*Trésors Carolingiens / Carolingian Treasures*
> "The Carolingian book, a political tool put to work in
> the unification of an empire, was at the heart of a vast
> intellectual and artistic movement...
>
> "Charlemagne used religious reform to seal the unity of
> his empire. Glorified and sanctified, the book became one
> of the foundations of medieval culture. At the same time,
> the emperor unified education throughout the empire, and
> he spread a new form of writing, one more easily read,
> the Carolingian Miniscule... "
>
> This outstanding online digital library exhibition, at,
http://expositions.bnf.fr/carolingiens/index.htm
> -- provides significant portions of famous Carolingian Era
> treasures of the Bibliothèque nationale de France -- Flash
> animations presented as readable books, pages of which may be
> "turned" by clicking the page-corners -- and holding the mouse over
> most pages brings up that page's own note, and a click on a page
> center provides good magnification --
Monday, May 28, 2007
THE PAPHLAGONIA AND PONTUS CONFERENCE
International Conference on Paphlagonia and Pontus in Antiquity and the
early Byzantine Period (7th c. BC-7th c. AD)
May 31-June 4, 2008 / Izmir, Turkey
First Circular - Call for Papers
Dear Colleagues,
An international conference on Paphlagonia and Pontus in antiquity and the
early Byzantine period (7th c. BC-7th c. AD) will take place between May
31st and June 4th, 2008 at the Dokuz Eylul University in Izmir, Turkey.
The conference is jointly organised by the Department of Archaeology,
Faculty of Arts and Sciences, Dokuz Eylul University, Izmir and The Centre
for Classics and Archaeology, School of Historical Studies, University of
Melbourne. This conference will be organised as a part of the Paphlagonia
Project, a long-term archaeological field project in central Paphlagonia
.
We invite papers from scholars and graduate students on any aspect of
Paphlagonia and Pontus in the above period. The conference aims to bring
together participants from throughout the world to discuss a range of
issues concerning this North Anatolian landscape and encourage dialogue
amongst and between Classical and Near Eastern archaeologists, ancient
historians, classicists and all other disciplines from Classical, Near
Eastern and Anatolian Studies.
Paphlagonia is an area of the central Black Sea coastal region of Turkey,
situated between Bithynia and Pontus, and separated from Galatia by an
eastern outlier of the Bithynian Olympus. It is a mountainous district
with the Halys as its chief river; along its coast were a number of
colonies, including Greek Sinope. It was a contact zone between the Greeks
of the Black Sea region and the Iron Age population of Central Anatolia.
The conference seeks papers on both the adaptation and change and the
continuity of culture(s) over time and space, and on the construction of
ethnic identities in the culturally diverse area of Paphlagonia and
Pontus. Participants are encouraged to explore all kinds of evidence on
the region and its relations with other areas (Galatia, Bithynia,
Propontis, Thrace, Colchis/Georgia, Armenia, the rest of the Black Sea,
etc.), including textual, archaeological, artistic, anthropological,
numismatic and epigraphic, from Archaic to Early Byzantine times.
A post-conference excursion is planned on June 4th to both of the
archaeological museums of Izmir and to the excavations at Agora and Old
Smyrna.
Papers may be given in any Western European languages (English, German,
French, Italian, Spanish) and in Turkish, although English is preferred
for both oral and poster presentations.
We hope that you will be able to participate.
If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact one of the
organisers:
Ergun LAFLI
Dokuz Eylul Universitesi
Fen-Edebiyat Fakultesi
Arkeoloji Bolumu
Oda No: A 461/1
Tinaztepe/Kaynaklar Yerleskesi, Buca
TR-35160, Izmir, TURKEY.
Fax : +90.232.453 41 88.
E-mail:.
Gocha TSETSKHLADZE
Centre for Classics and Archaeology
The University of Melbourne
Victoria 3010
AUSTRALIA.
Fax: +61 3 83444161
E-Mail:.
Please submit an abstract of not more than 300 words with the attached
registration form as soon as possible, and not later than January 1st,
2008. by e-mail (preferred) to; or by fax: +90
232 453 4188.
Abstracts of accepted papers will be published separately and also made
available on the conference web site. Conference web site is still under
construction and will be appeared under
.
The proceedings of the conference will be published. Detailed information
will be given in the Second Circular.
The participation fee is 30 euros (20 euros for students). This does not
include accommodation, fooding or your travel expenses to Izmir.
The organisers seek the widest participation at this conference. We would
like to encourage colleagues from all parts of the world to attend. We
should be grateful if you would display copies of this circular in your
institution.
We look forward to your joining us at the Dokuz Eylul University in Izmir.
Ergun LAFLI & Gocha TSETSKHLADZE
early Byzantine Period (7th c. BC-7th c. AD)
May 31-June 4, 2008 / Izmir, Turkey
First Circular - Call for Papers
Dear Colleagues,
An international conference on Paphlagonia and Pontus in antiquity and the
early Byzantine period (7th c. BC-7th c. AD) will take place between May
31st and June 4th, 2008 at the Dokuz Eylul University in Izmir, Turkey.
The conference is jointly organised by the Department of Archaeology,
Faculty of Arts and Sciences, Dokuz Eylul University, Izmir and The Centre
for Classics and Archaeology, School of Historical Studies, University of
Melbourne. This conference will be organised as a part of the Paphlagonia
Project, a long-term archaeological field project in central Paphlagonia
We invite papers from scholars and graduate students on any aspect of
Paphlagonia and Pontus in the above period. The conference aims to bring
together participants from throughout the world to discuss a range of
issues concerning this North Anatolian landscape and encourage dialogue
amongst and between Classical and Near Eastern archaeologists, ancient
historians, classicists and all other disciplines from Classical, Near
Eastern and Anatolian Studies.
Paphlagonia is an area of the central Black Sea coastal region of Turkey,
situated between Bithynia and Pontus, and separated from Galatia by an
eastern outlier of the Bithynian Olympus. It is a mountainous district
with the Halys as its chief river; along its coast were a number of
colonies, including Greek Sinope. It was a contact zone between the Greeks
of the Black Sea region and the Iron Age population of Central Anatolia.
The conference seeks papers on both the adaptation and change and the
continuity of culture(s) over time and space, and on the construction of
ethnic identities in the culturally diverse area of Paphlagonia and
Pontus. Participants are encouraged to explore all kinds of evidence on
the region and its relations with other areas (Galatia, Bithynia,
Propontis, Thrace, Colchis/Georgia, Armenia, the rest of the Black Sea,
etc.), including textual, archaeological, artistic, anthropological,
numismatic and epigraphic, from Archaic to Early Byzantine times.
A post-conference excursion is planned on June 4th to both of the
archaeological museums of Izmir and to the excavations at Agora and Old
Smyrna.
Papers may be given in any Western European languages (English, German,
French, Italian, Spanish) and in Turkish, although English is preferred
for both oral and poster presentations.
We hope that you will be able to participate.
If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact one of the
organisers:
Ergun LAFLI
Dokuz Eylul Universitesi
Fen-Edebiyat Fakultesi
Arkeoloji Bolumu
Oda No: A 461/1
Tinaztepe/Kaynaklar Yerleskesi, Buca
TR-35160, Izmir, TURKEY.
Fax : +90.232.453 41 88.
E-mail:
Gocha TSETSKHLADZE
Centre for Classics and Archaeology
The University of Melbourne
Victoria 3010
AUSTRALIA.
Fax: +61 3 83444161
E-Mail:
Please submit an abstract of not more than 300 words with the attached
registration form as soon as possible, and not later than January 1st,
2008. by e-mail (preferred) to
232 453 4188.
Abstracts of accepted papers will be published separately and also made
available on the conference web site. Conference web site is still under
construction and will be appeared under
The proceedings of the conference will be published. Detailed information
will be given in the Second Circular.
The participation fee is 30 euros (20 euros for students). This does not
include accommodation, fooding or your travel expenses to Izmir.
The organisers seek the widest participation at this conference. We would
like to encourage colleagues from all parts of the world to attend. We
should be grateful if you would display copies of this circular in your
institution.
We look forward to your joining us at the Dokuz Eylul University in Izmir.
Ergun LAFLI & Gocha TSETSKHLADZE
Early English Law
Catching up on a couple of weeks of announcements, so forgive the plethora of new posts that will be forthcoming!
Dear colleagues,
It is my very great pleasure to announce the CFP for "Early English
Law: A Centenary Conference on Die Gesetze der Angelsachsen of Felix
Liebermann (1903 - 1916)," which will be held 16-17 July, 2008, at
the Institute for Historical Research in London. Proposals of around
300 words are invited on the areas of Historiography (especially, but
not exclusively, relating to Liebermann), Evidence (manuscripts and
archeological data), Philology, Law, and Editing. Within each of
these areas, we invite proposals that consider antiquarian interest
in early laws, general historiography on the laws to the present,
assessments of Liebermann's accomplishment, the problems with his
edition, new editing work, discovery of new manuscripts or
reinterpretations of known manuscripts, construction and use of
individual manuscripts, legal terminology (Old English, Latin, or
early Anglo-Norman), considerations of individual laws, codes in
context, and comparative work on England and its neighbors!
. All sessions will be plenary, and the organizers invite proposals
for panels as well as for individual papers. Proposals should be sent
to Bruce O'Brien at the Institute of Historical Research by 31
October 2007 (email: bobrien@umw.edu). The full CFP may be found at
http://www.history.ac.uk/conferences/medieval.php#79.
Dear colleagues,
It is my very great pleasure to announce the CFP for "Early English
Law: A Centenary Conference on Die Gesetze der Angelsachsen of Felix
Liebermann (1903 - 1916)," which will be held 16-17 July, 2008, at
the Institute for Historical Research in London. Proposals of around
300 words are invited on the areas of Historiography (especially, but
not exclusively, relating to Liebermann), Evidence (manuscripts and
archeological data), Philology, Law, and Editing. Within each of
these areas, we invite proposals that consider antiquarian interest
in early laws, general historiography on the laws to the present,
assessments of Liebermann's accomplishment, the problems with his
edition, new editing work, discovery of new manuscripts or
reinterpretations of known manuscripts, construction and use of
individual manuscripts, legal terminology (Old English, Latin, or
early Anglo-Norman), considerations of individual laws, codes in
context, and comparative work on England and its neighbors!
. All sessions will be plenary, and the organizers invite proposals
for panels as well as for individual papers. Proposals should be sent
to Bruce O'Brien at the Institute of Historical Research by 31
October 2007 (email: bobrien@umw.edu). The full CFP may be found at
http://www.history.ac.uk/conferences/medieval.php#79.
Wednesday, May 16, 2007
Issue 10
The Board and Editors of The Heroic Age would like to announce
our tenth issue located at www.heroicage.org. With this issue, The
Heroic Age has introduced 2 sections of articles, one themed, and one
unthemed. We hope you enjoy this issue. Below, I've included a
table of contents, and I would also like to remind you of our Calls
for Papers for upcoming issues.
Issue 10:
Articles: Saints and Sanctity
Relics, Religious Authority, and the Sanctification of Domestic Space
in the Home Gregory of Tours: An Analysis of the Glory of the
Confessors 20
by Dennis Quinn
Miracle Stories and the Primary Purpose of Adomnán's Vita Columbae
by Sara E. Ellis Nilsson
Preserving the Body Christian: The Motif of "Recapitation" in
Ireland's Medieval Hagiography by Máire Johnson
Boniface's Booklife: How the Ragyndrudis Codex Came to be a Vita
Bonifatii by Michel Aaij
Tradition and Transformation in the Cult of St. Guthlac in Early
Medieval England by John R. Black
Articles-Unthemed Section
The P-Celtic Place-Names of North-East England and South-East Scotland
by Bethany Fox
Trade, Gift-giving and Romanitas: A Comparison of the Use of Roman
Imports in Western Britain and Southern Scandinavia by Thomas Green
Editions and Translations
The Revelatio Ecclesiae de Sancti Michaelis and the Mediterranean
Origins of Mont St.-Michel by John Charles Arnold (Forthcoming)
Columns
The Forum: The Historicity and Historiography of Arthur: A critical
review of King Arthur: Myth-Making and History by N. Higham, and The
Reign of Arthur: From History to Legend by C. Gidlow by Howard M.
Wiseman
Electronic Medievalia: If I were "You": How Academics Can Stop
Worrying and Learn to Love "the Encyclopedia that Anyone Can Edit" by
Daniel Paul O'Donnell
Continental Business by Michel Aaij
History by Biography:
The Changing Hagiography of St. Æthelthryth by Stacie Turner
Saint Elisabeth of Thuringia, 1207-2007 by Michel Aaij
In addition we have our book reviews edited by Brad Eden from various
contributors and recent losses to the Medieval community.
Issue 11 is planned for a mid-summer release.
Larry J. Swain
our tenth issue located at www.heroicage.org. With this issue, The
Heroic Age has introduced 2 sections of articles, one themed, and one
unthemed. We hope you enjoy this issue. Below, I've included a
table of contents, and I would also like to remind you of our Calls
for Papers for upcoming issues.
Issue 10:
Articles: Saints and Sanctity
Relics, Religious Authority, and the Sanctification of Domestic Space
in the Home Gregory of Tours: An Analysis of the Glory of the
Confessors 20
by Dennis Quinn
Miracle Stories and the Primary Purpose of Adomnán's Vita Columbae
by Sara E. Ellis Nilsson
Preserving the Body Christian: The Motif of "Recapitation" in
Ireland's Medieval Hagiography by Máire Johnson
Boniface's Booklife: How the Ragyndrudis Codex Came to be a Vita
Bonifatii by Michel Aaij
Tradition and Transformation in the Cult of St. Guthlac in Early
Medieval England by John R. Black
Articles-Unthemed Section
The P-Celtic Place-Names of North-East England and South-East Scotland
by Bethany Fox
Trade, Gift-giving and Romanitas: A Comparison of the Use of Roman
Imports in Western Britain and Southern Scandinavia by Thomas Green
Editions and Translations
The Revelatio Ecclesiae de Sancti Michaelis and the Mediterranean
Origins of Mont St.-Michel by John Charles Arnold (Forthcoming)
Columns
The Forum: The Historicity and Historiography of Arthur: A critical
review of King Arthur: Myth-Making and History by N. Higham, and The
Reign of Arthur: From History to Legend by C. Gidlow by Howard M.
Wiseman
Electronic Medievalia: If I were "You": How Academics Can Stop
Worrying and Learn to Love "the Encyclopedia that Anyone Can Edit" by
Daniel Paul O'Donnell
Continental Business by Michel Aaij
History by Biography:
The Changing Hagiography of St. Æthelthryth by Stacie Turner
Saint Elisabeth of Thuringia, 1207-2007 by Michel Aaij
In addition we have our book reviews edited by Brad Eden from various
contributors and recent losses to the Medieval community.
Issue 11 is planned for a mid-summer release.
Larry J. Swain
Sunday, May 6, 2007
John NIles' New Book
Just out: Beowulf and Lejre, by John D. Niles, featuring contributions by Tom Christensen and Marijane Osborn. Foreword by John Hines, afterword by Tom Shippey. Edited by J. Niles and M. Osborn. Published by the Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, Tempe, AZ, as vol. 323 in the series Medieval and Renaissance Texts and Studies. With over 200 illustrations, including 48 in full color. 495 + xiv pages. ISBN 978-0-86698-368-6. Hardcover, $89.95. In collaboration with Brepols Publishers, Belgium.
Is the Old English epic poem Beowulf mere fantasy, or is its action grounded in a real-world locale? Archaeological excavations undertaken in 1986-88 and again in 2004-05 at Lejre, on the Danish island of Zealand, throw that question into relief, for they have revealed the existence of two Iron Age and Viking Age hall-complexes located right where the Danish episodes of that poem have traditionally been located on the basis of legendary evidence. This book reports on these dramatic discoveries and analyzes their significance. Many texts relating to Lejre in the medieval and modern period are included with analysis and commentary. In addition, the modern pseudo-scholarly "myth of Lejre" is explored. The book includes a translation into English of the 1991 book Lejre: Syn og Sagn by the Danish archaeologist Tom Christensen, director of the 1986-88 excavations, together with a new chapter by Christensen summarizing the results of the latest excavations.
In the editors' view, the archaeological discoveries that have stimulated the publication of this book represent "the most important new material development in Beowulf studies to have taken place since the poem was first published in a reliable modern edition" (in 1833-37). You are invited to see if you agree.
A roundtable discussion on the topic "Beowulf and Lejre: Assimilating the New Archaeological Discoveries" is scheduled as session 38 at the 2007 Medieval Congress at Kalamazoo, Michigan. Congress attendees please note: so as to avoid an unfortunate scheduling conflict, that session will merge with session 40, "The Vikings in Late Anglo-Saxon England," into a single 2.5-hour "supersession." The Richard Rawlinson Center for Anglo-Saxon Studies and Manuscript Research will serve as chief host. The combined session will start at 10 a.m. on Thursday, 10 May, in Bernhard 105 (not Schneider 1340), beginning with the scheduled Rawlinson Center program.
Is the Old English epic poem Beowulf mere fantasy, or is its action grounded in a real-world locale? Archaeological excavations undertaken in 1986-88 and again in 2004-05 at Lejre, on the Danish island of Zealand, throw that question into relief, for they have revealed the existence of two Iron Age and Viking Age hall-complexes located right where the Danish episodes of that poem have traditionally been located on the basis of legendary evidence. This book reports on these dramatic discoveries and analyzes their significance. Many texts relating to Lejre in the medieval and modern period are included with analysis and commentary. In addition, the modern pseudo-scholarly "myth of Lejre" is explored. The book includes a translation into English of the 1991 book Lejre: Syn og Sagn by the Danish archaeologist Tom Christensen, director of the 1986-88 excavations, together with a new chapter by Christensen summarizing the results of the latest excavations.
In the editors' view, the archaeological discoveries that have stimulated the publication of this book represent "the most important new material development in Beowulf studies to have taken place since the poem was first published in a reliable modern edition" (in 1833-37). You are invited to see if you agree.
A roundtable discussion on the topic "Beowulf and Lejre: Assimilating the New Archaeological Discoveries" is scheduled as session 38 at the 2007 Medieval Congress at Kalamazoo, Michigan. Congress attendees please note: so as to avoid an unfortunate scheduling conflict, that session will merge with session 40, "The Vikings in Late Anglo-Saxon England," into a single 2.5-hour "supersession." The Richard Rawlinson Center for Anglo-Saxon Studies and Manuscript Research will serve as chief host. The combined session will start at 10 a.m. on Thursday, 10 May, in Bernhard 105 (not Schneider 1340), beginning with the scheduled Rawlinson Center program.
New Book
From ISAS:
Virginia Blanton's new book was published on May 1:
Signs of Devotion: The Cult of St. AEthelthryth in Medieval England, 695-1615 (Hardcover, Penn State Press). For more info, point your browser at
http://www.psupress.psu.edu/books/titles/978-0-271-02984-9.html
Virginia Blanton's new book was published on May 1:
Signs of Devotion: The Cult of St. AEthelthryth in Medieval England, 695-1615 (Hardcover, Penn State Press). For more info, point your browser at
http://www.psupress.psu.edu/books/titles/978-0-271-02984-9.html
Ages of Saints Conference
FWD from Derek Kruger, UNC Greensboro
An Age of Saints? Sainthood, scepticism and the authority of the Church in
the Mediterranean koiné, AD 200-900
Two-day Graduate Conference: University of Cambridge, United Kingdom,
1st-2nd September 2007.
Since the publication of Peter Brown’s famous ‘Holy Man’ article in 1971,
the cult of saints has been a prime marker for religious change between
the ancient and medieval worlds. The saint has thus been crucial to
scholarly efforts to delineate not only the religious, but also the
social, cultural and political identity of late antiquity. In this sense,
the rise of the holy man has been unstoppable and meteoric. But is there
scope to revisit the significance of the holy man in late antiquity? How
might historians take account not only of the positive evidence for the
change in religious sensibilities the rise of the cult of saints is
supposed to represent, but also of the significant and too often
overlooked areas of resistance to it that were expressed during this
period? How was the cult of the saints, their relics and their icons, used
either to consolidate or challenge the authority of the institutional
Church and its bishops? What was the influence exerted upon these
developments throughout the late antique and early medieval periods by
surviving non-Christian traditions, especially Greek and Hellenistic
philosophy? Was the articulation of religious authority experienced
differently in different parts of the Mediterranean and its hinterland?
If so, why?
>From the outset, it is important to note that, despite the emphasis on the
cult of the saints, scepticism and authority are loosely defined. Within
the overarching interest in secular or sacred opposition to, or
competition with, the cult of the saints, possible themes include: the
sceptical position towards sainthood established within contemporary
literature; tensions between public and private modes of interaction with
the divine; opposition to ecclesiastical involvement within the cult of
the saints, or the establishment of ecclesiastical paradigms of cultic
practice; opposition to asceticism as the 'spiritual ultimate'; medical,
philosophical or theological objections or corrections to contemporary
models of sainthood; the literary topos of the hagiographic doubter;
variant models of authority constructed within and around the cult of the
saints in general; tensions created by ascetic groups in relation to the
ecclesiastical and imperial institutions; heresy; iconoclasm; etc.
However, these themes are by no means exhaustive.
The conference is aimed particularly at doctoral students in the first,
second or third years of their research, with an emphasis on the friendly
and interested sharing of ideas. Papers which offer some perspective on
the unity, or divergence, of East and West are particularly welcome, but,
of course, this is not essential. The conference is not limited to the
Greco-Roman tradition, and we will look to include scholars of the
post-Roman West (including Visigothic Spain, Frankish Gaul and Anglo-Saxon
England) and of the non-Greek East (Syriac and Coptic Christianity,
Judaism and Islam).
We are endeavouring to provide two nights’ accommodation and meals,
probably at Trinity College. We must warn in advance, however, that we
shall unfortunately be unable to offer travel expenses. No registration
fee is currently envisaged.
Currently we are looking for the submission of abstracts (c.500 words).
Papers (30mins) will ideally be presented in English – but this is not
mandatory, as those in French, German and Italian will also be considered.
Please forward your abstracts by e-mail attachment to Mr Phil Booth
(pb281@cam.ac.uk) or Mr Matthew dal Santo (mjd79@cam.ac.uk),
preferably by 30th June 2007.
An Age of Saints? Sainthood, scepticism and the authority of the Church in
the Mediterranean koiné, AD 200-900
Two-day Graduate Conference: University of Cambridge, United Kingdom,
1st-2nd September 2007.
Since the publication of Peter Brown’s famous ‘Holy Man’ article in 1971,
the cult of saints has been a prime marker for religious change between
the ancient and medieval worlds. The saint has thus been crucial to
scholarly efforts to delineate not only the religious, but also the
social, cultural and political identity of late antiquity. In this sense,
the rise of the holy man has been unstoppable and meteoric. But is there
scope to revisit the significance of the holy man in late antiquity? How
might historians take account not only of the positive evidence for the
change in religious sensibilities the rise of the cult of saints is
supposed to represent, but also of the significant and too often
overlooked areas of resistance to it that were expressed during this
period? How was the cult of the saints, their relics and their icons, used
either to consolidate or challenge the authority of the institutional
Church and its bishops? What was the influence exerted upon these
developments throughout the late antique and early medieval periods by
surviving non-Christian traditions, especially Greek and Hellenistic
philosophy? Was the articulation of religious authority experienced
differently in different parts of the Mediterranean and its hinterland?
If so, why?
>From the outset, it is important to note that, despite the emphasis on the
cult of the saints, scepticism and authority are loosely defined. Within
the overarching interest in secular or sacred opposition to, or
competition with, the cult of the saints, possible themes include: the
sceptical position towards sainthood established within contemporary
literature; tensions between public and private modes of interaction with
the divine; opposition to ecclesiastical involvement within the cult of
the saints, or the establishment of ecclesiastical paradigms of cultic
practice; opposition to asceticism as the 'spiritual ultimate'; medical,
philosophical or theological objections or corrections to contemporary
models of sainthood; the literary topos of the hagiographic doubter;
variant models of authority constructed within and around the cult of the
saints in general; tensions created by ascetic groups in relation to the
ecclesiastical and imperial institutions; heresy; iconoclasm; etc.
However, these themes are by no means exhaustive.
The conference is aimed particularly at doctoral students in the first,
second or third years of their research, with an emphasis on the friendly
and interested sharing of ideas. Papers which offer some perspective on
the unity, or divergence, of East and West are particularly welcome, but,
of course, this is not essential. The conference is not limited to the
Greco-Roman tradition, and we will look to include scholars of the
post-Roman West (including Visigothic Spain, Frankish Gaul and Anglo-Saxon
England) and of the non-Greek East (Syriac and Coptic Christianity,
Judaism and Islam).
We are endeavouring to provide two nights’ accommodation and meals,
probably at Trinity College. We must warn in advance, however, that we
shall unfortunately be unable to offer travel expenses. No registration
fee is currently envisaged.
Currently we are looking for the submission of abstracts (c.500 words).
Papers (30mins) will ideally be presented in English – but this is not
mandatory, as those in French, German and Italian will also be considered.
Please forward your abstracts by e-mail attachment to Mr Phil Booth
(pb281@cam.ac.uk) or Mr Matthew dal Santo (mjd79@cam.ac.uk),
preferably by 30th June 2007.
Opportunity
The Centre for Medieval Studies (CMS) is a Norwegian
Centre of Excellence (CoE) appointed by the Research
Council of Norway and a Nordic Centre of Excellence
(NCoE)appointed by the Nordic Research Councils.
We have announced Doctoral - , Post Doctoral - &
Researcher Positions at The Centre for Medieval Studies:
http://www.uib.no/cms/various/jobs.htm
Application deadline: May 19, 2007
Centre of Excellence (CoE) appointed by the Research
Council of Norway and a Nordic Centre of Excellence
(NCoE)appointed by the Nordic Research Councils.
We have announced Doctoral - , Post Doctoral - &
Researcher Positions at The Centre for Medieval Studies:
http://www.uib.no/cms/various/jobs.htm
Application deadline: May 19, 2007
Thursday, May 3, 2007
Vatican Library Closing
This piece has been making the rounds of e-lists and blogs:
Bibliothèque Apostolique Vaticane
Monseigneur Farina, préfet de la BAV, a annoncé devant les directeurs des
bibliothèques de l'Unione, association des instituts archéologiques et
historiques de Rome, la prochaine fermeture de la Bibliothèque Apostolique
Vaticane (manuscrits et imprimés) qui prendra effet à partir du 1er
septembre 2007 et durera jusqu'au 1er janvier 2010.
Cela signifie que pour les chercheurs professeurs, la bibliothèque reste
ouverte jusqu'au 15 juillet prochain et jusqu'au 15 juin pour les
doctorants. Les Archives Secrètes Vaticanes ne sont pas concernées par
cette fermeture.
[Transmis par Marilyn NICOUD, Directrice des études médiévales, École
française de Rome .]
Bibliothèque Apostolique Vaticane
Monseigneur Farina, préfet de la BAV, a annoncé devant les directeurs des
bibliothèques de l'Unione, association des instituts archéologiques et
historiques de Rome, la prochaine fermeture de la Bibliothèque Apostolique
Vaticane (manuscrits et imprimés) qui prendra effet à partir du 1er
septembre 2007 et durera jusqu'au 1er janvier 2010.
Cela signifie que pour les chercheurs professeurs, la bibliothèque reste
ouverte jusqu'au 15 juillet prochain et jusqu'au 15 juin pour les
doctorants. Les Archives Secrètes Vaticanes ne sont pas concernées par
cette fermeture.
[Transmis par Marilyn NICOUD, Directrice des études médiévales, École
française de Rome .]
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