It Is Not a Webpage: Issues of Presenting
Pennsylvania, Penn Libraries, MS Roll 1066 in a Digital
Environment (Language: English)
Dot Porter, Schoenberg Institute for Manuscript Studies, University of
Pennsylvania
Tuesday
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
837
Newlyn Building: 1.02
DEFINING SUBALTERNITIES, II: THEORISING THE SUBALTERN
Global Medieval Peasants Research Network
Stuart Pracy, Department of History & Archaeology, University of
Exeter
Stuart Pracy
(Re)Conceptualising Otherness and Othering in Old Norse
Literature (Language: English)
Solveig Bollig, Institutionen för språkstudier, Umeå Universitet
Can the Subaltern Rule?: Women and the Patriarchal Triangle in
Medieval Ireland (Language: English)
Sarah Vincent, Independent Scholar, Brest
Reconsidering Gramsci’s ‘Hegemonic Apparatus’: Towards a
New Approach to the Study of the Premodern Subaltern
(Language: English)
Walter Beers, Haifa Center for Mediterranean History, University of
Haifa
215
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 839-a:
Paper 839-b:
Paper 839-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 840-a:
Paper 840-b:
Paper 840-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 841-a:
Paper 841-b:
Paper 841-c:
216
839
Maurice Keyworth Building: G.02
PILGRIM POSSIBILITIES, II: REPRESENTING AND PERFORMING PILGRIMAGE
History Research Centre, Manchester Metropolitan University
Kathryn Hurlock, Department of History, Politics & Philosophy,
Manchester Metropolitan University
Philip A. Booth, Department of History, Politics & Philosophy,
Manchester Metropolitan University
Gender and Pilgrimage in the Digby Mary Magdalene (Language:
English)
Jiamiao Chen, Department of English, University of Bristol
Elements of Performance in Early Indian Narrative Art
(Language: English)
Kajal Bawa, Department of History, University of Delhi
Visualising Pilgrimage in 16th-Century Domestic Music
Performance (Language: English)
Huw Keene, Edinburgh College of Art, University of Edinburgh
840
Clarendon Building: 2.01
MULTI-LEGALISM IN EUROPE IN THE HIGH MIDDLE AGES: PROBLEMS AND
POSSIBILITIES
British Academy Network ‘Jurisdictions, Legal Community & Political
Discourse in Europe, 1050-1250’
Alice Taylor, Department of History, King’s College London
Jason Taliadoros, Faculty of Business & Law, Deakin University,
Melbourne
Jurisdictions, Legal Community, and Political Discourse, 10501250: Approaches, Findings, and Questions (Language: English)
Helle Vogt, Center for Interdisciplinære Retlige Studier (CIS),
Københavns Universitet
The Problem of the State (Language: English)
Alice Taylor
The Problem of the Papacy (Language: English)
Danica Summerlin, Department of History, University of Sheffield
841
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.04
ASSOCIATED AND MARGINALISED?: POOR AND MARGINALISED PEOPLE AND
THEIR (ATTRIBUTED) NETWORKS IN THE LATE MIDDLE AGES
Matthias Wesseling, Historisches Institut, RWTH Aachen Universität
Jacqueline Turek, Historisches Institut, RWTH Aachen Universität
Immigrant Artisans and Systemic Marginalisation in London,
1450-1550 (Language: English)
Shannon McSheffrey, Department of History, Concordia University,
Montréal
Forgotten Guests: Chronicling Romani Immigrants in the Holy
Roman Empire, 1417-1497 (Language: English)
Lane B. Baker, Department of History, Stanford University
Confraternitas pauperum: Associations of Poor People between
Solidarity, Religious Needs, and Government Control, c. 14001550 (Language: English)
Matthias Wesseling
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 842-a:
Paper 842-b:
Paper 842-c:
Paper 842-d:
Paper 843-b:
Paper 843-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 844-a:
Paper 844-b:
Paper 844-c:
843
Michael Sadler Building: LG.16
CORRELATIONS BETWEEN POETRY AND DRAMA
Société Internationale pour l’étude du Théâtre Médiéval
Cora Dietl, Institut für Germanistik, Justus-Liebig-Universität Gießen
Cora Dietl
The Virgin Mary between Orthodoxy and Reform in Medieval
Bohemia: Drama, Poetry, Prose (Language: English)
Eliška Kubartová, Katedra divadelních a filmových studií, Univerzita
Palackého, Olomouc
The Virgin Mary in Late Medieval Catalan Drama and Poetry:
Interdependencies and Correlations (Language: English)
Lenke Kovács, Departament de Filologia Catalana i Lingüística General,
Universitat de les Illes Balears, Palma
Between Prefiguration and Example: Between Christian and
Jewish Traditions - Queen Esther in 16th-Century Drama and
Poetry (Language: English)
Cora Dietl
Tuesday
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 843-a:
842
Virtual Session
DISEASE IN THE MEDIEVAL ISLAMICATE WORLD, IV: RETRIEVING THE
CORPUS OF PLAGUE TREATISES
Nahyan Fancy, Department of History, DePauw University, Indiana and
Monica Green, Independent Scholar, Phoenix, Arizona
Ahmed Tahir Nur, Department of Religious Studies, Yale University
‘Uthmānī’s Healing the Grieving Heart: On the Exposition of
Issues around the Plague (Language: English)
Burak Veysel Erman, Faculty of Islamic Studies, Yalova University /
Department of Philosophy, Istanbul Medeniyet University
llyas b. Ibrahim’s Shield from Plagues and Epidemics (Language:
English)
Ahmed Tahir Nur
Idrīs-i Bidlīsī’s Refraining from Epidemic-Stricken Places
(Language: English)
Mehmet Emin Güleçyüz, Divinity School, University of Chicago, Illinois
A Synthesising and Canonical Plague Treatise in the 16thCentury Ottoman Capital: Risālat al-shifā’ li-adwā’ al-wabā’
(Language: English)
Mustakim Arıcı, Faculty of Arts & Humanities, Istanbul Medeniyet
University
844
Esther Simpson Building: 3.08
MEDIEVALISM AND NATIONALISM
Miriam Müller, Department of History, University of Birmingham
Andrew B. R. Elliott, Independent Scholar, Lincoln
‘Do you remember Macsen?’: Yma O Hyd, Medievalism, and
Welsh Nationalism (Language: English)
Michael Evans, Faculty of Social Science, Delta College, Michigan
The Far Right and Their Peasants: From Blood and Soil to
Anastasia (Language: English)
Miriam Müller
(Neo)Medievalism and Nationalism in Brazil: Nostalgia for a
Foreign Past? (Language: English)
Luiz Felipe Anchieta Guerra, Departamento de História, Universidade
Estadual de Montes Claros, Brazil
217
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 845-a:
Paper 845-b:
Paper 845-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 846-a:
Paper 846-b:
Respondent:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 847-a:
Paper 847-b:
Paper 847-c:
218
845
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.06
MAKING AS METHOD: MEDIEVAL MATERIALS, II
Millie Horton-Insch, Department of History of Art, University College
London
Jess Bailey, Department of History of Art, University College London
The Value of Craft: A History and Historiography of Wooden
Reliquaries (Language: English)
Andrew Sears, Institut für Kunstgeschichte, Universität Bern
Concealing What Matters: English Alabaster on Display in the
Late Middle Ages (Language: English)
Carly B. Boxer, Department of Art & Art History, Bucknell University,
Pennsylvania
Making Ambivalence: The Material Contradictions of English
Benedictine Manuscripts (Language: English)
Avantika Kumar, Department of History of Art & Architecture, Harvard
University
846
Clarendon Building: GR 01
POETRY AND COMMUNICATION, 14TH-16TH CENTURIES, IV: BEYOND THE
MIDDLE AGES AND THE RENAISSANCE
Estelle Doudet, Faculté des lettres, Université de Lausanne
Ellen Delvallée, Litt&Arts (UMR 5316), Université Grenoble Alpes /
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Grenoble
‘Défense et illustration, ou plutôt offense et dénigration?’:
Barthélemy Aneau Reads Joachim du Bellay (Language: English)
Vanessa Glauser, Faculté des lettres, Université de Lausanne
Rhetoric and Commitment of a Modern Orator: The Case of Jean
Bouchet (Language: English)
Nathalie Dauvois, Centre de Linguistique Française, Université
Sorbonne Nouvelle
Estelle Doudet
847
Stage@leeds: Stage 1
ARMS, ARMOUR, AND THE ARTS OF COMBAT, IV: CAROLINGIANS AND
CAVALRY
Jacob H. Deacon, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Karen Watts, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Carolingian Armour: What You See Is What You Get? (Language:
English)
Gabriella Miyamoto, Department of Art History, Ringling College of Art
& Design, Florida
The Development of Cavalry Tactics from the Carolingians to the
High Middle Ages (Language: English)
Jürg Gassmann, Independent Scholar, Wexford
‘Hobelars, Currours, and Écorcheurs, Oh My!’: Some Thoughts
on ‘Non-Knightly’ Soldier Words, Their Armour, and Weapons
(Language: English)
Robert W. Jones, Advanced Studies in England, Bath / Department of
History, Franklin & Marshall College, Pennsylvania
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 848-a:
Paper 848-b:
Paper 848-c:
848
Newlyn Building: LG.01
THE BELLIPHONIC, II: WAR OF SOUNDS
DFG Projekt ‘Der laute Krieg und die Laute des Krieges: Belliphonie im
Mittelalter’
Martin Clauss, Institut für Europäische Geschichte, Technische
Universität Chemnitz
Martin Clauss
The Sound of Silence: The Belliphonic in Medieval Miniatures
(Language: English)
Monja Katja Schünemann, Institut für Europäische Studien und
Geschichtswissenschaften, Technische Universität Chemnitz
Narrating Sound: The Belliphonic in Medieval Literature
(Language: English)
Gesine Mierke, Institut für Germanistik, Otto-Friedrich-Universität
Bamberg
Preaching Sound: The Belliphonic in Medieval Sermons
(Language: English)
Pauline Pötzsch, Institut für Europäische Studien und
Geschichtswissenschaften, Technische Universität Chemnitz
Tuesday
219
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 18.00-19.00
DINNER: 18.00-20.00
Take some time to enjoy your evening meal with colleagues.
Refectory 18.00-20.00
TUESDAY 04 JULY
RECEPTION
HOSTED BY
MORTIMER HISTORY SOCIETY
UNIVERSITY HOUSE: LITTLE WOODHOUSE ROOM
18.00-19.00
A reception hosted by the Mortimer History Society to celebrate the launch of Dynasty of Destiny:
The Mortimers of Wigmore in the Middle Ages, 1066-1485. Through a series of essays,
contributed by academics and scholars, the book explores new aspects of one of the most
prominent families of medieval Britain.
TUESDAY 04 JULY
RECEPTION
HOSTED BY
MEDIEVAL WORLDS: COMPARATIVE & INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES,
AUSTRIAN ACADEMY OF SCIENCES
UNIVERSITY HOUSE: ST GEORGE ROOM
18.00-19.00
We are delighted to welcome you to our Medieval Worlds reception, where you can meet editors
and authors of our interdisciplinary journal to learn more about our latest volumes, our special
issue series, and how you can publish your own work with us.
For more information about Medieval Worlds, please visit www.medievalworlds.net.
220
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 19.00-20.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Speaker:
Introduction:
Details:
The Medieval Academy is pleased once again to host the Annual Medieval
Academy Lecture, an opportunity for the Academy to showcase some of
the important work being done by scholars in North America. We hope
you will join us for a reception immediately following the lecture, where
members of the Medieval Academy staff will be available to answer
questions about the Academy and its work. For more information about
the Academy, please see www.medievalacademy.org. All those attending
are warmly invited to join members of the Medieval Academy after the
lecture for a glass of wine.
Tuesday
901
Esther Simpson Building: LG08
ANNUAL MEDIEVAL ACADEMY LECTURE: SOMATIC ENTANGLEMENTS
(Language: English)
Medieval Academy of America
Elina Gertsman, Department of Art History & Art, Case Western
Reserve University, Ohio
Lisa Fagin Davis, Medieval Academy of America, Massachusetts
Zoocephalic, or animal-headed, figures have long been recognized as a
hallmark of Ashkenazic Jewish art, evident specifically in a series of
manuscripts illuminated during the 13 th and 14th centuries. The raison
d’être for this visual tradition, at least in theory, constitutes a creative
take on the corpus of Judaic law that forbids the representation of human
countenance, as well as on the body of medieval responsa that took on
this prohibition, often in surprisingly liberal ways. Yet, the presence of
animal-heads goes well beyond any juridical mandate; and because
zoocephali constitute a pliant visual idiom operating outside established,
traditional paradigms, their uses remain unfixed. These theriomorphs,
whose very nature is predicated on somatic entanglements between
humanity and animality, have been employed to great and varied effect
in medieval Hebrew books. This lecture explores several such
entanglements in order to suggest that zoocephalic images stage a wide
variety of complex visual arguments about likeness and difference.
Please note that admission to this event will be on a first-come, firstserved basis as there will be no tickets. Please ensure that you arrive as
early as possible to avoid disappointment.
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Purpose:
903
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.06
SEAFARING: EXPERIMENTAL APPROACHES FOR EARLY MEDIEVAL STUDIES OF
NORTH ATLANTIC NETWORKS - A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
Islands of the North Atlantic (IONA)
Matthew Hussey, Department of English, Simon Fraser University,
British Columbia
Matthew Hussey
In this IONA-sponsored round table discussion, four scholars of three
different fields (history, archaeology, and literature) will explore and
discuss new modes of encounter and engagement with the cultural
artifacts of early medieval Britain, Ireland, Scandinavia, and indigenous
North America. By trying out indigenous critical theory to rethink the
pedagogy of early North Atlantic history, testing the idea of
‘aquapelagoes’ across North Sea archaeology, remediating English
poetry in interactive digital forms, and opening up Irish and Welsh texts
to blue eco-criticism, our panel will test new ideas, connections, and
possibilities for a denationalised and deperiodised medieval studies.
Participants include Sarah-Nelle Jackson (University of British Columbia),
Karen L. Jolly (University of Hawai’i at Mānoa), David Petts (Durham
University), and Rowan Steininger (University of British Columbia).
221
MEDIEVAL
CITY.
Study a Masters in
Medieval Studies.
MEDIEVAL
STUDIES.
LNCN.AC/MEDIEVAL
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 19.00-20.00
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Purpose:
915
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.32
CHINGGISID RIPPLES, V: WAYS FORWARD ON IMPERIAL MONGOL
NETWORKS - A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
Geoffrey Humble, School of Medicine, University of Leeds and Márton
Vér, Seminar für Turkologie und Zentralasienkunde, Georg-AugustUniversität Göttingen
Márton Vér
Mongol Empire studies have been revolutionised over the past decade,
not least by the major ERC database project based at the Hebrew
University of Jerusalem and pressures to broaden medieval history
curricula. Building upon the ‘Chinggisid Ripples’ sessions, this round table
discussion brings together a broad group of early career scholars to
identify key challenges and opportunities, both within the field and in
interaction with medieval studies more broadly. Taking the sessions’ four
themes of materiality, historiography, institutions, and lineage as
starting points, the discussion will focus on the challenge of extrapolating
to large-scale network models while maintaining sensitivity to
entanglements and dislocations rooted in the local and material.
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Purpose:
926
Esther Simpson Building: 2.11
WHAT DID MEDIEVAL PHILOSOPHY DO FOR US?: CROSS-DISCIPLINARY
ENTANGLEMENTS - A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
IPM Monthly
Maria Eduarda Machado, Instituto de Filosofia, Universidade do Porto
Maria Eduarda Machado
What is the point of studying medieval philosophy? At first sight, its direct
impact on other disciplines seems to be negligable. Indeed, how can the
clarification of abstruse interpretative frameworks written centuries ago
contribute to historical reconstructions of the past or even contemporary
philosophical debate? This round table discussion will discuss the
interdisciplinary value of medieval philosophy for contemporary
scholarship as mirrored by the structural entanglement on which the
notion of philosophia was grounded. By contrasting how disciplines like
cultural history, history of science, and literature deal with medieval
philosophical theories, the round table will shed light on and deconstruct
long-lasting biases against medieval philosophy and its supposed
uselessness.
Tuesday
Participants include Wonhee Cho (Academy of Korean Studies, Gyeonggido), Francesca Fiaschetti (Universität Wien), Geoffrey Humble
(University of Leeds), Toby Jones (Universiteit Leiden), and Qiao Yang
(Max-Planck-Institut für Wissenschaftsgeschichte, Berlin).
Participants include Grégory Clesse (Université catholique de Louvain),
Mário João Correia (Universidade do Porto), Yael Kedar (Tel Hai College,
Haifa), Jonathan Morton (Tulane University, New Orleans), Paula Oliveira
e Silva (Universidade do Porto), Nicola Polloni (KU Leuven), and Sarah
Virgi (Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München).
223
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 19.00-20.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Purpose:
927
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.31
THE BENEFITS OF BEING ENTANGLED: A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
Pearl-Poet Society / Medieval Association of the Midwest (MAM)
Mickey Sweeney, School of English, Dominican University, Illinois
Mickey Sweeney
Anglophone academic institutions increasingly argue against supporting
medieval language and literary studies on the grounds that the discipline
is irrelevant to current ‘practically’ driven, diversity / justice-inspired
curriculums. This round table offers a forum for exploring strategies for
cross-temporal and cross-disciplinary entanglements in the teaching of
late 14th-century Middle English texts. As we are slowly being written out
of the profile of English, History, and Philosophy degrees, on account of
perceived student ‘wants’, or management’s misunderstanding of
relations between subjects of study within individual disciplines, we need
to find ways to assert our joyfully messy and plural, yet intellectually
rigorous, entanglements with all aspects of the humanities deemed
specifically relevant to the present, entanglements that make knowledge
of medieval culture integral not only to the learning goals and objectives
of our own departments but of the liberal arts as a whole. So many of
the great works of the present or cultural concerns of 2023 are grounded
in a relationship with works / events of the past and the ‘soft’ skills that
employers seek are bread and butter learning outcomes for our classes.
We will also discuss strategies for devising courses that will convince
people of the need to understand the origins of our contemporary
culture. Like all good teaching, this round table offers practical and
theoretical ways to continue to be a part of the work that needs to be
done to help our colleagues and all our students to thrive in this complex
time.
We will invite the audience to come prepared with their ideas and
suggestions.
Participants include Ashley Bartelt (Northern Illinois University),
Catherine J. Batt (University of Leeds), Jane Beal (University of La Verne,
California), Michael Calabrese (California State University, Los Angeles)
and Katie Jo LaRiviere (Mount Angel Seminary, Oregon).
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Purpose:
930
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.09
NETWORKING MEDIEVAL MONARCHY, V: TEACHING MEDIEVAL MONARCHY A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
Royal Studies Network
Elena Woodacre, Department of History, University of Winchester
Laura Pilsworth, Routledge, Abingdon
This session is part of the Networking Medieval Monarchy strand.
Networking Medieval Monarchy V will bring together the themes touched
on in the four paper sessions and discuss a new textbook on medieval
monarchy, in development with Routledge. The four co-authors will
outline the framework of this textbook and reflect on the challenges of
creating a textbook which engages with the wide varieties of rulership
practised across Europe from 1000-1500. Approaches to teaching
medieval monarchy will be explored and feedback from the audience on
what they want to see from a textbook on the subject is welcomed.
Participants include Lucinda Dean (University of the Highlands & Islands,
Dornoch), Simon Lambe (London South Bank University), Patrik Pastrnak
(Univerzita Palackého, Olomouc), and Elena Woodacre (University of
Winchester).
224
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 19.00-20.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Purpose:
Participants include Marten Düring (Université du Luxembourg), Stefan
Eichert (Naturhistorisches Museum Wien), Geert Kessels (LAB1100, Den
Haag), Laura K. Morreale (Independent Scholar, Washington, DC),
Alexander Watzinger (Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften,
Wien), and David Zbíral (Masarykova univerzita, Brno).
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Purpose:
Tuesday
935
Esther Simpson Building: 2.12
NETWORKED DATA: DIGITAL ENVIRONMENTS FOR COLLECTING, MANAGING,
AND ANALYSING RELATIONAL DATA IN MEDIEVAL STUDIES - A ROUND
TABLE DISCUSSION
Centrum pro digitální výzkum náboženství / Dissident Networks Project
(DISSINET), Masarykova univerzita, Brno
Robert L. J. Shaw, Centrum pro digitální výzkum náboženství,
Masarykova univerzita, Brno and David Zbíral, Centrum pro digitální
výzkum náboženství / Dissident Networks Project (DISSINET),
Masarykova univerzita, Brno
Robert L. J. Shaw
This round table discussion brings together developers, co-authors, and
users of environments for data collection, data management, and data
analysis in history. It seeks to share knowledge about such environments
and create a space for networking. In line with the IMC’s special strand,
the main focus is on relational data. Participants will present the
environments and workflows in flash talks, and discuss their strengths
and limitations with current as well as potential users. The tools will
include
Heurist
(https://heuristnetwork.org),
histograph
(http://histograph.eu), InkVisitor (https://inkvisitor.net), nodegoat
(https://nodegoat.net/), and OpenAtlas (https://openatlas.eu/).
936
Esther Simpson Building: 1.01
THE MIDDLE AGES IN MODERN GAMES, V: LUDIC NETWORKS AND
ENTANGLEMENTS - A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
Centre for Medieval & Renaissance Research, University of Winchester
Robert Houghton, Centre for Medieval & Renaissance Research,
University of Winchester and Mariana Lopez, School of Arts & Creative
Technologies, University of York
Mariana Lopez
The field of medievalist game studies is growing rapidly and across
numerous disciplines. There is a vast volume of new and important work
produced every year and a growing network of scholars and industry
figures engaging with this research. However, with this rapid and varied
development there is an increasing danger of research retreating into
subject specific silos. Further, there is a continued need to understand
and address the entanglement of games within media and popular
culture more generally, alongside their connections and distinctions from
other forms of medievalism. This round table discussion addresses the
state of the field and highlights new directions and areas of research.
This open discussion welcomes all participants and will include James
Baillie (Universität Wien), Thom Gobbitt (Österreichische Akademie der
Wissenschaften, Wien), Robert Houghton (University of Winchester), and
Katherine J. Lewis (University of Huddersfield).
225
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 19.00-20.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Purpose:
940
Esther Simpson Building: 2.07
THINKING THROUGH MULTI-LEGALISM IN EUROPE IN THE HIGH MIDDLE
AGES - A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
British Academy Network ‘Jurisdictions, Legal Community & Political
Discourse in Europe, 1050-1250’
Alice Taylor, Department of History, King’s College London
Alice Taylor
This round table discussion considers the effects of separate legal
traditions (whether national or systematic) on the way in which we write
the history of law during the high Middle Ages, the period of the ‘legal
revolution’. Drawing on examples from Iberia, the Italian peninsula, and
England, as well as thinking through the historiographies of civil law,
canon law, and common law, this round table discussion considers the
challenges and possibilities in producing a properly ‘multi-legal’ history
of law in Europe during this period.
Participants include Rodrigo García-Velasco Bernal (University College
London), Thomas McSweeney (College of William & Mary, Virginia),
Danica Summerlin (University of Sheffield), Jason Taliadoros (Deakin
University, Melbourne), and Lidia Luisa Zanetti Domingues (Università
degli Studi di Milano).
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Purpose:
942
Maurice Keyworth Building: G.02
DISEASE IN THE MEDIEVAL ISLAMICATE WORLD, V: THE STATE OF OUR
QUESTIONS - A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
Nahyan Fancy, Department of History, DePauw University, Indiana and
Monica Green, Independent Scholar, Phoenix, Arizona
Monica Green
This session places the Islamicate world into the larger context of
medieval Afro-Eurasia. The round table discussion draws common
threads out of the prior sessions and ponders how the Islamicate world
looks when placed on a larger map. Peterson will look at the category of
leprosy as it has functioned in historiography; Nur will discuss future
prospects for the field of disease history in the Islamicate world; Oliveira
da Silva gives us a new perspective on the Black Death from the western
end of the Mediterranean, Portugal; and Blecher and Syed sum up their
experiences translating Ibn Hajar al-‘Asqalani’s Merits of the Plague.
Participants include Joel Blecher (George Washington University), Ahmed
Tahir Nur (Yale University), André Filipe Oliveira da Silva (Universidade
do Porto), Anna M. Peterson (Universidad de Cantabria), and Mairaj Syed
(University of California, Davis).
226
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 19.00-20.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Purpose:
943
Esther Simpson Building: 2.08
ANARCHISING THE MIDDLE AGES: ANARCHIST APPROACHES TO THE MIDDLE
AGES (AAMA) - A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
Anarchist Approaches to the Middle Ages
Bee Jones, Faculty of History, University of Oxford and Moritz
Wallenborn, Historisches Seminar, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität
München
Delfi I. Nieto-Isabel, School of History, Queen Mary University of
London
This round table session will be an opportunity to continue discussion of
David Graeber and David Wengrow’s The Dawn of Everything, as well as
discussing other aspects of anarchist approaches to the Middle Ages.
Scholars in any discipline with an interest in applying anarchist ideas,
and the anarcho-curious, are welcome to take part in this open
discussion and meet like-minded people.
Participants include Bee Jones (University of Oxford), Thomas Mical
(Auckland University of Technology), and Claire Taylor (University of
Nottingham).
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Purpose:
944
Esther Simpson Building: 3.02
THE LORD OF THE RINGS: THE RINGS OF POWER AND QUESTIONS OF
ADAPTATION AND AUTHENTICITY: A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
Centre for Fantasy & the Fantastic, School of Critical Studies, University
of Glasgow
Andrew Higgins, Centre for Fantasy & the Fantastic, School of Critical
Studies, University of Glasgow
Andrew Higgins
Our continuing Tolkien at Leeds countable series will explore one of the
most significant new adaptations of Tolkien’s works, Amazon Prime’s five
season The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power series. Participants will
offer short presentations on some element of this series and how it is (or
is not) in dialogue with Tolkien’s texts and explore what this new
adaptation develops or reveals in the expanding body of adaptive works
based in some form on Tolkien’s world-building.
Tuesday
Session:
Title:
Participants include Brian Egede-Pedersen (Independent Scholar,
Nykøbing Falster), Mercury Natis (Independent Scholar, Worthing), and
Kate Natishan (University of Virginia).
227
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 19.00-20.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Purpose:
945
Esther Simpson Building: 3.01
SOMETHING OLD, SOMETHING NEW: DIGITAL VISIONS OF EARLY ENGLISH A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
Digital Medievalist
Stewart J. Brookes, Bodleian Library, University of Oxford
N. Kıvılcım Yavuz, Institute for Medieval Studies / School of History,
University of Leeds
To
celebrate
the
20th
anniversary
of
Digital
Medievalist
(https://digitalmedievalist.org/), this round table discussion interrogates
the need for up-to-date editions, catalogues, and online resources to act
as our support and guide when IIIF-ing and ‘turning the pages’ of digital
surrogates. Expect a heady mix of Digital Humanities, TEI, overviews of
some exciting in-progress projects, and maybe even the critiquing of the
odd library catalogue or two. And then we will open up the discussion to
discover what you would most like to see! Newcomers to Digital
Humanities are especially welcome to join the discussion!
Participants include Stewart J. Brookes (University of Oxford), Martin
Foys (University of Wisconsin-Madison), Catrin Haberfield (Stanford
University), Katarzyna Anna Kapitan (University of Oxford), Elaine
Treharne (Stanford University), and Eyup Eren Yurek (Stanford
University).
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Purpose:
946
Esther Simpson Building: 2.09
MEDIEVAL LIFE-WRITING: A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
Haskins Society
Susan Foran, Institutionen för humaniora och samhällsvetenskap,
Mittuniversitetet, Sundsvall
Michael Staunton, School of History, University College Dublin
Medieval biography or life-writing is often considered within frameworks
established by classical and modern biography. This session discusses
medieval life-writing traditions within their literary entanglements. How
is the individual life presented and memorialised in relation to social,
political, intellectual, or religious institutions or communities? Is
biography defined by an emphasis on the individual, and how far is this
a focus on the self, identity, and emotion? How are tensions negotiated
through rhetoric, convention, and style? What narrative models and
historiographical sources provided inspiration? How are stories
disseminated through transnational intellectual communities and martial
networks?
Sources
include
royal
and
chivalric
biographies,
hagiographies, obituaries, autobiographies, found alone or within
chronicles, histories, and romance.
Participants include Susan Foran (Mittuniversitetet, Sundsvall), Chris
Given-Wilson (University of St Andrews), Michael Staunton (University
College Dublin), Craig D. Taylor (University of York), and Larissa C. Tracy
(Longwood University, Virginia).
228
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: 19.00-20.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Purpose:
948
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.33
YORK MEDIEVAL PRESS: REFLECTIONS ON ITS 100TH VOLUME - A ROUND
TABLE DISCUSSION
York Medieval Press
Pete Biller, Centre for Medieval Studies, University of York
Pete Biller
York Medieval Press (YMP) was founded by the University of York’s
Centre for Medieval Studies and the publisher Boydell & Brewer in 1995.
It has recently published its 100th volume. To mark this occasion, it
proposes to hold a round table discussion followed by a drinks reception.
The round table discussion will (i) look at what YMP has done and what
it is doing, and (ii) use YMP as a case-study for a more general discussion
about medieval studies and publication. The discussion will explore
trends in published medieval research, as well as the potential for fruitful
collaborations between university departments and publishing houses.
Round table discussion participants will include the General Editor, a
representative from Boydell, and several YMP series’ editors and recent
authors.
Tuesday
Participants include Peregrine Horden (University of Oxford / Royal
Holloway, University of London), Paweł Kras (Katolicki Uniwersytet
Lubelski Jana Pawła II), and Caroline Palmer (Boydell & Brewer,
Woodbridge).
229
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: AFTER 20.00
TUESDAY 04 JULY
RECEPTION
HOSTED BY
MEDIEVAL ACADEMY OF AMERICA
ESTHER SIMPSON BUILDING: FOYER
20.00-21.00
The Medieval Academy of America is pleased once again to host the Annual Medieval Academy
Lecture, an opportunity for the Academy to showcase some of the important work being done
by scholars in North America. We hope you will join us for a reception immediately following the
lecture, where members of the Medieval Academy staff will be available to answer questions
about the Academy and its work.
For more information about the Academy, please see www.medievalacademy.org. All those
attending are warmly invited to join members of the Medieval Academy after the lecture for a
glass of wine or a non-alcoholic drink.
TUESDAY 04 JULY
RECEPTION
HOSTED BY
YORK MEDIEVAL PRESS
MAURICE KEYWORTH BUILDING: FOYER
20.00-21.00
Come and join York Medieval Press authors and editors, to learn more about our latest releases,
our special series, and how to publish your own monograph with the press.
230
TUESDAY 04 JULY 2023: AFTER 20.00
TUESDAY 04 JULY
RECEPTION
HOSTED BY
MEDIÄVISTENVERBAND
UNIVERSITY HOUSE: GREAT WOODHOUSE ROOM
20.15-21.15
Medievalists from Germany and German-speaking countries warmly invite you to enjoy a glass
of wine or non-alcoholic drink, hoping to strengthen ties among medievalists from all disciplines
and countries.
Tuesday
231
232
Events & Excursions: Wednesday 05 July
IMC Bookfair
Parkinson Building, 08.30-18.30
Bringing together publishers, editors,
authors and readers. The IMC Bookfair is
one of the highlights of the programme.
See pp. 432-433 for more details.
Medieval Craft Fair
University Square & Leeds University
Union Foyer, 10.30-19.00
Browse a variety of medieval-inspired
craft and gift items and chat with makers.
Join our stallholders for the Medieval Craft
Fair reception from 18.00-19.00 today.
See p. 433 for more details.
Events
Storytelling Circle, Leeds University
Union: Common Ground, 21.00-22.30
Late-night storytelilng
relaxing entertainment.
circle
offering
IMC Dance, Leeds University Union:
Stylus, 21.30-Late
Put on your dancing shoes and celebrate
with music provided by a local DJ.
A conversation with author Nicola Griffith
ahead of her latest novel Menewood.
Mappa Mundi, Stage@leeds: Stage 1,
20.30-22.00
Storyteller Daisy Black takes you on a tour
around the medieval map of the world in a
show full of marvels.
Workshops
Highlights from Leeds University
Library Special Collections, Parkinson
Building: Treasures of the Brotherton
Gallery, 12.00-14.00
Join us for a drop-in session. Special
Collections staff will be on hand with a
selection of medieval highlights from the
collections for delegates to examine close
up.
‘Paint It White’: Gesso Workshop,
University House: Beechgrove Room,
19.00-21.00
Shibden Hall, Departs Parkinson Steps
13.00
Learn about the steps involved in creating
a medieval panel painting with Markéta
Poskočilová.
Built in 1420, discover the hall’s medieval
- and later - history with David Cant from
the Yorkshire Vernacular Building Study
Group.
Hands
on
History:
Arms
and
Armour Replica Handling Session,
Maurice
Keyworth
Building:
1.09,
19.00-20.30
Performances
Hecastus, Beech Grove Plaza, 18.3019.30
At the Society for Combat Archaeology
workshop, delegates can get up close with
replicas of muesum artefacts.
Join the Lords of Misrule for a performance
of this c.16th-century morality play.
Templars: The Knights of Britain
Stage@leeds: Stage 3, 20.30-21.30
Wednesday
Excursions
Early Medieval Identities in Hild,
Spear, and Menewood: Retelling
History and Myth to Include Us
All, Esther Simpson Builidng: LG08,
19.00-20.00
Join author Steve Tibble and Peter
Koniexczy for a special live podcast about
the British Templars. Followed by a drinks
reception.
For more information on these and all other events, excursions, workshops,
performances and other activities taking place during IMC 2023, please visit
pp. 393-431.
233
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
The IMC Bookfair is open 08.30-18.30 in Parkinson Court: Make sure you pop in to
meet with publishers, browse their latest titles, network, discuss future projects, and, of
course, access exclusive IMC discounts! See pp. 432-433 for full details.
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1001-a:
Paper 1001-b:
Paper 1001-c:
Paper 1001-d:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1002-a:
Paper 1002-b:
Paper 1002-c:
234
1001
Michael Sadler Building: LG.16
THE BODY IN MEDIEVAL ART, I
Universiteit van Amsterdam
Wendelien A. W. van Welie-Vink, Faculteit der Geesteswetenschappen,
Universiteit van Amsterdam
Wendelien A. W. van Welie-Vink
The Risen Body of Lazarus: The Depiction of Jews in Albert van
Ouwater’s ‘Raising of Lazarus’ (Language: English)
Huib P. R. Iserief, Faculteit der Geesteswetenschappen, Universiteit van
Amsterdam
The Impotent Body Depicted in Manuscripts of Decretum
Gratiani (Language: English)
Eric Boot, Curating Art & Cultures - Arts of the Netherlands, Universiteit
van Amsterdam
The Fallen Body: The Depiction of the Body of Lucifer (Language:
English)
Claudia Marcu, Faculteit der Geesteswetenschappen, Universiteit van
Amsterdam
Seducing with an Apple?: The Depiction of Eva and Her Breasts
(Language: English)
Philippine Vieleers, Faculteit der Geesteswetenschappen, Universiteit
van Amsterdam
1002
Newlyn Building: 1.07
CASTLE SPACES, I: CONCEPTUALISING CASTLE SPACES IN THE BUILT AND
NATURAL ENVIRONMENT
Canterbury Christ Church University
Alison Norton, School of Humanities & Educational Studies, Canterbury
Christ Church University
Leonie V. Hicks, School of Humanities & Educational Studies,
Canterbury Christ Church University
Doors and Doorways: Connected Spaces in Two English Castles
(Language: English)
William Wyeth, English Heritage, York
Moving Through the Landscape: A GIS Analysis of EarlyConquest Castle Siting Patterns in Medieval Devon (Language:
English)
Alison Norton
Individual and Collective Identities: Conflicting Functions of the
Late Medieval Lodging Range (Language: English)
Sarah Kerr, Afdeling for Arkæologi og Kulturarvsstudier, Aarhus
Universitet
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1003-a:
Paper 1003-b:
Paper 1003-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1004-a:
Paper 1004-b:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1005-a:
Paper 1005-b:
Paper 1005-c:
1004
Maurice Keyworth Building: G.02
ROME AND PAPACY IN THE GREAT WESTERN SCHISM: NETWORKS OF
SURVIVAL, I
Project ‘Strategies of Survival: The Papal Curia & Ecclesiastical
Institutions of Rome in the Great Western Schism (1378-1417)’
Kirsi Salonen, Institutt for arkeologi, historie, kultur- og
religionsvitenskap, Universitetet i Bergen
Andreas Rehberg, Instituto Storico Germanico di Roma
Discovering Grey Eminences: Social Network Analysis on the
Papal Appointment Letters of Boniface IX (Language: English)
Reima Välimäki, School of History, Culture & Arts Studies, University of
Turku
Networks at the Highest Level: Roman Popes Appointing
Cardinals (Language: English)
Juuso Karhu, School of History, Culture & Arts Studies, University of
Turku
You Are Hired!: University Students’ Career Possibilities in the
Papal Curia during the Schism (Language: English)
Kirsi Salonen
1005
Esther Simpson Building: LG08
CANON LAW, II: NEW INSIGHTS ON THE DECRETUM GRATIANI AND ITS
SUCCESSORS
Iuris Canonici Medii Aevi Consociatio (ICMAC)
Greta Austin, Department of Religious Studies, University of Puget
Sound, Washington and Danica Summerlin, Department of History,
University of Sheffield
Melodie H. Eichbauer, College of Arts & Sciences, Florida Gulf Coast
University
Deposition and Readmission of Simoniacal Clerics: A
Comparative Analysis of De misericordia et iustitia, Cod. Sang.
673 and Decretum Gratiani, C. 1, q. 7. (Language: English)
Alessandro Recchia, Facoltà di Diritto Canonico, Pontificia Università
Urbaniana, Roma
The Impediment of Ligamen in both Recensions of Gratian’s
Decretum (Language: English)
Wiktor Dziemski, Wydział Filologiczny, Uniwersytet Jagielloński, Kraków
Omnibene’s Abbreviatio and the Early Stages of Gratian’s
Decretum (Language: English)
John Burden, Department of History, University of Rochester, New York
Wednesday
Paper 1004-c:
1003
Esther Simpson Building: 2.09
FORMS AND PHILOSOPHY IN MEDIEVAL JEWISH WRITING
IMC Programming Committee
Shamma Boyarin, Department of English, University of Victoria, British
Columbia
The Role of Jewish Medieval Commentary on Liturgical Poems
as an Educational Tool (Language: English)
Simha Goldin, Department of Jewish History, Tel Aviv University
Law, Innovation, and Dream in Maharam’s Halakha (Language:
English)
Joseph Isaac Lifshitz, Shalem College, Jerusalem
Melancholy and the Search for Wisdom in Ibn Gabirol (Language:
English)
Encarnación Ruiz Callejón, Departmento de Filosofía, Universidad de
Granada
235
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1006-a:
Paper 1006-b:
Paper 1006-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1007-a:
Paper 1007-b:
Paper 1007-c:
236
1006
Parkinson Building: Room 1.08
DYNASTY AND COURT CULTURE IN BYZANTIUM AND THE NEAR EAST, II:
COURT WOMEN
Cardiff Centre for Late Antique Religion & Culture, Cardiff University
Ewan William Richard Short, Geschiedenis Department, Universiteit van
Amsterdam
Nicholas Baker-Brian, School of History, Archaeology & Religion, Cardiff
University
All the Shahanshah’s Wives (Language: English)
Eve MacDonald, School of History, Archaeology & Religion, Cardiff
University and Domiziana Rossi, School of History, Archaeology &
Religion, Cardiff University
Sisters of the Macedonian Dynasty: Invisible Women?
(Language: English)
Shaun Tougher, School of History, Archaeology & Religion, Cardiff
University
After Zoe and Theodora: Imperial Women in Byzantine Court
Culture in the Post Macedonian Period (Language: English)
Ewan William Richard Short
1007
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.03
PREMODERN SEX AND SEXUALITIES IN ARABIC EROTIC TEXTS
Kathryn Maude, Department of English, American University of Beirut
Kathryn Maude
Cheeks like Apples, Breasts like Pomegranates: The Anecdotal
Lesbian in 10th-Century Arabic Erotic Writing (Language: English)
Riwa Roukoz, Department of English, American University of Beirut
Same-Sex Desire and the Long Tradition of Arabic Erotica, 10th15th Centuries (Language: English)
Pernilla Myrne, Institutionen för språk och litteraturer, Göteborgs
universitet
A 14th-Century Moralist’s Reading of Same-Sex Desires
(Language: English)
Jonathan Lawrence, Faculty of Asian & Middle Eastern Studies,
University of Oxford
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1008-a:
Paper 1008-b:
Paper 1008-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1009-a:
Paper 1009-b:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1010-a:
Paper 1010-b:
Paper 1010-c:
1009
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.31
LATE ANTIQUE TEXTS AND CHRISTIAN IDENTITIES
IMC Programming Committee
Robert Wiśniewski, Wydział Historii, Uniwersytet Warszawski /
Department of Classics, University of Reading
From ROTAS to SATOR: The Christianisation of a Magic Square
(Language: English)
Mark Saltveit, Independent Scholar, Vermont
Entangled Priests: Social and Economic Interconnectedness of
Clergy in Late Antique Egypt (Language: English)
Joanna Wegner, Instytut Archeologii, Uniwersytet Warszawski
Building a Transregional Christian Community in Late Antiquity:
The Epistolary Networks of Augustine of Hippo (Language:
English)
Carmen Angela Cvetković, Theologische Fakultät, Georg-AugustUniversität Göttingen
Wednesday
Paper 1009-c:
1008
Michael Sadler Building: Rupert Beckett Theatre
HISTORIES IN TRANSITION, I: THE FRANKISH ANNALS - A MATTER OF
CHOICES
Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische Akademie der
Wissenschaften, Wien / Seminar für mittelalterliche Geschichte,
Eberhard Karls Universität Tübingen
Maximilian Diesenberger, Institut für Mittelalterforschung,
Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
Maximilian Diesenberger
Writing and Rewriting the Frankish Annals: The Case of the
Annales Laureshamenses-Mosellani (Language: English)
Bart van Hees, Graduiertenkolleg 2196 ‘Dokument - Text - Edition’,
Bergische Universität Wuppertal
Why Is There So Little News from Rome in the Frankish Annals?
(Language: English)
Rosamond McKitterick, Faculty of History, University of Cambridge
The Annales Laureshamenses in the so called Chronicon
Moissiacense and Chronicon Anianense: Annals as Cause and
Consequence of Historiographical Compositions? (Language:
English)
Patrick Marschner, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
1010
Newlyn Building: LG.02
LORDS AND MERCHANTS: THE ENTANGLED NETWORKS OF TRADE AND
POWER
Sally Finn-Kelcey, Department of History, Trinity College Dublin
David Ditchburn, Department of History, Trinity College Dublin
The Politics of Economy: Disentangling Marshal Power in the
Irish Sea Zone (Language: English)
John Marshall, Department of History, Trinity College Dublin
Networks of Survival: the Mortimer Affinity and the Crisis of
1397 (Language: English)
Patrick McDonagh, Department of History, Trinity College Dublin
Avoiding Entanglements:15th-Century Irish Wool Merchants and
the Wool Staple (Language: English)
Sally Finn-Kelcey
237
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1011-a:
Paper 1011-b:
Paper 1011-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1012-a:
Paper 1012-b:
Paper 1012-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1013-a:
Paper 1013-b:
Paper 1013-c:
238
1011
Newlyn Building: 1.01
ADRIARCHCULT, I: 15TH-CENTURY NETWORKS IN DUBROVNIK COMMISSIONING, EXCHANGING, DEFENDING
ERC Project ‘AdriArchCult (Architectural Culture of the Early Modern
Eastern Adriatic - GA n. 865863)’
Jasenka Gudelj, Dipartimento di Filosofia e Beni Culturali, Università Ca’
Foscari, Venezia
Ines Ivić, Dipartimento di Filosofia e Beni Culturali, Università Ca’
Foscari, Venezia
Networking in Exile: Nicoletta Sorgo’s Dominican Convent in
Dubrovnik and the Venetian Corpus Domini (Language: English)
Ana Marinković, Faculty of Humanities & Social Sciences, University of
Zagreb
Liturgical Gold and Silver with Filigree-Style Decoration in Late
Medieval Dubrovnik (Language: English)
Andrea Missagia, Dipartimento di Filosofia e Beni Culturali, Università
Ca’ Foscari, Venezia
The Transition from Medieval to Modern Fortifications in
Dubrovnik and the Circulation of Knowledge (Language: English)
Karla Papeš, Dipartimento di Filosofia e Beni Culturali, Università Ca’
Foscari, Venezia
1012
Esther Simpson Building: 1.01
ENGLAND AND SCOTLAND AT PEACE AND WAR, I
Andy King, Department of History, University of Southampton
Gordon McKelvie, Department of History, University of Winchester
The Repercussion of Scottish War: A Financial Approach to the
Bruce Campaign in Ireland, 1315-1318 (Language: English)
Qiqing Tan, Department of History, University of Bristol
‘To maintain his banner’: John Randolph, Earl of Moray’s
Division at the Battle of Halidon Hill (Language: English)
Ethan Gould, Independent Scholar, Canberra
Chivalry and the Lower Orders in Anglo-Scottish War (Language:
English)
Alastair Macdonald, School of Divinity, History & Philosophy, University
of Aberdeen
1013
Newlyn Building: GR.01
MEDIEVAL ROMAN EMPIRES EAST AND WEST, I: EMPERORS AND OTHERS
Institute of Medieval & Early Modern Studies, Durham University
Len Scales, Department of History, Durham University
Jonathan Shepard, Khalili Research Centre, University of Oxford
Looking for Imperial Agents in the Holy Roman Empire
(Language: English)
Jonathan Lyon, Department of History, University of Chicago, Illinois
Decentring the Byzantine Emperor: Constraints and Limitations
on Imperial Action, 1258-1341 (Language: English)
James Cogbill, Faculty of History, University of Oxford
Performing Imperial Resilience in the Late Middle Ages: Manuel
II and Sigismund of Luxemburg (Language: English)
Sebastian Kolditz, Institut für Byzantinistik und Neogräzistik,
Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität Münster
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1014-a:
Paper 1014-b:
Paper 1014-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1015-a:
Paper 1015-c:
1015
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.04
THE ENTANGLED CAUCASUS, I: EARLY ENTANGLEMENTS - THE EARLY
MEDIEVAL CAUCASUS
Medieval Caucasus Network
James Baillie, Institut für Geschichte, Universität Wien / Institut für
Iranistik, Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien and
Nicholas J. B. Evans, Institute for Medieval Studies / School of History,
University of Leeds
Nicholas J. B. Evans
At the Crossroads of Empires: Armenian Patriarchal Architecture
between Tradition and Innovation (Language: English)
Cassandre Lejosne, Section d’historie de l’art, Université de Lausanne
Sufyanid Armenia and Caucasian Albania, c. 661-683 (Language:
English)
Stephanie Forrest, Faculty of History, University of Cambridge
The Consumption of Medieval Ceramics and the Construction of
Identity (Language: English)
Jake Hubbert, Department of Anthropology, Brigham Young University,
Utah
Wednesday
Paper 1015-b:
1014
Esther Simpson Building: 2.07
PRACTICES OF COMMUNITY BUILDING IN THE DUCHY OF AUSTRIA IN THE
TH
TIMES OF CONFLICT, C. 15 CENTURY
Herbert Krammer, Institut für Österreichische Geschichtsforschung,
Universität Wien
Christina Lutter, Institut für Österreichische Geschichtsforschung,
Universität Wien
Conflict and the Austrian Lands: Behind the Scenes of Political
Faction Building, 1350-1500 (Language: English)
Daniel Frey, Institut für Geschichte, Universität Wien
Who Deals with Whom?: Social Topography and Topographical
Networks in Real Estate and Loan Transactions in Medieval
Vienna, 1448-1463 (Language: English)
Korbinian Grünwald, Fakultät für Philosophie und Bildungswissenschaft,
Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
Political Turmoil and Social Dynamics among Urban Elites in a
Small Austrian Town: Klosterneuburg, c. 15th Century (Language:
English)
Herbert Krammer
239
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1016-a:
Paper 1016-b:
Paper 1016-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1017-a:
Paper 1017-b:
Respondent:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1018-a:
Paper 1018-b:
Paper 1018-c:
240
1016
Esther Simpson Building: 2.12
WOMEN IN ACCOUNTING: FAMILIES AND FORMATION OF WEALTH IN
RENAISSANCE FLORENCE
Heinrich Lang, Institut für Geschichtswissenschaften, Universität Leipzig
Heinrich Lang
Accounting Networks and Family Ties: Women’s Private Account
Books in Late Medieval Florence (Language: English)
Serena Galasso, School of Humanities (History), University of Glasgow
How to Track the Accounting Efforts of a Renaissance
Noblewoman: The Case of Lucrezia de’ Medici-Salviati
(Language: English)
Adina Eckart, Institut für Sozial- und Wirtschaftsgeschichte, Universität
Leipzig
Camilla Salviati Serristori and the Inheritance of Giovanni
Serristori’s Assets and Financial Liabilities in 1531: A Patrician
Woman in Accounting in Renaissance Florence (Language:
English)
Heinrich Lang
1017
Newlyn Building: GR.02
ENTANGLED COMMODITIES, I: CLOTH TRADE AND ECONOMIC NETWORKS IN
THE WESTERN MEDITERRANEAN
Aysu Dinçer, Department of History, University of Warwick
Aysu Dinçer
Woollens and Cloth Markets in the Western Mediterranean in
the 13th Century (Language: English)
Lluis To Figueras, Departament d’Història i d’Història de l’Art,
Universitat de Girona
Domestic Cloth Trade in Barcelona in an Era of Apparent
Economic Decline, c. 1480-1520 (Language: English)
Lluís Sales Favà, Instituto de Estudos Medievais (IEM), Universidade
Nova de Lisboa
Anna Rich-Abad, Department of History, University of Nottingham
1018
Esther Simpson Building: 3.02
MARGINAL COMMUNITIES IN GLOBALISED MEDITERRANEAN NETWORKS, I:
WOMEN ON THE MARGINS
Anna C. Kelley, St Andrews Institute of Mediaeval Studies, University of
St Andrews
Anna C. Kelley
Traveling on the Margins: Women’s Monasticism and Pilgrimage
Networks in Late Antiquity (Language: English)
Grace Stafford, Wydział Historii, Uniwersytet Warszawski
Foreign Catholic Women without Words: A Multidisciplinary
Reassessment of the Nexus of Agency of the Latin Basilissai in
Morea (Language: English)
Andrea Mattielo, Independent Scholar, London
Knowledge Networks and Caliphal Women in the Umayyad Court
of al-Andalus (Language: English)
Eduardo Manzano Moreno, Instituto de Historia, Consejo Superior de
Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC), Madrid
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1019-a:
Paper 1019-b:
Paper 1019-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1020-a:
Paper 1020-b:
Paper 1020-c:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1021-a:
Paper 1021-b:
Paper 1021-c:
1020
Parkinson Building: Room B.22
BIRGITTINE TEXTS AND NETWORKS, I
Syon Abbey Society / ReVision Project
Laura Saetveit Miles, Institutt for fremmedspråk, Universitetet i Bergen
Brandon Alakas, Department of Fine Arts & Humanities, University of
Alberta
Syon Abbey Psalters and The Hours of the Holy Spirit (Language:
English)
Kathleen E. Kennedy, Centre for Medieval Studies, University of Bristol
The Influence of Birgitta of Sweden on a Previously Unknown
Work by the Author of A Revelation of Purgatory (Language:
English)
Clarck Drieshen, Cambridge University Library, University of Cambridge
From Parish Priests to Birgittine Brethren: Pastoral Manuals at
Syon and the Case of New Haven, Beinecke Rare Book and
Manuscript Library, MS 317 (Language: English)
Antje Elisa Chan, Faculty of English, University of Oxford
1021
Stage@leeds: Stage 1
MARRIAGE IN THE LATE ROMAN EMPIRE: RISKS AND REWARDS IN
RELATIONSHIP NETWORKS
Jeroen W. P. Wijnendaele, Vakgroep Geschiedenis, Universiteit Gent
Ian N. Wood, School of History, University of Leeds
The Empress Justina as Bride and Marriage Broker (Language:
English)
Kate Cooper, Department of History, Royal Holloway, University of
London
Marriage and Social Mobility in the Late Roman Army of
Ammianus (Language: English)
Jeroen W. P. Wijnendaele
Knots and Loose Ends: Late Antique Usurpers and Their Wives
(Language: English)
Julia Hillner, Bonn Center for Dependency & Slavery Studies,
Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn
Wednesday
Session:
Title:
1019
Michael Sadler Building: LG.19
DISENTANGLING THE ARCHIVE, I: SINGLE DOCUMENT DISCOVERIES
The National Archives, Kew
Euan Roger, The National Archives, Kew
Andrew Prescott, School of Critical Studies (English Language &
Linguistics), University of Glasgow
Geoffrey Chaucer, Cecily Chaumpaigne, and the Statute of
Labourers (Language: English)
Euan Roger
Romantic Administrators: Thomas Altherton, Exchequer Scribe
and Owner of the Romance of Sir Parthenope of Blois (Language:
English)
Hannes Kleineke, History of Parliament Trust, London
Rewriting Memory in 15th-Century Durham: Margaret Horsley
and the Miscellaneous Charters (Language: English)
Bridget Cox, Department of History, Durham University
241
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1022-a:
Paper 1022-b:
Paper 1022-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1023-a:
Paper 1023-b:
Paper 1023-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1024-a:
Paper 1024-b:
Paper 1024-c:
242
1022
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.33
NETWORKS AND IDENTITIES IN THE CAROLINGIAN WORLD
Graeme Ward, Seminar für mittelalterliche Geschichte, Eberhard Karls
Universität Tübingen
Rutger Kramer, Onderzoeksinstituut voor Geschiedenis en
Kunstgeschiedenis, Universiteit Utrecht
Social Relationships of Migrants within Carolingian Septimania
(Language: English)
Courtney Luckhardt, Department of History, University of Southern
Mississippi
Intellectual Networks and Textual Transmission: The Case of
Claudius of Turin (Language: English)
Graeme Ward
Gender and Networks in Carolingian Monasticisms (Language:
English)
Ingrid Rembold, Department of History, School of Arts, Languages &
Cultures, University of Manchester
1023
Parkinson Building: Room B.09
ENTANGLED SHRINES OF MEDIEVAL JERUSALEM
Ran Bar Yaakov, Department of Jewish History, University of Haifa
Lidia Chakovskaya
On the Rivers of Jerusalem: Jerusalem’s Topography as a
Network of Water Symbols in Late Antique-Early Medieval
Pilgrim Accounts (Language: English)
Lidia Chakovskaya
The Growth of a Tradition: Huldah’s Grave on the Mount of
Olives (Language: English)
Amichay Schwartz, Department of Israel Heritage, Ariel University /
Department of Land of Israel Studies & Archaeology, Bar-Ilan
University
Graves, Sin, and Punishment in Eastern Jerusalem: The Kidron
Valley as a Network of Sites, Topography, and Traditions
(Language: English)
Ran Bar Yaakov
1024
Michael Sadler Building: LG.10
LOCAL SOCIETIES AND MICROPOLITICS IN THE EARLY MIDDLE AGES:
ACTORS, CONFLICTS, AND WRITING, I
Proyecto ESMICRO ‘Scenarios of Micropolitics’ / Project
‘PeopleandWriting’, Universidad de Salamanca
Iñaki Martín Viso, Departamento de Historia Medieval, Moderna y
Contemporánea, Universidad de Salamanca
Julio Escalona, Instituto de Historia, Consejo Superior de
Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC), Madrid
Micropolitics in Early Medieval Societies: Why Do They Matter?
(Language: English)
Iñaki Martín Viso
Getting Away with Murder: Postcards from the Carolingian
Empire (Language: English)
Charles West, Department of History, University of Sheffield
Territorial Conflicts and Micropolitics in Early Medieval Iberia
(Language: English)
Alicia Martín Rodríguez, Departamento de Historia Medieval, Moderna y
Contemporánea, Universidad de Salamanca
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1025-a:
Paper 1025-b:
Paper 1025-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1026-a:
Paper 1026-b:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1027-a:
Paper 1027-b:
Paper 1027-c:
1026
Clarendon Building: 1.02
ENTANGLED ENVIRONMENTS, I: ENVIRONMENTAL ASSEMBLAGE AND
NETWORKS IN MEDIEVAL BRITAIN
Susannah Bain, Faculty of History / Jesus College, University of Oxford
and Geraint Morgan, Faculty of History, University of Oxford
Bee Jones, Faculty of History, University of Oxford
Assemblages of Movement in Late Medieval England (Language:
English)
Celeste van Gent, Independent Scholar
The Agency of Nature in Materials: Scottish Medieval Devotional
Objects and Spaces, from an Actor Network Theory Perspective
(Language: English)
Abigail Ford, Leicester Medieval Research Centre, University of
Leicester
‘An excellent mill belonging to the blessed maiden’: Milling and
Human Agency in the Latin Hagiography of Gwenffrewi
(Language: English)
Geraint Morgan
1027
Esther Simpson Building: 2.08
PILGRIMS AND NETWORKS OF KNOWLEDGE: TEXTS AND TOPOGRAPHIES OF
MEDIEVAL ROME
Anna Blennow, Institutionen för språk och litteraturer, Göteborgs
Universitet
Kurt Villads Jensen, Centrum för medeltidsstudier, Stockholms
universitet
Tangled Up in Stories: Time, Faith, and Memory in the Medieval
Roman Narrative Urbanscape (Language: English)
Magnus G. Borg, Historiska institutionen, Lunds universitet
The Making of Medieval Rome through Networks of Texts and
Topographies (Language: English)
Anna Blennow
A House of Many Functions: The Textual Networks of St
Birgitta’s House in Rome (Language: English)
Sara Risberg, Diplomatarium Suecanum, Riksarkivet, Stockholm
Wednesday
Paper 1026-c:
1025
Newlyn Building: GR.07
SILENCE AND SILENCING, I: SILENCES IN THE ARCHIVE
Brittany Orton, Department of History, University of York and Basil
Arnould Price, Centre for Medieval Studies, University of York
Basil Arnould Price
Recovering Hidden Queenly Networks in Early Medieval
England: The Silence of Kinship in the Historia ecclesiastica and
Vita Wilfridi (Language: English)
Brittany Orton
‘These tales seme to be infarced’: Silencing the Miracle Stories
in Ælfric’s Sermo de Sacrificio in Die Pascae (Language: English)
Ellen Gallimore, Department of English & Related Literature, University
of York
Dancing in the Silence: Dance and Parish Religion in Britain and
Western Scandinavia (Language: English)
Lynneth Miller Renberg, Department of History & Political Science,
Anderson University, South Carolina
243
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1028-a:
Paper 1028-b:
Paper 1028-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1029-a:
Paper 1029-b:
Paper 1029-c:
244
1028
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.32
ENTANGLED IMAGINATIONS OF BODIES AND SPACES FROM THE CLOISTER TO
THE UNIVERSE
IMC Programming Committee
Armin Bergmeier, Fakultät für Geschichte, Kunst- und
Orientwissenschaften, Universität Leipzig
Of Monsters and Men: Representing Border-Crossing Corpora in
Early Medieval England (Language: English)
Emily Sun, Department of English, Harvard University
What a ‘Body’ Globally Interconnects in the Medieval Discourse:
The Diagrammatic Resonance of the Universe from
Mappaemundi to Chinese Astronomy Coins (Language: English)
Canchen Cao, School of Humanities (History), University of Glasgow
‘The region of Palestine borders upon Italy’: Geographic
Prophecy in the Joachite Tradition (Language: English)
Thomas Maurer, Department of History, University of Tennessee,
Knoxville
1029
Stage@leeds: Stage 3
ENTANGLEMENTS OF THE SENSES IN MEDIEVAL SACRED ART AND RELIGIOUS
EXPERIENCE, I: PERCEPTION - PERFORMANCE
ERC Project ‘SenSArt: The Sensuous Appeal of the Holy - Sensory
Agency of Sacred Art & Somatised Spiritual Experiences in Medieval
Europe (12th-15th Centuries)’
Micol Long, Dipartimento dei Beni Culturali, Università degli Studi di
Padova and Zuleika Murat, Dipartimento dei Beni Culturali, Università
degli Studi di Padova
Zuleika Murat
Kissing the Sacred: A Sensory Approach to the 14th-Century Pax
from Burgos Cathedral (Language: English)
Sara Carreño, Dipartimento dei Beni Culturali, Università degli Studi di
Padova
Sensing the Scroll: The Exultet Liturgy in Southern Italy and
Multisensory Experiences of Community, 10th-14th Centuries
(Language: English)
Judith Utz, Institut für Realienkunde des Mittelalters und der frühen
Neuzeit, Paris-Lodron-Universität Salzburg
Performative and Sensory Experiences on Some Vierges en
Majesté from Auvergne, France: Preliminary Notes (Language:
English)
Valentina Baradel, Dipartimento dei Beni Culturali, Università degli
Studi di Padova
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1030-a:
Paper 1030-b:
Paper 1030-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1031-a:
Paper 1031-c:
1031
Michael Sadler Building: LG.15
MAPPING THE ORIGINS OF THE ‘MIDDLE KNOWLEDGE’ DOCTRINE:
DISENTANGLING THE NOTIONS OF NECESSITY, CONTINGENCY, AND DIVINE
FOREKNOWLEDGE, I
Project ‘Does God Know the Contingents? The Origin in the 16 th Century
of the Middle Knowledge Doctrine’, Instituto de Filosofia, Universidade
do Porto
Paula Oliveira e Silva, Instituto de Filosofia / Faculdade de Letras,
Universidade do Porto
João Rebalde, Instituto de Filosofia, Universidade do Porto
Aux origines de la doctrine de la scientia media chez Pedro da
Fonseca: nécéssité et conséquence, du Commentaire au Liv. VI
de la Métaphysique d’Aristote aux Institutionum dialecticarum
(Language: Français)
Vera Rodrigues, Instituto de Filosofia, Universidade do Porto
Caetano’s Reading of Aquinas on the Compatibility between
Divine Knowledge through Ideas and Intuitive Divine
Knowledge (Language: English)
Maria Eduarda Machado, Instituto de Filosofia, Universidade do Porto
Is There Room for Contingency in Divine Knowledge?:
Alphonsus Vargas de Toledo and Alphonsus Mendonza’s
Answers (Language: English)
Paula Oliveira e Silva
Wednesday
Paper 1031-b:
1030
Virtual Session
PERCEPTION AND EXPRESSION OF ELITES’ ROLES DURING THE EARLY AND
HIGH MIDDLE AGES
Grup de Recerca Consolidat en Estudis Medievals ‘Espai, Poder i
Cultura’, Universitat de Lleida
Flocel Sabaté Curull, Grup de Recerca Consolidat en Estudis Medievals
‘Espai, Poder i Cultura’, Universitat de Lleida
Flocel Sabaté Curull
Power, Leadership, and Social Cohesion in North-Eastern Spain
during the Early Middle Ages (Language: English)
Fernando Ruchesi, Grup de Recerca Consolidat en Estudis Medievals
‘Espai, Poder i Cultura’, Universitat de Lleida
Comital Behaviour and Government Abuse in 9th-Century
Catalonia (Language: English)
Sergi Tella, Grup de Recerca Consolidat en Estudis Medievals ‘Espai,
Poder i Cultura’, Universitat de Lleida
Chivalric Virtues in the Troubadours’ Poetry, 11th-12th Centuries
(Language: English)
Maria López, Grup de Recerca Consolidat en Estudis Medievals ‘Espai,
Poder i Cultura’, Universitat de Lleida
245
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1032-a:
Paper 1032-b:
Paper 1032-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1033-a:
Paper 1033-b:
Paper 1033-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1034-a:
Paper 1034-b:
246
1032
Parkinson Building: Room B.10
LEXICAL NETWORKS IN OLD NORSE POETRY
James Parkhouse, Independent Scholar, Oxford
Alicia Maddalena, Department of English & Related Literature,
University of York
‘He is not particularly original in his use of words’: Lexical
Repetition in the Literary History of Skaldic Poetry (Language:
English)
Kate Heslop, Department of Scandinavian, University of California,
Berkeley
Lexical Networks in Old Norse Skaldic Poetry: A Quantitative
Study (Language: English)
Tarrin Wills, Nordisk Forskningsinstitut, Københavns Universitet
Regin-Rǫk and Skǫp-skjǫldungr: Two ‘Fate’ Collocations in the
Poetic Edda (Language: English)
James Parkhouse
1033
Clarendon Building: 1.03
THE ENTANGLED MAKING, USES, AND VISUALISATIONS OF TEXTILES IN THE
EARLY MEDIEVAL PERIOD, 450-1100, I
AHRC Project ‘Unwrapping the Galloway Hoard’ / National Museum of
Scotland / University of Glasgow
Tracey Davison, Centre for Medieval Studies, University of York and
Alexandra Makin, School of Humanities (Archaeology), University of
Glasgow
Alexandra Makin
‘The Draped Universe of Islam’: Attitudes to Clothing and
Textiles in Medieval Islamic Societies, c. 1000 (Language: English)
Charlotte Wood, Faculty of History, University of Oxford
The Will of Wynflaed (Language: English)
Tracey Davison
Entangled ‘Englishness’: Textiles in the 11th Century (Language:
English)
Millie Horton-Insch, Department of History of Art, University College
London
1034
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.09
EPISCOPAL NETWORKS AND ADMINISTRATIVE CONNECTIONS
Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Kyly Walker, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Philippa Hoskin, Faculty of Divinity, University of Cambridge
Bishop Gilbert Foliot’s Friendship and Networking and Their
Relation to Episcopal Administration (Language: English)
Yinwen Mai, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Connections in the Registers of Archbishops Wickwane and
Romeyn, 1279-1296 (Language: English)
Laura Atkinson, Department of History, University of York
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1035-a:
Paper 1035-b:
Paper 1035-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1036-a:
Paper 1036-b:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1037-a:
Paper 1037-b:
Paper 1037-c:
1036
Esther Simpson Building: 2.11
OUTLAW NETWORKS, I: FAMILY AND OTHER SOCIAL NETWORKS
International Association for Robin Hood Studies
Lesley Coote, School of Humanities, University of Hull
Lesley Coote
Outlaw Networks in the Sagas of Icelanders: Friends and
Enemies (Language: English)
Viktória Gyönki, Department of Medieval & Early Modern History,
Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest
Little John: The Tie that Binds (Language: English)
Renée Michelle Ward, School of Humanities & Heritage, University of
Lincoln
Godliness Next to Anonymous: Comparing Robin Hood Media
Texts to the Hacktivist Movement (Language: English)
Jonathan Bishop, Department of Library & Information Studies,
Aberystwyth University / Department of Computing & Engineering,
University of Gloucestershire
Wednesday
Paper 1036-c:
1035
Esther Simpson Building: 1.08
MAKING OF EUROPE, I: DIPLOMACY IN SOUTHERN MEDIEVAL EUROPE
British Academy / Leverhulme Small Grants
Barbara Bombi, School of History, University of Kent and Pietro Mocchi,
Centre for Medieval & Early Modern Studies (MEMS), University of Kent
Barbara Bombi
Networking the Written Word: Producing and Keeping Records
of Diplomatic Pacts in the Iberian Peninsula, 1096-1325
(Language: English)
Maria João Branco, Instituto de Estudos Medievais (IEM), Universidade
Nova de Lisboa and Hermínia Maria Vasconcelos Vilar, Centro
Interdisciplinar de História, Culturas e Sociedades (CIDEHUS),
Universidade de Évora
Sicilian Noblemen and Diplomacy in the 14 th Century (Language:
English)
Patrizia Sardina, Dipartimento Culture e Società, Università degli Studi
di Palermo
Conflict and Diplomacy between Fiction and Reality: Gregory XII
and Benedict XIII on the Eve of the Council of Pisa, 1408
(Language: English)
Gabriele Bonomelli, School of History, University of Kent
1037
Stage@leeds: Stage 2
MEDIEVAL JUDICIAL AND SPATIAL NETWORKS IN WESTERN EUROPE
IMC Programming Committee
Mariah Luther Cooper, Department of History & Classics, Acadia
University, Nova Scotia
Support Networks for Travelers with Disabilities in the
Carolingian Empire (Language: English)
Kelly Gibson, Department of History, University of Dallas, Irving
Medieval Judicial Networks: The Juízes de Fora and the
Ordenações Afonsinas (Language: English)
Teresa Rodrigues, Faculdade de Direito, Universidade de Lisboa
Violence and Foreigners in England in the Records of King’s
Bench in the 1450s and 1460s (Language: English)
Thomas Ford, Department of History, University of Winchester
247
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1038-a:
Paper 1038-b:
Paper 1038-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1039-a:
Paper 1039-b:
Paper 1039-c:
248
1038
Newlyn Building: 1.02
ALFREDIAN VOICES, I: NEW READINGS OF THE ALFREDIAN BOETHIUS AND
SOLILOQUIES
Amy Faulkner, Department of English Language & Literature, University
College London
Amy Faulkner
The Prose Preface to the Old English Boethius and Æthelwold’s
Revolt (Language: English)
Francis Leneghan, Faculty of English Language & Literature, University
of Oxford
Creative Prayer in the Old English Boethius and Soliloquies
(Language: English)
Nicole Guenther Discenza, Department of English, University of South
Florida
The Alfredian Connection: Networks of Meaning in the Metres of
Boethius and the Old English Poetics of Lament (Language:
English)
Francisco J. Rozano-García, School of English & Creative Arts,
University of Galway
1039
Esther Simpson Building: 3.01
‘TILL DEATH DO US PART’: MEDIEVAL HERMITS, DYING, AND ‘DEATH’ TO
THE WORLD
Cartusiana
Tom Gaens, Ruusbroecgenootschap, Universiteit Antwerpen and
Stephen J. Molvarec, School of Theology & Ministry, Boston College,
Massachusetts
Emilia Jamroziak, Institute for Medieval Studies / School of History,
University of Leeds
‘Knock, Knock’: Brushes with Death in the Carthusian Cell
(Language: English)
Millicent-Rose Newis, Faculty of English, University of Cambridge
Porta caeli?: Interment, Networks, and Death at the Parisian
Carthusian Charterhouse (Language: English)
Stephen J. Molvarec
‘In between two deaths’: The Monstruous and the Sublime in
Later Medieval Carthusian Life (Language: English)
Tom Gaens
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1040-a:
Paper 1040-b:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1041-a:
Paper 1041-c:
1041
Esther Simpson Building: 3.08
ANIMALS AND CRIMINALITY
MAD (Medieval Animal Data Network), Department of Medieval Studies,
Central European University, Budapest/Wien
Gerhard Jaritz, Department of Medieval Studies, Central European
University, Budapest/Wien
Alice Choyke, Independent Scholar, Budapest
Animals in Statutory Provisions and Criminality of Medieval
Dubrovnik
(Language: English)
Gordan Ravančić, Croatian Institute of History, Zagreb
Misbehaving Beasts and Humans: Animal Crimes and Animals as
Symbol (Language: English)
Andrea Vanina Neyra, Instituto Multidisciplinario de Historia y Ciencias
Humanas, Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas /
Instituto de Historia Antigua y Medieval ‘José Luis Romero’, Universidad
de Buenos Aires
The Praxis of Animal Thefts (Language: English)
Gerhard Jaritz
Wednesday
Paper 1041-b:
1040
Virtual Session
DIGITISING THE MIDDLE AGES: THE IMPACTS OF DIGITIZED CORPORA ON
MEDIEVAL HISTORIOGRAPHY
Corpus de la Bourgogne du Moyen Âge (CBMA), Laboratoire de
Médiévistique Occidentale de Paris (LaMOP - UMR 8589), Centre
national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS) / Université Paris 1
Panthéon-Sorbonne
Gabriel Castanho, Instituto de História, Universidade Federal do Rio de
Janeiro and Eliana Magnani, Laboratoire de Médiévistique Occidentale
de Paris (LaMOP - UMR 8589), Université Paris 1 - Panthéon-Sorbonne
/ Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Paris
Nicolas Perreaux, Laboratoire de Médiévistique Occidentale de Paris
(LaMOP - UMR 8589), Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne
Serial Work on Digital Sources of the Parliament of Paris in the
15th Century: Historiographical Problems (Language: English)
Pauline Spychala, Deutsches Historisches Institut Paris
Gifts, Networks, and Digitised Corpora: Rethinking Territorial
Sovereignty in the Principality of Burgundy under John the
Fearless and Philip the Good, 1404-1467 (Language: English)
Baptiste Rameau, Archéologie, Terre, Histoire et Sociétés (ARTEHIS UMR 6298), Université de Bourgogne
249
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1042-a:
Paper 1042-b:
Paper 1042-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1043-a:
Paper 1043-b:
Paper 1043-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1044-a:
Paper 1044-b:
Paper 1044-c:
250
1042
Clarendon Building: 1.01
RUNES AND RUNIC INSCRIPTIONS, I: CULTURAL NETWORKS
Jasmin Higgs, Department of English, University of Nottingham
Tracey-Anne Cooper, Department of History, St John’s University,
Queens, New York
The Canterbury Runic ‘Charm’ in its Manuscript Context
(Language: English)
Bella Scindens, Department of English, Drama & Film, University
College Dublin
Runic Networks in the Avar Khaganate?: The Runes at Lány and
their Implications for Cultural Networks between the Avar
Khaganate and the People of Northern and Central Europe
(Language: English)
Robert Klapper, Faculty of History, University of Oxford
Memory and Grief in Early Medieval England: Memorial
Inscriptions and Old English Literature (Language: English)
Abigail Greaves, School of English, University of Nottingham
1043
Clarendon Building: 2.01
KEEPING HEALTHY ON CRUSADE: THE DE REGIMINE ET VIA ITINERIS ET FINE
PEREGRINANTIUM OF ADAM OF CREMONA
Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Joanna Phillips, School of History, University of Leeds
Alex Bamji, School of History, University of Leeds
A Context for Adam of Cremona (Language: English)
Peregrine Horden, All Souls College, University of Oxford and Joanna
Phillips
L’edizione critica del testo odeporico De Regimine di Adamo da
Cremona (Language: Italiano)
Laura Esposito, Dipartimento di Studi letterari, linguistici e comparati,
Università degli Studi di Napoli L’Orientale
Finding Adam: Methodological Challenges and Historiographical
Resources of Translation (Language: English)
Francesca Petrizzo, School of Humanities, University of Glasgow /
Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
1044
Parkinson Building: Room B.08
SOUND CULTURES IN MEDIEVAL SCANDINAVIA: INTERDISCIPLINARY
PERSPECTIVES, I
Stefka G. Eriksen, Norsk institutt for kulturminneforskning, Oslo
Stefka G. Eriksen
Wooden Vaults: Acoustics in Medieval Norwegian Churches
(Language: English)
Kjartan Hauglid, Norsk institutt for kulturminneforskning, Oslo
‘Ear and despair’: Visualising the Sound of Damnation in
Medieval Architectural Sculpture (Language: English)
Margrete S. Andås, Institutt for kunst- og medievitenskap, Norges
teknisk-naturvitenskapelige universitet, Trondheim
Carving Sound: Inscriptions in Churches as a Representation of
the Church Soundscape (Language: English)
Karen Langsholt Holmqvist, Lærerutdanning, NLA Høgskolen
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1045-a:
Paper 1045-b:
Paper 1045-c:
Paper 1045-d:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Paper 1046-a:
Paper 1046-b:
Paper 1046-c:
Paper 1046-d:
1046
Newlyn Building: LG.01
ART HISTORY AND NETWORK: RESEARCHING TOWN PLANNING,
ARCHITECTURE, AND PAINTING IN EUROPE AND IN POLAND IN THE CONTEXT
OF NETWORKS
Instytut Historii sztuki i Kultury, Uniwersytet papieskiego Jana Pawła II,
Kraków
Dariusz Tabor, Instytut Historii sztuki i Kultury, Uniwersytet
papieskiego Jana Pawła II, Kraków
Piotr Oliński, Wydział Nauk Historycznych, Uniwersytet Mikołaja
Kopernika, Toruń
Ancient Heroes in Medieval Art in the Networks of Epochs and
Symbols (Language: English)
Grzegorz First, Instytut Historii sztuki i Kultury, Uniwersytet
papieskiego Jana Pawła II, Kraków
The Logistic of Spirit: Networks of Architecture, Networks of
Libraries, and Networks of Spiritual Life in the Cistercian
Commonwealth, 12th and 13th Centuries (Language: English)
Dariusz Tabor
Kraków in Earthly and Heavenly Networks: Towards the
Symbolism of the Square Plan in Medieval Urbanism (Language:
English)
Piotr Pajor, Instytut Historii sztuki i Kultury, Uniwersytet papieskiego
Jana Pawła II, Kraków
Late Medieval Painters in Kraków: Social, Economic, Political,
and Artistic Networks within the City and with Other Artistic
Centres and Peripheries (Language: English)
Adam Spodaryk, Instytut Historii sztuki i Kultury, Uniwersytet
papieskiego Jana Pawła II, Kraków
Wednesday
Moderator:
1045
Clarendon Building: 2.08
MEDIEVAL SERMON STUDIES
International Medieval Sermon Studies Society
Alexander Marx, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
Alexander Marx
Bringing Sermons to Life: Entanglements between Preacher and
Listener, Author and Reader, User and Manuscript (Language:
English)
Hans-Jochen Schiewer, Deutsches Seminar, Germanistische
Mediävistik, Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg
The Cistercian Network of Traditions as Illustrated by the Latin
Legenda Aurea (Language: English)
Constanze Albers, Deutsches Seminar, Albert-Ludwigs-Universität
Freiburg
Latin Terms for Religious Disbelief and Disbelievers: A Database
Analysis using Brepols’ Library of Latin Sources (Language:
English)
Keagan Joel Brewer, Department of Media, Communications, Creative
Arts, Language & Literature, Macquarie University, Sydney
Bede’s Palm Sunday Homily: A Rhetorical Exposition (Language:
English)
John Bequette, Division of Humanities, University of Saint Francis,
Indiana
251
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1047-a:
Paper 1047-b:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1048-a:
Paper 1048-b:
Paper 1048-c:
1047
Parkinson Building: Room B.11
PREDESTINATION, CONSCIENCE, AND THE SOUL IN LATE SCHOLASTIC AND
RENAISSANCE THOUGHT
IMC Programming Committee
Volker Leppin, Yale Divinity School, Yale University
Conscience, Obedience, and the Making of Late Medieval
Subjects in Pastoral Care (Language: English)
Biörn Tjällén, Institutionen för humaniora och samhällsvetenskap,
Mittuniversitetet, Sundsvall
The Body as Microcosm in a Macrocosm in Pietro Pomponazzi’s
Work (Language: English)
Sarah Seinitzer, Zentrum für Wissenschaftsgeschichte, Universität Graz
1048
Clarendon Building: 1.06
SCRIBES AND STUDENTS’ CULTURES AND PARATEXTS
IMC Programming Committee
Marco Mostert, Utrecht Centre for Medieval Studies, Universiteit Utrecht
The Marginal Drawings in a Copy of Gregory IX’s ‘Decretales’
(University of Oregon Special Collections & University Archives,
MS 027) (Language: English)
Zoey Kambour, Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art, University of Oregon
In Sorbona quando sumus: Richard de Basoches’ Notes from
Paris, Bibliothèque nationale de France, MS Lat. 3074 (Language:
English)
Florina Rodica Hariga, Facultatea de Istorie și Filosofie, Universitatea
Babeș-Bolyai, Cluj-Napoca
Scribal Signatures, Stock Phrases, and Foliage Symbolism: An
Assessment of Particular Mottoes in the Paratext of Middle
English Literary Manuscripts (Language: English)
Yasmin Ibrahim, Department of English, King’s College London
COFFEE BREAK: 10.30-11.15
Coffee and Tea will be available on a self-serve basis at the following locations:
Esther Simpson Building: Foyer
Maurice Keyworth Building: Foyer
Parkinson Building: Bookfair
University Square: IMC Social Space
252
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023
MEDIEVAL CRAFT FAIR
UNIVERSITY SQUARE & LEEDS UNIVERSITY UNION: FOYER
10.30-19.00
The Medieval Craft Fair (see p. 433) will take place on University Square showcasing a
variety of handmade items using and inspired by medieval craft techniques. The
exhibitors will include:
Anachronalia - Accessories and hand-bound books inspired by the past, present, and
possible futures.
Fiftyeleven - Hand-tooled, lovingly crafted, historically inspired woodwork and
pyrography.
Gemmeus - Handcrafted historical, classical, and revival jewellery, created in sterling
silver, gold, and natural gemstones and pearls.
Hudson Clay-Potter - Accurate reproduction pottery.
Opus Anglicanum - Embroidery kits and related items.
Pretender to the Throne - Historically inspired ceramics and prints.
The Goodwives - Weaver and textile historians, producing replicas of
archaeological finds.
Tillerman Beads - Handmade glass beads based on research, museum holdings, and
archaeological reports.
Trinity Court Potteries - Producers of museum quality replica pottery: Pots of History.
Viking Agenda - Viking-inspired jewellery and office supplies.
Wednesday
253
Yale UNIVERSITY PRESS
Visit our stand for a special conference discount
on a wide range of Yale titles
HENRY III
Reform, Rebellion, Civil War,
Settlement, 1259-1272
David Carpenter
In the second volume of his groundbreaking
biography of Henry III, David Carpenter provides
an entirely new account of the revolutionary
events between 1258 and 1272. Illuminating
the political twists and turns of the day, the book
is essential reading for those interested in the
politics, warfare, religion, art, and architecture of
the medieval period.
£30.00 | 23 May 2023
TEMPLARS
The Knights of Britain
Steve Tibble
Known today for heresy and fanaticism, the
Knights Templar were in fact dedicated to preserving peace in Britain to fund their crusades
abroad. Charting the history of the Order, Steve
Tibble corrects the record and argues that these
medieval knights were essential to the emergence of an early English state.
£25.00 | 26 September 2023
Join us on Wednesday 05 July for Steve’s talk,
Templars - The Knights of Britain, Stage@leeds:
Stage 3, 20.30-21.30
yalebooks.co.uk | @yalebooks
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1101-a:
Paper 1101-b:
Paper 1101-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1102-a:
Paper 1102-b:
Paper 1102-c:
Moderator:
Paper 1103-a:
Paper 1103-b:
Paper 1103-c:
1102
Newlyn Building: 1.07
CASTLE SPACES, II: INTERACTING WITH CASTLES AS HERITAGE SPACES
Canterbury Christ Church University
Alison Norton, School of Humanities & Educational Studies, Canterbury
Christ Church University
Alison Norton
A Castle of Matchless Magnificence: Conwy Castle and Tourism
in the Long 19th Century (Language: English)
Holly Conway, Department of Archaeology & History, University of
Exeter
Interpretations and Perceptions of the Tower of London: Can
the Truth Get in the Way of a Good Story? (Language: English)
Alfred Hawkins, Historic Royal Palaces, London
Viewing Castle Sites through a Gendered Lens: Opportunities
and Challenges (Language: English)
Rachel Delman, Humanities Division, University of Oxford
1103
Esther Simpson Building: 2.09
COMMUNITIES AND RELIGION IN THE LATE MEDIEVAL BALTIC REGION
Uniwersytet Mikołaja Kopernika, Toruń
Piotr Oliński, Wydział Nauk Historycznych, Uniwersytet Mikołaja
Kopernika, Toruń
Beata Możejko, Instytut Historii, Uniwersytet Gdański
Prayer Communities of Monasteries as the Means of Local,
Regional, and Supra-Regional Integration in the 12th-15th
Centuries (Language: English)
Piotr Oliński
Between Disaster and Religiousness: Floods as Sources of
Inspiration for Prayers in Hanseatic Cities (Language: English)
Katarzyna Bogdańska, Instytut Historii, Uniwersytet Mikołaja
Kopernika, Toruń
Lower Clergy and Their Social Networks in the Late Medieval
Prussian Towns (Language: English)
Marcin Sumowski, Instytut Historii, Uniwersytet Mikołaja Kopernika,
Toruń
Wednesday
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
1101
Michael Sadler Building: LG.16
THE BODY IN MEDIEVAL ART, II
Universiteit van Amsterdam
Wendelien A. W. van Welie-Vink, Faculteit der Geesteswetenschappen,
Universiteit van Amsterdam
Huib P. R. Iserief, Faculteit der Geesteswetenschappen, Universiteit van
Amsterdam
‘Deus ex machina’?: The Moving Body of Christ (Language:
English)
Wendelien A. W. van Welie-Vink
The Holy Spirit Embodied on the Rhineland Altar Piece
(Language: English)
Jip van Reijen, Faculteit der Geesteswetenschappen, Universiteit van
Amsterdam / Bonnefantenmuseum, Maastricht
Frozen in Crystal: The Celestial Body (Language: English)
Mattie M. van den Bosch, Faculteit der Geesteswetenschappen,
Universiteit van Amsterdam
255
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1104-a:
Paper 1104-b:
Paper 1104-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1105-a:
Paper 1105-b:
Paper 1105-c:
256
1104
Maurice Keyworth Building: G.02
ROME AND PAPACY IN THE GREAT WESTERN SCHISM: NETWORKS OF
SURVIVAL, II
Project ‘Strategies of Survival: The Papal Curia & Ecclesiastical
Institutions of Rome in the Great Western Schism (1378-1417)’
Kirsi Salonen, Institutt for arkeologi, historie, kultur- og
religionsvitenskap, Universitetet i Bergen
Kirsi Salonen
The Masters of the Dominican Order of the Roman Obedience
and Their Networks in Italy during the Schism (Language:
English)
Teemu Immonen, Department of History, University of Turku
Whose Side Are You On?: The Monastery of Grottaferrata
Navigating the Late Medieval Crisis (Language: English)
Anni Hella, School of History, Culture & Arts Studies, University of
Turku
Imagining Islam in Late Medieval Rome: The Case of the
Anonimo Romano (Language: English)
James A. Palmer, Department of History, Florida State University
1105
Esther Simpson Building: LG08
CANON LAW, III: CANON LAW AND WOMEN
Gender & History / Iuris Canonici Medii Aevi Consociatio (ICMAC)
Greta Austin, Department of Religious Studies, University of Puget
Sound, Washington
Christof Rolker, Zentrum für Mittelalterstudien (ZEMAS) / Institut für
Geschichtswissenschaften und Europäische Ethnologie, Otto-FriedrichUniversität Bamberg
Linking Lay Women and ‘Magic’ in Bishops’ Visitations of the
Diocese in the 10th and Early 11th Centuries, as Described in
Regino’s Two Books and Burchard’s Decretum (Language:
English)
Greta Austin
Women and Men in Medieval Canon Law: Gender Relations in a
Network of Legal Texts in the 12th and 13th Centuries (Language:
English)
Carolina Gual Silva, Instituto de História, Universidade Federal Rural de
Rio de Janeiro
Women as Legal Actors in Later Medieval Canon Law (Language:
English)
Gisela Drossbach, Philologisch-Historische Fakultät, Universität
Augsburg
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1106-a:
Paper 1106-b:
Paper 1106-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1107-a:
Paper 1107-b:
1107
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.31
BEYOND ISABEL I OF CASTILE: BOOKS, PATRONS, AND READERS
María Morrás, Facultat d’Humanitats, Universitat Pompeu Fabra,
Barcelona
Dorothy S. Severin, Department of Hispanic Studies, University of
Liverpool
Forging New Models: Joan of Arc at Isabel I’s Court (Language:
English)
Loreto Romero, Magdalen College, University of Oxford
Isabel I and Her Books: From Script to Print (Language: English)
María Morrás
Two Mirrors for Princesses in 15th-Century France and Castile:
Christine de Pizan’s Le livre des trois vertus (1405) and Fray
Martín de Córdoba’s Jardín de nobles donzellas (c. 1468)
(Language: English)
Jenne Mousnier-Lompré, Litt&Arts (UMR 5316), Université Grenoble
Alpes
Wednesday
Paper 1107-c:
1106
Parkinson Building: Room 1.08
DYNASTY AND COURT CULTURE IN BYZANTIUM AND THE NEAR EAST, III:
COURT CULTURE
Cardiff Centre for Late Antique Religion & Culture, Cardiff University
Shaun Tougher, School of History, Archaeology & Religion, Cardiff
University
Ewan William Richard Short, Geschiedenis Department, Universiteit van
Amsterdam
Refinement and the Abbasid Court (Language: English)
Letizia Osti, Dipartimento di Lingue, Letterature, Culture e Mediazioni,
Università degli Studi di Milano
Court Culture and School Life in Middle Byzantine
Constantinople (Language: English)
Nikolaos Zagklas, Institut für Byzantinistik & Neogräzistik, Universität
Wien
Who’s In?: Selecting Saints in Basil II’s Illuminated Menologion
(Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana, MS Vat. gr. 1613) (Language:
English)
Barbara Crostini, Institutionen för lingvistik och filologi, Uppsala
universitet
257
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1108-a:
Paper 1108-b:
Paper 1108-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1109-a:
Paper 1109-b:
Paper 1109-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1110-a:
Paper 1110-b:
Paper 1110-c:
258
1108
Michael Sadler Building: Rupert Beckett Theatre
HISTORIES IN TRANSITION, II: USING AND SHAPING THE PAST
Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische Akademie der
Wissenschaften, Wien / Seminar für mittelalterliche Geschichte,
Eberhard Karls Universität Tübingen
Maximilian Diesenberger, Institut für Mittelalterforschung,
Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
Walter Pohl, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische Akademie
der Wissenschaften, Wien
Lists of Notable Events: Early Medieval Annotations to Easter
Tables (Language: English)
Steffen Patzold, Seminar für mittelalterliche Geschichte, Eberhard Karls
Universität Tübingen
Rapine in Carolingian Chronicles (Language: English)
Eric J. Goldberg, Department of History, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology
Letters for a King: Charlemagne, Alcuin, and Æthelstan
(Language: English)
Joanna Story, Centre for Medieval Research, University of Leicester
1109
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.03
HOLY PLACES, HOLY BODIES: RELIGIOUS TOPOGRAPHIES IN THE EARLY AND
CENTRAL MIDDLE AGES
IMC Programming Committee
Albrecht Diem, Department of History, Syracuse University, New York
The Entangled Fates: Earthly Bodies and Heavenly Award in 6thand 7th-Century Female Hagiographies (Language: English)
Hiu Ki Chan, St Andrews Institute of Mediaeval Studies, University of St
Andrews
Hisperic Cosmographies: Adamnán’s De locis sanctis and the
Cosmographia of Aethicus Ister (Language: English)
Tiffany Beechy, Department of English, University of Colorado, Boulder
La ‘rete’ delle madonne arboree in europa e nel mondo tra
edifici sacri, manifestazioni popolari e religiose (Language:
Italiano)
Giulia Maria Palma, L’École doctorale Sciences Sociales (ED 483),
Université de Lyon 2 and Vania Rocchi, Independent Scholar,
Acquapendente
1110
Newlyn Building: LG.02
CULTURAL CROSSROADS IN THE MEDIEVAL ARAB WORLD
Sally Hany Abed, Department of Near & Middle Eastern Studies, Trinity
College Dublin and Maha Baddar, Department of Writing, Pima
Community College, Arizona
Maria Joana Matos Gomes, Instituto de Filosofia, Universidade do Porto
Who is a Rhetor?: Ibn Sina’s Reinvention of the Role of the
Speaker in Political Rhetoric (Language: English)
Maha Baddar
Arabic Voices in the Cairo Genizah (Language: English)
Sally Hany Abed
Cutting Edges on Cross-Cultural Manuscripts: The Transnational
and Transculturation of Falconry and Venery Treatises
(Language: English)
Leslie Jacoby, Independent Scholar, Kensington, California
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1111-a:
Paper 1111-b:
Paper 1111-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1112-a:
Paper 1112-b:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1113-a:
Paper 1113-b:
Paper 1113-c:
1112
Esther Simpson Building: 1.01
ENGLAND AND SCOTLAND AT PEACE AND WAR, II
Andy King, Department of History, University of Southampton
Andy King
Entangled Allegiances: Harclay’s Negotiations with Robert the
Bruce in English Chronicles (Language: English)
Kelly McRae, School of Divinity, History & Philosophy, University of
Aberdeen
A Scottish Queen in an English Court: Absentee Queenship and
Joan of the Tower, c. 1353-1362 (Language: English)
Amy Hayes, Department of History, Open University
Allegiance, Subjecthood, and Identity across Richard II’s
Plantagenet Empire (Language: English)
Ali Al-Khafaji, Department of History, University of Bristol
1113
Newlyn Building: GR.01
MEDIEVAL ROMAN EMPIRES EAST AND WEST, II: CHRISTIANITY AND
EMPIRE
Institute of Medieval & Early Modern Studies, Durham University
Len Scales, Department of History, Durham University
Len Scales
High Noon of Empire?: Byzantium towards the Mid-11th Century
(Language: English)
Jonathan Shepard, Khalili Research Centre, University of Oxford
Anno of Cologne and Albero of Trier: Imperial Bishops and the
Roman Past (Language: English)
Matthew Clayton, Department of History, Durham University
Justinian in the 12th-Century Latin West (Language: English)
Björn Weiler, Department of History & Welsh History, Aberystwyth
University
Wednesday
Paper 1112-c:
1111
Newlyn Building: 1.01
ADRIARCHCULT, II: 15TH-CENTURY HUMANIST NETWORKS IN DALMATIA COMMISSIONING, EXCHANGING, REPRESENTING
ERC Project ‘AdriArchCult (Architectural Culture of the Early Modern
Eastern Adriatic - GA n. 865863)’
Jasenka Gudelj, Dipartimento di Filosofia e Beni Culturali, Università Ca’
Foscari, Venezia
Jasenka Gudelj
Administrative Networks, Communal Memory, and Architectural
Representations in 15th-Century Zadar (Language: English)
Laris Borić, Department of Art History, University of Zadar
An Entangled Dragon in a Renaissance Inscription from
Dalmatia (Language: English)
Neven Jovanović, Department of Classical Philology, University of
Zagreb
‘Quemadmodum ipse me facere volverat’: Šimun Kožičić Benja
at the Court of Cardinal Marco Vigerio in Rome (Language:
English)
Daniele Pelosi, Dipartimento di Filosofia e Beni Culturali, Università Ca’
Foscari, Venezia
259
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1114-a:
Paper 1114-b:
Paper 1114-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1115-a:
Paper 1115-b:
Paper 1115-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1116-a:
Paper 1116-b:
Paper 1116-c:
260
1114
Esther Simpson Building: 2.07
SALZBURG INTERCONNECTED: CITY, CLOISTER, CULTURE
Archiv der Erzdiözese Salzburg
Jutta Baumgartner, Archiv der Erzdiözese, Salzburg
Marlene Ernst, Lehrstuhl für Digital Humanities, Universität Passau
Monk and Manager: Acting as Liaison between God and Men
(Language: English)
Sonja Führer, Bibliothek, Erzabtei St Peter, Salzburg
City and Bourgeoisie: Family and Professional Entanglements in
Late Medieval Salzburg (Language: English)
Jutta Baumgartner
The Monk of Salzburg as Author of Spiritual and Secular Songs
(Language: English)
Ingrid Bennewitz, Lehrstuhl für Deutsche Philologie des Mittelalters,
Otto-Friedrich-Universität Bamberg
1115
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.04
THE ENTANGLED CAUCASUS, II: DISTANT ENTANGLEMENTS - BETWEEN AND
BEYOND CAUCASUS REGIONS
Medieval Caucasus Network
James Baillie, Institut für Geschichte, Universität Wien / Institut für
Iranistik, Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien and
Nicholas J. B. Evans, Institute for Medieval Studies / School of History,
University of Leeds
Tara L. Andrews, Institut für Geschichte, Universität Wien
The Colonial Archive at the End of the World: The Mediterranean
Slave Trade during the Twilight of the Genoese Colonies in the
Black Sea (Language: English)
John Latham-Sprinkle, Vakgroep Geschiedenis, Universiteit Gent
Ani Entangled: Caucasian Urbanisation in the Afro-Eurasian
Commercial Revolution, 900-1400 (Language: English)
Nicholas Matheou, School of History, Classics & Archaeology, University
of Edinburgh
Contacts between Georgia and the North Caucasus in the Middle
Ages (Language: English)
Lado Mirianashvili, Independent Scholar, Tbilisi
1116
Esther Simpson Building: 2.12
INTELLECTUAL NETWORKS IN CHINA, THE ISLAMIC WORLD, AND THE
RENAISSANCE
IMC Programming Committee
Niels H. Gaul, School of History, Classics & Archaeology, University of
Edinburgh
Qingtan in the Wei-Jin Period: A Mixed Political Network of
Knowledge (Language: English)
Run Gu, Philosophische Fakultät, Eberhard Karls Universität Tübingen
Utopian Thought in the Islamicate West (Language: English)
Ruben Schenzle, Seminar für Semitistik und Arabistik, Freie Universität
Berlin
Bessarion’s Platonist Network: Disseminating Radical Platonism
in 15th-Century Italy (Language: English)
Scott Kennedy, Faculty of Humanities & Letters, Bilkent University,
Ankara
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1117-a:
Paper 1117-b:
Paper 1117-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1118-a:
Paper 1118-b:
Paper 1118-c:
Paper 1119-b:
Paper 1119-c:
1118
Esther Simpson Building: 3.02
MARGINAL COMMUNITIES IN GLOBALISED MEDITERRANEAN NETWORKS, II:
VOICING MARGINALISATION
Anna C. Kelley, St Andrews Institute of Mediaeval Studies, University of
St Andrews
Jessica Varsallona, Department of Continuing Education, University of
Oxford
Byzantine Identity and the Eugenic Legacy (Language: English)
Daniel K. Reynolds, Centre for Byzantine, Ottoman & Modern Greek
Studies, University of Birmingham
Finding One’s Voice: Byzantine Disability in Translation
(Language: English)
Maroula Perisanidi, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Voicing Transgressive Women: Gendering Marginal Identities in
Byzantium (Language: English)
Stephanie Novasio, Independent Scholar, Wilmslow
1119
Michael Sadler Building: LG.19
DISENTANGLING THE ARCHIVE, II: HIDING IN PLAIN SIGHT
The National Archives, Kew
Euan Roger, The National Archives, Kew
Hannes Kleineke, History of Parliament Trust, London
‘It is to be remembered’: Disentangling the Research Potential
of the Memoranda Rolls (Language: English)
Paul R. Dryburgh, The National Archives, Kew
Hiding in Plain Sight: How the Calendars of Government Records
for Henry VII’s Reign Have Influenced Narratives of the Early
Tudor Period (Language: English)
Sean Cunningham, The National Archives, Kew
Researching with TNA REQ 3 and Disentangling Early Tudor
Archival ‘Miscellanea’ (Language: English)
Laura Flannigan, St John’s College, University of Oxford
Wednesday
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1119-a:
1117
Newlyn Building: GR.02
ENTANGLED COMMODITIES, II: CULTURE, RELIGION, AND ECONOMIC LIFE
Aysu Dinçer, Department of History, University of Warwick
Richard M. Goddard, Department of History, University of Nottingham
Byzantine Art and Artists as Commodities in Rus’, c. 1261-1453
(Language: English)
Monica White, Department of Russian & Slavonic Studies, University of
Nottingham
‘Fortify your spirit and heart’: Trade and Uses of an Aromatic
Resin (Language: English)
Aysu Dinçer
Medicine, Cosmetics, and Magic Spells: Production and Uses of
Pigeon Secretions (Language: English)
Sophia Germanidou, School of History, Classics & Archaeology,
Newcastle University
261
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1120-a:
Paper 1120-b:
Paper 1120-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1121-a:
Paper 1121-b:
Paper 1121-c:
Paper 1121-d:
262
1120
Parkinson Building: Room B.22
BIRGITTINE TEXTS AND NETWORKS, II
Syon Abbey Society / ReVision Project
Brandon Alakas, Department of Fine Arts & Humanities, University of
Alberta
Laura Saetveit Miles, Institutt for fremmedspråk, Universitetet i Bergen
Syon’s Heretical Book: The Reforming Devotion of John Ryckes’
Ymage of Love (Language: English)
Brandon Alakas
Networking Prayer: Richard Whitford, William Bonde, and the
Vernacular Theology of London, British Library, MS Harley 494
(Language: English)
Katherine Goodwin, Department of History, Baylor University, Texas
How Did Birgitta of Sweden’s Revelations Get to England?: The
Networks behind the Mystery (Language: English)
Yaroslav Pershyn, Institutt for fremmedspråk, Universitet i Bergen
1121
Stage@leeds: Stage 1
QUEENLY AND COMITAL NETWORKS AND HOUSEHOLDS IN THE HIGH AND
LATER MIDDLE AGES
Medieval Studies Research Group, University of Lincoln
Louise J. Wilkinson, School of Humanities & Heritage, University of
Lincoln
Louise J. Wilkinson
How to Secure the Throne: A Survey of the Political Networks of
the Medieval Royal Heiress, 1109-1328 (Language: English)
Anaïs Waag, School of Humanities & Heritage, University of Lincoln
‘Till death (or other inconvenience) do us part’: A Consideration
of the Multiple Marriages of the Medieval Monarchies of
England, Scotland, and France, c. 1200-c. 1330 (Language:
English)
Francesca Cannon, School of Humanities & Heritage, University of
Lincoln
Connecting the Queen, Connecting the Kingdom: Eleanor of
Provence’s Networks through Her Household and Wardrobe
Accounts (Language: English)
Paula Del Val Vales, School of Humanities & Heritage, University of
Lincoln
Extracts from the Household Roll of the Earl and Countess
Warenne: 1286-1287 (Language: English)
Katherine Delaney, School of Humanities & Heritage, University of
Lincoln
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1122-a:
Paper 1122-b:
Paper 1122-c:
Respondent:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1123-a:
Paper 1123-c:
1123
Parkinson Building: Room B.09
THINKING NETWORKS SPATIALLY: INFRASTRUCTURE, RESOURCES, HUMANS
Daniel Brown, Independent Scholar, Viersen and Stefanie Schild,
Independent Scholar, Hilden
Karl Christian Alvestad, Institutt for kultur, religion og samfunnsfag,
Fakultet for humaniora, idretts- og utdanningsvitskap, Universitetet i
Sørøst-Norge, Notodden
Social Ties and the Construction of Spatiality: Three High
Medieval German Monasteries and Their Patrons (Language:
English)
Johannes Waldschütz, Kreisarchiv, Landkreis Rottweil
Routes of Privilege: The Directions of Norman Sicily’s Herrschaft
in the Tyrrhenian Val Demone in the Long 12th Century through
the Lens of Church and Royal Diplomas (Language: English)
Silvio Lorenzo Ruberto, Utrecht Centre for Medieval Studies,
Universiteit Utrecht
Bad Blood and Building Bridges: Rural Communal Networks in
the Alps, 1350-1500 (Language: English)
Joschka Meier, Historisches Institut, Universität Bern
Wednesday
Paper 1123-b:
1122
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.33
SECULAR NETWORKS AND ACTORS: LINKING LATE ANTIQUE AND EARLY
MEDIEVAL LIFEWORLDS
Roland Steinacher, Institut für Alte Geschichte und Altorientalistik,
Universität Innsbruck
Thomas Brown, School of History, Classics & Archaeology, University of
Edinburgh
Negotiating with His Imperial Majesty in the Name of My King:
African and Italian Ambassadors in the 5th and 6th Centuries
(Language: English)
Roland Steinacher
Exchange and Transfer of Knowledge: Networks and
Entanglements of Aristocratic Communities in the Late Roman
Empire (Language: English)
Veronika Egetenmeyr, Institut für Geschichte, Universität KoblenzLandau
Sacred Networks: The Exchange of Relics between East and
West (Language: English)
Nadine Viermann, Department of History, Durham University
Philipp von Rummel, Deutsches Archäologisches Institut (DAI), Berlin
263
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1124-a:
Paper 1124-b:
Paper 1124-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1125-a:
Paper 1125-b:
Paper 1125-c:
264
1124
Michael Sadler Building: LG.10
LOCAL SOCIETIES AND MICROPOLITICS IN THE EARLY MIDDLE AGES:
ACTORS, CONFLICTS, AND WRITING, II
Proyecto ESMICRO ‘Scenarios of Micropolitics’ / Project
‘PeopleandWriting’, Universidad de Salamanca
Iñaki Martín Viso, Departamento de Historia Medieval, Moderna y
Contemporánea, Universidad de Salamanca
Álvaro Carvajal Castro, Departamento de Historia Medieval, Moderna y
Contemporánea, Universidad de Salamanca
Unearthing Hidden Local Conflicts: The Doublets in the Cardeña
Cartulary, 10th-11th Centuries (Language: English)
Julio Escalona, Instituto de Historia, Consejo Superior de
Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC), Madrid
Priests and Their Rural Communities South of the Miño: Written
Production and Identity, 10-11th Centuries (Language: English)
Ainoa Castro Correa, Departamento de Historia Medieval, Moderna y
Contemporánea, Universidad de Salamanca
Escritura y sociedad en el Bierzo: producción gráfica y memoria
social (ss. X-XI) (Language: Español)
Pablo De la Pinta Rodríguez, Departamento de Historia Medieval,
Moderna y Contemporánea, Universidad de Salamanca
1125
Newlyn Building: GR.07
SILENCE AND SILENCING, II: SILENCING AND RACIALISING
Brittany Orton, Department of History, University of York and Basil
Arnould Price, Centre for Medieval Studies, University of York
Brittany Orton
Filling in the Gaps: Absence as Gain in Copenhagen Cod. Arab.
99’s Ibn Faḍlān (Language: English)
Tonicha Upham, Institut for Kultur og Samfund, Aarhus Universitet
The Indigenous Turn of Medieval Studies: A Comparative Case
Study (Language: English)
Solveig Marie Wang, Lehrstuhl für Nordische Geschichte, Universität
Greifswald
Confronting Silences: Rethinking Medieval Race, Gender, and
Class in Haft Paykar, an ‘Interracial’ Romance between a
Persian King and His Chinese Musician Slave Girl (Language:
English)
Amanda Caterina Leong, School of Social Sciences, Humanities & Arts,
University of California, Merced
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1126-a:
Paper 1126-b:
Paper 1126-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1127-a:
Paper 1127-b:
Paper 1127-c:
Paper 1128-a:
Paper 1128-b:
Paper 1128-c:
Paper 1128-d:
1127
Esther Simpson Building: 2.08
ENTANGLEMENTS OF KNOWLEDGE: READING JOSEPHUS IN THE LATIN
MIDDLE AGES
SNSF Sinergia-Project ‘Lege Iosephum!’ Reading Josephus in the Latin
Middle Ages
Lena Tröger, Institut für Historische Theologie, Universität Bern
Katharina Heyden, Institut für Historische Theologie, Universität Bern
Cautus et assiduus lege verba voluminis huius: On the Christian
Transmission and Reception of Flavius Josephus in the Latin
West (Language: English)
Judith Mania, Institut für Klassische Philologie, Universität Bern
Magis Iosephi sententiam sequimur: Building the Historia
Scholastica on Josephus’ Foundations (Language: English)
Sara Moscone, Institut für Historische Theologie, Universität Bern
Cut, Copy, and Paste: The Use of Josephus in William of Tyre’s
Chronicon (Language: English)
Lena Tröger
1128
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.32
NETWORKS OF NON-TRADITIONAL HEALING AND KNOWLEDGE
Medica: Society for the Study of Healing in the Middle Ages
Anna M. Peterson, Facultad de Medicina, Universidad de Cantabria
Nichola Harris, Department of Social Science, History & Education,
State University of New York, Ulster
Ending with a Period: Recipes to Stop Menstruation in Medieval
England (Language: English)
Kristin Uscinski, School of Humanities, State University of New York,
Purchase
Affectively Charged Illustration in the Works of John Arderne
(Language: English)
Fiona Lillian Knight, Faculty of History, University of Cambridge
Heretical Healers: Networks of Heretical Medical Practitioners in
13th-Century Southern France (Language: English)
Joshua Rice, Department of History, Royal Holloway, University of
London
The Networks around Anna of Hohenlohe (Language: English)
Elke Krotz, Institut für Germanistik, Universität Wien
Wednesday
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
1126
Clarendon Building: 1.02
ENTANGLED ENVIRONMENTS, II: HUMAN AND NON-HUMAN AGENTS IN THE
MEDIEVAL ARABIC AND LATIN WORLD
Susannah Bain, Faculty of History / Jesus College, University of Oxford
and Geraint Morgan, Faculty of History, University of Oxford
Susannah Bain
‘Gardens beneath which rivers flow’: Perennial Water and the
Cultural Landscape of Medieval Egypt (Language: English)
Brendan Haug, Department of Classical Studies, University of Michigan
Beyond the Caliph’s Kitchen: Ecological Entanglements in a 10thCentury Baghdadi Cookbook (Language: English)
Luke Bateman, Merton College, University of Oxford
Releasing Fish from the Network of the Human-Fish
Relationship (Language: English)
Polina Ignatova, Institutionen för kultur och samhälle, Linköping
universitet
265
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1129-a:
Paper 1129-b:
Paper 1129-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1130-a:
Paper 1130-b:
Paper 1130-c:
266
1129
Stage@leeds: Stage 3
ENTANGLEMENTS OF THE SENSES IN MEDIEVAL SACRED ART AND RELIGIOUS
EXPERIENCE, II: PERCEPTION - SMELL
ERC Project ‘SenSArt: The Sensuous Appeal of the Holy - Sensory
Agency of Sacred Art & Somatised Spiritual Experiences in Medieval
Europe (12th-15th Centuries)’
Micol Long, Dipartimento dei Beni Culturali, Università degli Studi di
Padova and Zuleika Murat, Dipartimento dei Beni Culturali, Università
degli Studi di Padova
Annette Kern-Stähler, Institut für Englische Sprachen und Literaturen,
Universität Bern
Images that Smell: Scents, Flavours, and Perfumes in the
Aesthetic Experience of Art, 12th-15th Centuries (Language:
English)
Zuleika Murat
Sacred Scent: The Representation of Censers in the Hispanic
Middle Ages (Language: English)
Alicia Girona Calvé, Proyecto de Investigación ‘Espacio, letra e imagen:
el factor cluniacense en la Edad Media hispana desde sus inicios a su
decadencia (ca. 1000-1500)’, Universidad Complutense de Madrid
The Perfume and the Heretic: The Corruption of Religious
Experience according to Lucas of Tuy, Iberian Peninsula in the
1230s (Language: English)
Amélie De Las Heras, Madrid Institute for Advanced Study
1130
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.06
ENTANGLED NOBILITIES AND GENEALOGICAL NETWORKS
IMC Programming Committee
David Green, Centre for British Studies, Harlaxton College, University of
Evansville
Growing Strong: Depicting the Nobility in Mid-15th-Century
Royal Genealogical Chronicles (Language: English)
Catherine Gower, School of Arts & Humanities, Nottingham Trent
University
Vendetta within a Noble Network: Reactions after the Trinci
Murder (Language: English)
Zoltán Szolnoki, Department of History, Móra Ferenc Museum, Szeged
Peasants Fostering Knights: The Entanglement of Noble
Lineages and Peasant Families in Northern Portugal through the
Nurturing Practice of Amádigo (Language: English)
Gonçalo Palmeira, Instituto de Estudos Medievais (IEM), Universidade
Nova de Lisboa
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1131-a:
Paper 1131-b:
Paper 1131-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1132-a:
Paper 1132-c:
1132
Parkinson Building: Room B.10
INTELLECTUAL NETWORKS IN CAROLINGIAN MANUSCRIPTS
Irish Research Council Project ‘The Irish Foundation of Carolingian
Europe (IFCE): The Case of Calendrical Science (Computus)’
Mathew T. A. Clear, Department of History, Trinity College Dublin
Máirín MacCarron, School of English & Digital Humanities, University
College Cork
Object-Oriented Cataloguing: A New Digital Tool for Analysing
Carolingian Intellectual Culture and its Networks (Language:
English)
Judith ter Horst, Department of History, Trinity College Dublin
Networks of Visigothic Ideas in Carolingian Europe (Language:
English)
Immo Warntjes, Department of History, Trinity College Dublin
Controversy and Reform: The Transmission of Easter Tables in
Carolingian Manuscripts (Language: English)
Mathew T. A. Clear
Wednesday
Paper 1132-b:
1131
Michael Sadler Building: LG.15
MAPPING THE ORIGINS OF THE ‘MIDDLE KNOWLEDGE’ DOCTRINE:
DISENTANGLING THE NOTIONS OF NECESSITY, CONTINGENCY, AND DIVINE
FOREKNOWLEDGE, II
Project ‘Does God Know the Contingents? The Origin in the 16 th Century
of the Middle Knowledge Doctrine’, Instituto de Filosofia, Universidade
do Porto
João Rebalde, Instituto de Filosofia, Universidade do Porto
Paula Oliveira e Silva, Instituto de Filosofia / Faculdade de Letras,
Universidade do Porto
The Modification of the Medieval Notion of Divine
Foreknowledge in Luis de Molina’s Middle Knowledge (Language:
English)
David Torrijos-Castrillejo, Facultad de Filosofía, Universidad Eclesiástica
San Dámaso, Madrid
Alfonso Mendoza’s Middle Knowledge Doctrine (Language:
English)
João Rebalde
The Consequences of Pedro Luis’ Molinism for His Christology
(Language: English)
Mário João Correia, Instituto de Filosofia, Universidade do Porto
267
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1133-a:
Paper 1133-b:
Paper 1133-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1134-a:
Paper 1134-b:
Paper 1134-c:
268
1133
Clarendon Building: 1.03
THE ENTANGLED MAKING, USES, AND VISUALISATIONS OF TEXTILES IN THE
EARLY MEDIEVAL PERIOD, 450-1100, II
AHRC Project ‘Unwrapping the Galloway Hoard’ / National Museum of
Scotland / University of Glasgow
Tracey Davison, Centre for Medieval Studies, University of York and
Alexandra Makin, School of Humanities (Archaeology), University of
Glasgow
Tracey Davison
Intertwined Threads, Obscured Narratives: Technical Analysis
as a Means of Approaching the Ephemeral in Early Medieval
Silks (Language: English)
Gwendoline Pepper, Department of Archaeology, University of York
Entangled Textiles: The Case of the Galloway Hoard (Language:
English)
Susanna Harris, School of Humanities (Archaeology), University of
Glasgow and Alexandra Makin
Embroidered Entanglements: Chains of Gift-Giving and the
Cuthbert Embroideries (Language: English)
Daisy Bonsall, Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse & Celtic, University of
Cambridge
1134
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.09
EPISCOPAL NETWORKS AND THE GREGORIAN REFORM IN LOTHARINGIA AND
CHAMPAGNE, 1050-1200
Robin Moens, Historisches Institut, RWTH Aachen Universität /
Département d’histoire, Université de Namur
Nicolas Ruffini-Ronzani, Département d’histoire, Université de Namur /
Archives de l’Etat de Namur
The Bishops and Their Abbots: Investigating Reform Groups in
the Church Province of Reims (Language: English)
Sebastian Gensicke, Historisches Institut, RWTH Aachen Universität
Networks of the Archbishops of Trier in the 12th Century
(Language: English)
Naemi Winter, Institut für Geschichtswissenschaft, Rheinische
Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn
Romanity Put to the Test: Clerical Networks in Liège at the Time
of the ‘Martyrdom’ of Bishop Albert of Louvain, 1192 (Language:
English)
Robin Moens
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1135-a:
Paper 1135-b:
Paper 1135-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1136-a:
Paper 1136-b:
1136
Esther Simpson Building: 2.11
OUTLAW NETWORKS, II: FEMALE NETWORKING
International Association for Robin Hood Studies
Lesley Coote, School of Humanities, University of Hull
Alexander L. Kaufman, Department of English / Honors College, Ball
State University, Indiana
The Well-Woven Web: Female Tricksters in the Robin Hood
Tradition (Language: English)
Antha Cotten-Spreckelmeyer, College of Liberal Arts & Sciences Humanities, University of Kansas
The Good, the Bad, and Margery: Infamy through Outlawry in
The Book of Margery Kempe (Language: English)
Helen Lawson, Department of English, Durham University
From Blacklist to Betrayal: Hannah Weinstein’s Outlaw Band
and ATV’s Robin Hood (Language: English)
Dean A. Hoffman, Occidental Studies Institute, Nashua, New Hampshire
Wednesday
Paper 1136-c:
1135
Esther Simpson Building: 1.08
MAKING OF EUROPE, II: BUILDING DIPLOMATIC NETWORKS IN THE LATE
MIDDLE AGES
British Academy / Leverhulme Small Grants
Barbara Bombi, School of History, University of Kent and Pietro Mocchi,
Centre for Medieval & Early Modern Studies (MEMS), University of Kent
Barbara Bombi
Arbitrator: Accountability and Personal Agency in Peace- and
Treaty-Making in 15th-Century Italy (Language: English)
Isabella Lazzarini, Dipartimento di Scienze Umane, Storiche e Sociali,
Università degli Studi del Molise
Expenses, Envoys, and Epistles: Mechanisms of Informal
Diplomacy in Later Medieval Europe (Language: English)
Kathleen Neal, Centre for Medieval & Renaissance Studies, Monash
University, Victoria
Politics, Diplomacy, and the Spoils of War: Robert Knolles’
Indentures of War, 20 June 1370 (Language: English)
Rémy Ambühl, Department of History, University of Southampton
269
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1137-a:
Paper 1137-b:
Paper 1137-c:
Paper 1137-d:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1138-a:
Paper 1138-b:
Paper 1138-c:
270
1137
Stage@leeds: Stage 2
JEWISH-CHRISTIAN ENTANGLEMENTS IN THE MIRROR OF MEDIEVAL
MANUSCRIPTS AND CHARTERS
IMC Programming Committee
Pratima Gopalakrishnan, Department of Classics, University of Texas,
Austin
Clavis Verborum Biblicorum (Language: English)
Hanna Liss, Lehrstuhl für Bibel und Jüdische Bibelauslegung,
Hochschule für Jüdische Studien Heidelberg
Hebrew Sounds on Christian Tongues: Transliteration and
Translation in a Medieval Anglo-Norman Psalter (Language:
English)
Loraine Enlow, Department of Bible & Ancient Semitic Languages,
Jewish Theological Seminary, New York
Were Jews a ‘Race’ in Medieval Europe?: Jewish Theological
Perspectives (Language: English)
David Shyovitz, Department of History, Northwestern University, Illinois
The Hebrew ‘King Arthur’ Re-Evaluated: Vatican Library, Vatican
Codex, MS Urb. Ebr. 48 as a Non-Autograph Copy (Language:
English)
Christopher Berard, Department of English, Providence College, Rhode
Island and Leon Jacobowitz-Efron, Core Humanities Program, Shalem
College, Jerusalem
1138
Newlyn Building: 1.02
ALFREDIAN VOICES, II: ALFREDIAN ENTANGLEMENTS
Francis Leneghan, Faculty of English Language & Literature, University
of Oxford
Francis Leneghan
Some Contexts for 9th-Century Psalters in England (Language:
English)
Jane Toswell, Department of English, University of Western Ontario
Tangles with Gnomes in the Old English Pastoral Care (Language:
English)
Megan Renz Perry, Program in Medieval Studies, Yale University
Some Observations on the Biblical Law in the Prologue of the
Laws of Alfred the Great: Translation and Interpretation
(Language: English)
Mikhail Zemlyakov
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1139-a:
Paper 1139-b:
Paper 1139-c:
Paper 1139-d:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1140-a:
Paper 1140-b:
1140
Clarendon Building: GR 01
LAW AND PROBLEM SOLVING, C. 1000-C. 1300, I: PROBLEMS IN FINDING
AND ADMINISTERING JUSTICE
Philippa Byrne, Faculty of History, University of Oxford and Meghan
Woolley, Writing Lab, Purdue University, Indiana
Philippa Byrne
Solving the Problem of Legal Authority in ‘Part One’ of the SoCalled Très ancien Coutumier of Normandy (Language: English)
Will Eves, School of Law, University of Nottingham
Committitur gaole per statutum: The Entanglements of the
Court of the General Eyre (Language: English)
Mariah Luther Cooper, Department of History & Classics, Acadia
University, Nova Scotia
Avenging Mothers in the Early Common Law (Language: English)
Meghan Woolley
Wednesday
Paper 1140-c:
1139
Esther Simpson Building: 3.01
HIDDEN CISTERCIANS
Cîteaux: Commentarii cistercienses
Terryl N. Kinder, Cîteaux: Commentarii cistercienses, Pontigny
Terryl N. Kinder
Cistercian Organisation, Reputation, and the Great Morimond
Controversy of 1124 (Language: English)
Michael Voigts, School of Theology & Formation, Asbury Theological
Seminary, Kentucky
Medieval Cistercian Manuscripts in Australia: Digitised and NonDigitised (Language: English)
Elizabeth Freeman, School of Humanities, University of Tasmania
ARCCIS: An Association for the Promotion of Cistercian Culture
(Language: English)
Eric Delaissé, Centre européen pour le rayonnement de la culture
cistercienne, Association pour le rayonnement de la culture
cistercienne, Cîteaux
The Trappist (Cistercian) Monastery of St Susan at Lulworth,
Dorset (Language: English)
David Bell, Department of Religious Studies, Memorial University of
Newfoundland
271
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1141-a:
Paper 1141-b:
Paper 1141-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1142-a:
Paper 1142-b:
Paper 1142-c:
272
1141
Esther Simpson Building: 3.08
CROSSING THE BRANCHES IN ENVIRONMENTAL MEDIEVAL STUDIES: LIVING
ALONGSIDE BEASTS IN MEDIEVAL PORTUGAL
NEMUS: Network for the Environment in Medieval Usages & Societies /
Instituto de Estudos Medievais, Universidade Nova de Lisboa
Tiago Viúla de Faria, Instituto de Estudos Medievais (IEM),
Universidade Nova de Lisboa
Tiago Viúla de Faria and Ana Elisabete Pires, Centro de Investigação em
Biodiversidade e Recursos Genéticos, Universidade do Porto /
Faculdade de Medicina Veterinária, Universidade Lusófona, Lisboa
The Fox and the Wolf: Literary Representations in Medieval
Portugal (Language: English)
Fábio Gonçalves, Instituto de Estudos Medievais (IEM), Universidade
Nova de Lisboa
Dysfunctional Relationships: A Zooarchaeological View of
Carnivores and Humans from Southwestern Iberia in Medieval
Times (Language: English)
Maria João Valente, Departamento de Artes e Humanidades / Centro de
Estudos em Arqueologia, Artes e Ciências do Património (CEAACP),
Universidade do Algarve
Man and Wolf in Late Medieval Southern Portugal (Language:
English)
André Filipe Oliveira da Silva, Centro de Investigação Transdisciplinar
‘Cultura, Espaço e Memória’ (CITCEM), Universidade do Porto
1142
Clarendon Building: 1.01
RUNES AND RUNIC INSCRIPTIONS, II: METHODOLOGICAL ENTANGLEMENTS
Jasmin Higgs, Department of English, University of Nottingham
Marcus Smith, Kulturarvsstudion, Riksantikvarieämbetet, Visby
The Entanglement of Runes and Object: Showcasing
Methodological Approaches to Fragmentary and Non-Lexical
Runic Data Using the Brooches from the Pre-Old English Runic
Corpus (Language: English)
Jasmin Higgs
The Knockando Runestone: Methodological Approaches to Runic
Inscriptions (Language: English)
Jeanette Geirsdóttir, Institutt for lingvistiske, litterære og estetiske
studier, Universitetet i Bergen
The Power of a Name: Named Weapons and Their Entanglement
with Humans through Runic Inscriptions (Language: English)
Bianca Chiacchia, Independent Scholar, York
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1143-a:
Paper 1143-b:
Paper 1143-c:
Paper 1143-d:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1144-a:
Paper 1144-b:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1145-a:
Paper 1145-b:
Paper 1145-c:
1144
Parkinson Building: Room B.08
SOUND CULTURES IN MEDIEVAL SCANDINAVIA: INTERDISCIPLINARY
PERSPECTIVES, II
Stefka G. Eriksen, Norsk institutt for kulturminneforskning, Oslo
Stefka G. Eriksen
The Soundscape of Church Bells in the Middle Ages: An Example
from Norway (Language: English)
Alf Tore Hommedal, Universitetsmuseet i Bergen, Universitetet i Bergen
Creating Sacred Sound: On the Multiple Effects of the
Consecration of Church Bells in the Middle Ages (Language:
English)
Terje de Groot, Riksantikvaren, Oslo
Audible Children: The Reported Voices of Medieval Children in
Nordic Hagiography (Language: English)
Rakel Igland Diesen, Institutt for historiske og klassiske studier, Norges
teknisk-naturvitenskapelige universitet, Trondheim
1145
Clarendon Building: 2.08
MEDIEVAL SPIRITUALITY BETWEEN INDIVIDUAL PERFECTION AND
COMMUNAL INTERACTION
Internationale Gesellschaft für theologische Mediävistik (IGTM)
Jonathan Reinert, Theologische Hochschule Reutlingen
Sven Michael Gröger, Seminar für Liturgiewissenschaft, Rheinische
Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn
The Origin of the Apparition in the Gregorian Mass: Oral and
Written Traditions (Language: English)
Jan Reitzner, Evangelisch-lutherische Landeskirche, Hannover
Connecting the Wholeness of Spiritual Life in One Way, Again
and Again: Bonaventure as a Theologian of Spirituality
(Language: English)
Jonathan Reinert
Eucharistic Devotion in Late Medieval Fraternities (Language:
English)
Volker Leppin, Yale Divinity School, Yale University
Wednesday
Paper 1144-c:
1143
Virtual Session
THE NETTING OF THE BODY, SENSES, AND SOUL IN LATE ANTIQUITY FROM
RD
TH
THE 3 - 6 CENTURIES
Anastasia Theologou, Department of Medieval Studies, Central
European University, Budapest/Wien
István Perczel, Department of Medieval Studies, Central European
University, Budapest/Wien
The Vehicle of the Soul from Plotinus to Damascius (Language:
English)
Gaetano Longo, Department of Medieval Studies, Central European
University, Budapest/Wien
The Principle of Sympathy in Plotinus’ Philosophy (Language:
English)
Anastasia Theologou
Senses and Reason in the Writings of Gregory of Nyssa
(Language: English)
Andra Jugănaru, Facultatea de Istorie, Universitatea din București
Baptism and an Origenian Concept of the Soul in the PseudoDionysius Ecclesiastic Hierarchy (Language: English)
István Perczel
273
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1146-a:
Paper 1146-b:
Paper 1146-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1147-a:
Paper 1147-b:
Paper 1147-c:
Paper 1147-d:
274
1146
Newlyn Building: LG.01
ENCOUNTERS WITH THE SUPERNATURAL: VAMPIRES AND OTHER MARGINAL
FIGURES
IMC Programming Committee
Chris Latham, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
The Wolf as Werewolf or Vampire?: Haunting the Romanian
Imagination from Old Folk Stories, Traditions, and Beliefs to
Dracula’s Myth (Language: English)
Alexandra Costache-Babcinschi, Departamentul de Limbi Moderne și
Comunicare în Afaceri, Facultatea de Relații Economice Internaționale,
Academia de Studii Economice din București
Duendes: A Folkloric Study of Fallen Angels (Language: English)
Ilinca-Simona Ionescu, Facultatea de Limbi și Literaturi Străine,
Universitatea din București
Cruel Crushes: Emotional Violence against Supernatural Women
in the Legendary Sagas (Language: English)
Felix Lummer, Independent Scholar, Reykjavík
1147
Parkinson Building: Room B.11
THEODORE OF MOPSUESTIA’S HERITAGE AS ENTANGLEMENT: INVOLVEMENT,
ACCEPTANCE, AND REJECTION
Sofia Puchkova, Faculty of Asian & Middle Eastern Studies, University of
Oxford
Sofia Puchkova
Obscure Networks in Theodore of Mopsuestia’s Biblical
Exegesis: Reception as Involvement (Language: English)
Sofia Puchkova
Theodore of Mopsuestia on Doubting Thomas: The Reception of
a Controversial Interpretation and the Compositional Practices
of Heretical Discourse (Language: English)
Philip Michael Forness, Faculteit Theologie en Religiewetenschappen, KU
Leuven
The New Creation Belief between Theodore of Mopsuestia
(Theodore the Interpreter) and the Eastern Syrian Mysticism
(Language: English)
Alexey Muraviev
Anti-Allegorical Arguments in Syriac Psalm Commentaries and
the Reception of Theodore of Mopsuestia (Language: English)
Cornelis Hoogerwerf, Nederlands-Vlaams Bijbelgenootschap, Haarlem /
Faculteit der Geesteswetenschappen, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1148-a:
Paper 1148-b:
Paper 1148-c:
1148
Clarendon Building: 2.01
WARFARE IN LITERATURE
De Re Militari: Society for Medieval Military History
Ilana Krug, Department of History & Political Science, York College of
Pennsylvania
Kelly DeVries, Department of History, Loyola University Maryland
The Chronology and Geography of Alexios I Komnenos’
Campaign against the Pechenegs, 1087 (Language: English)
Marek Meško, Historický ústav, Filozofická fakulta, Univerzita Hradec
Králové
Gunpowder in the Chronistic Spanish Poetry of the Renaissance:
The Consecration of Don Juan de Austria as the Strategist
Officer in La Austríada (Language: English)
Marta Cristina Oria de Rueda Molins, Département des Lettres et Arts,
École Normale Supérieure de Lyon
Warfare and Political Poetry in the 14th Century: To Exalt or
Decry? (Language: English)
Ilana Krug
LUNCH: 12.00-14.00
Take some time to enjoy lunch with colleagues.
If you have pre-ordered Café Lunch Credit for today, your QR code voucher can be used
anytime during café opening hours on the day of validity at the locations listed on p. 24.
Wednesday
275
Einstieg in die Mediävistik
Deutsche Literatur
des Mittelalters
Das Nibelungenlied
Eine Einführung
in die Germanistische Mediävistik
4., neu bearb. und erw. Auflage 2015,
208 Seiten, € 17,80. ISBN 978-3-503-15589-7
Klassiker-Lektüren, Band 5
Von Thomas Bein
Von Jan-Dirk Müller
2019, 272 Seiten, € 19,95.
ISBN 978-3-503-18854-3
Grundlagen der Germanistik, Band 64
Hartmann von Aue
Deutschsprachige Lyrik
des Mittelalters
Von Ludger Lieb
Von den Anfängen bis zum
14. Jahrhundert.
Eine Einführung
Von Thomas Bein
2017, 271 Seiten, € 19,95.
ISBN 978-3-503-17167-5
Grundlagen der Germanistik, Band 62
Erec – Iwein – Gregorius –
Armer Heinrich
2020, 252 Seiten, € 19,95.
ISBN 978-3-503-19136-9
Klassiker-Lektüren, Band 15
Online in unserem Verzeichnis
Mediävistik informieren.
Hier klicken!
Erich Schmidt Verlag GmbH & Co. KG
Genthiner Str. 30 G · 10785 Berlin
Tel. +49 030 25 00 85-265
Fax +49 030 25 00 85-275
ESV@ESVmedien.de · www.ESV.info
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 13.15-14.00
Session:
Title:
Speaker:
Introduction:
Details:
1199
Esther Simpson Building: LG08
KEYNOTE LECTURE 2023: BEYOND CONNECTED DOTS - THE FUTURE OF
NETWORK ANALYSIS IN MEDIEVAL STUDIES (Language: English)
David Zbíral, Centrum pro digitální výzkum náboženství / Dissident
Networks Project (DISSINET), Masarykova univerzita, Brno
Johannes Preiser-Kapeller, Institut für Mittelalterforschung,
Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
As part of the ongoing digital turn in the humanities, network analysis is
finding its way into medieval studies. Network approaches have shown
some of their potential already, but their use in historical research has
often succumbed to three major challenges. The first one is a
rudimentary application of network analysis as merely a prosopographic
visualisation tool rather than a method to test hypotheses about human
behaviour. The second challenge is the unproductive separation of
network analysis from a broader quantitative and hypothesis-testing
approach to research. The third challenge is to find ways of implementing
a genuine ‘source criticism 2.0’ in the heart of the collection and analysis
of structured relational data. Drawing on examples from the Dissident
Networks Project as well as various other projects and publications, this
lecture addresses all three challenges and identifies in each of them an
opportunity for raising the bar in upcoming research, thus maximising
the potential of both the methodology and data from premodern sources.
Please note that admission to this event will be on a first-come, firstserved basis as there will be no tickets. Please ensure that you arrive as
early as possible to avoid disappointment.
Wednesday
277
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1201-a:
Paper 1201-b:
Paper 1201-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1202-a:
Paper 1202-b:
Paper 1202-c:
278
1201
Michael Sadler Building: LG.16
SALVATION AND SACRED TOPOGRAPHY IN LATER MEDIEVAL EUROPE
IMC Programming Committee
Lauren Beck, Department of History of Art, University of York
Painting Heaven and Hell in the Wake of Plague: A Contribution
to the Study of Parish Churches’ Wall Paintings in the Kingdom
of Navarre, 1348-1387 (Language: English)
Eneko Tuduri, Centre for Basque Studies, University of Nevada, Reno /
‘Historia de la economía, sociedad, poder y cultura en la Edad Media’,
Universidad del País Vasco - Euskal Herriko Unibertsitatea, VitoriaGasteiz
Under the Protecting Cloak of Our Lady: The Role of the
Illustrious Brotherhood of Our Blessed Lady in Modification of
the Sacred Space of Hertogenbosch, 13th-16th Century
(Language: English)
Pavel Bychkov
The Library of Christian Unity: Creating Ceremony in Pope
Nicholas V’s Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana between Curial
Networks and Urban Entanglements (Language: English)
Filip Malesevic, Département des sciences historiques, Université de
Fribourg
1202
Newlyn Building: 1.07
THE ARCHAEOLOGY OF THE MEDIEVAL PERIOD IN SUDAN AND THE HORN OF
AFRICA: NEW PERSPECTIVES
University of Khartoum, Sudan
Ahmed Hussein Abdelrahman Adam, Department of Archaeology,
University of Khartoum, Sudan and Abdelrahman Ibrahim Said,
Department of Archaeology, University of Khartoum, Sudan
Adam Simmons, Department of History, Language & Global Cultures,
Nottingham Trent University
The Islamisation of Sudan through Material Culture (Language:
English)
Intisar Soghayroun Elzein, Department of Archaeology, University of
Khartoum, Sudan
New Thoughts on Medieval Archaeology in the Sudan (Language:
English)
Ali Osman Mohamed Salih, Department of Archaeology, University of
Khartoum, Sudan
Medieval Archaeology in the Middle Nile Region: New
Discoveries (Language: English)
Mohammed Ahmed Abdelmageed Ahmed, Institute of Archaeology,
University of Wadi El-Neel, Khartoum
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1203-a:
Paper 1203-b:
Paper 1203-c:
Paper 1203-d:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1204-a:
Paper 1204-c:
1204
Clarendon Building: 2.08
WARFARE AND THE CHURCH, C. 1000-1300, I: CONCEPTIONS
Alastair Forbes, Department of History, Durham University and Grant
Jones, Department of History, Durham University
Malek Jamal Zuraikat, Department of English, Yarmouk University,
Jordan
Knightly Lives and Knightly Literature: The Role of Clerical
Teachings in the Civilising of Knighthood (Language: English)
Georgia M. Russell, Department of History, Durham University
Mortal Combat: Monastic Ideals of Bloodless Warfare in the
Early 12th Century (Language: English)
Alastair Forbes
‘We’ll watch you from here, and see how a bishop fights!’:
Warrior Bishop and Frontier Knights in the Cantar de mio Cid
(Language: English)
Joanna Mendyk, Instytut Historii, Uniwersytet Jagielloński, Kraków /
Departamento de Historia, Universidad de Zaragoza
Wednesday
Paper 1204-b:
1203
Esther Simpson Building: 2.09
TRANSCENDING SOCIAL LIMITS IN LATE MEDIEVAL SOCIETY
Department of Medieval Studies, Central European University,
Budapest/Wien
Gerhard Jaritz, Department of Medieval Studies, Central European
University, Budapest/Wien
Gerhard Jaritz
Kin, Friends, and Neighbours: Crossing Formal Boundaries in
Late Medieval Central and South-Eastern Europe (Language:
English)
Robert Kurelić, Department of History, Juraj Dobrila University, Pula
Cuius regio, eius religio: Medieval Albanians and Their Social
Shifts (Language: English)
Etleva Lala, Department of Eastern & Central European History &
Historical Russistics, Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest
The Socially Diverse Environment of Romipetae: The Visitors of
San Spirito in Sassia, Rome (Language: English)
Karsten Johannes Schuil, Department of Medieval Studies, Central
European University, Budapest/Wien
Climbing the Career Ladder: Administrative Offices in a Monastic
Context (Language: English)
Elisabeth Gruber, Institut für Realienkunde des Mittelalters und der
frühen Neuzeit, Paris-Lodron-Universität Salzburg
279
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1205-a:
Paper 1205-b:
Paper 1205-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1206-a:
Paper 1206-b:
Paper 1206-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1207-a:
Paper 1207-b:
Paper 1207-c:
280
1205
Esther Simpson Building: LG08
CANON LAW, IV: THE BOUNDARIES OF LAW - CANON AND COMMON LAW,
AND THE IUS COMMUNE IN THE CENTRAL MIDDLE AGES
Iuris Canonici Medii Aevi Consociatio (ICMAC)
Danica Summerlin, Department of History, University of Sheffield
Kathleen Cushing, Department of History, Keele University
Quae raro contingunt: The Challenge of the ‘Rare’ in 12thCentury Ius commune (Language: English)
Bruce C. Brasington, Department of History, West Texas A&M
University, Canyon
Canon Law, Roman Law, and Common Law in Magna Carta:
Multi-Legalism in England in the Early Days of the Common Law
(Language: English)
Jason Taliadoros, Faculty of Business & Law, Deakin University,
Melbourne
‘All men are either free or slave’: Bracton and the Roman Law of
Slavery (Language: English)
Thomas McSweeney, William & Mary Law School, College of William &
Mary, Virginia
1206
Parkinson Building: Room 1.08
DYNASTY AND COURT CULTURE IN BYZANTIUM AND THE NEAR EAST, IV:
COURT TEXTS
Cardiff Centre for Late Antique Religion & Culture, Cardiff University
Ewan William Richard Short, Geschiedenis Department, Universiteit van
Amsterdam
Eve MacDonald, School of History, Archaeology & Religion, Cardiff
University
A Tale of Two Palaces: The Courts of Arcadius and Honorius in
the Works of Claudian (Language: English)
Martijn Icks, Geschiedenis Department, Universiteit van Amsterdam
Parent-Child Relationships in Komnenian Court Culture
(Language: English)
Margaret E. Mullett, School of History, Classics & Archaeology,
University of Edinburgh
Saint Meets Emperor: Characterisation in Imperial Encounters in
Italo-Greek Hagiography (Language: English)
Emma Huig, Vakgroep Letterkunde, Universiteit Gent
1207
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.31
FEMALE ECONOMIC AGENCY IN THE MIDDLE AGES
Verena Weller, Historisches Institut, Universität Mannheim
Julia Bruch, Historisches Institut, Universität zu Köln
Mobility of Women Workers in 16th-Century Southwestern
Germany (Language: English)
Lena-Mareike Liznerski, Historisches Institut, Universität Mannheim
Conditions of Female Wage Work in Late Medieval Nuremberg
(Language: English)
Jacqueline Turek, Historisches Institut, RWTH Aachen Universität
Female Investments in Montpellier in the 13th and 14th Centuries
(Language: English)
Verena Weller
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1208-a:
Paper 1208-b:
Paper 1208-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1209-a:
Paper 1209-b:
1209
Newlyn Building: LG.02
SECULAR AND RELIGIOUS TRANSFORMATIONS FROM LATE ANTIQUITY INTO
THE EARLY MIDDLE AGES
IMC Programming Committee
Diane J. Reilly, Department of Art History, Indiana University,
Bloomington
Imperial Public Performance and the Christianisation of Rome,
c. 300-c. 663 (Language: English)
Jacob Latham, Department of History, University of Tennessee,
Knoxville
The Transformation of Sports Structures from Late Antiquity
into the Byzantine Middle Ages in Asia Minor (Language: English)
Başak Kalfa-Ataklı, Department of Architecture, Çankaya University,
Ankara and Ufuk Serin, Department of Architecture, Middle East
Technical University, Ankara
From Ephesus to Antioch: Early Baptism and Naming Practices
in Asia Minor (Language: English)
Zoe Tsiami, Department of History, Archaeology & Social Anthropology,
University of Thessaly, Volos
Wednesday
Paper 1209-c:
1208
Michael Sadler Building: Rupert Beckett Theatre
PROCESSES OF INCLUSION AND EXCLUSION IN LATE ANTIQUITY, I:
CREATING BOUNDARIES
Harry Mawdsley, Department of History, Durham University and
Michael Wuk, School of Humanities & Heritage, University of Lincoln
Michael Wuk
The More the Merrier?: Polygyny, Elite Masculinity, and
Homosocial Inclusion in Late Antiquity (Language: English)
Ulriika Vihervalli, Department of History, University of Liverpool
The Rituals of Banishment: Exclusion and Reconciliation in Late
Antique Communities (Language: English)
Harry Mawdsley
Should They Stay Apart?: Clerics and Lay People in Late Antique
Houses, Streets, and Churches (Language: English)
Robert Wiśniewski, Wydział Historii, Uniwersytet Warszawski /
Department of Classics, University of Reading
281
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1211-a:
Paper 1211-b:
Paper 1211-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1212-a:
Paper 1212-b:
Paper 1212-c:
282
1211
Newlyn Building: 1.01
ADRIARCHCULT, III: BUSINESS NETWORKS OF DALMATIAN QUATTROCENTO
ARTISTS - COMMISSIONING, EXCHANGING, TRADING
ERC Project ‘AdriArchCult (Architectural Culture of the Early Modern
Eastern Adriatic - GA n. 865863)’
Jasenka Gudelj, Dipartimento di Filosofia e Beni Culturali, Università Ca’
Foscari, Venezia
Cristiano Guarneri, Dipartimento di Filosofia e Beni Culturali, Università
Ca’ Foscari, Venezia
Family Ties and Business Networks of Juraj Dalmatinac /
Giorgio Dalmata (Language: English)
Jasenka Gudelj
Religious Networks and Artistic Exchange: The Canons Regular
of the Lateran and the Church of Santa Maria a Mare on the
Tremiti Islands (Language: English)
Beatrice Tanzi, Dipartimento di Filosofia e Beni Culturali, Università Ca’
Foscari, Venezia
Adriatic Artistic Exchange: The Sculptural Decoration of the
Portal of the Church of Santa Maria a Mare on the Tremiti
Islands (Language: English)
Giuseppe Andolina, Dipartimento di Filosofia e Beni Culturali, Università
Ca’ Foscari, Venezia
1212
Esther Simpson Building: 1.01
ENGLAND AND SCOTLAND AT PEACE AND WAR, III
Andy King, Department of History, University of Southampton
Fergal Leonard, Department of History, Durham University
Edward IV and Scotland: A Study in Indifference? (Language:
English)
Gordon McKelvie, Department of History, University of Winchester
From ‘Bretteyne to Albion’: Irish and Welsh Dimensions in the
Anglo-Scottish War of 1532-1534 (Language: English)
Kate McGregor, School of History, University of St Andrews
A British King-in-Waiting?: James VI of Scotland and AngloScottish Relations, c. 1586-1603 (Language: English)
Beth Cowen, School of Humanities (History), University of Glasgow
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1213-a:
Paper 1213-b:
Paper 1213-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1214-a:
Paper 1214-b:
1214
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.03
‘OWING ME, KNOWING YOU’: CREDIT RELATIONS AND PERSONAL
NETWORKS IN 14TH-CENTURY TYROL
Stephan Nicolussi-Köhler, Institut für Geschichtswissenschaften und
Europäische Ethnologie, Universität Innsbruck
Thomas Ertl, Friedrich-Meinecke-Institut, Freie Universität Berlin
Credit Networks in 14th-Century Tyrol: Notary Registers as
Sources for Medieval Capital Markets (Language: English)
Stephan Nicolussi-Köhler
Confarrea et impera: The Role of Chivalric Networks as a Source
of Political Power in 14th-Century Tyrol (Language: English)
Tobias Pamer, Institut für Geschichtswissenschaften und Europäische
Ethnologie, Universität Innsbruck
Connections, Credit, and Careers: The Importance of Personal
and Financial Networks for Tyrolean Officials in the 14th Century
(Language: English)
Lienhard Thaler, Tiroler Landesarchiv, Innsbruck
Wednesday
Paper 1214-c:
1213
Newlyn Building: GR.01
MEDIEVAL ROMAN EMPIRES EAST AND WEST, III: IMPERIAL PASTS AND
FUTURES
Institute of Medieval & Early Modern Studies, Durham University
Len Scales, Department of History, Durham University
Björn Weiler, Department of History & Welsh History, Aberystwyth
University
When Did the Roman Translatio imperii Take Place?: Alternative
Byzantine Views of New Rome’s Exclusive Claim to Romanness
in the Middle Ages (Language: English)
Yannis Stouraitis, School of History, Classics & Archaeology, University
of Edinburgh
Defensor ecclesiae: Narratives of translatio imperii and Its
Justification in Late Medieval Latin Historiography (Language:
English)
Lisa Rolston, Department of History, University of Canterbury,
Christchurch
Eutychius, Gundeshapur, and Galerius’ Invasion of the Sasanian
Empire (Language: English)
Byron Waldron, Department of Classics & Ancient History, University of
Sydney
283
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1215-a:
Paper 1215-b:
Paper 1215-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1216-a:
Paper 1216-b:
Paper 1216-c:
284
1215
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.04
THE ENTANGLED CAUCASUS, III: AN ENTANGLED HEART - THE CENTRAL
CAUCASUS IN THE HIGH MIDDLE AGES
Medieval Caucasus Network
James Baillie, Institut für Geschichte, Universität Wien / Institut für
Iranistik, Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien and
Nicholas J. B. Evans, Institute for Medieval Studies / School of History,
University of Leeds
Nicholas Matheou, School of History, Classics & Archaeology, University
of Edinburgh
The Anchors of the Web: Brokerage, Identity, and Power in the
Bagrationid Court (Language: English)
James Baillie
Entangled Caucasus: Kirakos Ganjakec’i (Language: English)
Heiko Jochen Christian Conrad, Independent Scholar, Berlin
The Emergence of Standardised Textual and Visual
Representations of the Miracle of St George (Language: English)
Kevin Tuite, Département d’Anthropologie, Université de Montréal
1216
Maurice Keyworth Building: G.02
DIGITAL HISTORY AND NEW DIRECTIONS IN CRUSADE STUDIES, I:
SURVEYING, VISUALISING, AND ANALYSING TEXTUAL AND MATERIAL
NETWORKS AND ENTANGLEMENTS
Digital History & New Directions in Crusade Studies Network / Northern
Network for the Study of the Crusades / Centre for the Study of
Religion & Conflict
Jason T. Roche, Department of History, Politics & Philosophy,
Manchester Metropolitan University
Natasha Ruth Hodgson, School of Arts & Humanities, Nottingham Trent
University
The Medieval Reception of the Roman Conquest of Jerusalem in
70 AD: Exploiting Digital Resources on a Seminal Historical
Event (Language: English)
Alexander Marx, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
Female Representation in the Latin East: An Extensive Digital
Database (Language: English)
Rafca Nasr, Département d’histoire de l’art et d’archéologie, Université
de Fribourg
Les réseaux nobiliaires au risque de l’Histoire dans l’Oultremer
latin (Language: Français)
Isabelle Ortega, Risques chroniques émergents (CHROME - EA 7352),
Université de Nîmes and Anne Tchounikine, Laboratoire d’InfoRmatique
en Image et Systèmes d’information (LIRIS - UMR 5205), Institut
National des Sciences Appliquées, Lyon
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1217-a:
Paper 1217-b:
Paper 1217-c:
Paper 1217-d:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1218-b:
Paper 1218-c:
1218
Esther Simpson Building: 3.02
MARGINAL COMMUNITIES IN GLOBALISED MEDITERRANEAN NETWORKS,
III: DIASPORA COMMUNITIES CROSSING THE MARGINS
Anna C. Kelley, St Andrews Institute of Mediaeval Studies, University of
St Andrews
Daniel K. Reynolds, Centre for Byzantine, Ottoman & Modern Greek
Studies, University of Birmingham
Echoes of Empire: The Formation and Role of a Trapezuntine
Elite Diaspora in the Late Byzantine World (Language: English)
Annika Asp, Independent Scholar, London
At the Margins of the City: Religious Minorities within (and
outside) Palaiologan Constantinople (Language: English)
Jessica Varsallona, Department of Continuing Education, University of
Oxford
Women in the Borderland: Feudal Customs and Venetian Right
in Negroponte, 13th-14th Centuries (Language: English)
Daniele Tinterri, Archivio di Stato di Genova, Ministero della Cultura
Wednesday
Paper 1218-a:
1217
Parkinson Building: Room B.22
NETWORKS OF CULTURAL EXCHANGE: CAVE CHURCHES, SHRINES, AND
HERMITAGES - WALL PAINTINGS AND GENDER IN THE MEDITERRANEAN AND
BEYOND
Andrea-Bianka Znorovszky, Departamento de Historia Medieval,
Moderna y Contemporánea, Universidad de Salamanca
Raluca-Gabriela Prelipceanu, Facultatea de Istorie şi Filosofie,
Universitatea Babeș-Bolyai, Cluj-Napoca
Birth, Death, and Protective Imagery in a 10th-Century Cave
Church in Cappadocia (Language: English)
Niamh Bhalla, Department of Art History, Northeastern University,
London
Crusaders, Workshops, and Local Devotions: The Cave Shrine
Representations of St Marina la Monaca in a Regional Context
(Language: English)
Andrea-Bianka Znorovszky
The Androgynous Representation of the Archangel Michael in
Ribita: The Work of a Western Master in Transylvania (Language:
English)
Raluca-Gabriela Prelipceanu
Viktoria Puzanova and Byzantine Art in Albania (Language:
English)
Irena Nikaj, Department of Education, University ‘Fan S. Noli’, Korçë,
Albania
285
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1219-a:
Paper 1219-b:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1220-a:
Paper 1220-b:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1221-a:
Paper 1221-b:
Paper 1221-c:
286
1219
Esther Simpson Building: 2.12
CHARTERS AND DEEDS IN THEIR GRAPHICAL NETWORKS: SOCIAL,
INSTITUTIONAL, AND GEOGRAPHICAL SPACES, I
ANR-FWF Project BeCoRe, ANR-19-CE27-0021 / FWF I 4502
Internationale Projekte
Sébastien Barret, Institut de Recherche et d’Histoire des Textes (IRHT UPR 841), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Paris
Cristina Andenna, Historisches Institut, Universität des Saarlandes
The Writing Handbook of Guillaume Flambart and the Graphical
Systems of Private Deeds in Normandy in the 15th Century
(Language: English)
Isabelle Bretthauer, Archives Nationales de France, Paris
Graphical Networks of Charters around Marmoutiers Abbey
(Language: English)
Claire Lamy, Centre Roland Mousnier (CRM - UMR 8596), Sorbonne
Université, Paris
1220
Newlyn Building: 1.02
NETWORKS OF SANCTITY, I: SAINTS TEXTUAL - SAINTLY NETWORKS IN
RELIGIOUS AND DEVOTIONAL TEXTS
Edmund van der Molen, Department of History, University of
Nottingham
Edmund van der Molen
Thus Said Niall the Deacon: The Function of Holy Saintly Figures
in Old English Apocalyptic Homilies (Language: English)
William Beattie, Medieval Institute, University of Notre Dame, Indiana
Saint versus Saint: Friendship and Rivalry in Medieval Miracle
Collections (Language: English)
Kara Kersh, Department of History, Trinity College Dublin
1221
Stage@leeds: Stage 1
POWER RELATIONS: ROYAL WOMEN AND THEIR NETWORKS
Vanessa Jane King, Department of History, Classics & Archaeology,
Birkbeck, University of London
Elina Screen, Trinity College, University of Oxford
Networking Queens in England and Francia before 850
(Language: English)
Vanessa Jane King
Locating Judith of Flanders within Networks of Male Authority
(Language: English)
Matthew Firth, College of Humanities, Arts & Social Sciences, Flinders
University, Adelaide
In the Name of the Queen: Networks of Naming amongst the
Royal Women of Early Medieval England (Language: English)
James Chetwood, School of English & Digital Humanities, University
College Cork
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1222-a:
Paper 1222-b:
Paper 1222-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1223-a:
Paper 1223-b:
1223
Clarendon Building: 2.01
COMPLEX SPATIAL NETWORKS OF THE MIDDLE AGES: DIGITAL DATA,
ANALYSIS, AND VISUALISATION
IMC Programming Committee
Stefan Eichert, Naturhistorisches Museum Wien
Unwinding the Threads: Maritime Network Dynamics in the Late
Antique Western Mediterranean (Language: English)
Rowan Munnery, School of Classics, University of St Andrews
Visual Networks in the Latin East: GIS Viewshed Modelling and
Strategic Networks in the 12th-Century Kingdom of Jerusalem
(Language: English)
Mark Nicovich, Department of History & Social Science, William Carey
University, Mississippi
Gharb al-Andalus’ Cities Network Analysis as a Potential Method
for Charting City Growth (Language: English)
Joel Santos, School of Archaeology & Ancient History, University of
Leicester
Wednesday
Paper 1223-c:
1222
Parkinson Building: Room B.10
THE MOBILITY OF OBJECTS AND PEOPLES AND ENTANGLEMENTS BETWEEN
BYZANTINE, ISLAMIC, AND WESTERN MEDIEVAL WORLDS
IMC Programming Committee
Panos Sophoulis, Department of Russian Language & Literature & Slavic
Studies, National Kapodistrian University of Athens
The Weaponisation of Merchants and Mercantile Networks on
the Byzantine-Islamic Frontier (Language: English)
Berke Çetinkaya, Department of History, Boğaziçi University, Istanbul
Theodore of Tarsus: Archbishop of Canterbury, Scholar, and
Diplomat - Christian, Saracen, and Later 7th-Century Trading
Networks with the Eastern Roman Byzantine Empire (Language:
English)
Katherine Barker, Department of Archaeology & Anthropology,
Bournemouth University
Entanglement of Origins: The So-Called Siculo-Arabic Casket in
the Wawel Cathedral Treasury in Kraków and Byzantine, Arabic,
and Latin Court Culture (Language: English)
Magdalena Garnczarska, Instytut Historii Sztuki, Uniwersytet
Jagielloński, Kraków
287
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1224-a:
Paper 1224-b:
Paper 1224-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1225-a:
Paper 1225-b:
Paper 1225-c:
288
1224
Michael Sadler Building: LG.10
LOCAL SOCIETIES AND MICROPOLITICS IN THE EARLY MIDDLE AGES:
ACTORS, CONFLICTS, AND WRITING, III
Proyecto ESMICRO ‘Scenarios of Micropolitics’ / Project
‘PeopleandWriting’, Universidad de Salamanca
Iñaki Martín Viso, Departamento de Historia Medieval, Moderna y
Contemporánea, Universidad de Salamanca
Ainoa Castro Correa, Departamento de Historia Medieval, Moderna y
Contemporánea, Universidad de Salamanca
Individual Rights and Community Defences: Italy, 8th-10th
Centuries (Language: English)
Vito Loré, Dipartimento di Studi Umanistici, Università degli Studi Roma
Tre
Contesting Status: Conflict and the Micropolitics of Social
Differentiation in Early Medieval Localities in North West Iberia
(Language: English)
Álvaro Carvajal Castro, Departamento de Historia Medieval, Moderna y
Contemporánea, Universidad de Salamanca
Iglesias y monasterios como dinamizadores sociales en
contextos rurales del NO peninsular (ss. X-XI) (Language:
Español)
Alejandro Pombo Rial, Departamento de Historia Medieval, Moderna y
Contemporánea, Universidad de Salamanca
1225
Newlyn Building: GR.07
SILENCE AND SILENCING, III: QUEER HEARING AND LISTENING
Brittany Orton, Department of History, University of York and Basil
Arnould Price, Centre for Medieval Studies, University of York
Jane Bonsall, School of Modern Languages, University of St Andrews
Discipline and Discourse: Queer Possibilities and Outlaw
Communities in Harðar Saga and Grettis Saga (Language: English)
Basil Arnould Price
Camping Silence and Silencing Camp: Examining Critical
Responses to the Narrator of the Roman de Silence (Language:
English)
Moss Pepe, School of Literatures, Languages & Cultures, University of
Edinburgh
‘As Bres dó ann sin’: A Queer Reading of Cath Maige Tuired
(Language: English)
Rachel Martin, Department of Celtic Languages & Literatures, Harvard
University
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1226-a:
Paper 1226-b:
Paper 1226-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1227-a:
Paper 1227-b:
Paper 1227-c:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1228-a:
Paper 1228-b:
Paper 1228-c:
1227
Clarendon Building: 1.02
MEDIEVAL NETWORKS OF EMOTIONS AND PASSIONS, I
IMC Programming Committee
Melanie Brunner, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Death Rituals as Sites of Emotional Networks: The Burial of
Peter Abelard (Language: English)
Babette Hellemans, Afdeling Geschiedenis, Rijksuniversiteit Groningen
Compassio et vita: The Images of Passion in the Vision of Early
Franciscan Theology (Language: English)
Bingyi Chen, Department of Theology & Religious Studies, King’s
College London
Could Passion Play Spectators Be Considered an Emotional
Community? (Language: English)
Ivan Missoni, Independent Scholar, Zagreb
1228
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.32
AGEING AND CARE IN THE MIDDLE AGES, I: CULTURAL NARRATIVES OF
AGEING, HEALTH, AND ILLNESS
Universitetet i Bergen
Laura Cayrol-Bernardo, Institutt for fremmedspråk, Universitetet i
Bergen and Ninon Dubourg, Départment d’Histoire, Université de Liège
Wendy J. Turner, Department of History, Anthropology & Philosophy,
Augusta University, Georgia
Ageing Women in 15th-Century Italy: Gender, Health, and
(Self) Care Strategies (Language: English)
Laura Cayrol-Bernardo
The Hope of Eternal Life: Theological Considerations of Healing
and Care in Sedulius Scottus’ De rectoribus Christianis
(Language: English)
Noémi Farkas-Hussey, Department of Ancient Classics, University of
Galway
Old Wives / Young Brides, Crip Time / Queer Time (Language:
English)
Yoav Tirosh, Centre for Disability Studies, University of Iceland,
Reykjavík
Wednesday
Session:
Title:
1226
Clarendon Building: 1.01
THE NATURES OF THE BEAST: MEDIEVAL ANIMAL ENTANGLEMENTS, I
‘Homo Imperfectus’ Project, Nederlandse Organisatie voor
Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek (NWO) / Centre for Religion & Heritage,
Rijksuniversiteit Groningen
Sven Gins, Faculteit Godgeleerdheid en Godsdienstwetenschap,
Rijksuniversiteit Groningen
Sven Gins
Curious Camels and Wicked Wolves: The Role of Animals in the
Histories of Gregory of Tours (Language: English)
Heather Duncan, Department of History, University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign
From Corpus to Anima: The Bestiary’s Panthera as a Gendered
Christ Figure (Language: English)
Erin A. Sulla, Library - Arts & Humanities, Occidental College, Los
Angeles
The Wages of Sin for Man and Beast in Middle English Literature
(Language: English)
Mary Dzon, Department of English, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
289
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1229-a:
Paper 1229-b:
Paper 1229-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1230-a:
Paper 1230-b:
Paper 1230-c:
290
1229
Stage@leeds: Stage 3
ENTANGLEMENTS OF THE SENSES IN MEDIEVAL SACRED ART AND RELIGIOUS
EXPERIENCE, III: MATERIAL CULTURE - MANUSCRIPTS AND TEXTS
ERC Project ‘SenSArt: The Sensuous Appeal of the Holy - Sensory
Agency of Sacred Art & Somatised Spiritual Experiences in Medieval
Europe (12th-15th Centuries)’
Micol Long, Dipartimento dei Beni Culturali, Università degli Studi di
Padova and Zuleika Murat, Dipartimento dei Beni Culturali, Università
degli Studi di Padova
Lieke Andrea Smits, Ruusbroecgenootschap, Universiteit Antwerpen
Synesthesia in Monastic Religious Experience, 11th-12th
Centuries (Language: English)
Micol Long
‘Sweet song’, ‘great odour’, and ‘celestial light’: Rhetorical
Evocation of the Senses in Late Medieval Lenten Devotion
(Language: English)
Sommer L. Hallquist, Department of History of Art, University of
Cambridge
The Multisensorial Dimension of Private Devotion as Attested by
Flemish Books of Hours, 14th-15th Centuries (Language: English)
Vittorio Frighetto, Dipartimento dei Beni Culturali, Università degli Studi
di Padova
1230
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.06
EPIGRAPHIES OF PIOUS TRAVEL, I: PILGRIMS AND THE RELIGIOUS
EXPERIENCE
Rachael Banes, Abteilung Byzanzforschung, Österreichische Akademie
der Wissenschaften, Wien
Rachael Banes
The Holy Land in Early East Slavic Epigraphy (Language: English)
Alexei Gippius
Who Wrote the Greek Graffiti on the Walls of Alanian Churches?
(Language: English)
Andrey Vinogradov
Under Divine Protection: Supernatural Beings in Christian Greek
Graffiti from the Late Antique Mediterranean (Language: English)
Arkadiy Avdokhin, ‘Jenseits des Kanons’: Heterotopien religiöser
Autorität im spätantiken Christentum, Centre for Advanced Studies,
Universität Regensburg
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1231-a:
Paper 1231-b:
Paper 1231-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1232-a:
Paper 1232-b:
1232
Clarendon Building: 1.06
MANUSCRIPT MATERIALITIES, TEXTUAL CONNECTIONS, AND OTHER
ENTANGLEMENTS
Alessandro Gnasso, Institut for Nordiske Studier og Sprogvidenskab,
Københavns Universitet
Alessandro Gnasso
The Circulation of Historical Texts in 12th-Century England:
Oxford, All Souls College, MS 36 and the Origin of Historia post
Bedam (Language: English)
Stanislav Mereminskiy, Independent Scholar, Tallinn
Manuscript Source and Print Copy of the ‘Scanian Law’: What
Can Be Achieved by Studying the Materiality of Artefacts?
(Language: English)
Anne Ladefoged, Avdelningen för Bokhistoria, Lunds universitet
The Oldest Latin-Icelandic Glossary in Its Manuscript Context
(Language: English)
Simonetta Battista, Institut for Nordiske Studier og Sprogvidenskab,
Københavns Universitet
Wednesday
Paper 1232-c:
1231
Michael Sadler Building: LG.15
ENTANGLED MINDS?: MEDIEVAL NETWORKS OF IMAGINATIONS AND
ASSOCIATIONS
IMC Programming Committee
Michele Campopiano, Department of English & Related Literature,
University of York
Fun with a Purpose?: Some Medieval Ashkenazi Manuscripts
Suggest that the Rabbis Liked to Play (Language: English)
Bettina Burghardt, Hochschule für Jüdische Studien Heidelberg
Ramon Llull’s Combinatorial Entanglement of Images and
Intellections and the Poietic Requirement (Language: English)
Sergi Castella-Martinez, Centre d’Estudis en Estètica, Religió i Cultura
Contemporània, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona
Woven Networks of Metaphor: Intersections of Word-Weaving
in Irish, English, and Carolingian Communities (Language:
English)
Maren Clegg Hyer, Department of English & Philosophy, Snow College,
Utah
291
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1233-a:
Paper 1233-b:
Paper 1233-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1234-a:
Paper 1234-b:
Paper 1234-c:
292
1233
Clarendon Building: 1.03
THE ENTANGLED MAKING, USES, AND VISUALISATIONS OF TEXTILES IN THE
EARLY MEDIEVAL PERIOD, 450-1100, III
AHRC Project ‘Unwrapping the Galloway Hoard’ / National Museum of
Scotland / University of Glasgow
Tracey Davison, Centre for Medieval Studies, University of York and
Alexandra Makin, School of Humanities (Archaeology), University of
Glasgow
Alexandra Makin
Visuality and Sound Fields in Early Medieval Eastern Central
Europe: A Case Study of the Avars in the 6th to 8th Centuries
(Language: English)
Karina Grömer, Naturhistorisches Museum Wien and Beate Maria
Pomberger, Prähistorische Abteilung, Naturhistorisches Museum Wien /
Institut für Urgeschichte und Historische Archäologie, Universität Wien
Sounds Wrapped and Worn: Aspects of Avar Period Identity as
Shown by Pellet Bells and Dress (Language: English)
Kayleigh Saunderson, Institut für Urgeschichte und Historische
Archäologie, Universität Wien
On the Lombards’ Golden Thread: Experiments in Spinning,
Weaving, and Embroidery Techniques (Language: English)
Lorena Ariis, Independent Scholar, Linz
1234
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.09
NETWORKS OF PIOUS DONATIONS IN NORTHERN EUROPE, I: RELIGIOUS
COMMUNITIES
Embla Aae, Institutt for arkeologi, historie, kultur- og
religionsvitenskap, Universitetet i Bergen and Anna-Stina Hägglund,
History, Philosophy & Literary Studies Unit, Faculty of Social Sciences,
Tampere University
Helle Vogt, Center for Interdisciplinære Retlige Studier (CIS),
Københavns Universitet
Childless Benefactors Venerating St Birgitta: Adopted Women
Given to Nådendal Abbey in the 15th Century (Language: English)
Anna-Stina Hägglund
Benedikt Kolbeinsson and Lay-Monastic Networks in 14thCentury Iceland (Language: English)
Ryder C. Patzuk-Russell, Instytut Historii, Uniwersytet Śląski, Katowice
‘And for the friars preachers[…]’: Patterns and Peculiarities of
Dominican Donations in Medieval Denmark (Language: English)
Johnny Grandjean Gøgsig Jakobsen, Institut for Nordiske Studier og
Sprogvidenskab (NorS), Københavns Universitet
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1235-a:
Paper 1235-b:
Paper 1235-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1236-a:
Paper 1236-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1237-a:
Paper 1237-b:
Paper 1237-c:
1236
Michael Sadler Building: LG.19
TOLKIEN’S WORK AND ACADEMIC NETWORKS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF LEEDS
Centre for Fantasy & the Fantastic, School of Critical Studies, University
of Glasgow
Andrew Higgins, Centre for Fantasy & the Fantastic, School of Critical
Studies, University of Glasgow
Sara Brown, Department of Literature & Language, Signum University,
New Hampshire
J. R. R. Tolkien’s Intensive Work on Middle English Language
and Literature during His Six Years at Leeds (Language: English)
Andoni Cossio, Facultad de Letras, Universidad del País Vasco - Euskal
Herriko Unibertsitatea, Vitoria-Gasteiz
‘An industrious little devil’: Tolkien’s Development of the Elvish
Languages at Leeds, 1920-1925 (Language: English)
Andrew Higgins
Leeds and the Medieval Foundation of J. R. R. Tolkien’s ‘Father
Christmas’ Letters (Language: English)
Kristine Larsen, Department of Earth & Space Sciences, Central
Connecticut State University
Wednesday
Paper 1236-b:
1235
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.33
SPINNING AROUND CIRCLES OF POWER: ENTANGLEMENT AND NETWORK AT
FRENCH, GERMAN, AND ITALIAN MEDIEVAL COURTS, 10TH-15TH CENTURY, I
Olivia Mayer, Institut für Geschichte, Alpen-Adria-Universität Klagenfurt
Maria-Elena Kammerlander, Lehrstuhl für Mittelalterliche Geschichte,
Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg
Letters to the King, Court, and Other Magnates: Archbishop
John of Ravenna (905-914) and His Quest for Influence in the
Kingdom of Italy (Language: English)
Matthias Rozein, Département des Sciences historiques, Université de
Liège
The Ottonian Empire as a Bishop’s Scope of Action: Bishop Leo
of Vercelli and his Entanglements with the Ottonian Court, 9961014 (Language: English)
Maximilian Schwarzkopf, Institut für Geschichte, Martin-LutherUniversität Halle-Wittenberg
The Vacancies after the Roman Catastrophe in 1167 and the
Role of Frederick Barbarossa (Language: English)
Matthias Weber, Historisches Institut, Ruhr-Universität Bochum /
Regesta Imperii, Akademie der Wissenschaften und der Literatur Mainz
1237
Stage@leeds: Stage 2
BAD ENTANGLEMENTS: CRIME AND ABUSE IN THE EARLY MIDDLE AGES, I
Jan van Doren, Departement Geschiedenis en Kunstgeschiedenis,
Universiteit Utrecht
Jan van Doren
Preaching an Abuse into an Illegal Act in Early Medieval Gaul
(Language: English)
Merle Eisenberg, Department of History, Oklahoma State University
Driving out the Plagues of the Soul: Transgression and Penance
in Lérinian Thought (Language: English)
Teun van Dijk, Afdeling Kunst en Cultuur, Geschiedenis, Oudheid, Vrije
Universiteit Amsterdam
Entangled in Crime: Societal Offences in Minor Canonical
Collections (Language: English)
Sven Meeder, Afdeling Geschiedenis, Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen
293
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1238-a:
Paper 1238-b:
Paper 1238-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1239-a:
Paper 1239-b:
Paper 1239-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1240-a:
Paper 1240-b:
Paper 1240-c:
294
1238
Esther Simpson Building: 3.01
MERCIAN STUDIES, I: MERCIAN NETWORKS, 7TH-9TH CENTURIES
Leicester Medieval Research Centre
Joanna Story, Centre for Medieval Research, University of Leicester
Joanna Story
Queen Osthryth of Mercia in Secular and Ecclesiastical Networks
(Language: English)
Máirín MacCarron, School of English & Digital Humanities, University
College Cork
Torthelm of Leicester’s Letter to Boniface (Language: English)
Peter Darby, Department of History, University of Nottingham
A Wicked Queen and a Tyrannical King?: Memories of Eadburh
and Offa in Late 9th-Century Wessex (Language: English)
Alex Traves, Department of History, University of York
1239
Parkinson Building: Room B.09
BASILICA-MONASTERIUM: A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF THE FIRST HOLY
SITES OF WESTERN CHRISTIANITY, C. 400-C. 900, I
Archéologies et Sciences de l’Antiquité (ArScAn - UMR 7041), Centre
national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS) / Université Paris 8,
Vincennes-Saint-Denis / Département d’histoire, Université de Montréal
Gordon Blennemann, Département d’histoire, Université de Montréal
and Anne-Marie Helvétius, Département d’Histoire, Université Paris 8,
Vincennes-Saint-Denis
Francesco Veronese, Dipartimento di Scienze Storiche, Geografiche e
dell’Antichità, Università degli Studi di Padova
Saint-Denis of Paris as a Model for the Basilicae-monasteria of
the Frankish World (Language: English)
Anne-Marie Helvétius
The Martinian Communities of Tours (Language: English)
Magali Coumert, Département d’histoire, Université de BretagneOccidentale / Institut Universitaire de France, Paris
Festives Cultures and the Basilicae Sanctorum in Merovingian
Gaul, 5th-6th Centuries (Language: English)
Gordon Blennemann
1240
Clarendon Building: GR 01
LAW AND PROBLEM SOLVING, C. 1000-C. 1300, II: LAW AND THE
PROBLEM OF POLITICAL AUTHORITY
Philippa Byrne, Faculty of History, University of Oxford and Meghan
Woolley, Writing Lab, Purdue University, Indiana
Meghan Woolley
The Concept of Dismissing a Caliph in Islamic Political / Legal
Thought: The Approaches of al-Mawardi (d. 1058), al-Farra (d.
1066), and al-Juwayni (d. 1085) (Language: English)
Munevver Gulce, Department of Religious Studies, Temple University,
Philadelphia
Collective Punishment in Anglo-Norman England and Its
Precedents (Language: English)
Jake A. Stattel, Trinity College, University of Cambridge
‘Arnold didn’t write this’: The Technology of the Written Record,
1130-1314 (Language: English)
Leland Renato Grigoli, American Historical Association
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1241-a:
Paper 1241-b:
Paper 1241-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1242-a:
Paper 1242-b:
Paper 1242-c:
1241
Esther Simpson Building: 3.08
MEDIEVAL TOWNS AND CITIES, I: PLACES TO LIVE (AND DIE)
Institute for Medieval Research, University of Nottingham
Pam Powell, Department of History, University of Nottingham
Richard M. Goddard, Department of History, University of Nottingham
Murder in Memoranda: The Tragedy of Thomas Arden in
Faversham’s Wardmote Book (Language: English)
Esther Liberman Cuenca, Department of Criminal Justice, Political
Science & History, University of Houston-Victoria / Institute for
Advanced Study, Princeton
Sensory Experiences in the Medieval Urban Household
(Language: English)
Christopher King, School of Humanities, University of Nottingham
Newcomers as Neighbours: Interacting with Immigrants in a
Late Medieval Town (Language: English)
Susan Maddock, School of History, University of East Anglia
Wednesday
1242
Esther Simpson Building: 2.07
EXPRESSIVE BODIES: VISIBLE ILLNESS, VISIBLE HEALTH, I
‘Hermeneutics of the Visible Body: Conceptualisations & Practices in
Medieval Medicine in the Latin Tradition’
Montserrat Cabré i Pairet, Facultad de Medicina, Universidad de
Cantabria
Anna M. Peterson, Facultad de Medicina, Universidad de Cantabria
Attaining a Healthy Face Using Medical Handbooks in the Middle
Ages (Language: English)
Montserrat Cabré i Pairet
The Intelligibility of the Invisible: Exploring the Physicality of
Bodily Qualities in the Medieval Brain (Language: English)
Fernando Salmón Muñiz, Facultad de Medicina, Universidad de
Cantabria
Modesty and Malady: Showing and Hiding the Ailed Breast
(Language: English)
Alba Lara Granero, Department of Hispanic Studies, Brown University
295
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1243-a:
Paper 1243-b:
Paper 1243-c:
Paper 1243-d:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1244-a:
Paper 1244-b:
Paper 1244-c:
296
1243
Esther Simpson Building: 2.08
MEDIEVAL TIMELINES IN EDUCATION AND HISTORY
Institutt for lærarutdanning, Norges teknisk-naturvitenskapelige
universitet, Trondheim
Peter Lunga, Institutt for lærarutdanning, Norges teknisknaturvitenskapelige universitet, Trondheim
Karl Christian Alvestad, Institutt for kultur, religion og samfunnsfag,
Fakultet for humaniora, idretts- og utdanningsvitskap, Universitetet i
Sørøst-Norge, Notodden
Representations of Time and Allegorical History in the PreTridentine Liturgy of Scandinavia (Language: English)
Emil Mård Vaadal Eliasson, Institutt for lærarutdanning, Norges
teknisk-naturvitenskapelige universitet, Trondheim
Sacred and Corrupt Lineages in the Histories of Norwegian
Kings and Saints (Language: English)
Peter Lunga
The Reformatory Timeline: How Pre-Printing Press Reformers
Influenced the Lutheran Reformation (Language: English)
Martin Øystese, Institutt for lærarutdanning, Norges teknisknaturvitenskapelige universitet, Trondheim
Visualising the Distance and Dynamics of the Middle Ages in
History Education (Language: English)
Martin Veier-Olsen, Institutt for lærarutdanning, Norges teknisknaturvitenskapelige universitet, Trondheim
1244
Parkinson Building: Room B.08
SOUND CULTURES IN MEDIEVAL SCANDINAVIA: INTERDISCIPLINARY
PERSPECTIVES, III
Stefka G. Eriksen, Norsk institutt for kulturminneforskning, Oslo
Miriam Tveit, Historie, kultur og media, Nord universitet, Bodø
What Does the Dog Say?: Listening to Animals in the Sagas of
Icelanders (Language: English)
Harriet Jean Evans Tang, Department of Archaeology, Durham
University
The Speaking Dead: Sound and Silence in Encounters with the
Dead in Medieval Icelandic Sagas (Language: English)
Kirsi Kanerva, School of History, Culture & Arts Studies, University of
Turku
The Sound of Silence in Old Norse Literature (Language: English)
Stefka G. Eriksen
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1245-a:
Paper 1245-b:
Paper 1245-c:
Paper 1245-d:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1246-a:
Paper 1246-c:
1246
Newlyn Building: LG.01
DEBATES IN MEDIEVAL FRENCH LITERATURE, I: DISCOURSE, COMPILATION,
CIRCULATION
Johannes Junge Ruhland, Department of French & Italian, Stanford
University and S. C. Kaplan, Department of French & Italian, University
of California, Santa Barbara
Johannes Junge Ruhland
Fragmented Debates: Reconciling the Incomplete and the
Fragmentary in 15th-Century French Literary Culture (Language:
English)
Emma Cayley, School of Languages, Cultures & Societies - French,
University of Leeds
Shades of the Self: Inner Debate in Jean Renart’s Lai de l’Ombre
(Language: English)
Tamara Bentley Caudill, Department of Languages, Literatures &
Culture, Jacksonville University, Florida
Going Round in Circles: Circulation of Texts as Debate in the
Mid-15th Century (Language: English)
S. C. Kaplan
Wednesday
Paper 1246-b:
1245
Esther Simpson Building: 1.08
SEAMS OF TIME: MEDIEVAL OBJECT NARRATIVES AND THEIR
TEMPORALITIES
DFG Netzwerk ‘Zeitfugen’
Anja S. Rathmann-Lutz, Seminar für mittelalterliche Geschichte,
Eberhard Karls Universität Tübingen
Anja S. Rathmann-Lutz
A Break in Time: Competing Concepts of History in the Crypt
Frescoes at Anagni (Language: English)
Armin Bergmeier, Fakultät für Geschichte, Kunst- und
Orientwissenschaften, Universität Leipzig
Drinking Horn Reliquaries at the Interface (Language: English)
Adeline Schwabauer, Graduiertenkolleg 2212 ‘Dynamiken der
Konventionalität (400-1550), Universität zu Köln
Chivalrous Appearance and Crude Jokes: On Dealing with the
Glorious Past at the End of the Middle Ages (Language: English)
Cornelia Logemann, Institut für Kunstgeschichte, Karl-FranzensUniversität Graz
Stately Ruins: Forms, Motifs, and Potential Interpretations of
Ancient Spolia in Medieval Cities (Language: English)
Henrike Haug, Kunsthistorisches Institut, Universität zu Köln
297
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1247-a:
Paper 1247-b:
Paper 1247-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1248-a:
Paper 1248-b:
Paper 1248-c:
Paper 1248-d:
1247
Parkinson Building: Room B.11
UNTANGLING THE WORLD OF DOCUMENTARY CONSERVATION PRACTICES IN
PORTUGUESE MONASTIC ARCHIVES: FROM THE MIDDLE AGES TO THE 19TH
CENTURY
Centro de Investigação Transdisciplinar ‘Cultura, Espaço e Memória’
(CITCEM), Universidade do Porto / Fundação para a Ciência e a
Tecnologia (FCT), Lisboa
Maria João Oliveira e Silva, Faculdade de Letras, Universidade do Porto
Maria João Oliveira e Silva
Reconstructing the Archives of the Monastery of Grijó from libri
copiarum of the Medieval Period (Language: English)
Cristina Cunha, Departamento de História e de Estudos Políticos e
Internacionais / Centro de Investigação Transdisciplinar ‘Cultura,
Espaço e Memória’ (CITCEM), Universidade do Porto and Ana Catarina
Soares, Faculdade de Letras, Universidade do Porto
Reconstructing the Archives of the Monastery of Grijó from Libri
copiarum from the 18th Century (Language: English)
Ana Catarina Pinto, Faculdade de Letras, Universidade do Porto
Reconstructing the Archives of the Monastery of Rendufe from
16th- to 19th-Century Inventories and Charters (Language:
English)
Joana Lencart, Faculdade de Letras, Universidade do Porto and Maria
João Oliveira e Silva
1248
Esther Simpson Building: 2.11
NETWORKS AND ENTANGLEMENTS OF THE IRISH SEA CULTURE-PROVINCE
Lindy Brady, Department of History, Geography & Social Sciences,
Edge Hill University
Charles Insley, Centre for Medieval & Early Modern Studies /
Department of History, School of Arts, Languages & Cultures,
University of Manchester
King Aldfrith’s Learned Network (Language: English)
Colin A. Ireland, College of Global Studies, Arcadia University,
Pennsylvania / School of English, Drama & Film, University College
Dublin
A Network of Saints in the Northern Irish Sea Zone (Language:
English)
Elva Johnston, School of History, University College Dublin
Multilingualism in the Irish Sea Zone (Language: English)
Lindy Brady
Legal Education and Knowledge Networks: The Compilation of
Late Medieval Irish ‘Digests’ (Language: English)
Fangzhe Qiu, School of Irish, Celtic Studies & Folklore, University
College Dublin
TEA BREAK: 15.45-16.30
Tea and Coffee will be available on a self-serve basis at the following locations:
Esther Simpson Building: Foyer
Maurice Keyworth Building: Foyer
Parkinson Building: Bookfair
University Square: IMC Social Space
298
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1301-a:
Paper 1301-b:
Paper 1301-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1302-a:
Paper 1302-b:
Paper 1302-c:
1302
Michael Sadler Building: LG.16
CONTEXTUALISING REGIONAL LIVES, HISTORIES, TEXTS, AND MEMORY
IMC Programming Committee
Iain Dyson, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
John of Beverley, A Man of Deira (Language: English)
Paulette Barton, Department of Modern Languages & Classics /
Department of History, University of Maine
Royal Genealogies in the ‘Northern Recension’ of the AngloSaxon Chronicle (Language: English)
Elisabetta Magnanti, Institut für Geschichte, Universität Wien
Entangled Accounts: Land Deeds, Hereward’s Deeds, and the
Reckonings of Heroism in the Register of Robert of Swaffham
(Language: English)
Joseph Grossi, Department of English, University of Victoria, British
Columbia
There and Back Again: Master Robert Edington as an Agent of
Intellectual Exchange between Durham Cathedral Priory and the
Schools of Paris, c. 1167-c. 1190 (Language: English)
Adam Fletcher, Institute of Medieval & Early Modern Studies, Durham
University
Wednesday
Paper 1302-d:
1301
Newlyn Building: 1.07
THE WORK OF HANS MEMLING THROUGH THE LENS OF ART HISTORY,
MEDICINE, AND LAW: IN SEARCH OF A COMMON LANGUAGE
Memling Research Center, Uniwersytet Gdański
Beata Możejko, Instytut Historii, Uniwersytet Gdański
Beata Możejko
Hans Memling and Melancholy for Sale (Language: English)
Andrzej Woziński, Instytut Historii Sztuki, Uniwersytet Gdański
Mamma carcinomatosa: Allegory of Sin and Virtue - A
Contribution To the Analysis of the Paintings of Memling’s and
Moller’s Last Judgment in the Gdańsk Collections (Language:
English)
Jerzy Jankau, Klinika Chirurgii Plastycznej, Wydział Lekarski, Gdański
Uniwersytet Medyczny
The Controversy Concerning Hans Memling’s Last Judgment as a
Hard Case: An Initial Consideration (Language: English)
Joanna Kamień, Wydział Prawa iAdministracji, Uniwersytet Gdański and
Kamil Zeidler, Wydział Prawa iAdministracji, Uniwersytet Gdański
299
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1303-a:
Paper 1303-b:
Paper 1303-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1304-a:
Paper 1304-b:
Paper 1304-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1305-a:
Paper 1305-b:
Paper 1305-c:
300
1303
Esther Simpson Building: 2.08
ADMINISTRATIVE ACCOUNTABILITY IN LATE MEDIEVAL EUROPE
Institutul de Cercetare al Universității din București (ICUB)
Ionuț Epurescu-Pascovici, Secția de Științe umaniste, Institutul de
Cercetare, Universitatea din Bucureşti
Marco Mostert, Utrecht Centre for Medieval Studies, Universiteit Utrecht
Defining the Castellan’s Officium in 14th-Century Savoy
(Language: English)
Ionuț Epurescu-Pascovici
Ruling from Afar: Genoese and Venetian Instructions to Their
Black Sea Agents, 14th-15th Centuries (Language: English)
Alessandro Flavio Dumitrașcu, Secția de Științe umaniste, Institutul de
Cercetare, Universitatea din București / Institutul de Studii Sud-Est
Europene al Academiei Române, Bucharest
The Accountability of Venetian Territorial Officials in Dalmatia,
15th to 16th Centuries (Language: English)
Dana-Silvia Caciur, Secția de Științe umaniste, Institutul de Cercetare,
Universitatea din Bucureşti
1304
Clarendon Building: 2.08
WARFARE AND THE CHURCH, C. 1000-1300, II: INTERACTIONS
Alastair Forbes, Department of History, Durham University and Grant
Jones, Department of History, Durham University
Tim Martin, Department of History, University of Miami, Florida
Volodymyr Monomakh and the Kipchaks: Holy War or Political
Confrontation? (Language: English)
Andrii Kepsha, Department of Archaeology, Ethnology & Cultural
Studies, Uzhhorod National University
Recipient of a 2023 Miriam Czock Fund Bursary
Power, Patronage, and the Clerical Ideal in Early 12th-Century
England: A Case Study of Robert of Gloucester and William of
Malmesbury (Language: English)
Katherine Bader, Independent Scholar, Eugene, Oregon
Equipping the Knight for Heaven: Spiritual Arming in Robert
Grosseteste’s Letter to Richard Marshal (Language: English)
Grant Jones
1305
Esther Simpson Building: LG08
CANON LAW, V: CUSTOM, PRACTICE, AND SOURCES IN THE LONG 12TH
CENTURY
Iuris Canonici Medii Aevi Consociatio (ICMAC)
Greta Austin, Department of Religious Studies, University of Puget
Sound, Washington
Danica Summerlin, Department of History, University of Sheffield
Legal Custom in the Letters of Wibald of Stablo: Authority and
Tradition (Language: English)
Tatiana Petrukhina, Institutt for arkeologi, konservering og historie,
Universitetet i Oslo
Law and the Sacrament of Marriage: The Theologians Hugh of St
Victor and Peter Lombard (Language: English)
Melodie H. Eichbauer, College of Arts & Sciences, Florida Gulf Coast
University
Canon Law Comes to the Kingdom of Denmark (Language:
English)
Frederik Pedersen, School of Divinity, History, Philosophy & Art History,
University of Aberdeen
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1306-a:
Paper 1306-b:
Paper 1306-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1307-a:
Paper 1307-c:
1307
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.31
WOMEN, POWER, AND PATRONAGE IN THE LATE MEDIEVAL MEDITERRANEAN
WORLD
IMC Programming Committee
Doaa Omran, Department of English Language & Literature, University
of New Mexico, Albuquerque
Donation Opportunities for Women and Girls in Churches of the
Late Byzantine and Early Post-Byzantine Period in the Wider
Region of Macedonia (Language: English)
Katerina Kiltzanidou, Department of History & Ethnology, Democritus
University of Thrace, Komotini
The Beseeched Burial: Entanglements in the Historical Events
Associated with the Shrine of al-Sayyida Nafīsa, Cairo (Language:
English)
Murtaza Shakir, Department of History, Aljamea-tus-Saifiyah, Mumbai
Implementing Imperial Matronage in Mughal Architecture:
Gendered Negotiations of Frameworks and Networks Governing
Construction (Language: English)
Parshati Dutta, Department of History of Art, University of York
Wednesday
Paper 1307-b:
1306
Newlyn Building: GR.02
NIHIL NOVI EX ORIENTE?: CHINA IN WESTERN EYES IN THE MIDDLE AGES
AND THE EARLY MODERN PERIOD
Institute for the History of Ancient Civilizations, Northeast Normal
University, Changchun
Bernhard Hollick, Institutt for arkeologi, konservering og historie,
Universitetet i Oslo
Cornelia Linde, Lehrstuhl für Allgemeine Geschichte des Mittelalters,
Universität Greifswald
The Silk Road through the Eyes of the Nomads (Language:
English)
Elizabeth Webster, Institute for the History of Ancient Civilizations,
Northeast Normal University, Changchun
Reading about China: Franciscan Travelogues and their
Audience (Language: English)
Bernhard Hollick
‘Western’ Antiquity in G. P. Maffei’s Historiae Indicae, Book VI:
China (Language: English)
Sven Günther, Institute for the History of Ancient Civilizations,
Northeast Normal University, Changchun
301
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1308-a:
Paper 1308-b:
Paper 1308-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1309-a:
Paper 1309-b:
Paper 1309-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1310-a:
Paper 1310-a:
302
1308
Michael Sadler Building: Rupert Beckett Theatre
PROCESSES OF INCLUSION AND EXCLUSION IN LATE ANTIQUITY, II:
CROSSING BOUNDARIES
Harry Mawdsley, Department of History, Durham University and
Michael Wuk, School of Humanities & Heritage, University of Lincoln
Harry Mawdsley
Beyond the Narrative: Gendered and Sexual Violence in Late
Antiquity (Language: English)
Victoria Leonard, Centre for Arts, Memory & Communities, Coventry
University / Institute of Classical Studies, Royal Holloway, University of
London
Sit Down, Be Humble: Hazing Rituals in Late Antique
Communities (Language: English)
Michael Wuk
Creating Community and Overcoming Exclusion: The Two
Editions of Optatus of Milevis during the Donatist Schism
(Language: English)
Matthieu Pignot, Département d’histoire, Université de Namur
1309
Newlyn Building: LG.02
LAW AFTER ROME: NETWORKS AND CONNECTIONS IN THE LEGES
BARBARORUM, I - NETWORKS IN LOMBARD LAW
Italy in Late Antiquity & the Early Middle Ages (ILAEMA) Project
Christopher Heath, School of Humanities & Heritage, University of
Lincoln
Thomas Brown, School of History, Classics & Archaeology, University of
Edinburgh
Antiqui homines: Networks of Authentication in Lombard Law
(Language: English)
Christopher Heath
Intratextual References in the Edictus Rothari: Crimes of the
servus regis (Language: English)
Thom Gobbitt, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
The Case tributarie in Lombard Laws: Roman Heritage or
Barbaric Innovation? (Language: English)
Andrea Mariani, Centro de Investigação Transdisciplinar ‘Cultura,
Espaço e Memória’ (CITCEM), Universidade do Porto
1310
Parkinson Building: Room 1.08
NEW PERSPECTIVES ON NETWORKS OF WORK AND SERVICE IN LATE
MEDIEVAL CITIES
Eva Cersovsky, Abteilung für Mittelalterliche Geschichte, Universität zu
Köln
Andreas Lehnertz, Universität Trier
Networks of Work and Chronicling in Late Medieval Metz:
Personal Relationships behind the Chronicles of Jean Aubrion,
Jacomin Husson, and Philippe de Vigneulles (Language: English)
Hanna Schäfer, Forschungszentrum Europa, Universität Trier
Artisans and Charitable Institutions in Later Medieval
Strasbourg, 1400-1600 (Language: English)
Eva Cersovsky
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1311-a:
Paper 1311-b:
Paper 1311-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1312-a:
Paper 1312-c:
1312
Esther Simpson Building: 1.01
ENGLAND AND SCOTLAND AT PEACE AND WAR, IV
Andy King, Department of History, University of Southampton
Katherine J. Lewis, Department of Communication & Humanities,
University of Huddersfield
Supporting Reproduction as Anglo-Scottish Royal Diplomacy
(Language: English)
Emma Trivett, Independent Scholar, Dundee
Religion and Justice in England and Scotland from the Council of
Florence to Mary Queen of Scots (Language: English)
Andrea Hugill, Independent Scholar, Ottawa
A Different Hugh: A Medieval Blood-Libel Transformed into Class
Critique in Ballad Form (Language: English)
Orit Klein Vartsky, School of Cultural Studies, Faculty of Humanities,
Tel Aviv University
Wednesday
Paper 1312-b:
1311
Newlyn Building: 1.01
ADRIARCHCULT, IV: NETWORKS OF QUATTROCENTO ARCHITECTURAL
PRODUCTION IN THE EASTERN ADRIATIC - COMMISSIONING, EXCHANGING,
SUPPLYING
ERC Project ‘AdriArchCult (Architectural Culture of the Early Modern
Eastern Adriatic - GA n. 865863)’
Jasenka Gudelj, Dipartimento di Filosofia e Beni Culturali, Università Ca’
Foscari, Venezia
Ana Marinković, Faculty of Humanities & Social Sciences, University of
Zagreb
Rock, Chisel, Paper: Networks of Stone Supply, Ready-Made
Elements, and Paper Templates in the 15th-Century Adriatic
Basin (Language: English)
Cristiano Guarneri, Dipartimento di Filosofia e Beni Culturali, Università
Ca’ Foscari, Venezia
Legal Documents as a Source for the Construction History of
Late Medieval Dalmatia (Language: English)
Ines Ivić, Dipartimento di Filosofia e Beni Culturali, Università Ca’
Foscari, Venezia
Building All’antica in Venetian Istria: Patron-Builder Networks
in and around Savičenta (Language: English)
Petar Strunje, Dipartimento di Filosofia e Beni Culturali, Università Ca’
Foscari, Venezia
303
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1313-a:
Paper 1313-b:
Paper 1313-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1314-a:
Paper 1314-b:
Paper 1314-c:
304
1313
Newlyn Building: GR.01
MEDIEVAL ROMAN EMPIRES EAST AND WEST, IV: ENTANGLEMENTS AND
EXCHANGES
Institute of Medieval & Early Modern Studies, Durham University
Len Scales, Department of History, Durham University
Len Scales
The Ecumenical Council that Never Was: 12th-Century Theology
and Politics between New Roman Empires (Language: English)
Maximilian Lau, Faculty of History, University of Oxford
Elite Textile Attributes of Courtly Culture in Merovingian and
Early Byzantine Archaeological Contexts: Influences and
Transfers in Elite Female Clothing between East and West
(Language: English)
Olga Magoula-Bamford, Department of Archaeology, University of York
Identifying Albert of Aachen: Crusade Historian and Crusader?
(Language: English)
Vedran Sulovsky, Faculty of History / Gonville & Caius College,
University of Cambridge
1314
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.03
NETWORKS AND ENTANGLEMENTS AT THE TIME OF MAXIMILIAN I OF
HABSBURG
Jonathan Dumont, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
Jonathan Dumont
Writing Maximilian: Prince, Pen, and Penmanship - Uses of
Writing at Court and in the Chancery (Language: English)
Andreas Zajic, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
Armouring Maximilian: Chivalry, Tournament, and the Culture of
the Gift at the Court of Maximilian (Language: English)
Rahul Kulha, Kunsthistorisches Museum Wien
Nicolaus Pol, the Calendar Reform of Leo X, and Parallel
Networks of Scientific Patronage in Renaissance Vienna
(Language: English)
Grantley McDonald, Institut für Musikwissenschaft, Universität Wien
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1315-a:
Paper 1315-b:
Paper 1315-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1316-b:
Paper 1316-c:
1316
Maurice Keyworth Building: G.02
DIGITAL HISTORY AND NEW DIRECTIONS IN CRUSADE STUDIES, II: TOOLS
AND POSSIBILITIES
Digital History & New Directions in Crusade Studies Network / Northern
Network for the Study of the Crusades / Centre for the Study of
Religion & Conflict
Jason T. Roche, Department of History, Politics & Philosophy,
Manchester Metropolitan University
Kathryn Hurlock, Department of History, Politics & Philosophy,
Manchester Metropolitan University
Digital Tools for Crusader Studies (Language: English)
Natasha Ruth Hodgson, School of Arts & Humanities, Nottingham Trent
University
Battles in the Crusading Soundscape (Language: English)
Kate Arnold, School of Arts & Humanities, Nottingham Trent University
MWGrid and the First Crusade: Agent-Based Simulations of the
March between Nikaia and the So-Called Battle of Dorylaion,
1097 (Language: English)
Jason T. Roche
Wednesday
Paper 1316-a:
1315
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.04
THE ENTANGLED CAUCASUS, IV: ENTANGLED ARCHITECTURE - GEORGIAN
AND ARMENIAN RELIGIOUS BUILDING
Medieval Caucasus Network
James Baillie, Institut für Geschichte, Universität Wien / Institut für
Iranistik, Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien and
Nicholas J. B. Evans, Institute for Medieval Studies / School of History,
University of Leeds
Bella Radenovic, Courtauld Institute of Art, University of London
Creating a New Artistic Vocabulary of Sculptural Decoration:
The Case of the Monasteries of Yeghipatrush and Astvatsynkal
in the 12th-13th Centuries (Language: English)
Arpine Asryan, Matenadaran - Research Institute of Ancient
Manuscripts, Yerevan
Liturgy and Image: About the Painted Programmes in the
Churches of Svaneti in the 11th-13th Centuries (Language: English)
Manuela Studer-Karlen, Institut für Kunstgeschichte, Universität Bern
Funerary Architecture between Materiality and Sensoriality
(Language: English)
Anahit Galstyan, Department of History of Art & Architecture, University
of California, Santa Barbara
305
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1317-a:
Paper 1317-b:
Paper 1317-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1318-a:
Paper 1318-b:
Paper 1318-c:
306
1317
Parkinson Building: Room B.22
ECONOMIC NETWORKS AND SPACES IN THE WESTERN MEDITERRANEAN: THE
FORMATION OF AN INTERNATIONAL EUROPEAN COMMERCIAL MILIEU ON THE
VERGE OF THE EARLY MODERN PERIOD
Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación, España (PID2019-104157GB-I00) /
Fundación ‘La Caixa’ (ID 2017ACUP0195) / Agency for Management of
University & Research Grants, Generalitat de Catalunya / GRAMP-Med /
IAUB
María Dolores López Pérez, Departamente de Historia y Arqueología,
Facultad de Geografía e Historia, Universitat de Barcelona
Sari Nassar, Departament d’Història i Arqueologia, Universitat de
Barcelona
The Torralba Company and the Formation of a Transnational
Business Network (Language: English)
María Dolores López Pérez and Sari Nassar
The Torralba Company and the Trade Network of Joan Esparter
in Pisa and Florence (Language: English)
Gerard Marí Brull, Departament d’Història i Arqueologia, Universitat de
Barcelona
Building a Network in Western Europe: The Salviati / Neroni
Partnership (Language: English)
Matthieu Scherman, Analyse comparée des pouvoirs (ACP - EA 3350),
Université Gustave Eiffel
1318
Esther Simpson Building: 3.02
MARGINAL COMMUNITIES IN GLOBALISED MEDITERRANEAN NETWORKS, IV:
LABOURING FROM THE MARGINS
Anna C. Kelley, St Andrews Institute of Mediaeval Studies, University of
St Andrews
Eduardo Manzano Moreno, Instituto de Historia, Consejo Superior de
Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC), Madrid
From the Plough to the Spatula (and back Again): The Agency of
Rural Artisans (Language: English)
Flavia Vanni, British School at Athens
Corvée, Conscription, and Communication in the Early
8th-Century Caliphate (Language: English)
Arietta S. Papaconstantinou, Department of Classics, University of
Reading
From Desert to City: Rural Labour, Monastic Production, and
Networks of Consumption in Late Antiquity (Language: English)
Anna C. Kelley
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1319-a:
Paper 1319-b:
Paper 1319-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1320-a:
Paper 1320-b:
1320
Newlyn Building: 1.02
NETWORKS OF SANCTITY, II: SAINTS IN DEVOTIONAL AND SOCIAL
NETWORKS
Edmund van der Molen, Department of History, University of
Nottingham
Andrew Judson, Department of History, University of Nottingham
The Model Saint: Thomas Becket’s Liturgical Descendants
(Language: English)
Katherine Emery, Independent Scholar, Leigh-on-Sea
Networks of Nobles and Saints: The Case of Dauphine of
Puimichel (Language: English)
Antonia Anstatt, Faculty of History, University of Oxford
Networks of Devotion: The Socioreligious World of a Living Saint
(Language: English)
Edmund van der Molen
Wednesday
Paper 1320-c:
1319
Esther Simpson Building: 2.12
CHARTERS AND DEEDS IN THEIR GRAPHICAL NETWORKS: SOCIAL,
INSTITUTIONAL, AND GEOGRAPHICAL SPACES, II
ANR-FWF Project BeCoRe, ANR-19-CE27-0021 / FWF I 4502
Internationale Projekte
Cristina Andenna, Historisches Institut, Universität des Saarlandes
Dominique Stutzmann, Institut de Recherche et d’Histoire des Textes
(IRHT), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Paris
Queenly Charters and the Spaces of Authority in the Crown of
Aragon (Language: English)
Sebastian Roebert, Historisches Seminar, Universität Leipzig /
Sächsische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Leipzig
Networks of Writing and Spaces of Authority in the Charters of
the Last Duchesses of the House Babenberg in Austria and
Styria (Language: English)
Maximilian Bacher, Historisches Institut, Universität des Saarlandes
Searching for Graphical Networks of Charters in the Late Middle
Ages: Regions, Institutions, and Archival Collections (Language:
English)
Sébastien Barret, Institut de Recherche et d’Histoire des Textes (IRHT UPR 841), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Paris
307
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
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Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1321-a:
Paper 1321-b:
Paper 1321-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1322-a:
Paper 1322-b:
Paper 1322-c:
308
1321
Stage@leeds: Stage 1
NETWORKS OF WOMEN AND OBJECTS IN THE EARLY MIDDLE AGES
Laboratoire de Médiévistique Occidentale de Paris (LaMOP - UMR 8589),
Université Paris 1 - Panthéon-Sorbonne / Laboratório de Estudos
Medievais, Universidade de São Paulo
Justine Audebrand, Laboratoire de Médiévistique Occidentale de Paris
(LaMOP - UMR 8589), Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne and Julie
Morgane Renou, Laboratório de Estudos Medievais, Universidade de
São Paulo
Justine Audebrand
Women, Books, and Networks of Exchange in Early Medieval
Europe (Language: English)
Jessica Hodgkinson, School of History, Politics & International
Relations, University of Leicester / School of English, University of St
Andrews
Reverentissima et devotissima regina: Queen Ansa and the
translatio of the Relics of St Julia (Language: English)
Maria Elena Aureli, Dipartimento di Civiltà e Forme del Sapere,
Università di Pisa
The Objects of Adornment Buried with Women in the Early
Middle Ages: A Key to Consider Family Networks, Based on
Cases in Gaul and Aquitaine (Language: English)
Isabelle Cartron, Institut de Recherche Antiquité et Moyen Âge
(Ausonius - UMR 5607), Université Bordeaux Montaigne / Centre
National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Paris and Dominique
Castex, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Paris / De
la Préhistoire à l’Actuel: Culture, Environnement et Anthropologie
(PACEA - UMR 5199), Université de Bordeaux
1322
Parkinson Building: Room B.10
‘WHAT NEWS?’: SENDING AND RECEIVING NEWS IN LATER MEDIEVAL
EUROPE
Traveler’s Lab, Wesleyan University, Connecticut / Centre for Medieval
Studies, University of Exeter
Helen Birkett, Department of Archaeology & History, University of
Exeter
Chris Given-Wilson, St Andrews Institute of Mediaeval Studies,
University of St Andrews
Managing the News: Bishops and Their People, 1200-1520
(Language: English)
David Gary Shaw, Department of History, Wesleyan University,
Connecticut
‘Principally because the rumors still persist’: Information
Networks in the Pogroms of 1391 (Language: English)
Adam Franklin-Lyons, Marlboro Institute for Liberal Arts &
Interdisciplinary Studies, Emerson College, Boston
News as a Social Event: Experiencing the Present (Language:
English)
Helen Birkett
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1324-a:
Paper 1324-b:
Paper 1324-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1325-a:
Paper 1325-c:
1325
Newlyn Building: GR.07
SILENCE AND SILENCING, IV: SILENCED WOMEN AND FEMINIST LISTENING
Brittany Orton, Department of History, University of York and Basil
Arnould Price, Centre for Medieval Studies, University of York
Sarah McKeagney, Department of History, University of York
Silent Tongues, Speaking Bodies: Movement and Mediality in the
Philomena Tale (Language: English)
Sydney Owada, Department of English Language & Literature,
University of Michigan
Freeing the Fairy Queen: Subversive Readings of Romance’s
Silent Intertext (Language: English)
Jane Bonsall, School of Modern Languages, University of St Andrews
Mind the Gap!: Reading Conspicuous Silences in Feminist
Retellings of Medieval Sources (Language: English)
Sophia Philomena Wolf, Englisches Seminar, Albert-Ludwigs-Universität
Freiburg
Wednesday
Paper 1325-b:
1324
Michael Sadler Building: LG.10
LOCAL SOCIETIES AND MICROPOLITICS IN THE EARLY MIDDLE AGES:
ACTORS, CONFLICTS, AND WRITING, IV
Proyecto ESMICRO ‘Scenarios of Micropolitics’ / Project
‘PeopleandWriting’, Universidad de Salamanca
Iñaki Martín Viso, Departamento de Historia Medieval, Moderna y
Contemporánea, Universidad de Salamanca
Iñaki Martín Viso
‘Teridorio Portucalensis discurente ribulos inter Aue et Leça’:
Document Production and Local Societies in Northern Portugal,
10th-11th Centuries (Language: English)
Francisco José Álvarez López, Departamento de Historia Medieval,
Moderna y Contemporánea, Universidad de Salamanca
Conflicts over Property and Control of Local Churches in Early
Medieval Galicia, 9th-12th Centuries: Actors, Arguments, and
Strategies (Language: English)
Daniel Justo Sánchez, Departamento de Historia Medieval, Moderna y
Contemporánea, Universidad de Salamanca
Power Creep: The Spatial Growth of Micropolitics in the Liebana
Valley, 9th-11th Centuries (Language: English)
Leonor Baeza Gomariz, Departamento de Historia Medieval, Moderna y
Contemporánea, Universidad de Salamanca
309
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1326-a:
Paper 1326-b:
Paper 1326-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1327-a:
Paper 1327-b:
Paper 1327-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1328-a:
Paper 1328-b:
Paper 1328-c:
310
1326
Clarendon Building: 1.01
THE NATURES OF THE BEAST: MEDIEVAL ANIMAL ENTANGLEMENTS, II
‘Homo Imperfectus’ Project, Nederlandse Organisatie voor
Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek (NWO) / Centre for Religion & Heritage,
Rijksuniversiteit Groningen
Sven Gins, Faculteit Godgeleerdheid en Godsdienstwetenschap,
Rijksuniversiteit Groningen
Dolly Jørgensen, Institutt for kultur- og språkvitenskap, Universitetet i
Stavanger
Allegorical Ant-Hills: The Entanglement of Gold-Digging Ants in
Medieval Latin Bestiaries (Language: English)
Chloe Anne Peters, Independent Scholar, Wien
Zoemorphism in Gerald of Wales’ Topographica Hibernica
(Language: English)
Alan Montroso, Department of English, University of Maryland
The Lion, the Weasel, and the Doodlebug: Entangled Species
and Theriopoiesis in Middle French Encyclopaedias (Language:
English)
Sven Gins
1327
Clarendon Building: 1.02
MEDIEVAL NETWORKS OF EMOTIONS AND PASSIONS, II
IMC Programming Committee
Babette Hellemans, Afdeling Geschiedenis, Rijksuniversiteit Groningen
Networking for Gain: Emotional and Economical Disentangling
in Medieval Letters by Women (Language: English)
Kenna L. Olsen, Department of English, Mount Royal University, Alberta
Poe(tree) in the Pear Tree: Sexual Passions, Disability, and the
Semiotic in The Merchant’s Tale (Language: English)
Caitlyn Salinas, Department of English, Texas A&M University, College
Station
The Concept of Fear in the Emotional Community of Old Russian
Scribes (Language: English)
Svetlana Borisova
1328
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.32
AGEING AND CARE IN THE MIDDLE AGES, II: CARING FOR OLDER ADULTS NETWORKS, PLACES, AND PEOPLE
Universitetet i Bergen
Laura Cayrol-Bernardo, Institutt for fremmedspråk, Universitetet i
Bergen and Ninon Dubourg, Départment d’Histoire, Université de Liège
Mireia Comas Via, Departament d’Història i Arqueologia, Universitat de
Barcelona
Ageing in Liège: Networks of Institutional Care on a City Scale
(Language: English)
Ninon Dubourg
‘Mayntayn thi housolde’: Bodily Upkeep and Material
Conservation in John Lydgate’s The Dietary (Language: English)
Amy Danielle Juarez, Department of English Literature, University of
California, Riverside
Caregivers, Charity, or Cash?: Making Ends Meet during One’s
Final Years (Language: English)
Jaco Zuijderduijn, Ekonomihögskolan, Lunds universitet
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1329-a:
Paper 1329-b:
Paper 1329-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1330-a:
Paper 1330-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1331-a:
Paper 1331-b:
Paper 1331-c:
1330
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.06
EPIGRAPHIES OF PIOUS TRAVEL, II: SPACE AND EPIGRAPHY
Rachael Banes, Abteilung Byzanzforschung, Österreichische Akademie
der Wissenschaften, Wien
Arkadiy Avdokhin, ‘Jenseits des Kanons’: Heterotopien religiöser
Autorität im spätantiken Christentum, Centre for Advanced Studies,
Universität Regensburg
Using Graffiti (or the Absence of Them) as Proxy Data for
Sacred Space: The Memnonium at Abydos (Again) (Language:
English)
Ian Rutherford, Department of Classics, University of Reading
The Epigraphic Melting Pot: Pilgrims and Epigraphic Traditions
in Greek Graffiti from the Sinai (Language: English)
Rachael Banes
Scanner’s Progress: 3D Modelling Russian and Byzantine
Pilgrimage Epigraphy (Language: English)
Sofiya Shevchuk and Yuri Svoiski
Wednesday
Paper 1330-b:
1329
Stage@leeds: Stage 3
ENTANGLEMENTS OF THE SENSES IN MEDIEVAL SACRED ART AND RELIGIOUS
EXPERIENCE, IV: MATERIAL CULTURE - OBJECTS
ERC Project ‘SenSArt: The Sensuous Appeal of the Holy - Sensory
Agency of Sacred Art & Somatised Spiritual Experiences in Medieval
Europe (12th-15th Centuries)’
Micol Long, Dipartimento dei Beni Culturali, Università degli Studi di
Padova and Zuleika Murat, Dipartimento dei Beni Culturali, Università
degli Studi di Padova
Micol Long
Sensing the Holy Womb: New Insights into the MET’s Visitation
(Language: English)
Davide Tramarin, Dipartimento dei Beni Culturali, Università degli Studi
di Padova
‘Non pur vivaci ma che favellassono’: Visual-Oral Narrative
Strategies in Tuscan Religious Painting, 13th-14th Centuries
(Language: English)
Chiara Demaria, Dipartimento di Storia, Archeologia, Geografia, Arte e
Spettacolo, Università degli Studi di Firenze
Clamor, Bells, and Faeces: Sensation in Religious Conflict during
the 15th and 16th Centuries (Language: English)
Simone Wagner, Max-Weber-Kolleg für kultur- und
sozialwissenschaftliche Studien, Universität Erfurt
1331
Michael Sadler Building: LG.15
PHILOSOPHICAL ENTANGLEMENTS AND CONNECTED CONCEPTS IN MEDIEVAL
WESTERN EUROPE
IMC Programming Committee
Jane Toswell, Department of English, University of Western Ontario
A Survey of Neural Networks in the Early Medieval Period via
Augustine’s Philosophy of Mind (Language: English)
Buki Fatona, Faculty of Theology & Religion, University of Oxford
The Philosophical Entanglements of Boethius and Beowulf:
Understanding Fortune’s True Self (Language: English)
Kristen York, Department of English, Texas A&M University
Laʒamon’s Necropoetics (Language: English)
Sarah Harlan-Haughey, Department of English, University of Maine
311
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1332-a:
Paper 1332-b:
Paper 1332-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1333-a:
Paper 1333-b:
Paper 1333-c:
312
1332
Clarendon Building: 1.06
MANUSCRIPT NETWORKS AND ENTANGLED TEXTS IN 15TH-CENTURY LONDON
Leverhulme Project ‘Whittington’s Gift: Reconstructing the Lost
Common Library of London’s Guildhall’
Natalie Calder, School of Arts, English & Languages, Queen’s University
Belfast
Ryan Perry, School of English, University of Kent
‘Devotional cosmopolitanism’, Revisited: Creativity and
Sectarianism in London Compilations (Language: English)
Stephen Kelly, School of Arts, English & Languages, Queen’s University
Belfast
Navigating ‘Disordered’ Faith in 15th-Century London (Language:
English)
Natalie Calder
Strengthening the Spiritual Self, Strengthening the Spiritual
Community: The Mirror of Holy Church Bridging London
Communities (Language: English)
Ségolène Gence, Centre for Medieval & Early Modern Studies (MEMS),
University of Kent
1333
Clarendon Building: 1.03
THE ENTANGLED MAKING, USES, AND VISUALISATIONS OF TEXTILES IN THE
EARLY MEDIEVAL PERIOD, 450-1100, IV
AHRC Project ‘Unwrapping the Galloway Hoard’ / National Museum of
Scotland / University of Glasgow
Tracey Davison, Centre for Medieval Studies, University of York and
Alexandra Makin, School of Humanities (Archaeology), University of
Glasgow
Tracey Davison
Entangled Economies: Women and Textiles in Late Antiquity
(Language: English)
Hope Williard, University Library, University of Lincoln
Of Cloth and Money: The Role of Woollen Commodity Currency
in Politics and Religion in Early Medieval Iceland (Language:
English)
Meghan Korten, Department of History, University of Iceland, Reykjavík
Trade and Textiles: Exploring Women’s Roles in the Medieval
Icelandic Economy (Language: English)
Hannah S. Evans, Institute of Irish Studies, University of Liverpool
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1334-a:
Paper 1334-b:
Paper 1334-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1335-a:
Paper 1335-b:
1335
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.33
SPINNING AROUND CIRCLES OF POWER: ENTANGLEMENT AND NETWORK AT
FRENCH, GERMAN, AND ITALIAN MEDIEVAL COURTS, 10TH-15TH CENTURY, II
Olivia Mayer, Institut für Geschichte, Alpen-Adria-Universität Klagenfurt
Sebastian Gensicke, Historisches Institut, RWTH Aachen Universität
Magical Entanglements: Producing and Consuming Sorcery at
Late Medieval French Courts (Language: English)
Olivia Mayer
A Queen’s Network: The Letters of Isabeau of Bavaria (13701435) and the Court of Charles VI of France (Language: English)
Felix Schulz, Institut für Geschichtswissenschaften und Europäische
Ethnologie, Universität Innsbruck
Connected via Crisis: Counterinsurgency in Southwestern
Germany around 1500 (Language: English)
Joy Sheik, Historisches Seminar, Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg
Wednesday
Paper 1335-c:
1334
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.09
NETWORKS OF PIOUS DONATIONS IN NORTHERN EUROPE, II: FOUNDATIONS
AND SAINTS
Embla Aae, Institutt for arkeologi, historie, kultur- og
religionsvitenskap, Universitetet i Bergen and Anna-Stina Hägglund,
History, Philosophy & Literary Studies Unit, Faculty of Social Sciences,
Tampere University
Kirsi Salonen, Institutt for arkeologi, historie, kultur- og
religionsvitenskap, Universitetet i Bergen
Altar Foundations and Irrevocable Donations to Saints in
Medieval Norway (Language: English)
Embla Aae
Between the Town Law and the Last Judgement: The ‘Eternal’
Foundations of Stockholm Burghers before the Reformation
(Language: English)
Piotr Kołodziejczak, Wydział Nauk Historycznych, Uniwersytet Mikołaja
Kopernika, Toruń
Gifts to St Olav in the Late Medieval Wills of the Lübeck
Bergenfahrer (Language: English)
Sigrun Høgetveit Berg, Institutt for arkeologi, historie,
religionsvitenskap og teologi, Universitetet i Tromsø - Norges arktiske
universitet
313
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1336-a:
Paper 1336-b:
Paper 1336-c:
Paper 1336-d:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1337-a:
Paper 1337-b:
Paper 1337-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1338-a:
Paper 1338-b:
Paper 1338-c:
314
1336
Michael Sadler Building: LG.19
NEW WORKS, NETWORKS, AND METHODS IN TOLKIEN AND MIDDLE-EARTH
RESEARCH
Centre for Fantasy & the Fantastic, School of Critical Studies, University
of Glasgow
Andrew Higgins, Centre for Fantasy & the Fantastic, School of Critical
Studies, University of Glasgow
Andrew Higgins
Tolkien Studies and the ‘Theological Turn’ (Language: English)
Mitchell Kooh, Department of English, University of Notre Dame,
Indiana
Queer Time and Space in Tolkien’s Middle-earth (Language:
English)
Yvette Kisor, School of Humanities & Global Studies, Ramapo College of
New Jersey
Reading Tolkien’s First Age through the Lens of Michel de
Certeau (Language: English)
Cami Agan, Department of Language & Literature, Oklahoma Christian
University
Queer Phenomenology, Lesbian Ents, and the Future of Queer
Tolkien Studies (Language: English)
Christopher Vaccaro, Department of English, University of Vermont
1337
Stage@leeds: Stage 2
BAD ENTANGLEMENTS: CRIME AND ABUSE IN THE EARLY MIDDLE AGES, II
Jan van Doren, Departement Geschiedenis en Kunstgeschiedenis,
Universiteit Utrecht
Mayke de Jong, Utrecht Centre for Medieval Studies, Universiteit
Utrecht
Pagan Entanglements in the 8th Century (Language: English)
Rob Meens, Departement Geschiedenis en Kunstgeschiedenis,
Universiteit Utrecht
Abusing the City: Frankish Kings, Urban Communities, and Sin in
the 9th Century (Language: English)
Jelle Wassenaar, Lehrstuhl für Geschichte des Mittelalters, FriedrichAlexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg
‘Aussonia corrupta’: Constructing Corruption in the Kingdom of
Italy, c. 814-840 (Language: English)
Jan van Doren
1338
Esther Simpson Building: 3.01
MERCIAN STUDIES, II: MERCIAN SCULPTURE, 7TH-9TH CENTURIES
Leicester Medieval Research Centre
Joanna Story, Centre for Medieval Research, University of Leicester
Joanna Story
Flights of Angels: Sculpted Stones and Shrines in Mercia
(Language: English)
Meg Boulton, Department of the History of Art, University of York
Figural Sculpture in Mercia: Revisiting the ‘Peterborough School’
(in the Light of Lichfield) (Language: English)
Teresa Porciani, School of History, Politics & International Relations,
University of Leicester
Deck the Hall: Sculpting Church Interiors in the East Midlands
(Language: English)
Jane Hawkes, Department of History of Art, University of York
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1339-a:
Paper 1339-b:
Respondent:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1340-a:
Paper 1340-b:
1340
Clarendon Building: GR 01
LAW AND PROBLEM SOLVING, C. 1000-C. 1300, III: LEGAL EXPERTS,
SCHOOLS OF LAW, AND LEGAL PROBLEMS
Philippa Byrne, Faculty of History, University of Oxford and Meghan
Woolley, Writing Lab, Purdue University, Indiana
Thomas McSweeney, William & Mary Law School, College of William &
Mary, Virginia
Rise of the Experts: Legal Officials and Scholarship in the
Byzantine Church, 11th-12th Centuries (Language: English)
James Morton, Department of History, Chinese University of Hong Kong
‘Non semper contrarius sensus auctoritatis pro auctoritate
suscipiendus est’: Juristic Logic and the Problem of Legal
Literacy in Medieval Canon Law (Language: English)
Jose Osorio, Centre for Medieval Studies, University of Toronto
Legal Treatises in 12th-Century England: Forms and Forensics
(Language: English)
Sarah White, Department of History, Lancaster University
Wednesday
Paper 1340-c:
1339
Parkinson Building: Room B.09
BASILICA-MONASTERIUM: A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF THE FIRST HOLY
SITES OF WESTERN CHRISTIANITY, C. 400-C. 900, II
Archéologies et Sciences de l’Antiquité (ArScAn - UMR 7041), Centre
national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS) / Université Paris 8,
Vincennes-Saint-Denis / Département d’histoire, Université de Montréal
Gordon Blennemann, Département d’histoire, Université de Montréal
and Anne-Marie Helvétius, Département d’Histoire, Université Paris 8,
Vincennes-Saint-Denis
Gordon Blennemann
Between Blossomings and Silences: The Basilica and the Cult of
the Martyr Justine in Early Medieval Padua, 6th-10th Centuries
(Language: English)
Francesco Veronese, Dipartimento di Scienze Storiche, Geografiche e
dell’Antichità, Università degli Studi di Padova
Charles the Bald and the Basilica of His Realm (Language:
English)
Martin Gravel, Département d’Histoire, Université Paris 8, VincennesSaint-Denis
Ian N. Wood, School of History, University of Leeds
315
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1341-a:
Paper 1341-b:
Paper 1341-c:
Paper 1341-d:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1342-a:
Paper 1342-b:
Paper 1342-c:
316
1341
Esther Simpson Building: 3.08
MEDIEVAL TOWNS AND CITIES, II: GUILDS, OFFICIALS, AND MERCHANTS
Institute for Medieval Research, University of Nottingham
Pam Powell, Department of History, University of Nottingham
Eliza Hartrich, School of History, University of East Anglia
Economics and the Cult of Death: The Guild of St George in
Nottingham, 1459-1546 (Language: English)
Richard M. Goddard, Department of History, University of Nottingham
Riding Together: How Networks Were Sustained in Practice
among the Cinque Ports (Language: English)
Sheila Sweetinburgh, Centre for Kent History & Heritage (CKHH),
Canterbury Christ Church University
Trading Networks: Evidence from the Customs Records of the
Port of Chester, 1404-1405 (Language: English)
Pam Powell
Networks and Entanglements in a Late-15th Century London
Merchant’s Formulary: Richard Arnold and His ‘Chronicle’
(Language: English)
Justin Colson, Institute of Historical Research, University of London
1342
Esther Simpson Building: 2.07
EXPRESSIVE BODIES: VISIBLE ILLNESS, VISIBLE HEALTH, II
‘Hermeneutics of the Visible Body: Conceptualisations & Practices in
Medieval Medicine in the Latin Tradition’
Montserrat Cabré i Pairet, Facultad de Medicina, Universidad de
Cantabria
Montserrat Cabré i Pairet
The Consul and the Leper: Illness in Administrative Texts
(Language: English)
Anna M. Peterson, Facultad de Medicina, Universidad de Cantabria
Diseases ‘of Manifest Appearance’ in the Kitāb al-Malakī:
Between Theory and Practice (Language: English)
Anna Gili, Dipartimento di Studi Linguistici e Letterari, Università degli
Studi di Padova
Sex and Appearance: Making Gender Visible in the Middle Ages
(Language: English)
Paloma Moral de Calatrava, Departamento de Enfermería, Universidad
de Murcia
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1343-a:
Paper 1343-b:
Paper 1343-c:
Paper 1343-d:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1344-a:
Paper 1344-c:
1344
Parkinson Building: Room B.08
LATE MEDIEVAL SCANDINAVIAN ELITES, I
Institutt for historiske studier, Norges teknisk-naturvitenskapelige
universitet, Trondheim
Randi Bjørshol Wærdahl, Institutt for historiske og klassiske studier,
Norges teknisk-naturvitenskapelige universitet, Trondheim
Dag Retsö, Institutionen för ekonomisk historia och internationella
relationer, Stockholms universitet
A Network Society: Locality and Spatiality in 15th-Century
Sweden (Language: English)
Olov Lund, Institutionen för ekonomisk historia och internationella
relationer, Stockholms universitet
Inter-Nordic Aristocratic Networks in the Late Middle Ages:
Myth or Reality? (Language: English)
Erik Opsahl, Institutt for historiske og klassiske studier, Norges teknisknaturvitenskapelige universitet, Trondheim
News, Rumours, Gossip: Elite Women’s Horizontal and Vertical
Networks in Late Medieval Norway (Language: English)
Randi Bjørshol Wærdahl
Wednesday
Paper 1344-b:
1343
Esther Simpson Building: 2.09
CHRONICLES OF AFRICA, I: ISSUES OF TRANSLATION AND TRANSMISSION
Iona McCleery, Institute for Medieval Studies / School of History,
University of Leeds
Hannah MacKenzie, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Between Egypt and Ethiopia: The Chronicle of John of Nikiu
(Language: English)
Daria Elagina, Hiob Ludolf Zentrum für Äthiopistik, Asien-AfrikaInstitut, Universität Hamburg
Peeling back the Layers of an Onion?: Diogo Gomes’s First
Discovery of Guinea in the Valentim Fernandes Manuscript in
Munich (Language: English)
Iona McCleery
Rethinking the Fall of Dotawo: A New Translation of the Texts
and Archaeology (Language: English)
Adam Simmons, Department of History, Language & Global Cultures,
Nottingham Trent University
From the 19th-Century Tārīkh al-fattāsh to the 17th-Century
Chronicle of Ibn al-Mukhtār (Language: English)
Mauro Nobili, Department of History, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign
317
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1346-a:
Paper 1346-b:
Paper 1346-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1347-a:
Paper 1347-b:
Paper 1347-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1348-a:
Paper 1348-b:
Paper 1348-c:
318
1346
Newlyn Building: LG.01
DEBATES IN MEDIEVAL FRENCH LITERATURE, II: TRANSLATION AND
ADAPTATION
Elizabeth L’Estrange, Department of History of Art, University of
Birmingham
Emma Cayley, School of Languages, Cultures & Societies - French,
University of Leeds
The Eye and the Heart: From Middle French to Middle English
(Language: English)
Olivia Robinson, School of English, Drama & Creative Studies,
University of Birmingham
Sticky Wickets of Translating La Belle Dame sans Mercy
(Language: English)
Joan E. McRae, Department of World Languages, Literatures &
Cultures, Middle Tennessee State University
Competing Voices: Anne de Graville’s Adaptation of the Belle
Dame sans Mercy, c. 1525 (Language: English)
Elizabeth L’Estrange
1347
Parkinson Building: Room B.11
THE CONCERTINA-FOLD BOOK ACROSS PRE-MODERN CULTURES
International Center of Medieval Art (ICMA) / Andrew W. Mellon Society
of Fellows in Critical Bibliography, Rare Book School
Megan McNamee, Edinburgh College of Art, University of Edinburgh
Sarah Griffin, Lambeth Palace Library
A Folded Genealogy of Edward IV (Language: English)
Sonja Drimmer, Department of the History of Art & Architecture,
University of Massachusetts Amherst
Going Up, Coming Down: Landscape, Verticality, and Time in the
Mixtec Screen-Fold Manuscripts of Pre-Hispanic Mexico
(Language: English)
Jamie Forde, Edinburgh College of Art, University of Edinburgh
Tibetan Buddhist Concertina-Fold Books in Qing-Era Beijing
(Language: English)
Ben Nourse, Department of Religious Studies, University of Denver
1348
Esther Simpson Building: 2.11
NETWORKS OF WAR
Regula Schmid Keeling, Historisches Institut, Universität Bern
Regula Schmid Keeling
The Night Watch: A Practice between Civic Burden and Social
Privilege (Language: English)
Elena Magli, Historisches Institut, Universität Bern
Summoning the Countryside: The Integration of Fribourg’s
Peripheric Territories in the Town’s Military Organisation, 14001550 (Language: English)
Mathijs Roelofsen, Independent Scholar, Fribourg
Coveted Experts: Master Gunners in the Service of Urban
Networks (Language: English)
Daniel Jaquet, Laboratory for Experimental Museology, École
Polytechnique Fédérale Lausanne
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 18.00-19.00
DINNER: 18.00-20.00
Take some time to enjoy your evening meal with colleagues.
Refectory 18.00-20.00
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY
RECEPTION AT UNIVERSITY SQUARE
HOSTED BY
THE IMC ADMINISTRATION AND THE IMC EXHIBITORS
UNIVERSITY SQUARE
18.00-19.00
All delegates are very welcome to enjoy a drink to celebrate the IMC 2023 and its Medieval Craft
Fair. The Medieval Craft Fair will remain open until 19.00 to allow you time to browse their many
medieval-inspired items!
RECEPTION
HOSTED BY
CENTRE FOR MEDIEVAL STUDIES, UNIVERSITY OF BRISTOL
UNIVERSITY HOUSE: LITTLE WOODHOUSE ROOM
Wednesday
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY
18.00-19.00
The Centre for Medieval Studies at the University of Bristol would be delighted to meet you at
this open-house drinks reception. Come and talk to our staff and students about our
programmes, our research, and our activities - all welcome!
319
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 19.00-20.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Purpose:
1401
Esther Simpson Building: 1.08
EVERYTHING YOU WANT TO KNOW ABOUT HANS MEMLING’S LAST
JUDGMENT BUT WERE AFRAID TO ASK: A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
Memling Research Center, Uniwersytet Gdański
Beata Możejko, Instytut Historii, Uniwersytet Gdański
Beata Możejko
Hans Memling’s Last Judgement has been in the National Museum in
Gdańsk since 1956, when it returned from the USSR. Previously,
however, it was located in St Mary’s Church in Gdańsk for several
centuries from 1473, when it was seized by Paul Beneke, along with other
expensive valuables from the galley ‘St Andrew / St Matthew’. The Tsar
of Russia, Peter I, wanted it for himself, in turn, Emperor Napoleon took
it to the Louvre. In the 19th century, when recognised as the work of
Hans Memling, numerous studies on it began to appear. This round table
discussion brings together scholars working in an interdisciplinary group.
Returning to general questions, the participants will point to new
interpretative contexts of this triptych.
Participants include Jacek Friedirch (Uniwersytet Gdański), Jerzy Jankau
(Gdański Uniwersytet Medyczny), Joanna Kamień (Uniwersytet Gdański),
Aleksandra
Stanek
(Uniwersytet
Gdański),
Andrzej
Woziński
(Uniwersytet Gdański), and Kamil Zeidler (Uniwersytet Gdański).
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Purpose:
1412
Esther Simpson Building: 1.01
ENGLAND AND SCOTLAND AT WAR AND PEACE, V: BETTER TOGETHER? THE
STATE OF THE FIELD - A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
Department of History, University of Southampton
Andy King, Department of History, University of Southampton
Alastair Macdonald, School of Divinity, History & Philosophy, University
of Aberdeen
Since 2017, the IMC has played host to a series of strands focused on
‘England and Scotland at War and Peace’ which has become a staple of
the Congress. These sessions have helped to create a new network of
scholars interested in exploring the dynamics of Anglo-Scottish relations
and comparisons throughout the Middle Ages. In this round table
discussion, scholars from different thematic and chronological
specialisms will discuss the state of the field and consider what future
directions may lie ahead for research into the sometimes friendly,
sometimes turbulent relations between the medieval kingdoms of
Scotland and England.
Participants include Morvern French (Historic Environment Scotland,
Edinburgh), Andy King (University of Southampton), Fergal Leonard
(Durham University), Gordon McKelvie (University of Winchester), and
Alice Taylor (King’s College London).
320
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 19.00-20.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Purpose:
1416
Maurice Keyworth Building: G.02
DIGITAL HISTORY AND NEW DIRECTIONS IN CRUSADE STUDIES, III: A
ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
Centre for the Study of Religion & Conflict, Nottingham Trent University
Natasha Ruth Hodgson, School of Arts & Humanities, Nottingham Trent
University
Natasha Ruth Hodgson
This session aims to build on two additional paper sessions set up by the
newly established network for Digital History and New Directions in
Crusade Studies, of which Roche and Hodgson are founder members. It
will incorporate representatives from established digital projects
including the Database of Crusaders to the Holy Land and the Revised
Regesta Regni Hierosolymitani, which is undergoing significant
development through the forthcoming year. However, it also seeks to
identify and showcase new, needs-based approaches for digital tools in
relation to crusader studies and explore future possibilities for potential
to advance research in this area.
Participants include Myra Miranda Bom (University of London / University
of Cambridge), Anna Gutgarts (Hebrew University of Jerusalem), Alan V.
Murray (University of Leeds), and Jason T. Roche (Manchester
Metropolitan University).
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Purpose:
Wednesday
1425
Esther Simpson Building: 3.02
BUILDING A NETWORK FOR DIGITALLY EDITING QUEENS’ ACTS: A ROUND
TABLE DISCUSSION
Royal Studies Network
Ana Maria S. A. Rodrigues, Departamento de História, Faculdade de
Letras, Universidade de Lisboa
Lledó Ruiz Domingo, Facultad de Geografía e Historia, Universitat de
València
Though research on queenship has progressed immensely in the last
decades, there are still some areas of the queens’ activities that are less
well known because of the fragmentary and dispersed nature of the
documentation concerning them. Several research projects - Queens’
Resources, French Queens’ Testaments, CORREGAM, ERA - have
therefore been launched recently to collect, digitally edit, and study such
documents: either those promulgated by the queens themselves or those
addressed to them. The aim of this round table discussion is to share and
discuss these experiences, in order to start building a network for
digitally editing European Queens’ Acts in a co-operative and panEuropean project.
Participants include Paula Del Val Vales (University of Lincoln), Inês Olaia
(Universidade de Lisboa), Diana Pelaz Flores (Universidad de Santiago
de Compostela), Miriam Shadis (Ohio University), Manuela Santos Silva
(Universidade de Lisboa), and Elena Woodacre (University of
Winchester).
321
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 19.00-20.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Purpose:
1426
Esther Simpson Building: 2.11
BEYOND THE ‘BIG THINGS OF HISTORY’: HUMANS, THEIR NETWORKS, AND
ENTANGLEMENTS - A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
Cultural Disrupt
Daniel Brown, Independent Scholar, Viersen
Daniel Brown
One of the ideas of who or what makes ‘History’ previously formed
around the ‘Big Characters’ and ‘Big Ideas’, yet humans, the main actors
of ‘History’, are part of a natural and social world - connected, entangled
and part of many different networks, formal or informal. These may be
networks of support, of power, of dependence relations, the exchange of
intellectual property, or the trading of wares, shaped by and shaping
geography. In this round table, we shall discuss the value of researching
what is behind the ‘Big Things of History’ - humans, their entanglements
with each other, and their networks.
Participants include Karl Christian Alvestad (Universitetet i Sørøst-Norge,
Notodden), Philippa Byrne (University of Oxford), Johannes Waldschütz
(Kreisarchiv, Landkreis Rottweil), and Katherine Weikert (University of
Winchester).
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Purpose:
1429
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.04
ENRICHED TIMELINES AND THE NETWORKS OF GOTHIC ARCHITECTURE: A
ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
‘Paris Past & Present’ Research Project, University of California, Los
Angeles
Meredith Cohen, Department of Art History, University of California, Los
Angeles
Meredith Cohen
Digital timelines constitute a useful new method with which to approach
history from a more complete perspective than previously possible. This
round table session will discuss the specific insights resulting from UCLA’s
Enriched Digital Timeline project, which began in Summer 2021 with a
focus on 15 European ‘Gothic’ great churches. Integrating multiple
building histories in a single venue permitted dynamic visual organisation
of extensive, detailed, and multimodal data on an unprecedented scale.
By complementing and extending the parameters of memory and
cognition, this project offers a rich source not only for new insights on
architectural practices and processes, as will be discussed here, but also
other inquiries into history.
Participants include Abigail Berry (University of California, Los Angeles),
Alan Carillo (University of Iowa), Tori Schmitt (University of California,
Los Angeles), Hannah Thomson (University of California, Los Angeles),
Taylor Van Doorne (University of California, Santa Barbara), and Monica
Vree (University of Iowa).
322
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 19.00-20.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Purpose:
1435
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.33
NETWORKED MIDDLE AGES: CELEBRATING SOCIAL NETWORK SCHOLARSHIP
IN MEDIEVAL STUDIES - A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
Social Network Analysis Researchers of the Middle Ages (SNARMA)
Matthew H. Hammond, Department of History, King’s College London
Matthew H. Hammond
The IMC 2023 theme, Networks and Entanglements, offers the perfect
opportunity to mark a milestone in the emergence of the sub-discipline
of medieval Social Network Analysis (SNA), with several of the
contributors to the first ever collection of medieval SNA case studies
(forthcoming). The authors will discuss their current research (across a
broad chronological and geographical spread), their thoughts on
medieval network studies, and what the future may hold for medieval
SNA.
Speakers will include Cassidy Croci (University of Nottingham), Sébastien
de Valeriola (Université Libre de Bruxelles), Máirín MacCarron (University
College Cork), Isabelle Rosé (Université Rennes 2), Nicolas RuffiniRonzani (Université de Namur / Archives de l’Etat de Namur), and David
Zbíral (Masarykova univerzita, Brno).
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Purpose:
Wednesday
1438
Esther Simpson Building: 3.01
MERCIAN STUDIES, III: COLLECTING MERCIAN MATERIALS - A ROUND
TABLE DISCUSSION
A Literary History of Mercia / British Academy
Christine Rauer, School of English, University of St Andrews
Rachel A. Burns, Faculty of English Language & Literature, University of
Oxford / School of English, University of St Andrews
How extensive is pre-Conquest Mercian literary culture? What materials
survive in terms of manuscripts, inscriptions, and Old English and Latin
texts? Where do the difficulties lie in identifying relevant material? Which
centres were the most or least productive ones? Is it possible to speak
of a ‘network’ of Mercian authors or scribes? This round table discussion
is sponsored by the collaborative Literary History of Mercia project and
will focus on providing an update on the year’s work on the project. We
hope to explore (or problematise) the relationship between Old English
and Latin in the corpus; cultural high and low points within the period;
and some comparison with other kingdoms. Members of the audience
will be encouraged to join in the discussion with project staff, as we hope
to pick up the larger conference theme of networks and entanglements
in the varied literary landscape of Mercia.
Participants include Jessica Hodgkinson (University of Leicester /
University of St Andrews), Emily Kesling (University of Oxford), Francis
Leneghan (University of Oxford), Christine Rauer (University of St
Andrews), and Joanna Story (University of Leicester).
323
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 19.00-20.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Purpose:
1441
Stage@leeds: Stage 3
MEDIEVAL URBAN HISTORY: NEW OPPORTUNITIES FOR RESEARCH? - A
ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
Institute for Medieval Research, University of Nottingham
Pam Powell, Department of History, University of Nottingham
Richard M. Goddard, Department of History, University of Nottingham
Urban history is a wide-ranging field. Medieval towns and cities were
centres of government, law, and religion, as well as trading hubs, artistic
centres, and social spaces. Indeed, even defining what constitutes
‘urban’ has been a contentious issue amongst historians. This panel
seeks to examine the state of medieval urban research today and look
at new and exciting directions in urban studies. The panel seeks to
capitalise on the range of skills possessed by not only historians but
urban archeologists, geographers, art historians, and scholars from all
disciplines, studying any geographical region, who work in urban studies,
or whose work has urban links, to discuss their research and new
opportunities for exciting research in this growing field.
Participants include Aysu Dinçer (University of Warwick), Eliza Hartrich
(University of East Anglia), Christopher King (University of Nottingham),
Esther Liberman Cuenca (University of Houston-Victoria / Institute for
Advanced Study, Princeton), and Mireille Juliette Pardon (Berea College,
Kentucky).
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Purpose:
1442
Esther Simpson Building: 2.07
EXPRESSIVE BODIES: VISIBLE ILLNESS, VISIBLE HEALTH, III - A ROUND
TABLE DISCUSSION
‘Hermeneutics of the Visible Body: Conceptualisations & Practices in
Medieval Medicine in the Latin Tradition’
Montserrat Cabré i Pairet, Facultad de Medicina, Universidad de
Cantabria
Anna M. Peterson, Facultad de Medicina, Universidad de Cantabria
This round table discussion will explore, from a variety of disciplines, the
visibility of some ‘actions of the body’, their relevance in medieval
cultures, and how they were interpreted and acted upon by a variety of
agents. From the presence or absence of ulcers, buboes, or facial hair to
the appearance of the skin or the shape of the genitals, bodily surfaces
played a central role in medical and religious understandings of the body
and aspects of social life.
Participants include Montserrat Cabré i Pairet (Universidad de Cantabria),
Anna Gili (Università degli Studi di Padova), Fiona Lillian Knight
(University of Cambridge), Alba Lara Granero (Brown University), and
Fernando Salmon Muñiz (Universidad de Cantabria).
324
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 19.00-20.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Purpose:
1443
Esther Simpson Building: 2.09
CHRONICLES OF AFRICA, II: PENDING QUESTIONS - A ROUND TABLE
DISCUSSION
Institute for Medieval Studies / School of History, University of Leeds
Iona McCleery, Institute for Medieval Studies / School of History,
University of Leeds
Iona McCleery
Historical narratives written in and about Africa have fraught
transmission and translation histories: they may not survive in their
original format or language; manuscripts could be lost for centuries;
texts might survive only in later compilations. 19 th- and 20th-century
editions, especially translations, are often riddled with errors. Although
problems of this kind are relevant to all chronicles, those of Africa are
particularly affected by imperial conflicts and colonial assumptions. Most
chronicles continue to prompt questions about dating, genre,
interpolation, and reception. This round table discussion will pick up the
issues discussed in a related session (Chronicles of Africa: Issues of
Translation and Transmission) with a wider variety of scholars working
on narratives produced in or about Africa.
Participants include Solomon Gebreyes Beyene (Universität Hamburg),
Mauro Nobili (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign), Adam
Simmons (Nottingham Trent University), and Vincent W. J. van Gerven
Oei (Punctum books).
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Purpose:
Wednesday
1446
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.31
TRANSLATING PREMODERN SEX AND SEXUALITIES: A ROUND TABLE
DISCUSSION
Society for Medieval Feminist Scholarship
Kathryn Maude, Department of English, American University of Beirut
Kathryn Maude
This round table will bring together research on multiple languages and
geographical areas to discuss how to translate medieval texts concerning
sex and sexualities across language and time. As translators we are
aware that texts from the ancient and medieval past continue to be
frequent and irresistible sources of inspiration for modern and
contemporary readers seeking to articulate their own sexual desires and
identities. Ranging from medieval Arabic erotic anthologies across Old
French epic poetry and Old English sermons, we plan to discuss the
potential pitfalls and opportunities in translating and analysing medieval
ideas about sex and sexuality in the present day.
Participants include Mounawar Abbouchi (University of Georgia), Riwa
Roukoz (American University of Beirut), and Adam Talib (American
University in Cairo).
325
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: 19.00-20.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Purpose:
1447
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.06
NEW TOOLS AND METHODS IN DIGITAL MEDIEVAL STUDIES: A ROUND
TABLE DISCUSSION
Digital Medievalist
Katarzyna Anna Kapitan, Linacre College, University of Oxford and N.
Kıvılcım Yavuz, Institute for Medieval Studies / School of History,
University of Leeds
Lisa Fagin Davis, Medieval Academy of America, Massachusetts
On the occasion of the 20th anniversary of the founding of Digital
Medievalist (http://digitalmedievalist.org/), this round table discussion
considers developments in the field of digital medieval studies by
bringing together users and creators of new tools and methods. These
include the Edition Visualisation Technology (http://evt.labcd.unipi.it),
the Corpus Kalendarium Database (http://www.cokldb.org), VC Editor
(http://viscoll.org), Archetype (https://archetype.ink), and a broader
discussion of the possibilities provided by digital solutions as well as open
source and open access initiatives. Newcomers to digital humanities are
especially welcome to join the discussion.
Participants include Stewart J. Brookes (University of Oxford), Aaron
Macks (Harvard University), Elisabetta Magnanti (Universität Wien), Jan
Odstrčilík (Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien), and
Dot Porter (University of Pennsylvania).
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Purpose:
1448
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.32
MEDIEVAL BATTLEFIELDS: A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
De Re Militari: Society for Medieval Military History
Ilana Krug, Department of History & Political Science, York College of
Pennsylvania
Ilana Krug
In keeping with the IMC’s thematic strand of ‘networks and
entanglements’, this round table session is designed to focus on the topic
of medieval battlefields, looking to some of the most recent aspects of
battlefield studies as a way to highlight the important role of battlefields
as liminal spaces that bring together topography, people, and objects.
As such, we anticipate the round table session will generate a lively
discussion about issues pertaining to, for example, battlefield geography,
methodologies, and artifacts.
Participants include Sophie Ambler (Lancaster University), Kelly DeVries
(Loyola University Maryland), Daniel Franke (Richard Bland College of
William & Mary, Virginia), and Michael Livingston (The Citadel, Military
College of South Carolina).
326
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY 2023: AFTER 20.00
WEDNESDAY 05 JULY
RECEPTION
HOSTED BY
GERMAN HISTORICAL INSTITUTE, LONDON / GERMAN HISTORY SOCIETY
UNIVERSITY HOUSE: GREAT WOODHOUSE ROOM
20.00-21.00
The German Historical Institute, London and the German History Society warmly invite the
members of the wider medievalists' community as well as friends and alumni of the Institute
and Society to join us for this friendly get-together.
Wednesday
327
Institute of Mediaeval Studies
Postgraduate Study
at St Andrews
The Institute of Mediaeval Studies at the University of St Andrews is a truly
interdisciplinary initiative, bringing together academic staff of international
standing in literature, languages, philosophy, history and history of art.
Together with postdoctoral fellows, research associates, postgraduates and
visiting academics, they form a community of well over 100 people working on
the Middle Ages. Subjects taught and researched at the Institute reflect this vast
range, including a remarkable combination of experts on both East and West,
Byzantium, Islam and Christianity.
THE INSTITUTE OFFERS 3 FULL-TIME MASTERS DEGREES (MLitt):
• Mediaeval History
• Mediaeval English
• Mediaeval Studies
The Institute and the participating departments also offer MPhil and
Doctoral research degrees (full-time or part-time) in single and combined
disciplines.
WHAT YOU GET:
• teaching and personal supervision by leading experts
• the opportunity to learn in a vibrant and stimulating research community
• taught courses on a range of single and interdisciplinary subjects
• training in research skills, palaeography and codicology (often using original
manuscripts in the University library), as well as languages including Latin,
Arabic, Greek, Old English, Middle Scots, German, French, Italian,
Old Norse, Middle Welsh and Old Irish.
Further information on the activities of the Institute, including the long-standing
seminar series, conferences, workshops, international exchanges, research
interests and staff profiles may be found on the SAIMS
website: www.st-andrews.ac.uk/saims
For enquiries about postgraduate studies, please contact the Institute Secretary,
Mrs Audrey Wishart: saimsmail@st-andrews.ac.uk
University of St Andrews
The University of St Andrews Court is a charity registered in Scotland, No: SC013532
328
Events & Excursions: Thursday 06 July
IMC Bookfair
Parkinson Building, 08.30-13.00
Bringing together publishers, editors,
authors and readers. The IMC Bookfair is
one of the highlights of the programme.
See pp. 432-433 for more details.
Medieval Craft Fair
University Square & Leeds Univeristy
Union Foyer 10.30-18.00
Browse a variety of medieval-inspired
craft and gift items and chat with makers.
See p. 433 for more details.
Historical & Archaeological
Societies Fair
Leeds University Union Foyer 10.3018.00
Meet with independent groups who are
dedicated to preserving local and national
historical and archaeological heritage.
See p. 434 for more details.
Performances
‘Rys up an let us daunce!’, Leeds
University Union: Riley Smith Hall, 20.0022.00
Celebrate the end of IMC 2023 with a
joyous medieval dance co-ordinated by
the Arbeau Dancers.
Workshops
Rediscovering Medieval Lives at
Calverley Old Hall, University House:
Beechgrove Room, 13.00-14.00
Join Landmark Trust Historian Caroline
Stanford to find out more about 600 years
of medieval inhabitants of Calverley Hall
in Leeds.
Making Leeds Medieval
University Square, 10.30-18.00
Jousting with Databases: Learn How
to Create, Analyse, and Visualise
Historical Data with nodegoat,
Parkinson Building: Cohen B Cluster,
14.00-17.00
An exciting day of medieval-themed
entertainment, including combat displays,
falconry, music, re-enactors and more.
See p. 29 and our website for full details.
Discover nodegoat, a web-based research
environment for the humanities in this
workshop led by Pim van Bree and Gert
Kessells from Lab1100.
Excursions
Mount Grace Priory & Guisborough
Priory, Departs Parkinson Steps 09.00
Visit these two significant monastic sites
with Glyn Coppack (Archaeological and
Historical Research) and Stuart Harrison
(Ryedale
Archaeological
Services,
Pickering).
The Stained Glass of All Saints, North
Street, Departs Parkinson Steps 13.00
Thursday
See the recently-restored stained glass in
this 14th-century York church with David
Mercer (All Saints North Street) and
Alison Gilchrist (Barley Studio).
For more information on these and all other events, excursions, workshops,
performances and other activities taking place during IMC 2023, please visit
pp. 393-431.
329
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
The IMC Bookfair is open 08.30-13.00 in Parkinson Court: Make sure you pop in to
meet with publishers, browse their latest titles, network, discuss future projects, and, of
course, access exclusive IMC discounts! See pp. 432-433 for full details.
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1501-a:
Paper 1501-b:
Paper 1501-c:
Paper 1501-d:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1502-a:
Paper 1502-b:
Respondent:
330
1501
Newlyn Building: GR.01
MEDITATIONS: IDENTITY, THOUGHT, AND QUESTIONING IN OLD ENGLISH
AND ANSELM
IMC Programming Committee
Amy Faulkner, Department of English Language & Literature, University
College London
‘Þær us eall seo fæstnung standeþ’: Boethian Meditation in The
Wanderer (Language: English)
Nicholas Babich, Department of English, University of Notre Dame,
Indiana
Pride in Old English Poetry: Identity Formation and Destruction
in the Fallen Angels as a Group (Language: English)
Wai-leuk Cheung, Department of English Literature, University of
Birmingham
Anselm the Fool: Meditation and the Joy of Unbelief in the
Proslogion (Language: English)
James R. Ginther, Faculty of Theology, St Michael’s College, University
of Toronto
Intertwined Language and Spiritual Perspectives from the
Vercelli Book: A Pilot Comparative Assessment (Language:
English)
Jacob Wayne Runner, Institute of Liberal Arts & Science, Kanazawa
University
1502
Newlyn Building: 1.07
CASTLE SPACES, III: NETWORKS OF CONQUEST - UNDERSTANDING THE
SIGNIFICANCE OF CRUSADER CASTLES
Canterbury Christ Church University
Alison Norton, School of Humanities & Educational Studies, Canterbury
Christ Church University
Nicholas E. Morton, Department of History, Languages & Global
Cultures, Nottingham Trent University
Fortified Remains of the Templar and Teutonic Knights in
Amanos: Sarı Seki and Haruniye Castles (Language: English)
Muhittin Çeken, Department of History, Aydın Adnan Menderes
University
The Fortresses of the Crusades Period in Turkey (Language:
English)
Sevtap Gölgesiz-Karaca, Department of History, Trakya University
Recipient of a 2023 Templar Heritage Trust Bursary
Nicholas E. Morton
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1504-a:
Paper 1504-b:
Paper 1504-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1505-a:
Paper 1505-b:
Paper 1505-c:
1504
Parkinson Building: Room B.10
AMBIGUITY OF HOSPITALITY, I: APPROACHING INTERCULTURAL HOSTGUEST RELATIONS THROUGH DISCOURSE AND RITUALS, 1000-1350
Ambiguities of Hospitality Project / Centrum för medeltidsstudier,
Stockholms universitet
Wojtek Jezierski, Historiska institutionen, Stockholms universitet
Miriam Tveit, Historie, kultur og media, Nord universitet, Bodø
Ambiguous Semantics?: Changing Notions of Hospitality in
Narrative Sources - A Digital Humanities Approach (Language:
English)
Tim Geelhaar, Sonderforschungsbereich 1288 ‘Praktiken des
Vergleichens’, Fakultät für Geschichtswissenschaften, Universität
Bielefeld
‘After dinner everyone wants to kill Nur-ad-Din’: Faith, Class,
and Culture in the Latin East (Language: English)
Lars Kjær, Faculty of History, Northeastern University London
(S)Platter: What Do Metaphors of Battles as Feasts Tell Us
about the Ambiguity of Hospitality in Intercultural Contacts?
(Language: English)
Wojtek Jezierski
1505
Michael Sadler Building: Rupert Beckett Theatre
THE PAPACY OF PASCHAL II AND THE TRIUMPH OF ROMAN PRIMACY?, I
Centro de Estudos de História Religiosa, Universidade Católica
Portuguesa, Lisboa
Enrico Veneziani, Centro de Estudos de História Religiosa, Universidade
Católica Portuguesa, Lisboa
Damian Smith, Department of History, Saint Louis University, Missouri
Pascal II, la Primauté du Pape et Henri V (Language: Français)
Glauco Maria Cantarella, Dipartimento di Storia Culture Civiltà,
Università di Bologna
Paschal II and the Patrimony (Language: English)
Brenda M. Bolton, University of London
A View of Rome from another Perspective: Paschal II against
the Antipopes, 1099-1118 (Language: English)
Francesco Renzi, Centro de Estudos de História Religiosa, Universidade
Católica Portuguesa, Porto
Thursday
331
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1506-a:
Paper 1506-b:
Paper 1506-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1507-a:
Paper 1507-b:
Paper 1507-c:
332
1506
Maurice Keyworth Building: G.02
TEXTS AND THE REPRESSION OF MEDIEVAL HERESY: TWENTY YEARS AFTER,
I
Centrum pro digitální výzkum náboženství / Dissident Networks Project
(DISSINET), Masarykova univerzita, Brno
Robert L. J. Shaw, Centrum pro digitální výzkum náboženství,
Masarykova univerzita, Brno and David Zbíral, Centrum pro digitální
výzkum náboženství / Dissident Networks Project (DISSINET),
Masarykova univerzita, Brno
David Zbíral
‘Sub vestimentis ovium lupus rapax’: Shaping the Image of
Heretics in the Early Sources on Heresy in the West, c. 10001150 (Language: English)
Lidia Hinz-Wieczorek, Wydział Historii, Uniwersytet im. Adama
Mickiewicza, Poznań
The Repression of Heresy in Medieval Confessors’ Guides: The
Case of Alan of Lille’s Liber Poenitentialis (Language: English)
Anne Greule, Professur für Mittelalterliche Geschichte, Historisches
Seminar, Universität Erfurt
Heresy Constructed and Heresy Denied in Texts: The Case of
Hussite Radicalism (Language: English)
Pavlína Cermanová, Centrum Medievistických Studií, Akademie věd
České republiky, Praha
1507
Michael Sadler Building: LG.10
QUEER COMMUNITY IN THE MIDDLE AGES, I: DISRUPTIVE NETWORKS AND
TRANSHISTORICAL QUEERNESS
Tim Wingard, Centre for Medieval Studies, University of York
Sarah McKeagney, Department of History, University of York
Renunciates, Not Ascetics: Caste and Sexual Outcasts in
Medieval India (Language: English)
Lucky Issar, Independent Scholar, Berlin
Out and Roaming About: Performing LGBTQI+ Histories at
Nottingham Castle (Language: English)
Emma Fearon, Department of History, Nottingham Trent University
Going Cruising with Arnaud de Verniolle: Queer Community in
14th-Century Pamiers (Language: English)
Tim Wingard
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1508-a:
Paper 1508-b:
Paper 1508-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1509-a:
Paper 1509-b:
Paper 1509-c:
1508
Newlyn Building: GR.02
RETHINKING THE CAROLINGIAN REFORMS FURTHER, I: KNOWLEDGE AND
PRAXIS FROM TOP TO BOTTOM
Rethinking the Carolingian Reforms
Carine van Rhijn, Departement Geschiedenis en Kunstgeschiedenis,
Universiteit Utrecht
Arthur Westwell, Fakultät für Katholische Theologie, Universität
Regensburg
Reserve, Transcribe, Improve: Knowledge after the Carolingian
Reforms in Handbooks for Bishops and Priests (Language:
English)
Bastiaan Waagmeester, Seminar für mittelalterliche Geschichte,
Eberhard Karls Universität Tübingen
The Importance of Salvation in Carolingian Royal Advice
Literature (Language: English)
Edward Meehan, Department of History, University of Liverpool
Carolingian Reform: Large-Scale, Top-Down? - Some
Historiographical Notes, 1960-2000 (Language: English)
Mayke de Jong, Utrecht Centre for Medieval Studies, Universiteit
Utrecht
1509
Newlyn Building: LG.02
LAW AFTER ROME: NETWORKS AND CONNECTIONS IN THE LEGES
BARBARORUM, II - SOCIAL LIFE OF LAW AND DOCUMENTARY PRACTICES IN
EARLY MEDIEVAL ITALY
Thom Gobbitt, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
Christopher Heath, School of Humanities & Heritage, University of
Lincoln
From Birth to Wedding (Language: English)
François Bougard, Institut de Recherche et d’Histoire des Textes (IRHT
- UPR 841), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS),
Nanterre
Merry Widows in Lombard and Post-Lombard Italy?: Law,
Legislation, and Documentary Evidence, 774-900 (Language:
English)
Bernhard Zeller, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
Margins of Freedom: Documentary Visibility and Legal Action of
Non-Free Individuals in Early Medieval Italy (Language: English)
Gianmarco De Angelis, Dipartimento di Scienze Storiche, Geografiche e
dell’Antichità, Università degli Studi di Padova
Thursday
333
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1510-a:
Paper 1510-b:
Paper 1510-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1511-a:
Paper 1511-b:
Paper 1511-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1512-a:
Paper 1512-b:
Paper 1512-c:
334
1510
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.31
MULTIDIMENSIONAL DIPLOMACY: THE MAMLUK / CAIRO SULTANATE AS A
SYSTEM OF NETWORKED EMPIRE, I
‘Diplomaticon, Power in History’, Universiteit Antwerpen / Centre for
Medieval & Early Modern Studies / Centre for the History of Diplomacy,
University of Manchester
Georg Christ, School of Arts, Languages & Cultures, University of
Manchester and Malika Dekkiche, Faculteit Letteren en Wijsbegeerte,
Universiteit Antwerpen
Georg Christ
Building a Network: Timurid and Turkmen Parallel Diplomacy
with the Mamluks in the 15th Century (Language: English)
Malika Dekkiche
Connecting Sultanates: A 15th-Century Family Network between
Egypt and India (Language: English)
Meia Walravens, Trinity College, University of Oxford
Visiting Mecca, or Meeting the Caliphs?: The ḥaǧǧ Diplomacy of
Sahelian Sultans in Mamluk Cairo, 13th-16th Centuries (Language:
English)
Rémi Dewière, Department of Humanities, Northumbria University
1511
Parkinson Building: Room B.22
ENTANGLEMENTS IN AFGHANISTAN
‘Invisible East’ Project, University of Oxford
Hugh Kennedy, School of Languages, Cultures & Linguistics, School of
Oriental & African Studies, University of London
Hugh Kennedy
The Rural Administration of Khurasan According to Documents
(Language: English)
Arezou Azad, Faculty of Asian & Middle Eastern Studies, University of
Oxford
Newly-Discovered Fragments from a Medieval Islamic Historical
Work: History and Historiography in Samanid Central Asia
(Language: English)
Thomas Benfey, Faculty of Asian & Middle Eastern Studies, University
of Oxford
Unveiling the Corpus of Firuzkuh Documents from Medieval
Afghanistan (Language: English)
Nabi Saqee, Bodleian Library, University of Oxford
1512
Stage@leeds: Stage 1
MIDDLE ENGLISH MIDDLES: HEGEMONY, RESISTANCE, AND THE INBETWEEN
Kathryn Maude, Department of English, American University of Beirut
Riwa Roukoz, Department of English, American University of Beirut
Tears for Souvenirs: Margery Kempe’s Midlife Tour of Jerusalem
(Language: English)
Kathryn Maude
Stuck in the Middle with You: Aspiration and the Undetermined
in Sir Orfeo and the Awntyrs off Arthure (Language: English)
Rob Brown, Department of English, Harvard University
Chaucer’s Quainte: Manuscripts, Authority, and Queer
Melancholia (Language: English)
Roberta Magnani, Department of English Literature & Creative Writing,
Swansea University
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1513-a:
Paper 1513-b:
Paper 1513-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1514-a:
Paper 1514-b:
Paper 1514-c:
1513
Esther Simpson Building: 3.01
BYZANTINE WARFARE, I: MILITARY NETWORKS AND ENTANGLEMENTS
BETWEEN BYZANTIUM AND ITS NEIGHBOURS
De Re Militari: Society for Medieval Military History
Georgios Theotokis, Department of History, Ibn-Haldun University,
Istanbul
Georgios Theotokis
Pahlavuni: A House of Generals, Politicians, Hierarchs,
Philosophers, and Saints (Language: English)
Konstantinos Takirtakoglou, School of History & Archaeology, Aristotle
University of Thessaloniki
Byzantium’s Network of Alliances in the East: The Relations of
the Comneni Emperors with the Armenians and the Latins, c.
1080-1180 (Language: English)
Ioannis Sarantidis, School of History & Archaeology, Aristotle University
of Thessaloniki
Marriage and Alliance in the Byzantine Civil Wars of the
14th Century (Language: English)
Panos Sophoulis, Department of Russian Language & Literature & Slavic
Studies, National Kapodistrian University of Athens
1514
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.03
NETWORKS AND ENTANGLEMENTS IN EARLY AND HIGH MEDIEVAL CENTRAL
EUROPE, I
Tomáš Klír, Ústav pro Archeologii, Univerzita Karlova, Praha
Mária Vargha, Ústav pro Archeologii, Univerzita Karlova, Praha
Linguistic and Cultural Dynamics in a Frontier Society: New
Perspectives on Northeastern Bavaria in the Early Middle Ages A Joint Research Project between Prague and Heidelberg
(Language: English)
Tomáš Klír
Onomastic Lexicons in Bohemia and Bavaria: Digitisation and
Spatial Representation of Data (Language: English)
Viktorie Janovská, Filozofická fakulta, Univerzita Karlova, Praha
Spatial and Statistical Methods in Current Onomastic Studies:
The Case of Bavaria and Bohemia (Language: English)
Martin Janovský, Filozofická fakulta, Univerzita Karlova, Praha
Thursday
335
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1515-a:
Paper 1515-b:
Paper 1515-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1516-a:
Paper 1516-b:
Paper 1516-c:
336
1515
Parkinson Building: Room B.09
SINO-BYZANTINE COMPARISONS, EURASIAN ENTANGLEMENTS, I: NEW
ELITES AND NEW LEARNING?
ERC Project ‘Classicising Learning in Medieval Imperial Systems: CrossCultural Approaches to Byzantine Paideia & Tang/Song Xue’ / Centre for
Late Antique, Islamic & Byzantine Studies, University of Edinburgh
Curie Virág, School of History, Classics & Archaeology, University of
Edinburgh
Niels H. Gaul, School of History, Classics & Archaeology, University of
Edinburgh
The Education of a New Elite: Academies and the Revival of
Classical Learning in Northern Song China (Language: English)
Linda Walton, Department of History, Portland State University, Oregon
A New Learning for a New Elite?: Schools and Regional
Networks in Constantinople during the Long 11th Century
(Language: English)
Niels H. Gaul
An Elite in Search of Its Classics: Christian and Non-Christian
‘Classics’ in 12th-Century Constantinopolitan Schools (Language:
English)
Foteini Spingou, School of History, Classics & Archaeology, University of
Edinburgh / Archives & Learning Services, University of York / Digital
Education Service, University of Leeds
1516
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.04
‘ENTANGLED’ MONASTICISM IN MEDIEVAL AND EARLY MODERN
CHRISTIANITY: A COMPARISON WITH MEDIEVAL JAPANESE BUDDHISM
Research Project ‘Religious Movements & Communication: Medium,
Worldview & Social Integration’ / Japan Society for the Promotion of
Science
Toshio Ohnuki, Faculty of Humanities & Social Sciences, Tokyo
Metropolitan University
Emilia Jamroziak, Institute for Medieval Studies / School of History,
University of Leeds
Entanglements and Self-Transformation: The Case of Cistercian
Pastoral Care (Language: English)
Toshio Ohnuki
A Reconsideration of Jesuit Modernity from the Entangled
Perspective (Language: English)
Kazuhisa Takeda, School of Political Science & Economics, Meiji
University, Tokyo
Entanglements in the Buddhism of Medieval Japan: Sects,
Doctrines, and Pastoral Care (Language: English)
Hitoshi Karikome, Faculty of Human Studies, Shujitsu University,
Okayama
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1517-a:
Paper 1517-b:
Paper 1517-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1518-a:
Paper 1518-b:
Paper 1518-c:
1517
Virtual Session
IN SEARCH OF THE COMMON GOOD: SOCIOECONOMIC ENTANGLEMENTS,
TH
CONSENSUS, AND POWER IN THE CROWN OF ARAGON, 14 -15TH CENTURIES
Grup de Recerca Consolidat en Estudis Medievals ‘Espai, Poder i
Cultura’, Universitat de Lleida
Flocel Sabaté Curull, Grup de Recerca Consolidat en Estudis Medievals
‘Espai, Poder i Cultura’, Universitat de Lleida
Flocel Sabaté Curull
The Transference of Practices and Discursiveness of the
Common Good among Mercantile, Urban, and Parliamentary
Spaces in Medieval Catalonia, 1380-1440 (Language: English)
Rogerio R Tostes, Facultat de Lletres, Universitat de Lleida
The Almoina of Lleida: A Local Form of Power (Language: English)
Núria Preixens Vidal, Facultat de Lletres, Universitat de Lleida
Influence Peddling in a Context of Bi-Statehood: The Valencian
Mercantile Group and Ferdinand of Trastámara, Regent of
Castile and King of Aragon, 1410-1416 (Language: English)
Carlos Crespo Amat, Instituto de Estudos Medievais (IEM),
Universidade Nova de Lisboa / Departament d'Història Medieval,
Història Moderna i Ciències i Tècniques Historiogràfiques, Universitat
d'Alacant
1518
Clarendon Building: 1.02
ECCLESIASTICAL NETWORKS IN EARLY MEDIEVAL GAUL, HISPANIA, AND
ITALY, I
Medieval Studies Research Group
Marta Szada, Wydział Humanistyczny, Uniwersytet Mikołaja Kopernika,
Toruń and Jerzy Szafranowski, Wydział Historii, Uniwersytet
Warszawski
Ian N. Wood, School of History, University of Leeds
The Role of Late Antique Lay Elites in Ecclesiastical Construction
Works on the Italian Peninsula (Language: English)
Isabelle Mossong, Kommission für Alte Geschichte und Epigraphik,
Deutsches Archäologisches Institut, München
Unhappy in the Ecclesiastical Web: Valerius of Bierzo’s Critique
of the Church in 7th-Century Gallaecia (Language: English)
Marta Szada
Unorthodox Christian Networks in 8th-Century Iberia:
Entanglements of the Adoptionism Crisis (Language: English)
Nicola Meyrick, School of Humanities & Heritage, University of Lincoln
Thursday
337
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1519-a:
Paper 1519-b:
Paper 1519-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1520-a:
Paper 1520-b:
Paper 1520-c:
338
1519
Newlyn Building: 1.02
JEWS, CONVERSOS, AND CHRISTIANS: PROFESSIONAL RELATIONSHIPS IN
LATE MEDIEVAL IBERIA, I
Anna Rich-Abad, Department of History, University of Nottingham
Marina Girona Berenguer, Departamento de Historia Medieval y
Ciencias y Técnicas Historiográficas, Universidad Nacional de Educación
a Distancia
Jewish Domestic Servants and Non-Jewish Enslaved Women in
Late Medieval Perpignan: Revisiting the Domestic Service Job
Description for the Jewish Home (Language: English)
Rebecca Lynn Winer, Department of History, Villanova University,
Pennsylvania
Child Labour and Apprenticeships in Barcelona’s Jewish Quarter
in the 14th and 15th Centuries (Language: English)
Anna Rich-Abad
Learning a Trade, Constituting a Dowry: A Comparative Analysis
of Converso and Old Christian Child Labour through
Apprenticeship Contracts in Valencia, 1400-1450 (Language:
English)
Guillermo López Juan, Departament d’Història Medieval i Ciències i
Tècniques Historiogràfiques, Universitat de València
1520
Stage@leeds: Stage 3
ENTANGLED SEMANTICS OF POWER BETWEEN EAST AND WEST, I: LOST IN
TRANSLATION - CHANCERY HABITS, INSTITUTIONAL LANGUAGE, AND
DIPLOMATIC PRACTICES IN THE 1192 BYZANTINE CHRYSOBULL TO PISA
Luisa Andriollo, Dipartimento di Civiltà e Forme del Sapere, Università
di Pisa
Cristina Rognoni, Dipartimento di Scienze Umanistiche, Università degli
Studi di Palermo
Pisan Civitas and Byzantine Megalopolis in the Chrysobull of
1192: Spaces, Institutions, and Men (Language: English)
Luisa Andriollo
Law and Diplomacy in the Chrysobull of 1192 (Language: English)
Daphne Penna, Sectie Rechtsgeschiedenis, Faculteit Rechtsgeleerdheid,
Rijksuniversiteit Groningen
Representation of Power between East and West: Material
Aspects of the Chrysobull of 1192 and Its Latin Translation
(Language: English)
Carlo Pernigotti, Dipartimento di Fililogia, letteratura e linguistica,
Università di Pisa and Maria Cristina Rossi, Dipartimento di Civiltà e
Forme del Sapere, Università di Pisa
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1521-a:
Paper 1521-b:
Paper 1521-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1522-a:
Paper 1522-b:
Paper 1522-c:
1521
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.32
TO BE GOD WITH GOD: MYSTICAL NETWORKS AND ENTANGLEMENTS, I MYSTICAL RELATIONALITY AND THEOLOGICAL ANTHROPOLOGY
Mystical Theology Network / Committee on the Study of Religion,
Harvard University
Lydia Shahan, Committee on the Study of Religion, Harvard University
Amanda Langley, School of History, Queen Mary University of London
‘Even if we cannot see one another, we can still kiss in the
dark’: Relation and Deification in Willem Jordaens’ Kiss of the
Mouth (Language: English)
John Arblaster, Ruusbroecgenootschap, Universiteit Antwerpen
Duns Scotus’s Theology of Union with God and Its Christological
Dimension (Language: English)
Dominic Abbott, Faculteit Theologie en Religiewetenschappen, KU
Leuven
Like Mother, like Son: Christ’s Resemblance to His Mother in
Late Medieval Devotional Literature (Language: English)
Lydia Shahan
1522
Esther Simpson Building: 3.08
CHRISTIAN ENTANGLEMENTS OF THE SUPERNATURAL IN LATE ANTIQUITY, I:
DEMONS AND THEIR CONTEXTS
Ryan Denson, Department of Classics, Ancient History, Religion &
Theology, University of Exeter
Charlotte Spence, Department of Classics, Ancient History, Religion &
Theology, University of Exeter
The Demonic Body: Changing Conceptions of the Demon’s Body
in Medical Discourse in Late Antiquity (Language: English)
Tiana Blazevic, Department of History & Archaeology, Macquarie
University, Sydney
The Vestigial Echoes of Greco-Roman Daimones in Christian
Demonology (Language: English)
Ryan Denson
Demonology and Kaiserkritik in Procopius’ Secret History
(Language: English)
Gioia Soldi, Dipartimento di Filologia Classica e Italianistica, Università
di Bologna
Thursday
339
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1523-a:
Paper 1523-b:
Paper 1523-c:
Paper 1523-d:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1524-a:
Paper 1524-b:
Paper 1524-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1525-a:
Paper 1525-b:
340
1523
Michael Sadler Building: LG.15
ENTANGLEMENTS ACROSS MEDIEVAL SPACE, OBJECTS, AND DATA, I
bITEM Project (Beyond the Item)
Stefan Eichert, Naturhistorisches Museum Wien
Johannes Preiser-Kapeller, Institut für Mittelalterforschung,
Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
Beyond the Item: Object Biographies and Their Entanglement in
a CIDOC CRM-Based Network (Language: English)
Nina Richards, Naturhistorisches Museum Wien
bITEM: An Open Source Web Application for the Visualisation of
Object Biographies (Language: English)
Stefan Eichert
Creating Digital Twins of Cultural Heritage Objects: 3D Models,
MicroCT Scans, and Their Integration into Digital Networks
(Language: English)
Viola Winkler, Naturhistorisches Museum Wien
Biography of a Landscape: Connecting a Deserted Medieval
Village, an Iron Age Burial Mound, and the Palaeolithic Venus of
Willendorf through People and Landscapes - bITEM Case Studies
(Language: English)
Roland Filzwieser, Ludwig Boltzmann Institute for Archaeological
Prospection & Virtual Archaeology, Ludwig Boltzmann Gesellschaft,
Wien
1524
Clarendon Building: 2.08
LOYALTY AS ENTANGLEMENTS, I: LOYALTY AS EMOTIONAL ENTANGLEMENT
Haskins Society / Battle Conference on Anglo-Norman Studies
Chris Lewis, Institute of Historical Research, University of London
Ryan Kemp, Institut für Geschichtswissenschaft, Rheinische FriedrichWilhelms-Universität Bonn
For God and Monastery: Loyalty in the Medieval Devotional
Landscape (Language: English)
Lauren Mancia, Department of History, Brooklyn College, City
University of New York
Breaking the Ties of Brotherhood: Emotion and Disloyalty
among the Angevin Nobility (Language: English)
Lili Scott Lintott, St Andrews Institute of Mediaeval Studies, University
of St Andrews
Grief and Loyalty: Healers and Bereavement in Medieval
Thinking (Language: English)
Emily A. Winkler, Faculty of History, University of Oxford
1525
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.06
CENTRAL EUROPEAN QUEENSHIP, I: EMBEDDING POWER AND AUTHORITY IN
DIFFERENT CULTURAL AND LEGAL SYSTEMS
Royal Studies Network
Patrik Pastrnak, Katedra historie, Univerzita Palackého, Olomouc
Patrik Pastrnak
Queen Elizabeth of Luxembourg, 1409-1442: Modalities of
Queenly Power in Premodern Central Europe (Language: English)
Anna Jagoš, Independent Scholar, Rédange
Ruling in the Latin East: Margaret of Hungary, Queen Dowager
of Thessalonica, 1207-1216 (Language: English)
Attila Bárány, ‘Hungary in Medieval Europe’ Research Group, University
of Debrecen / Eötvös Loránd Research Network, Budapest
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1526-a:
Paper 1526-b:
Paper 1526-c:
Paper 1526-d:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1527-a:
Paper 1527-b:
Paper 1527-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1528-a:
Paper 1528-c:
1527
Esther Simpson Building: 2.07
ENTANGLED SELVES, EMOTIONAL SELVES, I: THE SELF IN PAIN
Isabella Clarke, Oriel College, University of Oxford and Meritxell Risco
de la Torre, School of Humanities, University of Iceland, Reykjavík
Isabella Clarke
The Ailing Self: Illness and Self-Representation in Tang China
(Language: English)
Xiaojing Miao, Pembroke College, University of Oxford
‘The bende of this blame I bere in my nekke’: Transgression,
Wounds, and Plague Anxiety in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
(Language: English)
Mary Alcaro, Department of English, Rutgers University, New Jersey
Saint Hysteria?: The Tumultuous Aura of Sanctity in (Modern)
Medieval Texts (Language: English)
Meaghan Elizabeth Allen, School of Arts, Languages & Cultures,
University of Manchester
1528
Newlyn Building: LG.01
SIGHTS AND SOUNDS: MEDIEVAL PASTIMES
Meghan Cai, Department of Modern Languages & Literature, Grand
Valley State University, Michigan and Jacquelyn Tuerk-Stonberg,
Department of History, Kean University, New Jersey
Meghan Cai
How Magical Amulets Function: Images and Texts on Byzantine
Amulets (Language: English)
Jacquelyn Tuerk-Stonberg
Rhapsodising Foreign Musical Instruments (Language: English)
Xurong Kong, Department of History, Kean University, New Jersey
Wine for Books: Book Borrowing Practices among 11th- and 12thCentury Chinese Literati (Language: English)
Meghan Cai
Thursday
Paper 1528-b:
1526
Clarendon Building: 1.01
PAN-CONTINENTAL STORY COLLECTIONS IN A COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE,
I: SECRETS AND SUSPICION
Rory Critten, Section d’anglais, Université de Lausanne
Rory Critten
Secrets Unveiled: Shared and Certain Knowledge - (Emotional)
Decisions in Sendebar (Language: English)
Ulrike Becker, Zentrum Macht und Herrschaft, Institut für
Geschichtswissenschaft, Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn
Royal Bedroom Secrets in The Book of Syntipas / Sindbad /
Sendebar / Seven Sages (Language: English)
Emilie van Opstall, Amsterdam Centre for Ancient Studies &
Archaeology, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Queer Taboos?: Senescalcus, Balneator, and Attitudes towards
Sodomy (Language: English)
Rory Critten
Moralising the Gatekeeper: The Jackal’s Handling of Secrets in
the Byzantine Stephanites kai Ichnelates and the Translators’
Opinions (Language: English)
Lilli Hölzlhammer, ‘Retracing Connections’ Project, Uppsala universitet
341
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1529-a:
Paper 1529-b:
Paper 1529-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1530-a:
Paper 1530-b:
Paper 1530-c:
342
1529
Esther Simpson Building: 2.08
ART BINDS COMMUNITIES IN MEDIEVAL EUROPE, I: NETWORKS BEYOND
BORDERS
Maddalena Vaccaro, Dipartimento di Scienze del Patrimonio Culturale
(DISPAC), Università degli Studi di Salerno
Maddalena Vaccaro
Binded Inserts, Bonding Icons: Some New Thoughts on Greek
Images in Western Manuscripts (Language: English)
Antonino Tranchina, Dipartimento delle Arti, Università di Bologna
Spatialising Rule in a Comparative Perspective: From
Montecassino to Canterbury (Language: English)
Fabio Massaccesi, Dipartimento delle Arti, Università di Bologna
Sacred Images Owned by the Laity in the Medieval Churches of
Naples (Language: English)
Stefano D’Ovidio, Dipartimento di Studi Umanistici, Università degli
Studi di Napoli - Federico II
1530
Stage@leeds: Stage 2
INSCRIPTIONS AS NETWORKS AND ENTANGLEMENTS IN THE MEDIEVAL
EASTERN MEDITERRANEAN, I
ERC GRAPH-EAST: Latin as an Alien Script in the Medieval ‘Latin East’ /
Centre d’études supérieures de civilisation médiévale (CESCM - UMR
7302)
Maria Aimé Villano, Centre d’Études Supérieures de Civilisation
Médiévale (CESCM - UMR 7302), Université de Poitiers / Centre
National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Poitiers
Estelle Ingrand-Varenne, Centre d’Études Supérieures de Civilisation
Médiévale (CESCM - UMR 7302), Université de Poitiers / Centre
National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Poitiers
Inscriptions and Heraldic Symbols from Cenacle on Mount Zion:
Material Evidence of Christian Pilgrimage in Mamluk Jerusalem
(Language: English)
Michael Chernin, Israel Antiquities Authority, Jerusalem and Shai
Halevi, Israel Antiquities Authority, Jerusalem
The Pilgrimage of Anselm and John Adornes to the Holy Land,
1470-1471: An Illustration of the Entanglements of Social,
Professional, and Symbolic Networks of a Prominent Family
from Bruges (Language: English)
Clément Dussart, Centre d’Études Supérieures de Civilisation Médiévale
(CESCM - UMR 7302), Université de Poitiers / Centre National de la
Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Poitiers
The Inscribed Identity of the Bodrum St Peter Castle: A New
Documentation for the Mural Inventory (Language: English)
Hasan Sercan Sağlam, Centre d’Études Supérieures de Civilisation
Médiévale (CESCM - UMR 7302), Université de Poitiers / Centre
National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Poitiers
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1531-a:
Paper 1531-b:
Paper 1531-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1532-a:
Paper 1532-b:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1533-a:
Paper 1533-b:
1532
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.09
NETWORKS AND ENTANGLEMENTS IN NORDIC HAGIOGRAPHY, I
Norse Hagiography Network
Natasha Bradley, Lincoln College, University of Oxford and Tiffany
Nicole White, Department of Scandinavian, University of California,
Berkeley
Tiffany Nicole White
The Role of Óláfsríma in the Canonisation of Bishop Guðmundr
Arason (Language: English)
Joshua E. Harris, Department of Germanic Studies, Indiana University
Twisted Thorns: The Ideological Potential of a Special Relic
(Language: English)
Sabine Heidi Walther, Institut für Germanistik, Vergleichende Literaturund Kulturwissenschaft, Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn
1533
Michael Sadler Building: LG.19
BRITISH ARCHAEOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION, I: NETWORKS OF ARTISANS
British Archaeological Association
Harriet Mahood, Graduate Centre for Medieval Studies, University of
Reading
Harriet Mahood
Construction of the Effect and the Effect of the Construction:
Durham and the Sacralising Cybernetic of the Rib Vault
(Language: English)
Richard Brotherton, Independent Scholar, New York
Disentangling an Unknown 14th-Century Workshop of
Illuminators (Language: English)
Róisín Astell, Centre for Medieval & Early Modern Studies (MEMS),
University of Kent
Bishops’ Croziers and Their Artistic Entanglements in 12thCentury England (Language: English)
Sophie Kelly, Department of History of Art, University of Bristol
Thursday
Paper 1533-c:
1531
Clarendon Building: GR 01
TANGLING WITH THE CLASSICS, I: MEDIEVAL LEARNING
Jacqueline M. Burek, Department of English, George Mason University,
Virginia and Rebecca Menmuir, School of English & Drama, Queen Mary
University of London
Philippa Byrne, Faculty of History, University of Oxford
Eriugenian Entanglements: Defining Vox in the 9th and 10th
Centuries (Language: English)
Paul Vinhage, College of Arts & Sciences, Cornell University
Pruning the Roots of Entanglement: Teaching the Georgics in
the Cathedral Schools of France (Language: English)
Anthony J. Fredette, Independent Scholar, Scottsdale, Arizona and
Simon Whedbee, Department of Languages & Cultures, Loyola
University New Orleans, Louisiana
Édouard Glissant’s Poetics of Relation as a Guide to Late
Medieval Vernacular Translations of Arabo-Latin Science
(Language: English)
Eleanor Myerson, Corpus Christi College, University of Cambridge
343
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1534-a:
Paper 1534-b:
Respondent:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1535-a:
Paper 1535-b:
Paper 1535-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1536-a:
Paper 1536-b:
Paper 1536-c:
Paper 1536-d:
344
1534
Newlyn Building: GR.07
TWO MEDIEVAL LIVES: ARCHBISHOP AND COUNTESS
Society for Fourteenth-Century Studies
Helen Lacey, Mansfield College, University of Oxford
Katherine J. Lewis, Department of Communication & Humanities,
University of Huddersfield
Archbishop Arundel’s Exile in Italy, 1397-1399 (Language:
English)
Chris Given-Wilson, St Andrews Institute of Mediaeval Studies,
University of St Andrews
Defrauding the In-Laws: Maud, Countess of Oxford, and the De
Vere Estates, 1371-1413 (Language: English)
James Ross, Department of History, University of Winchester
Helen Lacey
1535
Clarendon Building: 1.06
REPRESENTING NETWORKS AND ENTANGLEMENTS, I: MEDIEVAL NARRATIVE
Bristol Centre for Medieval Studies, University of Bristol
Marianne J. Ailes, Department of French, University of Bristol
Helen Fulton, Centre for Medieval Studies, University of Bristol
Cross-Cultural Entanglements: Friendships and Liaisons across
Religious Divides in Old French Chansons de Geste (Language:
English)
Marianne J. Ailes
Arthur and Mont Saint-Michel: Disentangling the Semiotic
Function of Mountain Landscapes in Romance (Language: English)
Steve De Hailes, Department of English, University of Bristol
The King and His Entourage: Representing Kingly Relationships
in Angevin Texts (Language: English)
Tim Watson, School of Humanities, University of Bristol
1536
Esther Simpson Building: 1.01
J. R. R. TOLKIEN: MEDIEVAL ROOTS AND MODERN BRANCHES
Centre for Fantasy & the Fantastic, School of Critical Studies, University
of Glasgow
Andrew Higgins, Centre for Fantasy & the Fantastic, School of Critical
Studies, University of Glasgow
Andrew Higgins
Riddles in the Mark: The Usage of ‘Riddle’ in Book III of The
Lord of the Rings as Micro Level Interlacing (Language: English)
Christian S. Trenk, Theologische Fakultät, Katholische Universität
Eichstätt-Ingolstadt
Dark are the Pathless Ways (Language: English)
Scott Hodgman, Department of Literature & Language, Signum
University, New Hampshire
‘This is a serious journey, not a hobbit walking-party’: Travel
and the Quest Motif in Tolkien’s Work (Language: English)
Eva Lippold, Faculty of Arts & Social Sciences, Open University,
Coventry
‘We swears on the precious’: Oath-Making and Oath-Keeping in
Tolkien - Literary Devices or Spiritual Statements? (Language:
English)
Gaëlle Abaléa, Centre d’Etudes Médiévales Anglaises (CEMA), Sorbonne
Université, Paris
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1537-a:
Paper 1537-b:
Paper 1537-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1538-a:
Paper 1538-b:
Paper 1538-c:
Paper 1538-d:
1537
Newlyn Building: 1.01
SEARCHING FOR HEALTH AND THE HOLY, I: SAINTS AND PILGRIMS
Graduate Centre for Medieval Studies, University of Reading
Ruth J. Salter, Graduate Centre for Medieval Studies, University of
Reading
Caroline Bourne, Graduate Centre for Medieval Studies, University of
Reading
William of Malmesbury’s Pilgrimages?: Travels, Miracles, and
Religious Networks in the Early 12th Century (Language: English)
Ming Liu, School of History, Classics & Archaeology, University of
Edinburgh
St Michael’s Angelic Interactions: Signs of Sanctity and
Pilgrimage through the Landscape (Language: English)
Tracey Silvester, Graduate Centre for Medieval Studies, University of
Reading
Using the Power of Network Analysis to Identify Networks of
Power in the Liber Eliensis (Language: English)
Ian David Styler, Independent Scholar, Jönköping
1538
Esther Simpson Building: 1.08
CONCEPTS AND FOUNDATIONS IN THE PRACTICE OF HISTORY, I
Centre for Research in Historiography & Historical Culture, Aberystwyth
University
Antoni Grabowski, Instytut Historii im. Tadeusza Manteuffla, Polskiej
Akademii Nauk, Warszawa
Björn Weiler, Department of History & Welsh History, Aberystwyth
University
Picturing the Passage of Time in Anglo-Norman Manuscripts,
c. 1080-1150 (Language: English)
Charlie Rozier, School of History, University of East Anglia
Historialisation of Places in the Middle Ages as Exchange of
Historical Memory (Language: English)
Antoni Grabowski
Incidences: How to Visualize and Hierarchize Simultaneous
Events in French and Latin Historical Writing (1170s to 1400)
(Language: English)
Johannes Junge Ruhland, Department of French & Italian, Stanford
University
Past, Page, and Process: Autograph Revision and the Editing of
History (Language: English)
Rachel A. Wilson, Program in Medieval Studies, Yale University
Thursday
345
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1539-a:
Paper 1539-b:
Paper 1539-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1540-a:
Paper 1540-b:
Paper 1540-c:
346
1539
Esther Simpson Building: LG08
MILITARY ORDERS AND CRUSADERS, I: SESSIONS IN HONOUR OF
PROFESSOR HELEN J. NICHOLSON
Centre for Medieval Studies, Cardiff University
Hayley Bassett, School of History, Archaeology & Religion, Cardiff
University and Paul Webster, ‘Exploring the Past Pathway’, Cardiff
University
Paul Webster
Melisende and Sybil: An Examination of Gendered Power
Structures in the 12th-Century Kingdom of Jerusalem (Language:
English)
Hayley Bassett
Baldwin’s Brides: Three Women Who Might Have Been Queen of
Jerusalem (Language: English)
Susan B. Edgington, School of History, Queen Mary University of
London
Margaret of Jerusalem and Beverley: Piety and Pragmatism
during the Third Crusade (Language: English)
Jochen Burgtorf, Department of History, California State University,
Fullerton
1540
Esther Simpson Building: 2.12
IFORAL PROJECT, I: HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES ON PORTUGUESE
TH
TH
MUNICIPAL CHARTERS, 12 TO 15 CENTURIES
iForal Project ‘Portuguese Municipal Charters in the Middle Ages: An
Historical & Linguistic Approach in the Digital Era’
Filipa Roldão, Centro de História, Universidade de Lisboa
Maria João Branco, Instituto de Estudos Medievais (IEM), Universidade
Nova de Lisboa
What Stays on from Islamic Law in Portuguese Municipal
Charters (Language: English)
Hermenegildo Fernandes, Centro de História, Universidade de Lisboa
Regulation for the Others: Municipal Laws for Moorish and
Frankish Communities in Portugal in the 12th Century (Language:
English)
Manuela Santos Silva, Centro de História, Universidade de Lisboa
The Municipal Charter in the Royal Enquiries of the 13th Century:
Some Problems (Language: English)
Amélia Andrade, Instituto de Estudos Medievais (IEM), Universidade
Nova de Lisboa
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1541-a:
Paper 1541-b:
Paper 1541-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1542-a:
Paper 1542-b:
Paper 1542-c:
Paper 1542-d:
1541
Clarendon Building: 1.03
MOURNING AND REMEMBRANCE, I: TO BE REMEMBERED IN YOUR
COMMUNITY
Lena Wahlgren-Smith, Centre for Medieval & Renaissance Culture,
University of Southampton / School of History & Archaeology,
University of Winchester
Lena Wahlgren-Smith
‘To sing thee masses I shall not shun’: Trentals and
Commemorative Mass Schedules in Middle English Ghost
Narratives (Language: English)
James Galvin, Department of English Literature, University of
Birmingham
Remembrance in a Parish: The Memory of William Sponne in
Towcester, Northamptonshire, 1448-1560 (Language: English)
David Lepine, Independent Scholar, Dartford
The Aldermen of Late Medieval London and Their Tombs
(Language: English)
Christian Steer, Department of History, University of York
1542
Parkinson Building: Room B.11
STANDING BETWEEN WORLDS: CULTURAL, POLITICAL, AND MILITARY
BROKERS AND THEIR NETWORKS IN THE MEDITERRANEAN REGION BETWEEN
THE 4TH AND 7TH CENTURIES
Nikolas Hächler, Historisches Seminar, Universität Zürich
Nikolas Hächler
Goth, Christian, Warlord, Roman Commander: Gainas and His
Varying Personae (Language: English)
Antonia Pia Knöpges, ‘Kleine und fragmentarische Historiker der
Spätantike (KFHist)’, Institut für Alte Geschichte, Heinrich-HeineUniversität Düsseldorf
Influence and Power in the 5th Century: The Entanglements of
the Eastern Roman Master of Soldiers Aspar (Language: English)
Maximilian Höhn, Institut für Altertumswissenschaften, FriedrichSchiller-Universität Jena
Secret Puppet Masters?: Eunuchs at the Eastern Roman
Imperial Court and Their Role Within Palace Communication in
the 5th Century (Language: English)
Marcel J. Paul, Institut für Altertumswissenschaften, Friedrich-SchillerUniversität Jena
The Exarchs of Ravenna: Observations on Byzantium’s
Governors in Italy and Their Entanglements in the Western
Mediterranean World, 584-650 (Language: English)
Nikolas Hächler
Thursday
347
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1543-a:
Paper 1543-b:
Paper 1543-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1544-a:
Paper 1544-b:
Paper 1544-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1545-a:
Paper 1545-b:
Paper 1545-c:
348
1543
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.33
ARS VENDENDI: RETAIL AND ADVERTISING IN THE MIDDLE AGES, I
Konstanzer Arbeitskreis für mittelalterliche Geschichte / Medieval
Finance Network
Thomas Ertl, Friedrich-Meinecke-Institut, Freie Universität Berlin
Ulla Kypta, Fakultät für Geisteswissenschaften, Universität Hamburg
Retail and Advertising in the Middle Ages: An Introduction
(Language: English)
Thomas Ertl
Markets and Their Agents in German Towns (Language: English)
Sabine von Heusinger, Historisches Institut, Universität zu Köln
Cosmas or Damian?: Medieval Healers between Charity and
Commerce (Language: English)
Gregor Rohmann, Historisches Seminar, Goethe-Universität Frankfurt
am Main
1544
Parkinson Building: Room B.08
LATE MEDIEVAL SCANDINAVIAN ELITES, II
Institutt for historiske studier, Norges teknisk-naturvitenskapelige
universitet, Trondheim
Magne Njåstad, Institutt for historiske og klassiske studier, Norges
teknisk-naturvitenskapelige universitet, Trondheim
Sigrun Høgetveit Berg, Institutt for arkeologi, historie,
religionsvitenskap og teologi, Universitetet i Tromsø - Norges arktiske
universitet
Icelandic Elites and the Fishing Economy, 1400-1600 (Language:
English)
Emil Gunnlaugsson, Stefansson Arctic Institute, Akureyri and Árni
Daníel Júlíusson, Stefansson Arctic Institute, Akureyri
High Altitude Farming and Long Distance Trading: Economic
Elites and Networks in Inland Scandinavia (Language: English)
Magne Njåstad
Elites and Networks of Credit in Late Medieval Norway
(Language: English)
Susann Anett Pedersen, Institutt for historiske studier, Norges teknisknaturvitenskapelige universitet, Trondheim
1545
Esther Simpson Building: 2.09
SOCIAL AGENCY OF SECULAR GOLDSMITHS’ WORK IN THE LATE MIDDLE
AGES, I: PRODUCTION
International Center of Medieval Art (ICMA)
Masha Goldin, eikones - Zentrum für die Theorie und Geschichte des
Bildes, Universität Basel and Hila Manor, Department of Art History,
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Hila Manor
A Late Medieval Goldsmith’s Workshop (Language: English)
Jack Ogden, Independent Scholar, London
‘Made with the gold that the Londoners gave to the King’
(Language: English)
Alison Wright, Department of History of Art, University College London
Secular and Sacral Entanglements: The Shrine of St Simeon in
Zadar as a Mirror of Late Medieval Society (Language: English)
Mandy Telle, Sonderforschungsbereich 933 ‘Materiale Textkulturen’,
Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1546-a:
Paper 1546-b:
Paper 1546-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1547-a:
Paper 1547-b:
Paper 1547-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1548-a:
Paper 1548-c:
1547
Clarendon Building: 2.01
THE MEDIEVAL PSALTER IN ENGLAND
Jane Toswell, Department of English, University of Western Ontario
Jane Toswell
Connecting the Dots: Towards a Reconstruction of a
Fragmentary Psalter (Language: English)
Monika Maria Opalińska, Instytut Anglistyki, Uniwersytet Warszawski
English Psalms in Books of Hours: An Olive Branch from Digital
Humanities (Language: English)
Magdalena Charzyńska-Wójcik, Nanovic Institute for European Studies,
University of Notre Dame, Indiana / Katedra Historii Języka
Angielskiego i Translatoryki, Katolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana Pawła
II, Lublin
A Unique and Unpublished Anglo-Norman Abbreviated Psalter of
the 15th Century: Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS Bodley 9
(Language: English)
Samira Lindstedt, Institutt for fremmedspråk, Universitetet i Bergen
1548
Esther Simpson Building: 3.02
NETWORKS OF THE LORD’S PRAYER: EXPLORING ST GALL’S LIBRARY
Isabell Väth, Lehrstuhl für Deutsche Literatur des Mittelalters im
europäischen Kontext, Deutsches Seminar, Eberhard Karls Universität
Tübingen
Michael Lebzelter, DFG-Editionsprojekt ‘Narrative Vermittlung religiösen
Wissens’, Eberhard Karls Universität Tübingen
Networks across Time but in Space: Tracing the Lord’s Prayer in
St Gall’s Medieval Manuscripts (Language: English)
Johanna Jebe, Seminar für mittelalterliche Geschichte, Eberhard Karls
Universität Tübingen
Connecting the Reader with the Text: Literary Strategies in
Explanations of the Lord’s Prayer (Language: English)
Isabell Väth
The All-Encompassing Prayer: Networks of Theological Thought
in Explanations of the Lord’s Prayer (Language: English)
Sven Michael Gröger, Seminar für Liturgiewissenschaft, Rheinische
Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn
Thursday
Paper 1548-b:
1546
Esther Simpson Building: 3.02
WRITING, PRINTING, AND ILLUMINATING BOOKS IN THE LATE 15TH
CENTURY
Zentrum für Mittelalterstudien (ZEMAS), Otto-Friedrich-Universität
Bamberg
Christof Rolker, Zentrum für Mittelalterstudien (ZEMAS) / Institut für
Geschichtswissenschaften und Europäische Ethnologie, Otto-FriedrichUniversität Bamberg
Christof Rolker
Printers and Books at Bamberg in the 15th Century (Language:
English)
Bettina Wagner, Staatsbibliothek Bamberg
Development of Mise-en-Page in Dutch Late Medieval
Manuscripts and Early Printings: A Comparison (Language:
English)
Janne van der Loop, Gutenberg-Institut für Weltliteratur und
schriftorientierte Medien, Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz
Illumination and Woodcut Colouring in Anton Koberger’s
German Bible of 1483 (Language: English)
Ulrike Carvajal, Staatsbibliothek Bamberg
349
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023
COFFEE BREAK: 10.30-11.15
Coffee and Tea will be available on a self-serve basis at the following locations:
Esther Simpson Building: Foyer
Maurice Keyworth Building: Foyer
Parkinson Building: Bookfair
University Square: IMC Social Space
MEDIEVAL CRAFT FAIR
UNIVERSITY SQUARE & LEEDS UNIVERSITY UNION: FOYER
10.30-18.00
The Medieval Craft Fair (see p. 433) will take place on University Square showcasing a
variety of handmade items using and inspired by medieval craft techniques. The
exhibitors will include:
Anachronalia - Accessories and hand-bound books inspired by the past, present, and
possible futures.
Fiftyeleven - Hand-tooled, lovingly crafted, historically inspired woodwork and
pyrography.
Gemmeus - Handcrafted historical, classical, and revival jewellery, created in sterling
silver, gold, and natural gemstones and pearls.
Hudson Clay-Potter - Accurate reproduction pottery.
Opus Anglicanum - Embroidery kits and related items.
Pretender to the Throne - Historically inspired ceramics and prints.
The Goodwives - Weaver and textile historians, producing replicas of
archaeological finds.
Tillerman Beads - Handmade glass beads based on research, museum holdings, and
archaeological reports.
Trinity Court Potteries - Producers of museum quality replica pottery: Pots of History.
Viking Agenda - Viking-inspired jewellery and office supplies.
HISTORICAL & ARCHAEOLOGICAL SOCIETIES FAIR
LEEDS UNIVERSITY UNION: FOYER
10.30-18.00
Meet with independent groups who are dedicated to preserving local and national
historical and archaeological heritage, including:
Towton Battlefield Society
West Yorkshire Archive Service
Yorkshire Archaeological and Historical Society (YAHS)
MAKING LEEDS MEDIEVAL
UNIVERSITY SQUARE
10.30-18.00
As IMC 2023 draws to a close, join us in and around University Square for a range of
activities, including the Medieval Craft Fair and live displays, including medieval music,
combat displays, as well as birds of prey.
For full details, please visit www.tinyurl.com/MakingLeedsMedieval2023 or check the IMC
2023 App.
350
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1601-a:
Paper 1601-b:
Respondent:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Purpose:
1601
Michael Sadler Building: LG.16
THE LEARNED ARTS IN EARLY MEDIEVAL INSULAR CIRCLES: THE EVIDENCE
FROM ANONYMUS AD CUIMNANUM
Brian Stone, Department of English, Indiana State University
Brian Stone
Knowledge of the Progymnasmata among the Irish: Evidence
from the Anonymus ad Cuimnanum (Language: English)
Brian Stone
‘Philosophus amator sapientiae, philocomphus amator
iactantiae’: Translating the Hiberno-Latin of Anonymus ad
Cuimnanum (Language: English)
Brian Cook, College of Liberal Arts, Auburn University, Alabama
Lindy Brady, Department of History, Geography & Social Sciences,
Edge Hill University
1602
Newlyn Building: 1.07
CASTLE SPACES, IV: THE ‘AUTHENTIC’ CASTLE EXPERIENCE - CHALLENGING
IDEAS OF AUTHENTICITY REGARDING CASTLES AS HERITAGE SPACES IN
IRELAND AND BRITAIN, A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
Canterbury Christ Church University
Alison Norton, School of Humanities & Educational Studies, Canterbury
Christ Church University
Leonie V. Hicks, School of Humanities & Educational Studies,
Canterbury Christ Church University
Increasingly, perceptions of castles for present-day audiences are
influenced by popular culture and its projection of these structures as
being synonymous with ideas of fantasy, romanticism, and war. These
ideas encourage visitors to castles hoping they will get an authentic
experience of chivalric knights or gruesome battles. As scholars, we
understand castles are individualistic and have their unique history. Yet,
how does one demonstrate this when ‘authenticity’ is used as a
marketing technique? This round table discussion will discuss the
challenges heritage professionals face when attempting to balance what
is authentic and what is perceived as authentic in castles found in Ireland
and Britain.
Participants include Morn D. T. Capper (University of Chester), Catriona
Cooper (Canterbury Christ Church University), Callum Watson (National
Trust for Scotland, Edinburgh), Katherine Weikert ((University of
Winchester), and William Wyeth (English Heritage, York).
Thursday
351
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1603-a:
Paper 1603-b:
Paper 1603-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1604-a:
Paper 1604-b:
Respondent
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1605-a:
Paper 1605-b:
Paper 1605-c:
352
1603
Newlyn Building: GR.01
EARLY ARTHURIAN LITERATURE BETWEEN HAGIOGRAPHY AND FICTION
Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse & Celtic, University of Cambridge /
Leverhulme Trust
Francesco Marzella, Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse & Celtic,
University of Cambridge
Rebecca Thomas, School of History, Archaeology & Religion, Cardiff
University
Arthur Behaving Badly and Saints Being Saintly (Language:
English)
Paul Russell, Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse & Celtic, University of
Cambridge
Prophecy and Fictive Learning: From Hagiography to the Latin
Arthurian (Language: English)
Rosalind Love, Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse & Celtic, University
of Cambridge
Geoffrey of Monmouth and the (Im)Possibility of Medieval Latin
Fiction (Language: English)
Francesco Marzella
1604
Parkinson Building: Room B.10
AMBIGUITY OF HOSPITALITY, II: TROUBLED DIPLOMACIES IN EURASIAN
CONTEXTS, 13TH-14TH CENTURIES
Ambiguities of Hospitality Project / Centrum för medeltidsstudier,
Stockholms universitet
Wojtek Jezierski, Historiska institutionen, Stockholms universitet
Tim Geelhaar, Sonderforschungsbereich 1288 'Praktiken des
Vergleichens', Fakultät für Geschichtswissenschaften, Universität
Bielefeld
Honourable Guest or Dangerous Spy?: Contradictions of
Diplomatic Hospitality in Late Medieval Italy (Language: English)
Edward Dettmam Loss,
Koryo and the Mongol Yuan Empire: Merged in Some Areas Yet
Separated in Others (Language: English)
Kang Hahn Lee, Korean History Department, Academy of Korean
Studies, Seongnam
Lars Kjær, Faculty of History, Northeastern University London
1605
Michael Sadler Building: Rupert Beckett Theatre
THE PAPACY OF PASCHAL II AND THE TRIUMPH OF ROMAN PRIMACY?, II
Centro de Estudos de História Religiosa, Universidade Católica
Portuguesa, Lisboa
Enrico Veneziani, Centro de Estudos de História Religiosa, Universidade
Católica Portuguesa, Lisboa
Brenda M. Bolton, University of London
Paschal II and Canon Law (Language: English)
Anne J. Duggan, Department of History, King’s College London
Paschal II and France (Language: English)
Pascal Montaubin, UFR d’histoire et de géographie, Université de
Picardie Jules-Verne, Amiens
Inter barbaros positus: Paschal II and the Kingdom of England
(Language: English)
Enrico Veneziani
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1606-a:
Paper 1606-b:
Paper 1606-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1607-a:
Paper 1607-b:
Paper 1607-c:
1606
Maurice Keyworth Building: G.02
TEXTS AND THE REPRESSION OF MEDIEVAL HERESY: TWENTY YEARS AFTER,
II
Centrum pro digitální výzkum náboženství / Dissident Networks Project
(DISSINET), Masarykova univerzita, Brno
Robert L. J. Shaw, Centrum pro digitální výzkum náboženství,
Masarykova univerzita, Brno and David Zbíral, Centrum pro digitální
výzkum náboženství / Dissident Networks Project (DISSINET),
Masarykova univerzita, Brno
Reima Välimäki, School of History, Culture & Arts Studies, University of
Turku
Ad extorquendum veritatem: The Situational Production of
‘Truth’ in the Interaction between Inquisitorial and Defendant
Agencies at Trial, Giaveno, 1335 (Language: English)
Davor Salihović, Centrum pro digitální výzkum náboženství / Dissident
Networks Project (DISSINET), Masarykova univerzita, Brno
A Network Analysis of Incriminations in the Inquisition Register
of Bologna, 1291-1310 (Language: English)
Katia Riccardo, Centrum pro digitální výzkum náboženství / Dissident
Networks Project (DISSINET), Masarykova univerzita, Brno
A Geographic Perspective on Peter Seila’s Inquisition in Quercy,
1241-1242 (Language: English)
Kaarel Sikk, Centrum pro digitální výzkum náboženství / Dissident
Networks Project (DISSINET), Masarykova univerzita, Brno
1607
Michael Sadler Building: LG.10
QUEER COMMUNITY IN THE MIDDLE AGES, II: NETWORKS AND
INSTITUTIONS
Tim Wingard, Centre for Medieval Studies, University of York
Tim Wingard
Epistolary Queerness: A Medieval and Early Modern Study of
Sexuality (Language: English)
Laura DeLuca, Department of English, Carnegie Mellon University,
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Male Homosexuality in the Galician-Portuguese Cantigas de
escárnio e maldizer in the Light of the Community Norms of
Emotional Expression (Language: English)
Aleksandra Urbaniak, Wydział Neofilologii, Uniwersytet im. Adama
Mickiewicza, Poznań
Premodern / Queer / Community: Reconsidering the Narrative
of Medieval Marginalisation (Language: English)
Hilary Rhodes, Department of Teaching & Learning Sciences, University
of Denver, Colorado
Thursday
353
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1608-a:
Paper 1608-b:
Paper 1608-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1609-a:
Paper 1609-b:
Paper 1609-c:
354
1608
Newlyn Building: GR.02
RETHINKING THE CAROLINGIAN REFORMS FURTHER, II: CANON LAW AND
LITURGY
Rethinking the Carolingian Reforms
Arthur Westwell, Fakultät für Katholische Theologie, Universität
Regensburg
Ingrid Rembold, Department of History, School of Arts, Languages &
Cultures, University of Manchester
A Better Liturgy Is a Different Liturgy (Language: English)
Tyler D. Sampson, School of Theology & Religious Studies, Catholic
University of America, Washington, DC
Reformatio and Correctio in the Carolingian Sources Concerning
Canonical Law (Language: English)
Kristina Mitalaité, Department of Research of Ancient & Medieval
Cultures, Lithuanian Culture Research Institute, Vilnius
Agilulf of Bobbio’s Plenary Missal in the Biblioteca Ambrosiana:
A Liturgical Treasure Trove in Post-Carolingian Italy (Language:
English)
Arthur Westwell
1609
Newlyn Building: LG.02
LAW AFTER ROME: NETWORKS AND CONNECTIONS IN THE LEGES
BARBARORUM, III - NETWORKS IN EARLY MEDIEVAL LEGAL CULTURES
Christopher Heath, School of Humanities & Heritage, University of
Lincoln
Thom Gobbitt, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
Honour, Shame, and Religious Entanglements in Early Medieval
English Law (Language: English)
Julian Calcagno, College of Humanities, Arts & Social Sciences, Flinders
University, Adelaide
The Runaway placitum: The Lawsuit of Jesi in 860 against Count
Hildebert and Its Consequences (Language: English)
Clemens Gantner, Institut für Österreichische Geschichtsforschung,
Universität Wien
Gender and Legal Identity in Early Medieval Southern Italy
(Language: English)
Sarah Whitten, Department of History, Hobart & William Smith
Colleges, Geneva, New York
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1610-a:
Paper 1610-b:
Paper 1610-c:
Paper 1610-d:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1611-a:
Paper 1611-b:
Paper 1611-c:
1611
Parkinson Building: Room B.22
A WORLD OF STEEL AND STONE: NETWORKS OF DEFENSIVE STRUCTURES IN
MEDIEVAL SLAVONIA, CROATIA, AND DALMATIA
Tomislav Matić, Croatian Institute of History, Zagreb
Danko Dujmović, Faculty of Humanities & Social Sciences, University of
Rijeka
Testing the Limits: Defensive Systems on the Western Borders
of Central Slavonia in the High Middle Ages (Language: English)
Tomislav Matić
The Congregatio Generalis of 1558: The Role of Steničnjak
Castle in the Defence of the Kingdom of Croatia (Language:
English)
Matea Jurić, Department of History, Catholic University of Croatia,
Zagreb
The Network of Castles and Fortresses in the Medieval County of
Gračenica (Language: English)
Nikolina Belošević, Faculty of Humanities & Social Sciences, University
of Rijeka and Danko Dujmović, Faculty of Humanities & Social Sciences,
University of Rijeka
Roads and Castles of the Vinodol Valley: The Cases of Grižane
and Ledenice (Language: English)
Andrej Janeš, Department for Archaeology, Croatian Conservation
Institute, Zagreb and Palma Karković Takalić, Faculty of Humanities &
Social Sciences, University of Rijeka
Thursday
Paper 1611-d:
1610
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.31
MULTIDIMENSIONAL DIPLOMACY: THE MAMLUK / CAIRO SULTANATE AS A
SYSTEM OF NETWORKED EMPIRE, II - RECONCEPTUALISING THE DĀR ALḤARB LEVANTINE COAST AND LEVANT TRADE, POST 1291
‘Diplomaticon, Power in History’, Universiteit Antwerpen / Centre for
Medieval & Early Modern Studies / Centre for the History of Diplomacy,
University of Manchester
Georg Christ, School of Arts, Languages & Cultures, University of
Manchester and Malika Dekkiche, Faculteit Letteren en Wijsbegeerte,
Universiteit Antwerpen
Malika Dekkiche
Diplomacy in the Service of Baybars’ Ambitions, 1260-1277
(Language: English)
Mohamed Ouerfelli, Institut de recherches et d’études sur les mondes
arabes et musulmans (IREMAM - UMR 7310), Aix Marseille Université
The Palestinian Coast as a Focus of Mamluk-Frankish Diplomacy
and Trade in the Post-1291 Period (Language: English)
Reuven Amitai, Institute for Asian & African Studies, Hebrew University
of Jerusalem
Porous Jihad Boundaries: Redefining the Dār al-ḥarb after 1291
and Mamluk Satellites - Cyprus, Rhodes, Venice, Crete
(Language: English)
Georg Christ
Retrospective Digital Cartography: Challenging the Visual
Language of Political Self-Containment - From the Roman to the
Mamluk Empire (Language: English)
Luca Scholz, School of Arts, Languages & Cultures, University of
Manchester
355
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1612-a:
Paper 1612-b:
Paper 1612-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1613-a:
Paper 1613-b:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1614-a:
Paper 1614-b:
Paper 1614-c:
356
1612
Clarendon Building: 2.01
MEDIEVAL YORKSHIRE: COMMUNITIES AND NETWORKS, 10TH-15TH
CENTURIES
Ridings of Yorkshire Society (ROYS)
Adam Cook, School of Humanities, University of Hull / Institute for
Medieval Studies, University of Leeds and Ryan Michael Prescott,
School of Humanities, University of Hull
Ryan Michael Prescott
A Queen of Jorvik?: Queenship, Coronation, and the Network of
Royal Sisters in the Reign of Æthelstan of Wessex (Language:
English)
Florence H. R. Scott, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Viking Entanglements in the History and Folklore of Ravenser
Odd (Language: English)
Emily Robinson, Department of Politics, University of Sussex
The Networks of Literate and Devout Book Lovers in Late
Medieval Yorkshire: Eremiticism in the Lincoln Thornton
Manuscript (Language: English)
Yuki Sugiyama, Department of English & Related Literature, University
of York
1613
Esther Simpson Building: 3.01
BYZANTINE WARFARE, II: MILITARY INFLUENCES BETWEEN BYZANTIUM AND
ITS NEIGHBOURS
De Re Militari: Society for Medieval Military History
Georgios Theotokis, Department of History, Ibn-Haldun University,
Istanbul
Georgios Theotokis
Steppe Influences on Byzantine Warfare and Military
Organisation, 800-1100 (Language: English)
Leif Inge Ree Petersen, Institutt for historiske og klassiske studier,
Norges teknisk-naturvitenskapelige universitet, Trondheim
Military Influences in Iconography: 14th-Century Military
Equipment in the Frescoes of the Church of St Mary on Prespa
Lake, Albania (Language: English)
Raffaele D’Amato, Laboratorio delle antiche Province Danubiane,
Università degli Studi di Ferrara
1614
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.03
NETWORKS AND ENTANGLEMENTS IN EARLY AND HIGH MEDIEVAL CENTRAL
EUROPE, II
Ivo Štefan, Ústav pro Archeologii, Univerzita Karlova, Praha
Tomáš Klír, Ústav pro Archeologii, Univerzita Karlova, Praha
Landscape and Onomastics in Northeastern Bavaria (Language:
English)
Nicolas Jansens, Slavisches Institut, Ruprecht-Karls-Universität
Heidelberg / Univerzita Karlova, Praha
Connecting Centre and Periphery: Networks in Early Medieval
Bohemia (Language: English)
Ivo Štefan
Primus: Empowering the Voiceless - A Comparative Analysis of
Christianisation in Medieval Hungary and Bohemia (Language:
English)
Mária Vargha, Ústav pro Archeologii, Univerzita Karlova, Praha
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1615-a:
Paper 1615-b:
Paper 1615-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1616-a:
Paper 1616-b:
Paper 1616-c:
1615
Parkinson Building: Room B.09
SINO-BYZANTINE COMPARISONS, EURASIAN ENTANGLEMENTS, II:
IMPERIAL POWER IN WAR, PEACE, AND PARRHESIA
ERC Project ‘Classicising Learning in Medieval Imperial Systems: CrossCultural Approaches to Byzantine Paideia & Tang/Song Xue’ / Centre for
Late Antique, Islamic & Byzantine Studies, University of Edinburgh
Niels H. Gaul, School of History, Classics & Archaeology, University of
Edinburgh
Linda Walton, Department of History, Portland State University, Oregon
Eternal Triumphant Victor: Imperial Military Achievement in
Middle Byzantine Propaganda (Language: English)
Defangyu Kong, School of History, Classics & Archaeology, University of
Edinburgh
Imperial Absences: Medieval Chinese Emperors in Textual
Representations of Military Campaigns (Language: English)
Michael Höckelmann, Institut für Sprachen und Kulturen des Nahen
Ostens und Ostasiens, Friedrich-Alexander-Universität ErlangenNürnberg
Words That Shook Thrones: Comparing Parrhesia in the Middle
Byzantine and Tang Empires (Language: English)
Bilal Adıgüzel, School of History, Classics & Archaeology, University of
Edinburgh
1616
Stage@leeds: Stage 1
TEXTUAL ENTANGLEMENTS AND CRUSADE NARRATIVES
Beth Spacey, School of Historical & Philosophical Inquiry, University of
Queensland
Natasha Ruth Hodgson, School of Arts & Humanities, Nottingham Trent
University
Classicising the Environments of the Latin East: Textual
Entanglements in the Narratives of Fulcher of Chartres and
Jacques de Vitry (Language: English)
Beth Spacey
Textual Entanglements: William of Tyre and His Use of First
Crusade Narrative (Language: English)
Andrew David Buck, School of History, Archaeology & Religion, Cardiff
University
Infirmi et sani: Entanglements of Spiritual and Physical Health
after the Battle of Hattin (Language: English)
Megan Cassidy-Welch, Institute for Religion & Critical Inquiry,
Australian Catholic University, Victoria
Thursday
357
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1617-a:
Paper 1617-b:
Paper 1617-c:
Paper 1617-d:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1618-a:
Paper 1618-b:
Paper 1618-c:
358
1617
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.04
METAPHORS OF INCLUSION AND EXCLUSION: LITERARY AND SPIRITUAL
TH
NETWORKING IN 15 -CENTURY IBERIA
Esther Pascua Echegaray, Facultad de Ciencias Sociales y
Humanidades, Universidad a Distancia de Madrid
Esther Pascua Echegaray
Spreading a Message of Social Inclusiveness: Alonso de
Cartagena’s Theological Allegories on New Men and Their
Internal Fight to be Accepted (Language: English)
Maria Laura Giordano, Departamento de Humanidades, Universitat Abat
Oliba CEU, Barcelona
Blood, Heredity, and Status: Metaphors and the Rise of Purity of
Blood in Late Medieval Spain (Language: English)
Rosa Vidal Doval, School of Languages, Linguistics & Film, Queen Mary
University of London
Trees and Conversos: A Theological-Political Metaphor, 15th-16th
Centuries (Language: English)
Claude B. Stuczynski, Department of General History, Bar-Ilan
University, Ramat Gan
Spanish Cancionero Poetry as a Weapon for and against
Conversos (Language: English)
Óscar Perea Rodríguez, Department of Languages, Literatures &
Cultures, University of California, Berkeley
1618
Clarendon Building: 1.02
ECCLESIASTICAL NETWORKS IN EARLY MEDIEVAL GAUL, HISPANIA, AND
ITALY, II
Medieval Studies Research Group
Marta Szada, Wydział Humanistyczny, Uniwersytet Mikołaja Kopernika,
Toruń and Jerzy Szafranowski, Wydział Historii, Uniwersytet
Warszawski
Yaniv Fox, Department of General History, Bar-Ilan University, Ramat
Gan
Success of Many Fathers: The Ecclesiastical Network behind the
Foundation of St Maurice d’Agaune in 515 (Language: English)
Jerzy Szafranowski
The Foundation of Female Monasteries in 7th-Century
Merovingian Gaul: Female Independence or Male Dominance?
(Language: English)
Susan Phillips, School of Humanities & Heritage, University of Lincoln
Between the Lord and the Deep Blue Sea: Relics, Intertext, and
Entanglement in the Life of Benedict of Aniane (Language:
English)
Rutger Kramer, Onderzoeksinstituut voor Geschiedenis en
Kunstgeschiedenis, Universiteit Utrecht
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1619-a:
Paper 1619-b:
Paper 1619-c:
Paper 1619-d:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1620-a:
Paper 1620-b:
Paper 1620-c:
1619
Newlyn Building: 1.02
JEWS, CONVERSOS, AND CHRISTIANS: PROFESSIONAL RELATIONSHIPS IN
LATE MEDIEVAL IBERIA, II
Marina Girona Berenguer, Departamento de Historia Medieval y
Ciencias y Técnicas Historiográficas, Universidad Nacional de Educación
a Distancia
Anna Rich-Abad, Department of History, University of Nottingham
Rebuilding the Community: Networks of Support among the
Conversos of 15th-Century Barcelona (Language: English)
Clara Jáuregui, Arxiu de la Catedral de Barcelona
Economic Profile and Mentality of the Jewish and Converso
Communities in the Kingdom of Aragon in the Late Middle Ages
(Language: English)
Miguel Ángel Motis Dolader, Facultad de Comunicación y Ciencias
Sociales, Universidad San Jorge, Zaragoza
La práctica profesional de la medicina entre judíos y
judeoconversos castellanos en el tránsito de la Edad Media a la
Moderna (Language: Español)
Enrique Cantera-Montenegro, Departamento de Historia Medieval y
Ciencias y Técnicas Historiográficas, Universidad Nacional de Educación
a Distancia, Madrid
Jewish Women and Medicine in Late Medieval Castile (Language:
English)
Marina Girona Berenguer
1620
Stage@leeds: Stage 3
ENTANGLED SEMANTICS OF POWER BETWEEN EAST AND WEST, II: NEW
WINE IN OLD WINESKINS - GREEK LEXICAL LOANS AND SEMANTIC
RESHAPING IN THE FISCAL AND INSTITUTIONAL LANGUAGE OF MEDIEVAL
ITALY
Alberto Cotza, Dipartimento di Civiltà e Forme del Sapere, Università di
Pisa and Paolo Tomei, Dipartimento di Civiltà e Forme del Sapere,
Università di Pisa
François Bougard, Institut de Recherche et d’Histoire des Textes (IRHT
- UPR 841), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS),
Nanterre
A Word in Two Worlds: Baiulus / βαΐουλος, 781-944 (Language:
English)
Paolo Tomei
From the Emperor to the Saint: New Functions and Roles of the
Comes corti in Post-Byzantine Bari, 11th Century (Language:
English)
Nicolò Galluzzi, Dipartimento di Civiltà e Forme del Sapere, Università
di Pisa
Δεκατεία: A Case-Study on Greek Fiscal Lexicon in 12th-Century
Pisa (Language: English)
Alberto Cotza
Thursday
359
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1621-a:
Paper 1621-b:
Paper 1621-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1622-a:
Paper 1622-b:
Paper 1622-c:
360
1621
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.32
TO BE GOD WITH GOD: MYSTICAL NETWORKS AND ENTANGLEMENTS, II RE-EVALUATING MYSTICAL GENEALOGIES: NEW APPROACHES TO TEXTUAL
TRANSMISSIONS AND TRADITIONS
Mystical Theology Network / Ruusbroecgenootschap, Universiteit
Antwerpen
John Arblaster, Ruusbroecgenootschap, Universiteit Antwerpen
Einat Klafter, Zvi Yavetz School of Historical Studies, Tel Aviv University
‘Franciscan’ Mysticism?: A (Re-)Evaluation of Medieval Mystical
Genealogies (Language: English)
Michael Hahn, Sarum College, Salisbury
Mapping Mysticism: New Approaches to (and Uses for)
Stemmatology (Language: English)
Jonas Hermann, Department of Germanic Languages & Literatures,
Harvard University
Where Are All the People?: Absence, Anonymity, and the
Construction of ‘Agnes Blannbekin’ (Language: English)
Amanda Langley, School of History, Queen Mary University of London
1622
Esther Simpson Building: 3.08
CHRISTIAN ENTANGLEMENTS OF THE SUPERNATURAL IN LATE ANTIQUITY,
II: MONSTERS AND MIRACLES
Ryan Denson, Department of Classics, Ancient History, Religion &
Theology, University of Exeter
Frederick Kimpton, Department of Classics, Ancient History, Religion &
Theology, University of Exeter
Serpents, Saints, and Sorcerers: The Dragon-Slaying Narratives
of Lucian of Samosata’s Philopseudes and the New Testament
Apocrypha (Language: English)
William Colman, Department of Classics, Ancient History, Religion &
Theology, University of Exeter
Medical Terminology in the Miracles of Cosmas and Damian
(Language: English)
Elle Jones, Department of Archaeology, Classics & Egyptology,
University of Liverpool
Of God and a god: The Christian Veneer to the Pagan Story of
Grendel in Beowulf (Language: English)
James Buckingham, Independent Scholar, Walworth County, Wisconsin
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1623-a:
Paper 1623-b:
Paper 1623-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1624-a:
Paper 1624-b:
Paper 1624-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1625-a:
Paper 1625-c:
1624
Clarendon Building: 2.08
LOYALTY AS ENTANGLEMENTS, II: LOYALTY IN WAR
Haskins Society / Battle Conference on Anglo-Norman Studies
Chris Lewis, Institute of Historical Research, University of London
Matthew Bennett, School of History & Archaeology, University of
Winchester
Earl Uhtred of Northumbria and the Pretence of Loyalty at the
Turn of the 11th Century (Language: English)
Andrew Wareham, School of Humanities & Social Sciences, University
of Roehampton
Loyalty, Rebellion, and Treason in Capetian Anjou, 1199-1246
(Language: English)
Thibault Jouis, Centre Roland Mousnier (CRM - UMR 8596), Sorbonne
Université, Paris
Blood and Loyalty: Bastards and Vendetta in Late Medieval
Society (Language: English)
José Andres Porras, Faculty of History, University of Oxford
1625
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.06
CENTRAL EUROPEAN QUEENSHIP, II: WEAVING MARRIAGE, WEAVING
THROUGH MARRIAGE
Royal Studies Network
Patrik Pastrnak, Katedra historie, Univerzita Palackého, Olomouc
Patrik Pastrnak
The Political Framework of the Marriage of Mazovian Duke
Siemowit IV to Alexandra, Sister of Władysław II Jagiełło, the
King of Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania, February 1387
(Language: English)
Jan Jeż, Wydział Nauk Historycznych, Uniwersytet Kardynała Stefana
Wyszyńskiego, Warszawa
Anne, Queen Consort of Hungary-Bohemia and Her DynasticDomestic Relations (Language: English)
Attila Györkös, ‘Hungary in Medieval Europe’ Research Group / Eötvös
Loránd Research Network, University of Debrecen
Queen Elisabeth of Austria (Elżbieta Rakuszanka): Wife, Mother,
and Ruler - Old Questions and New Research (Language: English)
Beata Możejko, Instytut Historii, Uniwersytet Gdański
Thursday
Paper 1625-b:
1623
Michael Sadler Building: LG.15
ENTANGLEMENTS ACROSS MEDIEVAL SPACE, OBJECTS, AND DATA, II
FWF DFG Project HOLDURA (I 4330-G)
Mihailo Popović, Abteilung Byzanzforschung, Österreichische Akademie
der Wissenschaften, Wien
Johannes Tripps, Hochschule für Technik, Wirtschaft und Kultur, Leipzig
Stefan Uroš I and Helen of Anjou: The Royal Couple’s Influence
on the Confessional Structure of the Principality of Zeta in the
Late 13th and Early 14th Century (Language: English)
Dorota Vargová, Abteilung Byzanzforschung, Österreichische Akademie
der Wissenschaften, Wien
A Mother and Two Sons: the Serbian Rulers Helen, Dragutin, and
Milutin and Their Entangled Realms in Medieval Serbia
(Language: English)
Mihailo Popović
OpenAtlas: Handling Entangled Data in a Linked Data World
(Language: English)
Bernhard Koschiček-Krombholz, Institut für Mittelalterforschung
(IMAFO) / Austrian Centre for Digital Humanities and Cultural Heritage
(ACDH-CH), Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
361
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1626-a:
Paper 1626-b:
Paper 1626-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1627-a:
Paper 1627-b:
Paper 1627-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1628-a:
Paper 1628-b:
Paper 1628-c:
362
1626
Clarendon Building: 1.01
PAN-CONTINENTAL STORY COLLECTIONS IN A COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE,
II: THE SEVEN SAGES OF ROME
Bettina Bildhauer, School of Modern Languages - German, University of
St Andrews
Emilie van Opstall, Amsterdam Centre for Ancient Studies &
Archaeology, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Domestic(ity) Matters: Morality Tales and Mirror for Princes in
the Scottish Seven Sages of Rome (Language: English)
Caitlin Flynn, School of English, University of St Andrews
Cross-Cultural Relationships and Crusade Ideologies in the
French Continuations (Le Roman de Kanor) (Language: English)
Victoria Turner, Department of French / St Andrews Institute of
Mediaeval Studies, University of St Andrews
A Male Victim’s Story: Narrating Sexualised Violence in a
German Version of the Seven Sages of Rome (Language: English)
Bettina Bildhauer
1627
Esther Simpson Building: 2.07
ENTANGLED SELVES, EMOTIONAL SELVES, II: THE SELF IN ITS
ENVIRONMENT
Isabella Clarke, Oriel College, University of Oxford and Meritxell Risco
de la Torre, School of Humanities, University of Iceland, Reykjavík
Meritxell Risco de la Torre
Eco-Narrative, Body, and Grettir’s Emotion in Grettis saga
Ásmundarsonar (Language: English)
Chen Cui, Faculté des Lettres, Université de Lausanne
Entangled Selves and Others in Partonopeu de Blois: Emotions
and Mobile Identities (Language: English)
Lucie Kaempfer, Département de Langue et Littérature Anglaises,
Université de Genève
Love and Fury: The Question of Dido’s Anger in The Aeneid and
Its Medieval Adaptations (Language: English)
Mounawar Abbouchi, Department of Comparative Literature &
Intercultural Studies, University of Georgia, Athens
1628
Newlyn Building: LG.01
NETWORKS IN, OF, AND AROUND NORDIC MANUSCRIPTS, I: PRODUCTION,
TRANSMISSION, AND RECEPTION
Lea D. Pokorny, Faculty of Philosophy, History & Archaeology,
University of Iceland, Reykjavík and Giulia Zorzan, Faculty of
Philosophy, History & Archaeology, University of Iceland, Reykjavík
Lea D. Pokorny
The Transmission and Role of the Eufemiavisor in the Textual
and Literary Network of Medieval Sweden (Language: English)
Louise Faymonville, Institutionen för svenska och flerspråkighet,
Stockholms universitet
Kinship and Manuscript Production in Pre-Modern Iceland
(Language: English)
Katelin Marit Parsons, Árni Magnússon Institute for Icelandic Studies,
Reykjavík
Everchanging Narratives: What the Literary Transmission
Process Tells Us about Manuscript Production (Language: English)
Pernille Ellyton, Ordbog over det norrøne prosasprog, Københavns
Universitet
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1629-a:
Paper 1629-b:
Paper 1629-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1630-a:
Paper 1630-b:
Paper 1630-c:
1629
Esther Simpson Building: 2.08
ART BINDS COMMUNITIES IN MEDIEVAL EUROPE, II: ENTANGLEMENTS
BEYOND RELIGIOUS COMMUNITIES
Fabio Massaccesi, Dipartimento delle Arti, Università di Bologna
Fabio Massaccesi
Identity from Variations: Patronage and Technique of Mosaic
Floors between Italy and France, 9th-12th Centuries (Language:
English)
Maddalena Vaccaro, Dipartimento di Scienze del Patrimonio Culturale
(DISPAC), Università degli Studi di Salerno
Monastic Gratians: Early Illuminated Manuscripts of the
Decretum Gratiani within Religious Communities (Language:
English)
Gianluca del Monaco, Dipartimento delle Arti, Università di Bologna
Illuminated Legal Manuscripts among Religious Communities in
the South of France, the Italian Peninsula, and the Iberian
Peninsula, 13th-16th centuries (Language: English)
Maria Alessandra Bilotta, Instituto de Estudos Medievais (IEM),
Universidade Nova de Lisboa
1630
Stage@leeds: Stage 2
INSCRIPTIONS AS NETWORKS AND ENTANGLEMENTS IN THE MEDIEVAL
EASTERN MEDITERRANEAN, II
ERC GRAPH-EAST: Latin as an Alien Script in the Medieval ‘Latin East’ /
Centre d’études supérieures de civilisation médiévale (CESCM - UMR
7302)
Estelle Ingrand-Varenne, Centre d’Études Supérieures de Civilisation
Médiévale (CESCM - UMR 7302), Université de Poitiers / Centre
National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Poitiers
Hasan Sercan Sağlam, Centre d’Études Supérieures de Civilisation
Médiévale (CESCM - UMR 7302), Université de Poitiers / Centre
National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Poitiers
Reading (and Writing) Latin Inscriptions in Medieval
Constantinople (Language: English)
Ida Toth, Ioannou Centre for Classical & Byzantine Studies, University
of Oxford
Pulling the Thread from a Cypriot- and a ConstantinopolitanInscribed Textile (Language: English)
Maria Aimé Villano, Centre d’Études Supérieures de Civilisation
Médiévale (CESCM - UMR 7302), Université de Poitiers / Centre
National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Poitiers
Using Latin in Cypriot Tomb Sculpture: A Means of Dissolving
Geographical and Chronological Boundaries and / or Indicating
Ethnic Identities (Language: English)
Savvas Mavromatidis, Department of History & Archaeology, University
of Cyprus, Nicosia
Thursday
363
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1631-a:
Paper 1631-b:
Paper 1631-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1632-a:
Paper 1632-b:
Paper 1632-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1633-a:
Paper 1633-b:
Paper 1633-c:
364
1631
Clarendon Building: GR 01
TANGLING WITH THE CLASSICS, II: MEDIEVAL IDEOLOGIES
Jacqueline M. Burek, Department of English, George Mason University,
Virginia and Rebecca Menmuir, School of English & Drama, Queen Mary
University of London
Rebecca Menmuir
Between Admiration and Contempt: Virgil’s Entanglements in
the Old French Roman de Dolopathos (Language: English)
Ramani Chandramohan, Faculty of Medieval & Modern Languages /
Queen’s College, University of Oxford
High Walls and Broken Towers: The Ruin as Political Poetry in a
Latin Context (Language: English)
Iris van Kuijk, Department of Classics, Universiteit Leiden
Virgil in 13th Century Southern Italy: Local and Imperial,
Material and Spiritual (Language: English)
Philippa Byrne, Faculty of History, University of Oxford
1632
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.09
NETWORKS AND ENTANGLEMENTS IN NORDIC HAGIOGRAPHY, II
Norse Hagiography Network
Natasha Bradley, Lincoln College, University of Oxford and Tiffany
Nicole White, Department of Scandinavian, University of California,
Berkeley
Natasha Bradley
Liberal Learning in Páls saga postola (Language: English)
David Bond West, Faculty of English Language & Literature, University
of Oxford
Manifestations of the Secular in Norse Hagiography (Language:
English)
Haraldur Hreinsson, Faculty of Theology & Religious Studies, University
of Iceland, Reykjavík
Empress and St Helena in Medieval and Post-Medieval Icelandic
Verse (Language: English)
Natalie van Deusen, Department of Modern Languages & Cultural
Studies, University of Alberta
1633
Michael Sadler Building: LG.19
BRITISH ARCHAEOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION, II: NETWORKS OF INTERACTION
British Archaeological Association
Harriet Mahood, Graduate Centre for Medieval Studies, University of
Reading
Harriet Mahood
Urban Origins as Entanglement: New Evidence from Ipswich,
c. 600-900 (Language: English)
Brandon H. Fathy, School of Archaeology & Ancient History, University
of Leicester
A Pinch of the Exotic: Continental Contact and the Elite
Residence in Medieval England (Language: English)
Erik Matthews, Hornby Castle Project, Northallerton
The Jewish Community in the Cultural Landscape of York in the
13th Century: From Margins to City Centre (Language: English)
Louise A. Hampson, Centre for the Study of Christianity & Culture,
University of York
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1635-a:
Paper 1635-b:
Paper 1635-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1636-a:
Paper 1636-b:
Paper 1636-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1637-a:
Paper 1637-c:
Paper 1637-d:
1636
Esther Simpson Building: 1.01
TOLKIEN’S MEDIEVAL ENTANGLEMENTS
Centre for Fantasy & the Fantastic, School of Critical Studies, University
of Glasgow
Andrew Higgins, Centre for Fantasy & the Fantastic, School of Critical
Studies, University of Glasgow
Kristine Larsen, Department of Earth & Space Sciences, Central
Connecticut State University
The Interlaced Entanglement of ‘The King’s Touch’ (Language:
English)
Amy Amendt-Raduege, Department of English, Western Washington
University
The Theme of Decay and Fall in Tolkien’s Works and its Medieval
Entanglements (Language: English)
Andrzej Wicher, Zakład Angielskiego Dramatu, Teatru i Filmu,
Uniwersytet Łódzki
Sam the Scop: The Entanglements of Poetry in Beowulf and The
Lord of the Rings (Language: English)
Kirsten Ogilby, Institut for Engelsk, Germansk og Romansk,
Københavns Universitet
1637
Newlyn Building: 1.01
SEARCHING FOR HEALTH AND THE HOLY, II: HEALTH AND HEALING
Graduate Centre for Medieval Studies, University of Reading
Ruth J. Salter, Graduate Centre for Medieval Studies, University of
Reading
Ruth J. Salter
Remedies for Elfish Impairment: Magic and Disability in the Old
English Leechbook (Language: English)
Sarah Carruthers, Independent Scholar, Halifax, Nova Scotia
Holiness as Impediment?: Hermannus Contractus’ Ideas about
Disability (Language: English)
Gregory Carrier, Centre for Medieval Studies, University of Toronto
Making Humans into Medicine in Late Medieval England
(Language: English)
Melanie Socrates, Department of English, Theatre & Creative Writing,
Birkbeck, University of London
Interwoven Weather Prognostics (Language: English)
Janet Walls, Graduate Centre for Medieval Studies, University of
Reading
Thursday
Paper 1637-b:
1635
Clarendon Building: 1.06
REPRESENTING NETWORKS AND ENTANGLEMENTS, II: COURTLY AND
RELIGIOUS NETWORKS
Bristol Centre for Medieval Studies, University of Bristol
Marianne J. Ailes, Department of French, University of Bristol
Steve De Hailes, Department of English, University of Bristol
Representing Northern French Networks in Tournament
Romance (Language: English)
Kim Kellas, Department of French, University of Bristol
‘Une foiz a la cort le roi’: Contrasting Representations of Courts
in Gautier d’Arras and Chrétien de Troyes (Language: English)
Sara Madoré, School of Humanities, University of Bristol
Christian Pilgrimage Networks and Their Peripheries (Language:
English)
Eileen Gardiner, School of Humanities, University of Bristol
365
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1638-a:
Paper 1638-b:
Paper 1638-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1639-a:
Paper 1639-b:
Paper 1639-c:
Paper 1639-d:
366
1638
Esther Simpson Building: 1.08
CONCEPTS AND FOUNDATIONS IN THE PRACTICE OF HISTORY, II
Centre for Research in Historiography & Historical Culture, Aberystwyth
University
Antoni Grabowski, Instytut Historii im. Tadeusza Manteuffla, Polskiej
Akademii Nauk, Warszawa
Björn Weiler, Department of History & Welsh History, Aberystwyth
University
Byrhtferth of Ramsey’s Models and Methods as a Historian
within a Network of English Benedictine Reformers (Language:
English)
Emily Clarke, Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse & Celtic, University of
Cambridge
Whispering to the Prince: Three Views on a Royal Wedding at
Burgos, 1269 (Language: English)
David Cantor-Echols, Division of the Social Sciences, University of
Chicago, Illinois
Bad News Networks: Three Reactions to the Capture of Acre in
1291 (Dis)Entangled (Language: English)
Christoph Pretzer, Institut für Klassische Philologie, Universität Bern
1639
Esther Simpson Building: LG08
MILITARY ORDERS AND CRUSADERS, II: SESSIONS IN HONOUR OF
PROFESSOR HELEN J. NICHOLSON
Exploring the Past Pathway, Cardiff University
Hayley Bassett, School of History, Archaeology & Religion, Cardiff
University and Paul Webster, ‘Exploring the Past Pathway’, Cardiff
University
Hayley Bassett
Does the Templar Master Gerard of Ridefort Deserve His
Reputation as an Arrogant Fool?: A Re-Examination of the Battle
of Cresson (Language: English)
Nicholas E. Morton, Department of History, Languages & Global
Cultures, Nottingham Trent University
The Military Orders and the Minority of King Henry III
(Language: English)
Paul Webster
A Different Kind of Order: English Magnates, Household Knights,
and Crusade in the 14th Century (Language: English)
Pierre Gaite, Cardiff School of Education & Social Policy, Cardiff
Metropolitan University
A Military Campaign Report of the Teutonic Order from the City
Archives of Torun: Analysis, Date, and Context (Language:
English)
Gregory J. Leighton, Wydział Nauk Historycznych, Uniwersytet Mikołaja
Kopernika, Toruń
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1640-a:
Paper 1640-b:
Paper 1640-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1641-a:
Paper 1641-b:
Paper 1641-c:
1640
Esther Simpson Building: 2.12
IFORAL PROJECT, II: HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES ON PORTUGUESE
TH
TH
MUNICIPAL CHARTERS, 12 TO 15 CENTURIES
iForal Project ‘Portuguese Municipal Charters in the Middle Ages: An
Historical & Linguistic Approach in the Digital Era’
Filipa Roldão, Centro de História, Universidade de Lisboa
Hermenegildo Fernandes, Centro de História, Universidade de Lisboa
The Network of Royal Notaries-Public in the Reign of King
Afonso III, 1248-1279 (Language: English)
Bernardo de Sá-Nogueira, Centro de História, Universidade de Lisboa
Public Notaries on Municipal Charters of Trás-os-Montes during
the Middle Ages (Language: English)
Ricardo Seabra, Centro Interdisciplinar de História, Culturas e
Sociedades (CIDEHUS) / Centro de Investigação em Ciências Históricas
(CICH), Universidade Autónoma de Lisboa
The Municipal Charters Granted by King Dinis of Portugal, 12791325: An Online Edition and Its Many Research Perspectives
(Language: English)
Helena Coelho, Faculdade de Letras, Universidade de Coimbra
1641
Clarendon Building: 1.03
MOURNING AND REMEMBRANCE, II: THE LIVING AND THE DEAD
Lena Wahlgren-Smith, Centre for Medieval & Renaissance Culture,
University of Southampton / School of History & Archaeology,
University of Winchester
Christian Steer, Department of History, University of York
‘Virtutum vitis Philippi vera propago / pontificum gemma
cunctae probitatis imago’: The Minutulus Epigraphs in the Maior
Neapolitana Ecclesia - Rhetorical Paths of Remembrance
between Lineage, Virtues, and Civic Identity, 1301-1407
(Language: English)
Marco Esposito, Institut für Geschichte, Universität Regensburg
Presentation and Physical Treatment of the Bodies of the Dead
in the Íslendingasögur and Konungasögur (Language: English)
Lucia Simova, Independent Scholar, South Orange, New Jersey
‘Colunnas inter apostolicas velut igne micancius astrum’:
Minutulus, Carbonus, and Beyond - Early 15th-Century Epigraphs
of the Neapolitan Clergy in the ‘Light’ of Political Dialectic and
Memorial Self-Propagation (Language: English)
Luigi Tufano, Dipartimento di Studi Umanistici Sezione di Scienze
dell’Antichità, Università degli Studi di Napoli - Federico II
Thursday
367
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1642-a:
Paper 1642-b:
Paper 1642-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1643-a:
Paper 1643-b:
Paper 1643-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1644-a:
Paper 1644-b:
Paper 1644-c:
368
1642
Newlyn Building: GR.07
PERFORMING PREMODERN DISABILITY: DISABILITY IN PERFORMANCE,
DISABILITY AS PERFORMANCE
Medieval & Renaissance Drama Society (MRDS)
Mark Campbell Chambers, Department of English Studies, Durham
University
Frank M. Napolitano, Department of English, Radford University,
Virginia
Disability in Performance in the Records from Medieval Durham:
The Case of Master Nicholas of York (Language: English)
Mark Campbell Chambers
Blindness and Body Waste in Medieval French Farce (Language:
English)
Marla Carlson, Department of Theatre & Film Studies, University of
Georgia, Athens
The Staging of Bodily Deviance in Leading Roles in Spanish
Golden Age Comedia (Language: English)
Pablo García Piñar, Department of Romance Languages & Literatures,
University of Chicago, Illinois
1643
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.33
ARS VENDENDI: RETAIL AND ADVERTISING IN THE MIDDLE AGES, II
Konstanzer Arbeitskreis für mittelalterliche Geschichte / Medieval
Finance Network
Thomas Ertl, Friedrich-Meinecke-Institut, Freie Universität Berlin
Ulla Kypta, Fakultät für Geisteswissenschaften, Universität Hamburg
Bargaining and Language Skills: Communication Strategies of
Late Medieval Merchants (Language: English)
Tanja Skambraks, Historisches Institut, Universität Mannheim
Siste gradu, optime lector: Advertisements for Rhetoric Courses
at Universities in the Holy Roman Empire (Language: English)
Maximilian Schuh, Friedrich-Meinecke-Institut, Freie Universität Berlin
Advertising and Selling Incunabula (Language: English)
Paul Schweitzer-Martin, Abteilung Mittelalterliche Geschichte, LudwigMaximilians-Universität München
1644
Parkinson Building: Room B.08
VIKING HERITAGE AND HISTORY IN EUROPE, I
Malmö universitet
Stefan Nyzell, Institutionen för samhälle, kultur och identitet, Malmö
universitet
Sara Ellis Nilsson, Institutionen för kulturvetenskaper,
Linnéuniversitetet
Viking Re-Enactment (Language: English)
Stefan Nyzell
Political Uses of the Viking Age: The Sweden Democrats and the
Danish People’s Party (Language: English)
Julia Håkansson, Institutionen för samhälle, kultur och identitet, Malmö
universitet
Cultural Contact, the Tourist Gaze, and Heritage Viking Spaces
(Language: English)
Megan Arnott, Department of English, Lakehead University, Thunder
Bay, Ontario
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1645-a:
Paper 1645-b:
Respondent:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1646-a:
Paper 1646-b:
Paper 1646-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1647-a:
Paper 1647-c:
1646
Esther Simpson Building: 3.02
ALLEGORISING THE BIBLE AND TRANSLATING SCHOLASTIC CONCEPTS TO THE
VERNACULAR: WILLIAM OF MALMESBURY, CHAUCER, AND WILLIAM
LANGLAND
IMC Programming Committee
Ian R. Johnson, School of English, University of St Andrews
Bad Bishop, Ignoble Nobles, and the Wages of Sin: William of
Malmesbury’s Allegorical Exegesis of Lamentations (Language:
English)
Jason Stubblefield, Department of History, University of Tennessee,
Knoxville
Ockhamite Humour in Chaucer’s The Book of The Duchess
(Language: English)
Selena Ozbas, Department of English Language & Literature, Istanbul
Yeni Yuzyil University
Translating Charity in Piers Plowman (Language: English)
Derek Joel Witten, Trinity College of Arts & Science, Duke University,
North Carolina
1647
Parkinson Building: Room B.11
RECEPTION OF TEXTS IN MEDIEVAL ART AND LEARNING
IMC Programming Committee
Diane J. Reilly, Department of Art History, Indiana University,
Bloomington
Reception of the Iconography of the Buch Der Heiligen
Dreifaltigkeit in Later Alchemical Manuscripts and Printed
Books, 1410-1419 (Language: English)
Sergei Zotov, Centre for the Study of the Renaissance, University of
Warwick
Carolingian Receptions of Vitruvius’ De architectura (Language:
English)
Matthew Brian Edholm, St Andrews Institute of Mediaeval Studies,
University of St Andrews
Untangling the Milites Christi Illustrated in an Aretine
Hagiographic Lectionary of the 11th-Century Church Reform
Movement (Firenze, Biblioteque Nazionale, MS F.N.II.I.412)
(Language: English)
Charles S. Buchanan, School of Interdisciplinary Arts, Ohio University
Thursday
Paper 1647-b:
1645
Esther Simpson Building: 2.09
SOCIAL AGENCY OF SECULAR GOLDSMITHS’ WORK IN THE LATE MIDDLE
AGES, II: USE
International Center of Medieval Art (ICMA)
Masha Goldin, eikones - Zentrum für die Theorie und Geschichte des
Bildes, Universität Basel and Hila Manor, Department of Art History,
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Masha Goldin
Richard II and the Coronation Regalia: A Case of Duplicated
‘Object-Conversion’ (Language: English)
Rowanne Dean, Department of Art History, University of Chicago,
Illinois
14th-Century Nested Beakers from a Jewish Context: Profane
Drinking Vessels or Ritual Objects? (Language: English)
Maria Stürzebecher, Museum Alte Synagoge, Erfurt
John Cherry, Independent Scholar, Ludlow
369
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1648-a:
Paper 1648-b:
1648
Esther Simpson Building: 2.11
TOURNAMENT CULTURE
Justin Sturgeon, Department of Art, University of West Florida
Justin Sturgeon
Untangling René d’Anjou’s Livre des tournois (Language: English)
Justin Sturgeon
Tournaments and pas d’armes at the French Court, 1445-1449
(Language: English)
Craig D. Taylor, Centre for Medieval Studies, University of York
LUNCH: 12.00-14.00
Take some time to enjoy lunch with colleagues.
If you have pre-ordered Café Lunch Credit for today, your QR code voucher can be used
anytime during café opening hours on the day of validity at the locations listed on p. 24.
370
UN I V ERSITY OF MIC HIG A N PR E S S
THE MEDIEVAL
POST-COLONIAL JEW,
IN AND OUT OF TIME
Miriamne Ara Krummel
BEHOLDING DISABILITY
IN RENAISSANCE
ENGLAND
Allison P. Hobgood
TRIAL BY FARCE
A Dozen Medieval French
Comedies in English for
the Modern Stage
Edited and Translated by
Jody Enders
A CATALOGUE OF
GREEK MANUSCRIPTS
AT THE UNIVERSITY OF
MICHIGAN, ANN ARBOR
Nadezhda
Kavrus-Hoffmann with
the collaboration of
Pablo Alvarez
THE APOCALYPSE
IN REFORMATION
NUREMBERG
Jews and Turks in
Andreas Osiander’s
World
Andrew L. Thomas
STOCK CHARACTERS
SPEAKING
Eight Libanian
Declamations Introduced
and Translated
Robert J. Penella
THE BLACK WIDOWS
OF THE ETERNAL CITY
The True Story
of Rome’s Most
Infamous Poisoners
Craig A. Monson
OTTOMAN EURASIA
IN EARLY MODERN
GERMAN LITERATURE
Cultural Translations
(Francisci, Happel,
Speer)
Gerhild Scholz Williams
FOLLOWING CHAUCER
Offices of the Active Life
Lynn Staley
IMAGINING IBERIA IN
ENGLISH AND CASTILIAN
MEDIEVAL ROMANCE
Emily Houlik-Ritchey
THE LION’S EAR
Pope Leo X, the
Renaissance
Papacy, and Music
Anthony M. Cummings
WRITING PIRATES
Vernacular Fiction and
Oceans in Late Ming
China
Yuanfei Wang
INTIMATE READING
Textual Encounters
in Medieval Women’s
Visions and Vitae
Jessica Barr
READING MEDIEVAL
LATIN WITH THE LEGEND
OF BARLAAM AND
JOSAPHAT
Donka D. Markus
USE CODE
UMIMC23
TO SAVE 30%!
UNIVERSITY OF
MICHIGAN PRESS
press.umich.edu
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 13.15-14.00
Session:
Title:
Speaker:
Introduction:
Details:
1699
Esther Simpson Building: LG08
KEYNOTE LECTURE 2023: THE MAKING OF SHIP-CENTRED COMMUNITIES IN
THE VIKING AGE - SOCIAL UNITS, MARITIME NETWORKS, AND THE GLOBAL
ENTANGLEMENTS OF HISTORIOGRAPHY (Language: English)
Minoru Ozawa, College of Arts, Rikkyo University, Tokyo
Johannes Preiser-Kapeller, Institut für Mittelalterforschung,
Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
Recently, Viking Age studies have been changing rapidly because of new
archaeological discoveries, new scientific approaches to materials, the
re-examination of historical texts, and application of social science theory
etc. Recent research reveals that Scandinavian entanglements with
various ethnic groups and polities and their networking with different
regions created new communities, new societies, and new orders from
the North Atlantic to western Eurasia from the 8th to the 11th centuries.
Thus, the Scandinavians could be recognised as agents of change.
However, while recent scholarship has shed light on some aspects of the
Vikings, there has been little discussion of the social units of their
homeland which must be the driving force for their expansion on
maritime routes to the outer world. What were the Scandinavian-style
social units in the early Middle Ages?
In this lecture, I will discuss how the Scandinavians created social units
inside their homeland and exported them to the wider world, from the
viewpoint of the Global Middle Ages. My talk will be divided into three
parts. First, I will focus on the creation of ship-centred communities:
while we can understand that ships were indispensable for the
Scandinavians in the early Middle Ages, there has been little discussion
of their role in forming social units. Second, I will discuss the making of
a new order through Scandinavian maritime networks in western Eurasia.
When ships connected their own farms not only with other parts of
Scandinavia but also with the North Atlantic, the British Isles, the
Continent, and the East, how did they function in the process of creating
networks of focal points? Lastly, I will turn my attention to the
background of my research based on the global entanglements of
historiography. The study of the Vikings needs interdisciplinary
approaches and, as a result, can merge different historiographies from
different backgrounds such as Danish, Swedish, Norwegian, Icelandic,
British, French, German, Polish, Ukrainian, Russian, and East Asian
(including
Japanese).
The
entanglements
of
such
diverse
historiographies will open new points of view, new approaches, and new
methodologies.
Please note that admission to this event will be on a first-come, firstserved basis as there will be no tickets. Please ensure that you arrive as
early as possible to avoid disappointment.
372
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1701-a:
Paper 1701-b:
Paper 1701-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1702-a:
Paper 1702-b:
Paper 1702-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1703-a:
Paper 1703-b:
Paper 1703-c:
1701
Michael Sadler Building: LG.16
WHAT’S IN A NAME?: NAMES AND NAMING IN EARLY MEDIEVAL ENGLAND
AND SCANDINAVIA
IMC Programming Committee
Alaric Hall, Institute for Medieval Studies / School of English, University
of Leeds
Early Medieval English ‘Nicknames’ and the Regulation of
Morality (Language: English)
Tristan K. Alphey, Faculty of History, University of Oxford
Gunnhild of Denmark’s Names: Family Relationships, Social
Connections, Political Allegiances (Language: English)
Valeria Di Clemente, Dipartimento di Scienze Umanistiche, Struttura
didattica speciale di Ragusa, Università degli studi di Catania
Disentangling the Legends of Edith Swanneck (Language: English)
Joanna Louise Laynesmith, Department of History, University of
Reading
1702
Newlyn Building: 1.07
TEXTILES AND THEIR SOCIAL, TECHNICAL, AND SYMBOLIC FACETS
IMC Programming Committee
Diane J. Reilly, Department of Art History, Indiana University,
Bloomington
Connecting Recipes from Medieval Manuscripts on Printed
Textiles (Language: English)
Tonia R. Brown, Independent Scholar, Fairborn, Ohio
The Thread Count of Myths: A Material Ecocritical Reading and
Genre Exploration of ‘The Lady and the Unicorn’ Tapestries
(Language: English)
Sarah Burt, Department of English, Saint Louis University, Missouri
Clothing Maintenance in Early Islam: Shifting Boundaries
between Theology and Reality (Language: English)
Hadas Hirsch, Faculty of Humanities & Social Sciences, Oranim
Academic College, Tivon
Thursday
1703
Newlyn Building: GR.01
WRITING IDENTITY IN MEDIEVAL IRELAND AND WALES
IMC Programming Committee
Helen Fulton, Centre for Medieval Studies, University of Bristol
Mapping Medb’s Wrath: Gendered Emotion in the Táin Bó
Cúailnge (Language: English)
Abigail Hazel Weaver, Centre for Medieval Studies, University of Bristol
Title, Role, and / or Institution?: How the Use of Network
Theory Can Provide a Re-Examination of Queens in the Irish
Annals (Language: English)
Aoife Cranny Walsh, Independent Scholar, Dublin
How Late Medieval Welsh Poetry Tamed a Dragon (Language:
English)
Mitchell Simpson, Department of English, University of Arkansas,
Fayetteville
373
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1704-a:
Paper 1704-b:
Paper 1704-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1705-a:
Paper 1705-b:
Paper 1705-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1706-a:
Paper 1706-b:
374
1704
Parkinson Building: Room B.10
AMBIGUITY OF HOSPITALITY, III: THE NORSE WORLD, 11TH-14TH
CENTURIES
Miriam Tveit, Historie, kultur og media, Nord universitet, Bodø
Wojtek Jezierski, Historiska institutionen, Stockholms universitet
High-Status Foreign Guests in Medieval Scandinavian
Households (Language: English)
Beñat Elortza, Historie, kultur og media, Nord Universitet, Bodø
‘And to not spare any man who would cause mischief’: Women
and the Hosting of Outlaws in the Íslendingasögur (Language:
English)
Sigrun Borgen Wik, Department of History, Trinity College Dublin
The Ambiguity of Urban Hospitality in the Norwegian Realm
(Language: English)
Miriam Tveit
1705
Michael Sadler Building: Rupert Beckett Theatre
THE PAPACY OF PASCHAL II AND THE TRIUMPH OF ROMAN PRIMACY?, III
Centro de Estudos de História Religiosa, Universidade Católica
Portuguesa, Lisboa
Enrico Veneziani, Centro de Estudos de História Religiosa, Universidade
Católica Portuguesa, Lisboa
Anne J. Duggan, Department of History, King’s College London
Rainier in Spain: The Legation of 1089-1090 (Language: English)
Damian Smith, Department of History, Saint Louis University, Missouri
Relations between the County of Portugal and Rome during the
Pontificate of Paschal II (Language: English)
Luís Carlos Amaral, Centro de Investigação Transdisciplinar ‘Cultura,
Espaço e Memória’ (CITCEM), Universidade do Porto
An Ecclesiology for Conquest: Paschal II, the Crusade, and the
‘Church of Asia’ (Language: English)
Antonio Musarra, Dipartimento di Storia Antropologia Religioni Arte
Spettacolo, Università degli Studi di Roma ‘La Sapienza’
1706
Maurice Keyworth Building: G.02
TEXTS AND THE REPRESSION OF MEDIEVAL HERESY: TWENTY YEARS AFTER,
III
Centre for the Centrum pro digitální výzkum náboženství / Dissident
Networks Project (DISSINET), Masarykova univerzita, Brno
Robert L. J. Shaw, Centrum pro digitální výzkum náboženství,
Masarykova univerzita, Brno and David Zbíral, Centrum pro digitální
výzkum náboženství / Dissident Networks Project (DISSINET),
Masarykova univerzita, Brno
Robert L. J. Shaw
Rebels, Idolaters, Heretics: The Stedinger at a Conjunction of
Discourses (Language: English)
František Novotný, Katedra filosofie a religionistiky, Univerzita
Pardubice
The Spatial Diffusion of Witchcraft Accusations: The Case of
Vaud, 1440-1461 (Language: English)
Larissa de Freitas Lyth, Peterhouse, University of Cambridge
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1707-a:
Paper 1707-b:
Paper 1707-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1708-a:
Paper 1708-b:
Respondent:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1709-a:
Paper 1709-b:
Paper 1709-c:
1707
Michael Sadler Building: LG.10
QUEER COMMUNITY IN THE MIDDLE AGES, III: QUEER TEXTUAL
COMMUNITIES
Tim Wingard, Centre for Medieval Studies, University of York
Tim Wingard
I, Monster: Reading the Liber Monstrorum in the Carolingian
Empire (Language: English)
Michael Eber, Independent Scholar, Berlin
Homosocial Networks and the Discourses of Mystical Castration
(Language: English)
Robyn Jennings, College of Arts, University of Guelph, Ontario and
Jacqueline Murray, Department of History, University of Guelph,
Ontario
Power, Emotions, and Relationships: Beyond the Boundaries of
Gender in Late Medieval Polish Hagiography (Language: English)
Kalina Słaboszowska, Wydział Historii, Uniwersytet Warszawski
1708
Newlyn Building: GR.02
RETHINKING THE CAROLINGIAN REFORMS FURTHER, III: BEYOND THE
CAROLINGIANS
Rethinking the Carolingian Reforms
Arthur Westwell, Fakultät für Katholische Theologie, Universität
Regensburg
Carine van Rhijn, Departement Geschiedenis en Kunstgeschiedenis,
Universiteit Utrecht
‘It’s all Greek to me’: Monks, Canons, and the Legatine Council,
786 (Language: English)
Stephen Michael Ling, Research & Enterprise, University of Salford
Reforming Afterlives: Carolingian Correctio and the English
Secular Clergy (Language: English)
Gerald P. Dyson, Department of History, Kentucky Christian University
Carine van Rhijn
Thursday
1709
Newlyn Building: LG.02
AUTHOR AND AUDIENCE IN LATE ANTIQUE LATIN LITERATURE
Matthijs Zoeter, Vakgroep Geschiedenis, Universiteit Gent
Mark Humphries, Centre for Medieval & Early Modern Research
(MEMO), Swansea University
The Production and Readership of Ausonius’ Bilingual Poetry
(Language: English)
Alison John, All Souls College, University of Oxford
‘Ut veteres auctores tradunt’: Authorities in Servius’
Commentary on the Eclogues (Language: English)
Delila Jordan, School of History, Classics & Archaeology, University of
Edinburgh
Senator Purgatus: The Story of Symmachus’ Letters to Flavianus
(Language: English)
Matthijs Zoeter
375
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1710-a:
Paper 1710-b:
Paper 1710-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1712-a:
Paper 1712-b:
Paper 1712-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1713-a:
Paper 1713-b:
Paper 1713-c:
376
1710
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.31
NETWORKS OF RELIGIOUS AUTHORITY IN THE ISLAMIC AND WESTERN
MIDDLE AGES
IMC Programming Committee
Gwendolyne Knight, Historiska institutionen, Stockholms universitet
Islamic Law and Spirituality in Unison and Difference: Medieval
Narratives from the Indian Sub-Continent (Language: English)
Bilal Ahmad, Department of Comparative Religion, International Islamic
University, Islamabad
The Order of Preachers versus the Sect of Witches: How Did One
Network Produce, Entangle, and Condemn Another? (Language:
English)
Fedor Nekhaenko, Philosophische Fakultät, Universität Potsdam
Recipient of a 2023 Miriam Czock Fund Bursary
Networks of Publishing and Polemical Texts of the Investiture
Contest (Language: English)
Lari Ahokas, Department of Philosophy, History & Art Studies,
University of Helsinki
1712
Clarendon Building: 2.01
WARDSHIP, NETWORKS, AND SOCIAL CONTROL IN 14TH-CENTURY ENGLAND
Society for Fourteenth-Century Studies
Helen Lacey, Mansfield College, University of Oxford
Katherine J. Lewis, Department of Communication & Humanities,
University of Huddersfield
Networks of Governance in Huntingdonshire before the Black
Death, 1290-1348 (Language: English)
Andrew M. Spencer, Gonville & Caius College, University of Cambridge
Wardship and Richard II’s ‘Youthful’ Companions during the
1370s and 1380s (Language: English)
Connor Williams, Department of History, University of Nottingham
Manorial Officers, Peasant Oligarchs, and Social Control in
14th-Century Wakefield (Language: English)
Isaac Lawton, Centre for Medieval Studies, University of York
1713
Esther Simpson Building: 3.01
BYZANTINE WARFARE, III: VERTICAL TRANSITION OF MILITARY
KNOWLEDGE IN BYZANTIUM AND BEYOND
De Re Militari: Society for Medieval Military History
Georgios Theotokis, Department of History, Ibn-Haldun University,
Istanbul
Ilana Krug, Department of History & Political Science, York College of
Pennsylvania
Inspiring Soldiers in Early and Middle Byzantium: Finding the
Link between Procopius and Syrianos Magistros (Language:
English)
Dimitrios Sidiropoulos, Department of History & Archaeology, Aristotle
University of Thessaloniki
‘Know your enemy … and do your best to avoid him’: Evidence
of Vertical Transmission of Military Knowledge in the Military
Manuals (Language: English)
Georgios Theotokis
Byzantine Military Manuals and Pedagogy: The Educational
Strategies of Byzantine Tacticians (Language: English)
Georgios Chatzelis, Department of History & Archaeology, Aristotle
University of Thessaloniki
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1714-a:
Paper 1714-b:
Paper 1714-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1715-a:
Paper 1715-b:
Paper 1715-c:
1714
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.03
NETWORKS AND ENTANGLEMENTS IN EARLY AND HIGH MEDIEVAL CENTRAL
EUROPE, III
Mária Vargha, Ústav pro Archeologii, Univerzita Karlova, Praha
Ivo Štefan, Ústav pro Archeologii, Univerzita Karlova, Praha
Cistercian Networks and Entanglements in Central-Eastern
Europe (Language: English)
László Ferenczi, Ústav pro Archeologii, Univerzita Karlova, Praha
River, Landscape, and Settlement: Transitions and Site
Dynamics in the Körös Region, Hungary (Language: English)
Csilla Zatykó, Institute of Archaeology, Research Centre for the
Humanities, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest
Novelties in Material Culture as Indicators of Change in the
Social Structure (Language: English)
Jakub Sawicki, Archeologický ústav, Akademie věd České republiky,
Praha
1715
Parkinson Building: Room B.09
SINO-BYZANTINE COMPARISONS, EURASIAN ENTANGLEMENTS, III:
CREATING NETWORKS OF REFERENCE
ERC Project ‘Classicising Learning in Medieval Imperial Systems: CrossCultural Approaches to Byzantine Paideia & Tang/Song Xue’ / Centre for
Late Antique, Islamic & Byzantine Studies, University of Edinburgh
Foteini Spingou, School of History, Classics & Archaeology, University of
Edinburgh / Archives & Learning Services, University of York / Digital
Education Service, University of Leeds
N. Kıvılcım Yavuz, Institute for Medieval Studies / School of History,
University of Leeds
Crafting Traditions: Antony of Tagrit, His ‘Classics’ and the
Syriac Classicising of Rhetorical Learning (Language: English)
Mara Nicosia, Department of Classics & Ancient History, Durham
University
The Bucolic Mode and Imperial Voice in 10th-Century Byzantium
(Language: English)
Paroma Chatterjee, Department of the History of Art, University of
Michigan
Learning Geography in 12th-Century Byzantium: Alternative
Models, Interconnected Networks (Language: English)
Chiara D’Agostini, Centre for Medieval Literature, Syddansk Universitet,
Odense
Thursday
377
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1716-a:
Paper 1716-b:
Paper 1716-c:
Paper 1716-d:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1717-a:
Paper 1717-b:
Paper 1717-c:
378
1716
Stage@leeds: Stage 1
NETWORKS OF THE CRUSADES: SOCIAL AND RELIGIOUS ENTANGLEMENTS
AND IMAGINATIONS
IMC Programming Committee
Jason T. Roche, Department of History, Politics & Philosophy,
Manchester Metropolitan University
A Qualitative-Quantitative Approach to the Social Networks of
the Flemish Crusaders: Tools, Methodology, and Research
Possibilities (Language: English)
Dawid Gołąb, Instytut Historii i Archiwistyki, Uniwersytet Pedagogiczny,
Kraków
Entangled to a Failing State: King Amalric of Jerusalem and
Fatimid Egypt (Language: English)
Allison Emond, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
In Search of True Unity: Innocent III’s Treatment of the Greek
Church in Constantinople (Language: English)
Edith Lagarde, Department of History, University of Notre Dame,
Indiana
In quanta sanguinis effusione: Crusade and the Construction of
History in Genoa, 1155-1200 (Language: English)
Thomas P. Morin, Center for Medieval & Renaissance Studies, Saint
Louis University, Missouri
1717
Clarendon Building: 1.02
SERVING THE KING: ROYAL OFFICERS IN SMALL PORTUGUESE FRONTIER
TOWNS, 15TH-16TH CENTURIES - NETWORKS, MOBILITIES, AND
CIRCULATION
Project ‘FRONTOWNS: Think Big on Small Frontier Towns: Alto Alentejo
& Alta Extremadura Leonesa (13th-16th Centuries)’ / Instituto de
Estudos Medievais (IEM), Universidade Nova de Lisboa
Gonçalo Melo da Silva, Instituto de Estudos Medievais (IEM),
Universidade Nova de Lisboa
Gonçalo Melo da Silva
The Circulation of Public Notaries in the Alto Alentejo Region,
1438-1521 (Language: English)
João Pedro Alves, Instituto de Estudos Medievais (IEM), Universidade
de Lisboa
The King’s Clerks in Alto Alentejo Small Frontier Towns in the
15th Century: Functions, Recruitment, and Mobility (Language:
English)
Marcelo Andrade, Instituto de Estudos Medievais (IEM), Universidade
Nova de Lisboa
Judges, Justices, and Jurisdictions in Alto Alentejo Small
Frontier Towns, 15th-16th Centuries: Functions, Social Profile,
and Geographical Mobility (Language: English)
Adelaide Millán da Costa, Instituto de Estudos Medievais (IEM),
Universidade Nova de Lisboa / Departamento de Ciências Sociais e
Gestão, Universidade Aberta
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1718-a:
Paper 1718-b:
Paper 1718-d:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1719-a:
Paper 1719-b:
Paper 1719-c:
Paper 1719-d:
1718
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.04
NETWORKS AND ENTANGLEMENTS WITHIN AND THROUGH THE ITALIAN
PENINSULA, 1000-1500
Giuseppe Celico, School of Humanities, University of Glasgow / School
of History, Classics & Archaeology, University of Edinburgh and
Francesco Migliazzo, School of History, Classics & Archaeology,
University of Edinburgh
Giuseppe Celico
At the Crossroad of Two Empires: The Dual Identity of Johannes
Philagathos (Language: English)
Silvia Maria Marchiori, Department of History & Philosophy of Science,
University of Cambridge
Spreading the Word: Examining Modena Cathedral’s Porta dei
Principi for Traces of the Gregorian Reform (Language: English)
Blair Apgar, Department of Art & Design, Caldwell University, New
Jersey
Foreign Officials in Bologna: Networks and Governance, c. 1250c. 1350 (Language: English)
Francesco Migliazzo
1719
Newlyn Building: 1.02
RELIGIOUS ENTANGLEMENTS AND CO-PRODUCTION: JUDAISM,
CHRISTIANITY, AND ISLAM
Research Project ‘Interactive Histories, Co-Produced Communities:
Judaism, Christianity & Islam’
Katharina Heyden, Institut für Historische Theologie, Universität Bern
and Rahel Schär, Institut für Historische Theologie, Universität Bern
Katharina Heyden
Co-Production of Healing Pilgrimage Sites in the Eastern
Mediterranean, 5th-7th Centuries (Language: English)
Maureen Attali, Institut für Historische Theologie, Universität Bern
Religious Co-Production in the Legends of the 60 Martyrs of
Gaza and the Martyrdom of Bishop Sophronius of Jerusalem
(Language: English)
Rahel Schär
Struggle and Endurance in the Qur’an in the Context of Late
Antique Piety (Language: English)
Paul Neuenkirchen, Institut für Historische Theologie, Universität Bern
Examining Porous Boundaries between Jewish and Muslim
Litigants in Fāṭimid Courts: A Comparative Study of Jewish and
Islamic Debt Acknowledgements (Iqrārs) in the Cairo Genizah
(Language: English)
Sarah Islam, Institut für Historische Theologie, Universität Bern
Thursday
379
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1720-a:
Paper 1720-b:
Paper 1720-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1721-a:
Paper 1721-b:
Paper 1721-c:
380
1720
Stage@leeds: Stage 3
ENTANGLED SEMANTICS OF POWER BETWEEN EAST AND WEST, III:
MULTILINGUALISM AND BYZANTINE CULTURAL HERITAGE IN DOCUMENTARY
SOURCES FROM MEDIEVAL ITALY
Luisa Andriollo, Dipartimento di Civiltà e Forme del Sapere, Università
di Pisa and Cristina Rognoni, Dipartimento di Scienze Umanistiche,
Università degli Studi di Palermo
Maria Cristina Rossi, Dipartimento di Civiltà e Forme del Sapere,
Università di Pisa
Graeca in Medieval Roman Documents (Language: English)
Serena Ammirati, Dipartimento di Studi Umanistici, Università degli
Studi Roma Tre
Between Norman Administrators and Local Advocates:
Archontes in Greek Archival Sources of Southern Italy in the
11th and Early 12th Centuries (Language: English)
Nathan Leidholm, Program in Cultures, Civilizations & Ideas, Bilkent
University, Ankara
Multilingualism in the Greek Documents of Norman Sicily
(Language: English)
Francesca Potenza, Dipartimento di Giurisprudenza, Università degli
Studi di Palermo
1721
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.32
TO BE GOD WITH GOD: MYSTICAL NETWORKS AND ENTANGLEMENTS, III MYSTICAL COMMUNITIES IN ENGLAND AND THE LOW COUNTRIES
Mystical Theology Network / Protestantse Theologische Universiteit,
Amsterdam
Louise Nelstrop, Protestantse Theologische Universiteit, Amsterdam /
St John’s College, University of Oxford
John Arblaster, Ruusbroecgenootschap, Universiteit Antwerpen
Deification in English Mystical Networks (Language: English)
Louise Nelstrop
Teaching How to Become God?: Learning Relations among the
Middle Dutch Mystics of Groenendaal (Language: English)
Michiel Vandenbroucke, Ruusbroecgenootschap, Universiteit Antwerpen
Some Unknown Mystics in John of Ruusbroec’s Network
(Language: English)
Rob Faesen, Faculteit Theologie en Religiewetenschappen, KU Leuven /
Ruusbroecgenootschap, Universiteit Antwerpen
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1722-a:
Paper 1722-b:
Paper 1722-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1723-a:
Paper 1723-b:
Paper 1723-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1724-a:
Paper 1724-c:
1723
Michael Sadler Building: LG.15
ENTANGLEMENTS ACROSS MEDIEVAL SPACE, OBJECTS, AND DATA, III
FWF DFG Project HOLDURA (I 4330-G)
Johannes Tripps, Hochschule für Technik, Wirtschaft und Kultur, Leipzig
Mihailo Popović, Abteilung Byzanzforschung, Österreichische Akademie
der Wissenschaften, Wien
Our Entangled yet Collective Memories and the Spirit of Place in
the Medieval Cultural Landscape as Heritage in Reality and
Virtuality (Language: English)
Hee Sook Lee-Niinioja, Independent Scholar, Helsinki
Objects of Private Devotion as Witnesses to Entanglement
between Venice and the Árpád and Nemanjić Dynasties
(Language: English)
Johannes Tripps
Initials with Teratological Motifs in the Belgrade
Prophetologion: Witnesses of Entanglement between East and
West (Language: English)
Branka Vranešević, Department of Art History, University of Belgrade
1724
Clarendon Building: 2.08
LOYALTY AS ENTANGLEMENTS, III: WHAT CAN OBJECTS TELL US ABOUT
LOYALTY?
Haskins Society / Battle Conference on Anglo-Norman Studies
Chris Lewis, Institute of Historical Research, University of London
Hannah Boston, School of Humanities & Heritage, University of Lincoln
Coinage and Regional Loyalties in Stephen’s Reign (Language:
English)
Arrun Thuraisingham, Department of History, University of East Anglia /
British Museum, London
Coinage as an Expression of Loyalty in the French Lands of
Henry Plantagenet (Language: English)
Eleanor Stinson, School of History, University of East Anglia /
Department of Coins & Medals, British Museum, London
Disentangling Medieval Loyalty through Tents and Campsites
(Language: English)
Hayley de la Motte, School of History, University of East Anglia
Thursday
Paper 1724-b:
1722
Esther Simpson Building: 3.08
CHRISTIAN ENTANGLEMENTS OF THE SUPERNATURAL IN LATE ANTIQUITY,
III: THE SUPERNATURAL AND THE SELF
Charlotte Spence, Department of Classics, Ancient History, Religion &
Theology, University of Exeter
Ryan Denson, Department of Classics, Ancient History, Religion &
Theology, University of Exeter
Dreams and Dreamers in Late Antiquity (Language: English)
Frederick Kimpton, Department of Classics, Ancient History, Religion &
Theology, University of Exeter
Aramaic Incantation Bowls and Christian ‘Magic’ (Language:
English)
Anne Sieberichs, Onderzoekinstituut voor Geschiedenis en
Kunstgeschiedenis (OGK), Universiteit Utrecht
Curse Tablets and Personal Religion in Late Antiquity (Language:
English)
Charlotte Spence
381
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1725-a:
Paper 1725-b:
Paper 1725-c:
Respondent:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1727-a:
Paper 1727-b:
Paper 1727-c:
382
1725
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.06
CENTRAL EUROPEAN QUEENSHIP, III: CONFRONTING THE NETWORK
EFFECTS - MEDIATION, REGICIDE, CALUMNY
Royal Studies Network
Patrik Pastrnak, Katedra historie, Univerzita Palackého, Olomouc
Elena Woodacre, Department of History, University of Winchester
Queens of Bohemia and Intercessory Power (Language: English)
Věra Soukupová, Ústav pro českou literaturu, Akademie věd České
republiky, Praha
Parallels and Intersections in 14th-Century Southern ItalianHungarian Relations: Queen Johanna I of Naples (Language:
English)
Ágnes Virágh, ‘Hungary in Medieval Europe’ Research Group, University
of Debrecen / Eötvös Loránd Research Network, Budapest
What Happened in the Low Countries, Didn’t Stay in the Low
Countries: The Theory of the Spread of Gossip about the Queens
of the House of Luxembourg (Language: English)
Zuzana Bolerazká, Katolická teologická fakulta, Univerzita Karlova,
Praha
Patrik Pastrnak
1727
Esther Simpson Building: 2.07
ENTANGLED SELVES, EMOTIONAL SELVES, III: THE CONSTRUCTION OF
FEMININE SELFHOOD
Isabella Clarke, Oriel College, University of Oxford and Meritxell Risco
de la Torre, School of Humanities, University of Iceland, Reykjavík
Meritxell Risco de la Torre
Insults as Injuries: The Gendered Body of Selfhood and
Women’s Revenge in Old Norse Literature / Sagas (Language:
English)
Clare Mulley, St Hugh’s College, University of Oxford
A Sensory Linguistics of Interconnected Embodiment and
Emotion in Hildegard von Bingen’s Symphoniae (Language:
English)
Hannah Victoria Johnson, Centre de Linguistique en Sorbonne (CeLiSo),
Sorbonne Université, Paris
From the Devil We Came: Reimagining Female Agency with the
Monstrous Mélusine (Language: English)
Lauren E. Wood, Department of History, University of California, San
Diego
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1728-a:
Paper 1728-b:
Paper 1728-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1729-a:
Paper 1729-b:
Paper 1729-c:
1728
Newlyn Building: LG.01
NETWORKS IN, OF, AND AROUND NORDIC MANUSCRIPTS, II: PRODUCTION
CIRCUMSTANCES AND INFLUENCES
Lea D. Pokorny, Faculty of Philosophy, History & Archaeology,
University of Iceland, Reykjavík
Giulia Zorzan, Faculty of Philosophy, History & Archaeology, University
of Iceland, Reykjavík
The Imitation Game: (De)Coding Foreign Features in a Formal
Icelandic Register (Language: English)
Katrín Lísa L Mikaelsdóttir, Faculty of Icelandic & Comparative Cultural
Studies, University of Iceland, Reykjavík
Revisiting a Scribal Network Based on Rubrics (Language:
English)
Beeke Stegmann, Árni Magnússon Institute for Icelandic Studies,
Reykjavík and Giovanni Verri, Institut for Nordiske Studier og
Sprogvidenskab (NorS), Københavns Universitet
Providing Books for Swedish Churches: Networks of Liturgical
Book Transmission in the 12th and 13th Centuries (Language:
English)
Emilia Henderson-Roche, National Library of Finland, Helsinki
1729
Esther Simpson Building: 2.08
ART BINDS COMMUNITIES IN MEDIEVAL EUROPE, III: CONNECTIONS
WITHIN THE CITY
Gianluca del Monaco, Dipartimento delle Arti, Università di Bologna
Gianluca del Monaco
Death, Textile, Memory: The Binding Bodies of the Las Huelgas
Deposition (Language: English)
Anabelle Gambert-Jouan, Department of History of Art, Yale University
The Politics of Exposing (and Hiding from View): Notes on the
Loggia dei Cavalieri in Treviso (Language: English)
Giacomo Confortin, Independent Scholar, Vedelago
For a Vallombrosan Artistic Network in 15th-Century Florence
and Beyond (Language: English)
Michela Young, Department of History of Art, University of Cambridge
Thursday
383
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1730-a:
Paper 1730-b:
Paper 1730-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1731-a:
Paper 1731-b:
Paper 1731-c:
384
1730
Stage@leeds: Stage 2
INSCRIPTIONS AS NETWORKS AND ENTANGLEMENTS IN THE MEDIEVAL
EASTERN MEDITERRANEAN, III
ERC GRAPH-EAST: Latin as an Alien Script in the Medieval ‘Latin East’ /
Centre d’études supérieures de civilisation médiévale (CESCM - UMR
7302)
Hasan Sercan Sağlam, Centre d’Études Supérieures de Civilisation
Médiévale (CESCM - UMR 7302), Université de Poitiers / Centre
National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Poitiers
Maria Aimé Villano, Centre d’Études Supérieures de Civilisation
Médiévale (CESCM - UMR 7302), Université de Poitiers / Centre
National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Poitiers
The Western Copies of the Holy Sepulchre and Their Inscriptions
(Language: English)
Estelle Ingrand-Varenne, Centre d’Études Supérieures de Civilisation
Médiévale (CESCM - UMR 7302), Université de Poitiers / Centre
National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Poitiers
The Network of Venetian Inscriptions in Greece outside Major
Colonisation Centres: A Corpus Attempt (Language: English)
Yaroslav Stadnichenko, Centre d’Études Supérieures de Civilisation
Médiévale (CESCM - UMR 7302), Université de Poitiers
Stone-Cutting Workshops in the Medieval Eastern
Mediterranean (Language: English)
Thierry Grégor, Centre d’Études Supérieures de Civilisation Médiévale
(CESCM - UMR 7302), Université de Poitiers
1731
Clarendon Building: GR 01
TANGLING WITH THE CLASSICS, III: MEDIEVAL LITERARY CULTURE
Jacqueline M. Burek, Department of English, George Mason University,
Virginia and Rebecca Menmuir, School of English & Drama, Queen Mary
University of London
Jacqueline M. Burek
Entangled Affinity in Medieval Irish Classical Reception
(Language: English)
Brigid Ehrmantraut, Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse & Celtic,
University of Cambridge
‘Muse, tell me (again) of the deeds of Alexander’: Classical
Reception and (Meta)poetic Entanglement in Walter of
Châtillon’s Alexandreis (Language: English)
Ivo Wolsing, Instituut voor Geschiedenis, Universiteit Leiden
‘Let clerkis ken the poetis different’: Aeneid, Book XIII in Late
Medieval Scotland (Language: English)
Laurie Atkinson, Englisches Seminar, Eberhard Karls Universität
Tübingen
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1733-a:
Paper 1733-b:
Paper 1733-c:
Paper 1733-d:
1733
Michael Sadler Building: LG.19
NETWORKS OF CHARITY IN A MATERIAL WORLD, C. 1200-1500
Mary Anne Gonzales, Student Success Office, University of Waterloo,
Ontario
Elma Brenner, Wellcome Library, London
‘Pour cause d’amour et de carité’: Material Culture and
Testamentary Practice in Late Medieval Tournai (Language:
English)
Ariana Mae Sider, Centre for Medieval Studies, University of Toronto
Women’s Networks, Material Culture, and Testamentary
Practice in 13th-Century Kent (Language: English)
Jack W. McCart, Centre for Medieval Studies, University of Toronto
Charity Networks in Medieval France (Language: English)
Tanya Stabler Miller, Department of History, Loyola University Chicago,
Illinois
‘What we geven to the pore it nedith not thee to telle’: The
Mendicant Vocation and Charitable Provision in Late Medieval
England (Language: English)
Hannah Kirby Wood, St Thomas More College, University of
Saskatchewan
Thursday
385
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1735-a:
Paper 1735-b:
Paper 1735-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1736-a:
Paper 1736-b:
Paper 1736-c:
Paper 1736-d:
386
1735
Clarendon Building: 1.06
REPRESENTING NETWORKS AND ENTANGLEMENTS, III: NETWORKS AND THE
PRODUCTION OF MANUSCRIPTS
Bristol Centre for Medieval Studies, University of Bristol
Marianne J. Ailes, Department of French, University of Bristol
Marianne J. Ailes
Information Networks and Monastic Manuscripts in the 12th
Century: An Examination of Cambridge University Library, MS
Mm. 4. 28 and Cambridge, Corpus Christi College, MS 303
(Language: English)
Teal St Nicklaus, Centre for Medieval Studies, University of Bristol
Networks of Neapolitan Angevin Manuscript Production and
Reading (Language: English)
Ronald Musto, School of Humanities, University of Bristol
Text and Melody in the Blessing of a Bell: A Comparative Case
Study of Five Canterbury Pontificals (Language: English)
Cassandra Fenton, Department of Music, University of Bristol
1736
Esther Simpson Building: 1.01
DISENTANGLING THE SECOND AGE OF TOLKIEN’S MIDDLE-EARTH
Centre for Fantasy & the Fantastic, School of Critical Studies, University
of Glasgow
Andrew Higgins, Centre for Fantasy & the Fantastic, School of Critical
Studies, University of Glasgow
Andrew Higgins
The Tale of Aldarion and Erendis: Not Just a Medieval Love Story
(Language: English)
Sara Brown, Department of Literature & Language, Signum University,
New Hampshire
Out of the Great Sea: Of Elendil and Legends Old and New
(Language: English)
S. R. Westvik, School of History, University College Dublin /
Historisches Institut, Universität Potsdam
Untangling the Second Age Tale of Years (Language: English)
James Tauber, Department of Literature & Language, Signum
University, New Hampshire
The Roads to Númenor: Navigating Tolkien’s Mythopoeic
Network (Language: English)
Clara Colin Saïdani, Faculté Lettres et Langages, Nantes Université
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1737-a:
Paper 1737-b:
Paper 1737-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1738-a:
Paper 1738-b:
Paper 1738-c:
1737
Newlyn Building: 1.01
POLITICAL AND ECONOMIC NETWORKS BETWEEN BYZANTIUM AND ITS
NEIGHBOURS
IMC Programming Committee
Mireia Comas Via, Departament d’Història i Arqueologia, Universitat de
Barcelona
The Athenian Economy in the Middle Ages: Establishing a
Trading Network between Athenian and Arabic Cultures
(Language: English)
Panagiota Mantouvalou, Centre for Byzantine, Ottoman & Modern
Greek Studies, University of Birmingham
Commercial Networks between the Byzantine Empire and
Europe, Including the British Isles (Language: English)
Elena Ene Draghici-Vasilescu, Faculty of History / Wolfson College,
University of Oxford
The Byzantine Oikoumene: A Medieval International Society?
(Language: English)
Ilia Curto Pelle, Faculty of History, University of Oxford
1738
Esther Simpson Building: 1.08
CONCEPTS AND FOUNDATIONS IN THE PRACTICE OF HISTORY, III
Centre for Research in Historiography & Historical Culture, Aberystwyth
University
Antoni Grabowski, Instytut Historii im. Tadeusza Manteuffla, Polskiej
Akademii Nauk, Warszawa
Björn Weiler, Department of History & Welsh History, Aberystwyth
University
‘Sola pietas me compulit ista narrare’: Orderic Vitalis on the
Wreck of the White Ship (Language: English)
Harriet Strahl, Department of History, Durham University
Chronicler, Monks, and Patrons: Matthew Paris and the Liber
additamentorum (Language: English)
Bethany Summerfield, Department of History & Welsh History,
Aberystwyth University
Transplanting the Saints and Adapting Their History: The Cults
of St Florian and St Giles in 11th- to 13th-Century Poland
(Language: English)
Milosz Sosnowski, Wydział Historii, Uniwersytet im. Adama Mickiewicza,
Poznań
Thursday
387
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1739-a:
Paper 1739-b:
Paper 1739-c:
Respondent:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1740-a:
Paper 1740-b:
Paper 1740-c:
388
1739
Esther Simpson Building: LG08
MILITARY ORDERS AND CRUSADERS, III: SESSIONS IN HONOUR OF
PROFESSOR HELEN J. NICHOLSON
School of History, Archaeology & Religion, Cardiff University
Hayley Bassett, School of History, Archaeology & Religion, Cardiff
University and Paul Webster, ‘Exploring the Past Pathway’, Cardiff
University
Peter Edbury, School of History, Archaeology & Religion, Cardiff
University
Ad mensam: Production and Consumption in English Hospitaller
Houses (Language: English)
Christie Majoros-Dunnahoe, School of History, Archaeology & Religion,
Cardiff University
The Teutonic Order and Anglo-Hanseatic Diplomatic
Negotiations during the Reign of Henry IV: Some Overlooked
Evidence from the Canterbury Cathedral Archives (Language:
English)
Barbara Bombi, School of History, University of Kent
The Crimes of Oswald Massingberd: An English Hospitaller on
Malta (Language: English)
Nicholas McDermott, School of History, Archaeology & Religion, Cardiff
University
Helen Nicholson, School of History, Archaeology & Religion, Cardiff
University
1740
Esther Simpson Building: 2.12
IFORAL PROJECT, III: DIGITAL PERSPECTIVES ON PORTUGUESE MUNICIPAL
CHARTERS, 12TH TO 15TH CENTURIES
iForal Project ‘Portuguese Municipal Charters in the Middle Ages: An
Historical & Linguistic Approach in the Digital Era’
Joana Serafim, Romanisches Seminar, Universität Zürich / Centro de
Linguística, Universidade de Lisboa
Filipa Roldão, Centro de História, Universidade de Lisboa
Sharing Codes: Contributions to Charters Digital Editions from
Other Literary Texts (Language: English)
Mariana Leite, Instituto de Filosofia, Universidade do Porto and Maria
Joana Matos Gomes, Instituto de Filosofia, Universidade do Porto
Data Modelling and Text Editing: The Case of Portuguese
Municipal Charters (Language: English)
Catarina Coelho, Centro de Linguística, Universidade de Lisboa and
Joana Serafim
Close Words: A Glossary of Translated and Rewritten Medieval
Texts (Language: English)
José Vasco Carvalho de Sousa, Instituto de Engenharia Electrónica e
Informática, Universidade de Aveiro and João Paulo Silvestre, Centro de
Línguas, Literaturas e Culturas, Universidade de Aveiro
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1741-a:
Paper 1741-b:
Paper 1741-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1742-a:
Paper 1742-b:
Paper 1742-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1743-a:
Paper 1743-b:
1742
Newlyn Building: GR.07
TREACHEROUS BISHOPS, SACRED SPACE, AND CREATIVE MICROHISTORY:
STUDIES FROM MEDIEVAL PEOPLE
Project ‘Medieval People: Social Bonds, Kinship & Networks’
Charlotte Cartwright, Department of History, Christopher Newport
University, Virginia
Amy Livingstone, School of Humanities & Heritage, University of Lincoln
Treacherous Bishops in Ottonian Germany (Language: English)
Laura Wangerin, Department of History, Seton Hall University, New
Jersey
A Lineage of Temples: The Exegesis of Church Consecration at
Sant Benet de Bages, 972 (Language: English)
Adam C. Matthews, Department of History, Cornell University
Medieval Everydays: Exploring Creative Microhistory (Language:
English)
Katherine Weikert, School of History & Archaeology, University of
Winchester
1743
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.33
URBAN IDENTITIES IN LATE MEDIEVAL ENGLAND AND GERMANY
Richard Asquith, Independent Scholar, Durham
Rachael Harkes, Department of History, Durham University
The London Liber Lynne: An English Family Book (Language:
English)
Christian Liddy, Department of History, Durham University
Metropolis and Periphery: Different Approaches to the
Construction of Urban Identities in Medieval Franconian Towns
and Cities (Language: English)
Charlotte Neubert, Institut für Geschichte, Universität Regensburg
Knights of the City: Urban Identity or Social Aspiration in Late
Medieval London? (Language: English)
Richard Asquith
Thursday
Paper 1743-c:
1741
Clarendon Building: 1.03
MOURNING AND REMEMBRANCE, III: MEMORIALS IN SOUTHERN EUROPE
FROM LATE ANTIQUITY TO THE LATE MIDDLE AGES
Lena Wahlgren-Smith, Centre for Medieval & Renaissance Culture,
University of Southampton / School of History & Archaeology,
University of Winchester
David Lepine, Independent Scholar, Dartford
Coniugi pudicissimae bene merenti: Remembering Women in
Rome between the 4th and the 6th Century (Language: English)
Teodora Georgievová, Filozofická fakulta, Masarykova univerzita, Brno /
Dipartimento di Storia Antropologia Religioni Arte Spettacolo, Università
degli Studi di Roma ‘La Sapienza’
Remembering the Dead on the Edge of Empire: Epitaphs and
Emotion in Late Antique Milan, 300-600 (Language: English)
Meghan Dulsky, School of Classics, University of St Andrews
Religious Canopied Tombs: Analysis of the Specimens of the
Crown of Aragon during the Late Middle Ages (Language: English)
Stefania Botticchio Giorgi, Facultad de Geografía e Historia, Universidad
Complutense de Madrid
389
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1744-a:
Paper 1744-b:
Paper 1744-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1745-a:
Paper 1745-b:
Paper 1745-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1746-a:
Paper 1746-b:
Paper 1746-c:
390
1744
Parkinson Building: Room B.08
VIKING HERITAGE AND HISTORY IN EUROPE, II
Malmö universitet
Sara Ellis Nilsson, Institutionen för kulturvetenskaper,
Linnéuniversitetet
Stefan Nyzell, Institutionen för samhälle, kultur och identitet, Malmö
universitet
Cultural Heritage Institutions’ Relationship with Viking Ships
and Their Reconstructions (Language: English)
Sara Ellis Nilsson
Iceland’s Vikings at the Saga Museum (Language: English)
Guðrún D. Whitehead, Department of Social Sciences, University of
Iceland, Reykjavík
Vikings and Gaming Cultural Representations of the North in
Video Games (Language: English)
Lysiane Lasausse, Institutt for kultur, religion og samfunnsfag,
Universitetet i Sørøst-Norge, Notodden / Department of History,
Philosophy, Culture & Art Studies, University of Helsinki
1745
Esther Simpson Building: 2.09
CONNECTING MEDIEVAL BADGES AND AMPULLAS
Rijksmuseum van Oudheden, Leiden
Annemarieke Willemsen, Rijksmuseum van Oudheden, Leiden
Michael John Lewis, Portable Antiquities Scheme, British Museum,
London
Chained and Contained: Medieval Ampullas as Carriers of Power,
Image, and Cult (Language: English)
Pleun van Lieshout, Departement Geschiedenis en Kunstgeschiedenis,
Universiteit Utrecht
The Influence of the Catholic Church on ‘Secular’ Themed
Sexual Badges (Language: English)
Lisa Fenucci, Independent Scholar, Genk
Beads, Badges, and Beyond: Rosaries as Reliquaries in Art and
Archaeology (Language: English)
Annemarieke Willemsen
1746
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.09
THE MUDDYING OF FACTIONAL DEMARCATIONS IN LATE MEDIEVAL ENGLISH
RELIGIOUS DISCOURSES
Lollard Society
Ian R. Johnson, School of English, University of St Andrews
Michael van Dussen, Department of English, McGill University, Montréal
‘Commyning togider’: Shared Modes of Religious Conversation
in 15th-Century England and Their Implications for the
Orthodox-Heterodox Dichotomy (Language: English)
Rob Lutton, Department of History, University of Nottingham
The Lemmatic Orthodox Community in between and amongst
Fragmentary Interpretations in the Middle English Wycliffite
Glossed Gospels (Language: English)
Ian R. Johnson
‘Quere’: Textual Auditors in and around the Common Profit
Tradition (Language: English)
Ryan Perry, School of English, University of Kent
THURSDAY 06 JULY 2023: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1748-a:
Paper 1748b:
Paper 1748-c:
1748
Esther Simpson Building: 2.11
IMAGINATION, SPLENDOUR, AND ALCHEMY IN THE HIGH AND LATER MIDDLE
AGES
Dutch Research School for Medieval Studies
Sven Meeder, Afdeling Geschiedenis, Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen
Sven Meeder
The Usage of Space, Time, and Imagination in Hadewijch’s Fifth
Vision (Language: English)
Mark Verweij, Departement Geschiedenis en Kunstgeschiedenis,
Universiteit Utrecht
Late Medieval Alchemical Comprehension (Language: English)
Johanna Katharina Geremia, Departement Geschiedenis en
Kunstgeschiedenis, Universiteit Utrecht
The Virtue Magnificence: Theories and Practices in France and
the Burgundian Lands (Language: English)
Mats Dijkdrent, Institut de Recherche de Louvain pour le Territoire,
l’Architecture, l’Environnement Construit, Université catholique de
Louvain
TEA BREAK: 15.45-16.30
Tea and Coffee will be available on a self-serve basis at the following locations:
Esther Simpson Building: Foyer
Maurice Keyworth Building: Foyer
University Square: IMC Social Space
DINNER: 18.00-20.00
Take some time to enjoy your evening meal with colleagues.
Refectory 18.00-20.00
The Arbeau Dancers will provide instruction and demonstrations of the different dances, ranging
from the stately Basse Dances of the Burgundian court to the more lively dances of the Italian
Renaissance. Audience participation is very welcome, whether you are a complete beginner,
more confident, or something of an expert! Likewise, participants are invited to simply come and
cheer on the dancers.
Thursday
‘Rys up an let us daunce!’ Join Arbeau Dancers to celebrate the closing of IMC 2023 and
‘Making Leeds Medieval’ for a joyous evening of medieval dance.
391
Events & Excursions: Friday 07 July
Workshops
Medieval Records and the National
Archives: A Workshop, Parkinson
Building: Room B.08, 09.00-13.00
‘The purse of rich prosperity’:
Tasseled Pouch Workshop, Parkinson
Building: Room B.09, 10.00-16.00
Join Sean Cunningham, Paul Dryburgh &
Euan Roger for this workshop aimed at
all medievalists exploring how to discover
more about the rich archival collections
held at the National Archives.
Join re-enactor and living historian Tanya
Bentham and discover how to create a
medieval-style pouch or purse in silk
brocade trimmed with braids and tassels.
Events & Excursions: Tuesday 11 July
Workshops
Medieval Records and the National
Archives:
A
Virtual
Workshop,
Available online, 14.00-18.00
Join Sean Cunningham, Paul Dryburgh &
Euan Roger for this workshop aimed at
all medievalists exploring how to discover
more about the rich archival collections
held at the National Archives.
For more information on these and all other events, excursions, workshops,
performances and other activities taking place during IMC 2023, please visit
pp. 393-431.
392
The IMC administration reserves the right to cancel events, excursions, or workshops
due to unforeseen circumstances and to alter the schedule at short notice if necessary.
Please note that all times are approximate.
Places at our events, excursions & workshops are allocated on a first-come, firstserved basis. For paid events, early booking is recommended to avoid disappointment.
If you would like to attend an event for which space is available but have not included
it in your registration, please enquire at the Information and Payments Desk in the
Refectory Foyer.
Events/Excursions
Events, Excursions & Workshops
Sunday 02 July
A Stitch in Time: Embroidery Workshop
Directed by
Tanya Bentham
University House: De Grey Room
10.00-16.00
Price: £35.50
German brick stitch is a continental counted-stitch embroidery technique. Particularly
associated with German embroidery of the later Middle Ages, this technique was used
to create geometrical designs (often in bright colours) that form repeating patterns.
Brick stitch designs are oriented straight on the piece, rather than on an angle, and
the regular grid of the brick pattern makes it easy to create figures, including plants,
people, and animals. Brick stitch can be seen in surviving purses, as well as on larger
embroidered works such as the Hildesheim Cope (1310-1320), now on display in the
Victoria and Albert Museum.
After an introduction to sewing techniques, participants will work in silk thread on linen
to create a small panel of brick stitch.
All materials are included. Demonstrations of the relevant techniques will be shown
393
throughout the day, as well as individual tuition where needed.
Tanya Bentham has been a re-enactor for years, working the last 20 as a professional
living historian. Her main focus has always been on textiles, especially embroidery,
but also making detours into costume, natural dyeing, weaving, millinery, and silversmithing. She has delivered workshops for numerous museums, schools, and community
organisations throughout Yorkshire. Her books Opus Anglicanum: A Handbook and
Bayeaux Stitch: A Practical Handbook were recently published by Crowood press as
part of their embroidery series.
Please note that lunch is not included.
The workshop can only accommodate a limited number of participants. Early booking
is recommended.
Sunday 02 July
Book-Binding Workshop
Directed by
Linette Withers
University House: Beechgrove Room
13.00-17.00
Price: £42.50
Used for accounts and other administrative writings, limp ledger binding, sometimes
called a tacketed stationery binding, was in regular use from the 13th through to the
17th centuries and is particularly associated with Italy. Designed to be easy to take
apart to allow pages to be added to it over time, it was usually made of vellum and
leather and featured an extended cover flap and some form of closure.
Despite being a highly functional binding, this did not stop them being decorative,
and they boast a wide variety of stitch patterns, clasps or ties, and flap shapes while
maintaining their practicality.
This class will take you through the sewing of the text block and headbands, as well as
the attachment of the cover with decorative straps using medieval techniques to create
a modern version of this style of ledger binding. At the end of the class you will have a
useable and expandable sketchbook.
394
All tools and materials will be provided.
Linette Withers completed an MA in Medieval Studies at the University of Leeds before
joining the IMC team as Senior Congress Officer. She has been binding books since
2005 and since 2012 has worked as a professional book binder, producing codices and
stationery that are inspired by historical examples. Her work was shortlisted for display
at the Bodleian Library at the University of Oxford as part of their ‘Redesigning the
Medieval Book’ competition and exhibition in 2018. One of her books is also held in the
permanent collection of The Lit & Phil in Newcastle after being part of an exhibition of
bookbinding in 2021. In addition she works with private and library repair projects and
teaches bookbinding in her studio in Leeds.
Events/Excursions
The straps and cover will be made of leather, but a parchment effect paper and faux
leather strap version of the book can be made on request if you would prefer not to use
leather for your binding.
This workshop can only accommodate a limited number of participants. Early booking
is recommended.
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Sunday 02 July
‘Draw thy sword in right’: Combat Workshop
Directed by
Dean Davidson & Stuart Ivinson,
Kunst des Fechtens International
Refectory
13.30-16.00
Price: £16.00
Have you ever had a desire to learn how to fight like our historical forbears or study the
highly effective fighting style that was taught throughout the medieval period? Back by
popular demand, Kunst des Fechtens (KDF) International bring a workshop in the use
of medieval longswords to the congress participants.
KDF workshops bring a dynamic approach to training, with a martial application of
this historical art, through practical drills combined with interpretations from historical
treatises. Our professional and experienced instructors will be on hand to provide
tuition in this noble fighting style.
KDF International is an association of like-minded clubs from across Europe, whose
aim is to promote the study, development, and practice of the martial arts tradition
of medieval and renaissance Germany, in particular those of the Master Johannes
Liechtenauer. These martial arts have been preserved in numerous treatises and have
been unearthed, transcribed, translated, and interpreted into a modern understanding
of a subtle, dynamic, and effective martial arts system that looks at the use of a
number of weapons and unarmed combat of the time. Founded in 2006, KDF was
born from a desire to focus attention on Liechtenauer’s works as well as bringing
a dynamic approach to training, adding the use of protection as well as free play
exercises and bouts to drill and practice as a part of trying to triangulate a truth within
their interpretations.
Dean has over 20 years of experience in martial arts and training in historical weapons.
He is the KDF International Senior Instructor and European Historical Combat Guild
Chapter Master at the Royal Armouries, Leeds. He is an active member of the Society
for Combat Archaeology, an international organisation committed to the promulgation
of systematic knowledge related to combat and warfare in the past. Dean is passionate
about sharing knowledge on this subject and regularly presents at renowned
international conferences and seminars, providing a unique insight in to the arms and
armour used throughout medieval warfare. He is also a founding member of the Towton
Battlefield Frei Compagnie and 3 Swords, a prestigious medieval historical and armed
combat interpretation group. Dean holds a Masters in Health Informatics from the
Faculty of Medicine at the University of Leeds.
Stuart Ivinson has been involved with historical combat for 16 years, joining the
European Historical Combat Guild in 2000 and KDF upon its inception in 2006. He is
currently an Assistant Instructor at the Leeds Chapter of both organisations. Stuart
is also a member of the Society for Combat Archaeology and a founder member
of both the Towton Battlefield Society Frei Compagnie and 3 Swords. He has made
presentations regarding the display of arms and armour for organisations such as the
National Archives at Kew, English Heritage, and numerous British museums. Stuart has
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All weapons are provided by KDF. Participants should wear indoor training shoes and
appropriate and comfortable gym training gear that will allow freedom of movement
(i.e. t-shirt and track suit bottoms). Please make the instructors aware of any prior
medical conditions.
This workshop can only accommodate a limited number of participants. Early booking
is recommended.
Sunday 02 July
Events/Excursions
an MA in Librarianship, an MA in Medieval History and a P.Dip in Heritage Management.
When he is not being Dean’s sidekick he is the Librarian at the Royal Armouries Museum
in Leeds.
Musical Instruments of the
Middle Ages:
A Show-and-Tell Session
Directed by
de Mowbray’s Musicke
University House: Beechgrove
Room
19.30-21.00
Price: £8.50
Do you know the difference between a gittern and a guitar? How a 3-hole pipe can get
all the notes of a scale, and beyond?
De Mowbray’s Musicke will bring their full collection of medieval instruments - from citole
to shawm, from bagpipe to symphonie. Few of the instruments on display are wellknown, certainly outside the circle of medieval musicians. This is a great opportunity to
see and learn about these instruments and hear them played.
This presentation will explain the development, manufacture, and use of all these
instruments. Some instruments will be deconstructed, but all will be played!
An opportunity to get a close up view of instruments of this period, not to be missed!
De Mowbray’s Musicke’s medieval line-up of three musicians will be at this year’s
IMC. The group was formed in 2010 in order to play instruments of the Medieval and
Tudor periods in various combinations, loud and quiet. They are a costumed group
focussing on music, songs and dances of the period to 1500. They play many different
instruments of this period, as well as singing and dancing. De Mowbray’s Musicke’s
work takes them around the country: to historic sites (such as Bolsover Castle and
Warkworth Castle), concert venues, and dance halls.
You can see us at our website www.demowbray.info.
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Monday 03 July
Highlights from Leeds University Library
Special Collections
Hosted by
Leeds University Library Special Collections
Parkinson Building: Treasures of the Brotherton Gallery
12.00-14.00
This event is free of charge.
Join us for a drop-in session to see medieval treasures from Special Collections at the
University of Leeds. Special Collections staff will be in the Treasures of the Brotherton
Gallery with a selection of highlights from the collections for delegates to examine close
up.
This year we are excited to share five newly acquired medieval manuscripts and a rare
incunabulum with conference delegates, alongside some of our other holdings. These
medieval treasures are the subject of ongoing cataloguing and research activity, and
we look forward to displaying them in our gallery for the first time.
The collections at Leeds contain beautiful illuminated 15th-century French and Flemish
books of hours, psalters, and prayer books, as well as German chained manuscripts
from the 1450s. We also have a fine collection of incunabula. The Library of Ripon
Cathedral is held on long-term deposit in Special Collections at the University of
Leeds, and includes a Latin Bible from the 13th century. A highlight of the Yorkshire
Archaeological and Historical Society Collection is the enormous series of surviving
court rolls of the manor of Wakefield (1274-1925).
Special Collections houses over 300,000 rare books and seven kilometres of
manuscripts and archives, including the celebrated Brotherton Collection. Find details
of Special Collections opening times and collections at library.leeds.ac.uk/info/1500/
special_collections.
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Monday 03 July
Talk and Demonstration by
Peter Bull
University House: Beechgrove Room
13.00-14.00
This event is free of charge.
Events/Excursions
‘Hammers, strings, and whistles’:
Musical Instruments of the
Middle Ages
Contemporary artwork provides an invaluable source of information about medieval
musical instruments. This paper will include illustrations of a hammered dulcimer after
the painting The Virgin and Child (c. 1460) by Giovanni Boccati, a hurdy gurdy after the
depiction of Hell in Hieronymus Bosch’s triptych The Garden of Earthly Delights (14901510), a recorder based on depictions in Sebastian Virdung’s Musica Getuscht (1511),
as well as many other pictures of medieval lutes, gitterns, flutes, and bagpipes. The
talk will combine images of contemporary artwork along with modern reproductions of
the instruments and demonstrations of how they are played.
Monday 03 July
The Medieval Podcast Live!
Hosted by
Danièle Cybulskie
Stage@leeds: Stage 3
20.30-21.30
This event is free of charge.
Go behind the scenes and join Danièle Cybulskie for a live recording of The Medieval
Podcast with her most popular guest, Eleanor Janega. Eleanor is the author of The
Middle Ages: A Graphic History and The Once and Future Sex: Going Medieval on
Women’s Roles in Society. She’s also the creator and host of some of HistoryHit’s most
popular video series, including Medieval Pleasures, as well as her own podcast We’re
Not So Different, cohosted by Luke Waters.
Danièle is the creator and host of The Medieval Podcast, and the author of Life in
Medieval Europe: Fact and Fiction, How to Live Like a Monk: Medieval Wisdom for
Modern Life, and the forthcoming Chivalry and Courtesy: Medieval Manners for a
Modern World. When they join forces, Danièle and Eleanor bring learning and whole lot
of laughter to everyone’s favourite time period. At this live recording session, you’re
invited to sit back and enjoy an entertaining evening going medieval together.
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Monday 03 July
‘The key to Paradise is prayer’: A Workshop for the Islamic
Astrolabe
Directed by
Kristine Larsen
Stage@Leeds: Stage 1
19.00-20.30
This event is free of charge.
Astronomy is central to the Islamic faith in terms of defining the timing of its calendar
and religious observances. It has one of the truly lunar calendars (solely based on the
phases of the moon), with the month beginning with the sighting of the barely born
waxing crescent moon just after sunset. The five prayer times of each day are also
related to astronomical phenomenon, such as twilight, local noon, and sunset. It is also
important that prayers be done while facing the direction of the holy Kaaba in Mecca
(called the qibla). Astrolabes were used in medieval times to compute all of these
important parameters.
This hands-on workshop is an introduction to the basic moving parts of an Eastern or
Islamic astrolabe, as well as the computations of the five prayer times and the qibla.
No prior knowledge is necessary, and all materials will be provided. Instruction guides
and a cardboard astrolabe will be provided. This workshop is limited to 75 participants
and places will be allocated on a first-come, first served basis.
The workshop is presented by Central Connecticut State University astronomy professor
Kristine Larsen, who has made similar presentations at the International Medieval
Congress at Western Michigan University for several years, as well as numerous other
universities and educational centers.
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Events/Excursions
Monday 03 July
The Art of the Medieval Minstrel
Performed by
Peter Bull
Stage@leeds: Stage 2
20.30-21.30
Price: £12.00
‘Unforgettable.... Amazingly versatile... Marvellously entertaining’, Leicester Mercury
‘Musical wizard’, Gazette & Herald, North Yorkshire
‘If music be the food of love, then heritage musician Peter Bull has enough on his menu
for a medieval banquet’, Lancashire Telegraph
Peter Bull is a historical musician, who has performed regularly for many years at the
Tower of London and at Hampton Court Palace with the acclaimed historical interpreters
Past Pleasures, as well as at numerous properties in the care of the National Trust and
English Heritage. His solo recitals have included appearances at the Leicester Early
Music Festival, the Spanish Institutes in London and Manchester, the Leeds City Art
Gallery, and the Leeds International Medieval Congress.
In this concert, he performs dance music from England (Gresley manuscript, 15th
century), from France (Manuscrit du Roi, 13th century), and from Italy (Piacenza, c.1450
& Ebreo/Ambrosio, 1463); he also performs Spanish music from Las Cantigas de Santa
Maria (1221-1284) and El Cancionero de Palacio (1474-1516). He will play a variety
of replica mediaeval musical instruments (wheel fiddle [hurdy-gurdy], hammered
dulcimer, recorders, and gittern), and sing to the accompaniment of a medieval lute.
For further information, please visit www.peterbull.com/.
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Monday 03 July
Medieval Society Pub Quiz
Hosted by
Leeds University Union Medieval Society
Leeds University Union: Old Bar
20.00-21.00
This event is free of charge.
The LUU Medieval Society is delighted to welcome you to Leeds and to the IMC 2023!
Why not wind down after your first day of sessions with the traditional Medieval Society
Pub Quiz?
We invite you to form teams with other IMC delegates to answer questions posed by
the Medieval Society quizmaster. Pool knowledge with your colleagues to compete for
everlasting glory and a small prize - you may even get a crown! Can you defeat the
reigning champion?
The quiz will begin after 20.00 but please arrive early to find a table and organise your
team.
The LUU Medieval Society was formed in 2013 in order to promote a thriving community
of medievalists at the University and city of Leeds. To learn more about LUU Medieval
Society, visit https://engage.luu.org.uk/groups/J7M/medieval-society.
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Events/Excursions
Tuesday 04 July
Highlights from Leeds University Library
Special Collections
Hosted by
Leeds University Library Special Collections
Parkinson Building: Treasures of the Brotherton Gallery
12.00-14.00
This event is free of charge.
Join us for a drop-in session to see medieval treasures from Special Collections at the
University of Leeds. Special Collections staff will be in the Treasures of the Brotherton
Gallery with a selection of highlights from the collections for delegates to examine close
up.
This year we are excited to share five newly acquired medieval manuscripts and a rare
incunabulum with conference delegates, alongside some of our other holdings. These
medieval treasures are the subject of ongoing cataloguing and research activity, and
we look forward to displaying them in our gallery for the first time.
The collections at Leeds contain beautiful illuminated 15th-century French and Flemish
books of hours, psalters, and prayer books, as well as German chained manuscripts
from the 1450s. We also have a fine collection of incunabula. The Library of Ripon
Cathedral is held on long-term deposit in Special Collections at the University of
Leeds, and includes a Latin Bible from the 13th century. A highlight of the Yorkshire
Archaeological and Historical Society Collection is the enormous series of surviving
court rolls of the manor of Wakefield (1274-1925).
Special Collections houses over 300,000 rare books and seven kilometres of
manuscripts and archives, including the celebrated Brotherton Collection. Find details
of Special Collections opening times and collections at library.leeds.ac.uk/info/1500/
special_collections.
403
Tuesday 04 July
How to Create and Monetize Your Podcast
Presented By
Danièle Cybulskie & Peter Konieczny
Stage@leeds: Stage 3
19.00-20.30
This event is free of charge.
Because of its ability to reach millions of people around the world, podcasting is an
increasingly valuable space for historians to share their work - and their enthusiasm.
In this workshop, you’ll learn the basics about how to create and monetize your own
podcast, including:
•
•
•
•
•
Setup: equipment, software, and space
Format: content, length, and audience
Editing: to cut or not to cut?
Distribution: how and where to share
Monetization: how to fund your efforts
Danièle Cybulskie is the creator and host of The Medieval Podcast, which has surpassed
200 episodes and 1.5 million downloads since its inception in 2019. Peter Konieczny
is the founder and editor of Medievalists.net which distributes five medieval-themed
podcasts across multiple platforms, including The Medieval Podcast, Bow and Blade,
Scotichronicast, The Medieval Grad Podcast, and Byzantium and Friends.
Tuesday 04 July
Bow and Blade Live!
Presented By
Kelly DeVries & Michael Livingston
Stage@leeds: Stage 3
20.30-21.30
This event is free of charge.
Bow & Blade is a podcast about the battles, sieges, and military history of the Middle
Ages. It’s hosted by Kelly DeVries (Loyola University Maryland) and Michael Livingston
(The Citadel), both leading experts on medieval warfare. Their show features in-depth
discussions about some of the most important events of the Middle Ages, examining
and analyzing their military aspects. Some episodes include guests, while others are
question and answer sessions from the queries of their listeners. All this from their
virtual bar, giving the listener a seat at the table as ‘scholars of medieval warfare go
beyond the Wikipedia articles to talk about the debates and questions they are working
on today’. This episode will be a special live question and answer session with guests.
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Events/Excursions
Tuesday 04 July
Their thread of life is spun’: A Spinning Workshop
Directed by
Carey Fleiner
University House: Beechgrove Room
19.00-21.00
Price: £52.50
One of the oldest of the textile arts, spinning involves creating yarn by drawing out
and twisting together fibres. For many people in the 21st century, spinning is primarily
the stuff of fairy tales - princesses fall into an enchanted slumber after pricking their
fingers on spindles or sinister creatures spin straw into gold. In Greek mythology, the
Fates control destiny by spinning, and then cutting, the thread of each life. Throughout
the medieval period, however, spinning was an essential part of textile production,
producing thread by hand that can then be woven into cloth, with the spindle and the
distaff serving as symbols of femininity.
In this two-hour workshop, participants will learn about the basics of spinning wool
on a hand spindle. The workshop will begin with a short talk on the basics of sorting
a fleece, what is staple, and a look at the tools used for combing and carding wool
for spinning. Participants will practice carding wool into rolags (small, fluffed rolls of
fibre prepared for spinning), and then learn the basics of drafting and creating a twist,
as they work their way up to hand spindles. Finally, the workshop will finish up with
further information on setting the twist and plying the yarn. Whilst the workshop works
mainly with top-whorl spindles, there will be opportunities to talk about and handle
other types of spindles, which may include medieval, French, support, and Turkish
spindles.
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All materials, including wool and top-whorl spindle, will be supplied, and participants
will be able to keep their spindle. No previous experience of any sort of textile work is
needed.
Carey Fleiner is currently Senior Lecturer in Classical (Roman) History at the University
of Winchester. Her areas of research include Roman women and entertainment and
sport in the Classical world. She learnt to embroider, knit, and crochet as a child, and
later learnt spinning, weaving, and nalbinding. She has exhibited and won awards for
her work especially throughout the United States. She is keen on the history of textiles
and techniques of all sorts, especially in the Classical period. In practice, she enjoys
cotton-spinning on the charkha, wool-combing, and working with exotic fibres and
blends.
Visit her website: www.cdfleiner.wixsite.com/my-site-2 and follow her on Twitter
@AugustaAtrox.
Tuesday 04 July
Medieval Open Mic Night
Hosted by
Robin Fishwick
Emmanuel Centre: Claire Chapel
20.00-22.00
This event is free of charge.
Not with an actual microphone (that would be silly!) the IMC Open Mic Night offers
a variety of fare from poetry readings to music, song, even, occasionally, dance! In
previous years, we have had music from the troubadours, Viking sagas, medieval
poetry, and a variety of musical instruments. Medieval contributions are particularly
welcome, but it is an opportunity to share anything you always wanted to perform with
the international audience the IMC provides. Whether you come to perform or listen,
you will find the ambience of the Emmanuel Centre Claire Chapel and emcee Robin
Fishwick’s famous spiced fruit punch unforgettable.
Robin Fishwick is the Quaker Chaplain at the Universities Chaplaincy and a supporter
of various music nights in Leeds. He is a bit of a singer/songwriter himself and plays a
variety of instruments (some of them quite weird!).
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Tuesday 04 July
Performed by
Trouvère Medieval Minstrels
Stage@leeds: Stage 1
20.30-22.00
Price: £16.00
Events/Excursions
Ludus Danielis: Music and Tales
from the Play of Daniel
The Ludus Danielis was composed at the Abbey of Beauvais in Northern France in
the 12th century and is a musical play telling two of the stories of the Old Testament
prophet Daniel. As it says in its opening lines, it was created by the ‘iuventus’ - the
young men of the choir, and they did this under the guidance of their choirmaster,
Ralph the Englishman. It was a work of devotion in Christ’s honour, and was performed
in the Christmas season - it ends, after all, with the news of the birth of Christ. But
it was clearly also enormous fun - the original manuscript makes clear that it was an
acted play, not a static oratorio: costumes were involved, as were instruments. It is
thought that it was perhaps a sanctioned enjoyable entertainment in a season that
could otherwise be marked by license; it was an aspect of the Feast of Fools.
In creating the music for their play, Ralph and the choir made use of a paraliturgical
repertory that was a common currency among music-makers of the 12th century, and
it seems more than likely that music otherwise secular in nature was incorporated
into the Ludus. This play can thus be shown to share melodic elements known as far
afield as Bavaria, Aquitaine, and Norman Sicily, woven together with great imagination
and creativity. In the Ludus Danielis we get a glimpse of an intellectual and creative
community that existed beyond political and ethnic boundaries, and which similarly
could stride across more spiritual boundaries as well in its artistic freedoms.
The Ludus is packed with gorgeous melodies as well as being a great bit of storytelling,
with its two tales of Daniel and the Writing on the Wall, and Daniel in the Lions’ Den. It
is punctuated with the cry of ‘King, May You Live Forever!’, taken from the address to
the Persian King Darius in the Book of Daniel. This is surely ironic, and also celebratory
- for this play is in honour of a different king who indeed lives forever.
Trouvère are one of the longest-established medieval music ensembles in the UK,
formed in 1998 by Paul Leigh. Paul had come across medieval music in the course of
studying for his music degree, had fallen for the modal sound, and has never really
looked back. Gill Page joined the group in 2000 as a storyteller, and eventually took up
the medieval harp and later the symphony (the precursor of the hurdy gurdy). Richard
de Winter works as a singer, actor and musician, with a particular focus on early music.
He has sung with Trouvère since 2015.
As well as a range of recordings, Trouvère have also produced a growing set of books
of medieval music in modern notation. Trouvère perform regularly at medieval events
and in concert, and are also the team behind Medieval Music in the Dales - the UK’s
only festival of medieval music, taking place at Bolton Castle in Wensleydale every
September. The festival is now in its 7th year and brings together musicians from
all around the world for a wonderful weekend of concerts, workshops, and informal
playing.
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Wednesday 05 July
Highlights from Leeds University Library
Special Collections
Hosted by
Leeds University Library Special Collections
Parkinson Building: Treasures of the Brotherton Gallery
12.00-14.00
This event is free of charge.
Join us for a drop-in session to see medieval treasures from Special Collections at the
University of Leeds. Special Collections staff will be in the Treasures of the Brotherton
Gallery with a selection of highlights from the collections for delegates to examine close
up.
This year we are excited to share five newly acquired medieval manuscripts and a rare
incunabulum with conference delegates, alongside some of our other holdings. These
medieval treasures are the subject of ongoing cataloguing and research activity, and
we look forward to displaying them in our gallery for the first time.
The collections at Leeds contain beautiful illuminated 15th-century French and Flemish
books of hours, psalters, and prayer books, as well as German chained manuscripts
from the 1450s. We also have a fine collection of incunabula. The Library of Ripon
Cathedral is held on long-term deposit in Special Collections at the University of
Leeds, and includes a Latin Bible from the 13th century. A highlight of the Yorkshire
Archaeological and Historical Society Collection is the enormous series of surviving
court rolls of the manor of Wakefield (1274-1925).
Special Collections houses over 300,000 rare books and seven kilometres of
manuscripts and archives, including the celebrated Brotherton Collection. Find details
of Special Collections opening times and collections at library.leeds.ac.uk/info/1500/
special_collections.
408
Wednesday 05 July
Performed by
The Lords of Misrule
Beech Grove Plaza
18.30-19.30
This event is free of charge.
The Lords of Misrule are an amateur dramatic society first established nearly 50 years
ago at the Centre for Medieval Studies at the University of York. Over the years we have
performed a range of medieval, and occasionally early modern, drama, sometimes in
modernised form and sometimes in the original language. We always aim to bring out
the spirit of the plays, never oversimplifying them, but always making them accessible
to a wide audience. We have also taken part in the York Mystery Plays, most recently
in the summer of 2022, performing the ‘The Last Supper’ play on the waggons for the
first time since the Mystery Plays were revived in the 20th century.
Events/Excursions
Hecastus
This year we are performing Hecastus, a morality play written in Latin in 1539 by
the Dutch author Macropedius. The Lords were approached by the Hecastus Theatre
Project to join other drama groups elsewhere in Europe performing Hecastus in the
spring of 2023, so what you will see stems from our contribution to this project.
Hecastus is very similar in many ways to Everyman, a well-known medieval morality
play. Widely performed and widely translated in its day, Macropedius’ version follows
the story of Hecastus (Greek for ‘everyman’), who is faced with the prospect of death,
but can find no one to accompany him to the grave.
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Wednesday 05 July
Early Medieval Identities in Hild, Spear, and Menewood:
Retelling History and Myth to Include Us All
A Conversation with
Nicola Griffith
Introduced by Elaine Treharne (Stanford University)
Q&A Hosted by Joshua Davies (King’s College London) &
Matt Hussey (Simon Fraser University, British Columbia)
Esther Simpson Building: LG08
19.00-20.00
This event is free of charge.
Nicola Griffith will discuss the publication of her long-awaited second novel about Hild,
Menewood (2023) in conversation with Megan Cavell (University of Birmingham) and
Jenny Neville (Royal Holloway, University of London).
Nicola Griffith is a dual UK/US citizen, born in Leeds and currently living in Seattle.
She is the author of eight novels (including Hild, and Spear) with a ninth, Menewood
- a sequel to Hild - forthcoming. In addition to her fiction and nonfiction (the New
York Times, Guardian, Nature, New Scientist and others) she is known for her datadriven 2015 work on bias in the literary ecosystem and as the founder and co-host of
#CripLit. Her awards include two Washington State Book Awards, the Premio Italia, the
Nebula, World Fantasy, and Otherwise/Tiptree awards, and the Lambda Literary Award
(6 times). She serves on various advisory and editorial boards (Duke University Press
Practices series, the Journal of Historical Fictions, the Encyclopedia of Science Fiction),
holds a PhD from Anglia Ruskin University, and is married to novelist and screenwriter
Kelley Eskridge. She maintains a website and research blog, (all early 7th-century, all
the time) and posts on Twitter and Instagram.
After the event, there will be an opportunity for participants to have their books signed
by Nicola. Copies of Nicola’s work will be available for purchase at the event.
This event was organised by the Institute of English Studies, School of Advanced Study,
University of London, with support from the Arts and Humanities Research Council and
the IONA association.
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Events/Excursions
Wednesday 05 July
‘Paint It White’: Gesso Workshop
Led by
Markéta Poskočilová
University House: Beechgrove Room
19.00-21.00
Price: £24.50
Gesso is a traditional mix of an animal glue binder (usually rabbit-skin glue), chalk, and
white pigment, used to coat rigid surfaces, such as wooden panels, as a permanent
primer for further painting. Its absorbency makes it work with a wide range of painting
media, including different types of water-based, tempera, and oil paints. Mixing and
applying gesso is itself a skilled craft, as it is usually applied in multiple thin layers.
In this workshop, participants will learn about the steps involved in creating a medieval
panel painting, including making pigments, gilding, and the application of colour using
medieval techniques. Participants will also learn the technique of applying gesso to
wood, before having a chance to experiment with a wooden panel of their own. This
panel can then be painted or decorated at home.
All materials and tools will be provided. Due to the nature of the materials, it is not
possible to offer vegan alternatives.
Markéta Poskočilová studies the book culture of the late Middle Ages. She is completing
her PhD focusing on the Olomouc chapter library in the Department of History in
Palacký University. Inspired by the artistry and craftsmanship of medieval books, she
studied medieval painting techniques at the Accademia Santu Jacu School in Sardinia.
This workshop can only accommodate a limited number of participants. Early booking
is recommended.
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Wednesday 05 July
Hands on History: Arms and Armour
Replica Handling Session
Presented by
The Society for Combat Archaeology
Maurice Keyworth Building: 1.09
19.00-20.30
Price: £11.00
Ever wonder what it would be like to take a museum object out of its case for a closer
look? As that is not always possible, you could try the next best thing and get up close
to facsimiles of museum artefacts.
This workshop will consist of both a presentation of arms and armour from England and
Scandinavia from the 8th to the 12th centuries, a period commonly known as the ‘Viking
Age’. This presentation will focus on the materiality of the pieces, followed by the hands
on ‘handling session’ of replica objects - including swords, helmets, shields, and axes.
All the arms and armour presented are researched and referenced against archaeological
finds, museum artefacts, or items based on manuscript reproductions (with a detailed
breakdown of information related to each piece). Photography is actively encouraged!
The Society for Combat Archaeology (SoCA) is an international organization committed
to the advancement of knowledge about the nature of combat and conflict in the past
in all of their varieties. Its mission is to research, interpret, and convey material and
issues on the subject of combat and to encourage interdisciplinary interaction between
researchers in a variety of fields. To this end, SoCA cooperates extensively with an
international network of expertise consisting of persons with academic and practical
backgrounds in subjects related to combat, most notably from archaeology and martial
arts. SoCA thus draws upon a vast array of sources and critical assessments, which
ensure a high level of consideration in the presented material and the maintenance of
academic integrity in all its mediums of knowledge.
This workshop can only accommodate a limited number of participants. Early booking
is recommended.
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Events/Excursions
Wednesday 05 July
Mappa Mundi
Performed by
Daisy Black
Stage@leeds: Stage 1
20.30-22.00
Price: £12.00
‘Here, I found beasts like minotaurs, useful for war’.
Let the twelve winds blow you to the far corners of the Earth; meet mermaids and
mandrakes; and follow the trail of Adam’s burnt footprints all the way back to Eden.
Storyteller Daisy Black takes you on a tour around the medieval map of the world. A
show full of marvels, including saints and giants, heroes and devils, grisly cannibals,
and Norwegian skiers. Weaving together medieval maps and travel writing with oral
storytelling, this show is your passport to see the world through 14th-century eyes.
Just watch out for the monsters lurking at the edges of the map...
Daisy Black is a medievalist, theatre director, and storyteller. She works as a lecturer
in English at the University of Wolverhampton and is one of the BBC/AHRC New
Generation Thinkers. Her storytelling weaves medieval narratives together with English
folk song. Often moving, occasionally political, frequently feminist, just a little queer
and regularly funny, Daisy’s stories underline the relevance and vibrancy of medieval
narratives for today’s world.
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Wednesday 05 July
Templars: The Knights of Britain
Hosted by
Steve Tibble
With
Peter Konieczy
Stage@leeds: Stage 3
20.30-21.30
This event is free of charge.
To celebrate the launch of Templars: The Knights of Britain, join author Steve Tibble and
Peter Konieczy for a talk about the British Templars. The talk will cover the reputation
of the order in Britain, and how, ironically, but entirely rationally, the Templars were
dedicated peace-mongers when it came to affairs of state in Britain, despite their
warlike tendencies on Christendom’s eastern front. This was not altruism. Paradoxically,
the order sought peace as the best means to wage war. The British Templars needed
peaceful, stable states so that kings could take their armies on crusade. And they
wanted efficient governments with productive economies so that men, money, and
materiél could be transferred more readily to the East.
Altruistic or not, the result was the same. The true legacy of the British Templars lies
not in mad stories of conspiracy and satanism, but in a by-product of their endeavours
- the way in which this small group of brave and highly focused individuals helped
shape medieval Britain while simultaneously defending the Christian Middle East.
The talk will be live streamed on Medievalists.net and be followed by questions and a
drinks reception.
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Wednesday 05 July
Hosted by
James Baillie
Leeds University Union: Common
Ground
21.00-22.30
This event is free of charge.
Events/Excursions
Storytelling Circle
Come and join other IMC attendees for a late night storytelling circle! This is our fourth
storytelling circle at the IMC, offering relaxed entertainment and exploration of the
world of spoken stories for tellers and listeners alike.
The art of oral storytelling in various forms was integral to the background of many
works we now think of primarily as literary texts, and this is an opportunity to experience
something of that as well as an alternative to the IMC’s dancefloor for those who want
some quieter entertainment. Come to listen to and share riddles, poems, songs, and
spoken stories, be they medieval, folkloric, or otherwise.
All are welcome to come and participate - no experience expected or needed - or just
come and go as you please and relax and listen as the night draws in around us.
This event is sponsored by LUU medieval society. The LUU Medieval Society was formed
in 2013 in order to promote a thriving community of medievalists both at the University
and in city of Leeds. To learn more about LUU Medieval Society, visit https://engage.
luu.org.uk/groups/J7M/medieval-society.
Wednesday 05 July
IMC Dance
Hosted by
International Medieval Congress
Leeds University Union: Stylus
21.30-Late
This event is free of charge.
The International Medieval Congress once again invites attendees to don their dancing
shoes. Music provided by a local DJ.
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Thursday 06 July
Making Leeds Medieval
Hosted by
International medieval Congress
University Square
10.30-18.00
This event is free of charge.
As this year’s International Medieval Congress comes to a close, immerse yourself in
the Middle Ages with an exciting day of medieval-themed entertainment.
Watch thrilling combat displays, get up close to birds of prey, and meet people
demonstrating medieval crafts and techniques.
The Medieval Craft Fair will run on both Wednesday and Thursday, giving you the
chance to browse beautiful medieval-inspired handmade items from books to textiles
and jewellery.
Confirmed demonstrations and exhibitors will be available via the IMC 2023 app, virtual
event platform, and on campus.
416
Events/Excursions
Thursday 06 July
Rediscovering Medieval Lives at Calverley Old Hall
Presented by
Caroline Stanford, Landmark Trust
University House: Beechgrove Room
13.00-14.00
This event is free of charge.
Calverley Old Hall is an ancient manor house in Leeds currently under restoration by
the Landmark Trust. The on-site archaeology and documentary research are yielding
fascinating insights into the lives of the Calverley family, who lived on the site for some
600 years from around 1100. The talk will cover the history and evolution of Calverley
Old Hall and the colourful lives of some of those who lived within its walls. It will include
recent discoveries on site, including a painted chamber of exceptional 16th-century
Renaissance wall paintings of national significance. For the first time, a spotlight is
being shone upon this important medieval building in Leeds.
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Thursday 06 July
Jousting with Databases: Learn How to Create, Analyse,
and Visualise Historical Data with nodegoat
Directed by
Pim van Bree & Geert Kessels (LAB1100)
Parkinson Building: Cohen B Cluster
14.00-17.00
Price: £5.00
Nodegoat is a web-based research environment for the humanities that is used by
medieval historians to create, to analyse, and to visualise historical datasets. Nodegoat
can be customised to the needs of your own research project and is able to handle
vague and conflicting source material. Thanks to this flexibility, nodegoat is used in a
wide variety of research projects ranging from mapping the provenance of medieval
manuscripts, to analysing the networks of medieval graduates, and uncovering power
dynamics by examining Carolingian charters.
During the workshop we will first give a general introduction to nodegoat and will then
teach you how to configure your own research environment based on the needs of your
research questions. Feel free to bring your laptop, research question, and/or dataset to
be used during the workshop. You can also start your project before the workshop and
attend the workshop to ask questions about your project: go to www.nodegoat.net/
requestaccount to get started.
LAB1100 is a research and development firm established in 2011 by Pim van Bree
and Geert Kessels. LAB1100 brings together skills in new media, history, and software
development. Working together with universities, research institutes, and museums,
LAB1100 has built the digital research platform nodegoat and produces interactive data
visualisations.
For further information, please visit www.lab1100.com and www.nodegoat.net.
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‘Rys up an let us daunce!’
Events/Excursions
Thursday 06 July
Performed by
Arbeau Dancers
Leeds University Union: Riley Smith Hall
20.00-22.00
This event is free of charge.
To celebrate the closing of the IMC 2023 and the ‘Making Leeds Medieval’ events, we
invite all participants to attend an informal (and joyous) evening of medieval dance led
by the Arbeau Dancers. The Arbeau Dancers will provide instruction and demonstrations
of the different dances, ranging from the stately Basse Dances of the Burgundian court
to the more lively dances of the Italian Renaissance. Audience participation is very
welcome, whether you are a complete beginner, more confident, or something of an
expert! Likewise, participants are invited to simply come and cheer on the dancers.
The Arbeau Dancers are a Yorkshire-based group who perform and demonstrate
historical dances from the 14th to 19th centuries. They derive their name from a 16thcentury French monk, Thoinot Arbeau, who wrote a dance manual, the Orchesographie,
describing how dances were performed and the etiquette and manners of the time.
They frequently perform in period costume, which they research carefully to provide as
authentic a demonstration as possible.
For more information about the Arbeau Dancers please visit, www.arbeau.co.uk.
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Friday 07 July
Medieval Records and the National Archives: A Workshop
Directed by
Sean Cunningham, Paul Dryburgh & Euan Roger
Parkinson Building: Room B.08
09.00-13.00
Price: £7.50
For all medievalists the ability to locate, read, and understand archival sources is
fundamental to their research whatever their discipline and stage in their career. The
National Archives of the United Kingdom (TNA) holds one of the world’s largest and most
important collections of medieval records. The vast archive of English royal government
informs almost every aspect of medieval life from the royal court to the peasantry,
land ownership and tenure, the law, warfare and diplomacy, trade and manufacture,
transport, credit and debt, death and memory, material culture, literature, art and
music. However, finding, using, and interpreting the rich diversity of material is not
always entirely straightforward, and its potential for a wide range of research uses is
often unclear. This workshop will offer an introduction to TNA, show you how to begin
your research into its collections, and access research support. Images of original
documents will be used to illustrate the range of disciplines and topics TNA records
can inform and illuminate. Short, themed sessions will also introduce attendees to the
‘Mechanics of Medieval Government’ and ‘Accessing Medieval Justice’ .
This workshop is aimed at all medievalists, from masters students through to
experienced academics in any discipline, who wish to discover more about the rich
archive collections at TNA and how they might use them in their research. There are
no pre-requisites for attending the workshop, although a basic knowledge of Latin is
recommended.
Sean Cunningham is Head of the Medieval team at The National Archives and
specialises in 15th- and 16th-century records of English royal government. Euan Roger
is a Principal Medieval Records Specialist whose research has focussed on church,
government, medicine, and law in the late Middle Ages. Paul Dryburgh is a Principal
Medieval Records Specialist with interests in government, politics, and warfare in the
British Isles in the 13th and 14th centuries.
This workshop is sponsored by the National Archives, Kew.
The workshop can only accommodate a limited number of participants. Early booking
is recommended.
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Events/Excursions
Friday 07 July
‘The purse of rich prosperity’: Tasseled Pouch Workshop
Directed by
Tanya Bentham
Parkinson Building: Room B.09
10.00-16.00
Price: £34.50
Before pockets were sewn into clothing, the purse or pouch, worn at the waist, was an
essential accessory for both men and women to keep money and other small objects
safe. Purses could be simple constructions of leather or fabric, or much more elaborate,
featuring sumptuous fabrics and elaborate embroidery.
Participants in this workshop will create a medieval style pouch or purse in silk
brocade trimmed with braids and tassels. Participants will learn to braid using a simple
fingerlooping or plaiting technique and to construct tassels with embroidered tops
before assembling and lining their new medieval fashion accessory.
All materials are included. Demonstrations of the relevant techniques, including simple
braiding and passementerie as well as basic sewing will be shown throughout the day,
as well as individual tuition where needed.
Tanya Bentham has been a re-enactor for years, working the last 20 as a professional
living historian. Her main focus has always been on textiles, especially embroidery,
but also making detours into costume, natural dyeing, weaving, millinery, and silversmithing. She has delivered workshops for numerous museums, schools, and community
organisations throughout Yorkshire. Her books Opus Anglicanum: A Handbook and
Bayeaux Stitch: A Practical Handbook were recently published by Crowood press as
part of their embroidery series.
Please note that lunch is not included.
The workshop can only accommodate a limited number of participants. Early booking
is recommended.
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Tuesday 11 July
Medieval Records and the National Archives:
A Virtual Workshop
Directed by
Sean Cunningham, Paul Dryburgh & Euan Roger
Available Virtually
14.00-18.00
Price: £5.00
For all medievalists the ability to locate, read, and understand archival sources is
fundamental to their research whatever their discipline and stage in their career. The
National Archives of the United Kingdom (TNA) holds one of the world’s largest and most
important collections of medieval records. The vast archive of English royal government
informs almost every aspect of medieval life from the royal court to the peasantry,
land ownership and tenure, the law, warfare and diplomacy, trade and manufacture,
transport, credit and debt, death and memory, material culture, literature, art and
music. However, finding, using, and interpreting the rich diversity of material is not
always entirely straightforward, and its potential for a wide range of research uses is
often unclear. This workshop will offer an introduction to TNA, show you how to begin
your research into its collections, and access research support. Images of original
documents will be used to illustrate the range of disciplines and topics TNA records
can inform and illuminate. Short, themed sessions will also introduce attendees to the
‘Mechanics of Medieval Government’ and ‘Accessing Medieval Justice’ .
This workshop is aimed at all medievalists, from masters students through to
experienced academics in any discipline, who wish to discover more about the rich
archive collections at TNA and how they might use them in their research. There are
no pre-requisites for attending the workshop, although a basic knowledge of Latin is
recommended.
Sean Cunningham is Head of the Medieval team at The National Archives and
specialises in 15th- and 16th-century records of English royal government. Euan Roger
is a Principal Medieval Records Specialist whose research has focussed on church,
government, medicine, and law in the late Middle Ages. Paul Dryburgh is a Principal
Medieval Records Specialist with interests in government, politics, and warfare in the
British Isles in the 13th and 14th centuries.
This workshop is sponsored by the National Archives, Kew.
The workshop can only accommodate a limited number of participants. Early booking
is recommended.
422
Places on our excursions are allocated on a first-come, first-served basis, so early
booking is recommended to avoid disappointment. Please make a note of how
participation in excursions will affect your meal requirements, and note also the time
of departure from and return to the Parkinson Building, including any travel time, in
relation to other commitments, and book accordingly.
Participants are advised to wear sensible footwear and come prepared for the
weather. The wearing of high-heeled shoes is impractical at most sites and prohibited
at some. Most excursions will involve a significant amount of walking and/or standing.
Raincoats and sunblock may be required. Please contact the IMC if you have any
questions or concerns about a particular excursion. Children under the age of 18
must be accompanied by a responsible adult.
Events/Excursions
Excursions
We ask that those participating in excursions arrive at the given meeting point 15
minutes before the excursion is due to begin. A member of staff will be present in
this area to provide information.
The IMC administration reserves the right to cancel excursions due to unforeseen
circumstances and to alter the schedule at short notice if necessary. Please note
that all times are approximate. Prices for the excursions include entrance fees, and
donations to the sites, fees for the guides, staffing, and administration costs. Meals
and transport to the site are not included in the price unless otherwise indicated.
Sunday 02 July
Two ‘secret’ Yorkshire Castles: Tickhill and Conisbrough
Price: £54.50
Depart Parkinson Steps: 09.30
Arrive Parkinson Steps: 19.30
This excursion to the Yorkshire village of Tickhill and town of Conisbrough, near
Doncaster, will allow participants to visit two castles, which both had their roots in
the Norman expansion in the North of England. Tickhill Castle is the property of the
Duchy of Lancaster and is therefore not normally open to the public. This excursion
allows a very rare and exclusive opportunity to study the remains of this little-known
magnificent motte and bailey castle.
The early castle at Tickhill was built before 1089 with prominent earth and water
features. The motte, at 23 meters (75 feet), is the second highest surviving early
Norman motte in the United Kingdom (the highest is at Thetford, Norfolk, some 24
meters (80 feet tall), and the third largest artificial mound in Britain (the largest is
the pre-historic Silbury Hill, at 30 meters (98 feet) high). The gatehouse is one of the
earliest surviving Norman examples in England. The castle witnessed a number of
sieges throughout its history, in 1102, 1193-94, 1264, 1322, and finally in 1644. It was
set in a landscape which included a moat (which is still filled with water), a mill and its
millpond, as well as a 13th-century clapper bridge.
Although famously appearing in Sir Walter Scott’s novel Ivanhoe (1819), the
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Tickhill Castle, Credit: Robert Woosnam-Savage
comparatively little-visited Conisbrough Castle
remains one of Yorkshire’s best-kept secrets.
The castle possesses the most impressive and
finest standing remains of a late 12th-century
cylindrical keep or donjon in Britain. It has
been described as ‘one of the finest examples
of late Norman defensive architecture’. The
four-storey Norman keep is exceptionally
well preserved, both internally and externally,
and reaches a height of 27 meters (90 feet).
Within its walls is the largest hooded fire-place
of its date, an impressive private chapel, and a
fine processional staircase.
Nearby is St Peter’s Minster at Conisbrough, a 12th-15th century church which, standing
on an earlier Anglo-Saxon site of c. 750, contains an excellent group of medieval
funerary slabs, said to be the finest of their kind in England. A richly carved tomb chest,
dating from the 11th-12th century, includes depictions of St George and the dragon as
well as warriors in combat. It has been suggested that some of the subjects illustrated
may be representations of The Song of Roland and that it formed the tomb of William
de Warrenne, 3rd Earl of Surrey, who died while on the Second Crusade in 1148. A
12th-13th century altar stone in the church probably came from Conisbrough Castle.
Along the way to Conisbrough, the church of St John at Wadworth, will also be visited
to see the rare effigy of a medieval forester in hunting garb, complete with sword,
buckler, and horn, unique in Yorkshire. There is also a fine effigy of a knight and lady
from the time of the Wars of the Roses, Edmund Fitzwilliam (1382-1465), whose father
(another Edmund) was Constable of Conisbrough Castle. The tour will also make a brief
stop at Braithwell to see the stump of a medieval Cross shaft, which has an intriguing,
although sadly unproven, association. It is all that remains of a cross allegedly erected
to commemorate the freeing of King Richard I from imprisonment (c. 1191).
This excursion will once again be led by Kelly DeVries (Professor of the Department
of History, Loyola University, Maryland and Honorary Historical Consultant to the
Royal Armouries) and Robert C. Woosnam-Savage FSA (Curator of Armour and Edged
Weapons, Royal Armouries, Leeds).
Sensible footwear is recommended, as there will be a significant amount of walking
on uneven surfaces and climbing steep stone steps and slopes. Packed lunches will be
provided.
For
more
information
about
Conisbrough Castle, please visit www.
english-heritage.org.uk/visit/places/
conisbrough-castle/.
Conisborough Castle, © Robin Bendall/User:Highfields,
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:ConisbroughCastle.jpg.
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Events/Excursions
Bolton Abbey. Credit: Michael D. Beckwith, CC0, via Wikimedia Commons
Sunday 02 July
Bolton Abbey
Price: £28.00
Depart Parkinson Steps: 13.00
Arrive Parkinson Steps: 19.00
The beautiful setting of Bolton Priory has inspired artists and writers by, in the words
of John Ruskin, its ‘sweet peace and tender decay’ (1856). The ruins of the medieval
priory and its church are within the wooded valley of the river Wharf and provide a
glimpse of both medieval and 18th-century approaches to medieval buildings.
In this excursion, delegates will walk down from the village with its shops and facilities
to explore the abbey ruins and look at its conversion to a parish church after the
Reformation. Architectural periods from the 12th to the 16th century can be seen here,
and we’ll discover how the later builders responded to the work of their predecessors,
and why the site became the haunt of the Romantic artists and writers.
This excursion will be led by Jenny Alexander (Department of Art History, University of
Warwick) and Bryony Wilde (Department of Art History, University of Warwick).
For more information about Bolton Abbey, please visit www.boltonabbey.com/.
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Lyle Bascinet, Credit: Royal Armouries
Monday 03 July
Royal Armouries
Price: £25.00
Depart Parkinson Steps: 13.30
Arrive Parkinson Steps: 18.00
The Royal Armouries is the British national collection of arms and armour and Britain’s
oldest museum. It contains the finest collection of medieval arms and armour in Britain.
This excursion to the Royal Armouries Museum in Leeds will begin with a self-guided
visit to the public galleries until 16.00.
This visit will take place when the museum is closed to the public. Half of the group will
take part in a guided tour of the galleries, while the other group will have the opportunity
to view and handle original examples of armour and weapons with curatorial staff. The
focus of this session will be a comparison of European arms and armour with African
and Asian examples. After about an hour, the groups will switch before departing the
museum at approximately 17.00.
In order to attend this excursion delegates will be required to bring a valid photo ID
with them, such as a driving license or passport. Delegates should note that once the
museum has closed they will not be permitted to move unaccompanied around the
galleries, and will need to remain with the group.
For more information about the Royal Armouries, please visit www.royalarmouries.
org/.
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Events/Excursions
Imgae Caption and Credit
Byland Battlefield, Credit: Chris Pye
Tuesday 04 July
Byland Battlefield Walk
Price: £36.50
Depart Parkinson Steps: 13.00
Arrive Parkinson Steps: 19.30
At first light on the morning of October 14th in the year of Our Lord 1322, the armies
of two kings confronted each other at Sutton Bank in North Yorkshire. The soldiers of
King Edward II of England looked down from the heights at a strong force led by King
Robert I ‘the Bruce’ of Scotland as they deployed in the area around Gormire Lake, with
thousands more approaching from the direction of Northallerton to the north-west.
Soon they would join battle in a confrontation as dramatic as the landscape in which
it was fought.
The battle was a significant encounter in the Scottish War of Independence and unusual
in that it was fought so deep into English territory. Another interesting feature being
that it is one of only two occasions in the history of Anglo-Scottish warfare when the
kings of both nations were present in the field.
This battlefield walk will reveal the story of the ensuing battle and describe the events
of the battle itself, as well as addressing the wider historical context, the campaign
leading up to the battle, and the immediate aftermath and longer-term consequences.
This walk casts light on a fascinating but little-known and neglected episode of our
island history, and reveals a conflict largely shaped by the dramatic landscape in which
it took place. The outcome of the battle illustrates the almost-total hegemony King
Robert was able to establish over large parts of the North of England in the early 14th
century, but also Edward II’s stubbornness and refusal to recognise the inevitable – an
intransigence that would contribute to his ultimate downfall.
Sensible footwear is recommended, as there will be a significant amount of walking.
The hike will be approximately three miles long, but with level access. Refreshments
are included.
This tour will be guided by Harry Pearson, author of Clash of Crowns: The Battle of
Byland 1322.
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Shibden Hall, Halifax, with thanks to David Cant
Wednesday 05 July
Shibden Hall
Price: £27.50
Depart Parkinson Steps: 13.00
Arrive Parkinson Steps: 19.00
Shibden Hall is a Grade II* listed historic house located in a public park just outside
of Halifax in West Yorkshire. The hall dates back to 1420, and there are substantial
remains of the timber-framed building and its medieval core so that, although it has
been extensively modified by generations of residents over the years, it still retains a
late-medieval atmosphere. For more than 300 years, the Shibden estate was owned
by the Lister family, who were wealthy mill owners and cloth merchants. The Lister
family donated the house to the Halifax Corporation in 1933. The Hall is now a visitor
attraction, surrounded by the restored gardens and estate that forms Shibden Park.
The site also includes a 17th-century aisled barn and adjacent workshops that house
a carriage collection and displays relating to different crafts (including blacksmiths,
coopers, wheelwrights, and saddlers).
By far the most famous resident of Shibden Hall was Anne Lister (1791-1840), whose
now famous diaries documented her ‘love’ for ‘the fairer sex’. After inheriting Shibden
Hall in 1826, Anne extensively renovated the hall to improve its status, including adding
a Gothic tower to serve as her private library. She lived with her partner, Ann Walker,
at Shibden Hall from 1834 until Anne’s death in 1840 during a trip to the Caucasus.
Anne Lister’s life has recently been the focus of the BBC drama series written by Sally
Wainwright, Gentleman Jack.
This tour will primarily focus on the remnants of the medieval hall and its evolution,
but delegates will also have the opportunity to learn more about the life of one of
Yorkshire’s most famous (albeit non-medieval) residents, who is often described as ‘the
first modern lesbian’.
Due to the size of the hall, it will not be possible for the entire group to visit at once.
Participants will be divided into smaller groups for the tour of the hall but will also have
time for independent exploration of the barn and grounds.
This tour will be guided by David Cant of the Yorkshire Vernacular Building Study
Group.
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Events/Excursions
Mount Grace Priory, Credit: Mount Grace Priory / JohnArmagh / CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.
org/w/index.php?curid=28345591
Thursday 06 July
Mount Grace Priory and Guisborough Priory
Price: £53.50
Depart Parkinson Steps: 09.00
Arrive Parkinson Steps: 19.00
Even in Yorkshire, with its many surviving monastic sites, Mount Grace Priory and
Guisborough Priory are both very special, significant for their setting, as well as for
their physical remains.
Mount Grace Priory is the best preserved and most accessible of the nine English
medieval Carthusian charterhouses, and one of the most intensively researched in
Europe. The last monastery to be established in Yorkshire before the suppression, it
retains the well-preserved ruins of its church, the individual cells of its choir-monks and
lay-brothers, and the guest houses and service ranges of the inner court. The site was
substantially excavated between 1968-71 by Lawrence Keen and between 1985-92 by
Glyn Coppack, providing exceptional evidence for the reconstruction of a single monk’s
cell and its garden to demonstrate the setting of late medieval Carthusian life.
The great Augustinian priory of Gyseburn or Guisborough was one of the earliest
Augustinian houses to be established in England. Founded in about 1119 by Robert de
Brus, the greatest Norman lord in north-east England and richly endowed, it became
one of the greatest Yorkshire monasteries. At its suppression in 1540, it was the fourth
richest house in Yorkshire. Its buildings, now reduced to fragments, evidence building
campaigns of the 12th, 13th, and 14th centuries. In the 1860s, the then owner Admiral
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Thomas Chaloner excavated much of the church and recovered a great amount of
architectural spolia, still displayed on the site. In 1985, English Heritage undertook an
exploratory excavation in the nave of the church in advance of conservation work, which
lead to a major excavation in 1985-86 by Dave Heslop, and the architectural detail
recovered by Admiral Chaloner was recorded and analysed between 1986 and 1995
by Stuart Harrison, and displayed on site. The site is now managed by the Gisborough
Priory Project, who provide volunteers to open and manage the site.
This excursion will be led by Glyn Coppack (Archaeological and Historical Research)
and Stuart Harrison (Ryedale Archaeology Services, Pickering). A packed lunch will be
included.
For more information on Mount Grace Priory, please visit www.english-heritage.org.
uk/visit/places/mount-grace-priory/ and for more information on Gisborough Priory,
please visit www.english-heritage.org.uk/visit/places/gisborough-priory/.
Mount Grace Priory, Image Credit: Stuart Harrison
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Events/Excursions
Stained glass at All Saints, North Street, York.
Thursday 06 July
The Stained Glass of All Saints, North Street
Price: £25.00
Depart Parkinson Steps: 13.00
Arrive Parkinson Steps: 19.00
The earliest known written reference to All Saints North Street, York, is in a document
from 1089, but there was a church here in the Anglo-Saxon period. The fabric as seen
today developed from the 1100s to 1400s as the local population expanded. By the late
12th century the church belonged to the nearby Priory of Holy Trinity. Originally a simple
rectangular cell, the church gradually expanded to include an aisled nave of three bays,
as well as additional chapels on either side of the chancel.
The church is particularly notable for its exceptional collection of stained glass, dating
from the second quarter of the 14th century through to the first half of the 15th century.
Highlights of the collection include the Corporal Acts of Mercy Window and the Pricke
of Conscience Window, which depicts 15 signs indicating the end of the world and
incorporates the Middle English text of the poem that describes these events. Recently
All Saints was given an award from the National Heritage Lottery Fund towards the
restoration and preservation of its stained glass which has now been completed.
This visit will give participants the chance to see the restored glass, as well as learning
more about the process of conservation. Participants will also have the opportunity to
view archaeological finds from the church and visit the anchorhold.
This tour will be guided by David Mercer (Project Manager, All Saints North Street) and
Alison Gilchrist (Barley Studio), who was involved in the conservation of the stained
glass.
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Exhibitions & Bookfairs
Parkinson Building: Parkinson Court
Monday 03 July
10.00-19.30
Tuesday 04 July
08.30-18.30
Wednesday 05 July
08.30-18.30
Thursday 06 July
08.30-13.00
IMC Bookfair
A highlight of the IMC. The IMC Bookfair runs throughout the Congress and provides
an opportunity to meet with publishers, browse their latest titles, network, discuss
future projects, and, of course, access exclusive IMC discounts. Representatives will be
on hand in the Parkinson Court throughout the week. Refreshments will be available all
week, along with special competitions and giveaways.
You are cordially invited to join publishers’ representatives for the official IMC Bookfair
drinks reception at 18.00 on Monday 03 July where a variety of alcoholic and nonalcoholic beverages will be available.
All confirmed exhibitors are listed on the next page. The IMC app will also contain a
floor plan enabling you to find specific exhibitors. All in-person exhibitors will also have
a listing on the virtual platform.
Full details of all exhibitors can be found via the IMC 2023 app, virtual event platform,
and on our website: www.imc.leeds.ac.uk/imc-2023/bookfair.
432
Confirmed In-Person & Virtual Publishers
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Manchester University Press
Oxbow Books & Casemate UK
Oxford University Press
Palgrave Macmillan
Penn State University Press
Princeton University Press
Punctum Books
Routledge
Royal Armouries Publishing
Schwabe Verlag Basel/Berlin
Shaun Tyas Publishing
Trivent Publishing
University of Chicago Press
University of Michigan Press
University of Toronto Press
University of Wales Press
Yale University Press
Exhibitions
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Amsterdam University Press
Arc Humanities Press
Austrian Academy of Sciences Press
BAR Publishing
Boydell & Brewer
Bloomsbury Academic/ Bloomsbury
Digital Resources
Brepols
Brill
British Online Archives
Cambridge University Press
Ceramicon
Cistercian Publications
Combined Academic Publishers
De Gruyter
Edinburgh University Press
Harvard University Press
Liverpool University Press
Medieval Craft Fair
University Square
Wednesday 05 July
10.30-19.00
Thursday 06 July
10.30-18.00
Confirmed exhibitors:
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Anachronalia
Fiftyeleven
Gemmeus
Hudson Clay-Potter
Opus Anglicanum
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The Goodwives
Pretender to the Throne
Tillerman Beads
Trinity Court Potteries
Viking Agenda
433
Second-Hand & Antiquarian Bookfair
Leeds University Union: Foyer
Sunday 02 July
16.00-21.00
Monday 03 July
08.00-19.00
Tuesday 04 July
08.00-17.00
Confirmed exhibitors:
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Bennett and Kerr Books
Chevin Books
Matthew Butler Books
Donald Munro
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Northern Herald Books
Pinwell Books
Salsus Books
Unsworth Antiquarian Booksellers
Historical & Archaeological Societies Fair
Leeds University Union: Foyer
Thursday 06 July
10.30-18.00
Confirmed exhibitors:
• Towton Battlefield Society
• West Yorkshire Archive Service
• Yorkshire
Archaeological
Historical Society (YAHS)
and
Further exhibitors for the IMC Bookfair, Medieval Craft Fair, Second-Hand & Antiquarian
Bookfair, and Historical & Archaeological Societies Fair will be announced via our
website, the IMC virtual event platfom, and IMC 2023 App.
Programme Advertisers
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434
Brepols, back cover, inside back cover
Centre for Medieval & Renaissance Studies, Saint Louis University, pp. 128, 138
Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse and Celtic, University of Cambridge, p. 232
Erich Schmidt Verlag, p. 276
Leuven University Press, p. 62
Medieval Institute, University of Notre Dame, Indiana, p. 86
SISMEL - Edizioni del Galluzzo, p. 140
St Andrews Institute of Medieval Studies, University of St Andrews, p. 329
University of Chicago Press, pp. 56, 58, 60
University of Lincoln Medieval Studies, p. 222
University of Michigan Press, p. 371
Yale University Press, p. 254
Receptions
The IMC 2023 Bookfair will be launched with a drinks reception on Monday 03 July,
18.00-19.00. The Bookfair will remain open later during the reception, giving an extra
opportunity to talk to publishers’ representatives.
On Wednesday 05 July, 18.00-19.00, we will host a reception to celebrate this year’s
IMC and Craft Fair. Join us to raise a glass and meet our talented crafts people.
Centre for Medieval Arts & Rituals,
University of Cyprus
Monday 03 July, 19.00-20.00
University House: Great Woodhouse
Room
Centre for Medieval Research,
University of Leicester
Monday 03 July, 20.00-21.00
University House: Little Woodhouse
Room
Early Medieval Europe
Monday 03 July, 20.00-21.00
Esther Simpson Building: Foyer
Mortimer Historical Society
Tuesday 04 July, 18.00-19.00
University House: Little Woodhouse
Room
Medieval Worlds. Comparative &
Interdisciplinary Studies, Austrian
Academy of Sciences
Tuesday 04 July, 18.00-19.00
University House: St George Room
Medieval Academy of America
Tuesday 04 July, 20.00-21.00
Esther Simpson Building: Foyer
York Medieval Press
Tuesday 04 July, 20.00-21.00
Maurice Keyworth Building: Foyer
Exhibitions
As usual, individual publishers and other organisations will also host wine receptions to
promote their new titles, talk to existing and potential authors, and maintain relations
with their markets.
Mediävistenverband
Tuesday 04 July, 20.15-21.15
University House: Great Woodhouse
Room
Centre for Medieval Studies,
University of Bristol
Wednesday 05 July, 18.00-19.00
University House: Little Woodhouse
Room
German Historical Institute, London
/ German History Society
Wednesday 05 July, 20.00-21.00
University House: Great Woodhouse
Room
435
Index of Papers
Administration 108-a, 113-b, 113-c,
142-a, 142-b, 142-c, 208-b, 213-a, 215-a,
230-a, 230-b, 247-b, 308-a, 331-c, 334-b,
340-b, 340-c, 343-c, 348-c, 502-a, 502-c,
515-b, 524-a, 524-b, 538-b, 611-c, 618-b,
633-a, 633-b, 633-c, 706-a, 706-c, 708-b,
711-a, 711-b, 711-c, 715-b, 715-c, 719-a,
722-c, 730-b, 740-a, 740-b, 740-c, 741-a,
743-a, 811-a, 815-b, 1004-c, 1010-c,
1012-a, 1013-a, 1014-c, 1015-b, 1019-b,
1019-c, 1030-b, 1034-a, 1034-b, 1035-a,
1035-b, 1112-c, 1119-a, 1119-b, 1119-c,
1122-a, 1135-b, 1205-a, 1205-b, 1214-c,
1241-a, 1302-a, 1303-a, 1303-b, 1303-c,
1305-a, 1305-c, 1309-a, 1309-c, 1317-a,
1319-a, 1319-b, 1341-b, 1341-c, 1341-d,
1342-a, 1348-b, 1534-b, 1540-b, 1540-c,
1610-a, 1611-a, 1611-c, 1620-a, 1620-c,
1640-a, 1640-b, 1640-c, 1712-a, 1718-d,
1720-b
1330-c, 1343-c, 1530-c, 1533-a, 1611-d,
1614-b, 1633-a, 1633-b, 1714-b, 1719-a
Anthropology 110-a, 133-a, 206-b, 302-c,
323-a, 330-a, 333-a, 518-b, 523-a, 523-c,
714-a, 714-c, 737-a, 743-b, 803-a, 803-b,
803-c, 813-a, 813-b, 813-c, 1015-a,
1015-c, 1024-a, 1024-b, 1109-c, 1126-c,
1141-b, 1146-b, 1224-a, 1224-b, 1301-b,
1301-c, 1324-b, 1324-c, 1504-a, 1504-c,
1509-a, 1509-b, 1604-a, 1606-a, 1609-c,
1723-a, 1724-c, 1744-b
Architecture - Secular 233-a, 245-b,
345-b, 702-a, 702-b, 1002-a, 1002-c,
1011-c, 1046-c, 1102-a, 1102-b, 1111-a,
1111-b, 1241-b, 1502-a, 1502-b, 1611-a
1611-d
Archaeology - General 112-a, 113-c,
133-a, 133-b, 144-b, 247-a, 302-c, 311-b,
502-b, 543-a, 702-b, 702-d, 714-a, 802-b,
802-c, 1018-a, 1117-c, 1118-a, 1141-b,
1202-a, 1202-b, 1216-b, 1223-a, 1223-c,
1514-a, 1514-b, 1523-a, 1523-b, 1523-c,
1530-a, 1530-b, 1614-b, 1614-c, 1633-a,
1633-b, 1714-a, 1730-b, 1730-c, 1742-c,
1744-b
Archaeology - Sites 102-b, 102-c, 112-c,
133-b, 202-a, 202-b, 202-c, 223-b, 311-b,
341-b, 504-d, 508-c, 511-a, 518-b, 528-a,
528-b, 702-a, 712-b, 713-c, 811-b,
1002-a, 1002-b, 1002-c, 1023-b, 1023-c,
1102-b, 1102-c, 1115-b, 1202-a, 1202-b,
1202-c, 1209-b, 1223-b, 1330-a, 1330-b,
Architecture - Religious 102-b, 102-c,
112-c, 117-a, 134-a, 134-b, 145-a, 145-b,
145-c, 202-a, 217-a, 243-b, 245-a, 529-b,
529-c, 629-b, 629-c, 639-b, 729-c, 802-c,
829-b, 1011-a, 1015-a, 1026-b, 1044-a,
1044-b, 1044-c, 1046-b, 1109-c, 1111-a,
1144-a, 1144-b, 1201-a, 1201-b, 1201-c,
1202-a, 1202-c, 1211-b, 1211-c, 1230-a,
1230-b, 1230-c, 1239-a, 1239-b, 1239-c,
1307-b, 1311-c, 1315-a, 1315-b, 1330-a,
1330-c, 1338-a, 1338-c, 1529-b, 1533-a,
1533-c, 1545-c, 1629-a
Archives and Sources 110-b, 111-c,
123-b, 123-c, 132-c, 147-a, 147-d, 211-b,
211-c, 215-a, 223-a, 230-c, 315-b, 339-b,
526-b, 529-a, 529-b, 529-c, 538-b, 619-b,
619-c, 632-b, 704-a, 735-a, 735-b, 743-a,
743-c, 822-c, 835-a, 835-b, 835-c, 837-c,
841-a, 841-b, 841-c, 844-b, 1004-a,
1004-b, 1004-c, 1011-a, 1014-a, 1014-b,
1014-c, 1019-a, 1019-b, 1019-c, 1025-a,
1025-b, 1025-c, 1027-a, 1104-a, 1104-b,
1104-c, 1111-a, 1115-a, 1119-a, 1119-b,
1119-c, 1121-c, 1121-d, 1125-a, 1139-b,
1139-c, 1140-c, 1141-c, 1202-b, 1211-a,
1214-a, 1214-b, 1214-c, 1219-a, 1219-b,
1247-a, 1247-b, 1247-c, 1303-a, 1303-b,
1303-c, 1311-a, 1311-b, 1311-c, 1319-a,
1319-b, 1319-c, 1509-c, 1523-d, 1530-b,
1538-d, 1545-a, 1607-a, 1620-a, 1640-b,
1640-c, 1648-a, 1648-b, 1720-c, 1723-c,
1728-c
Paper Index
Archaeology - Artefacts 111-a, 111-b,
115-b, 241-a, 323-a, 333-a, 339-a, 340-a,
506-a, 511-a, 526-a, 535-a, 547-c, 611-a,
611-b, 616-b, 616-c, 641-a, 647-a, 647-b,
647-c, 702-c, 711-b, 713-c, 714-c, 716-b,
743-b, 747-a, 747-b, 816-b, 1015-c,
1026-b, 1028-b, 1033-a, 1033-b, 1042-b,
1133-a, 1133-b, 1133-c, 1142-a, 1142-c,
1202-a, 1202-b, 1202-c, 1233-a, 1233-b,
1233-c, 1241-b, 1245-b, 1313-b, 1314-b,
1321-a, 1321-c, 1329-c, 1333-a, 1333-b,
1333-c, 1523-a, 1523-b, 1523-c, 1523-d,
1528-a, 1533-b, 1533-c, 1633-b, 1645-b,
1714-c, 1722-b, 1737-a, 1744-a, 1745-a,
1745-b, 1745-c
Architecture - General 117-c, 145-a,
145-b, 245-b, 504-d, 544-c, 727-a,
1114-b, 1211-a, 1307-c, 1311-a, 1311-b,
1315-c, 1338-b, 1530-c, 1647-b, 1723-a,
1748-c
Art History - Decorative Arts 115-c,
124-c, 134-a, 148-a, 148-b, 229-c, 233-a,
233-b, 243-b, 245-a, 333-a, 339-c, 347-a,
506-a, 508-b, 647-c, 803-a, 1011-b,
1029-b, 1033-c, 1101-c, 1106-c, 1129-b,
1222-c, 1229-b, 1229-c, 1313-b, 1315-c,
1528-a, 1529-c, 1533-b, 1538-a, 1545-a,
1545-b, 1702-a, 1745-a, 1745-b, 1745-c
Art History - General 111-a, 111-b,
111-c, 115-a, 117-a, 117-c, 127-a, 129-c,
145-c, 147-b, 203-c, 211-b, 227-c, 229-b,
229-c, 233-b, 241-a, 243-b, 245-a, 245-b,
245-c, 303-b, 315-b, 327-a, 327-b, 329-a,
329-c, 333-b, 333-c, 341-c, 504-d, 521-b,
526-a, 529-a, 544-c, 547-a, 547-c, 611-a,
611-b, 629-a, 711-a, 711-b, 737-a, 745-a,
745-b, 745-c, 829-a, 829-c, 830-c, 839-b,
437
Index of Papers
845-a, 845-b, 847-a, 1001-a, 1001-b,
1001-c, 1015-a, 1018-b, 1028-b, 1029-a,
1029-b, 1044-a, 1044-b, 1046-c, 1046-d,
1048-a, 1101-a, 1101-b, 1101-c, 1111-c,
1114-a, 1117-a, 1129-a, 1202-c, 1211-b,
1216-b, 1217-b, 1227-b, 1245-a, 1245-b,
1245-c, 1245-d, 1301-a, 1301-b, 1301-c,
1311-b, 1326-a, 1328-b, 1338-a, 1338-c,
1347-a, 1347-b, 1347-c, 1529-b, 1533-a,
1533-b, 1533-c, 1537-b, 1545-a, 1545-c,
1625-c, 1629-a, 1629-b, 1629-c, 1630-b,
1645-a, 1645-b, 1647-a, 1648-a, 1702-b,
1715-b, 1718-b, 1723-b, 1723-c, 1729-c,
1730-a, 1730-b, 1741-a
Art History - Painting 129-b, 137-c,
145-a, 145-b, 145-c, 148-c, 229-b, 233-b,
245-b, 248-c, 327-b, 329-b, 333-b, 333-c,
345-a, 345-b, 345-c, 506-b, 515-a, 529-a,
529-b, 529-c, 640-a, 729-b, 729-c, 803-a,
826-b, 829-c, 845-c, 848-a, 1001-a,
1001-b, 1001-c, 1046-a, 1046-b, 1046-d,
1101-a, 1101-b, 1129-a, 1129-b, 1145-a,
1201-a, 1201-c, 1217-a, 1217-c, 1217-d,
1245-a, 1301-a, 1301-b, 1301-c, 1307-a,
1315-b, 1329-b, 1529-a, 1546-c, 1641-a,
1647-c, 1702-a, 1729-b, 1737-b
Art History - Sculpture 115-b, 129-a,
229-a, 233-a, 341-a, 544-c, 608-b, 629-a,
629-c, 829-b, 845-a, 845-b, 1029-a,
1029-c, 1101-a, 1111-b, 1211-a, 1211-c,
1311-a, 1315-a, 1329-a, 1338-a, 1338-b,
1338-c, 1630-c, 1729-a, 1730-c, 1741-c
Biblical Studies 114-a, 114-b, 114-c,
206-a, 214-c, 242-b, 314-c, 341-a, 508-b,
523-b, 537-b, 543-b, 545-a, 545-b, 545-c,
608-b, 728-a, 743-b, 808-b, 820-b, 820-c,
824-b, 827-a, 829-c, 1023-a, 1023-c,
1127-b, 1137-b, 1138-a, 1140-a, 1147-a,
1147-d, 1302-d, 1506-a, 1506-b, 1506-c,
1522-b, 1546-c, 1547-a, 1547-b, 1547-c,
1617-c, 1632-a, 1646-a, 1746-b
Bibliography 129-c, 147-c, 315-a, 527-c,
538-a, 538-c, 627-c, 632-a, 632-c, 638-a,
638-b, 732-b, 738-b, 1211-c, 1311-c
Byzantine Studies 106-b, 113-a, 113-b,
113-c, 113-d, 114-b, 115-a, 115-b, 115-c,
118-b, 127-c, 133-b, 206-b, 206-c, 209-c,
213-a, 213-b, 213-c, 215-b, 227-b, 227-c,
238-b, 243-b, 247-c, 248-a, 248-b, 306-b,
313-a, 313-b, 313-c, 318-a, 327-a, 329-a,
329-c, 334-c, 503-c, 506-a, 506-b, 508-c,
513-a, 513-b, 513-c, 516-a, 516-c, 520-a,
522-a, 522-b, 522-c, 528-a, 528-b, 535-a,
535-b, 535-c, 606-a, 608-c, 613-a, 613-b,
613-c, 616-a, 622-a, 629-b, 706-a, 706-b,
706-c, 711-a, 713-a, 713-b, 716-a, 716-c,
721-b, 722-b, 722-c, 743-c, 747-a, 813-a,
813-b, 813-c, 816-a, 829-a, 829-c, 830-a,
1006-a, 1006-b, 1006-c, 1013-b, 1013-c,
1106-b, 1106-c, 1113-a, 1116-c, 1117-a,
1117-c, 1118-b, 1118-c, 1122-a, 1147-b,
438
1148-a, 1206-a, 1206-b, 1206-c, 1209-b,
1209-c, 1213-a, 1215-c, 1217-a, 1217-d,
1218-a, 1218-b, 1218-c, 1222-a, 1222-c,
1230-a, 1230-b, 1230-c, 1307-a, 1313-a,
1313-b, 1313-c, 1330-b, 1330-c, 1340-a,
1504-b, 1513-a, 1513-b, 1513-c, 1515-b,
1515-c, 1520-a, 1520-b, 1522-c, 1525-b,
1528-a, 1529-a, 1542-d, 1613-a, 1613-b,
1615-a, 1615-c, 1620-b, 1622-a, 1622-b,
1623-a, 1623-b, 1630-a, 1630-b, 1713-a,
1713-b, 1713-c, 1715-b, 1715-c, 1716-c,
1718-a, 1719-a, 1720-b, 1730-b, 1737-a,
1737-b, 1737-c
Canon Law 134-c, 136-a, 136-b, 136-c,
136-d, 208-a, 319-c, 328-a, 505-a, 505-b,
505-c, 534-a, 605-a, 605-b, 605-c, 631-b,
634-b, 634-c, 705-a, 705-b, 705-c, 720-b,
805-a, 805-b, 805-c, 814-c, 834-a, 840-a,
840-c, 1005-a, 1005-b, 1005-c, 1105-a,
1105-b, 1105-c, 1205-a, 1205-b, 1237-a,
1237-c, 1305-a, 1305-b, 1305-c, 1337-c,
1340-a, 1340-b, 1340-c, 1605-a, 1608-b,
1629-b
Charters and Diplomatics 123-a, 123-c,
138-b, 234-a, 234-b, 235-c, 239-c, 313-c,
328-c, 331-c, 514-b, 519-a, 519-b, 519-c,
619-b, 619-c, 623-b, 623-c, 630-c, 719-a,
719-b, 719-c, 1014-a, 1022-a, 1027-c,
1123-a, 1123-b, 1124-a, 1124-b, 1124-c,
1134-a, 1134-b, 1134-c, 1141-c, 1219-a,
1219-b, 1240-c, 1247-a, 1247-b, 1247-c,
1302-c, 1303-b, 1309-a, 1314-a, 1319-a,
1319-b, 1319-c, 1324-a, 1334-c, 1509-a,
1509-b, 1509-c, 1520-a, 1520-b, 1520-c,
1540-b, 1540-c, 1609-a, 1609-b, 1610-a,
1639-b, 1640-a, 1640-b, 1640-c, 1716-a,
1720-a, 1720-b, 1720-c, 1739-b, 1740-a,
1740-b, 1740-c, 1742-b
Computing in Medieval Studies 110-a,
116-c, 123-a, 123-b, 123-c, 133-b, 135-a,
135-b, 135-c, 136-d, 147-a, 147-d, 212-b,
223-b, 235-a, 235-b, 235-c, 247-a, 247-b,
247-c, 247-d, 312-a, 313-a, 313-c, 315-b,
315-c, 322-b, 331-a, 335-a, 335-b, 335-c,
347-b, 347-c, 505-a, 505-c, 513-c, 520-c,
532-b, 536-a, 536-b, 536-c, 538-d, 605-c,
632-c, 636-a, 636-b, 636-c, 638-a, 715-c,
735-a, 735-b, 736-b, 736-c, 736-d, 738-a,
738-b, 738-c, 738-d, 801-a, 801-c, 822-b,
823-a, 835-a, 835-b, 835-c, 836-a, 836-b,
836-c, 838-a, 838-b, 838-c, 1002-b,
1004-a, 1014-b, 1022-a, 1032-b, 1040-a,
1040-b, 1043-b, 1045-c, 1132-a, 1132-b,
1132-c, 1215-a, 1216-a, 1216-b, 1216-c,
1223-b, 1238-a, 1315-c, 1316-a, 1316-b,
1316-c, 1319-c, 1504-a, 1514-b, 1514-c,
1523-a, 1523-b, 1523-c, 1523-d, 1537-c,
1547-b, 1606-b, 1606-c, 1614-c, 1623-a,
1623-b, 1623-c, 1716-a, 1728-a, 1740-a,
1740-b, 1740-c
Index of Papers
Crusades 104-a, 104-b, 104-c, 116-a,
116-b, 116-c, 204-a, 204-b, 216-a, 216-b,
216-c, 247-d, 304-a, 304-b, 304-c, 316-a,
316-b, 316-c, 323-b, 503-a, 503-c, 604-c,
604-d, 704-a, 704-b, 704-c, 733-c, 734-b,
736-d, 744-a, 804-b, 804-c, 813-c, 819-b,
819-c, 1043-a, 1127-c, 1204-a, 1204-b,
1204-c, 1216-a, 1216-b, 1216-c, 1222-b,
1223-b, 1304-a, 1313-c, 1316-a, 1316-b,
1316-c, 1502-a, 1502-b, 1504-b, 1504-c,
1512-a, 1530-a, 1530-c, 1535-a, 1539-a,
1539-b, 1539-c, 1616-a, 1616-b, 1616-c,
1626-b, 1630-a, 1630-b, 1630-c, 1639-a,
1639-c, 1639-d, 1705-c, 1716-a, 1716-b,
1716-c, 1716-d, 1730-a
Demography 213-c, 542-a, 702-a, 702-b,
702-d, 1633-a
Ecclesiastical History 106-d, 109-a,
112-b, 116-a, 120-a, 120-b, 120-c, 122-a,
122-b, 122-c, 122-d, 138-c, 142-a, 142-c,
148-a, 148-b, 148-c, 203-b, 209-a, 211-a,
213-b, 219-c, 220-b, 220-c, 221-b, 225-b,
226-a, 228-c, 232-b, 239-a, 303-a, 305-a,
305-b, 305-c, 318-a, 320-a, 320-b, 320-c,
325-b, 328-a, 328-b, 328-c, 334-a, 334-c,
335-c, 338-a, 338-b, 341-a, 348-a, 501-a,
502-c, 505-b, 505-c, 509-a, 509-b, 524-c,
530-b, 534-a, 534-b, 534-c, 535-b, 602-a,
603-a, 603-c, 605-a, 605-b, 608-c, 612-a,
612-b, 612-c, 613-b, 613-c, 634-a, 634-b,
634-c, 645-a, 645-b, 705-a, 705-b, 705-c,
709-b, 720-a, 720-b, 721-a, 721-c, 725-a,
728-a, 728-b, 728-c, 733-a, 733-b, 733-c,
734-a, 734-b, 734-c, 805-a, 805-b, 805-c,
806-a, 806-c, 807-a, 808-b, 809-a, 809-b,
814-a, 814-c, 834-a, 834-b, 834-c, 840-c,
1004-a, 1004-b, 1004-c, 1005-a, 1005-b,
1005-c, 1009-b, 1009-c, 1022-b, 1022-c,
1028-c, 1034-a, 1034-b, 1035-c, 1045-c,
1046-d, 1103-a, 1103-c, 1104-a, 1104-b,
1105-a, 1105-b, 1105-c, 1109-c, 1111-c,
1113-a, 1113-b, 1132-c, 1134-a, 1134-b,
Economics - General 110-b, 112-b,
112-c, 119-a, 119-b, 119-c, 128-a, 128-b,
310-a, 310-b, 310-c, 310-d, 318-c, 328-a,
328-b, 328-c, 348-a, 348-b, 348-c, 504-a,
510-a, 514-a, 542-a, 713-b, 737-b, 741-a,
810-b, 837-c, 1010-a, 1012-a, 1207-a,
1207-b, 1214-a, 1214-c, 1222-a, 1306-a,
1317-a, 1317-c, 1318-b, 1328-c, 1333-a,
1333-b, 1333-c, 1335-a, 1517-b, 1543-a,
1543-b, 1543-c, 1544-c, 1620-c, 1625-b,
1643-a, 1643-b, 1643-c
Economics - Rural 112-a, 128-c, 223-b,
310-a, 310-b, 310-c, 310-d, 512-c, 519-b,
519-c, 710-a, 710-b, 710-c, 737-b, 737-c,
1009-b, 1017-b, 1123-c, 1318-a, 1318-c,
1511-a, 1511-c, 1544-a, 1544-b
Economics - Trade 113-d, 310-a, 310-b,
310-c, 310-d, 317-a, 317-b, 343-b, 343-c,
518-c, 519-a, 611-a, 611-b, 616-a, 616-c,
713-c, 714-a, 729-a, 737-b, 741-a, 811-a,
822-b, 822-c, 1010-c, 1017-a, 1017-b,
1115-a, 1115-b, 1117-b, 1222-b, 1223-a,
1317-a, 1317-b, 1317-c, 1341-c, 1341-d,
1517-c, 1544-a, 1544-b, 1604-b, 1610-b,
1718-a, 1737-a, 1739-b
Paper Index
Daily Life 111-a, 113-a, 113-c, 117-b,
128-a, 128-c, 131-a, 131-b, 131-c, 134-c,
204-c, 217-b, 218-c, 219-a, 219-d, 228-c,
241-b, 248-a, 248-d, 319-a, 319-b, 333-b,
341-b, 347-a, 508-b, 512-c, 514-a, 514-b,
514-c, 518-b, 528-a, 528-c, 540-b, 541-a,
541-b, 608-a, 619-a, 641-a, 641-b, 641-c,
642-b, 707-b, 711-a, 737-c, 741-b, 743-a,
801-b, 802-c, 803-c, 808-a, 816-b, 824-a,
828-c, 842-d, 1009-b, 1026-a, 1026-c,
1036-a, 1036-b, 1037-a, 1041-a, 1041-b,
1041-c, 1110-b, 1121-c, 1121-d, 1123-c,
1141-c, 1203-a, 1203-b, 1203-c, 1203-d,
1207-a, 1207-b, 1207-c, 1208-c, 1218-b,
1230-a, 1230-b, 1230-c, 1231-a, 1237-c,
1240-c, 1241-b, 1241-c, 1245-c, 1245-d,
1309-b, 1309-c, 1318-a, 1327-c, 1328-c,
1330-a, 1330-b, 1337-c, 1509-a, 1528-c,
1609-a, 1702-c, 1722-c, 1723-b, 1739-a,
1739-c, 1742-c, 1745-a, 1745-b, 1745-c
1134-c, 1139-c, 1139-d, 1145-a, 1145-b,
1145-c, 1201-c, 1208-c, 1211-b, 1211-c,
1213-a, 1213-b, 1227-c, 1235-a, 1235-b,
1235-c, 1237-b, 1237-c, 1238-a, 1238-b,
1245-a, 1302-a, 1305-c, 1308-c, 1311-c,
1313-a, 1322-a, 1337-a, 1337-c, 1338-b,
1339-a, 1339-b, 1340-a, 1343-a, 1505-a,
1505-b, 1505-c, 1506-a, 1506-b, 1506-c,
1508-c, 1518-a, 1518-b, 1518-c, 1521-b,
1533-a, 1533-c, 1534-a, 1537-c, 1605-a,
1605-b, 1605-c, 1606-a, 1606-b, 1606-c,
1607-a, 1617-b, 1618-a, 1618-b, 1618-c,
1621-a, 1623-a, 1623-b, 1629-a, 1629-c,
1639-b, 1646-a, 1705-a, 1705-b, 1705-c,
1706-a, 1706-b, 1708-b, 1710-c, 1716-c,
1718-b, 1719-b, 1729-c, 1733-c, 1741-c,
1742-a
Economics - Urban 110-a, 137-a, 137-b,
141-a, 217-b, 235-b, 310-a, 310-b, 310-c,
310-d, 317-a, 317-b, 319-a, 335-b, 518-c,
610-a, 610-b, 610-c, 619-a, 619-b, 619-c,
647-b, 710-a, 710-b, 710-c, 743-a, 810-a,
810-c, 841-a, 1014-b, 1014-c, 1016-a,
1016-b, 1016-c, 1017-a, 1017-b, 1046-c,
1115-b, 1207-c, 1241-c, 1310-a, 1310-a,
1341-a, 1517-a, 1517-b, 1517-c, 1519-a,
1519-b, 1519-c, 1545-a, 1545-b, 1619-a,
1619-b, 1704-c, 1733-a, 1733-b, 1733-d
Education 114-a, 114-b, 114-c, 118-b,
140-c, 214-a, 214-b, 214-c, 222-a, 222-b,
231-a, 305-a, 305-b, 305-c, 314-a, 314-c,
321-a, 337-a, 337-c, 507-a, 507-b, 522-a,
522-b, 613-a, 640-c, 708-a, 714-b, 803-c,
828-b, 1048-b, 1106-b, 1107-c, 1122-b,
1227-a, 1243-d, 1302-a, 1302-d, 1304-c,
439
Index of Papers
1306-b, 1340-b, 1340-c, 1508-a, 1601-a,
1601-b, 1715-a, 1720-a, 1732-c, 1748-b
Epigraphy 209-a, 237-a, 241-c, 309-b,
535-a, 802-a, 821-a, 1009-a, 1042-c,
1042-b, 1044-c, 1115-c, 1142-a, 1142-b,
1230-a, 1230-b, 1230-c, 1315-a, 1330-a,
1330-b, 1330-c, 1518-a, 1530-a, 1530-b,
1530-c, 1630-a, 1630-b, 1630-c, 1641-a,
1641-c, 1722-c, 1730-a, 1730-b, 1730-c,
1741-a, 1741-b
Folk Studies 144-b, 331-b, 333-a, 1009-a,
1026-b, 1036-a, 1109-c, 1136-a, 1142-c,
1146-b, 1306-a, 1312-c, 1522-a, 1622-a,
1702-b
Gender Studies 106-a, 115-a, 117-b,
129-a, 140-c, 141-c, 146-a, 203-a, 207-a,
218-a, 218-b, 225-b, 301-a, 301-c, 302-b,
302-c, 302-d, 303-c, 307-c, 325-c, 326-c,
327-c, 329-b, 333-c, 342-b, 501-b, 501-c,
503-b, 507-a, 507-b, 507-c, 518-a, 532-a,
536-a, 536-b, 536-c, 601-a, 602-b, 607-a,
610-a, 610-c, 630-a, 630-b, 630-c, 640-a,
643-a, 648-a, 648-b, 701-a, 707-a, 707-b,
707-c, 721-c, 730-c, 731-c, 745-c, 807-a,
812-c, 833-a, 833-b, 833-c, 837-b, 1006-a,
1006-b, 1007-a, 1007-b, 1007-c, 1016-a,
1016-b, 1016-c, 1018-a, 1018-c, 1021-a,
1021-c, 1022-c, 1102-c, 1105-a, 1105-b,
1105-c, 1107-a, 1107-b, 1114-c, 1118-c,
1121-a, 1121-b, 1121-c, 1125-c, 1128-a,
1128-d, 1136-a, 1136-b, 1207-a, 1207-c,
1217-b, 1217-c, 1217-d, 1218-c, 1221-a,
1225-a, 1225-b, 1225-c, 1226-b, 1228-a,
1228-c, 1238-a, 1238-c, 1242-a, 1242-c,
1246-c, 1307-a, 1307-c, 1308-a, 1312-a,
1321-a, 1321-b, 1321-c, 1325-a, 1325-b,
1325-c, 1327-b, 1335-a, 1335-b, 1342-c,
1346-b, 1346-c, 1348-a, 1507-a, 1507-b,
1507-c, 1512-a, 1512-c, 1519-a, 1519-b,
1521-c, 1525-a, 1534-b, 1539-a, 1539-b,
1539-c, 1542-c, 1607-c, 1609-c, 1612-a,
1619-a, 1619-d, 1625-c, 1626-a, 1626-b,
1626-c, 1627-a, 1702-c, 1703-a, 1703-b,
1704-b, 1707-a, 1707-c, 1710-b, 1725-b,
1725-c, 1727-b, 1729-a, 1733-b, 1733-c
Genealogy and Prosopography 116-a,
116-b, 116-c, 135-a, 135-c, 207-a, 235-a,
235-b, 235-c, 247-b, 302-a, 302-d, 313-a,
313-b, 501-a, 503-c, 547-b, 548-b, 633-b,
638-c, 647-b, 715-c, 806-c, 815-a, 815-b,
1010-b, 1013-b, 1014-a, 1014-b, 1014-c,
1022-a, 1121-a, 1121-b, 1130-a, 1130-c,
1134-c, 1215-a, 1215-b, 1216-c, 1221-a,
1221-c, 1243-b, 1302-a, 1302-b, 1347-a,
1542-a, 1542-b, 1542-c, 1612-a, 1620-a,
1620-b, 1701-a, 1703-b, 1703-c, 1717-a,
1717-b, 1717-c, 1718-d
Geography and Settlement Studies
103-a, 112-a, 123-b, 135-a, 135-b, 135-c,
142-b, 202-b, 202-c, 217-c, 247-a, 317-a,
317-b, 317-c, 341-b, 342-c, 516-b, 523-a,
440
523-b, 523-c, 540-a, 540-b, 540-c, 541-a,
616-c, 618-b, 618-c, 623-a, 623-b, 623-c,
713-a, 716-a, 723-a, 723-b, 723-c, 815-a,
823-a, 823-b, 823-c, 1002-b, 1026-a,
1026-c, 1028-c, 1103-b, 1123-b, 1123-c,
1126-a, 1201-b, 1223-b, 1514-a, 1514-b,
1514-c, 1523-d, 1537-b, 1606-c, 1610-b,
1610-c, 1610-d, 1611-a, 1611-c, 1614-a,
1633-c, 1706-b, 1714-b, 1715-c, 1723-a,
1742-c
Hagiography 106-a, 106-b, 106-c, 106-d,
121-a, 121-b, 127-c, 148-a, 148-b, 148-c,
206-b, 206-c, 209-b, 213-b, 221-c, 226-c,
227-b, 239-b, 248-b, 306-a, 306-b, 306-c,
307-a, 328-b, 338-b, 503-b, 509-a, 509-b,
509-c, 517-a, 517-c, 520-a, 528-c, 602-a,
602-b, 603-a, 603-b, 603-c, 605-b, 608-c,
609-c, 617-a, 617-c, 712-a, 712-b, 720-c,
732-a, 733-b, 737-b, 806-b, 813-b, 817-b,
819-a, 819-b, 819-c, 819-d, 821-b, 843-b,
1026-c, 1037-a, 1106-c, 1109-a, 1144-c,
1208-b, 1215-c, 1217-b, 1220-a, 1220-b,
1238-a, 1320-a, 1320-b, 1320-c, 1343-a,
1527-c, 1532-a, 1532-b, 1537-a, 1537-c,
1603-a, 1603-b, 1603-c, 1618-c, 1621-c,
1622-a, 1632-b, 1632-c, 1637-b, 1647-c,
1703-c, 1707-c, 1719-b, 1738-c
Hebrew and Jewish Studies 109-c,
119-a, 119-b, 119-c, 139-a, 219-a, 219-b,
219-c, 219-d, 237-b, 301-c, 319-a, 319-b,
319-c, 514-a, 514-c, 543-a, 543-b, 543-c,
605-c, 631-a, 643-a, 711-b, 711-c, 743-b,
818-a, 818-b, 818-c, 821-a, 1001-a,
1003-a, 1003-b, 1003-c, 1023-b, 1023-c,
1137-a, 1137-b, 1137-c, 1137-d, 1231-a,
1312-c, 1322-b, 1519-a, 1519-b, 1519-c,
1619-a, 1619-b, 1619-c, 1619-d, 1633-c,
1719-a, 1719-d, 1722-b
Heraldry 315-b, 323-b, 638-c, 1201-a,
1245-c, 1702-b, 1703-c
Historiography - Medieval 101-b, 110-b,
124-a, 129-a, 130-a, 130-b, 130-c, 144-a,
144-b, 144-c, 205-c, 210-b, 210-c, 216-b,
216-c, 222-c, 223-a, 230-a, 230-b, 230-c,
231-a, 231-b, 231-c, 238-a, 247-d, 302-a,
302-d, 330-a, 330-b, 330-c, 336-c, 348-b,
503-a, 511-b, 515-c, 527-a, 527-d, 540-c,
541-b, 542-c, 544-a, 604-a, 604-b, 604-d,
609-c, 615-a, 615-b, 620-b, 622-a, 622-b,
622-c, 627-a, 632-a, 635-b, 642-a, 642-c,
702-c, 704-a, 705-b, 705-c, 709-c, 723-a,
723-b, 729-b, 737-c, 742-c, 748-a, 748-c,
812-a, 822-a, 825-a, 837-b, 841-b, 842-a,
1008-a, 1008-b, 1008-c, 1015-b, 1025-b,
1036-a, 1108-a, 1108-b, 1108-c, 1112-a,
1112-b, 1113-b, 1113-c, 1115-c, 1118-b,
1123-a, 1126-a, 1127-a, 1127-b, 1127-c,
1134-c, 1139-a, 1201-c, 1213-a, 1213-b,
1215-b, 1221-b, 1227-c, 1232-a, 1235-c,
1238-c, 1243-a, 1243-b, 1302-b, 1304-b,
1306-b, 1310-a, 1312-c, 1313-c, 1343-a,
Index of Papers
1343-b, 1343-c, 1343-d, 1504-a, 1504-b,
1504-c, 1511-a, 1511-b, 1516-a, 1516-b,
1516-c, 1535-c, 1537-a, 1538-a, 1538-b,
1538-c, 1538-d, 1540-a, 1540-b, 1540-c,
1603-a, 1603-b, 1604-b, 1607-c, 1615-b,
1616-a, 1616-b, 1616-c, 1638-a, 1638-b,
1638-c, 1641-b, 1644-a, 1701-b, 1701-c,
1716-c, 1738-a, 1738-b, 1738-c, 1743-b
Historiography - Modern Scholarship
101-c, 103-a, 103-b, 104-b, 111-a, 111-b,
111-c, 138-a, 222-c, 223-b, 236-a, 236-b,
321-c, 336-a, 336-b, 508-c, 526-b, 628-a,
635-c, 703-a, 703-b, 703-c, 704-c, 714-a,
714-b, 714-c, 804-c, 811-b, 837-c, 840-a,
840-b, 840-c, 844-b, 845-a, 847-c, 1022-b,
1040-a, 1040-b, 1115-a, 1118-a, 1118-b,
1119-a, 1119-b, 1125-b, 1306-c, 1508-c,
1701-c
Language and Literature - Celtic 126-a,
326-c, 712-a, 712-c, 812-b, 812-c, 837-b,
1109-b, 1225-c, 1248-a, 1248-b, 1248-c,
1248-d, 1603-a, 1703-a, 1703-c, 1731-a
Language and Literature - Comparative
101-b, 101-c, 130-c, 211-c, 212-c, 213-a,
248-d, 301-c, 306-c, 312-b, 312-c, 344-a,
344-b, 344-c, 537-a, 537-b, 537-c, 620-b,
637-a, 637-b, 640-b, 807-b, 826-b,
1109-b, 1110-b, 1146-a, 1306-a, 1325-c,
1504-c, 1526-a, 1526-b, 1526-c, 1526-d,
1538-b, 1622-a, 1626-a, 1626-b, 1626-c,
1638-c, 1715-a, 1720-c, 1728-a, 1738-b
Language and Literature - Dutch 141-c,
146-b, 146-c, 211-a, 521-a, 521-b, 528-c,
621-a, 1521-a, 1521-c, 1721-b, 1721-c
Language and Literature - French or
Occitan 141-c, 146-a, 146-b, 146-c,
246-b, 247-d, 315-c, 324-c, 325-c, 326-b,
336-c, 346-a, 346-b, 520-b, 520-c, 533-b,
537-b, 540-b, 540-c, 543-b, 546-a, 546-b,
546-c, 607-a, 621-b, 640-b, 646-a, 646-b,
Language and Literature - German
248-d, 337-a, 347-a, 347-b, 347-c, 547-a,
621-c, 637-a, 637-b, 637-c, 748-a, 831-a,
831-c, 843-a, 843-c, 848-b, 1045-a,
1114-c, 1614-a, 1626-c, 1732-b
Language and Literature - Greek 106-b,
206-a, 206-b, 206-c, 209-c, 248-b, 306-b,
334-c, 513-a, 513-b, 522-a, 522-b, 522-c,
606-a, 606-b, 709-a, 713-a, 1106-b,
1118-b, 1143-a, 1143-b, 1143-c, 1147-a,
1147-b, 1206-b, 1206-c, 1520-c, 1522-c,
1526-b, 1526-d, 1622-b, 1630-a, 1715-b,
1715-c
Language and Literature - Italian
527-a, 527-b, 527-c, 527-d, 547-a, 627-a,
627-b, 627-c, 727-a, 727-b, 727-c, 741-b,
804-a, 810-a, 822-a, 822-b, 827-a, 827-b,
827-c, 827-d, 1137-d, 1735-b
Language and Literature - Latin 102-a,
106-a, 124-a, 124-b, 124-c, 129-c, 132-a,
136-a, 136-b, 136-c, 136-d, 140-a, 201-a,
202-a, 205-c, 209-c, 214-a, 214-b, 217-a,
218-a, 218-b, 231-b, 232-a, 232-b, 232-c,
301-b, 306-a, 309-a, 309-b, 312-b, 314-a,
322-c, 331-a, 332-a, 332-b, 332-c, 346-a,
504-c, 517-b, 530-c, 531-c, 532-b, 601-c,
606-b, 614-b, 620-a, 620-c, 708-a, 709-c,
730-a, 732-b, 738-a, 807-a, 809-a, 809-b,
810-b, 816-a, 819-d, 825-b, 826-c, 832-a,
838-a, 843-a, 1009-a, 1027-a, 1027-b,
1027-c, 1028-a, 1038-c, 1039-a, 1043-b,
1043-c, 1045-c, 1109-b, 1111-b, 1116-c,
1130-a, 1139-a, 1144-c, 1206-a, 1221-a,
1221-b, 1222-b, 1226-a, 1231-c, 1232-c,
1238-b, 1243-b, 1306-b, 1306-c, 1309-b,
1326-a, 1340-c, 1343-b, 1501-a, 1518-b,
1520-c, 1526-b, 1531-a, 1531-b, 1532-b,
1535-c, 1538-c, 1601-a, 1601-b, 1603-a,
1603-b, 1603-c, 1618-c, 1631-b, 1631-c,
1637-b, 1646-c, 1709-a, 1709-b, 1709-c,
1720-a, 1722-a, 1725-a, 1727-b, 1731-a,
1731-b, 1731-c, 1740-a, 1740-b, 1740-c
Paper Index
Islamic and Arabic Studies 107-b,
118-a, 118-c, 143-a, 143-b, 143-c, 207-c,
207-d, 210-a, 210-b, 210-c, 211-a, 211-b,
237-a, 238-a, 243-a, 301-c, 307-b, 307-c,
311-a, 311-b, 311-c, 313-b, 318-c, 325-a,
339-c, 343-a, 343-b, 348-b, 502-b, 504-d,
515-c, 520-a, 542-b, 606-c, 615-a, 615-b,
622-a, 622-b, 622-c, 642-a, 642-b, 702-a,
702-c, 702-d, 704-c, 711-c, 723-c, 742-a,
742-b, 742-c, 743-c, 802-c, 804-b, 811-b,
817-c, 824-a, 842-a, 842-b, 842-c, 1003-c,
1007-a, 1007-b, 1007-c, 1015-b, 1018-c,
1023-b, 1033-a, 1104-c, 1106-a, 1110-a,
1110-b, 1110-c, 1116-b, 1125-a, 1125-c,
1126-a, 1126-b, 1141-b, 1222-a, 1222-b,
1222-c, 1223-c, 1240-a, 1307-b, 1307-c,
1315-a, 1315-c, 1318-b, 1343-d, 1510-a,
1510-b, 1510-c, 1511-a, 1511-b, 1511-c,
1526-c, 1531-c, 1540-a, 1610-a, 1610-b,
1610-c, 1610-d, 1702-c, 1710-a, 1719-b,
1719-c, 1719-d, 1737-a
646-c, 707-b, 732-a, 746-a, 746-b, 746-c,
826-a, 833-a, 833-b, 833-c, 846-a, 846-b,
1030-c, 1107-c, 1137-a, 1225-b, 1246-a,
1246-b, 1246-c, 1326-c, 1346-a, 1346-b,
1346-c, 1526-c, 1535-a, 1535-c, 1538-c,
1547-c, 1626-b, 1627-b, 1627-c, 1631-a,
1635-a, 1635-b, 1642-b, 1727-c, 1731-b
Language and Literature - Middle
English 126-b, 146-a, 212-b, 231-c,
242-a, 242-c, 326-a, 326-b, 331-b, 342-c,
530-a, 544-b, 548-a, 548-c, 607-c, 635-a,
638-d, 640-b, 648-a, 648-b, 648-c, 701-a,
701-b, 729-c, 744-a, 810-b, 810-c, 820-a,
820-b, 839-a, 1036-b, 1036-c, 1048-c,
1112-a, 1120-c, 1136-a, 1136-b, 1136-c,
1226-c, 1236-a, 1325-a, 1325-b, 1326-b,
1327-a, 1327-b, 1328-b, 1331-c, 1332-a,
1332-b, 1332-c, 1346-a, 1512-a, 1512-b,
1512-c, 1526-c, 1527-b, 1531-c, 1535-b,
441
Index of Papers
1535-c, 1547-b, 1612-c, 1626-a, 1627-c,
1637-c, 1646-b, 1646-c, 1721-a, 1731-c,
1746-b
Language and Literature - Old English
101-a, 101-b, 101-c, 201-b, 201-c, 212-a,
212-b, 212-c, 217-a, 226-b, 226-c, 242-a,
301-a, 312-a, 312-b, 312-c, 342-b, 501-a,
501-b, 501-c, 540-a, 601-b, 701-a, 701-b,
725-c, 744-b, 801-a, 801-b, 801-c, 838-b,
1025-a, 1025-b, 1028-a, 1038-a, 1038-b,
1038-c, 1042-c, 1109-b, 1138-a, 1138-b,
1138-c, 1142-a, 1231-c, 1248-a, 1248-b,
1248-c, 1248-d, 1302-b, 1331-b, 1501-a,
1501-b, 1501-d, 1547-a, 1622-c, 1631-b,
1637-a
Language and Literature - Other 101-a,
106-c, 140-b, 147-c, 211-c, 212-c, 218-c,
307-c, 311-a, 346-c, 515-a, 515-b, 515-c,
606-c, 611-c, 615-a, 715-a, 715-b, 715-c,
815-a, 815-b, 843-a, 843-c, 1007-a,
1007-b, 1007-c, 1046-a, 1125-c, 1146-c,
1148-c, 1215-c, 1236-a, 1236-b, 1236-c,
1302-c, 1336-a, 1336-b, 1336-c, 1336-d,
1343-a, 1343-c, 1527-a, 1528-b, 1528-c,
1536-a, 1536-b, 1536-c, 1536-d, 1626-a,
1627-b, 1636-a, 1636-b, 1636-c, 1736-a,
1736-b, 1736-c, 1736-d
Language and
Literature - Scandinavian 103-b, 103-c,
126-c, 135-a, 135-b, 135-c, 231-b, 242-a,
242-b, 244-a, 244-b, 244-c, 304-b, 324-b,
342-a, 344-b, 620-b, 620-c, 641-a, 641-b,
643-b, 725-b, 738-b, 806-a, 814-a, 837-a,
1025-c, 1032-a, 1032-b, 1032-c, 1036-a,
1042-a, 1125-b, 1142-c, 1146-c, 1225-a,
1228-c, 1232-b, 1232-c, 1243-b, 1244-a,
1244-b, 1244-c, 1532-a, 1532-b, 1612-b,
1627-a, 1628-a, 1628-b, 1628-c, 1632-a,
1632-b, 1632-c, 1641-b, 1704-b, 1727-a,
1728-a, 1728-b
Language and Literature - Semitic
237-b, 542-c, 543-c, 642-c, 1116-b,
1137-d, 1147-b, 1147-c, 1147-d
Language and Literature - Slavic 532-c,
714-b, 814-a, 814-b, 814-c, 1327-c,
1514-a, 1614-a
Language and Literature - Spanish or
Portuguese 127-b, 207-b, 537-a, 537-b,
537-c, 607-b, 632-b, 641-c, 725-d, 807-c,
843-b, 1107-a, 1107-b, 1141-a, 1146-b,
1148-b, 1204-c, 1322-b, 1526-a, 1607-b,
1617-d, 1642-c, 1740-a, 1740-b, 1740-c
Law 108-a, 108-b, 108-c, 113-d, 117-b,
141-b, 143-b, 143-c, 208-a, 208-b, 208-c,
224-a, 224-b, 224-c, 234-a, 240-a, 240-b,
240-c, 244-c, 248-a, 308-a, 308-b, 308-c,
314-b, 324-a, 343-c, 510-a, 510-b, 510-c,
512-a, 524-a, 524-b, 524-c, 538-d, 610-a,
618-a, 624-a, 624-b, 624-c, 707-c, 708-b,
710-c, 737-a, 804-b, 805-a, 805-b, 805-c,
442
808-c, 821-c, 840-a, 840-b, 840-c, 1003-b,
1005-b, 1016-a, 1016-b, 1016-c, 1019-a,
1037-b, 1037-c, 1041-a, 1041-b, 1119-c,
1135-a, 1138-c, 1140-a, 1140-b, 1140-c,
1141-c, 1205-a, 1205-b, 1205-c, 1208-b,
1212-c, 1225-a, 1232-b, 1237-a, 1240-a,
1240-b, 1240-c, 1241-a, 1301-c, 1305-a,
1305-b, 1309-a, 1309-b, 1309-c, 1334-a,
1334-b, 1335-a, 1340-a, 1340-b, 1340-c,
1507-c, 1509-a, 1509-b, 1509-c, 1517-a,
1520-b, 1525-a, 1540-a, 1540-b, 1540-c,
1606-a, 1609-a, 1609-b, 1609-c, 1624-c,
1629-c, 1704-c, 1710-a, 1717-a, 1717-b,
1717-c, 1719-d
Lay Piety 121-b, 121-c, 131-a, 131-b,
131-c, 131-d, 134-a, 134-b, 139-c, 204-c,
217-c, 220-a, 221-c, 225-c, 241-a, 241-b,
241-c, 246-b, 303-a, 303-b, 303-c, 311-a,
320-a, 320-b, 320-c, 518-a, 539-b, 541-b,
707-a, 720-c, 739-b, 839-a, 839-b, 839-c,
843-b, 843-c, 1018-b, 1047-a, 1103-b,
1120-a, 1120-c, 1128-c, 1234-a, 1234-b,
1234-c, 1245-b, 1304-c, 1320-b, 1320-c,
1329-c, 1332-a, 1332-b, 1332-c, 1334-a,
1334-b, 1334-c, 1341-a, 1342-a, 1518-a,
1529-c, 1532-a, 1537-b, 1541-a, 1541-b,
1541-c, 1612-c, 1633-b, 1635-c, 1642-b,
1646-c, 1723-b, 1733-a, 1733-b, 1733-c,
1742-b, 1748-a
Learning (The Classical Inheritance)
101-a, 146-b, 213-a, 214-a, 214-b, 218-b,
314-a, 508-a, 523-b, 606-b, 608-b, 612-b,
620-a, 620-b, 628-a, 713-a, 723-a, 823-b,
823-c, 828-a, 828-b, 828-c, 1046-a,
1116-c, 1231-c, 1306-c, 1501-a, 1515-a,
1515-b, 1515-c, 1531-a, 1531-b, 1531-c,
1601-a, 1601-b, 1631-a, 1631-b, 1631-c,
1632-a, 1647-b, 1715-a, 1715-b, 1715-c,
1731-a, 1731-b, 1731-c, 1748-c
Literacy and Orality 125-b, 211-a, 215-a,
215-b, 215-c, 508-a, 530-a, 530-b, 530-c,
614-a, 627-b, 638-b, 701-b, 709-c, 712-c,
731-a, 731-b, 731-c, 740-a, 740-b, 740-c,
808-a, 812-a, 821-a, 821-b, 821-c, 822-a,
831-a, 831-b, 831-c, 1030-c, 1032-a,
1042-b, 1045-a, 1046-a, 1048-a, 1107-c,
1116-a, 1120-a, 1142-b, 1303-a, 1322-a,
1322-b, 1322-c, 1329-b, 1501-d, 1509-b,
1718-a, 1732-b
Liturgy 108-c, 109-a, 127-b, 148-a,
148-b, 148-c, 205-a, 225-c, 232-b, 338-a,
346-b, 509-b, 517-c, 532-a, 532-c, 543-c,
603-c, 617-a, 617-b, 617-c, 621-c, 642-c,
717-a, 717-b, 717-c, 720-b, 721-b, 727-b,
728-a, 728-b, 728-c, 806-a, 806-b, 817-a,
817-b, 817-c, 819-a, 821-b, 829-a, 829-b,
832-b, 1003-a, 1144-b, 1201-a, 1243-a,
1307-b, 1315-b, 1320-a, 1529-b, 1532-b,
1537-b, 1541-a, 1541-b, 1541-c, 1608-a,
1608-c, 1612-a, 1730-a, 1742-b
Index of Papers
Local History 110-b, 111-b, 117-c, 126-a,
133-a, 141-a, 202-b, 202-c, 222-c, 318-b,
334-a, 343-a, 511-b, 514-b, 514-c, 516-b,
529-b, 529-c, 538-b, 541-a, 541-b, 543-a,
548-b, 604-b, 618-a, 618-c, 633-b, 713-b,
740-b, 740-c, 1009-b, 1019-c, 1023-a,
1023-b, 1024-c, 1028-c, 1036-b, 1102-a,
1104-c, 1110-b, 1114-a, 1114-b, 1201-b,
1209-a, 1214-a, 1214-b, 1245-d, 1317-b,
1335-c, 1344-a, 1507-b, 1529-c, 1540-a,
1611-b, 1611-c, 1611-d, 1612-b, 1612-c,
1623-a, 1623-b, 1625-a, 1640-a, 1640-b,
1646-a, 1710-a, 1712-a, 1712-c, 1723-c,
1728-b, 1728-c, 1732-a
Medicine 107-a, 228-a, 228-b, 228-c,
243-c, 507-c, 528-a, 528-b, 528-c, 542-a,
542-b, 542-c, 614-b, 628-a, 628-b, 628-c,
628-d, 637-c, 638-b, 642-a, 642-b, 642-c,
643-c, 728-a, 728-b, 728-c, 731-a, 731-b,
731-c, 742-a, 742-b, 742-c, 745-b, 803-b,
828-a, 828-b, 828-c, 842-a, 842-b, 842-c,
842-d, 1028-b, 1042-a, 1043-a, 1043-b,
1043-c, 1047-b, 1128-a, 1128-b, 1128-c,
1128-d, 1228-a, 1228-b, 1242-a, 1242-b,
1242-c, 1301-b, 1312-a, 1328-b, 1342-a,
1342-b, 1342-c, 1522-a, 1527-a, 1527-b,
1527-c, 1617-b, 1619-c, 1619-d, 1622-b,
1637-a, 1637-c, 1637-d, 1748-b
Medievalism and Antiquarianism 130-b,
139-b, 139-c, 147-c, 315-a, 330-b, 344-a,
344-b, 344-c, 508-c, 521-a, 526-b, 536-a,
536-b, 536-c, 544-b, 544-c, 632-a, 635-a,
635-b, 635-c, 636-a, 636-b, 636-c, 702-c,
736-a, 736-b, 736-c, 736-d, 744-a, 744-b,
836-a, 836-b, 836-c, 844-a, 844-b, 844-c,
1036-c, 1111-a, 1111-b, 1125-a, 1136-c,
1142-b, 1146-a, 1236-a, 1236-b, 1236-c,
1325-c, 1336-a, 1336-b, 1336-c, 1336-d,
1536-a, 1536-b, 1536-c, 1536-d, 1612-b,
1636-a, 1636-b, 1636-c, 1644-a, 1644-b,
1644-c, 1735-b, 1736-a, 1736-b, 1736-c,
1736-d, 1744-a, 1744-b, 1744-c
Mentalities 103-c, 114-c, 125-b, 130-a,
131-a, 131-b, 131-c, 131-d, 134-c, 204-c,
209-c, 212-a, 217-c, 220-a, 220-b, 225-a,
228-a, 236-a, 236-b, 238-a, 241-b, 242-a,
242-c, 246-a, 247-c, 304-a, 304-c, 306-a,
306-c, 316-b, 316-c, 323-a, 331-a, 333-b,
333-c, 336-c, 341-c, 342-a, 342-b, 508-a,
537-a, 537-c, 601-b, 607-a, 608-a, 614-c,
628-d, 648-a, 648-c, 704-b, 708-c, 718-b,
718-c, 720-c, 732-b, 737-c, 748-b, 802-a,
803-b, 804-c, 807-a, 807-b, 808-a, 808-b,
814-b, 822-a, 824-b, 827-c, 837-a, 1012-c,
1026-a, 1027-a, 1028-c, 1029-a, 1029-b,
1029-c, 1042-c, 1102-c, 1103-a, 1103-b,
1103-c, 1106-a, 1107-a, 1107-b, 1126-a,
1126-b, 1129-a, 1129-b, 1129-c, 1140-b,
1141-a, 1146-a, 1203-a, 1204-a, 1204-c,
1226-a, 1227-a, 1229-a, 1229-b, 1229-c,
1240-c, 1244-a, 1244-b, 1244-c, 1245-c,
1301-a, 1306-b, 1309-c, 1322-c, 1326-b,
1326-c, 1327-c, 1329-a, 1329-b, 1329-c,
1331-b, 1501-d, 1504-b, 1506-b, 1520-a,
1522-b, 1524-a, 1524-b, 1524-c, 1528-a,
1535-b, 1604-a, 1617-a, 1617-b, 1624-a,
1624-b, 1644-c, 1646-b, 1706-b, 1707-b,
1710-b, 1716-d, 1724-a, 1724-b, 1724-c,
1733-a, 1733-b, 1733-c, 1743-a, 1743-b,
1743-c
Paper Index
Manuscripts and Palaeography 108-b,
114-a, 114-c, 121-c, 124-b, 126-c, 128-a,
129-c, 132-a, 132-b, 132-c, 136-a, 136-b,
136-c, 136-d, 137-a, 137-b, 137-c, 140-a,
146-c, 147-a, 147-b, 147-c, 147-d, 201-c,
205-a, 205-b, 208-c, 210-a, 214-a, 214-b,
214-c, 215-c, 220-c, 232-a, 232-b, 232-c,
234-c, 237-a, 237-b, 248-c, 308-c, 312-a,
314-a, 314-b, 314-c, 315-c, 320-b, 322-a,
322-b, 329-a, 329-c, 332-a, 332-b, 332-c,
334-b, 337-a, 337-b, 337-c, 341-c, 345-c,
347-b, 347-c, 505-a, 505-b, 505-c, 511-b,
513-a, 515-b, 531-c, 532-a, 532-b, 538-a,
538-b, 538-c, 538-d, 541-c, 544-b, 546-a,
546-b, 546-c, 605-b, 605-c, 611-c, 614-b,
617-b, 620-c, 628-a, 628-b, 628-c, 628-d,
632-a, 632-b, 632-c, 638-a, 638-b, 638-c,
638-d, 640-b, 643-c, 646-a, 646-b, 646-c,
704-c, 705-a, 705-b, 717-a, 717-b, 717-c,
720-b, 728-c, 732-a, 732-b, 738-a, 738-b,
738-c, 738-d, 740-c, 745-a, 745-b, 746-a,
746-b, 801-a, 801-c, 805-b, 805-c, 809-a,
809-b, 817-a, 817-c, 820-a, 820-c, 822-b,
823-c, 828-a, 828-c, 831-a, 831-b, 831-c,
832-a, 832-b, 838-a, 838-b, 838-c, 845-c,
1001-b, 1005-a, 1005-b, 1008-a, 1008-b,
1008-c, 1009-a, 1020-b, 1020-c, 1022-b,
1027-b, 1042-a, 1043-b, 1045-a, 1045-b,
1048-a, 1048-b, 1048-c, 1108-a, 1108-b,
1108-c, 1110-c, 1120-b, 1124-b, 1124-c,
1125-a, 1127-a, 1128-a, 1128-b, 1130-a,
1132-a, 1132-b, 1137-b, 1137-d, 1139-b,
1215-c, 1219-a, 1219-b, 1229-b, 1229-c,
1231-a, 1232-a, 1232-b, 1232-c, 1242-a,
1242-b, 1246-a, 1246-c, 1247-a, 1247-b,
1247-c, 1302-b, 1302-c, 1308-c, 1317-b,
1319-c, 1321-a, 1324-a, 1332-c, 1342-b,
1346-a, 1346-b, 1346-c, 1347-a, 1347-b,
1347-c, 1508-a, 1512-c, 1520-c, 1529-a,
1530-b, 1531-c, 1533-b, 1538-c, 1538-d,
1546-a, 1546-b, 1546-c, 1547-a, 1547-c,
1601-b, 1608-a, 1608-c, 1612-c, 1621-b,
1622-c, 1628-a, 1628-b, 1628-c, 1629-b,
1629-c, 1632-c, 1637-d, 1640-a, 1640-c,
1647-a, 1647-c, 1648-a, 1702-a, 1707-a,
1710-c, 1718-a, 1719-d, 1720-a, 1720-c,
1723-c, 1728-a, 1728-b, 1728-c, 1732-a,
1735-a, 1735-b, 1735-c, 1746-c
Maritime and Naval Studies 113-a,
113-b, 128-b, 311-c, 504-b, 540-a, 540-b,
713-b, 729-a, 739-a, 822-c, 1126-c,
1223-a, 1341-b, 1604-b, 1610-c, 1620-c
443
Index of Papers
Military History 104-a, 104-b, 113-b,
204-a, 204-b, 216-a, 246-c, 304-a, 304-b,
304-c, 317-c, 340-a, 340-b, 340-c, 342-b,
348-c, 503-a, 504-a, 504-b, 504-c, 512-b,
516-a, 516-c, 533-c, 547-a, 547-b, 547-c,
604-b, 608-a, 614-c, 647-a, 647-b, 647-c,
716-a, 716-c, 731-a, 736-c, 736-d, 745-a,
747-a, 747-b, 747-c, 748-a, 748-b, 748-c,
815-a, 831-b, 847-a, 847-b, 847-c, 848-a,
848-b, 848-c, 1011-c, 1012-a, 1012-b,
1012-c, 1021-b, 1030-a, 1126-c, 1130-b,
1135-c, 1148-a, 1148-b, 1148-c, 1204-b,
1212-a, 1212-b, 1213-c, 1222-a, 1304-a,
1308-b, 1316-c, 1348-a, 1348-b, 1348-c,
1513-a, 1513-b, 1513-c, 1542-a, 1542-b,
1542-c, 1542-d, 1611-a, 1611-b, 1611-c,
1611-d, 1613-a, 1613-b, 1615-b, 1624-a,
1624-b, 1639-a, 1639-c, 1639-d, 1648-a,
1648-b, 1713-a, 1713-b, 1713-c, 1716-b
Performance Arts - Dance 801-b, 1025-c
Monasticism 102-a, 102-b, 102-c, 105-a,
105-b, 105-c, 105-d, 120-b, 120-c, 123-b,
123-c, 125-a, 125-c, 127-a, 134-b, 138-d,
142-c, 202-a, 202-b, 202-c, 203-a, 203-b,
203-c, 205-a, 205-b, 217-a, 218-b, 221-a,
225-a, 225-b, 225-c, 234-c, 234-d, 235-c,
305-a, 305-b, 305-c, 321-b, 323-b, 327-d,
329-a, 329-b, 329-c, 334-b, 337-b, 348-a,
517-a, 517-b, 517-c, 528-b, 531-a, 531-b,
531-c, 532-a, 532-c, 534-b, 539-b, 612-a,
617-a, 621-c, 631-a, 631-b, 709-b, 721-c,
732-a, 738-a, 741-a, 807-c, 809-a, 809-b,
813-b, 814-b, 825-b, 833-a, 834-b, 834-c,
845-c, 1018-a, 1020-a, 1020-b, 1022-c,
1039-a, 1039-b, 1039-c, 1045-b, 1045-d,
1046-b, 1048-a, 1103-a, 1104-a, 1104-b,
1109-a, 1114-a, 1120-c, 1123-a, 1134-a,
1139-a, 1139-b, 1139-c, 1139-d, 1147-c,
1204-b, 1219-b, 1224-c, 1227-a, 1229-a,
1234-a, 1234-b, 1234-c, 1239-a, 1239-b,
1239-c, 1302-c, 1302-d, 1305-a, 1308-b,
1315-b, 1318-c, 1328-a, 1334-a, 1334-b,
1334-c, 1339-a, 1339-b, 1501-c, 1516-a,
1516-b, 1516-c, 1518-b, 1524-a, 1529-b,
1537-a, 1537-c, 1618-a, 1618-b, 1618-c,
1621-a, 1621-b, 1629-a, 1629-b, 1637-b,
1638-a, 1642-a, 1646-a, 1647-b, 1707-b,
1708-a, 1714-a, 1719-c, 1729-c, 1732-a,
1739-a, 1739-c
Political Thought 109-b, 129-b, 142-a,
142-b, 224-c, 238-a, 246-a, 246-c, 314-b,
511-b, 526-c, 533-a, 533-c, 535-a, 548-a,
548-c, 606-a, 606-b, 606-c, 607-c, 609-b,
612-c, 614-c, 615-b, 704-b, 708-b, 709-a,
714-b, 714-c, 740-a, 804-a, 808-c, 827-d,
840-b, 1013-a, 1013-c, 1030-b, 1030-c,
1037-b, 1047-a, 1107-a, 1107-b, 1110-a,
1112-c, 1113-a, 1113-b, 1113-c, 1116-a,
1122-b, 1130-b, 1206-a, 1213-a, 1213-b,
1214-b, 1228-b, 1240-a, 1245-d, 1309-a,
1309-b, 1313-a, 1337-b, 1508-b, 1512-b,
1517-a, 1522-c, 1607-b, 1615-c, 1617-a,
1617-c, 1641-c, 1644-b, 1647-c, 1717-b,
1729-b, 1737-c
Music 201-b, 245-c, 346-a, 346-b, 532-c,
617-b, 617-c, 620-a, 717-a, 717-b, 717-c,
746-c, 748-b, 804-a, 806-b, 817-a, 833-a,
833-b, 839-c, 1114-c, 1314-c, 1507-a,
1528-b, 1735-c
Numismatics 348-b, 348-c, 1724-a,
1724-b
Onomastics 1137-b, 1221-c, 1514-a,
1514-b, 1514-c, 1614-a, 1701-a, 1701-b
Pagan Religions 133-a, 502-c, 602-c,
613-a, 620-c, 643-b, 704-a, 708-a, 802-a,
814-a, 1032-c, 1142-c, 1337-a, 1522-c,
1622-c, 1631-a, 1719-a, 1722-c
444
Performance Arts - Drama 245-c, 346-c,
520-c, 544-b, 729-c, 829-b, 843-a, 843-b,
843-c, 1227-c, 1507-a, 1507-b, 1642-a,
1642-b, 1642-c
Performance Arts - General 140-b,
245-c, 526-a, 533-b, 635-b, 825-b, 1642-a
Philosophy 146-b, 209-b, 227-a, 229-b,
243-a, 322-c, 522-b, 545-a, 545-c, 548-a,
609-a, 609-b, 613-a, 626-a, 626-b, 626-c,
703-b, 703-d, 709-a, 709-b, 726-a, 726-b,
726-c, 818-b, 826-a, 827-b, 1003-c,
1031-a, 1031-b, 1031-c, 1048-b, 1110-a,
1116-a, 1116-b, 1116-c, 1131-a, 1131-b,
1131-c, 1143-a, 1143-b, 1143-c, 1143-d,
1227-b, 1231-b, 1245-a, 1326-b, 1331-a,
1331-c, 1501-c, 1521-b, 1522-a, 1646-b,
1710-b, 1722-a, 1723-a
Politics and Diplomacy 102-a, 118-a,
118-b, 121-a, 122-a, 122-b, 122-c, 123-a,
137-a, 138-a, 138-b, 138-c, 138-d, 204-a,
211-b, 213-b, 215-a, 215-b, 215-c, 219-a,
225-a, 230-c, 234-a, 234-b, 235-a, 238-b,
240-a, 247-b, 311-b, 311-c, 313-b, 313-c,
317-c, 324-b, 334-a, 335-a, 335-c, 338-c,
340-b, 340-c, 343-b, 343-c, 502-a, 503-a,
503-c, 511-a, 512-a, 512-b, 516-a, 516-b,
516-c, 518-c, 525-a, 525-b, 525-c, 533-a,
533-b, 533-c, 535-c, 544-a, 548-b, 601-c,
604-b, 611-a, 614-a, 614-c, 616-a, 616-b,
618-a, 618-b, 618-c, 625-a, 625-b, 625-c,
630-a, 630-b, 633-a, 633-b, 633-c, 639-c,
645-a, 704-b, 706-b, 706-c, 708-b, 715-a,
715-b, 716-b, 716-c, 718-a, 718-b, 719-a,
719-b, 719-c, 722-a, 725-a, 725-c, 729-a,
730-a, 730-b, 730-c, 733-a, 733-b, 733-c,
734-c, 806-c, 811-a, 812-b, 826-c, 830-a,
830-b, 830-c, 840-a, 840-b, 1010-a,
1010-b, 1013-a, 1013-b, 1013-c, 1014-a,
1015-b, 1021-a, 1021-b, 1021-c, 1030-a,
1035-a, 1035-b, 1035-c, 1037-c, 1038-a,
1039-b, 1046-c, 1111-c, 1112-c, 1113-a,
1113-b, 1113-c, 1121-a, 1121-b, 1122-a,
1122-b, 1122-c, 1123-b, 1130-a, 1130-b,
1135-a, 1135-b, 1135-c, 1203-a, 1203-b,
1212-a, 1212-b, 1212-c, 1213-b, 1213-c,
Index of Papers
1215-a, 1218-a, 1221-b, 1222-c, 1235-a,
1235-b, 1235-c, 1238-c, 1240-b, 1304-b,
1313-a, 1313-c, 1314-a, 1314-b, 1319-a,
1319-b, 1335-b, 1335-c, 1337-a, 1343-b,
1343-c, 1343-d, 1344-a, 1344-b, 1348-c,
1505-a, 1505-b, 1505-c, 1508-b, 1510-a,
1510-b, 1510-c, 1517-b, 1517-c, 1520-a,
1520-b, 1524-b, 1525-b, 1534-a, 1534-b,
1539-a, 1539-b, 1542-a, 1542-b, 1542-c,
1542-d, 1604-a, 1605-b, 1605-c, 1609-b,
1610-a, 1610-b, 1610-c, 1610-d, 1611-b,
1612-a, 1620-a, 1620-b, 1620-c, 1624-a,
1624-b, 1625-a, 1625-b, 1631-c, 1638-b,
1639-a, 1639-b, 1645-a, 1648-b, 1701-c,
1704-a, 1705-a, 1705-b, 1709-c, 1712-b,
1716-b, 1716-d, 1717-a, 1717-c, 1718-b,
1718-d, 1724-a, 1724-b, 1724-c, 1725-a,
1725-b, 1737-c, 1738-a, 1739-b, 1742-a
Printing History 222-b, 243-c, 621-a,
632-b, 1120-b, 1243-c, 1546-a, 1546-b,
1546-c, 1702-a
Rhetoric 122-d, 229-a, 242-b, 309-a,
322-a, 322-b, 322-c, 513-a, 513-b, 527-b,
546-a, 546-b, 546-c, 604-c, 606-a, 606-c,
628-d, 646-a, 646-b, 646-c, 701-a, 708-a,
746-a, 746-b, 746-c, 846-a, 846-b,
1045-d, 1110-a, 1141-a, 1206-b, 1206-c,
1229-b, 1238-b, 1327-a, 1327-b, 1337-b,
1506-c, 1512-b, 1515-c, 1531-a, 1531-b,
1601-a, 1615-a, 1637-b, 1715-a, 1719-c,
1725-b, 1725-c, 1732-b
Science 137-c, 222-a, 228-b, 229-a,
237-a, 237-b, 243-c, 302-a, 302-b, 302-c,
321-a, 337-a, 337-c, 541-c, 542-b, 615-b,
626-a, 626-c, 629-b, 642-a, 726-a, 726-b,
726-c, 727-c, 731-a, 731-b, 803-b, 826-b,
826-c, 828-b, 842-b, 842-c, 1028-b,
1042-a, 1047-b, 1126-b, 1128-b, 1132-a,
1132-b, 1132-c, 1242-a, 1242-b, 1304-b,
1331-a, 1342-b, 1647-a, 1748-b
Sermons and Preaching 104-c, 120-a,
120-b, 121-a, 205-b, 221-b, 228-a, 232-a,
244-a, 322-a, 341-a, 531-c, 532-b, 604-c,
604-d, 613-b, 613-c, 645-b, 738-c, 810-a,
814-c, 818-a, 832-a, 832-b, 848-c, 1025-b,
1045-a, 1045-b, 1045-d, 1129-c, 1204-a,
1208-a, 1220-a, 1220-b, 1229-a, 1237-a,
1237-b, 1304-c, 1308-a, 1322-a, 1501-d,
1521-c, 1617-a, 1617-c, 1622-c, 1719-c,
1732-a, 1732-b, 1732-c
Sexuality 146-a, 212-b, 301-b, 344-a,
503-b, 544-a, 545-c, 607-c, 640-a, 648-b,
721-a, 807-b, 1007-a, 1007-b, 1007-c,
1208-a, 1225-a, 1225-b, 1308-a, 1327-b,
1342-c, 1507-b, 1507-c, 1512-c, 1521-a,
1607-a, 1607-b, 1607-c, 1626-c, 1707-a,
1707-b, 1707-c, 1725-c, 1745-b
Paper Index
Religious Life 102-a, 102-b, 102-c, 105-a,
105-b, 105-c, 105-d, 106-d, 112-c, 117-a,
121-a, 121-b, 121-c, 125-a, 131-a, 131-b,
131-c, 131-d, 132-b, 134-b, 134-c, 139-a,
139-b, 142-c, 143-a, 201-a, 203-a, 203-b,
203-c, 204-c, 205-b, 205-c, 209-a, 217-c,
219-b, 219-c, 219-d, 220-a, 220-b, 221-a,
221-b, 221-c, 225-b, 226-b, 228-a, 228-c,
234-b, 234-c, 234-d, 239-a, 239-b, 239-c,
241-c, 244-b, 303-a, 303-b, 303-c, 305-a,
305-b, 305-c, 311-a, 316-b, 316-c, 318-a,
319-b, 319-c, 320-a, 320-c, 321-a, 321-b,
321-c, 323-a, 327-c, 339-a, 339-b, 341-b,
343-a, 501-a, 508-a, 509-a, 509-c, 511-a,
517-b, 520-b, 521-b, 522-a, 529-a, 534-c,
535-b, 539-a, 543-a, 602-a, 602-b, 602-c,
603-a, 603-b, 603-c, 608-c, 613-b, 614-b,
621-a, 621-b, 621-c, 623-a, 629-a, 631-b,
634-a, 639-a, 639-b, 639-c, 645-a, 645-b,
703-a, 703-c, 707-a, 709-a, 709-b, 716-b,
718-a, 718-c, 720-c, 721-a, 721-b, 721-c,
730-c, 734-a, 739-a, 742-c, 743-c, 744-b,
802-b, 803-a, 803-c, 806-a, 806-b, 806-c,
807-b, 807-c, 808-b, 808-c, 814-b, 816-a,
816-b, 817-b, 818-a, 818-b, 818-c, 833-c,
841-c, 1003-a, 1003-b, 1011-a, 1011-b,
1020-a, 1020-b, 1020-c, 1023-a, 1025-c,
1026-b, 1027-c, 1029-a, 1029-b, 1029-c,
1039-a, 1039-b, 1039-c, 1044-a, 1045-c,
1103-a, 1103-b, 1103-c, 1109-a, 1111-c,
1114-c, 1116-a, 1120-a, 1120-b, 1122-c,
1129-a, 1129-b, 1129-c, 1136-b, 1139-a,
1139-b, 1139-c, 1139-d, 1144-a, 1144-b,
1145-a, 1145-b, 1145-c, 1147-c, 1203-b,
1203-c, 1203-d, 1208-c, 1209-a, 1209-c,
1226-b, 1226-c, 1227-a, 1227-b, 1227-c,
1229-a, 1229-c, 1234-a, 1234-b, 1234-c,
1237-b, 1238-b, 1242-c, 1243-c, 1245-b,
1304-a, 1307-b, 1308-c, 1312-b, 1321-b,
1326-a, 1326-c, 1328-a, 1329-a, 1329-c,
1332-b, 1334-a, 1334-b, 1334-c, 1338-b,
1338-c, 1512-a, 1516-a, 1516-b, 1516-c,
1518-b, 1521-a, 1521-b, 1521-c, 1522-b,
1524-a, 1524-c, 1529-c, 1539-c, 1541-a,
1541-b, 1541-c, 1617-d, 1618-b, 1621-a,
1621-b, 1621-c, 1622-b, 1635-c, 1641-a,
1641-b, 1641-c, 1707-b, 1707-c, 1708-a,
1710-a, 1714-a, 1721-a, 1721-b, 1721-c,
1722-a, 1722-b, 1722-c, 1732-c, 1733-d,
1735-a, 1735-c, 1739-a, 1741-c, 1742-b,
1745-a, 1745-c, 1746-a
Social History 109-b, 113-a, 113-d,
117-a, 117-b, 117-c, 118-a, 118-c, 124-a,
126-a, 126-b, 128-a, 128-b, 128-c, 135-b,
137-b, 137-c, 141-a, 141-b, 142-b, 144-a,
144-c, 203-a, 203-b, 203-c, 210-a, 210-b,
210-c, 216-a, 219-a, 219-b, 219-c, 219-d,
224-a, 224-b, 224-c, 233-a, 235-a, 235-b,
240-a, 240-b, 240-c, 246-a, 247-a, 303-a,
303-b, 303-c, 308-b, 309-a, 309-b, 313-a,
316-a, 318-b, 319-a, 319-b, 319-c, 322-c,
324-a, 324-b, 324-c, 325-b, 336-a, 336-b,
336-c, 342-c, 348-a, 502-b, 509-c, 510-a,
510-b, 510-c, 518-a, 518-b, 518-c, 519-a,
519-b, 519-c, 520-a, 524-a, 524-b, 524-c,
526-a, 526-c, 539-a, 541-a, 547-b, 548-c,
445
Index of Papers
603-a, 603-b, 608-a, 610-b, 616-b, 618-a,
618-b, 618-c, 619-a, 624-a, 624-b, 624-c,
628-c, 633-a, 639-a, 640-c, 641-a, 641-b,
642-b, 643-a, 707-b, 707-c, 708-c, 710-a,
710-b, 710-c, 713-c, 715-a, 722-a, 722-b,
731-c, 734-c, 739-a, 739-b, 741-b, 747-c,
802-a, 804-b, 808-a, 810-a, 810-b, 810-c,
813-a, 813-c, 818-c, 821-b, 822-c, 824-a,
825-a, 827-d, 837-c, 841-a, 841-b, 841-c,
842-a, 844-a, 844-b, 844-c, 847-c, 1002-c,
1009-c, 1012-b, 1012-c, 1013-a, 1013-b,
1015-a, 1017-a, 1022-a, 1022-c, 1024-a,
1024-b, 1024-c, 1025-a, 1026-a, 1030-a,
1030-b, 1033-a, 1033-b, 1034-a, 1036-b,
1036-c, 1037-b, 1041-c, 1042-b, 1042-c,
1046-d, 1103-c, 1112-c, 1114-b, 1115-b,
1117-a, 1117-b, 1117-c, 1121-d, 1122-b,
1123-a, 1124-a, 1124-b, 1124-c, 1125-b,
1125-c, 1126-b, 1126-c, 1128-c, 1128-d,
1130-c, 1133-b, 1133-c, 1136-c, 1142-a,
1142-b, 1201-b, 1203-c, 1203-d, 1205-c,
1206-b, 1207-a, 1207-b, 1208-a, 1208-b,
1211-a, 1214-a, 1214-b, 1214-c, 1215-a,
1219-a, 1221-c, 1224-a, 1224-b, 1224-c,
1225-c, 1228-c, 1233-a, 1233-b, 1233-c,
1237-c, 1241-a, 1241-b, 1241-c, 1246-a,
1246-b, 1301-a, 1303-a, 1303-b, 1303-c,
1308-a, 1308-b, 1310-a, 1310-a, 1311-a,
1317-a, 1317-c, 1318-a, 1318-b, 1318-c,
1322-b, 1322-c, 1324-b, 1324-c, 1327-a,
1328-a, 1328-c, 1335-c, 1337-c, 1341-a,
1341-b, 1341-c, 1341-d, 1342-a, 1343-b,
1344-a, 1344-b, 1344-c, 1348-a, 1348-b,
1348-c, 1504-a, 1506-a, 1506-c, 1507-a,
1507-c, 1509-c, 1515-a, 1515-b, 1517-a,
1517-b, 1517-c, 1522-a, 1524-a, 1524-b,
1528-b, 1528-c, 1541-a, 1541-b, 1541-c,
1542-a, 1542-b, 1542-d, 1543-a, 1543-b,
1543-c, 1544-a, 1544-b, 1544-c, 1606-a,
1606-b, 1606-c, 1607-b, 1609-a, 1609-b,
1609-c, 1611-b, 1614-c, 1617-b, 1620-b,
1624-a, 1624-b, 1624-c, 1625-c, 1630-c,
1633-a, 1635-a, 1635-b, 1641-c, 1642-a,
1642-b, 1642-c, 1643-a, 1643-b, 1643-c,
1701-a, 1702-c, 1704-a, 1704-b, 1704-c,
1706-a, 1706-b, 1709-a, 1709-b, 1709-c,
1712-b, 1712-c, 1714-c, 1716-a, 1716-d,
1717-a, 1717-b, 1717-c, 1720-b, 1724-a,
1724-b, 1724-c, 1725-a, 1729-a, 1729-b,
1733-a, 1733-d, 1737-c, 1742-c, 1743-a,
1743-b, 1743-c, 1746-a, 1746-c
Teaching the Middle Ages 132-c, 140-c,
222-a, 222-b, 331-a, 514-a, 514-b, 514-c,
726-a, 726-b, 726-c, 818-a, 1243-d,
1607-c
Technology 132-c, 229-a, 229-c, 315-a,
506-a, 513-c, 515-c, 520-c, 541-c, 629-b,
635-b, 635-c, 647-a, 737-a, 747-c, 847-a,
847-b, 1011-b, 1011-c, 1026-c, 1036-c,
1133-a, 1233-c, 1314-c, 1523-a, 1523-b,
1523-c, 1530-a, 1623-c, 1744-c
446
Theology 104-a, 104-b, 104-c, 106-c,
109-c, 114-b, 120-a, 121-c, 125-c, 127-b,
140-b, 142-a, 143-a, 204-b, 206-a, 220-c,
221-a, 221-b, 226-a, 227-a, 301-b, 304-c,
318-a, 321-a, 321-b, 321-c, 325-b, 327-d,
345-a, 513-b, 526-c, 531-a, 531-b, 545-a,
545-b, 545-c, 604-a, 604-d, 605-a, 609-a,
613-c, 626-b, 645-b, 703-d, 709-c, 720-a,
721-a, 721-b, 821-a, 824-b, 827-d, 833-b,
842-b, 842-c, 1022-b, 1031-a, 1031-b,
1031-c, 1038-b, 1045-b, 1045-d, 1046-b,
1047-a, 1120-b, 1129-c, 1131-a, 1131-b,
1131-c, 1137-c, 1138-a, 1138-b, 1140-a,
1143-c, 1143-d, 1145-a, 1145-b, 1145-c,
1147-b, 1226-c, 1227-b, 1228-b, 1231-b,
1302-d, 1305-b, 1312-b, 1338-a, 1501-a,
1501-b, 1501-c, 1506-a, 1506-b, 1518-c,
1521-a, 1521-b, 1608-b, 1617-a, 1617-c,
1621-a, 1632-b, 1646-c, 1647-a, 1706-a,
1708-b, 1710-b, 1721-a, 1721-b, 1721-c,
1723-b, 1732-c, 1748-a
Women's Studies 105-a, 105-b, 105-c,
105-d, 107-a, 107-b, 110-a, 120-c, 121-b,
127-b, 129-a, 131-d, 140-b, 207-b, 207-c,
207-d, 216-c, 218-a, 218-c, 219-b, 221-a,
225-a, 242-b, 243-c, 302-b, 302-d, 307-a,
307-b, 321-b, 325-a, 325-b, 326-a, 338-c,
341-c, 342-a, 344-a, 503-b, 525-a, 525-b,
525-c, 542-a, 544-a, 601-a, 601-c, 603-b,
607-b, 610-a, 610-c, 625-a, 625-b, 625-c,
631-b, 640-c, 648-a, 715-a, 725-a, 725-b,
725-c, 725-d, 741-b, 807-c, 821-c, 825-a,
825-b, 830-b, 830-c, 837-b, 1006-a,
1006-b, 1006-c, 1011-a, 1018-a, 1018-b,
1021-a, 1021-b, 1021-c, 1025-a, 1033-b,
1033-c, 1105-a, 1105-b, 1105-c, 1109-a,
1112-b, 1118-c, 1121-a, 1121-b, 1121-c,
1136-a, 1136-b, 1136-c, 1140-b, 1140-c,
1207-b, 1207-c, 1218-c, 1221-a, 1221-b,
1221-c, 1228-a, 1238-c, 1307-a, 1307-c,
1313-b, 1321-a, 1321-b, 1321-c, 1325-a,
1325-b, 1325-c, 1327-a, 1333-a, 1333-c,
1344-c, 1524-c, 1525-a, 1525-b, 1607-a,
1618-b, 1625-a, 1625-b, 1625-c, 1701-b,
1701-c, 1703-b, 1725-a, 1725-b, 1725-c,
1727-a, 1727-c, 1741-a, 1741-b, 1748-a
Index of Papers
Administration 108-a, 113-b, 113-c,
142-a, 142-b, 142-c, 208-b, 213-a, 215-a,
230-a, 230-b, 247-b, 308-a, 331-c, 334-b,
340-b, 340-c, 343-c, 348-c, 502-a, 502-c,
515-b, 524-a, 524-b, 538-b, 611-c, 618-b,
633-a, 633-b, 633-c, 706-a, 706-c, 708-b,
711-a, 711-b, 711-c, 715-b, 715-c, 719-a,
722-c, 730-b, 740-a, 740-b, 740-c, 741-a,
743-a, 811-a, 815-b, 1004-c, 1010-c,
1012-a, 1013-a, 1014-c, 1015-b, 1019-b,
1019-c, 1030-b, 1034-a, 1034-b, 1035-a,
1035-b, 1112-c, 1119-a, 1119-b, 1119-c,
1122-a, 1135-b, 1205-a, 1205-b, 1214-c,
1241-a, 1302-a, 1303-a, 1303-b, 1303-c,
1305-a, 1305-c, 1309-a, 1309-c, 1317-a,
1319-a, 1319-b, 1341-b, 1341-c, 1341-d,
1342-a, 1348-b, 1534-b, 1540-b, 1540-c,
1610-a, 1611-a, 1611-c, 1620-a, 1620-c,
1640-a, 1640-b, 1640-c, 1712-a, 1718-d,
1720-b
1330-c, 1343-c, 1530-c, 1533-a, 1611-d,
1614-b, 1633-a, 1633-b, 1714-b, 1719-a
Anthropology 110-a, 133-a, 206-b, 302-c,
323-a, 330-a, 333-a, 518-b, 523-a, 523-c,
714-a, 714-c, 737-a, 743-b, 803-a, 803-b,
803-c, 813-a, 813-b, 813-c, 1015-a,
1015-c, 1024-a, 1024-b, 1109-c, 1126-c,
1141-b, 1146-b, 1224-a, 1224-b, 1301-b,
1301-c, 1324-b, 1324-c, 1504-a, 1504-c,
1509-a, 1509-b, 1604-a, 1606-a, 1609-c,
1723-a, 1724-c, 1744-b
Architecture - Secular 233-a, 245-b,
345-b, 702-a, 702-b, 1002-a, 1002-c,
1011-c, 1046-c, 1102-a, 1102-b, 1111-a,
1111-b, 1241-b, 1502-a, 1502-b, 1611-a
1611-d
Archaeology - General 112-a, 113-c,
133-a, 133-b, 144-b, 247-a, 302-c, 311-b,
502-b, 543-a, 702-b, 702-d, 714-a, 802-b,
802-c, 1018-a, 1117-c, 1118-a, 1141-b,
1202-a, 1202-b, 1216-b, 1223-a, 1223-c,
1514-a, 1514-b, 1523-a, 1523-b, 1523-c,
1530-a, 1530-b, 1614-b, 1614-c, 1633-a,
1633-b, 1714-a, 1730-b, 1730-c, 1742-c,
1744-b
Archaeology - Sites 102-b, 102-c, 112-c,
133-b, 202-a, 202-b, 202-c, 223-b, 311-b,
341-b, 504-d, 508-c, 511-a, 518-b, 528-a,
528-b, 702-a, 712-b, 713-c, 811-b,
1002-a, 1002-b, 1002-c, 1023-b, 1023-c,
1102-b, 1102-c, 1115-b, 1202-a, 1202-b,
1202-c, 1209-b, 1223-b, 1330-a, 1330-b,
Architecture - Religious 102-b, 102-c,
112-c, 117-a, 134-a, 134-b, 145-a, 145-b,
145-c, 202-a, 217-a, 243-b, 245-a, 529-b,
529-c, 629-b, 629-c, 639-b, 729-c, 802-c,
829-b, 1011-a, 1015-a, 1026-b, 1044-a,
1044-b, 1044-c, 1046-b, 1109-c, 1111-a,
1144-a, 1144-b, 1201-a, 1201-b, 1201-c,
1202-a, 1202-c, 1211-b, 1211-c, 1230-a,
1230-b, 1230-c, 1239-a, 1239-b, 1239-c,
1307-b, 1311-c, 1315-a, 1315-b, 1330-a,
1330-c, 1338-a, 1338-c, 1529-b, 1533-a,
1533-c, 1545-c, 1629-a
Archives and Sources 110-b, 111-c,
123-b, 123-c, 132-c, 147-a, 147-d, 211-b,
211-c, 215-a, 223-a, 230-c, 315-b, 339-b,
526-b, 529-a, 529-b, 529-c, 538-b, 619-b,
619-c, 632-b, 704-a, 735-a, 735-b, 743-a,
743-c, 822-c, 835-a, 835-b, 835-c, 837-c,
841-a, 841-b, 841-c, 844-b, 1004-a,
1004-b, 1004-c, 1011-a, 1014-a, 1014-b,
1014-c, 1019-a, 1019-b, 1019-c, 1025-a,
1025-b, 1025-c, 1027-a, 1104-a, 1104-b,
1104-c, 1111-a, 1115-a, 1119-a, 1119-b,
1119-c, 1121-c, 1121-d, 1125-a, 1139-b,
1139-c, 1140-c, 1141-c, 1202-b, 1211-a,
1214-a, 1214-b, 1214-c, 1219-a, 1219-b,
1247-a, 1247-b, 1247-c, 1303-a, 1303-b,
1303-c, 1311-a, 1311-b, 1311-c, 1319-a,
1319-b, 1319-c, 1509-c, 1523-d, 1530-b,
1538-d, 1545-a, 1607-a, 1620-a, 1640-b,
1640-c, 1648-a, 1648-b, 1720-c, 1723-c,
1728-c
Paper Index
Archaeology - Artefacts 111-a, 111-b,
115-b, 241-a, 323-a, 333-a, 339-a, 340-a,
506-a, 511-a, 526-a, 535-a, 547-c, 611-a,
611-b, 616-b, 616-c, 641-a, 647-a, 647-b,
647-c, 702-c, 711-b, 713-c, 714-c, 716-b,
743-b, 747-a, 747-b, 816-b, 1015-c,
1026-b, 1028-b, 1033-a, 1033-b, 1042-b,
1133-a, 1133-b, 1133-c, 1142-a, 1142-c,
1202-a, 1202-b, 1202-c, 1233-a, 1233-b,
1233-c, 1241-b, 1245-b, 1313-b, 1314-b,
1321-a, 1321-c, 1329-c, 1333-a, 1333-b,
1333-c, 1523-a, 1523-b, 1523-c, 1523-d,
1528-a, 1533-b, 1533-c, 1633-b, 1645-b,
1714-c, 1722-b, 1737-a, 1744-a, 1745-a,
1745-b, 1745-c
Architecture - General 117-c, 145-a,
145-b, 245-b, 504-d, 544-c, 727-a,
1114-b, 1211-a, 1307-c, 1311-a, 1311-b,
1315-c, 1338-b, 1530-c, 1647-b, 1723-a,
1748-c
Art History - Decorative Arts 115-c,
124-c, 134-a, 148-a, 148-b, 229-c, 233-a,
233-b, 243-b, 245-a, 333-a, 339-c, 347-a,
506-a, 508-b, 647-c, 803-a, 1011-b,
1029-b, 1033-c, 1101-c, 1106-c, 1129-b,
1222-c, 1229-b, 1229-c, 1313-b, 1315-c,
1528-a, 1529-c, 1533-b, 1538-a, 1545-a,
1545-b, 1702-a, 1745-a, 1745-b, 1745-c
Art History - General 111-a, 111-b,
111-c, 115-a, 117-a, 117-c, 127-a, 129-c,
145-c, 147-b, 203-c, 211-b, 227-c, 229-b,
229-c, 233-b, 241-a, 243-b, 245-a, 245-b,
245-c, 303-b, 315-b, 327-a, 327-b, 329-a,
329-c, 333-b, 333-c, 341-c, 504-d, 521-b,
526-a, 529-a, 544-c, 547-a, 547-c, 611-a,
611-b, 629-a, 711-a, 711-b, 737-a, 745-a,
745-b, 745-c, 829-a, 829-c, 830-c, 839-b,
447
Index of Participants
AAE, Embla 1234, 1334
ABALÉA, Gaëlle 1536
ABBOTT, Dominic 1521
ABBOUCHI, Mounawar 1446, 1627
ABD ALGHANI, Jalal 325
ABED, Sally Hany 1110
ABENZA SORIA, Verónica Carla 743
ABERCROMBIE, Emily 246
ABOU-ZIED, Sarah O. 207
ABRAHAM, Elizabeth 132
ACHI, Andrea 111, 211, 511, 711
ADAM, Ahmed Hussein Abdelrahman 1202
ADAMSKA, Anna 125, 322
ADDISON, David 517
ADIGÜZEL, Bilal 1615
AGAN, Cami 1336
AHERN, Eoghan 338
AHMAD, Bilal 1710
AHMADI, Mohammad 243
AHMED, Mohammed Ahmed Abdelmageed
1202
AHOKAS, Lari 1710
AILES, Marianne J. 1535, 1635, 1735
AKHAPKINA, Daria 520
AKSELEVICH OBIBOK, Anna 640
AKYURT, Songül 143
ALAKAS, Brandon 1020, 1120
ALBERS, Constanze 1045
ALBERT, Mechthild 607
ALCARO, Mary 1527
ALDAZABAL, Ana Inés 607
ALEKSIDZE, Nikoloz 106
ALEX, Jemsy Claries 346
ALEXIU, Andra-Nicoleta 120
ALFARANO, Mario 105
AL-FERZLY, Michelle 711
ALI, Hossameldin 143
ALI, Muntazir 445
ALI TORRICO, Illas 516
AL-KHAFAJI, Ali 1112
ALLEN, Meaghan Elizabeth 1527
ALLIGER, Andrew M. 736
ALPHEY, Tristan K. 1701
ÁLVAREZ LÓPEZ, Francisco José 1324
ALVES, João Pedro 1717
ALVESTAD, Karl Christian 324, 1123, 1243,
1426
AMARAL, Luís Carlos 1705
AMBLER, Sophie 1448
AMBÜHL, Rémy 1135
AMENDT-RADUEGE, Amy 1636
AMIRI, Jahangir 307
AMIRIAN, Tayebeh 307
AMITAI, Reuven 1610
AMMIRATI, Serena 1720
ANDÅS, Margrete S. 1044
ANĐELOVIĆ, Aleksandar 522, 622
ANDENNA, Cristina 1219, 1319
ANDERLINI, Tina 333
ANDERSON, Henry 508, 608, 708, 808
ANDOLINA, Giuseppe 1211
ANDRADE, Amélia 1540
ANDRADE, Marcelo 1717
448
ANDRADE, Maria Filomena Pimentel de
Carvalho 718
ANDREOU, Andria 248
ANDRÉS FERNÁNDEZ, David 617
ANDRES PORRAS, José 1624
ANDREWS, Tara L. 835, 1115
ANDRIOLLO, Luisa 1520, 1720
ANGERER, Michael Lysander 312
ANSTATT, Antonia 1320
ANTHONY, Sean W. 210, 542
APGAR, Blair 1718
ARBLASTER, John 421, 531, 1521, 1621,
1721
ARÉVALO, Juan Manuel Rubio 736
ARICI, Mustakim 842
ARIIS, Lorena 1233
ARMSTRONG, Abby 538, 725
ARMSTRONG, Dan 634, 734
ARNDT, Sabine 237
ARNOLD, Jonathan 209
ARNOLD, Kate 1316
ARNOTT, Megan 1644
ASCHENBRENNER, Nathanael 606
ASP, Annika 1218
ASQUITH, Richard 1743
ASRYAN, Arpine 1315
ASTE, Paul 508
ASTELL, Róisín 1533
ATKINSON, Laura 1034
ATKINSON, Laurie 1731
ATTALI, Maureen 1719
ATTARI, Sadegh 228
AUDEBRAND, Justine 1321
AURELI, Maria Elena 1321
AUSTIN, Greta 805, 1005, 1105, 1305
AVDOKHIN, Arkadiy 1230, 1330
AYENACHEW WOLDETSADIK, Deresse 511
AZAD, Arezou 1511
BAALKE, Gabrielle 126
BABALOLA, Abidemi Babatunde 211, 311
BABICH, Nicholas 1501
BACHER, Maximilian 1319
BACKMAN, Agnieszka 147
BADDAR, Maha 1110
BADER, Katherine 1304
BAEZA GOMARIZ, Leonor 1324
BAILEY, Eleanor 624
BAILEY, Jess 745, 845
BAILEY, Laura 540
BAILEY, Lisa 209
BAILEY, Merridee 217
BAILEY, Michael 320, 420
BAILLIE, James 636, 936, 1015, 1115, 1215,
1315
BAIN, Susannah 230, 1026, 1126
BAKER, Lane B. 841
BAKER, Matthew 709
BAKER-BRIAN, Nicholas 706, 1006
BAMBOZZI, Camilla 527, 627, 727, 827
BAMJI, Alex 1043
BANCILA, Maria Yvonne 325
BANES, Rachael 1230, 1330
BAR Y AAKOV, Ran 1023
Index of Participants
BILOTTA, Maria Alessandra 1629
BINTLEY, Michael 441, 540
BIRD, Jessalynn 104
BIRKETT, Helen 1322
BISHOP, Jonathan 1036
BISSON, Elisa 627
BJERKE, Jillian 633
BLANCHARD, Mary 624
BLANCO-TORREJÓN, Laura 341
BLAŠKOVIĆ, Marija 725
BLAŽEK, Pavel 545
BLAZEVIC, Tiana 1522
BLECHER, Joel 742, 942
BLENNEMANN, Gordon 1239, 1339
BLENNOW, Anna 1027
BLIER, Suzanne 611
BLOBEL, Mathias 641
BLÜMER, Beatrice 823
BLURTON, Heather 744
BOERS, Kay 109, 209, 309
BOGDAŃSKA, Katarzyna 1103
BÖHRINGER, Letha 320
BOLERAZKÁ, Zuzana 129, 1725
BOLINTINEANU, Alexandra 132
BOLLIG, Solveig 837
BOLTON, Brenda M. 1505, 1605
BOM, Myra Miranda 630, 1416
BOMBI, Barbara 1035, 1135, 1739
BONOMELLI, Gabriele 1035
BONSALL, Daisy 1133
BONSALL, Jane 1225, 1325
BOODTS, Shari 532, 832
BOOT, Eric 1001
BOOTH, Philip A. 139, 239, 339, 439, 739,
839
BORA, Fozia 143
BORG, Magnus G. 1027
BORIĆ, Laris 1111
BORISOVA, Svetlana 1327
BORRIELLO, Maria 327
BOSANQUET, Antonia 702, 802
BOSSEMAN, Gaëlle 114
BOSTON, Hannah 224, 324, 524, 624, 724,
1724
BOTTICCHIO GIORGI, Stefania 1741
BOUGARD, François 1509, 1620
BOULTON, Meg 1338
BOURNE, Caroline 512, 1537
BOXER, Carly B. 845
BOYARIN, Shamma 543, 1003
BOŽIČ, Anja 322
BRADLEY, Natasha 242, 442, 1532, 1632
BRADLEY, Samuel 547
BRADY, Lindy 1248, 1601
BRANCO, Maria João 1035, 1540
BRASINGTON, Bruce C. 805, 1205
BREITH, Astrid 114, 531
BRENNER, Elma 1733
BRETTHAUER, Isabelle 1219
BREVIGLIERI OLIVEIRA, Beatriz 548
BREWER, Keagan Joel 1045
BROOKES, Stewart J. 801, 945, 1447
BROOKS HEDSTROM, Darlene 613
Participant Index
BARA, Péter 722
BARADEL, Valentina 1029
BÁRÁNY, Attila 1525
BARBACCIA, Holly 640
BARBER, Samuel 730
BARKER, Elton 835
BARKER, Katherine 1222
BARLOW, Victoria 533
BARRET, Sébastien 1219, 1319
BARTELT, Ashley 927
BARTON, Paulette 1302
BAS, Pierre-Henry 547
BASCHUNG, Adrian 747
BASSETT, Hayley 1539, 1639, 1739
BATEMAN, Luke 1126
BATT, Catherine J. 607, 927
BATTEN, Caroline R. 312
BATTISTA, Simonetta 1232
BATTISTELLI, Daniele 734
BAUMGARTNER, Jutta 347, 1114
BAWA, Kajal 439, 839
BEAL, Jane 927
BEATTIE, William 1220
BEAUCAMP, Ella Sophie 233
BEAUDET, Alexandre 737
BECK, Clemens 335
BECK, Lauren 129, 1201
BECKER, Ulrike 1526
BEDOGNI, Beatrice 620
BEECHY, Tiffany 1109
BEERS, Walter 837
BEICHLER, Katharina 245
BELL, David 202, 1139
BELL, Jennifer 612, 712
BELLARBRE, Julien 223
BELOŠEVIĆ, Nikolina 1611
BEN YEHUDA, Nahum 743
BENBOW, Eliot 339
BENEŠ, Carrie 822
BENEVENTO JASPER, Kathryn 247
BENFEY, Thomas 1511
BENÍTEZ-INGLOTT Y BALLESTEROS, Eduardo 818
BENNETT, Katharine 533, 633
BENNETT, Matthew 504, 1624
BENNEWITZ, Ingrid 248, 1114
BENNISON, Amira K. 411
BEQUETTE, John 1045
BERARD, Christopher 1137
BERG, Sigrun Høgetveit 1334, 1544
BERGER, Simon 815
BERGMEIER, Armin 1028, 1245
BERLAND, Jeffrey P. A. 215
BERNHEIM, Rosalie 643
BERRY, Abigail 1429
BEUMER, Mark 528
BEYENE, Solomon Gebreyes 111, 311, 1443
BHALLA, Niamh 1217
BIAŁAS, Karolina 507
BIANCHI, Nunzio 513
BICKFORD BERZOCK, Kathleen 111
BIENIAK, Magdalena 545
BILDHAUER, Bettina 1626
BILLER, Pete 948
449
Index of Participants
BROTHERTON, Richard 1533
BROWN, Daniel 1123, 1426
BROWN, Rob 1512
BROWN, Sara 1236, 1736
BROWN, Thomas 1122, 1309
BROWN, Tonia R. 1702
BRUCH, Julia 137, 337, 1207
BRUGGER, Eveline 119, 219, 419
BRUHN, Stephan 328
BRUNNER, Melanie 142, 734, 1227
BUCHANAN, Charles S. 1647
BUCK, Andrew David 1616
BUCKINGHAM, James 1622
BURDEN, John 1005
BUREK, Jacqueline M. 130, 330, 1531, 1631,
1731
BURGHARDT, Bettina 1231
BURGTORF, Jochen 1539
BURKART, Eric 831
BURNS, Rachel A. 441, 1438
BURRIDGE, Claire 528, 628, 728, 828
BURT, Kathleen 331
BURT, Sarah 1702
BURTON, Simon 531
BUSCH, Hannah 444
BUTTÀ, Licia 506
BÜTTNER, Marco 604
BYCHKOV, Pavel 1201
BYLINKA, Kacper 603
BYRNE, Philippa 1140, 1240, 1340, 1426,
1531, 1631
CABRÉ I PAIRET, Montserrat 437, 1242, 1342,
1442
CACIUR, Dana-Silvia 1303
CAI, Meghan 1528
CALABRESE, Michael A. 927
CALCAGNO, Julian 1609
CALDER, Natalie 1332
CAMPBELL, Emma 520
CAMPBELL, William 645
CAMPOPIANO, Michele 826, 1231
CAMPOS, Matheus 812
CANNON, Francesca 1121
CANONICO, Camilla 627
CANTARELLA, Glauco Maria 1505
CANTERA-MONTENEGRO, Enrique 1619
CANTOR-ECHOLS, David 1638
CAO, Canchen 1028
CAPPER, Morn D. T. 1602
CAPPUCCILLI, Eleonora 131
CARANDINO, Martina 645
CARBALLEIRA-DEBASA, Ana María 824
CARDOSO, Paula 539
CARDWELL, Samuel 226, 326
CARLEY-ANNEAR, Paul 134
CARLSON, Marla 1642
CARLSTROM, Bert 818
CARON, Ann Marie 225
CARREÑO, Sara 1029
CARRIER, Gregory 1637
CARRILLO, Alan 1429
CARRUTHERS, Sarah 1637
CARTRON, Isabelle 1321
450
CARTWRIGHT, Charlotte 1742
CARVAJAL, Ulrike 1546
CARVAJAL CASTRO, Álvaro 1124, 1224
CARVALHO DE SOUSA, José Vasco 1740
CARYTSIOTIS, Marie-Myriam 713
CASSANYES ROIG, Albert 734
CASSIDY-WELCH, Megan 1616
CASTALDI, Lucia 214
CASTANHO, Gabriel 1040
CASTELLA-M ARTINEZ, Sergi 1231
CASTEX, Dominique 1321
CASTRO CORREA, Ainoa 1124, 1224
CATALDI, Claudio 701
CATARINO LOPES, Paulo Esmeraldo 718
CAUDILL, Tamara Bentley 1246
CAVELL, Megan 201, 301
CAYLEY, Emma 246, 1246, 1346
CAYROL-BERNARDO, Laura 1228, 1328
ÇEKEN, Muhittin 1502
CELENTANO, Michele 327
CELICO, Giuseppe 1718
ÇELIK, Siren 606
CERMANOVÁ, Pavlína 1506
CERSOVSKY, Eva 506, 1310
ÇETINKAYA, Berke 1222
CHACON, Abner 605
CHAKOVSKAYA, Lidia 1023
CHALES DE BEAULIEU, Maurice 245
CHAMBERS, Mark Campbell 1642
CHAMPAGNE, Marie-Thérèse 132
CHAN, Antje Elisa 1020
CHAN, Hiu Ki 1109
CHANDLER, Cullen 138
CHANDLER, Paul 205
CHANDRAMOHAN, Ramani 1631
CHAPMAN, Adam 512, 712
CHARZYŃSKA-WÓJCIK, Magdalena 1547
CHATTERJEE, Paroma 1715
CHATZELIS, Georgios 1713
CHECHIK, Moishi 219
CHEN, Bingyi 1227
CHEN, Edith X. 343
CHEN, Jiamiao 839
CHENGANAKKATTIL, Muhamed Riyaz 311
CHERNIN, Michael 1530
CHERRY, John 1645
CHETWOOD, James 1221
CHEUNG, Wai-leuk 1501
CHIACCHIA, Bianca 1142
CHIRCOP, Rebecca 636
CHO, Wonhee 715, 915
CHOLOGAURI, Lana 616
CHOYKE, Alice 741, 1041
CHRIST, Georg 1510, 1610
CHU, Wei-cheng 807
CHURCH, Jordan 326
CINATO, Franck 314
CISZAK, Mariusz 714
CLARKE, Catherine A. M. 441, 635
CLARKE, Emily 1638
CLARKE, Isabella 1527, 1627, 1727
CLAUSS, Martin 748, 848
CLAYTON, Matthew 1113
Index of Participants
CZIGANJ, Natalia 648
D'AGOSTINI, Chiara 1715
DAHM, Karl Heiner 608
D'ALCONZO, Nicolò 513
DALEWSKI, Tomasz 130
DALL'AGLIO, Francesco 503
DALSGAARD HANSEN, Clara 244
D'AMATO, Raffaele 1613
DAMM, Carina 103
DANFORD, Rachel 737
DANKA, Balázs 341
DARBY, Peter 1238
DAUVOIS, Nathalie 846
DAVIES, Helen 823
DAVIES, Josh 403
DAVIS, James 112, 310, 410
DAVIS, Jennifer R. 108
DAVIS, Lisa Fagin 147, 901, 1447
DAVIS, Liza 508
DAVIS, Matthew E. 710
DAVIS, Rachel Meredith 625
DAVISON, Tracey 1033, 1133, 1233, 1333
D'AVRAY, David L. 605
DAY, Kirsty 507
DE ANGELIS, Gianmarco 1509
DE CEVINS, Marie-Madeleine 414
DE FREITAS LYTH, Larissa 1706
DE GROOT, Terje 1144
DE HAILES, Steve 1535, 1635
DE LA MOTTE, Hayley 1724
DE LA PINTA RODRÍGUEZ, Pablo 1124
DE LAS HERAS, Amélie 1129
DE SÁ-NOGUEIRA, Bernardo 1640
DE TEMMERMAN, Koen 513
DE TORRES RODRÍGUEZ, Jorge 311
DE VALERIOLA, Sébastien 235, 335, 435,
1435
DEACON, Jacob H. 547, 847
DEAN, Lucinda 830, 930
DEAN, Rowanne 1645
DECAIX, Véronique 626
DEFLOU-LECA, Noëlle 123
DEICHSTETTER, Sarah 337
DEKARLI, Martin 703
DEKKICHE, Malika 1510, 1610
DEL MONACO, Gianluca 1629, 1729
DEL VAL VALES, Paula 1121, 1425
DELAISSÉ, Eric 1139
DELANCEY, Mark Dike 811
DELANEY, Katherine 1121
DELL ISOLA, Jonathan 719
DELL'ACQUA, Francesca 215
DELMAN, Rachel 1102
DELUCA, Laura 1607
DELVALLÉE, Ellen 746, 846
DEMARIA, Chiara 1329
DENSON, Ryan 1522, 1622, 1722
DESBOIS-IENTILE, Adeline 746
DEVRIES, Kelly 1148, 1448
DEWIÈRE, Rémi 1510
DI CLEMENTE, Valeria 1701
DI SILVESTRO, Emanuele 827
DIAS, Paulo Alexandre Mesquita 504
Participant Index
CLEAR, Mathew T. A. 1132
CLEAVES, Wallace 342, 442
CLEMENTE-QUIJADA, Luís 317
CLERC-DEJOUR, Jade 333
CLESSE, Grégory 626, 726, 926
COELHO, Catarina 1740
COELHO, Helena 1640
COGBILL, James 1013
COHEN, Meredith 729, 1429
COLIN SAÏDANI, Clara 1736
COLMAN, William 1622
COLSON, Justin 1341
COMAS VIA, Mireia 619, 1328, 1737
CONNELLY, Erin 228
CONFORTIN, Giacomo 1729
CONRAD, Heiko Jochen Christian 1215
CONSAGRA, Piergiorgio 126
CONSTANTINOU, Stavroula 248, 306
CONTI, Aidan 232
CONWAY, Holly 1102
COOK, Adam 1612
COOK, Brian 1601
COOMANS, Janna 528
COOPER, Catriona 1602
COOPER, Kate 1021
COOPER, Mariah Luther 1037, 1140
COOPER, Tracey-Anne 1042
COOTE, Lesley 1036, 1136
CORREIA, Mário João 926, 1131
CORRIOL, Vincent 123
COSIJNS, Lev 616
COSSIO, Andoni 1236
COSTA, Paolo 708
COSTACHE-BABCINSCHI, Alexandra 1146
COSTAMBEYS, Marios 338
COSTANZA, Carmen 527, 727, 827
COTTEN-SPRECKELMEYER, Antha 1136
COTTO ANDINO, Maylene 107
COTTOM, Charmae 140
COTUNA, Vlad 636
COTZA, Alberto 1620
COUMERT, Magali 1239
COVERT, Audrey 525
COWEN, Beth 1212
COWLEY, Patrick 643
COX, Bridget 1019
COX, Eleanor 236, 336
CRANNY W ALSH, Aoife 1703
CRESPO AMAT, Carlos 1517
CRITTEN, Rory 1526, 1626
CROASDAILE, Caroline 241
CROCI, Cassidy 135, 1435
CROENEN, Godfried 315
CROSSLEY, Catherine Megan 523
CROSTINI, Barbara 1106
CUENCA, Esther Liberman 1241, 1441
CUI, Chen 1627
CUNHA, Cristina 1247
CUNNINGHAM, Sean 1119
CURTO PELLE, Ilia 1737
CUSHING, Kathleen 805, 1205
CUSHMAN, H. M. 544
CVETKOVIĆ, Carmen Angela 1009
451
Index of Participants
DÍAZ M ARTÍNEZ, Pablo C. 702
DIEM, Albrecht 509, 809, 1109
DIESEN, Rakel Igland 1144
DIESENBERGER, Maximilian 314, 1008, 1108
DIETL, Cora 843
DIJKDRENT, Mats 1748
DINÇER, Aysu 1017, 1117, 1441
DISCENZA, Nicole Guenther 1038
DITCHBURN, David 1010
DOHERTY, James 116
DONNELLY, Kiera 501
DONOVAN, Bethany 141
DOOLITTLE, Jeffrey 828
DORNBUSCH, Aneke 721
DOROSZEWSKA, Julia 106
DOUDET, Estelle 546, 646, 746, 846
D'OVIDIO, Stefano 1529
DOWS-MILLER, Sebastian 315, 444
DRESCHER, Veronika 232
DRIESHEN, Clarck 1020
DRIMMER, Sonja 1347
DROSSBACH, Gisela 1105
DRYBLAK, Anna 603
DRYBURGH, Paul R. 1119
DUBOURG, Ninon 1228, 1328
DUFFY, Paul 102
DUGAZ, Lucien 546, 646
DUGGAN, Anne J. 1605, 1705
DUJMOVIĆ, Danko 1611
DULSKA, Anna Katarzyna 631
DULSKY, Meghan 1741
DULUȘ, Mircea 513
DUMITRAȘCU, Alessandro Flavio 1303
DUMITRESCU, Andrei 534
DUMONT, Jonathan 1314
DUNCAN, Heather 1226
DUNCAN, James 808
DUNCKER, Dorthe 638
DUNN, Caroline 525
DÜRING, Marten 835, 935
DUSSART, Clément 1530
DUTTA, Parshati 1307
DUTURAEVA, Dilnoza 343
DWYER, Claire 625
DYMOND, Alex 524
DYSON, Gerald P. 1708
DYSON, Iain 1302
DZIEMSKI, Wiktor 1005
DZON, Mary 1226
EBER, Michael 1707
ECKART, Adina 1016
EDBURY, Peter 1739
EDGINGTON, Susan B. 1539
EDHOLM, Matthew Brian 1647
EGEDE-PEDERSEN, Brian 236, 944
EGETENMEYR, Veronika 334, 1122
EGGER, Christoph 332
EHRMANTRAUT, Brigid 1731
EICHBAUER, Melodie H. 1005, 1305
EICHERT, Stefan 935, 1223, 1523
EINBINDER, Susan 642
EISENBERG, Merle 1237
EISENHAUER, Monika Veronika 526
452
EIßING, Thomas 145
ELAGINA, Daria 1343
ELDEVIK, John 819
ELIAS, Yael 829
ÉLIÁS, János 525
ELIASSON, Emil Mård Vaadal 1243
ELICES OCÓN, Jorge 702
ELLIOTT, Andrew B. R. 635, 744, 844
ELLIS NILSSON, Sara 1644, 1744
ELLYTON, Pernille 1628
ELORTZA, Beñat 1704
EMBLETON M ÁRQUEZ, Sergio 620
EMERY, Katherine 1320
EMLYN, Rhun 612
EMOND, Allison 1716
ENE DRAGHICI-VASILESCU, Elena 1737
ENLOW, Loraine 1137
EPURESCU-PASCOVICI, Ionuț 1303
EREN, Özlem 445
ERIKSEN, Stefka G. 1044, 1144, 1244
ERMAN, Burak Veysel 842
ERNAZAROV, Kamil 246
ERNST, Marlene 234, 1114
ERNST, Rachel 120, 420
ERTL, Thomas 1214, 1543, 1643
ESCALONA, Julio 1024, 1124
ESCHER, Julia 830
ESDERS, Stefan 208
ESPOSITO, Laura 1043
ESPOSITO, Marco 1641
ESTRAFALLACES, Nicola 121
EVANS, Hannah S. 1333
EVANS, Michael 544, 844
EVANS, Nicholas J. B. 213, 1015, 1115,
1215, 1315
EVANS TANG, Harriet Jean 1244
EVES, Will 1140
FAESEN, Rob 1721
FAFINSKI, Mateusz 334
FAIRFAX, Tom 135
FANCY, Nahyan 542, 642, 742, 842, 942
FARIA, Tiago Viúla de 718, 1141
FARKAS-HUSSEY, Noémi 1228
FARLEY, Janice 339
FATHY, Brandon H. 1633
FATONA, Buki 1331
FAULKNER, Amy 212, 1038, 1501
FAYMONVILLE, Louise 1628
FEARN, Alison 241
FEARON, Emma 807, 1507
FEITOSA DE AMORIM JUNIOR, Elias 829
FELETTI, Federico 208
FELIZIANI, Andrea 336
FENTON, Cassandra 1735
FENUCCI, Lisa 1745
FERA, Martin 629
FERENCZI, László 1714
FERNANDES, Hermenegildo 1540, 1640
FIASCHETTI, Francesca 515, 915
FIELD, Sean L. 125, 320, 420
FILZWIESER, Roland 1523
FINN-KELCEY, Sally 1010
FIRNHABER-BAKER, Justine 240, 533
Index of Participants
GAMBOLD, Teifion 608
GANGL, Gerlinde 248
GANTNER, Clemens 215, 302, 1609
GARCÍA MORALES, Julia María 127
GARCÍA PIÑAR, Pablo 1642
GARCÍA-VELASCO BERNAL, Rodrigo 940
GARDINER, Eileen 1635
GARNCZARSKA, Magdalena 1222
GARRIGUET-M ATA, José Antonio 802
GASSMANN, Jürg 847
GATEL, Robin 225, 325
GAUL, Niels H. 1116, 1515, 1615
GAY, Louise 324
GEELHAAR, Tim 1504
GEIRSDÓTTIR, Jeanette 1142
GEIS, Lioba 208
GEITZ, Helena 705
GENCE, Ségolène 444, 1332
GENER-MORET, Marc 747
GENGNAGEL, Tessa 444
GENSICKE, Sebastian 1134, 1335
GEORGIEVA, Siyana 243
GEORGIEVOVÁ, Teodora 1741
GEREMIA, Johanna Katharina 1748
GERMANIDOU, Sophia 1117
GERTSMAN, Elina 901
GIARDINI, Marco 834
GIBSON, Kelly 1037
GIDOIN-BARALE, Élodie 333
GILI, Anna 1342, 1442
GILL, Miriam 529
GILLHAMMER, Cosima Clara 721, 820
GINS, Sven 1226, 1326
GINTHER, James R. 1501
GIORDANO, Maria Laura 1617
GIPPIUS, Alexei 1230
GIRONA BERENGUER, Marina 1519, 1619
GIRONA CALVÉ, Alicia 1129
GIVEN-WILSON, Chris 946, 1322, 1534
GLAUSER, Vanessa 846
GLIOZZI-WILKINS, Giulia Maria 527
GLUCHOWSKI, Carolin 521, 621
GNASSO, Alessandro 632, 832, 1232
GNECKOW, Daniel 136
GOBBITT, Thom 936, 1309, 1509, 1609
GODDARD, Richard M. 1117, 1241, 1341,
1441
GODLEWSKA, Patrycja 133
GOŁĄB, Dawid 1716
GOLAN, Nurit 640
GOLDBERG, Eric J. 1108
GOLDEN, Rachel 833
GOLDIE, Matthew Boyd 623
GOLDIN, Masha 1545, 1645
GOLDIN, Simha 1003
GÖLGESIZ-KARACA, Sevtap 1502
GÓMEZ, Miguel 204, 707
GONÇALVES, Fábio 1141
GONZALES, Mary Anne 1733
GONZALEZ, Linda 207
GONZÁLEZ GUTIÉRREZ, Carmen 802
GOODSON, Caroline 401
GOODWIN, Katherine 1120
Participant Index
FIRST, Grzegorz 1046
FIRTH, Matthew 1221
FISHER, Lydia 134
FLANNIGAN, Laura 1119
FLECHNER, Roy 348
FLEINER, Carey 601
FLETCHER, Adam 1302
FLOOD, Victoria 635
FLOWER, Richard 535
FLYNN, Caitlin 1626
FLYNN, William T. 346
FÖLDVÁRI, Sándor 225
FONTAINE-GASTAN, Marie 618
FONTES, João Luís 718
FORAN, Susan 946
FORBES, Alastair 1204, 1304
FORD, Abigail 241, 1026
FORD, Susan 140
FORD, Thomas 1037
FORDE, Jamie 1347
FORKE, Robert 420
FORNESS, Philip Michael 1147
FORREST, Stephanie 1015
FOURNIER, Eric 602
FOX, Madeline 827
FOX, Yaniv 309, 509, 1618
FOYS, Martin 801, 945
FRANCE, John 104, 504
FRANCKAERTS, Nathalie 141
FRANKE, Daniel 116, 416, 1448
FRANKLIN-LYONS, Adam 1322
FREDERICK, Jill A. 801
FREDETTE, Anthony J. 1531
FREEDMAN, Marci 139, 239, 339, 439, 739
FREEMAN, Elizabeth 1139
FRENCH, Morvern 1412
FREUDENHAMMER, Thomas 237
FREY, Daniel 1014
FRIED, Alexandra 529
FRIEDIRCH, Jacek 1401
FRIEDMAN, Sarah 507
FRIEDRICH, Robert 105, 205, 305
FRIGHETTO, Vittorio 1229
FROJMOVIC, Eva 543
FROST, Michael 806
FRY, Sarah 139, 239
FÜHRER, Sonja 1114
FÜHRER, Veronika 347
FULTON, Helen 126, 226, 1535, 1703
FURIO, Antoni 310, 410
FURLAN, Elisa 832
GAENS, Tom 531, 1039
GAGARINA, Vera 814
GAITE, Pierre 1639
GALASSO, Serena 1016
GALLANT, Denva 329
GALLIMORE, Ellen 1025
GALLUZZI, Nicolò 1620
GALSTYAN, Anahit 1315
GAŁUSZKA, Tomasz 125
GALVIN, James 1541
GAMBERINI, Roberto 314
GAMBERT-JOUAN, Anabelle 1729
453
Index of Participants
GOPALAKRISHNAN, Pratima 711, 1137
GORBY, Alexis 115
GORINI GONZALEZ, Diego 221
GOULD, Ethan 1012
GOWER, Catherine 1130
GRABOWSKI, Antoni 1538, 1638, 1738
GRAMSCH-STEHFEST, Robert 1, 435
GRANT, Lindy 733
GRANT, Tom 344
GRAVEL, Martin 1339
GREAVES, Abigail 1042
GREEN, Andrew 533
GREEN, David 1130
GREEN, Kathryn 725
GREEN, Monica 542, 642, 742, 842, 942
GREENE, Thomas A. E. 138
GREER, Sarah 130, 230
GRÉGOR, Thierry 1730
GREULE, Anne 105, 1506
GRIFFIN, Sarah 1347
GRIFONI, Cinzia 114, 214, 314
GRIGOLI, Leland Renato 1240
GRIGORYAN, Samvel 213
GRÖGER, Sven Michael 1145, 1732
GRÖMER, Karina 1233
GROSE, Becca 109, 209, 309
GROSS, Anthony 340
GROSSI, Joseph 1302
GRUBER, Elisabeth 1203
GRUNDMANN, Christina 221
GRÜNWALD, Korbinian 1014
GRYPEOU, Emmanouela 206
GU, Run 1116
GUAL SILVA, Carolina 1105
GUARNERI, Cristiano 1211, 1311
GUDELJ, Jasenka 1011, 1111, 1211, 1311
GUEPET, Haley 231
GUÉRIN, Sarah M. 611
GUERRA, Luiz Felipe Anchieta 844
GUÉVILLE, Estelle 341, 444
GUIDO, Alessandra 522
GUILIANO, Zachary Morgan 832
GULCE, Munevver 1240
GÜLEÇYÜZ, Mehmet Emin 842
GUMY, Chloé 646
GUNNLAUGSSON, Emil 1544
GÜNTHER, Sven 1306
GUTGARTS, Anna 1416
GYÖNKI, Viktória 1036
GYÖRKÖS, Attila 1625
HABERFIELD, Catrin 444, 945
HÄCHLER, Nikolas 1542
HAGAN, Kieran 622
HAGEDORN, Suzanne C. 239
HÄGGLUND, Anna-Stina 1234, 1334
HAHN, Michael 1621
HÅKANSSON, Julia 1644
HALEVI, Shai 1530
HALL, Alaric 201, 301, 1701
HALLQUIST, Sommer L. 1229
HALSTED, Chris 324
HALVADWALA, Sakina 339
HAMILTON, Andrew William 141
454
HAMMOND, Matthew H. 135, 235, 335, 1435
HAMPSON, Louise A. 1633
HAN, Nan 233
HANAGHAN, Michael 218
HANE, J. R. 816
HANNE, Eric J. 118
HANSEN, Anne Mette 638
HARDMAN, Elizabeth 510, 610
HARIGA, Florina Rodica 1048
HARKES, Rachael 710, 1743
HARLAND, James M. 334
HARLAN-HAUGHEY, Sarah 1331
HARMON, Clare Louise 804
HARR III, James B. 444
HARRINGTON, Jesse 733
HARRIS, Joshua E. 1532
HARRIS, Nichola 437, 1128
HARRIS, Susanna 1133
HARROWER, Scott 720
HÄRTEL, Stefan 516
HARTMANN, Sieglinde 637
HARTRICH, Eliza 740, 1341, 1441
HATCHETT, Ben 643, 824
HAUG, Brendan 1126
HAUG, Henrike 1245
HAUGLID, Kjartan 1044
HAVERKAMP-ROTT, Eva 514
HAWKES, Jane 1338
HAWKINS, Alfred 1102
HAY, Miriam 608
HAYES, Amy 1112
HAYRAPETYAN, Piruza 227
HEATH, Christopher 1309, 1509, 1609
HECKLER, Ron 636
HECKMAN, Christina M. 217
HEIDEMANN, Stefan 702
HEIL, Uta 114, 334
HEILES, Marco 831
HELLA, Anni 1104
HELLEMANS, Babette 431, 1227, 1327
HELVÉTIUS, Anne-Marie 509, 1239, 1339
HENDERSON-ROCHE, Emilia 1728
HENLEY, Georgia 403
HENNEQUIN, M. Wendy 501, 601
HENRY-NOEL, Darren 704
HEOR, Woo Ree 648
HERMANN, Jonas 1621
HERNÁNDEZ VERA, René 532, 632, 732, 832
HERRICK, Samantha Kahn 819
HERTOGH, Tim 628
HESLOP, Kate 1032
HEWETT, Mark 733
HEYDEN, Katharina 1127, 1719
HEYNE, Jon Paul 539, 639
HEYWOOD, Susie 533
HICKS, Leonie V. 540, 1002, 1602
HIGGINS, Andrew 944, 1236, 1336, 1536,
1636, 1736
HIGGS, Jasmin 236, 1042, 1142
HILLNER, Julia 1021
HILTMANN, Torsten 315
HINZ-WIECZOREK, Lidia 1506
HIRSCH, Hadas 1702
Index of Participants
IRANNEJAD, Shahrzad 542
IRELAND, Colin A. 1248
IRWIN, Dean A. 119
ISERIEF, Huib P. R. 1001, 1101
ISLAM, Sarah 1719
ISSAR, Lucky 1507
ITO, Marie D'Aguanno 310, 410
IVIĆ, Ines 1011, 1311
JACKEL, Christina 337
JACKSON, Claire Rachel 513
JACKSON, Sarah-Nelle 636, 903
JACOBOWITZ-EFRON, Leon 1137
JACOBS, Crescida 725
JACOBY, Leslie 1110
JAEKEN, Hanne 146
JAGOŠ, Anna 1525
JAKOBSEN, Johnny Grandjean Gøgsig 1234
JAMIESON, Callum A. 534, 634, 834
JAMROZIAK, Emilia 142, 203, 414, 714,
1039, 1516
JANEŠ, Andrej 1611
JANKAU, Jerzy 1301, 1401
JANOVSKÁ, Viktorie 1514
JANOVSKÝ, Martin 1514
JANSENS, Nicolas 1614
JAQUET, Daniel 1348
JARITZ, Gerhard 141, 341, 414, 1041, 1203
JÁUREGUI, Clara 1619
JEBE, Johanna 1732
JELINOWSKI, Jan 615
JENKINS, John 239, 339, 439
JENNINGS, Robyn 1707
JENSEN, Kurt Villads 104, 204, 304, 1027
JEŻ, Jan 1625
JEZIERSKI, Wojtek 1504, 1704
JOBSON, Adrian 625
JOHN, Alison 1709
JOHN, Caitlin 518
JOHNSON, Hannah Victoria 1727
JOHNSON, Ian R. 1646, 1746
JOHNSON, Tom 510, 710
JOHNSTON, Elva 1248
JOLLY, Karen L. 903
JONES, Bee 526, 943, 1026
JONES, Elle 1622
JONES, Grant 1204, 1304
JONES, Marcus 717
JONES, Nia Wyn 712, 812
JONES, Peter J. A. 204
JONES, Robert W. 847
JONES, Susan Frances 129
JONES, Toby 715, 915
JONG, Mayke de 308, 1337, 1508
JORDAN, Delila 1709
JORDAN, Erin L. 830
JØRGENSEN, Dolly 1326
JOTISCHKY, Andrew T. 439
JOUIS, Thibault 1624
JOVANOVIĆ, Neven 1111
JUAREZ, Amy Danielle 1328
JUDSON, Andrew 1320
JUGĂNARU, Andra 1143
JÚLÍUSSON, Árni Daníel 1544
Participant Index
HIRTNER, Gerald 234
HÖCKELMANN, Michael 1615
HODER, Manuel 637
HODGKINSON, Jessica 1321, 1438
HODGMAN, Scott 1536
HODGSON, Natasha Ruth 1216, 1316, 1416,
1616
HOEL, Nikolas O. 534
HOFER, Katharina M. 137
HOFF, Renske 621
HOFFMAN, Dean A. 1136
HOFMANOVÁ, Zuzana 302
HÖHN, Maximilian 1542
HOIJINCK, Cathrien 817
HOLLICK, Bernhard 134, 1306
HOLLIS, Crystal 241
HOLM, Nicola 535, 613, 709, 808
HOLMES, Catherine 343, 813
HOLMQVIST, Karen Langsholt 1044
HÖLZLHAMMER, Lilli 1526
HOMMEDAL, Alf Tore 1144
HOOGERWERF, Cornelis 1147
HOORENMAN, Johanna 344
HOOSEIN, Nausheen 504
HOPE, Steffen 603
HOPE, Trevor 607
HOPE-JONES, Amelia 329
HOPWOOD, Natalie 643
HORDEN, Peregrine 528, 948, 1043
HORECZY, Anna 122, 222, 322
HORNBY, Emma C. 717
HORNÍČKOVÁ, Kateřina 203, 303
HORTON-INSCH, Millie 745, 845, 1033
HOSKIN, Philippa 1034
HOUGHTON, Robert 536, 636, 736, 836, 936
HREINSSON, Haraldur 1632
HUBBERT, Jake 1015
HUGILL, Andrea 1312
HUI, Jonathan 344
HUIG, Emma 1206
HUMBLE, Geoffrey 515, 615, 715, 815, 915
HUMPHRIES, Mark 535, 1709
HUNTER, David 206
HUQ, Sabiha 307
HURLOCK, Kathryn 139, 239, 439, 739, 839,
1316
HUSSAIN, Amina 107
HUSSEY, Matthew 403, 903
HYER, Maren Clegg 1231
HYLAND, William P. 531
IACOCCA, Vanessa K. 236
IANNACE, Arturo Mariano 836
IBOS-AUGÉ, Anne 346
IBRAHIM, Yasmin 1048
ICKS, Martijn 1206
IGNATOVA, Polina 1126
IHNAT, Kati 517, 617, 717, 817
ILIA, Marina 248
ILKO, Krisztina 211
IMMONEN, Teemu 1104
INGRAND-VARENNE, Estelle 1530, 1630, 1730
INSLEY, Charles 338, 1248
IONESCU, Ilinca-Simona 1146
455
Index of Participants
JUNG, Elżbieta 726
JUNGE RUHLAND, Johannes 1246, 1538
JURIĆ, Matea 1611
JUSTO SÁNCHEZ, Daniel 1324
KAAL, Thomas Hendrik 818
KABALA, Jakub 247
KAEMPFER, Lucie 1627
KAFFENBERGER, Thomas 629
KALFA-ATAKLI, Başak 1209
KALLA, Sebastian 328
KAMBOUR, Zoey 1048
KAMIEŃ, Joanna 1301, 1401
KAMMERER, Adrian 225
KAMMERER, Lorenz 604
KAMMERLANDER, Maria-Elena 305, 1235
KANERVA, Kirsi 1244
KANGAS, Sini 104, 304, 704
KAPITAN, Katarzyna Anna 538, 638, 738,
838, 945, 1447
KAPLAN, S. C. 532, 1246
KARDASZ, Cezary 610
KARHU, Juuso 1004
KARIKOME, Hitoshi 1516
KARKOVIĆ TAKALIĆ, Palma 1611
KASCHKE, Sören 108
KASKA, Katharina 332
KATZ, Dana 702
KAUFMAN, Alexander L. 1136
KEDAR, Yael 626, 926
KEE, John 713
KEENE, Huw 839
KELLAS, Kim 1635
KELLEY, Anna C. 1018, 1118, 1218, 1318
KELLY, Adam 242, 342, 442
KELLY, Michael J. 109
KELLY, Sophie 1533
KELLY, Stephen 1332
KEMP, Ryan 524, 1524
KENNAN, Claire 541
KENNEDY, Hugh 210, 1511
KENNEDY, Kathleen E. 1020
KENNEDY, Scott 1116
KEPSHA, Andrii 1304
KERN-STÄHLER, Annette 1129
KERR, Sarah 1002
KERSEY, Harriet 525, 625, 725, 825
KERSH, Kara 1220
KESKIAHO, Jesse 609
KESLING, Emily 1438
KESSELS, Geert 935
KIKUCHI, Shigeto 308
KILCI, Gulsen 715
KILLICK, Helen K. S. 240
KILLILEA, Alison Elizabeth 441
KILTZANIDOU, Katerina 1307
KIMPTON, Frederick 1622, 1722
KINDER, Terryl N. 102, 202, 1139
KING, Andy 340, 1012, 1112, 1212, 1312,
1412
KING, Christopher 1241, 1441
KING, Vanessa Jane 1221
KIRCHHOFF, Chassica 647
KIRSH, Ella 508, 608, 708, 808
456
KISOR, Yvette 1336
KJÆR, Lars 1504
KLAFTER, Einat 221, 421, 1621
KLANICZAY, Gábor 414, 603
KLAPPER, Robert 1042
KLEINEKE, Hannes 1019, 1119
KLINCK, Nathalie 602
KLÍR, Tomáš 1514, 1614
KNEUPPER, Frances Courtney 131
KNIGHT, Fiona Lillian 437, 507, 1128, 1442
KNIGHT, Gwendolyne 124, 244, 804, 1710
KNIGHT, Katrina 124
KNÖPGES, Antonia Pia 1542
KNOWLES, Emma 126, 226, 326
KOBAYASHI, Asami 834
KOCZARSKI, Zdzisław 322
KOENDERS, Annelynn 146
KOLDITZ, Sebastian 238, 1013
KOŁODZIEJCZAK, Piotr 1334
KONARSKA-ZIMNICKA, Sylwia 803
KONG, Defangyu 1615
KONG, Katherine 833
KONG, Xurong 1528
KOOH, Mitchell 1336
KÖRNTGEN, Ludger 604, 705
KORTEN, Meghan 1333
KOSCHIČEK-KROMBHOLZ, Bernhard 1623
KOVÁCS, Lenke 843
KRAMER, Rutger 809, 1022, 1618
KRAMMER, Herbert 1014
KRAS, Paweł 125, 303, 948
KRÄTSCHMER, Marco 216
KRAWCZYK, Dariusz 546
KREBS, Verena 511, 611, 699, 711, 811
KREMER, Jan 736
KRISTÓF, Ilona 122
KROTZ, Elke 1128
KRUG, Ilana 1148, 1448, 1713
KUBARTOVÁ, Eliška 843
KUBINA, Krystina 606
KUHN, Matthias 638
KULHA, Rahul 1314
KULINICH, Alena 143
KUMAR, Avantika 845
KURELIĆ, Robert 1203
KURIAN, Erin 217, 541
KURTOĞLU, Ferhat Sezer 118
KYPTA, Ulla 137, 1543, 1643
LABORANTI, Giulia 805
LACEY, Eric 212
LACEY, Helen 240, 340, 1534, 1712
LACOMME, Thomas 510
LADEFOGED, Anne 1232
LAGARDE, Edith 1716
LAGERGREN, Karin 806
LAHEY, Stephanie J. 538
LAHEY, Stephen 703
LALA, Etleva 1203
LAMBE, Simon 530, 930
LAMMINAHO, Jutta 628
LAMY, Claire 1219
LANG, Heinrich 1016
Index of Participants
LING, Stephen Michael 1708
LIPPIATT, Gregory 411
LIPPOLD, Eva 1536
LIS, Kinga 621
LIS, Tomasz 714
LISIECKI, Marcin 714
LISS, Hanna 1137
LISTER, Iona 201
LISTON-KRAFT, Philip 637
LIU, Ming 1537
LIVINGSTON, Michael 1448
LIVINGSTONE, Amy 1742
LIZNERSKI, Lena-Mareike 1207
LJUNGAR, Wilhelm 323
LO PIANO, Michael 222, 322
LODONE, Michele 131
LOGEMANN, Cornelia 1245
LONG, Micol 431, 1029, 1129, 1229, 1329
LONGO, Gaetano 1143
LOPEZ, Mariana 140, 536, 636, 736, 836,
936
LÓPEZ, Maria 1030
LÓPEZ GÓMEZ, José Carlos 602
LÓPEZ JUAN, Guillermo 1519
LÓPEZ M ARTÍNEZ, Sergio 441
LÓPEZ PÉREZ, María Dolores 1317
LÓPEZ SÁNCHEZ, Fernando 516
LORDEN, Jennifer 101
LORÉ, Vito 1224
LOSS, Edward Dettmam 1604
LOUD, Graham A. 216, 416
LOUVIOT, Elise 441
LOVE, Rosalind 1603
LUBELLO, Maria 708
LUBICH, Gerhard 330
LUCKHARDT, Courtney 819, 1022
LUMMER, Felix 244, 1146
LUND, Olov 1344
LUNGA, Peter 1243
LUNN-ROCKLIFFE, Sophie 106
LUTTER, Christina 203, 1014
LUTTON, Rob 1746
LYON, Jonathan 1013
LYSÉN, Karl 323
M ACAULAY, Donal John Angus 530
M ACCARRON, Máirín 1132, 1238, 1435
M ACDONALD, Alastair 1012, 1412
M ACDONALD, Eve 516, 616, 1006, 1206
M ACDONALD, Zack 541
M ACHADO, Maria Eduarda 926, 1031
M ACHALSKI, Michał 224
M ACKENZIE, Hannah 1343
M ACKS, Aaron 1447
M ACWHIRTER, Liz 140
M ADDALENA, Alicia 1032
M ADDOCK, Susan 1241
M ADORÉ, Sara 1635
M AGLI, Elena 1348
M AGNANI, Eliana 1040
M AGNANI, Roberta 1512
M AGNANTI, Elisabetta 1302, 1447
M AGOULA-BAMFORD, Olga 1313
M AHAFFY, Caitlin 648
Participant Index
LANGLEY, Amanda 121, 221, 321, 421,
1521, 1621
ŁAPTAŚ, Magdalena 803
LARA GRANERO, Alba 1242, 1442
LARANJINHA, Ana Sofia 537
LARIVIERE, Katie Jo 927
LARPI, Luca 124
LARSEN, Kristine 1236, 1636
LASAUSSE, Lysiane 1744
LATHAM, Chris 244, 1146
LATHAM, Jacob 1209
LATHAM-SPRINKLE, John 1115
LAU, Maximilian 411, 1313
LAVELLE, Ryan 624
LAWRENCE, Jonathan 1007
LAWSON, Helen 1136
LAWTON, Isaac 1712
LAYNESMITH, Joanna Louise 1701
LAYNESMITH, Mark David 720
LAZZARINI, Isabella 1135
LEBZELTER, Michael 1732
LEE, Kang Hahn 1604
LEE-NIINIOJA, Hee Sook 1723
LEES, Clare A. 101
LEES, David Iain 231, 331
LEGKIKH, Victoria 532
LEHNERTZ, Andreas 319, 419, 1310
LEIDHOLM, Nathan 1720
LEIGHTON, Gregory J. 323, 1639
LEITE, Mariana 1740
LEJA, Meg 628
LEJOSNE, Cassandre 1015
LEMKE, Benedikt 108
LEMMER, Jan 230
LENART, Mirosław 222
LENCART, Joana 1247
LENEGHAN, Francis 1038, 1138, 1438
LENZO, Antonio 701
LEÓN MUÑOZ, Alberto 802
LEONARD, Fergal 1212, 1412
LEONARD, Victoria 1308
LEONG, Amanda Caterina 1125
LEONTE, Florin 203
LEPINE, David 1541, 1741
LEPPIN, Volker 1047, 1145
LESTER, Molly 109, 517
L'ESTRANGE, Elizabeth 1346
LEUBE, Georg 606
LEUNG, Maybelle 146
LEV, Yaacov 118
LEWIS, Barry James 712
LEWIS, Chris 128, 529, 624, 724, 1524,
1624, 1724
LEWIS, Katherine J. 340, 536, 836, 936,
1312, 1534, 1712
LEWIS, Michael John 1745
LEYENDECKER, Dominik 308
LIDDY, Christian 740, 1743
LIENDO, Elizabeth 445
LIFSHITZ, Joseph Isaac 543, 1003
LIN, Sihong 213
LINDE, Cornelia 105, 205, 305, 1306
LINDSTEDT, Samira 1547
457
Index of Participants
M AHOOD, Harriet 1533, 1633
M AI, Yinwen 1034
M AJOROS-DUNNAHOE, Christie 1739
M AJOROSSY, Judit 203, 303
M AKIN, Alexandra 1033, 1133, 1233, 1333
M AKLEFF, Ron 526
M AKRYPOULIAS, Christos G. 113
M ALANÍKOVÁ, Michaela Antonín 203, 303,
414
M ALASPINA, Matilde 632
M ALESEVIC, Filip 1201
M ALOY, Rebecca 109, 517, 817
M AMMADOVA, Sama 810
M ANCIA, Lauren 1524
M ANCINI, Andrea 721
M ANIA, Judith 1127
M ANIOTIS, Errikos 747
M ANOR, Hila 1545, 1645
M ANTOUVALOU, Panagiota 1737
M ANZANO MORENO, Eduardo 243, 1018, 1318
M ARCÉ SÁNCHEZ, Jaume 348, 519, 619
M ARCH, Ellie 134
M ARCHIORI, Silvia Maria 1718
M ARCU, Claudia 1001
M ARÍ BRULL, Gerard 1317
M ARIANI, Andrea 1309
M ARINKOVIĆ, Ana 1011, 1311
M ARSCHNER, Patrick 1008
M ARSHALL, John 1010
M ARTIN, Rachel 1225
M ARTIN, Silvina 202
M ARTIN, Tim 1304
M ARTÍN RODRÍGUEZ, Alicia 1024
M ARTÍN VISO, Iñaki 1024, 1124, 1224, 1324
M ARTÍNEZ M ARTÍNEZ, Teresa 117
M ARTINS, Diana 718
M ARX, Alexander 1045, 1216
M ARZELLA, Francesco 1603
M ASELLI, Matteo 827
M ASSACCESI, Fabio 1529, 1629
M ATHEOU, Nicholas 1115, 1215
M ATHISEN, Ralph 348
M ATIĆ, Tomislav 1611
M ATIS, Hannah W. 631
M ATOS GOMES, Maria Joana 1110, 1740
M ATTHEWS, Adam C. 1742
M ATTHEWS, Erik 1633
M ATTIELO, Andrea 1018
M AUDE, Kathryn 1007, 1446, 1512
M AUNTEL, Christoph 623, 723
M AURER, Thomas 1028
M AUREY, Yossi 819
M AVROMATIDIS, Savvas 1630
M AWDSLEY, Harry 1208, 1308
M AYER, Olivia 1235, 1335
MCCART, Jack W. 1733
MCCLEERY, Iona 1343, 1443
MCDERMOTT, Nicholas 1739
MCDONAGH, Patrick 1010
MCDONALD, Grantley 1314
MCGREGOR, Kate 1212
MCGUINNESS, Shaun David 612
MCHALE, James Edward 807
458
MCHUGH, Jennifer 224
MCILWRATH HURST, Jennifer 544
MCKEAGNEY, Sarah 510, 610, 710, 810,
1325, 1507
MCKELVIE, Gordon 1012, 1212, 1412
MCKITTERICK, Rosamond 1008
MCMAHON, Lucas 739
MCNAIR, Fraser 719
MCNAMEE, Megan 329, 1347
MCRAE, Joan E. 1346
MCRAE, Kelly 1112
MCSHEFFREY, Shannon 841
MCSWEENEY, Thomas 940, 1205, 1340
MEADES, Nathan 533, 633
MEEDER, Sven 1237, 1748
MEEHAN, Edward 1508
MEEK, Christine E. 741
MEENS, Rob 308, 1337
MEIER, Joschka 1123
MELE, Valentina 627
MELO DA SILVA, Gonçalo 317, 1717
MENDYK, Joanna 1204
MENMUIR, Rebecca 1531, 1631, 1731
MENZE, Volker 502
MEREMINSKIY, Stanislav 1232
MERENDEIRO, Cristina 630
MERLO, Brian James 544
MERRINGTON, John 508
MEŠKO, Marek 1148
MEYRICK, Nicola 1518
MEZIHORÁKOVÁ, Klára 303
MIAO, Xiaojing 1527
MICAL, Thomas 943
MICCI, Michael 725
MICHAILIDIS, George 238
MICHAUD, Marisa 732
MICHAUD, Noah 111
MICHEL, Cédrik 709
MICHELLI, Peter Michael 318
MICHELUZZI, Gerd 229
MIDSON, Cheryl 733
MIERKE, Gesine 748, 848
MIGLIAZZO, Francesco 1718
MIKAELSDÓTTIR, Katrín Lísa L 1728
MILENKOVIĆ, Dunja 522
MILES, Laura Saetveit 221, 1020, 1120
MILLÁN DA COSTA, Adelaide 317, 1717
MILLER, James Drysdale 138
MILLER, Peter Gerard 613
MILLER RENBERG, Lynneth 1025
MILLS, Marisa 812
MIMOUN, Alexander 119
MINER, Jeffrey 822
MINIER, Solène 518
MIQUEL MILIAN, Laura 420, 619
MIRIANASHVILI, Lado 1115
MISCHKE, Britta 208
MISSAGIA, Andrea 1011
MISSONI, Ivan 1227
MITALAITÉ, Kristina 1608
MITREA, Mihail 318
MITSIOU, Ekaterini 118, 313
MIYAMOTO, Gabriella 847
Index of Participants
NATISHAN, Kate 944
NAVARRO-COSTA, Pol 519
NEAL, Kathleen 1135
NEIJMAN, Thomas 235
NEKHAENKO, Fedor 1710
NELIDOFF, Ludmila 618
NELSTROP, Louise 421, 1721
NETÍK, Mikuláš 216
NEUBERT, Charlotte 1743
NEUENKIRCHEN, Paul 1719
NEUHAUSER, Arie 813
NEUPER, Wolfgang 234
NEVILLE, Jennifer 201, 301
NEWIS, Millicent-Rose 1039
NEYRA, Andrea Vanina 1041
NIBLAEUS, Erik G. 330, 620
NICHOLSON, Helen 1739
NICOLUSSI-KÖHLER, Stephan 1214
NICOSIA, Mara 1715
NICOVICH, Mark 1223
NIETO-ISABEL, Delfi I. 120, 220, 320, 420,
943
NIKAJ, Irena 1217
NIKIFOROVA, Sofya 218
NISA, João Rafael 317
NISSE, Ruth 543
NJÅSTAD, Magne 1544
NOBILI, Mauro 1343, 1443
NOLAN, Simon F. 305
NORRIS, Ophelia 821
NORTON, Alison 1002, 1102, 1502, 1602
NOURSE, Ben 1347
NOUTSOU, Stamatia 120, 420, 526
NOVARA, Paola 506
NOVASIO, Stephanie 1118
NOVIKOFF, Alex 419
NOVOTNY, Therese 729
NOVOTNÝ, František 1706
NSIRI, Mohamed-Arbi 645
NÜLLEN, Hanna 740
NUR, Ahmed Tahir 842, 942
NUTT, Jessica 736
NYZELL, Stefan 1644, 1744
OANCA RUSET, Monica 246
OBERMEIER, Anita 107, 207, 307
O'DONNELL, Maeve Marta 148, 617
O'DONOVAN, Edmond 102
ODSTRČILÍK, Jan 738, 1447
O'DUFFY, Grace Elizabeth 242, 342, 442
OGDEN, Jack 1545
OGILBY, Kirsten 1636
OĞUZ, Anil Yasin 515
OHNUKI, Toshio 631, 1516
OING, Michelle 526
OLAIA, Inês 630, 1425
OLDFIELD, Paul 822
OLGUN, Zeynep 113, 713
OLIŃSKI, Piotr 503, 614, 803, 1046, 1103
OLIVEIRA, António 547
OLIVEIRA DA SILVA, André Filipe 642, 942,
1141
OLIVEIRA E SILVA, Maria João 1247
OLIVEIRA E SILVA, Paula 926, 1031, 1131
Participant Index
MIYAMOTO, Mina 327
MOCCHI, Pietro 1035, 1135
MÖDLINGER, Marianne 629
MOENS, Robin 1134
MOFFAT, Ralph 647
MOFFETT, Louise 112
MOHAMMED, Sarmad Majeed 207
MOLINARI, Alessandra 147
MOLINS, Marta Cristina Oria de Rueda 1148
MOLONEY, Lucy 530
MOLVAREC, Stephen J. 531, 1039
MONTAUBIN, Pascal 1605
MONTEIRO, Pedro 537
MONTESANO, Marina 144
MONTPETIT, Mathilde 811
MONTROSO, Alan 1326
MOORE, Andrew 541
MOORE, Tony 310, 410
MORAL DE CALATRAVA, Paloma 1342
MORAWSKA, Karolina 503
MORETTI, Debora 144
MORGAN, Geraint 1026, 1126
MORGAN, Reed 133
MORIN, Thomas P. 1716
MORRÁS, María 1107
MORREALE, Laura K. 822, 935
MORRISSETTE, Katheryne 601
MORTON, James 1340
MORTON, Jonathan 826, 926
MORTON, Nicholas E. 1502, 1639
MÖSCH, Sophia 609
MOSCONE, Sara 1127
MOSSONG, Isabelle 1518
MOSTERT, Marco 548, 821, 1048, 1303
MOTIS DOLADER, Miguel Ángel 1619
MOURE LÓPEZ, Sara 248
MOUSNIER-LOMPRÉ, Jenne 1107
MOWRY, Ruthann 336
MOŻEJKO, Beata 414, 803, 1103, 1301,
1401, 1625
MUČALO, Nataša 110
MÜLLER, Miriam 844
MULLETT, Margaret E. 1206
MULLEY, Clare 1727
MUNNERY, Rowan 1223
MUNT, Harry 210
MURAT, Zuleika 1029, 1129, 1229, 1329
MURAVIEV, Alexey 1147
MURRAY, Alan V. 116, 216, 316, 416, 1416
MURRAY, Jacqueline 1707
MUSARRA, Antonio 1705
MUSTO, Ronald 1735
MUTLOVÁ, Petra 122
MYERSON, Eleanor 1531
MYKING, Synnøve Midtbø 232, 332
MYRNE, Pernilla 1007
MYŚLIWIEC, Katarzyna 744
NAKAYA, So 510
NAPOLITANO, Frank M. 1642
NASR, Rafca 1216
NASSAN AGHA, Joud 502
NASSAR, Sari 1317
NATIS, Mercury 944
459
Index of Participants
OLSEN, Karin 601
OLSEN, Kenna L. 648, 1327
OLSHANETSKY, Haggai 616
OMMUNDSEN, Åslaug 232, 332
OMRAN, Doaa 107, 207, 307, 1307
ÖNALAN, Hava 311
OPALIŃSKA, Monika Maria 1547
OPSAHL, Erik 806, 1344
O'REILLY, Ronan 304
ORTEGA, Isabelle 1216
ORTON, Brittany 1025, 1125, 1225, 1325
OSORIO, Jose 1340
OSTACCHINI, Luisa 226
OSTI, Letizia 1106
OTTEWILL-SOULSBY, Sam 215
OUERFELLI, Mohamed 233, 1610
OUTHWAITE, Patrick 614, 703
OWADA, Sydney 1325
OWEN, Grace 128
OWEN-CROCKER, Gale 333, 743, 801
ØYSTESE, Martin 1243
OZAWA, Minoru 1699
OZBAS, Selena 1646
ÖZSOY, Nusret Burak 729
PAC, Grzegorz 603
PACHÁ, Paulo 109, 502, 802
PAGE, Daniel Bennett 129
PAJOR, Piotr 1046
PALMA, Giulia Maria 1109
PALMEIRA, Gonçalo 1130
PALMER, Áine 833
PALMER, Caroline 948
PALMER, James A. 1104
PALMER, James T. 828
PALMISANO, Abigail 321
PALOZZI, Luca 229
PAMER, Tobias 1214
PANARO, Luca Arruns 836
PANCINI, Marialaura 527
PANSE-BULCHWALTER, Melanie 136
PANUŠKOVÁ, Lenka 345
PANZRAM, Sabine 802
PAPACONSTANTINOU, Arietta S. 1318
PAPEŠ, Karla 1011
PARDON, Mireille Juliette 707, 1441
PARKHOUSE, James 1032
PARSONS, Katelin Marit 1628
PASCALE, Giuseppe 709
PASCUA ECHEGARAY, Esther 1617
PASTRNAK, Patrik 730, 930, 1525, 1625,
1725
PATAŁA, Agnieszka 127
PATT, Rachel Catherine 115
PATZOLD, Steffen 108, 1108
PATZUK-RUSSELL, Ryder C. 1234
PAUL, Marcel J. 1542
PAWLOWSKI, Mark 113
PEARCE, Jennifer Mary 804
PEDERSEN, Frederik 1305
PEDERSEN, Susann Anett 1544
PELAZ FLORES, Diana 1425
PEŁECH, Tomasz 230
PELOSI, Daniele 1111
460
PENNA, Daphne 1520
PENNIMAN, John 728
PEPE, Moss 1225
PEPPER, Gwendoline 1133
PERCZEL, István 1143
PEREA RODRÍGUEZ, Óscar 1617
PÉREZ VIDAL, Mercedes 532, 732
PERINO, Michela 214
PERIS BOLTA, Laura 610
PERISANIDI, Maroula 1118
PERNIGOTTI, Carlo 1520
PERREAUX, Nicolas 1040
PERRY, Craig 711
PERRY, Megan Renz 1138
PERRY, Ryan 1332, 1746
PERSHYN, Yaroslav 1120
PETERS, Bart 604
PETERS, Chloe Anne 1326
PETERSEN, Leif Inge Ree 1613
PETERSON, Anna M. 437, 942, 1128, 1242,
1342, 1442
PETRIZZO, Francesca 640, 1043
PETRUKHINA, Tatiana 1305
PETTS, David 903
PEUKER, Miriam 105
PHILLIPS, Joanna 1043
PHILLIPS, Susan 1618
PICKARD, Charlotte 525, 625, 725, 825
PIETERSMA, Miente 731
PIGNOT, Matthieu 609, 1308
PIHKO, Saku 220
PILSWORTH, Laura 930
PINE, Savannah 507
PINHO, Maria 807
PIÑOL-ALABART, Daniel 519
PINTO, Ana Catarina 1247
PINTO, Karen 723
PINTO-COSTA, Paula 104, 204
PIRES, Ana Elisabete 1141
PITTMAN, Josh 548
PJECHA, Martin 703
PODKOŃSKI, Robert 726
POGĂCIAȘ, Andrei 614
POHL, Walter 302, 1108
POKORNY, Lea D. 1628, 1728
POLKOWSKI, Marcin 521
POLLOCZEK, Veronika 234
POLLONI, Nicola 626, 926
POLONI, Camilla 214
PÖLZL, Michaela 248
POMBERGER, Beate Maria 1233
POMBO RIAL, Alejandro 1224
POPOVIĆ, Mihailo 1623, 1723
PORCIANI, Teresa 1338
PORTER, Dot 838, 1447
POTENZA, Francesca 1720
POTOČNJAK, Saša 632
POTTHOFF, Hannah 748
PÖTZSCH, Pauline 848
POWELL, Alaric 804
POWELL, Austin 539, 639
POWELL, Pam 1241, 1341, 1441
POWER, Amanda 142, 217
Index of Participants
REYNOLDS, Daniel K. 1118, 1218
REZAKHANI, Khodadad 132, 348
RHODES, Hilary 1607
RICCARDO, Katia 1606
RICE, Joshua 437, 1128
RICH-ABAD, Anna 1017, 1519, 1619
RICHARD DALSACE, Julie 823
RICHARDS, Nina 1523
RIDEAU-KIKUCHI, Catherine 518
RIEDEL, Dagmar Anne 147
RIEDLER-POHLERS, Astrid 514
RIEKERT, Jörg-Peter 145
RIEMENSCHNEIDER, Jakob 334
RISBERG, Sara 1027
RISCO DE LA TORRE, Meritxell 1527, 1627,
1727
RIST, Rebecca A. C. 534, 834
ROACH, Levi 719
ROACH, Shauna 810
ROBERTS, Edward 805
ROBERTSON, Kellie 826
ROBINSON, Emily 1612
ROBINSON, Olivia 1346
ROCCHI, Vania 1109
ROCHE, Jason T. 116, 416, 1216, 1316,
1416, 1716
ROCHE, Thomas 538
ROCKWELL, David 113
RODRIGUES, Ana Maria S. A. 1425
RODRIGUES, André Moutinho 734
RODRIGUES, Teresa 1037
RODRIGUES, Vera 1031
RODRÍGUEZ AVILA, Adrián Israel 620
RODRÍGUEZ VIEJO, Jesús 148
ROEBERT, Sebastian 1319
ROELOFSEN, Mathijs 1348
ROGER, Euan 1019, 1119
ROGERS, Bethany 641
ROGNONI, Cristina 1520, 1720
ROHMANN, Gregor 1543
ROJO CARRILLO, Raquel 617
ROLDÃO, Filipa 317, 1540, 1640, 1740
ROLKER, Christof 145, 505, 605, 1105, 1546
ROLLINGER, Christian 706
ROLSTON, Lisa 1213
ROMERO, Loreto 1107
ROSÉ, Isabelle 123, 435, 1435
ROSILLO-LUQUE, Araceli 105
ROSKILLY, Jack 722
ROSS, James 1534
ROSSI, Domiziana 516, 616, 716, 816, 1006
ROSSI, Elena 507
ROSSI, Maria Cristina 1520, 1720
ROSSO, Chiara 214
ROUKOZ, Riwa 1007, 1446, 1512
ROUMIER, Julia 641
ROZANO-GARCÍA, Francisco J. 212, 441, 1038
ROZEIN, Matthias 1235
ROZENBERG, Lauren 745
ROZIER, Charlie 330, 1538
RÓZSA, Márton 722
ROZZA, Nicoletta 231, 331
RUBERTO, Silvio Lorenzo 1123
Participant Index
POYNTON-SMITH, Claire 212, 312, 441
PRACY, Stuart 128, 737, 837
PRAJDA, Katalin 722
PRANKE, Piotr Paweł 714
PREISER-KAPELLER, Johannes 1, 199, 313,
699, 1199, 1523, 1699
PREIXENS VIDAL, Núria 1517
PRELIPCEANU, Raluca-Gabriela 1217
PRESCOTT, Andrew 240, 1019
PRESCOTT, Ryan Michael 1612
PRETZER, Christoph 1638
PRICE, Basil Arnould 1025, 1125, 1225,
1325
PRICE, Eleanor 228, 346
PRICE, Emily Christine 139
PRIDGEON, Ellie 529
PROKOPEK, Skarbimir 110
PRUS, Caleb 643
PUCHKOVA, Sofia 1147
PUGET, Baptiste 518
PURCELL, Jake 209
PURKISS, Richard 224
PUTH, Verena 321
PYSIAK, Jerzy 614
QIU, Fangzhe 1248
RABAÇAL, Eduarda 537
RABAND, Ivo 245
RACANIELLO, Kristen 148
RADENOVIC, Bella 1315
RADL, Clemens 505
RADZIWILLOWICZ, Natalia 814
RAGACHEWSKAYA, Marina 307
RAINE, Hugo 618
RAMEAU, Baptiste 1040
RAMEY, Peter 201
RANDALL, Ian 713
RAPP, Claudia 113, 213, 313
RASCHI, Antonio 727
RASSI, Salam 542
RATHMANN-LUTZ, Anja S. 1245
RAUER, Christine 1438
RAVANČIĆ, Gordan 1041
RAZUM, Igor 639
RAZZAQ, Naila 711
READ, Lewis 522, 622
REANO, Daniele 708
REBALDE, João 1031, 1131
RECCHIA, Alessandro 1005
REHBERG, Andreas 122, 1004
REILLY, Diane J. 1209, 1647, 1702
REIMITZ, Helmut 314
REINERT, Jonathan 1145
REITZNER, Jan 1145
REMBOLD, Ingrid 1022, 1608
RENOU, Julie Morgane 1321
RENZI, Francesco 1505
RESNICK, Irven 319, 419
RÉTHORÉ, Florent 336
RETSÖ, Dag 1344
REVELL, Tom 212, 312
REYNDERS, Anne 146
REYNES, Benjamin 646
REYNOLDS, Amy 512, 612, 712, 812
461
Index of Participants
RUBIO SADIA, Juan Pablo 717
RUCHESI, Fernando 1030
RUFFINI-RONZANI, Nicolas 335, 435, 1134,
1435
RUIZ CALLEJÓN, Encarnación 1003
RUIZ DOMINGO, Lledó 1425
RUÍZ TORRES, Santiago 617
RUNNER, Jacob Wayne 1501
RUSSELL, Angus 343, 411
RUSSELL, Georgia M. 1204
RUSSELL, Paul 1603
RUSSELL, Scott 548
RUTHERFORD, Ian 1330
RYIER, Yanina 704
RYLEY, Hannah 538, 638
RYZHOVA, Ksenia 318
SABATÉ CURULL, Flocel 1030, 1517
SACKVILLE, Lucy 120
SAGASSER, Amélie 605
SAĞLAM, Hasan Sercan 1530, 1630, 1730
SAID, Abdelrahman Ibrahim 1202
SALEHI, Mina 132
SALES FAVÀ, Lluís 1017
SALIH, Ali Osman Mohamed 1202
SALIHOVIĆ, Davor 835, 1606
SALINAS, Caitlyn 1327
SALMÓN MUÑIZ, Fernando 1242, 1442
SALONEN, Kirsi 1004, 1104, 1334
SALTER, Ruth J. 1537, 1637
SALTVEIT, Mark 147, 1009
SALVATI, Benedetta 746
SAMPSON, Tyler D. 1608
SANNINO, Antonella 726
SANTING, Catrien 731
SANTOS, Joel 1223
SANTOS DINOA MEDEIROS, Juliana 106, 206,
306
SANTOS SILVA, Manuela 1425, 1540
SAQEE, Nabi 1511
SARANTIDIS, Ioannis 1513
SARDINA, Patrizia 1035
SARTI, Laury 812
SAUNDERSON, Kayleigh 1233
SAURA-NADAL, Jordi 519, 619
SAWICKI, Jakub 1714
SCALES, Len 1013, 1113, 1213, 1313
SCARDINA, Andrea 613
SCHACHTER, Hannah Teddy 219, 319
SCHÄFER, Hanna 1310
SCHÄR, Rahel 1719
SCHENK, Dorothee 720
SCHENZLE, Ruben 1116
SCHERMAN, Matthieu 1317
SCHIEWECK, Sandra 219
SCHIEWER, Hans-Jochen 1045
SCHILD, Stefanie 1123
SCHILLING, Cassandra 501
SCHLIE, Heike 629
SCHMID, Alexander 810
SCHMID KEELING, Regula 1348
SCHMIDT, Gleb 738
SCHMIDT, Siegrid 234, 347
462
SCHMIEDER, Felicitas 131, 523, 623, 723,
823
SCHMITT, Tori 117, 1429
SCHMITZ, Erik 331
SCHNEIDER, Philipp 315
SCHOLZ, Luca 1610
SCHONHARDT, Michael 136
SCHROER, Haley 117
SCHUERCH, Isabelle 731
SCHUH, Maximilian 1643
SCHUIL, Karsten Johannes 1203
SCHULTZ-BALLUFF, Simone 831
SCHULZ, Felix 1335
SCHULZ, Vera-Simone 111
SCHÜNEMANN, Monja Katja 848
SCHUTTE, Valerie 830
SCHWABAUER, Adeline 1245
SCHWANDT, Silke 247
SCHWARTZ, Amichay 1023
SCHWARZKOPF, Maximilian 1235
SCHWEITZER-MARTIN, Paul 137, 1643
SCIANCALEPORE, Antonella 826
SCINDENS, Bella 1042
SCOTT, Florence H. R. 1612
SCOTT LINTOTT, Lili 1524
SCREEN, Elina 719, 1221
SEABRA, Ricardo 1640
SEARS, Andrew 845
SEBO, Erin 501
SEINITZER, Sarah 1047
ŞENOCAK, Neslihan 142
ŠENOVSKÝ, Jakub 703
SEQUEIRA, Joana Isabel 743
SERAFIM, Joana 1740
SERIN, Ufuk 1209
ŠEVČÍK, Pavel 122
SEVERIN, Dorothy S. 1107
SHADIS, Miriam 1425
SHADRINA, Elena 741
SHAFFER, Melanie 817
SHAHAN, Lydia 121, 421, 1521
SHAKIR, Murtaza 1307
SHALEV-EYNI, Sarit 199
SHANZER, Danuta 309
SHARKEY, Benjamin 622
SHATZMILLER, Maya 110, 542
SHAW, David Gary 247, 1322
SHAW, Jan 126, 226, 326
SHAW, Robert L. J. 735, 835, 935, 1506,
1606, 1706
SHEA, Kayla 301
SHEIK, Joy 1335
SHEPARD, Jonathan 1013, 1113
SHEVCHUK, Sofiya 1330
SHIELDS, Tara 112
SHIELDS-MÁS, Chelsea 524
SHIELS, Ian 101
SHIPTON, Holly E. 112
SHOKHIKYAN, Gregory 721
SHORT, Ewan William Richard 1006, 1106,
1206
SHUKUROV, Rustam 313
SHYOVITZ, David 1137
Index of Participants
STINSON, Eleanor 1724
STOCKER, David 133
STONE, Brian 1601
STONE, Rachel 218, 825
STORY, Joanna 1108, 1238, 1338, 1438
STOURAITIS, Yannis 1213
STOUT, Geraldine 202
STOUT, Matthew 202
STRACK, Georg 216
STRAHL, Harriet 1738
STREITER, Nava 115
STRENGA, Gustavs 103
STRIEDER, Miriam 637
STRONG, Sean 516, 616, 716, 816
STRUNJE, Petar 1311
STUBBLEFIELD, Jason 1646
STUCZYNSKI, Claude B. 1617
STUDER-KARLEN, Manuela 1315
STURGEON, Justin 1648
STÜRZEBECHER, Maria 1645
STUTZMANN, Dominique 123, 223, 315, 738,
838, 1319
STYLER, Ian David 1537
SUGIYAMA, Yuki 1612
SULLA, Erin A. 1226
SULOVSKY, Vedran 1313
SUMMERFIELD, Bethany 1738
SUMMERLIN, Danica 505, 605, 840, 940,
1005, 1205, 1305
SUMOWSKI, Marcin 1103
SUN, Emily 1028
SUTHERLAND, Bobbi 707
SVOISKI, Yuri 1330
SWEENEY, Mickey 927
SWEETINBURGH, Sheila 1341
SWIST, Jeremy J. 613
SYED, Mairaj 742, 942
SYRBE, Daniel 502, 602
SZADA, Marta 1518, 1618
SZAFRANOWSKI, Jerzy 1518, 1618
SZOLNOKI, Zoltán 1130
SZUGYICZKI, Zsuzsanna 321
TABOR, Dariusz 1046
TAHA, Waleed Ahmed Abdulsalam 207
TAKEDA, Kazuhisa 1516
TAKIRTAKOGLOU, Konstantinos 1513
TALIADOROS, Jason 840, 940, 1205
TALIB, Adam 642, 1446
TAMM, Alexander 616
TAN, Qiqing 1012
TANABE, Megumi 327
TANZI, Beatrice 1211
T ARANU, Catalin 101
TARTAKOFF, Paola 219, 419
TAUBER, James 1736
T AYLOR, Alice 224, 724, 840, 940, 1412
TAYLOR, Claire 220, 943
TAYLOR, Craig D. 946, 1648
TAYLOR, Heather 241
TCHOUNIKINE, Anne 1216
TEBRUCK, Stefan 316, 416
TEDESCO, Vincenzo 144
TELLA, Sergi 1030
Participant Index
SIANO, Sibilla 231
SIDER, Ariana Mae 1733
SIDIROPOULOS, Dimitrios 1713
SIEBERICHS, Anne 1722
SIKK, Kaarel 1606
SILVA, Rafaela 537
SILVESTER, Tracey 1537
SILVESTRE, João Paulo 1740
SIMMONS, Adam 411, 1202, 1343, 1443
SIMON, Rainer 835
SIMOVA, Lucia 1641
SIMPSON, Mitchell 1703
SINGER, Marcel 316
SIOPIS, Ioannis 227
SKAMBRAKS, Tanja 1643
SŁABOSZOWSKA, Kalina 1707
SLAYTON, Kendra 121
SLOOTJES, Danielle 706
SMITH, Damian 1505, 1705
SMITH, Eleanor 326
SMITH, Innocent 205
SMITH, Isaac 138
SMITH, Katherine 127
SMITH, Kyle 312
SMITH, Marcus 1142
SMITS, Lieke Andrea 521, 1229
SOARES, Ana Catarina 1247
SOCRATES, Melanie 1637
SOGHAYROUN ELZEIN, Intisar 1202
SOLDI, Gioia 1522
SOLOPOVA, Elizabeth 820
SOMFAI, Anna 1
SONG, Ruoci 827
SOPHOULIS, Panos 1222, 1513
SOSNOWSKI, Milosz 1738
SOUKUPOVÁ, Věra 1725
SOUTHGATE, Audrey 820
SPACEY, Beth 1616
SPEER, Christian 740
SPENCE, Charlotte 1522, 1722
SPENCER, Andrew M. 1712
SPINGOU, Foteini 1515, 1715
SPODARYK, Adam 1046
SPYCHALA, Pauline 1040
ST NICKLAUS, Teal 1735
STABLER MILLER, Tanya 1733
STADNICHENKO, Yaroslav 1730
STAFFORD, Grace 1018
STANEK, Aleksandra 1401
STATTEL, Jake A. 1240
STAUFENBIEL, Baylee 243
STAUNTON, Michael 946
STECKEL, Sita 305, 431
STEER, Christian 1541, 1641
ŠTEFAN, Ivo 1614, 1714
STEFANESCU, Tudor 634
STEGMANN, Beeke 1728
STEINACHER, Roland 334, 1122
STEINER, Erica 124
STEININGER, Rowan 903
STEINMAN, Charles 633
STEPKEN, Raphael 748
STINCHCOMB, Jillian 211
463
Index of Participants
TELLE, Mandy 1545
TER HORST, Judith 1132
TERKLA, Dan 523, 623, 723, 823
TESTER, Poppy 536
THAKKAR, Mark 205
THALER, Lienhard 1214
THEISEN, Maria 345
THEISSEN, Paul 304
THEOLOGOU, Anastasia 1143
THEOTOKIS, Georgios 1513, 1613, 1713
THIES, Alexander 716
THOMAS, Maria S. 445
THOMAS, Rebecca 338, 512, 1603
THOMPSON, Nancy M. 229
THOMSON, Hannah 117, 1429
THORNTON, David E. 102
THURAISINGHAM, Arrun 1724
TICKLE, Jonathan 730
TIMMERMANN, Josh 609
TINTERRI, Daniele 1218
TINTI, Francesca 401
TIROSH, Yoav 1228
TISCHER, Roman 116
TJÄLLÉN, Biörn 1047
TO FIGUERAS, Lluis 1017
TOBIAS, Bendeguz 302
TOBIN, Michael 806
TOLFO, Thiago 317
TOMASELLI, Courtney 329
TOMEI, Paolo 1620
TOR, Deborah 210
TORGERSON, Jesse W. 247
TORRIJOS-CASTRILLEJO, David 1131
TOSTES, Rogerio R 1517
TOSWELL, Jane 1138, 1331, 1547
TOTH, Ida 1630
TOUGHER, Shaun 706, 1006, 1106
TRACY, Larissa C. 946
TRAMARIN, Davide 1329
TRANCHINA, Antonino 1529
TRATTER, Aaron 347
TRAVES, Alex 1238
TREHARNE, Elaine 801, 945
TRENK, Christian S. 1536
TRESCHOW, Michael 838
TRIPPS, Johannes 1623, 1723
TRISCHLER, Elisabeth 527, 627, 727
TRIVETT, Emma 1312
TRÖGER, Lena 1127
TROMBLEY, Justine 220
TSIAMI, Zoe 1209
TUDURI, Eneko 1201
TUERK-STONBERG, Jacquelyn 1528
TUFANO, Luigi 1641
TUITE, Kevin 1215
TUREK, Jacqueline 841, 1207
TURNER, Victoria 325, 1626
TURNER, Wendy J. 228, 1228
TVEIT, Miriam 1244, 1504, 1704
TWOMEY, Carolyn 728
TYSON, Rebecca 128, 540
TZOUMERKAS, Nikolaos 813
TZOURIADIS, Iason-Eleftherios 647, 747
464
UBL, Karl 108, 208, 308, 545
UCHYTILOVÁ, Barbora 345
ULRICH, Sonja 604
UPHAM, Tonicha 1125
URBANIAK, Aleksandra 1607
USCINSKI, Kristin 437, 1128
USHERWOOD, Rebecca 535
UTZ, Judith 629, 1029
VACCARO, Christopher 1336
VACCARO, Maddalena 1529, 1629
VALENTE, Maria João 1141
VÄLIMÄKI, Reima 220, 1004, 1606
VAN BREE, Pim 735
VAN DEN BOSCH, Alice 602
VAN DEN BOSCH, Mattie M. 1101
VAN DER LOOP, Janne 1546
VAN DER MEER, Matthieu 809
VAN DER MOLEN, Edmund 336, 1220, 1320
VAN DEUSEN, Natalie 1632
VAN DIJK, Teun 1237
VAN DOORNE, Taylor 1429
VAN DOREN, Jan 1237, 1337
VAN DUSSEN, Michael 703, 820, 1746
VAN GENT, Celeste 1026
VAN GERVEN OEI, Vincent W. J. 611, 1443
VAN HEES, Bart 1008
VAN KUIJK, Iris 1631
VAN LIESHOUT, Pleun 1745
VAN OPSTALL, Emilie 1526, 1626
VAN PELT, Julie 206
VAN PETEGHEM, Julie 527
VAN REIJEN, Jip 1101
VAN RENSWOUDE, Irene 628
VAN RHIJN, Carine 306, 528, 628, 728, 828,
1508, 1708
VAN WELIE-VINK, Wendelien A. W. 1001, 1101
VANDEBURIE, Jan 720
VANDENBROUCKE, Michiel 1721
VANELLI, Elena 136
VANNI, Flavia 1318
VARGA, Imre Solt 525
VARGHA, Mária 1514, 1614, 1714
VARGOVÁ, Dorota 1623
VARLIK, Nükhet 742
VARRÓ, Orsolya 138
VARSALLONA, Jessica 1118, 1218
VARTSKY, Orit Klein 1312
VASCONCELOS VILAR, Hermínia Maria 1035
VASSELLE, Pauline 814
VÄTH, Isabell 1732
VEIER-OLSEN, Martin 1243
VENEZIANI, Enrico 1505, 1605, 1705
VÉR, Márton 515, 615, 715, 815, 915
VERARDI, Andrea Antonio 534
VERKHOLANTSEV, Julia 122
VERONESE, Francesco 1239, 1339
VERRETH, Louis 606
VERRI, Giovanni 1728
VERSTEGEN, Ute 816
VERWEIJ, Mark 1748
VEY, Pierre 618
VIDAL DOVAL, Rosa 818, 1617
VIDON, Hugo 618
Index of Participants
WEAVER, Abigail Hazel 1703
WEBB, Lora 115, 829
WEBER, Matthias 1235
WEBSDALE, Nathan 813
WEBSTER, Elizabeth 1306
WEBSTER, Paul 1539, 1639, 1739
WEGNER, Joanna 1009
WEIGAND, Susanne 514
WEIKERT, Katherine 1426, 1602, 1742
WEILER, Björn 130, 230, 330, 1113, 1213,
1538, 1638, 1738
WEISSAR, Tomáš 825
WELLER, Verena 1207
WELLS-DE VOS, Michele 211
WESSELING, Matthias 841
WEST, Charles 401, 824, 1024
WEST, David Bond 1632
WESTVIK, S. R. 1736
WESTWELL, Arthur 1508, 1608, 1708
WHATELY, Conor 716
WHEATON, Benjamin 218
WHEDBEE, Simon 1531
WHITE, Bryant 520
WHITE, Chad 342, 442
WHITE, Christopher 530
WHITE, Monica 814, 1117
WHITE, Sarah 1340
WHITE, Tiffany Nicole 1532, 1632
WHITEHEAD, Guðrún D. 1744
WHITNAH, Lauren L. 819
WHITTEN, Sarah 1609
WICHER, Andrzej 1636
WIEDEMANN, Benedict 634
WIEDEMANN, Meike 323
WIEDL, Birgit 119, 319, 419
WIESER, Veronika 523
WIESINGER, Michaela 237, 337
WIHODA, Martin 316
WIJNENDAELE, Jeroen W. P. 1021
WIK, Sigrun Borgen 1704
WILK, Mateusz 238
WILKINSON, Louise J. 825, 1121
WILK-WOŚ, Zofia 803
WILLEMSEN, Annemarieke 1745
WILLIAMS, Connor 1712
WILLIARD, Hope 209, 1333
WILLS, Tarrin 1032
WILSON, Connor 504
WILSON, James 318, 704
WILSON, Rachel A. 1538
WILSON, Rowan 121
WINER, Rebecca Lynn 1519
WINGARD, Tim 810, 1507, 1607, 1707
WINKLER, Emily A. 724, 1524
WINKLER, Viola 1523
WINTER, Naemi 1134
WINTERHAGER, Philipp 328
WIŚNIEWSKI, Robert 106, 206, 306, 1009,
1208
WITTEN, Derek Joel 1646
WITTIG, Claudia 431, 633
WOLEVER, Eric 130
WOLF, Erik 103
Participant Index
VIELEERS, Philippine 1001
VIERMANN, Nadine 1122
VIHERVALLI, Ulriika 1208
VILLANO, Maria Aimé 1530, 1630, 1730
VINCENT, Sarah 837
VINHAGE, Paul 1531
VINOGRADOV, Andrey 1230
VIRÁG, Curie 1515
VIRÁGH, Ágnes 1725
VISA GUERRERO, Ireneu 148
VISINTINI, Eduard 821
VITALE, Angelo Maria 227
VOGT, Helle 840, 1234
VOIGTS, Michael 1139
VOLMENSKY, Catherine 829
VOLMERING, Nicole 538
VOLTI, Panayota 639
VON HARNIER, Henriette 821
VON HEUSINGER, Sabine 1543
VON MÖLLENDORFF, Nathalie-Josephine 145,
245
VON RUMMEL, Philipp 1122
VON WEISSENBERG, Marita 707
VRANEŠEVIĆ, Branka 1723
VREE, Monica 1429
VUKOVIĆ, Marijana 206
WAAG, Anaïs 1121
WAAGMEESTER, Bastiaan 328, 1508
WABNITZ, Sandra 302
WACHA, Heather Gaile 823
WÆRDAHL, Randi Bjørshol 1344
WAFFNER, Petra 131
WAGNER, Bettina 1546
WAGNER, Simone 1329
WAHLGREN-SMITH, Lena 1541, 1641, 1741
WALDRON, Byron 1213
WALDSCHÜTZ, Johannes 1123, 1426
WALKER, Jim 509
WALKER, Kyly 1034
WALLENBORN, Moritz 526, 943
WALLS, Janet 1637
WALRAVENS, Meia 1510
WALTHER, Sabine Heidi 1532
WALTON, Linda 1515, 1615
WAND, Benjamin 505, 645
WANG, Solveig Marie 103, 1125
WANGERIN, Laura 1742
WARD, Emily J. 431
WARD, Graeme 1022
WARD, Renée Michelle 1036
WARD-PERKINS, Bryan 306
WAREHAM, Andrew 324, 1624
WARNTJES, Immo 1132
WARREN, Thomas 247
WASSENAAR, Jelle 1337
WATSON, Callum 1602
WATSON, Tim 1535
WATTEAUX, Magali 223
WATTERSON, Tess 536
WATTS, Karen 547, 647, 847
WATZINGER, Alexander 935
WAWRZYNIAK, Natalia 546, 646
WCIÓRKA, Wojciech 545
465
Index of Participants
WOLF, Sophia Philomena 1325
WOLFF, Alicia 623
WOLSING, Ivo 1731
WOOD, Charlotte 1033
WOOD, Hannah Kirby 1733
WOOD, Ian N. 106, 1021, 1339, 1518
WOOD, Jamie 517
WOOD, Lauren E. 1727
WOODACRE, Elena 530, 630, 730, 830, 930,
1425, 1725
WOODLEY, Baylee 745
WOODS, Clare 809
WOOLGAR, Chris 340
WOOLLEY, Meghan 1140, 1240, 1340
WOZIŃSKI, Andrzej 1301, 1401
WOZNIAK, Thomas 623
WRIGHT, Alison 1545
WUK, Michael 1208, 1308
WYETH, William 1002, 1602
XIE, Chen 215
XU, Kun 222
YAMADA, Shintaro 135
YANG, Qiao 615, 915
YANKELEVICH, Kaila 523
YATSYK, Svetlana 838
YAVUZ, N. Kıvılcım 538, 638, 738, 838, 945,
1447, 1715
YE, Zhicheng 520
YEE, Pamela 242, 442
YIRGA, Felege-Selam Solomon 511, 611,
811, 1443
YORK, Kristen 1331
YOUNG, Michela 1729
YUREK, Eyup Eren 945
ZAGKLAS, Nikolaos 213, 1106
ZAJIC, Andreas 1314
ZANETTI DOMINGUES, Lidia Luisa 940
ZAPAŁA, Adam 122, 222, 322
ZATYKÓ, Csilla 1714
ZAVAGNO, Luca 713
ZBÍRAL, David 735, 835, 935, 1199, 1435,
1506, 1606, 1706
ZEČEVIĆ, Nada 414
ZECHER, Jonathan 528, 628
ZEIDLER, Kamil 1301, 1401
ZELLER, Bernhard 1509
ZEMLYAKOV, Mikhail 1138
ZENNARO, Nicolò 235
ZHENG, Ruisen 213
ZHIRNOVA, Alexandra 301
ZIEMANN, Daniel 414
ZINGG, Roland 705
ZNOROVSZKY, Andrea-Bianka 127, 227, 327,
1217
ZOETER, Matthijs 1709
ZORZAN, Giulia 1628, 1728
ZOTOV, Sergei 1647
ZOU, Ningning 729
ZUIJDERDUIJN, Jaco 410, 1328
ZUPKA, Dušan 503
ZURAIKAT, Malek Jamal 1204
ŽŮREK, Václav 730
466
Call for Papers: IMC 2024, 1-4 July
The IMC provides an interdisciplinary forum for the discussion of all
aspects of Medieval Studies. Proposals on any topic related to the Middle Ages
are welcome, while every year the IMC also chooses a special thematic focus.
In 2024, this is ‘Crisis’.
‘Crisis’ has long been used when writing about the Middle Ages – incorporating climate
and environmental issues such as epidemics, famines, and floods, political issues such
as the breakdowns of dynasties and popular revolts, and socio-cultural issues such as
religious apocalypticism and the questioning of faith. Yet while crisis is a concept deeprooted in a wide range of scholarship, it has also recently been reconsidered. Rather than
seeing whole periods as characterized by crisis conditions, medievalists now explicitly
ask ‘crisis for whom?’ Medieval institutions and systems could be resilient, surviving
challenges and pressures. Yet people simultaneously suffered hardships, even if not
everyone suffered to an equal degree. Medievalists are also interested in how individuals
and communities coped with crisis. Indeed, medieval societies had their own perception
and understanding of risk and found ways to adapt. An important component of this was
the construction of crisis narratives, sometimes informed by religious beliefs – stories
that changed across time, place, and audience. Temporality is also fundamental to
medievalists’ understanding of crisis, offering important counter-perspectives to views
of linear progress and modernization paradigms often seen in crisis historiography.
While substantial crises could serve as short-term ruptures and turning points, crises
also provoked more incremental changes within economies, institutions, and cultures
over time. Some things stayed the same despite crises and, thus, continuity remains
important.
A new language of resilience, vulnerability, and adaptation has become prominent within
medieval studies in recent years: stimulating new kinds of questions and new approaches
to old issues, as well as allowing medievalists to engage with other disciplines. However,
to what extent are these old ideas just repackaged with new terms? How we can define,
measure, and test these concepts?
IMC 2024 invites a plurality of viewpoints and critical engagement with these concepts.
We hope to engage scholars working at a variety of geographical scales – from the
global to the micro-community, and over a variety of timescales – from those linking the
Middle Ages to Antiquity or the early modern period to those focusing on an individual
year. The proportion of IMC sessions focused outside Europe continues to grow – a
trend we hope to see again in 2024. We welcome approaches from across medieval
studies, including economic, political, social, cultural, demographic, linguistic, artistic
and visual, religious-historical and intellectual, environmental, as well as those relating
to landscape and material culture, and approaches that engage those working outside
the disciplines of medieval studies per se, integrating relevant evidence from genetics,
bio-archaeology, historical climatology, and much more!
Themes to be addressed may include, but
are not limited to:
• Hazards, shocks, disasters, and their
redistributive impact
• Critical
discussion
of
relevant
terminology
–
crisis,
collapse,
adaptation,
risk,
resilience,
transformation, vulnerability – and
pathways forward
• Textual
representations
of
crisis
and its impact on human agents –
trauma, emotion, physical, and mental
responses
• The creation of crisis narratives and
stories
• Concepts of longing for crisis – the
signs of apocalypses, revolutions, and
renewals
• Who is to blame during crises?
Scapegoating, hate, compassion, and
cohesion
• Methodological insights – how to
define, measure, and test medieval
crisis ‘outcomes’
• Medieval crisis-related datasets, their
application, pitfalls, and uses
• Medieval crises represented in visual
culture, music culture, and the arts
• Inequalities, and the unequal impacts
of crises
• Medieval climate change and its
interaction
with
socio-ecological
context
• Explicitly
crises
gendered
approaches
to
• Crises occurring
across borders
or
conceptualized
• Entangled scales, global pressures/
hazards played out at local or micro
levels
• Settlements: adaptation and continuity
under stress
• Early
modern
and
modern
representations of medieval crisis
• Human-animal connections and their
place within crisis contexts
• The interaction of religious and
institutional responses to hazards
• Medieval studies and the natural
sciences: how can we help each other?
• Intersectional
considerations
responses to crises
in
• Hazards, the managed environment,
and the body politic
• Demographic approaches to hazards
and
disasters:
deaths,
births,
marriages
• Medieval religious and intellectual
responses to crisis in the Middle Ages
• Material culture and conceptualizing
crisis – objects and rituals
Proposals should be submitted online at www.imc.leeds.ac.uk. Deadlines: Paper
proposals: 31 August 2023; Session proposals: 30 September 2023
The IMC especially welcomes papers that bring perspectives from under-represented
disciplines, regions, and theoretical and conceptual perspectives.
468
The organisers of the International Medieval Congress
reserve the right to change the content of the programme,
speakers, or venue, should the need arise.
During the course of the Congress, the organisers or an individual speaker
may issue notes, examples, or other material which should be treated as confidential
and the property of the party issuing it. Participants may not use such material or republish
it in any way without first obtaining the specific consent of the party concerned. The IMC may use
images and other digital recordings of delegates made at the IMC 2023 for promotional purposes.
The University of Leeds takes all reasonable precautions
for the security of visitors and of their property. Participants are nevertheless advised
to exercise due care to secure their property. No responsibility can be accepted for loss
or damage however caused.
All participants of the IMC are required to register at www.imc.leeds.ac.uk. All speakers, chairs,
and respondents listed in the IMC 2023 programme have agreed to attend the IMC 2023. Should
a listed participant have to withdraw for whatever reason they are required to contact the IMC
administration immediately. If we have not received a listed participant’s registration within two
weeks of the IMC 2023 we will automatically remove their name from the programme and list the
participation as withdrawn. The IMC administration makes every effort to ensure the stability of the
academic programme for the IMC, but cannot guarantee the participation of any listed individual
and reserves the right to change the sessions should the need arise.
The International Medieval Congress is organised and administered
by the Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
with the assistance of the IMC Programming Committee and the IMC Standing Committee.
Images and design in this programme are courtesy of the following: the Brotherton Library and
the University of Leeds. Other images are either attributed individually under a Creative Commons
licence, or in the public domain, to the best of our knowledge.
Address:
International Medieval Congress
Institute for Medieval Studies
Parkinson Building, Room 1.03
University of Leeds
LEEDS LS2 9JT UK
Telephone: +44 (113) 343-3614
Fax: +44 (113) 343-3616
Email: imc@leeds.ac.uk
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Published online in Great Britain by the
INSTITUTE FOR MEDIEVAL STUDIES, UNIVERSITY OF LEEDS
June 2023
Retail price £5.00
NEW TITLES
Public Opinion and Political
Contest in Late Medieval Paris
Multi-Disciplinary Approaches
to Medieval Brittany
The Parisian Bourgeois and
his Community, 1400-1450
Connections and Disconnections
Caroline Brett, Paul Russell, Fiona Edmonds (eds)
Luke Giraudet
ISBN 978-2-503-59386-9
Series: Studies in European Urban History (1100-1800), vol. 60
ISBN 978-2-503-60110-6
Series: Medieval Texts and Cultures of Northern Europe, vol. 36
Saint Roch
Saewulf, John of Würzburg, Theoderic
L’évêque, le chevalier,
le pèlerin (VIIe-XVe siècle)
Three Pilgrimages to
the Holy Land
Pierre Bolle
Reginald Denys (Trans)
ISBN 978-2-503-59662-4
Série: Hagiologia, vol. 18
ISBN 978-2-503-59372-2
Series: Corpus Christianorum in Translation, vol. 41
Monastères, convergences,
échanges et confrontations
dans l’Ouest de l’Europe
au Moyen Âge
Crusading, Society,
and Politics in the Eastern
Mediterranean in the Age
of King Peter I of Cyprus
Claude Lucette Evans, Kenneth Paul Evans (éd)
Alexander Beihammer, Angel Nicolaou-Konnari (eds)
ISBN 978-2-503-59985-4
Série: Haut Moyen Âge, vol. 45
ISBN 978-2-503-59856-7
Series: Mediterranean Nexus, vol. 10
‘With Our Backs to the Ocean’:
Land, Lordship, Climate Change,
and Environment in the North-West
European Past
Ideas of the World
in Early Medieval
English Literature
Mark Atherton, Kazutomo Karasawa,
Francis Leneghan (eds)
Essays in Memory of Alasdair Ross
Richard Oram (ed.)
ISBN 978-2-503-59699-0
Series: Environmental Histories of the North Atlantic World, vol. 5
ISBN 978-2-503-59957-1
Series: Studies in Old English Literature, vol. 1
Circulating the Word of God in
Medieval and Early Modern Europe
Crafting Knowledge in
the Early Medieval Book
Catholic Preaching and Preachers across
Manuscript and Print (c. 1450 to c. 1550)
Practices of Collecting and
Concealing in the Latin West
Veronica O’Mara, Patricia Stoop (eds)
Sinead -O’Sullivan, Ciaran Arthur (eds)
ISBN 978-2-503-58515-4
Series: Sermo, vol. 17
ISBN 978-2-503-60247-9
Series: Publications of the Journal of Medieval Latin, vol. 16
www.brepols.net – info@brepols.net
470
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Visions of Medieval
History in North
America and Europe
Werewolves in Old
Norse-Icelandic
Literature
Studies on Cultural
Identity and Power
Between the Monster
and the Man
Courtney M. Booker,
Hans Hummer,
Dana Polanichka (eds)
Minjie Su
ISBN 978-2-503-59628-0
Series: Cursor Mundi, vol. 41
ISBN 978-2-503-59600-6
Series: Borders, Boundaries,
Landscapes, vol. 3
Territoires, regions,
royaumes
A Survey of Manuscripts
Illuminated in France
Le développement d’une
cartographie locale et
régionale dans l’Occident
latin et le monde arabe
(Xe-XVe siècle)
Frankish
Manuscripts:
The Seventh to
the Tenth Century
Lawrence Nees
Nathalie Bouloux,
Jean-Charles Ducène (éd)
ISBN 978-1-872501-25-3
Series: A Survey of Manuscripts
Illuminated in France, vol. 2
ISBN 978-2-503-59390-6
Series: Culture et société
médiévales , vol. 40
Skaldic Poetry of
the Scandinavian
Middle Ages
Poetry in Sagas
of Icelanders
Margaret Clunies Ross,
Kari Ellen Gade †,
Tarrin Wills (eds)
ISBN 978-2-503-51898-5
Series: Skaldic Poetry of
the Scandinavian Middle
Ages, vol. 5
Bringing the Holy
Land Home
The Crusades,
Chertsey Abbey, and
the Reconstruction of
a Medieval Masterpiece
Amanda Luyster (ed.)
ISBN 978-1-912554-94-2
Series: Studies in Medieval and Early
Renaissance Art History
www.brepols.net – info@brepols.net