Complete IMC 2016 Programme as PDF - last

Transcription

Complete IMC 2016 Programme as PDF - last
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 09.00-10.30
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Great Hall
KEYNOTE LECTURES 2016:
‘THE COLOUR SHALL BE GREEN’: FOOD AND CHROMATICISM IN THE LATER
MIDDLE AGES (LANGUAGE: ENGLISH)
THE SHIFTING PARADIGM OF MEDIEVAL FOOD CRISES: RESEARCHING
DEARTH AND FAMINE (LANGUAGE: ENGLISH)
‘The colour shall be green’: Food and Chromaticism in the Later Middle
Ages
Colour is intimately associated with our appreciation of food, yet we
must not expect the hues and lustre of medieval foods to have offered
the messages we might anticipate. For medieval people, colour
provided important information about the nature of objects, and that
was no less true of what they ate than of anything else. On one level
colour might expose moral and spiritual connotations, on another it
might offer indications of characteristics of a foodstuff according to
medieval humoral theories. Beyond this, a few texts - medieval recipe
books - tell us about the creation of colour and food. Display was a
crucial part of elite cuisine, and control of colour was essential. Recipes
instructed cooks how to colour dishes and to add verisimilitude to made
dishes. Heraldic colours and designs were employed for ‘subtleties’, the
set pieces that came to table with wider messages. There were general
cultural associations between colours and culinary preparations: some
types of dish show common patterns of colouring, such as the use of
green sauce for fish, and red for dishes known as ‘Saracen’. However
fleeting the colours of foodstuffs, they offer a further dimension to our
understanding of meals and the material culture of dining.
The Shifting Paradigm of Medieval Food Crises: Researching Dearth and
Famine
In the past 20 years, pre-modern food crises have moved from being
considered an object of study firmly limited to the past to becoming a
complex subject requiring a thorough historiographical renewal in light
of contemporary research and theories of distribution. Two independent
dynamics have come together to create this paradigm shift. The first is
the development of new research into food crises which focuses
especially on the European Mediterranean, has been launched by
ground-breaking French and Spanish research programmes on the
Crisis of the Late Middle Ages and on medieval food crises. The second
is the reception of models of economic research addressing present-day
crises of subsistence in the Third World, especially the ‘Entitlement
approach’ by Amartya Sen (arguing in its core that famine is not
caused simply by a lack of food, but also by people’s inability to access
existing food), and by its advocates and critics. This lecture will offer an
overview of these developments and some of their major
achievements, as well as looking at future perspectives that lie ahead
in the study of medieval famine.
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.
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
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101
Emmanuel Centre: Room 2
EATING THE BOOK, I: LECTIO, RUMINATIO, AND MEDITATIO IN OLD ENGLISH
LITERATURE
Rachel Burns, Department of English, University College London
Marilina Cesario, School of English, Queen’s University, Belfast
Praelectio, ruminatio, and the Composition of the Old English
Metrical Psalms (Language: English)
Francis Leneghan, Faculty of English Language & Literature, University
of Oxford
Digesting the Page: The Visual Literacy of the Exeter Book
(Language: English)
Johanna Green, Humanities Advanced Technology & Information
Institute, University of Glasgow
Ruminating on the Exeter Book: Unifying Themes in an AngloSaxon Poetic Manuscript (Language: English)
Richard Hawtree, School of Film, Media & Performing Arts, University
for the Creative Arts
102
Emmanuel Centre: Room 7
CHANNELLING THE SUBLUNARY EXPERIENCE: CHANGE IN MEDIEVAL
THOUGHT AND FICTION, I
Geert van Iersel, Fontys Hogescholen, Tilburg
Geert van Iersel
‘Let me have the first drink’: Judas, the Wine, and the Evil in the
Prague Ludus de cena domini (Language: English)
Cora B. Dietl, Institut für Germanistik, Justus-Liebig-Universität Gießen
Transformations of the Human Mind: How to Become Bestial or
Divine (Language: English)
Paul Wackers, Departement Nederlands, Universiteit Utrecht
To Be Anointed a Fool: The Case of a 1561 Brabantine Play
(Language: English)
Bas Jongenelen, Afdeling Nederlandse Taal en Cultuur, Radboud
Universiteit Nijmegen
103
University House: Cloberry Room
CROSS-CULTURAL TRANSMISSION IN NUBIAN CULTURE, I: THE INFLUENCE
OF CHRISTIANITY
Alexandros Tsakos, Institutt for arkeologi, historie, kultur- og
religionsvitenskap, Universitetet i Bergen
Giovanni Ruffini, Department of History, Fairfield University
The Bronze Censer from the Cathedral in Old Dongola (Language:
English)
Maciej Wyżgoł, Polish Centre of Mediterranean Archaeology,
Uniwersytet Warszawski
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
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104
Stage@leeds: Stage 3
BISHOPS AND THE SECULAR CLERGY ON THE MOVE
Episcopus: Society for the Study of Bishops & the Secular Clergy in the
Middle Ages
Michael Burger, College of Arts & Sciences, Auburn University at
Montgomery
Evan Gatti, Department of Art & Art History, Elon University, North
Carolina
Archdeacons and Space in 12th-Century England (Language:
English)
Stephen Marritt, School of Humanities (History), University of Glasgow
Episcopal Itineration in Late 13th-Century Lincoln (Language:
English)
Philippa Hoskin, School of History, University of Lincoln
Virtuous Travel: Episcopal Itinerations in the Dioceses of
Glasgow and Aberdeen from the 13th-15th Centuries (Language:
English)
Penelope Dransart, School of Archaeology, History & Anthropology,
University of Wales Trinity Saint David
105
Parkinson Building: Room B.11
UNDERSTANDING THE WEATHER, CLIMATE, AND SOCIETY IN THE SOUTH
BALTIC ZONE IN THE 15TH-16TH CENTURIES
Instytut Historii i Archiwistyki, Uniwersytet Mikołaja Kopernika, Toruń
Piotr Oliński, Instytut Historii i Archiwistyki, Uniwersytet Mikołaja
Kopernika, Toruń
Emilia Jamroziak, Forschungsstelle für Vergleichende Ordensgeschichte
(FOVOG), Technische Universität Dresden / Institute for Medieval
Studies / School of History, University of Leeds
Climate of the Southern Zone of the Baltic Sea in the 15th and
16th Centuries (Language: English)
Rajmund Przybylak, Katedra Meteorologii i Klimatologii, Uniwersytet
Mikołaja Kopernika, Toruń
Climate as the Subject of Humanistic Reflections in the 15th and
16th Centuries (Language: English)
Waldemar Chorążyczewski, Instytut Historii i Archiwistyki, Uniwersytet
Mikołaja Kopernika, Toruń
Bad Weather as the Harbinger of War Misfortunes in the 15th
Century in the Baltic States (Language: English)
Piotr Oliński
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
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106
Parkinson Building: Room B.08
DISTAFF, I: CLOTH AND CLOTHING FOR THE RICH AND ROYAL
Discussion, Interpretation & Study of Textile Arts, Fabrics & Fashion
(DISTAFF)
Gale R. Owen-Crocker, School of Arts, Languages & Cultures, University
of Manchester
Gale R. Owen-Crocker
Fingers and Claws: Medieval Falconry Gloves (Language: English)
Annemarieke Willemsen, Rijksmuseum van Oudheden, Leiden
Castilian Queens’ Luxury Grave Goods in Las Huelgas Abbey,
1214-1246 (Language: English)
María Barrigón Montañés, Departamento de Conservación, Palacio Real,
Patrimonio Nacional
From Rags to Relics: The Power of Embroidered English
Ecclesiastical Garments in the Middle Ages (Language: English)
Valentina S. Grub, School of Art History, University of St Andrews
Lexis of Cloth and Clothing: Medieval Royal Wardrobe Accounts
(Language: English)
Louise Miriam Sylvester, Department of English & Linguistics, University
of Westminster
107
Leeds University Union: Room 6 - Roundhay
DEBATING RELICS: REFLECTIONS ON RELICS IN THE MIDDLE AGES AND
PROBLEMS OF METHODOLOGY, I - RELICS AND DOUBT
NWO-VIDI Project ‘Mind Over Matter: Debates about Relics as Sacred
Objects, c. 350 - c. 1150’
Janneke Raaijmakers, Departement Geschiedenis en
Kunstgeschiedenis, Universiteit Utrecht
Robert Wiśniewski, Department of Ancient History, Uniwersytet
Warszawski
Introduction: Debating Relics - Reflections on Relics in the
Middle Ages and Problems of Methodology (Language: English)
Felice Lifshitz, Department of Women’s & Gender Studies, University of
Alberta
Debates about Relics in the Early Middle Ages (Language: English)
Janneke Raaijmakers
Numquid duo habuit corpora?: The 12th-Century Legend of St
Martin’s Translation to Salzburg and Its Reception (Language:
English)
Diarmuid Ó Riain, Institut für Geschichte, Universität Wien
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
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108
Parkinson Building: Room B.22
SAINTS IN WALES
University of Wales Trinity Saint David
Jane Cartwright, School of Welsh & Bilingual Studies, University of
Wales Trinity Saint David
Janet Burton, School of Archaeology, History & Anthropology,
University of Wales Trinity Saint David
Saints in Wales: Editing the Middle Welsh Prose Lives (Language:
English)
Jane Cartwright
Rationalising, Confusion, and Innovation in a 15th-Century
‘Paraphrase’ of the Welsh Life of St David (Language: English)
Jenny Day, Centre for Advanced Welsh & Celtic Studies, University of
Wales, Aberystwyth
The Imaging of Saints in Medieval Stained Glass (Language:
English)
Martin Crampin, Centre for Advanced Welsh & Celtic Studies, University
of Wales, Aberystwyth
109
Leeds University Union: Room 2 - Elland Road
GUIDING THE MIND OF THE BEHOLDER: THE MATERIALITY OF MEDIEVAL
TEXTS AS DETERMINANT OF ITS MEANING AND USE, I - THE MATERIALITY
OF LAW MANUSCRIPTS
Rüdiger Lorenz, Lehrstuhl für Mittelalterliche Geschichte, AlbertLudwigs-Universität Freiburg
Christoph Egger, Institut für Österreichische Geschichtsforschung,
Universität Wien
How Medieval Compilers (Re-)Arranged the Carolingian
Capitularies (Language: English)
Britta Mischke, Historisches Institut, Universität zu Köln
Laying Out Evil Intent: Text and Peritext in Later Lombard LawBooks (Language: English)
Thomas Gobbitt, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
The Manuscript Context of Lombard Feudal Law and Its
Implications (Language: English)
Rüdiger Lorenz
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
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111
Parkinson Building: Room 1.08
THE SEPARATION OF CHURCH AND CHURCH IN THE CAROLINGIAN ERA, 8TH10TH CENTURIES, I: INITIATIVE AND IMPACT
Rutger Kramer, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien and Graeme Ward, Institut für
Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften,
Wien
Charles West, Department of History, University of Sheffield
Episcopal Guidance Recommended: Correcting the Church in the
Reign of Lothar I (Language: English)
Sören Kaschke, Historisches Institut, Universität zu Köln
‘Superior to the canonical, but inferior to the monastic’: Monks,
Canons, and Alcuin’s Third Order - The Problem of Defining
Canons and Monks in the 8th and 9th Centuries (Language: English)
Stephen Michael Ling, School of Historical Studies, University of
Leicester
Good Monks, Bad Monks / Good Pastors, Bad Pastors: Fulda and
the Impact of Reform (Language: English)
Johanna Jebe, Graduiertenkolleg 1662 ‘Religiöses Wissen im
vormodernen Europa (800–1800)’, Eberhard-Karls-Universität Tübingen
112
Stage@leeds: Stage 1
THE MEROVINGIAN KINGDOMS IN MEDITERRANEAN PERSPECTIVE, I:
IMAGINING AND PRACTISING RELIGION
GIF-Project ‘East and West in the Early Middle Ages - The Merovingian
Kingdoms in Mediterranean Perspective’, Freie Universität Berlin / BenGurion University of the Negev, Beer Sheva
Pia Bockius, Geschichte der Spätantike und des frühen Mittelalters,
Friedrich-Meinecke-Institut, Freie Universität Berlin and Tamar Rotman,
Department of General History, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev,
Beer Sheva
Yitzhak Hen, Department of General History, Ben-Gurion University of
the Negev, Beer Sheva
Mapping Divine Power: Saints from East and West in Gregory of
Tours (Language: English)
Pia Bockius
Migration of Eastern Saints to Merovingian Gaul: A New Look at
the Liber In Gloria Martyrum and the Martyrologium
Hieronymianum (Language: English)
Tamar Rotman
Corresponding Agendas?: Some Thoughts on the Impact of the
‘Three Chapters Controversy’ in Merovingian Gaul (Language:
English)
Till Stüber, Geschichte der Spätantike und des frühen Mittelalters,
Friedrich-Meinecke-Institut, Freie Universität Berlin
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
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113
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.19
STUDIES IN SUSTENANCE, I: FEEDING AND FEASTING IN FRANCE
Graduate Centre for Medieval Studies, University of Reading
Charlotte Pickard, Centre for Continuing & Professional Education,
Cardiff University
Lindy Grant, Department of History, University of Reading
Culinary Hierarchies: Reflections of Status in Food and Feasting
(Language: English)
Charlotte Pickard
Feeding the Leper in Capetian France (Language: English)
Katie Phillips, Graduate Centre for Medieval Studies, University of
Reading
Knighting at the Great Capetian Feasts: The Cases of Alphonse
of Poitiers, Robert of Artois, and Alphonse of Boulogne
(Language: English)
Charlotte Crouch, Graduate Centre for Medieval Studies, University of
Reading
115
University House: Beechgrove Room
IN ADDITION TO DAILY BREAD, I: FEEDING EUROPE ON FRIDAYS
‘Creating the New North’ Research Programme, Universitetet i Tromsø Norges arktiske universitet
Sigrun Høgetveit Berg, Institutt for historie og religionsvitenskap, UiT
Norges arktiske universitet
Miriam Tveit, Fakultet for samfunnsvitenskap, Nord Universitet
In Cod We Trust: Stockfish Production and North-Norwegian
Coastal Society (Language: English)
Stefan Figenschow, Institutt for historie og religionsvitenskap, UiT
Norges arktiske universitet
Fish and Ships: Getting the Stockfish to the European Consumer
(Language: English)
Magne Njåstad, Institutt for historiske studier, Norges teknisknaturvitenskapelige universitet, Trondheim
116
Michael Sadler Building: Banham Theatre
FAMINE OR SHORTAGE, I: WORDS AND DEFINITIONS
Medieval Association of Rural Studies
Adam Franklin-Lyons, Department of History, Marlboro College,
Vermont
Marie D’Aguanno Ito, Department of History, American University,
Washington DC
Famines: A Concept Too Many? (Language: English)
Philip Slavin, School of History, University of Kent
Identifying Famine in Medieval Sources: England in the Early
14th Century (Language: English)
Phillipp R. Schofield, Department of History & Welsh History,
Aberystwyth University
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
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Paper 117-a:
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117
University House: Great Woodhouse Room
THE MONASTIC REFECTORY AND SPIRITUAL FOOD, I
Centre d’Études Supérieures de Civilisation Médiévale (CESCM), Cahiers
de Civilisation Médiévale
Estelle Ingrand-Varenne, Centre d’Études Supérieures de Civilisation
Médiévale (CESCM), Université de Poitiers / Centre National de la
Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
Martin Aurell, Centre d’Études Supérieures de Civilisation Médiévale
(CESCM), Université de Poitiers / Centre Nationale de la Recherche
Scientifique (CNRS)
Go Out of the Monastery to Realise the Monastic Life?: The Food
in the Heart of the Rural Priories - The Case of Some PrioriesCures in Dauphiné, France (Language: English)
Bruno Varennes, Centre européen de recherche sur les congrégations
et les ordres religieux (CERCOR), Laboratoire d’Études sur les
Monothéismes, Université de St Étienne
Angelic or Human: The Grandmontines (Language: English)
Martine Larigauderie-Beijeaud, Independent Scholar, Saint Sylvestre
118
Stage@leeds: Stage 2
LENTEN SERMONS: FAST OF THE BODY, BANQUET OF THE SOUL, I - THE
‘MAIN COURSE’ OF RELIGIOUS INSTRUCTION
Instituto de Filosofia, Universidade do Porto
Eleonora Lombardo, Instituto de Filosofia, Universidade do Porto
Pietro Delcorno, Leeds Humanities Research Institute, University of
Leeds
‘Cum ieiunatis […]’: Feeding the Soul in Early 13th-Century
Lenten Sermons (Language: English)
Eleonora Lombardo
The Lenten Sermons in the de tempore Collection of John
Waldeby, OESA: Sermon Form and Message (Language: English)
Yuichi Akae, Department of Humanities & Social Sciences, Keio
University, Tokyo
‘Alimenta uerbi’: Bede’s Homilies in Lent (Language: English)
Susan Cremin, Independent Scholar, Cork
119
Baines Wing: Room 1.14
MEDIEVAL(IST) FICTIONS OF THE NORTH: TELLING STORIES AND WRITING
HISTORY
Victoria Cooper, School of English, University of Leeds, Timothy
Rowbotham, Centre for Medieval Studies, University of York and Catalin
Taranu, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Alaric Hall, School of English, University of Leeds
‘Truth’ in Medievalist Fantasy: Interplay between History and
Fiction in Videogames (Language: English)
Victoria Cooper
Kings, Fools, and False Dichotomies: History and Folktale in
Gautreks saga (Language: English)
Timothy Rowbotham
The Many Battles of Maldon: How Does an Event Become
History? (Language: English)
Catalin Taranu
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
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120
Parkinson Building: Room B.09
ISLAMIC FOODWAYS IN THE MULTI-FAITH SOCIETIES OF IBERIA AND
SICILY: ARCHAEOLOGICAL APPROACHES
University of York
Michelle Alexander, Department of Archaeology, University of York
Iona McCleery, Institute for Medieval Studies / School of History,
University of Leeds
Zooarchaeological Insights into Social Change and Food
Practices during the Early Islamic Period in Iberia (Language:
English)
Marcos García-García, Departamento de Historia Medieval, Universidad
de Granada
Diet, Husbandry, and Religion: A Zooarchaelogical Approach to
Animal Exploitation in Islamic Sicily (Language: English)
Veronica Aniceti, Department of Archaeology, University of Sheffield
Islamic and Christian Diet in the Multi-Faith Society of Medieval
Portugal: A Stable Isotope Approach (Language: English)
Alice Toso, Department of Archaeology, University of York
Islamic Diet in Medieval Aragon: The Evidence from Stable
Isotopes (Language: English)
Michelle Alexander
121
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.16
THE TOWN AND THE RIVER: WATER AND HEALTH - FOOD PREPARATION AND
WATER SUPPLY
Marta Caroscio, Dipartimento di Storia, Archeologia, Geografia, Arte e
Spettacolo, Università degli Studi di Firenze
Maureen Mellor, Department for Continuing Education, University of
Oxford
Water and Wine on the Table: From Medical Practice to Practical
Use (Language: English)
Marta Caroscio
The Missing River: Siena and the Use of Underground Water
(Language: English)
Elena Brizio, Department of History, Georgetown University, Fiesole
122
University House: Little Woodhouse Room
THE JOYS AND HARMS OF FEASTS
Department of Medieval Studies, Central European University, Budapest
Gerhard Jaritz, Department of Medieval Studies, Central European
University, Budapest
Ingrid Matschinegg, Institut für Realienkunde des Mittelalters und der
Frühen Neuzeit, Universität Salzburg, Krems
Salty, Sour, and Sweet: A Visit to a Feast in the Medieval
Balkans (Language: English)
Nada Zečević, Medieval Central Europe Research Network, Central
European University, Budapest / Department of History, University of
Eastern Sarajevo
Regulated Feasts - Diminished Joy? (Language: English)
Gerhard Jaritz
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
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123
Emmanuel Centre: Room 10
HUNGRY FOR KNOWLEDGE OR JUST HUNGRY?: CONSUMING MIDDLE
ENGLISH POETRY
IMC Programming Committee,
Katherine Hikes Terrell, Department of English, Hamilton College, New
York
Food and Drink in the Manuscripts of Piers Plowman (Language:
English)
Sarah Wood, Department of English & Comparative Literary Studies,
University of Warwick
Eating His Words: Skelton’s Narratives of Food and
Consumption (Language: English)
Will Rogers, School of Humanities, University of Louisiana, Monroe
Gluttony, Knowledge, and Consumption in John Gower’s Story of
Nectanabus (Language: English)
Curtis Runstedler, Department of English Studies, Durham University
124
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.17
MEDIEVAL RECIPES AND COOKBOOKS, I: EXPLORING RECIPES
IMC Programming Committee,
Bobbi Sutherland, Department of History, University of Dayton
Dead Meat?: Mortal Survival in Medieval ‘Illusion Food’ Recipes
(Language: English)
Mary Hayes, Department of English, University of Mississippi
How (Im)Precise Can a Cook Be?: The Case of Medieval English
Recipes (Language: English)
Magdalena Bator, Instytut Anglistyki, Spoleczna Akademia Nauk,
Warszawa
125
Parkinson Building: Nathan Bodington Chamber
(RE)THEORISING MEDIEVAL FEAST/FAST/FAMINE IN THE 21ST CENTURY, I:
CONSUMING NARRATIVES OF WIFE, MOTHER, VIRGIN, HARLOT, HUNTRESS
Society for Medieval Feminist Scholarship (SMFS)
Liz Herbert McAvoy, Centre for Medieval & Early Modern Research
(MEMO), Swansea University
Liz Herbert McAvoy
Eating and Intimacy: Margery Kempe and the Power of
Commensality (Language: English)
Barbara Ellen Logan, Department of History, University of Wyoming,
Laramie
‘Mete for owyr Lady’: Feeding the Virgin Mary (Language: English)
Sue Niebrzydowski, School of English Literature, Bangor University
Death Eaters: The Digby Magdalen, the N-Town Herod, and the
Queer Feast (Language: English)
Daisy Black, Department of English Language & Literature, Swansea
University
Hunting with Diana and Queer Appetites (Language: English)
Roberta Magnani, Centre for Medieval & Early Modern Research
(MEMO), Swansea University
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
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Paper 126-a:
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126
Baines Wing: Room 1.16
DETERMINING ‘ENGLISH’ IDENTITY IN THE 12TH CENTURY: TEXTS AND
CONTEXTS
IMC Programming Committee,
Helen Birkett, Department of History, University of Exeter
‘Vitalis angligena’?: The English Identity of Orderic Vitalis
(Language: English)
Dale Copley, Department of History & Archaeology, University of
Chester
Aelred of Rievaulx’s Social and Historical Circles (Language:
English)
Ryszard Groń, Archdiocese of Chicago
Saints, Devils, and Goddesses: Female Ancestors in English
Royal Genealogies, c. 1125 - c. 1223 (Language: English)
Peter Lunga, Christ’s College, University of Cambridge
127
University House: St George Room
PROPERTY AND RULERS
IMC Programming Committee,
Paulette Barton, Department of Modern Languages & Classics,
University of Maine, Orono
Ideas of Property in the Private Charters of 12th-Century
England (Language: English)
Hannah Boston, Trinity College, University of Oxford
Junior Partners in Monarchy: The Parallel Cases of Scotland and
Aragon in the Early 15th Century (Language: English)
Shayna Devlin, Centre for Scottish Studies, University of Guelph
Urban Elites and Territorial Rule in Late Medieval Württemberg:
A Complicated Liaison (Language: English)
Nina Kühnle, Historisches Institut, Universität zu Köln
128
Baines Wing: Room G.36
PRACTICES AND LEGACIES OF KINGSHIP, I: RULERS AND IDEALS OF
KINGSHIP
Kerstin Hundahl, Historiska Institutionen, Lunds Universitet
Felicity Hill, School of History, University of East Anglia
Better Dead than Alive: Inventing Ideal Kingship in Rus’ and
Bohemia (Language: English)
Asya Bereznyak, Department of History, Hebrew University of
Jerusalem
The rex crucesignatus: Servant of God, Protector of the Dynasty
- The Case of King Håkon Håkonsson (Language: English)
Pål Berg Svenungsen, Institutt for arkeologi, historie, kultur- og
religionsvitenskap, Universitetet i Bergen
Converting without Wearing the Cross: The Role of Pagan Kings
in the Process of Christianisation of Scandinavia (Language:
English)
Dimitri Tarat, Department of General History, Ben-Gurion University of
the Negev, Beer Sheva
Redbad, the Once and Future King of the Frisians (Language:
English)
Han Nijdam, Fryske Akademy, Leeuwarden
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
Session:
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Moderator:
Paper 129-a:
Paper 129-b:
Paper 129-c:
Session:
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Paper 130-a:
Paper 130-b:
Paper 130-c:
Session:
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Paper 131-a:
Paper 131-b:
Paper 131-c:
129
Parkinson Building: Room B.10
READING MEDIEVAL LITERATURE: NEW APPROACHES
Onderzoekschool Mediëvistiek
Rob Meens, Departement Geschiedenis en Kunstgeschiedenis,
Universiteit Utrecht
Sabrina Corbellini, Oudere Nederlandse Letterkunde, Rijksuniversiteit
Groningen
Interpreting the Alexandreis: An Interdisciplinary Approach
(Language: English)
Ivo Wolsing, Faculteit der Letteren, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Perceptions of Sexuality, Sexual Desire, and Sexual Identity in
Italy, 1450-1500 (Language: English)
Marlisa den Hartog, Vakgroep Geschiedenis, Universiteit Leiden
On the Literary Practice of Continuation Works: Structure,
Meaning, and Expectations in the Midde Dutch Roman van
Walewein (Language: English)
Jelmar Hugen, Departement Geschiedenis en Kunstgeschiedenis,
Universiteit Utrecht
130
Emmanuel Centre: Wilson Room
CROSSING BORDERS IN THE INSULAR MIDDLE AGES, I: ROMANCE AND
HISTORY
Crossing Borders in the Insular Middle Ages
Victoria Flood, Department of English Studies, Durham University
Aisling Byrne, School of Literature & Languages, University of Reading
Nationalist Versions of the Trojan Legend in Transnational
Europe (Language: English)
Helen Fulton, Department of English, University of Bristol
Romancing the North (Language: English)
Sarah Baccianti, Faculté des lettres, Université de Lausanne
Books without Borders: Anglo-French Influences on Older Scots
Romance (Language: English)
Ruth Caddick, Department of English Literature, University of
Birmingham
131
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.15
DEFINING MEDIEVAL WORDS FOR MODERN AUDIENCES
Oxford English Dictionary
Patricia Stewart, Oxford English Dictionary
Debby Banham, Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse & Celtic, University
of Cambridge
English in an Irish Dictionary: Thinking about Definitions and
Translations in the Electronic Dictionary of the Irish Language
(eDIL) (Language: English)
Sharon J. Arbuthnot, Electronic Dictionary of the Irish Language (eDIL)
/ School of Modern Languages, Queen’s University, Belfast
When is a Unicorn a Rhinoceros?: Defining Medieval Animals
and Plants in the Oxford English Dictionary (Language: English)
Patricia Stewart
Just Look It Up in the Dictionary!: Why the Act of Translation
Differs from Definition in Anglo-Norman Texts (Language:
English)
Heather Pagan, Anglo-Norman Dictionary, Aberystwyth University
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
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Paper 132-a:
Paper 132-b:
Paper 132-c:
Session:
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Paper 133-a:
Paper 133-b:
Session:
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Paper 134-a:
Paper 134-b:
Paper 134-c:
132
Leeds University Union: Room 4 - Hyde Park
THE LATIN TALMUD, I
European Research Council Project ‘The Latin Talmud & Its Influence on
Christian-Jewish Polemic (LATTAL)’, Universitat Autónoma de Barcelona
Eulàlia Vernet, Departament de Ciències de l’Antiguitat i de l’Edat
Mitjana, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona
Görge K. Hasselhoff, Departament de Ciències de l’Antiguitat i de l’Edat
Mitjana, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona / Institut für Evangelische
Theologie, Technische Universität Dortmund
The Latin Talmud and Anti-Jewish Polemic in the 13th Century
(Language: English)
Alexander Fidora, Departament de Ciències de l’Antiguitat i de l’Edat
Mitjana, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona
The Extractiones de Talmud and Their Relationship to the
Hebrew Talmud Manuscript of the Biblioteca Nazionale Centrale
of Florence (MS Magl. coll. II.I.7, 8, and 9) (Language: English)
Ulisse Cecini, Departament de Ciències de l’Antiguitat i de l’Edat
Mitjana, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona
Hebrew hapax legomena from the Bible in the Latin Talmud:
Some Comments Regarding Their Textual Transmission and
Their Latin Translation (Language: English)
Eulàlia Vernet
133
Baines Wing: Room G.37
WOMEN RELIGIOUS: WRITTEN NORM AND LIVED PRACTICE
Société d’Études Interdisciplinaires sur les Femmes au Moyen Âge et la
Renaissance / ARDIT Cultures Medievals
Laura Cayrol Bernardo, Centre de Recherches Historiques, École des
Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales (EHESS), Paris
Kimm Curran, School of Critical Studies, University of Glasgow
More Than Meets the Eye: Female Religious Settlements in
Central Catalonia, 13th-16th Centuries (Language: English)
Araceli Rosillo-Luque, Departament d’Història Medieval, Paleografia i
Diplomàtica, Universitat de Barcelona
High Walls, Open Gates: Partial Enclosure in Beguine Life Rules
(Language: English)
Jennifer de Vries, Department of History, Georgetown University,
Washington, DC
134
Baines Wing: Room 1.15
THE EXCHANGE OF IDEAS BETWEEN ISLAM AND CHRISTIAN EUROPE
IMC Programming Committee,
Ann R. Christys, Independent Scholar, Leeds
Calling for More Visibility for Medieval Arabic Philosophy: The
Case of al-Farabi’s Commentary on Aristotle’s Rhetoric
(Language: English)
Maha Baddar, Department of Writing, Pima Community College,
Arizona
Women in Medieval Physiognomy (Language: English)
Patricia Castiñeyra-Fernández, Departamento de Historia del Arte,
Universidad de Murcia
Eastern Europe in the Geographical Work of al-Idrisi (Language:
English)
Irina Konovalova, Institute of World History, Russian Academy of
Sciences, Moscow
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
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Paper 135-a:
Paper 135-b:
Paper 135-c:
Session:
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Paper 136-a:
Paper 136-b:
Paper 136-c:
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Paper 137-a:
Paper 137-b:
Paper 137-c:
135
Baines Wing: Room 1.13
SOUTHERN ITALY IN THE NORMAN AND STAUFEN PERIODS, I: NEGOTIATING
POWER
Daniel Siegmund, Independent Scholar, Leipzig
Amy Devenney, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
‘Normanitas’ and Lordship: Reassessing Norman Identity in the
South (Language: English)
Thomas Nitschke, Lehrstuhl für Mittelalterliche Geschichte, AlbertLudwigs-Universität Freiburg
The Networks of Power of the South Italian Nobility in the 12th
Century (Language: English)
Hervin Fernández-Aceves, School of History, University of Leeds
The Mosaic of Roger II in Santa Maria dell’Ammiraglio in
Palermo: ‘essentially a political manifesto’ (Language: English)
Benedikt Vornberger, Zentrum für Mittelalter- und Renaissancestudien,
Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
136
Emmanuel Centre: Room 11
EUROPEAN CIVIL WARS: CLASSIFICATION AND COMPARISON, I
Institutt for arkeologi, konservering og historie, Universitetet i Oslo
Hans Jacob Orning, Institutt for arkeologi, konservering og historie,
Universitetet i Oslo
Helle Vogt, Center for Retskulturelle Studier, Det Juridiske Fakultet,
Københavns Universitet
The Classification of Political Conflicts in Post-Conquest England
(Language: English)
Stephen D. White, Department of History, Harvard University
Re-Thinking the ‘Feudal Anarchy’: Northwestern France, c. 1030
- c. 1130 (Language: English)
Matthew McHaffie, Department of History, King’s College London
Magnate Strategies during the Dynastic Wars in Denmark, 11311157 (Language: English)
Kim Esmark, Department of Culture & Identity, Roskilde Universitet
137
Leeds University Union: Room 5 - Kirkstall Abbey
THE ANIMAL TURN IN MEDIEVAL HEALTH STUDIES, I: EXPLOITATION AND
RISK - THE ANIMAL IN HUMAN HEALTH
Sunny Harrison, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Sunny Harrison
Roaming the Streets: Dog Rabies and Animal Health Control in
Late Antiquity (Language: English)
Iuliana Soficaru, Department of Medieval Studies, Central European
University, Budapest
Swallow a Frog and Avoid Croaking: Ingesting Poisonous
Animals in William of Marra (Language: English)
Kathleen Walker-Meikle, Department of History, University College
London
Animal Health and the Intensification of Draught Exploitation in
the Middle Ages (Language: English)
László Bartosiewicz, Institutionen för Arkeologi och Antikens Kultur,
Stockholms Universitet
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
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Paper 138-a:
Paper 138-b:
Paper 138-c:
Paper 138-d:
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Paper 139-a:
Paper 139-b:
Paper 139-c:
138
Michael Sadler Building: Rupert Beckett Theatre
THE EXPERIENCE OF SLAVERY IN THE MEDIEVAL WORLD, I: DOMESTIC
SLAVERY FROM LATE ANTIQUITY TO THE EARLY RENAISSANCE
Judith Evans-Grubbs, Department of History, Emory University
Judith Evans-Grubbs
The Weak Slaveholder in the Sermons of Augustine of Hippo
(Language: English)
Cassandra Casias, Department of History, Emory University
Slaves in the Family: The Relationship between Freeborn Boys
and Slaves According to John Chrysostom’s On Vainglory
(Language: English)
John W. Martens, Department of Theology, University of St Thomas,
Minnesota
Hrotsvit’s Basilius, or How to Break a Demonic Carta, Legally!
(Language: English)
Sarah Bogue, Department of Religion / Pitts Theological Library, Emory
University
Who’s Your Daddy?: Slavery and Contested Patrimony in
Florence (Language: English)
Lynn Marie Laufenberg, Department of History, Sweet Briar College,
Virginia
139
Baines Wing: Room 2.13
EXPLORING THE RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN POLITICAL COMMUNITIES IN THE
ATLANTIC ARC, 5TH-11TH CENTURIES
Álvaro Carvajal Castro, School of Archaeology, University College
Dublin
Álvaro Carvajal Castro
Contact Zones, Kingdoms, and Transculturality: The Northern
Atlantic Arc, c. 700 - c. 1100 (Language: English)
Russell Ó Ríagáin, Division of Archaeology & Anthropology, University
of Cambridge
Kingdoms in the Irish Sea Region: Developing New Narratives of
Interaction (Language: English)
Patrick Gleeson, School of History, Classics & Archaeology, Newcastle
University
Polities and Kingdoms in Early Medieval Wales: Continuity,
Change, and Geography (Language: English)
Andy Seaman, Department of Archaeology, Canterbury Christ Church
University
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 13.00-14.00
Session:
Title:
Purpose:
198
Parkinson Building: Treasures Gallery
SPECIAL LECTURE: RICHES REVEALED - MEDIEVAL ARCHIVES IN THE
COLLECTIONS OF THE YORKSHIRE ARCHAEOLOGICAL SOCIETY
Since its foundation in 1863, the Yorkshire Archaeological Society has
accumulated significant archive collections from all over Yorkshire,
many of them records of major families, some of which date back as
far as the 13th century.
In 2015 all these collections were deposited by the Society for safekeeping in the University of Leeds, Brotherton Library Special
Collections, where they are again available for use by the public. Join
us for this Lunchtime Talk to learn about the highlights of the
Collection, including the enormous series of surviving court rolls of the
manor of Wakefield (1274-1925), the 15th-century stock book and 16thcentury lease book of Fountains Abbey, the secular cartulary of
Whixley, North Yorkshire (1430), and numerous early Yorkshire
charters, among others.
The talk will be given by Sylvia Thomas, a past president of the
Yorkshire Archaeological Society and retired County Archivist of West
Yorkshire. Sylvia is the Joint Editor of the West Riding and Derbyshire
volumes of Records of Early English Drama.
The session will take place in the The Sheppard Room, accessed via the
Treasures of the Brotherton Gallery, where some of these items will be
on display. Special Collections houses over 200,000 rare books and
seven kilometres (4.3 miles) of manuscripts and archives, including the
celebrated Brotherton Collection, the Melsteth Icelandic Collection, the
Archives of the Dean & Chapter of Ripon, the Roth Collection, and the
Oriental Manuscript Collection. The Reading Room of Special Collections
is open from 09.00-18.00 during the Congress week, and IMC
delegates are welcome to pursue their research and explore the
collection.
More
details
can
be
found
at
http://library.leeds.ac.uk/special-collections.
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 13.00-14.00
Session:
Title:
Purpose:
199
Parkinson Building: Nathan Bodington Chamber
KEYNOTE LECTURE 2016: THE TASTE OF FOOD
Taste is an ambiguous word that refers either to the physiological
sensation that begins in the body by contact with food, or the aesthetic
evaluation that a particular society places on the gustatory experience
(also in the metaphorical sense, in areas not only of gastronomy but
also and above all else of art, literature, or music). Taste in its first
meaning is an individual and biological attitude. Taste in its second
meaning (understood now as Good Taste) becomes a collective and
cultural attitude. This lecture sets out to show how the respective
importance of these two meanings was modified over time - between
the Medieval and Modern period - with a progressive disequilibrium
away from the first to the second. It aims to show how both concepts
might discover an essential affinity in the ‘principle of knowledge’
which, moreover, allows utilisation of the idea of Taste in a
metaphorical sense; and how, through such a principle, the medieval
ideal of Taste (restricted to the act of eating and particularly
understood as a spontaneous datum) prepares the modern idea of
Good Taste (extended to other activities and mostly as a cultural
datum, that is, as the fruit of social learning) which, in turn, allows
elaboration of the very idea of Food Taste as a Good Taste culturally
learned.
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.
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 201-a:
Paper 201-b:
Paper 201-c:
Session:
Title:
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Paper 202-a:
Paper 202-b:
Paper 202-c:
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Paper 203-a:
Paper 203-b:
201
Emmanuel Centre: Room 2
EATING THE BOOK, II: INTERPRETING SIGNS IN ANGLO-SAXON
MANUSCRIPTS
Francis Leneghan, Faculty of English Language & Literature, University
of Oxford
Jennifer Neville, Department of English, Royal Holloway, University of
London
‘I have tasted of the books of all the islands’: Bibliophagy and
the Mise-en-Page of the Dialogues of Solomon and Saturn
(Language: English)
Rachel Burns, Department of English, University College London
Consumption as Translation: How the Apple Translates
Humanity in Ælfric’s Homilies on the Fall (Language: English)
Sharon Rhodes, Department of English, University of Rochester
Eating the Word with Your Eyes: More Iconicity and Logogriphs
in the Exeter Book Riddles (Language: English)
Winfried P. Rudolf, Seminar für Englische Philologie, Georg-AugustUniversität Göttingen
202
Emmanuel Centre: Room 7
CHANNELLING THE SUBLUNARY EXPERIENCE: CHANGE IN MEDIEVAL
THOUGHT AND FICTION, II
Geert van Iersel, Fontys Hogescholen, Tilburg
Paul Wackers, Departement Nederlands, Universiteit Utrecht
Food, Sperm, and Transformations in Late Medieval University
Medicine (Language: English)
Karine van ‘t Land, Independent Scholar, Eindhoven
Denials of Duplicity: Transformations in Romance as Counters to
Ambivalence (Language: English)
Geert van Iersel
Petrifying Transformations in the Middle English
Methamorphose (Language: English)
Sophia Wilson, Department of English, King’s College London
203
University House: Cloberry Room
CROSS-CULTURAL TRANSMISSION IN NUBIAN CULTURE, II: THE CERAMIC
CONTRIBUTION
Alexandros Tsakos, Institutt for arkeologi, historie, kultur- og
religionsvitenskap, Universitetet i Bergen
Giovanni Ruffini, Department of History, Fairfield University
Trade in the Early Period of the Kingdom of Makuria: The
Ceramic Evidence (Language: English)
Aneta Cedro, Instytut Kultur Śródziemnomorskich i Orientalnych,
Polskiej Akademii Nauk
Understanding Alodian Territory: The Ceramic Contribution
(Language: English)
Marie Evina, Département d’Histoire de l’Art et Archéologie, Université
de Poitiers
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 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:
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Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 206-a:
Paper 206-b:
204
Stage@leeds: Stage 3
BISHOPS AND THE SECULAR CLERGY AT HOME, I
Episcopus: Society for the Study of Bishops & the Secular Clergy in the
Middle Ages
Michael Burger, College of Arts & Sciences, Auburn University at
Montgomery
Evan Gatti, Department of Art & Art History, Elon University, North
Carolina
Food, Feast, and Famine in the North: Aspects of Capitular
Regulations and Local Conditions (Language: English)
Anna Minara Ciardi, Centrum för Teologi och Religionsvetenskap, Lunds
Universitet
Work, Rest, and Pray: The Use of Space and the Interaction
between Three Residences of the Bishops of St Davids in the
14th Century (Language: English)
Richard Charles Turner, Department of History & Classics, Swansea
University
A Divers Panoply: The Far-Flung Residences of the Medieval
Bishops of Lincoln (Language: English)
Paul Everson, Department of History, University of Keele and David
Stocker, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
205
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.10
MAPPINGS, I: MEDIEVAL WORLD MAPS BEYOND GEOGRAPHY
Felicitas Schmieder, Historisches Institut, FernUniversität Hagen and
Dan Terkla, Department of English, Illinois Wesleyan University,
Bloomington
Martina Stercken, Historisches Seminar, Universität Zürich
Visualisation in Maps: How to Encrypt Storytelling and Meaning
in 15th- and 16th-Century Maps (Language: English)
Isabella Valdivieso, Historisches Institut, FernUniversität Hagen
Space, Time, and Good Fortune: The Sawley Map and Its
Manuscript Context (Cambridge, Corpus Christi College, MS 66)
(Language: English)
Andrea Worm, Institut für Kunstgeschichte, Karl-Franzens-Universität
Graz
A Golden Apple in Mussa Melli’s Hand?: A Study of Late Medieval
World Maps of North Mediterranean Origin (Language: English)
Gerda Brunnlechner, Historisches Institut, FernUniversität Hagen
206
Parkinson Building: Room B.08
DISTAFF, II: MAKING, DECORATING, AND USING LINEN
Discussion, Interpretation & Study of Textile Arts, Fabrics & Fashion
(DISTAFF)
Gale R. Owen-Crocker, School of Arts, Languages & Cultures, University
of Manchester
Elizabeth Coatsworth, School of History of Art & Design, Manchester
Metropolitan University
Table Cloths and Table Napkins in Medieval Rabbinic Literature
(Language: English)
Nahum Ben-Yehuda, Land of Israel Studies & Archaeology, Bar-Ilan
University, Ramat Gan
Revisiting the Maaseik Textiles (Language: English)
Alexandra M. Lester-Makin, School of Arts, Languages & Cultures,
University of Manchester
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 207-a:
Paper 207-b:
Paper 207-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 208-a:
Paper 208-b:
Paper 208-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 209-a:
Paper 209-b:
Paper 209-c:
207
Leeds University Union: Room 6 - Roundhay
DEBATING RELICS: REFLECTIONS ON RELICS IN THE MIDDLE AGES AND
PROBLEMS OF METHODOLOGY, II - RELICS AND WRITING
NWO-VIDI Project ‘Mind Over Matter: Debates about Relics as Sacred
Objects, c. 350 - c. 1150’
Janneke Raaijmakers, Departement Geschiedenis en
Kunstgeschiedenis, Universiteit Utrecht
Janneke Raaijmakers
Hidden Bones in Altars and Sculptures: Invisible Objects as
Mediators to the Transcendence (Language: English)
Hedwig Röckelein, Kulturwissenschaftliches Zentrum, Georg-AugustUniversität Göttingen
Statues as Relics (Language: English)
Anthony Lappin, Maynooth University
The Need for Observing Relics: Reflections on the Implications
of a Secondary Adjustment to a Late Romanesque ArmReliquary (Language: English)
Marie Thorpstrup Laursen, Middelalder, Renæssance og Numismatik,
Nationalmuseet, Købnhavn
208
Parkinson Building: Room B.22
THE LITERARY ORIGINS OF HAGIOGRAPHY, I: NOVEL INFLUENCES
Christa Gray, Department of Classics, University of Reading
James Corke-Webster, Department of Classics & Ancient History,
Durham University
Minor Characters in Jerome’s Hagiography and Their Novelistic
Relations (Language: English)
Christa Gray
Separation and Recognition in the Ancient Greek Novel and the
Lives of the Cross-Dressers (Language: English)
Julie van Pelt, Afdeling Latijn en Grieks, Universiteit Gent
‘Apollonius of Tyre’ and Italian Hagiography (Language: English)
Stelios Panayotakis, Department of Philology, University of Crete /
Rijksuniversiteit Groningen
209
Leeds University Union: Room 2 - Elland Road
GUIDING THE MIND OF THE BEHOLDER: THE MATERIALITY OF MEDIEVAL
TEXTS AS DETERMINANT OF ITS MEANING AND USE, II - THE ARRANGEMENT
OF THE PAGE
Rüdiger Lorenz, Lehrstuhl für Mittelalterliche Geschichte, AlbertLudwigs-Universität Freiburg
Dominique Stutzmann, Institut de Recherche et d’Histoire des Textes
(IRHT), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Paris
Milanese Early Medieval Psalters and the Occurrence of Stylistic
and Iconographic Changes: From Birds to Human Figures
(Language: English)
Francesca Demarchi, Independent Scholar, Turin
Moving Books, Changing Contents: A Copy of William of
Conches’s Philosophia mundi in Altzella (Language: English)
Michael Schonhardt, Historisches Seminar, Albert-Ludwigs-Universität
Freiburg
Layout, Scribal Practice, and Reader Reception of Verse as
Prose in London, British Library, Harley MS 2253 (Language:
English)
Alana Bennett, Centre for Medieval Studies, University of York
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 210-a:
Paper 210-b:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 211-a:
Paper 211-b:
Paper 211-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 212-a:
Paper 212-b:
Paper 212-c:
210
Baines Wing: Room 2.14
RECENT WORK IN GEORGIAN STUDIES
Shota Rustaveli Institute of Georgian Literature, Ivane Javakhishvili
Tbilisi State University
Bert Beynen, Osher Lifelong Learning Institute, Temple University,
Philadelphia
Irma Ratiani, Shota Rustaveli Institute of Georgian Literature, Ivane
Javakhishvili Tbilisi State University
Water as a Marker of New Kingship (Language: English)
Grigol Jokhadze, Department of History, Ilia State University
Legitimate Succession in Rustaveli’s The Man in the Panther
Skin and Queen Tamar’s Reign (Language: English)
Bert Beynen
211
Parkinson Building: Room 1.08
THE SEPARATION OF CHURCH AND CHURCH IN THE CAROLINGIAN ERA, 8TH10TH CENTURIES, II: REACTIONS AND RESPONSES
Rutger Kramer, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien and Graeme Ward, Institut für
Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften,
Wien
Steffen Patzold, Seminar für Mittelalterliche Geschichte, EberhardKarls-Universität Tübingen
Amalarius of Metz, the Secular Office and Carolingian Liturgical
Reform (Language: English)
Graeme Ward
The ‘Apostates’ of St-Denis: Monks, Canons, and the Limits of
Carolingian Reform (Language: English)
Ingrid Rembold, Hertford College, University of Oxford
A Reformed Cult in Carolingian Brittany: The Two Lives of St
Melanius of Rennes (Language: English)
Alexandra Jordan, Department of History, Durham University
212
Stage@leeds: Stage 1
THE MEROVINGIAN KINGDOMS IN MEDITERRANEAN PERSPECTIVE, II:
TEXTUAL RELATIONS AND RELATIONSHIPS IN TEXTS - REASSESSING THE
EVIDENCE
GIF-Project ‘East and West in the Early Middle Ages - The Merovingian
Kingdoms in Mediterranean Perspective’, Freie Universität Berlin / BenGurion University of the Negev, Beer Sheva
Pia Bockius, Geschichte der Spätantike und des frühen Mittelalters,
Friedrich-Meinecke-Institut, Freie Universität Berlin and Tamar Rotman,
Department of General History, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev,
Beer Sheva
Stefan Esders, Geschichte der Spätantike und des frühen Mittelalters,
Friedrich-Meinecke-Institut, Freie Universität Berlin
Private Records of Official Diplomacy?: The Franco-Byzantine
Letters in the Austrasian Epistolar Collection (Language: English)
Bruno Dumézil, Département d’histoire, Université Paris Ouest Nanterre
La Défense
Merovingian Colors in the Spiritual Meadow (Language: English)
Jamie Kreiner, Department of History, University of Georgia, Athens
The Post-Roman West and the Byzantine Dark Ages (Language:
English)
Laury Sarti, Geschichte der Spätantike und des frühen Mittelalters,
Friedrich-Meinecke-Institut, Freie Universität Berlin
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
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Paper 213-a:
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Paper 214-a:
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213
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.19
STUDIES IN SUSTENANCE, II: MEALS AND THE MONASTIC ORDERS
Graduate Centre for Medieval Studies, University of Reading
Ruth Salter, Graduate Centre for Medieval Studies, University of
Reading
Anne Mathers-Lawrence, Graduate Centre for Medieval Studies,
University of Reading
Aspects of Monastic Alms and Almsgiving in the High Middle
Ages (Language: English)
Harriet Mahood, Graduate Centre for Medieval Studies, University of
Reading
Asking Nicely: Etiquette Lessons on whether Christ Asked or
Begged for Food, from a 14th-Century Irish Archbishop and His
Franciscan Interlocutor (Language: English)
Bridget Riley, Graduate Centre for Medieval Studies, University of
Reading
214
Emmanuel Centre: Room 10
POISONED FOOD AND POISONED BODIES IN MEDIEVAL LIFE, ART, AND
LITERATURE, I
Center of Archaeometry & Applied Molecular Archaeology, Universität
Salzburg / Interfakultärer Fachbereich Gerichtsmedizin und Forensische
Neuropsychiatrie, Universität Salzburg / Oswald von WolkensteinGesellschaft
Sieglinde Hartmann, Oswald von Wolkenstein-Gesellschaft, Frankfurt
am Main
Sieglinde Hartmann
Famous Persons, Infamous Poisons: Toxicological Aspects of
Unnatural Deaths in Medieval High Society (Language: English)
Jan Cemper-Kiesslich, Interfakultärer Fachbereich Gerichtsmedizin und
Forensische Neuropsychiatrie, Universität Salzburg
What is So Funny about the Extremely Poisonous Aconitum in
the Japanese Noh Farce ‘Busu’ of the 14th Century? (Language:
English)
Yuko Tagaya, Graduate School of Humanities, Kanto-Gakuin University,
Yokohama
Death of an Emperor, or, How Alexander the Great Tries to
Avoid the Prophecy of His Poisoning (Language: English)
Susanne Knaeble, Lehrstuhl für ältere Deutsche Philologie, Universität
Bayreuth
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
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Paper 215-a:
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215
University House: Beechgrove Room
IN ADDITION TO DAILY BREAD, II: MORE THAN JUST A DRINK - ALE AS A
NECESSITY OF SCANDINAVIAN LIFE
‘Creating the New North’ Research Programme, Universitetet i Tromsø Norges arktiske universitet
Sigrun Høgetveit Berg, Institutt for historie og religionsvitenskap, UiT
Norges arktiske universitet
Sigrun Høgetveit Berg
Magical Ale: Purpose and Function in Old Norse Runic
Inscription and Literary Depictions (Language: English)
Karoline Kjesrud, Institutt for lingvistiske og nordiske studier,
Universitetet i Oslo
Legal Ale: Brewing and Drinking in Scandinavian Laws
(Language: English)
Miriam Tveit, Fakultet for samfunnsvitenskap, Nord Universitet
‘The Germans in Bergen drink what they can get, but it is hardly
to be called wine’: So What Did the Norwegians Drink?
(Language: English)
Erik Opsahl, Institutt for historiske studier, Norges teknisknaturvitenskapelige universitet, Trondheim
Four Vikings Walk into a Bar: The ‘Vomit Motif’, Medieval
Icelandic Drinking Culture, and the Ethos of Control in Old Norse
Literature (Language: English)
Caroline R. Batten, Faculty of English Language & Literature, New
College, Oxford University
216
Michael Sadler Building: Banham Theatre
FAMINE OR SHORTAGE, II: ITALY IN THE 14TH CENTURY
Medieval Association of Rural Studies
Adam Franklin-Lyons, Department of History, Marlboro College,
Vermont
Philip Slavin, School of History, University of Kent
Fretura, Carestia, or, Fam: Understandings of Food Shortage
Intensity amongst 14th-Century Urban Elites (Language: English)
Adam Franklin-Lyons
The Florentine Grain Carestia of 1329-1330: Famine or Dearth?
- The Anatomy of a Market Break (Language: English)
Marie D’Aguanno Ito, Department of History, American University,
Washington DC
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
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Paper 217-a:
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Paper 218-a:
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Paper 219-a:
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217
University House: Great Woodhouse Room
THE MONASTIC REFECTORY AND SPIRITUAL FOOD, II
Centre d’Études Supérieures de Civilisation Médiévale (CESCM), Cahiers
de Civilisation Médiévale
Martin Aurell, Centre d’Études Supérieures de Civilisation Médiévale
(CESCM), Université de Poitiers / Centre Nationale de la Recherche
Scientifique (CNRS)
Vincent Debiais, Centre d’Études Supérieures de Civilisation Médiévale
(CESCM), Université de Poitiers / Centre National de la Recherche
Scientifique (CNRS), Paris
Spiritual Food and the Hermeneutics of Space in the Cloister of
Saint-Aubin in Angers (Language: English)
Sasha Gorjeltchan, Department of Art, University of Toronto
Inscribing ‘Spiritual Food’ in Refectories of the Holy Roman
Empire (Language: English)
Wilfried E. Keil, Institut für Europäische Kunstgeschichte, RuprechtKarls-Universität Heidelberg
Aesop’s Fables in the Refectory of the Abbey of Fleury
(Language: English)
Estelle Ingrand-Varenne, Centre d’Études Supérieures de Civilisation
Médiévale (CESCM), Université de Poitiers / Centre National de la
Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
218
Stage@leeds: Stage 2
LENTEN SERMONS: FAST OF THE BODY, BANQUET OF THE SOUL, II DOMINICAN TRADITION AND ITS RECEPTION
Instituto de Filosofia, Universidade do Porto
Eleonora Lombardo, Instituto de Filosofia, Universidade do Porto
Holly Johnson, Department of English, Mississippi State University
Collationes of Thomas Aquinas and the Birth of the Thematic
Lenten Sermon Collections (Language: English)
Jussi Hanska, Department of Education, University of Tampere
To Feast or To Fast: Informing the People of Their Legal
Obligations (Language: English)
Stefan Visnjevac, Department of Humanities, University of
Roehampton, London
A Lent ‘poor in Sundays’?: The Case of the Waldensian Sermons
(Language: English)
Andrea Giraudo, Società di Studi Valdesi, Torre Pellice
219
Baines Wing: Room 1.14
SPIRITUAL FOOD, BODILY METAPHOR, AND ARTISTIC EXPRESSION IN THE
HIGH MIDDLE AGES
Department of History, Durham University
Giles E. M. Gasper, Department of History, Durham University
Giles E. M. Gasper
Spiritual Food and the Theology of the Eucharist (Language:
English)
Sigbjørn Olsen Sønnesyn, Department of History, Durham University
The Depiction of the Eucharist in Norwegian Medieval Art
(Language: English)
Kaja Kollandsrud, Kulturhistorisk Museum, Oslo / Institutt for filosofi,
idé- og kunsthistorie og klassiske språk, Universitetet i Oslo
Ascetic Rejection and Bodily Need: Carthusian Attitudes to Food
(Language: English)
Rosalind Green, Department of History, Durham University
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
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Paper 222-a:
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220
Parkinson Building: Room B.09
FOOD, FEASTING, AND FAMINE IN THE ISLAMIC WORLD, I
Ann R. Christys, Independent Scholar, Leeds
Ann R. Christys
Digestifs and Dutch Courage in the Age of Muslim Empire:
Sunni-Hanafi Jurists on the Permissibility of Drinking Alcohol
(Language: English)
Claire Brierley, School of Computing, University of Leeds and Mustapha
Sheikh, School of Languages, Cultures & Societies - Arabic, Islamic &
Middle Eastern Studies, University of Leeds
Local Delicacies and Regional Pride in the Islamic World, c. 8001000 (Language: English)
Harry Munt, Department of History, University of York
221
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.16
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS AND SOCIETAL RESPONSES: INTERDISCIPLINARY
APPROACHES TO PRE-MODERN FAMINES, I
Heidelberg Center for the Environment, Ruprecht-Karls-Universität
Heidelberg / Abteilung Wirtschafts-, Sozial- und Umweltgeschichte,
Universität Bern
Maximilian Schuh, Historisches Seminar, Ruprecht-Karls-Universität
Heidelberg
Dominik Collet, Heidelberg Center for the Environment, Ruprecht-KarlsUniversität Heidelberg
Ask the Trees!: Dendroclimatology as an Approach to
Reconstruct Extreme Weather Events Leading to Famine
(Language: English)
Carolin Rethorn, Heidelberg Center for the Environment, RuprechtKarls-Universität Heidelberg
Climate, Crop Failure, and Famine in Pre-Modern Finland: TreeRing Evidence for Climate-Society Interactions (Language:
English)
Heli Huhtamaa, Historiches Institut, Universität Bern / Department of
Geographical & Historical Studies, University of Eastern Finland
Hungry Hungary: Food Shortage, Need, Famine, and Their
Detectable Causes in Medieval Hungary (Language: English)
Andrea Kiss, Institut für Wasserbau und Ingenieurhydrologie,
Technische Universität Wien / University of Szeged
222
University House: Little Woodhouse Room
FEASTING EAST AND WEST
IMC Programming Committee,
Shaun Tougher, School of History, Archaeology & Religion, Cardiff
University
Fairs and Feasting at the Plen an Gwari (Language: English)
Truan Evans, Graduate School of Arts & Humanities, University of
Bristol
Feasting, Drinking, and Assembly in Early Irish Law (Language:
English)
Joe Wolf, Department of Celtic Languages & Literatures, Harvard
University
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
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Paper 223-a:
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Paper 224-a:
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Paper 225-a:
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223
Parkinson Building: Room B.11
FOOD AND DRINK ON STAGE - AND IN THE AUDIENCE
IMC Programming Committee,
Alexandra F. Johnston, Records of Early English Drama, University of
Toronto
York Cycle: A Movable Feast? (Language: English)
John Ghent, Independent Scholar, Tokoroa
Eat to be Eaten: Food and Drink in the Spanish Medieval Dance
of Death (Language: English)
Beatriz de la Fuente Marina, Facultad de Filología, Universidad de
Salamanca
The Drunken Patriarch: Parallel Narratives, Comic Potential, and
Civic Ideology in the York and Towneley Noah Pageants
(Language: English)
Jamie Beckett, Department of English Studies, Durham University
224
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.17
MEDIEVAL RECIPES AND COOKBOOKS, II: DIALOGUE AND DISSEMINATION
IMC Programming Committee,
Melitta Weiss Adamson, Department of Modern Languages &
Literatures, University of Western Ontario
The Ménagier de Paris Reads the Viandier: Cookbook
Commentary in 14th-Century France (Language: English)
Timothy J. Tomasik, Department of Foreign Languages & Literatures,
Valparaiso University, Indiana
Cookbooks in Conversation (Language: English)
Bobbi Sutherland, Department of History, University of Dayton
‘Blessing is associated with the company’: Ibn Jazla and Early
Arab Culinary Recipes in Medieval Europe (Language: English)
Daniel Newman, School of Modern Languages & Cultures, Durham
University
225
Parkinson Building: Nathan Bodington Chamber
(RE)THEORISING MEDIEVAL FEAST/FAST/FAMINE IN THE 21ST CENTURY,
II: EATING PRACTICES AND THE VALUE OF FOOD IN THE 13TH-CENTURY
SOUTHERN LOW COUNTRIES
Society for Medieval Feminist Scholarship (SMFS)
Anne-Laure Méril-Bellini delle Stelle, Independent Scholar, Pissos
Brenda M. Bolton, University of London
Spilled Milk: Miscalculated Eating in the Exempla of Jacques de
Vitry (Language: English)
Stacie Vos, Department of Literature, University of California, San
Diego
Nutritional Value of Corporeal and Spiritual Food in Male
Cistercian Communities: A Balance to Reach (Language: English)
Eric Delaissé, Institut de Recherche Religions, Spiritualités, Cultures,
Sociétés (RSCS), Université Catholique de Louvain
Reassessing and Piety: Food and Feeding among the mulieres
religiosae and the viri Dei of the 13th-Century Southern Low
Countries (Language: English)
Anne-Laure Méril-Bellini delle Stelle
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
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Paper 226-a:
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Paper 227-a:
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Paper 228-a:
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Paper 228-c:
226
Baines Wing: Room 1.16
FAITH AND SOCIETY
IMC Programming Committee,
Paulette Barton, Department of Modern Languages & Classics,
University of Maine, Orono
Who Really Were the Faidits? (Language: English)
Olivier Sirjacq, Department of History, University of Reading
Venice as an altera Hierusalem?: A Documentary Investigation
of the Venetian Role in the Itinerarium ad Terra Sanctam
(Language: English)
Laura Grazia Di Stefano, Department of History, University of
Nottingham
Depicting the Holy Land in Late Medieval Historiography
(Language: English)
Nadine Ulrike Holzmeier, Historisches Institut, FernUniversität Hagen
227
University House: St George Room
RETHINKING CARTULARIES, 900-1200: CARTULARIES AS HISTORY,
HISTORY IN CARTULARIES, I - EARLY TEXTS
Manchester Centre for Anglo-Saxon Studies (MANCASS)
Charles Insley, Department of History, University of Manchester
Leonie V. Hicks, School of Humanities, Canterbury Christ Church
University
Reading the Dossier of Saint-Denis as History (Language: English)
Robert Berkhofer, Department of History, Western Michigan University,
Kalamazoo
The Pancarte of Jumièges and Beyond: Parallel Histories and
Authority (Language: English)
Thomas Roche, Archives départementales de l’Eure / Groupe de
Recherche d’Histoire (GRHis), Université de Rouen
The First Durham History: Property and the Past in the
Anonymous Historia de Sancto Cuthberto (Language: English)
Charlie Rozier, Institute of Medieval & Early Modern Studies, Durham
University
228
Baines Wing: Room G.36
PRACTICES AND LEGACIES OF KINGSHIP, II: DYNASTIC LEGACY AND
LEGITIMACY
Kerstin Hundahl, Historiska Institutionen, Lunds Universitet
Mia Münster-Swendsen, Department of Communication & Arts, Roskilde
Universitet
The Problem of Paternity: Henry II of England and Geoffrey of
Anjou (Language: English)
Charity Urbanski, Department of History, University of Washington
The Quest for Heirs: The Marriage and Kin Strategies of the
Capetians between 1140 and 1240 (Language: English)
Trine Imer Kappel, Independent Scholar, København
Valdemar II the Legislator: The Right Order of Society in Late
Medieval Denmark? (Language: English)
Michael H. Gelting, Rigsarkivet (Danish National Archives), Statens
Arkiver, København / Centre for Scandinavian Studies, University of
Aberdeen
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
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Paper 229-a:
Paper 229-b:
Paper 229-c:
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Paper 230-a:
Paper 230-b:
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Paper 230-d:
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Paper 231-a:
Paper 231-b:
229
Parkinson Building: Room B.10
DOCUMENTING SOCIO-ECONOMIC RELATIONSHIPS: WOMEN, FAMILIES, AND
LABOURERS
IMC Programming Committee,
Phillipp R. Schofield, Department of History & Welsh History,
Aberystwyth University
Entrepreneurs in the Cloth Hall: Elite Women Merchants in Late
Medieval Douai (Language: English)
Sarah Hanson, Department of History, University of California, Santa
Barbara
Quiet Women Seldom Make History: Scolding in 14th-Century
Wakefield (Language: English)
Megan Wall, Centre for Medieval & Renaissance Studies, KU Leuven
Family Fortunes: Tracking Names in 15th-Century Worcester
(Language: English)
Timothy Bowly, Independent Scholar, Bristol
230
Emmanuel Centre: Wilson Room
CROSSING BORDERS IN THE INSULAR MIDDLE AGES, II: SCIENTIFIC AND
TECHNICAL WRITINGS
Crossing Borders in the Insular Middle Ages
Victoria Flood, Department of English Studies, Durham University
Victoria Flood
What’s Welsh for Mugwort?: Multilingual Medieval Welsh
Medical Receipts (Language: English)
Diana Luft, Centre for Advanced Welsh & Celtic Studies, University of
Wales, Aberystwyth
The Visual Culture of Konungs Skuggsjá (Language: English)
Dale Kedwards, National Centre of Competence in Research (NCCR)
Mediality, Universität Zürich
The Insular Reception of Bartholomeus Anglicus’s De
proprietatibus rerum (Language: English)
Eric Lacey, Department of English, Creative Writing & American
Studies, University of Winchester
Grosseteste and the Green Knight: Medieval Colour Theory and
Early Heraldic Writing (Language: English)
Michael J. Huxtable, Department of English Studies, Durham University
231
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.15
MEDIEVALISMS IN 21ST-CENTURY FANTASY
Tales After Tolkien Society
Helen Young, Department of English, University of Sydney
Lesley Coote, Andrew Marvell Centre for Medieval & Early Modern
Studies, University of Hull
Aching for Tiffany: Terry Pratchett’s (Re)Visionary Witches
(Language: English)
Molly Brown, Department of English, University of Pretoria
Medievalisms in Urban Fantasy Television: Buffy to Lost Girl
(Language: English)
Helen Young
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
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Paper 232-a:
Paper 232-b:
Paper 232-c:
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Paper 233-a:
Paper 233-b:
232
Leeds University Union: Room 4 - Hyde Park
THE LATIN TALMUD, II
European Research Council Project ‘The Latin Talmud & Its Influence on
Christian-Jewish Polemic (LATTAL)’, Universitat Autónoma de Barcelona
Eulàlia Vernet, Departament de Ciències de l’Antiguitat i de l’Edat
Mitjana, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona
Ulisse Cecini, Departament de Ciències de l’Antiguitat i de l’Edat
Mitjana, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona
The Latin Translation of the Talmud in Paris, 1244-1245:
Anthology and florilegium (Language: Français)
Óscar de la Cruz Palma, Departamento de Ciencias de la Antigüedad y
de la Edad Media, Universitat Autónoma de Barcelona
The Latin Talmud Translation: Hebrew Sources (Language:
English)
Annabel González, Departament de Ciències de l’Antiguitat i de l’Edat
Mitjana, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona
The Latin Talmud Translation: The Epitome (Language: English)
Isaac Lampurlanés, Departament de Ciències de l’Antiguitat i de l’Edat
Mitjana, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona
233
Baines Wing: Room G.37
NEW DIRECTIONS IN THE STUDY OF WOMEN RELIGIOUS, I: STAGING THE
IDENTITIES OF WOMEN RELIGIOUS
Journal of Medieval Monastic Studies (JMMS) / History of Women
Religious of Britain & Ireland (HWRBI) / Henri Pirenne Institute for
Medieval Studies, Universiteit Gent / Religion & Society in the Early &
Central Middle Ages (ReSoMa), Universiteit Gent
Kimm Curran, School of Critical Studies, University of Glasgow, Kirsty
Day, Institute for Medieval Studies / School of History, University of
Leeds and Steven Vanderputten, Vakgroep Geschiedenis, Universiteit
Gent
Kimm Curran
Representations of Female Abbatial Leadership in 9th- to 11thCentury Saxony (Language: English)
Jirki Thibaut, Vakgroep Geschiedenis, Universiteit Gent / KU Leuven
Embodying Faith: Eugenia and Æthelthryth in the Monastery
(Language: English)
Abigail G. Robertson, Department of English, University of New Mexico
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
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Organiser:
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Paper 234-a:
Paper 234-b:
Paper 234-c:
Session:
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Paper 235-a:
Paper 235-b:
Paper 235-c:
234
Baines Wing: Room 1.15
ARCHIVES AND ARCHIVAL PRACTICES AROUND THE MEDIEVAL
MEDITERRANEAN
ARCHIves Project ‘The Comparative History of Archives in Late Medieval
and Early Modern Italy’, Birkbeck, University of London
Daisy Livingston, Department of History, School of Oriental & African
Studies, University of London
Konrad Hirschler, Department of History, School of Oriental & African
Studies, University of London
The Archive of the Basilica of San Vittore of Varese, 899-1299: A
Remarkable Example of Medieval Ecclesiastical Archival
Practices (Language: English)
Giacomo Giudici, Department of History, Classics & Archaeology,
Birkbeck, University of London
A Composite Archive: Storing and Organising Documents in the
15th-Century Crown of Aragon (Language: English)
Alessandro Silvestri, Department of History, Classics & Archaeology,
Birkbeck, University of London
Archival Practices in Egypt during the 13th-15th Centuries: The
Documentary Evidence (Language: English)
Daisy Livingston
235
Baines Wing: Room 1.13
SOUTHERN ITALY IN THE NORMAN AND STAUFEN PERIODS, II: PAPACY AND
EMPIRE
Michael Schwab, Institut für mittelalterliche Geschichte, LudwigMaximilians-Universität München
Hervin Fernández-Aceves, School of History, University of Leeds
Rituals in Context: The Norman-Papal Relationship in 1120
(Language: English)
Michael Schwab
Frederick II, Catholic Ruler and Faithful Son of the Church: The
Imperial Version (Language: English)
John Phillip Lomax, Department of History, Politics & Justice, Ohio
Northern University
‘Habeas tu privilegia et nos habeamus possessionem’: The
Borders of the Territory of Benevento in 1272 (Language: English)
Daniel Siegmund, Independent Scholar, Leipzig
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
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Paper 236-a:
Paper 236-b:
Paper 236-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
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Paper 237-a:
Paper 237-b:
Paper 237-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
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Paper 238-a:
Paper 238-b:
Paper 238-c:
236
Emmanuel Centre: Room 11
EUROPEAN CIVIL WARS: CLASSIFICATION AND COMPARISON, II
Center for Retskulturelle Studier, Københavns Universitet
Helle Vogt, Center for Retskulturelle Studier, Det Juridiske Fakultet,
Københavns Universitet
Stephen Church, School of History, University of East Anglia
Rebellious Regions: Law, Violence and the Practice of Political
Power in England and Denmark in the Late 12th and Early 13th
Centuries (Language: English)
Jenny Benham, School of History, Archaeology & Religion, Cardiff
University
The Notion of bellum civile in the Holy Roman Empire in the 12th
and 13th Centuries (Language: English)
Thomas Foerster, Det norske institutt i Roma, Universitetet i Oslo
Medieval Civil Wars and Modern Ones: Similar in Name Only?
(Language: English)
Hans Jacob Orning, Institutt for arkeologi, konservering og historie,
Universitetet i Oslo
237
Leeds University Union: Room 5 - Kirkstall Abbey
THE ANIMAL TURN IN MEDIEVAL HEALTH STUDIES, II: HARNESSING
NATURE - THE USE AND CONSUMPTION OF ANIMALS
Sunny Harrison, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Sunny Harrison
The Intake of Unicorn Over the Middle Ages (Language: English)
Adriana Gallardo Luque, Departamento de Historia Medieval,
Universidad Complutense de Madrid
Medicine and Magic in De taxone liber (Language: English)
Shirley Kinney, Department of History, University of Toronto
The Will of Wulfgeat and Appelfealu Steeds: Anglo-Saxon
Equine Nutrition, Management, and Genetics (Language: English)
Julia F. Crisler, Department of History, University of California, Los
Angeles
238
Michael Sadler Building: Rupert Beckett Theatre
THE EXPERIENCE OF SLAVERY IN THE MEDIEVAL WORLD, II: THE VIKINGS
AND THEIR IMPACT
Marek Jankowiak, Faculty of Oriental Studies, University of Oxford and
David Wyatt, School of History, Archaeology & Religion, Cardiff
University
Marek Jankowiak
Carolingian Slavery and the Viking Threat (Language: English)
Matthew Delvaux, Department of History, Boston College
Slavery in the Viking Age: The Role of Human Commodities in
North Sea Cultural Networks (Language: English)
Daniel Melleno, Department of History, University of California,
Berkeley
Slaves in Scandinavia: Sources and Supply (Language: English)
Michael Kræmmer, Independent Scholar, Sorø
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
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Paper 239-a:
Paper 239-b:
Paper 239-c:
239
Baines Wing: Room 2.13
EXPLORING MONASTIC LIBRARIES IN AUSTRIA: THE DEPARTMENT OF
MANUSCRIPT STUDIES AT THE AUSTRIAN ACADEMY OF SCIENCES
Oswald von Wolkenstein-Gesellschaft, Frankfurt am Main
Katrin Janz-Wenig, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
Astrid Breith, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
Medieval Manuscripts at the Library of the Canons Regular of St
Augustine in Klosterneuburg (Language: English)
Katrin Janz-Wenig
Medieval Manuscripts at the Library of the Benedictine
Monastery of Göttweig (Language: English)
Astrid Breith
Watermarks, Medieval Manuscripts, and Hebrew Fragments:
Three Databases Hosted by the Austrian Academy of Sciences
(Language: English)
Maria Stieglecker, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 301-a:
Paper 301-b:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 302-a:
Paper 302-b:
Paper 302-c:
Session:
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Moderator:
Paper 303-a:
301
Emmanuel Centre: Room 2
EATING THE BOOK, III: THE CONSUMPTION OF TEXTS IN ANGLO-SAXON
ENGLAND
Francis Leneghan, Faculty of English Language & Literature, University
of Oxford
Francis Leneghan
Swallowed Whole?: Old English Incorporation of Old Saxon
Verse Elements (Language: English)
Thomas A. Bredehoft, Chancery Hill Books & Antiques, West Virginia
Consuming (in) the Dialogi: Food and Gardens in Werferth’s Old
English Dialogues (Language: English)
David F. Johnson, Department of English, Florida State University
302
Emmanuel Centre: Room 7
HOMILIES IN ANGLO-SAXON ENGLAND, I: PREACHING AND TEACHING IN
ANGLO-SAXON HOMILIES
Seminar für Englische Philologie, Georg-August-Universität Göttingen
Esther Lemmerz, Seminar für Englische Philologie, Georg-AugustUniversität Göttingen and Christine Voth, Seminar für Englische
Philologie, Georg-August-Universität Göttingen
Donald G. Scragg, Manchester Centre for Anglo-Saxon Studies,
University of Manchester
Preachable Moments in Old Testament Narrative (Language:
English)
Paul Sander Langeslag, Seminar für Englische Philologie, GeorgAugust-Universität Göttingen
Preaching and Teaching: Didactic Techniques in Old English
Homilies (Language: English)
Judith Kaup, Institut für Anglistik und Amerikanistik, Heinrich-HeineUniversität Düsseldorf
Learning to Teach in the Vercelli Book (Language: English)
Rebecca Hardie, Department of English, King’s College London
303
University House: Cloberry Room
CROSS-CULTURAL TRANSMISSION IN NUBIAN CULTURE, III: ART AND
ARCHITECTURE
Alexandros Tsakos, Institutt for arkeologi, historie, kultur- og
religionsvitenskap, Universitetet i Bergen
Adam Simmons, Department of History, Lancaster University
In Search of Master-Builders of the Nubian Churches: A Sketch
Representation of a Plan from Faras Cathedral (Language:
English)
Piotr Makowski, Instytut Archeologii Uniwersytetu Warszawskiego,
Uniwersytet Warszawski
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 304-a:
Paper 304-b:
Paper 304-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 305-a:
Paper 305-b:
Paper 305-c:
Session:
Title:
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Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 306-a:
Paper 306-b:
Paper 306-c:
304
Stage@leeds: Stage 3
BISHOPS AND THE SECULAR CLERGY AT HOME, II
Episcopus: Society for the Study of Bishops & the Secular Clergy in the
Middle Ages
Michael Burger, College of Arts & Sciences, Auburn University at
Montgomery
Evan Gatti, Department of Art & Art History, Elon University, North
Carolina
The Art of Wishful Thinking: Interior Design and the
Imperialization of the Late Antique Bishop in Northern Italy
(Language: English)
Jaqueline Petra Sturm, Department of Art & Archaeology, Princeton
University
Houses in the Close: Cathedral Canons and Their Residence, c.
1000 - c. 1250 (Language: English)
Julia Steuart Barrow, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
The Residences of the Bishops of Durham: Archaeological and
Historical Perspectives (Language: English)
Caroline Smith, Department of Archaeology, Durham University
305
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.10
MAPPINGS, II: REPRESENTING SPICES, TOWNS, AND ROADS ON REGIONAL
MAPS
Felicitas Schmieder, Historisches Institut, FernUniversität Hagen and
Dan Terkla, Department of English, Illinois Wesleyan University,
Bloomington
Daniel Syrbe, Geisteswissenschaftliches Zentrum für Kultur &
Geschichte Ostmitteleuropas e.V. (GWZO), Universität Leipzig
Cloves, Cardamom, and Cartography: The Influence of the Spice
Trade on Portolan Maps (Language: English)
Kevin E. Sheehan, Library & Heritage Collections, Durham University
Etzlaub’s Romweg Map and Its Representation of Central
European Roads (Language: English)
Tomáš Klimek, Manuscriptorium Digital Library, Národní knihovna
České republiky, Praha
Mapping Destroyed Towns (Language: English)
Daniela Schulte, Historisches Seminar, Universität Zürich
306
Parkinson Building: Room B.08
DISTAFF, III: RECONSTRUCTING CLOTH AND CLOTHING
Discussion, Interpretation & Study of Textile Arts, Fabrics & Fashion
(DISTAFF)
Gale R. Owen-Crocker, School of Arts, Languages & Cultures, University
of Manchester
Alexandra M. Lester-Makin, School of Arts, Languages & Cultures,
University of Manchester
Textile Imprints in Grobina: Fabrics and Their Possible Uses
(Language: English)
Artis Āboltiņš, Independent Scholar, Riga and Santa Jansone, Faculty of
History & Philosophy, University of Latvia, Riga
Fabric Eater: The 13th-Century Robe (Language: English)
Tina Anderlini, Independent Scholar, Russange
A Duckbill on a Dutch Housewife: The huik or hoyk, the
Characteristic Mantle of the Dutch Housewife, 1520-1650
(Language: English)
Geeske M. Kruseman, Independent Scholar, Leiden
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 307-a:
Paper 307-b:
Respondent:
Session:
Title:
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Paper 308-a:
Paper 308-b:
Paper 308-c:
307
Leeds University Union: Room 6 - Roundhay
DEBATING RELICS: REFLECTIONS ON RELICS IN THE MIDDLE AGES AND
PROBLEMS OF METHODOLOGY, III - RELICS AND RÉÉCRITURE
NWO-VIDI Project ‘Mind Over Matter: Debates about Relics as Sacred
Objects, c. 350 - c. 1150’
Janneke Raaijmakers, Departement Geschiedenis en
Kunstgeschiedenis, Universiteit Utrecht
Jamie Kreiner, Department of History, University of Georgia, Athens
Miracle Stories and Their Meaning in Alcuin’s Saints’ Lives
(Language: English)
Jelle Visser, Departement Geschiedenis en Kunstgeschiedenis,
Universiteit Utrecht
Rewriting on Demand: Jonas of Orléans’s Vita secunda et
translatio sancti Hucberti and Carolingian Politics of Relic
Veneration (Language: English)
Francesco Veronese, Dipartimento di scienze storiche, geografiche e
dell’antichità, Università degli Studi di Padova
Julia M. H. Smith, School of Humanities (History), University of
Glasgow
308
Parkinson Building: Room B.22
THE LITERARY ORIGINS OF HAGIOGRAPHY, II: HOW TO PRAISE A SAINT
James Corke-Webster, Department of Classics & Ancient History,
Durham University
Christa Gray, Department of Classics, University of Reading
Panegyric and Eusebius of Caesarea’s Portrait of Constantine
(Language: English)
James Corke-Webster
Partners in Chastity: Heroic Characterisation in Latin Lives of
Virgin Spouses (Language: English)
Klazina Staat, Faculteit Letteren en Wijsbegeerte, Universiteit Gent
The Composition of Holy Praise: Generic Textures in Late Latin
Hagiography (Language: English)
Angela Zielinski Kinney, Institut für Klassische Philologie, Mittel- und
Neulatein, Universität Wien
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 309-a:
Paper 309-b:
Paper 309-c:
Session:
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Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 310-a:
Paper 310-b:
Paper 310-c:
309
Leeds University Union: Room 2 - Elland Road
GUIDING THE MIND OF THE BEHOLDER: THE MATERIALITY OF MEDIEVAL
TEXTS AS DETERMINANT OF ITS MEANING AND USE, III - THE
ARRANGEMENT OF THE MANUSCRIPT
Rüdiger Lorenz, Lehrstuhl für Mittelalterliche Geschichte, AlbertLudwigs-Universität Freiburg
Thomas Gobbitt, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
Mobilising History around 900: Manuscripts as a Key to the
Threatened Carolingian Order? (Language: English)
Luise Nöllemeyer, Sonderforschungsbereich 923 ‘Bedrohte Ordnungen’,
Eberhard-Karls-Universität Tübingen and Felix Schaefer,
Sonderforschungsbereich 923 ‘Bedrohte Ordnungen’, Eberhard-KarlsUniversität Tübingen
The Awntyrs off Arthure: Reading the Manuscript Evidence
(Language: English)
Rebecca Pope, Centre for Medieval & Early Modern Studies, University
of Kent
Uses of Manuscripts: Some Books with Functions of Other Books
(Language: English)
Leonor Zozaya, Centro de História da Sociedade e da Cultura (CHSC),
Universidade de Coimbra / Fundaçao para a Ciência e a Tenología
(FCT), Lisboa
310
Baines Wing: Room 2.14
MODERN APPROACHES TO GEORGIAN MEDIEVAL WRITINGS
Shota Rustaveli Institute of Georgian Literature, Ivane Javakhishvili
Tbilisi State University
Bert Beynen, Osher Lifelong Learning Institute, Temple University,
Philadelphia
Bert Beynen
City as a Text in the Medieval Chivalric Romance (Language:
English)
Maka Elbakidze, Shota Rustaveli Institute of Georgian Literature, Ivane
Javakhishvili Tbilisi State University
Computerised Processing of Titlo Diacritic in the Georgian
Chronicles (Language: English)
Irina Lobzhanidze, Linguistic Research Centre, Ilia State University
The Georgian Literary Canon: Development, Models, Directions
(Language: English)
Irma Ratiani, Shota Rustaveli Institute of Georgian Literature, Ivane
Javakhishvili Tbilisi State University
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 311-a:
Paper 311-b:
Paper 311-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 312-a:
Paper 312-b:
Paper 312-c:
311
Parkinson Building: Room 1.08
THE SEPARATION OF CHURCH AND CHURCH IN THE CAROLINGIAN ERA, 8TH10TH CENTURIES, III: ADAPTATION AND EXAPTATION
Rutger Kramer, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien and Graeme Ward, Institut für
Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften,
Wien
Mayke de Jong, Departement Geschiedenis en Kunstgeschiedenis,
Universiteit Utrecht
Sententia legis?: Bishops Teaching and Bishops Taught in
Hrabanus Maurus’s De institutione clericorum (Language: English)
Cinzia Grifoni, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
‘No one comes to the Father except through me’: Church
Fathers in the Institutio Canonicorum and Beyond (Language:
English)
Veronika Wieser, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
On the Shoulders of Goths: Visigothic Sources for Carolingian
Reforms (Language: English)
Molly Lester, Department of History, Princeton University
312
Stage@leeds: Stage 1
THE MEROVINGIAN KINGDOMS IN MEDITERRANEAN PERSPECTIVE, III:
(HOW) DIPLOMACY MATTERS
GIF-Project ‘East and West in the Early Middle Ages - The Merovingian
Kingdoms in Mediterranean Perspective’, Freie Universität Berlin / BenGurion University of the Negev, Beer Sheva
Pia Bockius, Geschichte der Spätantike und des frühen Mittelalters,
Friedrich-Meinecke-Institut, Freie Universität Berlin and Tamar Rotman,
Department of General History, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev,
Beer Sheva
Ian N. Wood, School of History, University of Leeds
The Frankish-Visigothic-Byzantine Triangle in the Late 6th
Century (Language: English)
Anna Gehler, Friedrich-Meinecke-Institut, Freie Universität Berlin
Friendship and Diplomacy in the Merovingian Kingdoms
(Language: English)
Hope Williard, School of History, University of Leeds
The Religious Dimensions of 6th-Century Frankish Diplomacy
(Language: English)
Yaniv Fox, Department of General History, Bar Ilan University
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 313-a:
Paper 313-b:
Paper 313-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 314-a:
Paper 314-b:
Paper 314-c:
313
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.19
14TH-CENTURY COLLECTED WORKS AND THE CONSEQUENCES FOR THE
MEDIEVAL CONCEPT OF VERNACULAR AUTHORSHIP
Henri Pirenne Institute for Medieval Studies, Universiteit Gent
Youri Desplenter, Vakgroep Nederlandse literatuur, Universiteit Gent
Youri Desplenter
Making Authors: The Cases of Eckhart, Tauler, and Seuse
(Language: English)
Freimut Löser, Meister-Eckhart-Gesellschaft / Abteilung Deutsche
Sprache und Literatur des Mittelalters, Universität Augsburg
The Community of Groenendaal and the Collecting of Authorial
Oeuvres: Ruusbroec and Van Leeuwen (Language: English)
Eva Vandemeulebroucke, Faculteit Letteren en Wijsbegeerte,
Universiteit Gent
Evaluating Christine de Pizan’s Audience through the Queen’s
Manuscript (London, British Library, MS Harley 4431) (Language:
English)
Charlotte Cooper, Faculty of Medieval & Modern Languages, University
of Oxford
314
Emmanuel Centre: Room 10
POISONED FOOD AND POISONED BODIES IN MEDIEVAL LIFE, ART, AND
LITERATURE, II
Center of Archaeometry & Applied Molecular Archaeology, Universität
Salzburg / Interfakultärer Fachbereich Gerichtsmedizin und Forensische
Neuropsychiatrie, Universität Salzburg / Oswald von WolkensteinGesellschaft
Jan Cemper-Kiesslich, Interfakultärer Fachbereich Gerichtsmedizin und
Forensische Neuropsychiatrie, Universität Salzburg
Jan Cemper-Kiesslich
St Anthony’s Fire and a Victim of Ergot Poisoning on the
Isenheim Altarpiece by Matthias Grünewald (Language: English)
Irma Trattner, Abteilung für Bildnerische Erziehung, Kunstuniversität
Linz
Like a Snake without Poison: The Stricker’s Puzzling
Contribution to Mental Poisoning by Sin (Language: English)
Silvan Wagner, Ältere Deutsche Philologie, Universität Bayreuth
The Mysterious Death in Stories of the Eaten Heart: Did Love
Poison the Last Meal of the Beloved Lady? (Language: English)
Sieglinde Hartmann, Oswald von Wolkenstein-Gesellschaft, Frankfurt
am Main
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 315-a:
Paper 315-b:
Paper 315-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 316-a:
Paper 316-b:
Paper 316-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 317-a:
Paper 317-b:
315
University House: Beechgrove Room
IN ADDITION TO DAILY BREAD, III: NO ORDINARY FEAST - SERVING UP
THE SYMBOLIC AND UNSAVOURY
‘Creating the New North’ Research Programme, Universitetet i Tromsø Norges arktiske universitet
Sigrun Høgetveit Berg, Institutt for historie og religionsvitenskap, UiT
Norges arktiske universitet
Richard Holt, Institutt for historie og religionsvitenskap, UiT Norges
arktiske universitet
Feasting with the Trolls of Nordic Literature (Language: English)
Eleanor Rosamund Barraclough, Department of English Studies,
Durham University
Horses for Courses: Food and Faith in Early Medieval Times
(Language: English)
John-Henry Clay, Department of History, Durham University
Tasting the Good News: Food and Drink Symbolism in Medieval
Irish Narratives (Language: English)
Cathinka Dahl Hambro, Institutt for kultur og litteratur, UiT Norges
arktiske universitet
316
Michael Sadler Building: Banham Theatre
CHRONICLING FAMINE
IMC Programming Committee,
Phillipp R. Schofield, Department of History & Welsh History,
Aberystwyth University
A Vulnerable Society?: Famines in Carolingian Historiography
(Language: English)
Stephan Franko Ebert, Institut für Geschichte, Technische Universität
Darmstadt
Britannia, Fecunda et Copiosa: Famine and Conquest in Henry of
Huntingdon’s Historia Anglorum (Language: English)
Jacqueline Burek, Department of English, University of Pennsylvania
Famine, Food, and Possible Proto-Robin Hood in Monastic
Chronicles (Language: English)
Charles Robert Kos, Independent Scholar, Melbourne
317
University House: Great Woodhouse Room
THE MONASTIC REFECTORY AND SPIRITUAL FOOD, III
Centre d’Études Supérieures de Civilisation Médiévale (CESCM), Cahiers
de Civilisation Médiévale
Pascale Brudy, Centre d’Études Supérieures de Civilisation Médiévale
(CESCM), Université de Poitiers / Centre Nationale de la Recherche
Scientifique (CNRS)
Estelle Ingrand-Varenne, Centre d’Études Supérieures de Civilisation
Médiévale (CESCM), Université de Poitiers / Centre National de la
Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
Spiritual Reading, Theological Conversation, and Alms for the
Poor in Royal Banquets, 12th-13th Centuries (Language: English)
Martin Aurell, Centre d’Études Supérieures de Civilisation Médiévale
(CESCM), Université de Poitiers / Centre Nationale de la Recherche
Scientifique (CNRS)
‘Diabolus est in refectorio’: Fighting the Devil during Monastic
Meals, c. 1100 - c. 1300 (Language: English)
François Wallerich, Centre d’Histoire Sociale et Culturelle de l’Occident
(CHISCO), Université Paris Ouest Nanterre La Défense
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 318-a:
Paper 318-b:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 319-a:
Paper 319-b:
Paper 319-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 320-a:
Paper 320-b:
Paper 320-c:
318
Stage@leeds: Stage 2
LENTEN SERMONS: FAST OF THE BODY, BANQUET OF THE SOUL, III SPIRITUAL MEANING OF FASTING
International Medieval Sermon Studies Society (IMSSS)
Pietro Delcorno, Leeds Humanities Research Institute, University of
Leeds
Lorenza Tromboni, Dipartimento di Storia, Archeologia, Geografia, Arte
e Spettacolo, Università di Firenze
‘Where is the Man who Fasted from what is Forbidden and
Feasted on what is Permitted?’: The Ramadan Sermons of the
Sufi Preacher Shu’ayb al-Hurayfish (Language: English)
Linda G. Jones, Departamento de Humanidades, Universitat Pompeu
Fabra, Barcelona
‘Praeceptum ieiunii’: A Spiritual Reading of Nicholas of Cusa’s
Lenten Sermons (Language: English)
Coralba Colomba, Dipartimento di Studi Umanistici, Università del
Salento
319
Baines Wing: Room 1.14
STUDIES IN SUSTENANCE, III: SAINTS AND SUSTENANCE
Graduate Centre for Medieval Studies, University of Reading
Ruth Salter, Graduate Centre for Medieval Studies, University of
Reading
Claire Harrill, Department of English Literature, University of
Birmingham
Cure and Cause: Depictions of Food in 12th-Century English
Hagiographies (Language: English)
Ruth Salter
In through the Mouth: Demonic Possession and Saintly
Exorcism in the Miracles of St Bartholomew (Language: English)
Claire Trenery, Department of History, Royal Holloway, University of
London
Saintly Sustenance and Spiritual Symbolism: Representations of
the Fluctuating Fortunes of the Cult of St Æthelthryth of Ely
(Language: English)
Ian Styler, Department of History, University of Birmingham
320
Parkinson Building: Room B.09
FOOD, FEASTING, AND FAMINE IN THE ISLAMIC WORLD, II
Ann R. Christys, Independent Scholar, Leeds
Arezou Azad, Department of History, University of Birmingham
Dining Culture at the Ghaznevid Court, 1030-1041 (Language:
English)
Hugh Kennedy, Department of the Languages & Cultures of the Near &
Middle East, School of Oriental & African Studies, University of London
Food Insecurity: Famine on the Darb Zubayda (Language: English)
Peter Webb, Department of the Languages & Cultures of the Near &
Middle East, School of Oriental & African Studies, University of London
Cultures and Cuisine during the Crusader Period: An Exploration
of Foodways in the Levant (Language: English)
Heather Elizabeth Crowley, School of History, Archaeology & Religion,
Cardiff University
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 321-a:
Paper 321-b:
Paper 321-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 322-a:
Paper 322-b:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 323-a:
Paper 323-b:
Paper 323-c:
321
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.16
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS AND SOCIETAL RESPONSES: INTERDISCIPLINARY
APPROACHES TO PRE-MODERN FAMINES, II
Heidelberg Center for the Environment, Ruprecht-Karls-Universität
Heidelberg / Abteilung Wirtschafts-, Sozial- und Umweltgeschichte,
Universität Bern
Maximilian Schuh, Historisches Seminar, Ruprecht-Karls-Universität
Heidelberg
Christian Rohr, Abteilung für Wirtschafts-, Sozial- und
Umweltgeschichte, Universität Bern
Weather and Its Impacts on Agrarian Production in Early-14thCentury England: Evidence From the Winchester Pipe Rolls
(Language: English)
Maximilian Schuh
Trade, Markets, and Famine in the Territory of the Swiss
Confederacy from the 14th to the 16th Centuries (Language:
English)
Chantal Camenisch, Abteilung für Wirtschafts-, Sozial- und
Umweltgeschichte, Universität Bern
Monsoon Failure, Drought, and Famine in Late Mughal South
Asia: Social Consequences in Bengal (Language: English)
Dario Kaidel, Heidelberg Center for the Environment, Ruprecht-KarlsUniversität Heidelberg
322
University House: Little Woodhouse Room
GOING TO THE DOGS?: HOLY AND UNHOLY FEASTING, FASTING, AND
HUNTING
IMC Programming Committee,
Catherine J. Batt, School of English, University of Leeds
‘Do not give that which is holy to dogs’: Hunting, the curée
Ritual, and the Eucharist (Language: English)
Andrew John Pattison, Department of English Philology, University of
Oulu
Neither Flesh nor Bread: Unholy Feasting in the Roman de
Renart (Language: English)
Pamela Diaz, Department of French, Hamilton College, New York
323
Parkinson Building: Room B.11
STAGING THE EUCHARIST
IMC Programming Committee,
Cora B. Dietl, Institut für Germanistik, Justus-Liebig-Universität Gießen
Eucharistic Image and Agency in the N-Town Passion Plays
(Language: English)
Clara Wild, Medieval Studies, Yale University
Hunger and the Eucharist: Angels’ Food in John Bale’s The
Temptation of Our Lord and the Digby Mary Magdalene
(Language: English)
Ernst Gerhardt, Department of English, Laurentian University, Ontario
The Reformation on Stage: Protestant Influence on the Passion
Play (Language: English)
Claudia Daiber, Graduate School of Humanities, Universiteit van
Amsterdam
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 324-b:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 325-a:
Paper 325-b:
Paper 325-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 326-a:
Paper 326-b:
Paper 326-c:
324
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.17
MEDIEVAL RECIPES AND COOKBOOKS, III: PHYSICAL AND SPIRITUAL
HEALTH
IMC Programming Committee,
Mary Hayes, Department of English, University of Mississippi
Evolution and Application of Humoral Theory in the Medieval
Kitchen (Language: English)
Loren David Mendelsohn, Science & Engineering Library, City College of
New York
325
Parkinson Building: Nathan Bodington Chamber
A FEAST FOR THE EYES: REPRESENTATIONS OF EATING IN ART
IMC Programming Committee,
Harriet Mahood, Graduate Centre for Medieval Studies, University of
Reading
A Dreamt Feast: Culinary Marvels in the Hypnerotomachia
Poliphili (Language: English)
Efthymia Priki, Department of Byzantine & Modern Greek Studies,
University of Cyprus
Don’t Play with Your Food: Food and Humour in the Cent
Nouvelles Nouvelles (Language: English)
Kleio Pethainou, Edinburgh College of Art, University of Edinburgh
Breaking Bread, Breaking Hearts: Hospitality in Late Medieval
Sicily (Language: English)
Kristen Streahle, Kunsthistorisches Institut in Florenz, Max-PlanckInstitut, Firenze
326
Baines Wing: Room 1.16
LATER MEDIEVAL PERSPECTIVES ON TOLERANCE
Department of Philosophy, National University of Ireland, Maynooth
Simon F. Nolan, Department of Philosophy, National University of
Ireland, Maynooth / Order of Carmelites
David E. Luscombe, Department of History, University of Sheffield
‘Sequens legem Marchie vel dyaboli’: Richard FitzRalph on
Robbing Food in 14th-Century Paris, London, and Dundalk
(Language: English)
Michael W. Dunne, Department of Philosophy, National University of
Ireland, Maynooth
‘Ex diversitate nutrimenti’: Nicholas of Cusa on Customs, Ethics,
Eating, and Geography (Language: English)
Susan Gottlöber, Department of Philosophy, National University of
Ireland, Maynooth
‘Tanquam apes Domini, dulcedinem spiritualem mellificantes’:
The Spirit of Tolerance and 14th-Century Carmelite Scholasticism
(Language: English)
Simon F. Nolan
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 327-a:
Paper 327-b:
Paper 327-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 328-a:
Paper 328-b:
Paper 328-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 329-a:
Paper 329-b:
327
University House: St George Room
RETHINKING CARTULARIES, 900-1200: CARTULARIES AS HISTORY,
HISTORY IN CARTULARIES, II - ANGLO-NORMAN CARTULARIES
John Rylands Research Institute, Manchester
Charles Insley, Department of History, University of Manchester
Stephen Church, School of History, University of East Anglia
Illuminated Cartularies in the Anglo-Norman World and the
Long 12th Century (Language: English)
Laura Cleaver, Department of History, Trinity College Dublin
Scribal Training and Copying Practices in the Worcester Nero
Middleton Cartulary (Language: English)
Kate Wiles, History Today, London
Cartulary Production at Worcester and Canterbury in the
Aftermath of the Norman Conquest (Language: English)
Francesca Tinti, Departamento de Historia Medieval, Moderna y de
América, Universidad del País Vasco
328
Baines Wing: Room G.36
PRACTICES AND LEGACIES OF KINGSHIP, III: PROPAGANDA AND PAPAL
INVOLVEMENT
Kerstin Hundahl, Historiska Institutionen, Lunds Universitet
Sally N. Vaughn, Department of History, University of Houston, Texas
King Offa’s Genes in the Papal Archive: A Lost Royal Legacy
(Language: English)
Benjamin Savill, Wolfson College, University of Oxford
Defaming Kings and Stirring Scandal: Excommunication as
Propaganda in the 13th Century (Language: English)
Felicity Hill, School of History, University of East Anglia
Papal Involvement and Propaganda in the Danish Battle for the
Throne in the Mid-13th Century (Language: English)
Kerstin Hundahl
329
Parkinson Building: Room B.10
EXPLORING THE MEDIEVAL IMAGINATIVE LANDSCAPE
Rose A. Sawyer, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Iona McCleery, Institute for Medieval Studies / School of History,
University of Leeds
Skiptingr, Conjǒun, and Wehselbalc: The Connection between
Child Substitution and Foolishness in Vernacular Insults
(Language: English)
Rose A. Sawyer
Útgarðr in Iceland: The Geography of the Supernatural in Saga
Society (Language: English)
Max Bienkowski, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
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Paper 330-a:
Paper 330-b:
Paper 330-c:
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Paper 331-a:
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Paper 331-b:
330
Emmanuel Centre: Wilson Room
ART AND RELIGION IN EARLY MEDIEVAL MANUSCRIPT ILLUMINATION
IMC Programming Committee,
Rhiannon M. Lawrence-Francis, Special Collections, Leeds University
Library
Medieval meditatio in Ireland: From the Carpet Pages of the
Book of Kells to the Fís Adomnán in the Leabhar na hUidre
(Language: English)
Laura McCloskey, Department of History of Art & Architecture, Trinity
College Dublin
The Devil in Details: Images of Architectural Elements in the Fall
of Lucifer in Anglo-Saxon Manuscript, Oxford, Bodleian Library,
MS Junius 11 (Language: English)
Gesner Las Casas Brito Filho, School of Fine Art, History of Art &
Cultural Studies, University of Leeds / Coordenação de
Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES), Brazil
Manuscript Illumination at Saint-Evroult and the Contacts with
England, c. 1100: Evidence and Questions about Artistic
Exchange within the Anglo-Norman State (Language: English)
Jesús Rodríguez Viejo, Edinburgh College of Art, University of
Edinburgh
331
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.15
J. R. R. TOLKIEN: MEDIEVAL ROOTS AND MODERN BRANCHES
Dimitra Fimi, Department of Humanities, Cardiff Metropolitan University
Chris Vaccaro, Department of English, University of Vermont
‘Those who cling in queer corners to the forgotten tongues and
manners of an elder day’: J. R. R. Tolkien, Finns, and Elves
(Language: English)
Andrew Higgins, Independent Scholar, London
Stirring the Alembic: Alchemical Resonances in Tolkien’s MiddleEarth (Language: English)
Sara Brown, Department of English, Rydal Penrhos School, Conwy
J. R. R. Tolkien and T. H. White: Modern Brits and Old Wizards
(Language: English)
Aurélie Brémont, Centre d’Études Médiévales Anglaises (CEMA),
Université Paris IV - Sorbonne
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 16.30-18.00
Session:
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Paper 332-a:
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Paper 333-a:
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332
Leeds University Union: Room 4 - Hyde Park
THE LATIN TALMUD, III
European Research Council Project ‘The Latin Talmud & Its Influence on
Christian-Jewish Polemic (LATTAL)’, Universitat Autónoma de Barcelona
Eulàlia Vernet, Departament de Ciències de l’Antiguitat i de l’Edat
Mitjana, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona
Alexander Fidora, Departament de Ciències de l’Antiguitat i de l’Edat
Mitjana, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona
The References to the Talmud in Andrew of St Victor’s Biblical
Commentaries (Language: English)
Montse Leyra Curiá, Facultad de Literatura Cristiana y Clásica,
Universidad San Dámaso, Madrid
Rashi’s Glosses on Isaiah: Notes on the List of Excerpts from
Rashi’s Commentaries in Bibliothèque nationale de France, MS
16.558 (Language: English)
Görge K. Hasselhoff, Departament de Ciències de l’Antiguitat i de l’Edat
Mitjana, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona / Institut für Evangelische
Theologie, Technische Universität Dortmund
Talmudic Quotations in Nicholas of Lyra’s Postilla Literalis
(Language: English)
Ari Geiger, Department of History, Bar-Ilan University, Ramat Gan
333
Baines Wing: Room G.37
NEW DIRECTIONS IN THE STUDY OF WOMEN RELIGIOUS, II: ORGANISING
FEMALE RELIGIOUS IN THE 10TH TO THE 12TH CENTURIES
Journal of Medieval Monastic Studies (JMMS) / History of Women
Religious of Britain & Ireland (HWRBI) / Henri Pirenne Institute for
Medieval Studies, Universiteit Gent / Religion & Society in the Early &
Central Middle Ages (ReSoMa), Universiteit Gent
Kimm Curran, School of Critical Studies, University of Glasgow, Kirsty
Day, Institute for Medieval Studies / School of History, University of
Leeds and Steven Vanderputten, Vakgroep Geschiedenis, Universiteit
Gent
Steven Vanderputten
Female Order?: Forms of Female Networking and Their
Strategies in the 12th Century between France and Southern
Italy (Language: English)
Cristina Andenna, Forschungsstelle für Vergleichende Ordensgeschichte
(FOVOG), Technische Universität Dresden
Bishops and Nuns in 10th-Century Lotharingia: The Examples of
Metz, Toul, and Verdun (Language: English)
Anne Wagner, Centre de Recherche Universitaire Lorraine d’histoire
(CRUHL) / Département d’histoire, Université de Franche-Comté,
Besançon
Prostitutes and Religious Life: Some Observations on Vitalis of
Savigny, Henry of Lausanne, and Ivo of Chartres (Language:
English)
Guido Cariboni, Dipartmento di Studi Medioevali, Università Cattolica
del Sacro Cuore, Milano
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 16.30-18.00
Session:
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Paper 334-a:
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Paper 335-a:
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Paper 336-a:
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334
Baines Wing: Room 1.15
A FRONTIER SOCIETY?: THE IBERIAN PENINSULA
IMC Programming Committee,
Jonathan Jarrett, School of History, University of Leeds
Reconstructing Hispania (Language: English)
Graham Barrett, St John’s College, University of Oxford
The Muslim Rahmanid State as Frontier for William of Gellone
and Bernard of Septimania (Language: English)
Janet Sorrentino, Department of History, Washington College, Maryland
Parias: New Approaches to the Tributes Paid by the Moors to
Christian Realms in Medieval Spain (Language: English)
Adrian Elias Negro Cortes, Departamento de Historia, Universidad de
Extremadura, Cáceres
335
Baines Wing: Room 1.13
SOUTHERN ITALY IN THE NORMAN AND STAUFEN PERIODS, III: DOCUMENTS
AND DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES
Community as Opportunity (Co:Op): The Creative Archives’ & Users’
Network (Creative Europe 2014-2020) / Dipartimento di Studi
Umanistici, Università degli Studi di Napoli - Federico II
Antonella Ambrosio, Dipartimento di Studi Umanistici, Università degli
Studi di Napoli - Federico II
Antonella Ambrosio
Digital Editions and Digital Archives of the Charters: The Case of
the Abbey Santa Maria della Grotta of Vitulano, Benevento
(Language: English)
Vera Isabell Schwarz-Ricci, Dipartimento di Studi Umanistici, Università
degli Studi di Napoli - Federico II
The Private Deeds of the Abbey of Santa Maria della Grotta:
Patterns and Functions in Notarial Practices, 10th-13th Centuries
(Language: English)
Paola Massa, Dipartimento di Scienze librarie e documentarie,
Università degli Studi di Roma ‘La Sapienza’
Donations pro anima in Greek Private Deeds in Southern Italy
under the Normans during the 12th Century (Language: English)
Adele Di Lorenzo, Dipartimento di Studi Umanistici, Università degli
Studi di Napoli - Federico II
336
Emmanuel Centre: Room 11
WHO DOES THE FIGHTING?: MILITARY ROLES IN THE HIGH MIDDLES AGES
IMC Programming Committee,
Daniel Jaquet, Max-Planck-Institut für Wissenschaftsgeschichte, Berlin
The Woman Warrior in the Medieval Context (Language: English)
Jaclyn Carter, Department of English, University of Calgary, Alberta
Medieval Cavalry: The Third Horseman of the Apocalypse
(Language: English)
John Henry Gassmann, Independent Scholar, Bühler
Pillagers with Long Knives: 14th-Century Conflict and Cornish
Connectivity (Language: English)
Samuel John Drake, Department of History, Royal Holloway, University
of London
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 16.30-18.00
Session:
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Paper 337-a:
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Paper 338-a:
Paper 338-b:
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Paper 339-a:
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337
Leeds University Union: Room 5 - Kirkstall Abbey
THE ANIMAL TURN IN MEDIEVAL HEALTH STUDIES, III: CARE OF THE BRUTE
BEAST - VETERINARY MEDICINE IN THE LATER MIDDLE AGES
Sunny Harrison, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Kathleen Walker-Meikle, Department of History, University College
London
Lords, Ladies, Grooms, and ‘Boys’: The Many Faces of Animal
Care in Late Medieval Miracle Narratives (Language: English)
Sunny Harrison
Contracts for the Cure of Animals in the Kingdom of Valencia in
the 15th Century: The Case of Alzira (Language: English)
Carmel Ferragud, Institut d’Història de la Medicina i de la Ciència López
Piñero, Universitat de València
338
Michael Sadler Building: Rupert Beckett Theatre
THE EXPERIENCE OF SLAVERY IN THE MEDIEVAL WORLD, III:
MANUMISSION
Marek Jankowiak, Faculty of Oriental Studies, University of Oxford and
David Wyatt, School of History, Archaeology & Religion, Cardiff
University
David Wyatt
Manumission at the Crossroads (Language: English)
David A. E. Pelteret, Independent Scholar, Fazeley
‘From rhetoric to practice’: Captives, Prisoners, and Slaves in
the Holy Land, 1099-1291 (Language: English)
Aysu Dinçer, Department of History, University of Warwick
Slavery in the Western Mediterranean Kingdom of Mallorca in
the 13th Century: Domestic and Personal or Collective and
Agricultural? (Language: English)
Larry J. Simon, Department of History, Western Michigan University,
Kalamazoo
339
Baines Wing: Room 2.13
HOSPITALLERS AND ART / HOSPITALLERS IN ART
Maureen Quigley, Department of Art & Art History, University of
Missouri, St Louis
Maureen Quigley
Hopsitaller Nuns and Royal Power: Iconography of the Prioral
Seat of Santa María de Sigena (Language: English)
Eileen McKiernan González, Department of Art & Art History, Berea
College, Kentucky
Appropriating the Hospital: The Crusading Identity of a
Hospitaller of St Jacques du Haut Pas (Language: English)
Maureen Quigley
The Magistral Court of the Order of St John in Rhodes, 13101523 (Language: English)
Theresa Vella, International Institute of Baroque Studies, L-Università
ta’ Malta
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 19.00-20.00
Session:
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401
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.15
1016 / 1066 / 2016: NEW PERSPECTIVES - A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
Centre for Medieval & Renaissance Culture, University of Southampton
/ Faculty of English Language & Literature, University of Oxford
Catherine A. M. Clarke, Centre for Medieval & Renaissance Studies /
Department of English, University of Southampton
Catherine A. M. Clarke
2016 sees major anniversaries of two key dates in 11th-century England
and Europe: the accession of Cnut of Denmark to the English throne in
1016, and William of Normandy’s conquest of England in 1066. This
round table will focus on ways in which our understanding of these
dates, and the cultural and political changes of the 11th century, have
changed in recent years, exploring perspectives including language,
religion, gender, material culture, and formations and expressions of
power and identity more broadly. The round table discussion will also
seek to identify important questions and lines of enquiry ahead of the
international conference ‘Conquest: 1016, 1066’ at Oxford later in July.
Participants include Laura Ashe (University of Oxford), David Bates
(University of East Anglia), Sarah Foot (University of Oxford), Katherine
Weikert (University of Winchester), and George Younge (University of
York).
Session:
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406
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.19
DOING THE GLOBAL MIDDLE AGES: A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
Arts & Humanities Research Council Project ‘Defining the Global Middle
Ages’ (AH/K001914/1)
Catherine Holmes, Faculty of History, University of Oxford
Naomi Standen, Centre for the Study of the Middle Ages, University of
Birmingham
The very notion of a ‘global Middle Ages’ is controversial. Basic
problems of definition, approach, and even ethics abound, with some
scholars unsettled by the imperialist and euro-centric history of the
term ‘medieval’. But this is a new and exciting field, certain to be
shaped as much by practical experience as by theoretical foreboding.
Given the breadth of expertise that global projects require, ‘doing’ the
global Middle Ages is also likely to involve collaborative research across
broad geographies. The six participants of this round table, whose
combined expertise stretches from sub-Saharan Africa to east Asia, will
reflect on their own practical experience of engaging with the global
Middle Ages: whether in terms of handling new archaeological
materials; establishing new journals with a global canvas; or seeking to
put established categories of analysis (e.g. the Crusades) into a more
global context. We will also be keen to hear from the audience about
their own experience of globalising their particular medieval worlds.
Participants include Matthew Mesley (Universität Zürich), Sam Nixon
(University of East Anglia), Arietta S. Papaconstantinou (University of
Reading), Walter Pohl (Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften,
Wien), and Carol Symes (University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign).
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 19.00-20.00
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407
Leeds University Union: Room 6 - Roundhay
WHAT DID WRITING DO FOR RELICS?: A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
NWO-VIDI Project ‘Mind Over Matter: Debates about Relics as Sacred
Objects, c. 350 - c. 1150’
Elisa Pallottini, Departement Geschiedenis en Kunstgeschiedenis,
Universiteit Utrecht and Janneke Raaijmakers, Departement
Geschiedenis en Kunstgeschiedenis, Universiteit Utrecht
Janneke Raaijmakers
Relics, often tiny, were meaningless without media explaining their
significance and conveying information regarding the saint’s identity
and origin. Much scholarly attention has been paid to hagiography as a
means to identify saints and to lend authority and authenticity to
saints’ remains. Yet, relics were accompanied by many other forms of
evidence, such as labels, inscriptions, and lists. We would like to place
the focus of this round table discussion on the latter sources: evidence
found inside and on reliquaries and altars, in relation to the physical
setting of the cult site (if possible). Part of this evidence was clearly
visible to the audience, but part of it was not, for example being hidden
inside relic holders or being inscribed too high up on the walls for
anyone to read. How was writing used in these contexts? How did
symbols, letters, seals, the materiality of the reliquaries, altars, and
labels help to establish authenticity? In addition, what other uses did
writing have? And how can we know/establish these uses?
Participants include Vincent Debiais (Université de Poitiers), Caroline
Goodson (Birkbeck, University of London), Estelle Ingrand-Varenne
(Université de Poitiers / Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique
(CNRS)), Marika Räsänen (University of Turku), Hedwig Röckelein
(Georg-August-Universität Göttingen), and Julia M. H. Smith
(University of Glasgow).
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409
Leeds University Union: Room 5 - Kirkstall Abbey
THE LEARNED CLERK, I: A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
Learned Clerk Working Group
James G. Clark, Department of History, University of Exeter and Sylvia
A. Federico, Department of English, Bates College, Lewiston
W. Mark Ormrod, Centre for Medieval Studies, University of York
This is one of two companion panels organised by the Learned Clerk
Working Group. We seek to further the conversation started at the
Learned Clerk Symposium in July 2015 at Bates on how we might reenvision late medieval textual structures and strategies through a focus
on the manuscript practices of the learned clerk in 14th-century
England. Rather than a study of historiographical versus literary
narrative, the panel aims to bring back into contact these discursive
modes (and subsequent fields of inquiry) through an examination of
their convergence in the work of clerks in several crucial aspects of late
medieval life. How did clerks structure themselves and their topics
through narrative? How did clerical narrative shape events and
thought?
Participants include James G. Clark (University of Exeter), Bernhard
Hollick (Universität zu Köln / University of Exeter), Linne R. Mooney
(University of York), Daniel Orton (University of Oxford), Thomas Pettitt
(Syddansk Universitet), and Fiona Somerset (University of Conneticut).
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 19.00-20.00
Session:
Title:
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411
Michael Sadler Building: Rupert Beckett Theatre
ANNUAL EARLY MEDIEVAL EUROPE LECTURE: WHO ARE YOU? - IDENTIFYING
INDIVIDUALS IN THE EARLY MIDDLE AGES (LANGUAGE: ENGLISH)
Early Medieval Europe
Several times on his way to Jerusalem, the pilgrim monk Bernard had
to acquire proofs of identification, writs of safe passage (amān) that
described his appearance and the purpose of his journey, before he
could proceed, and he had to carry those documents with him on his
journey at all times. It should not surprise us that he did not fully
understand Muslim identity papers, for nothing quite like them existed
in western Europe at the time. Why? How did people identify and
describe each other in the early medieval west? How did they avoid
mistaking one person for another? Identification and identity should not
be conflated, for the former is a determination made by others, while
the latter belongs to the possession and development of the self or,
more simply, the movement from ‘you’ to ‘I’.
The modern world is filled with manifold techniques of identification,
but there are over seven billion of us and global society has an interest
in the precise identification or separation of individuals, which begins at
birth and follows us throughout our lives. The early medieval west may
have lacked such precise forms of identification, but its various ways of
identifying people deserve closer examination since they belong to and
describe particular societies. Imposture, for instance, is a problem that
runs through the Merovingian history of Gregory of Tours but is
relatively rare among the Carolingians. Bernard may have required
official papers only outside Europe, but even Carolingian estate holders
needed to be able to identify and account for the people on their lands.
Dreamers needed to be able to distinguish between one saint and
another in their dreams and foreign emissaries needed to know whom
they were to meet. Mistakes were made, awkward social moments
arose, and repairs required. Exploring all of this has much to tell us
about early medieval society and the ways in which it understood itself,
its people, and their relations with each other.
The journal Early Medieval Europe (published by Wiley) is very pleased
to sponsor the Annual Early Medieval Europe Lecture at the
International Medieval Congress. By contributing a major scholarly
lecture to the Congress programme the journal aims to highlight the
importance of the Congress to scholars working in early medieval
European history and to support further research in this field. Early
Medieval Europe is an interdisciplinary journal encouraging the
discussion of archaeology, numismatics, palaeography, diplomatic,
literature, onomastics, art history, linguistics and epigraphy, as well as
more traditional historical approaches. It covers Europe in its entirety,
including material on Iceland, Ireland, the British Isles, Scandinavia
and Continental Europe (both west and east). Further information
about the journal and details on how to submit material to it are
available
at
http://eu.wiley.com
(the
full
url
is
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/%28ISSN%2914680254). All those attending are warmly invited to join members of the
editorial board after the lecture for a glass of wine.
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.
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 19.00-20.00
Session:
Title:
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431
University House: Beechgrove Room
‘NEW’ TOLKIEN: THE STORY OF KULLERVO AND A SECRET VICE - A ROUND
TABLE DISCUSSION
Dimitra Fimi, Department of Humanities, Cardiff Metropolitan University
Dimitra Fimi
This round table discussion will focus on works by J. R. R. Tolkien
published during the last 12 months. Participants will comment on The
Story of Kullervo, edited by Verlyn Flieger, a creative retelling of a
tragic episode from the Finnish Kalevala; and A Secret Vice, edited by
Dimitra Fimi and Andrew Higgins, an extended edition of Tolkien’s
essay on invented languages together with new material on philology,
contemporary language theories, and language as art.
Participants include Brad Eden (Valparaiso University), Kristine Larsen
(Central Connecticut State University), and Goering Nelson (University
of Oxford).
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432
Leeds University Union: Room 2 - Elland Road
SO WE’VE DIGITISED, WHAT NEXT?: A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
Arts & Humanities Research Council Project ‘Models of Authority:
Scottish Charters & the Emergence of Government, 1100-1250’
Stewart J. Brookes, Department of Digital Humanities, King’s College
London
Stewart J. Brookes
The large number of initiatives to digitise medieval manuscripts mean
that we now have unprecedented access to medieval texts. In many
ways, this explosion of knowledge can be compared to the early years
of the printing press. But how might we best utilise this growing body
of material? This round table will explore the potential for the
computer-assisted study of medieval manuscripts, discuss the practical
and theoretical consequences of the use of digital surrogates, and
present new methodologies for the visualisation of manuscript evidence
and data.
Participants include Renaud Alexandre (Centre National de la Recherche
Scientifique, Paris),Ainoa Castro Correa (King’s College London), and
David F. Johnson (Florida State University).
MONDAY 04 JULY 2016: 19.00-20.00
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437
Leeds University Union: Room 4 - Hyde Park
NEW DIRECTIONS IN MEDIEVAL ANIMAL STUDIES: A ROUND TABLE
DISCUSSION
School of Modern Languages, University of Warwick
Liam Lewis, Department of French Studies, University of Warwick
Liam Lewis
Interest in animals has, in recent decades, provided valuable insight
into the ways in which both humans and animals were conceptualised
in medieval culture. Similarly, studies of animals in the Middle Ages
have often challenged and re-energised contemporary debates in
Animal Studies. This round table aims to bring together scholars from a
variety of backgrounds and disciplines to discuss new theoretical
directions and approaches to the study of animals in medieval art,
literature, and culture. The aim is to explore where different
approaches to the study of animals in medieval sources could lead us,
and to highlight areas of shared interest, as well as the potential
setbacks that occur to researchers in this field.
Participants include Alice Choyke (Central European
Budapest) and Harriet Jean Evans (University of York).
Session:
Title:
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Purpose:
University,
439
University House: St George Room
MORE FAMINE THAN FEAST?: PREPARING FOR THE ACADEMIC JOB SEARCH A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
Medieval Academy of America Graduate Student Committee
Anya Adair, Department of English, Yale University
Anya Adair
Though these are lean years for academic positions, the buffet of job
blogs, how-to books, journal columns, and local advice provides
something of a surfeit to job-seekers. Information can be contradictory,
confusing, and sometimes inaccurate. How important is publication should a graduate aim for more than one? What about teaching
experience? Service? What are some common pitfalls for applicants?
What exactly does a search committee want, and how do these
requirements vary from institution to institution? By bringing together
scholars from various medieval disciplines and from a variety of higher
education institutions, this round table will seek to arm participants for
the challenge of presenting their research and experience to an
academic search committee.
Participants include Vincent Gillespie (University of Oxford), Susan
Irvine (University College London), Catherine Karkov (University of
Leeds), and Ursula Lenker (Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München).
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
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Paper 501-a:
Paper 501-b:
Paper 501-c:
Session:
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Paper 502-a:
Paper 502-b:
Paper 502-c:
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Paper 503-a:
Paper 503-b:
Paper 503-c:
501
Emmanuel Centre: Room 2
HOMILIES IN ANGLO-SAXON ENGLAND, II: SOURCES AND NARRATION IN
ANGLO-SAXON HOMILIES
Seminar für Englische Philologie, Georg-August-Universität Göttingen
Esther Lemmerz, Seminar für Englische Philologie, Georg-AugustUniversität Göttingen and Christine Voth, Seminar für Englische
Philologie, Georg-August-Universität Göttingen
Christine Voth
Patristic Number Symbolism in Anglo-Saxon Homilies (Language:
English)
Sabine Rauch, School of English, Drama & Film, University College
Dublin
Latin Quotations in Old English Homilies: A Palaeographical
Approach (Language: English)
Esther Lemmerz
The Narration of Christ’s Nativity in Vercelli VI (Language:
English)
Victoria Condie, Fitzwilliam College, University of Cambridge
502
Emmanuel Centre: Room 7
CARDINALS AND VISITORS TO THE CURIA
Herwig Weigl, Institut für Österreichische Geschichtsforschung / Institut
für Geschichte, Universität Wien
Brenda M. Bolton, University of London
‘Petrus enim papiensis’ (Peter of Pavia): The Career of Peter
Ithier ‘of Pavia’ (d. 1182), Diplomat and Cardinal (Language:
English)
Anne J. Duggan, Department of History, King’s College London
How to Feed a Cardinal: Proctors, Diplomacy, and Food at the
Papal Curia (Language: English)
Herwig Weigl
Cardinal Robert de Courson and the Council of Reims (Language:
English)
Sethina Watson, Centre for Medieval Studies, University of York
503
University House: St George Room
DIGITISING PATTERNS OF POWER, I: LORDSHIP, LANDSCAPE, AND
AGRICULTURE IN MEDIEVAL MOUNTAIN REGIONS
‘Digitising Patterns of Power (DPP): Peripherical Mountains in the
Medieval World’, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
Mihailo Popović, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Abteilung
Byzanzforschung, Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
Walter Pohl, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische Akademie
der Wissenschaften, Wien
The Wine and the Bishop: Bavarian Sees and Their Distant
Property (Language: English)
Katharina Winckler, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
The Feeding of the 5000: Artificial Irrigation and Agriculture in
Early Medieval Armenia (Language: English)
Johannes Preiser-Kapeller, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Abteilung
Byzanzforschung, Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
No Camels in Medieval Macedonia?: Evidence on Farm, Grazing,
and Pack Animals (Language: English)
Mihailo Popović
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 09.00-10.30
Session:
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Moderator:
Paper 504-a:
Paper 504-b:
Paper 504-c:
Session:
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Paper 505-a:
Paper 505-b:
Paper 505-c:
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Paper 506-a:
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Paper 506-c:
504
University House: Great Woodhouse Room
VIKINGS ON THE CONTINENT
National Museum of Antiquities, Leiden
Annemarieke Willemsen, Rijksmuseum van Oudheden, Leiden
Annemarieke Willemsen
Vikings in Frisia, Frisia in the Viking World (Language: English)
Nelleke IJssennagger, Faculteit der Letteren, Rijksuniversiteit
Groningen
Viking Paradigms: Uncovering Politico-Economic Patterns of
Scandinavian Activity in Normandy and Frisia (Language: English)
Christian Cooijmans, School of Literatures, Languages & Cultures,
University of Edinburgh
The Numismatic Evidence for the Vikings on the Continent
(Language: English)
Simon Coupland, McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research,
University of Cambridge
505
Parkinson Building: Room B.10
GLOBAL BYZANTIUM: TRANSITIONAL RELATIONS, 500-1453, I
Centre for Byzantine, Ottoman & Modern Greek Studies, Department of
Classics, Ancient History & Archaeology, University of Birmingham
Anna C. Kelley, Department of Classics, Ancient History & Archaeology,
University of Birmingham
Leslie Brubaker, Centre for Byzantine, Ottoman & Modern Greek
Studies, University of Birmingham / Institute of Archaeology &
Antiquity, University of Birmingham
A Byzantine Princess and an Ottonian Emperor: Theophano and
Otto Revisited (Language: English)
Lauren A. Wainwright, Centre for Byzantine, Ottoman & Modern Greek
Studies, Department of Classics, Ancient History & Archaeology,
University of Birmingham
Woven Words: The Form and Content of Inscribed Textiles in
the Byzantine World (Language: English)
Julia Galliker, Department of Classical Studies, University of Michigan
‘La vostra sorella Cleophe paleologina’: Context and Agency of
an Italian Basilissa in Byzantine Morea (Language: English)
Andrea Mattiello, Centre for Byzantine, Ottoman & Modern Greek
Studies, Department of Classics, Ancient History & Archaeology,
University of Birmingham
Chris Wickham, Faculty of History, University of Oxford
506
Parkinson Building: Room B.22
NEW PERSPECTIVES ON FEMALE MYSTICISM, I
IMC Programming Committee,
Anne-Laure Méril-Bellini delle Stelle, Independent Scholar, Pissos
Speaking Silence through Visionary Literature (Language:
English)
Hannah Byland, Graduate School, Cornell University
Performing Self-Starvation in the Middle Ages (Language: English)
Nanouschka Wamelink, Department of History, European Studies &
Religious Studies, Universiteit van Amsterdam
Christina of Stommeln: Accessing the Sacred (Language: English)
Päivi Salmesvuori, Department of Church History, University of Helsinki
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 507-a:
Paper 507-b:
507
Parkinson Building: Room B.09
MEDIEVAL EQUESTRIANISM, I: HORSES IN LITERATURE - THEORETICAL
APPROACHES
Timothy Dawson, Levantia, Leeds and Anastasija Ropa, Department of
Management & Communication Science, Latvian Academy of Sport
Education, Riga
Timothy Dawson
Tails, Eyes, and Oats: Rules for Keeping Horses in Welsh Law
Texts (Language: English)
Edgar Rops, Faculty of Law, University of Latvia, Riga
King Edward of Portugal’s Treatise on Horse Riding: A Repertory
of Technical and Psychological Considerations (Language:
English)
Ana Maria S. A. Rodrigues, Centro de História, Universidade de Lisboa
Session:
Title:
508
Baines Wing: Room 1.14
LEGAL, GRAMMATICAL, AND THEOLOGICAL KNOWLEDGE OF EARLY MEDIEVAL
SCRIBES AND TEACHERS, AND THEIR PRODUCTIONS, I: COLLECTIONS OF
Sponsor:
Sonderforschungsbereich 950 ‘Manuskriptkulturen in Asien, Afrika und
Europa’, Universität Hamburg
Philippe Depreux, Historisches Seminar / Sonderforschungsbereich 950
‘Manuskriptkulturen in Asien, Afrika und Europa’, Universität Hamburg
Warren Brown, Division of the Humanities & Social Sciences, California
Institute of Technology
Legal Handbooks or Schoolbooks for General Purpose?: Some
Reflections on Early Medieval Manuscripts Containing
Collections of formulae (Language: English)
Philippe Depreux
A Miscellaneous Manuscript and Its ‘raison d’être’: Structure
and Content of MS Clm 19413 (Language: English)
Till Hennings, Sonderforschungsbereich 950 ‘Manuskriptkulturen in
Asien, Afrika und Europa’, Universität Hamburg
The So-Called Collectio sangallensis in the Context of Other
Early St Gall formulae Collections (Language: English)
Karl Heidecker, Afdeling Geschiedenis, Rijksuniversiteit Groningen
FORMULAE
Organiser:
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Paper 509-a:
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509
Stage@leeds: Stage 2
CITIES OF READERS, I: SPACES AND PLACES OF RELIGIOUS KNOWLEDGE
Project ‘Cities of Readers’, Rijksuniversiteit Groningen
Sabrina Corbellini, Oudere Nederlandse Letterkunde, Rijksuniversiteit
Groningen
Bart Ramakers, Oudere Nederlandse Letterkunde, Rijksuniversiteit
Groningen
Domestic Religion and Religious Instruction in the Late Medieval
Household in Northern France (Language: English)
Margriet Hoogvliet, Afdeling Geschiedenis, Rijksuniversiteit Groningen
Sanctifying Domestic Space: Religious Reading Instructions for
a 15th-Century Dutch Laywoman (Language: English)
Susanne de Jong, Oudere Nederlandse Letterkunde, Rijksuniversiteit
Groningen
Martin Waldseemüller’s Universalis Cosmographia: A Worldwide
View on the Space of Religion at the End of the Middle Ages
(Language: English)
Angelo Cattaneo, Centro de História de Além-Mar (CHAM), Universidade
Nova de Lisboa
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
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Paper 510-a:
Paper 510-b:
Paper 510-c:
Session:
Title:
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Paper 511-a:
Paper 511-b:
510
Leeds University Union: Room 2 - Elland Road
SOCIAL NETWORKS OF CLERGY IN LATE ANTIQUITY, I
Project ‘Presbyters in the Late Antique West’, Uniwersytet Warszawski
Robert Wiśniewski, Department of Ancient History, Uniwersytet
Warszawski
Robert Wiśniewski
Rivalry between Presbyters and Deacons in the Roman Church:
The Witness of Ambrosiaster, De iactantia Romanorum
levitarum (Q. 101) (Language: English)
David Hunter, Department of Modern & Classical Languages, Literatures
& Cultures, University of Kentucky
Competition within Clergy in Late Antique Epigraphic Evidence
(Language: English)
Isabelle Mossong, Kommission für Alte Geschichte und Epigraphik,
Deutsches Archäologisches Institut, München
‘Tam grande scandalum’: Concilium Arelatense in Causa Fausti,
and the Dispute over the Right to Ordain Clerics - The Insight
into the Relationships between Monastic and Non-Monastic
Clergymen? (Language: English)
Jerzy Szafranowski, Instytut Historyczny, Uniwersytet Warszawski
511
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.15
MASTERING KNOWLEDGE AND POWER, I: THE BISHOP’S BOOKS - EPISCOPAL
LIBRARIES, SCHOOLS, AND SCHOLARLY NETWORKS IN EARLY MEDIEVAL
EUROPE
Giacomo Vignodelli, Dipartimento di Storia Culture Civiltà, Università di
Bologna and Giorgia Vocino, Faculty of History, University of Cambridge
Rosamond McKitterick, Faculty of History, University of Cambridge
Bishops’ Libraries in Western Europe, c. 800 - c. 1050 (Language:
English)
Laura Pani, Dipartimento di Studi Umanistici, Università degli Studi di
Udine
Law, Learning, and the Networks of Knowledge: Archbishop
Wulfstan and the Worcester Manuscripts in Context (Language:
English)
Inka Moilanen, Historiska Institutionen, Stockholms Universitet
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 09.00-10.30
Session:
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Paper 512-a:
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Session:
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Paper 513-a:
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Paper 514-a:
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Paper 514-c:
512
Parkinson Building: Room 1.08
LANGUAGES AND LITERACY IN THE EARLY MEDIEVAL WEST, I:
MULTILINGUALISM IN CAROLINGIAN AND OTTONIAN TEXTS
Project ‘The Languages of Early Medieval Charters’, Universidad del País
Vasco
Edward Roberts, Department of History, University of Liverpool /
Departamento de Historia Medieval, Moderna y de América, Universidad
del País Vasco and Francesca Tinti, Departamento de Historia Medieval,
Moderna y de América, Universidad del País Vasco
Francesca Tinti
Carolingian Old High German Texts Embedded in Multilingual
Situations: OHG Isidor, Straßburg Oaths, Ludwigslied, Pariser
Gespräche, Kassel Glosses (Language: English)
Wolfgang Haubrichs, Fachbereich Germanistik, Universität des
Saarlandes, Saarbrücken
Questions on Carolingian Vernacular Legislation (Language:
English)
Jens Schneider, Laboratoire ‘Analyse Comparée des Pouvoirs’,
Université Paris-Est Marne-la-Vallée
Writing Old Saxon in Early Medieval Manorial Administration:
The Cases of Werden and Essen (Language: English)
Stefan Esders, Geschichte der Spätantike und des frühen Mittelalters,
Friedrich-Meinecke-Institut, Freie Universität Berlin
513
Stage@leeds: Stage 1
PERSPECTIVES ON MEDIEVAL DIET, I: FOOD AND THE SUPERNATURAL IN
ANGLO-SAXON ENGLAND
Medieval Diet Group
Chris Woolgar, Department of History, University of Southampton
Debby Banham, Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse & Celtic, University
of Cambridge
Hippophagy and the Sacred: How Far Can We Go? (Language:
English)
Alban Gautier, Departement Histoire, Université du Littoral Côte
d’Opale
Hunger and Thirst in Anglo-Saxon England (Language: English)
Karen L. Jolly, Department of History, University of Hawai’i, Manoa
Final Feasts: The Role of Funerary Feasting in Anglo-Saxon
Culture (Language: English)
Christina Lee, School of English, University of Nottingham
514
Baines Wing: Room 1.15
OF MILLS AND MALT: THE MILL AND MALT TRADE IN ENGLAND AND
EASTERN EUROPE
IMC Programming Committee,
Steven A. Walton, Department of Social Sciences, Michigan
Technological University, Houghton
Mills on the Manors of St Albans Abbey (Language: English)
Rebecca Toepfer, Department of History, University of Southampton
The Malt Trade in Later Medieval England (Language: English)
Jim Galloway, Independent Scholar, Rathvilly
Food Production in Mills: Cistercian Abbeys in Central and
Eastern Europe (Language: English)
Krzysztof Guzikowski, Instytut Historii i Stosunków Miedzynarodowych,
Uniwersytet Szczecinski
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 09.00-10.30
Session:
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Paper 515-a:
Paper 515-b:
Paper 515-c:
Session:
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Paper 516-a:
Paper 516-b:
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Paper 517-a:
Paper 517-b:
Paper 517-c:
515
Leeds University Union: Room 6 - Roundhay
THE ORGANISATION, LOGISTICS, AND PRACTICE OF WAR, 1050-1500, I:
FOOD AND HEALTH IN WAR AND PEACE
Alan V. Murray, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds and
Joanna Phillips, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Andrew T. Jotischky, Department of History, Lancaster University
Real Crusaders Don’t Eat Quiche: The Portrayal of Food and
Famine in First Crusade Sources (Language: English)
Carol Sweetenham, Independent Scholar, Oxford
War and Peace: The Crusader’s Diet in Arsur (Apollonia-Arsuf,
Israel) (Language: English)
Miriam Pines, Department of Archaeology & Ancient Near Eastern
Cultures, Tel Aviv University
Food as a Link between Contesting Parties: Negotiation and
Peacemaking at the Table (Language: English)
Yvonne Friedman, Department of History, Bar-Ilan University, Ramat
Gan
516
Leeds University Union: Room 4 - Hyde Park
MYTH AND IDENTITY IN MEDIEVAL BRITAIN: NATION, HISTORY, POLITICS
Medieval & Early Modern Research Initiative, Cardiff University
Victoria Shirley, School of English, Communication & Philosophy, Cardiff
University
Melissa Julian-Jones, School of History, Archaeology & Religion, Cardiff
University
Gerald of Wales and the Trojan Britons in Ireland (Language:
English)
Diarmuid Scully, School of History, University College Cork
Hengist and the Foundation of England in the Galfridian
Chronicle Tradition (Language: English)
Victoria Shirley
Macduff, Thane of Fife, and the Mythologisation of the Scottish
Past in Andrew of Wyntoun’s Orygynale Cronykil (Language:
English)
Marian Toledo Candelaria, Centre for Scottish Studies, University of
Guelph
517
Baines Wing: Room G.37
RELIGIOUS COMMUNITIES AND FOOD, I
Department for the Study of Religions, Masaryk University, Brno
David Zbíral, Department for the Study of Religions, Masaryk
University, Brno
Reima Välimäki, Department of Cultural History / Turku Centre for
Medieval & Early Modern Studies (TUCEMEMS), University of Turku
Fasting Practices of the ‘Phoundagiagitai’ in the Context of
Patristic and Byzantine Monastic Theology and Practices
(Language: English)
Ylva Hagman, Institutionen för kultur och kommunikation, Linköpings
Universitet
Medieval Manicheans, Dietary Restrictions, and the Rise of the
Persecuting Society (Language: English)
Rachel Ernst, Department of History, Georgia State University
Between Fasting and Ritual Suicide: Reconsidering the Cathar
Endura (Language: English)
David Zbíral
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 09.00-10.30
Session:
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Moderator:
Paper 518-a:
Paper 518-b:
Paper 518-c:
Session:
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Paper 519-a:
Paper 519-b:
Paper 519-c:
Paper 519-d:
518
Parkinson Building: Nathan Bodington Chamber
‘NOT BY BREAD ALONE [...]’: LENTEN PREACHING IN THE 15TH AND 16TH
CENTURIES, I - SHAPING THE RELIGIOUS MESSAGE
Dipartimento di Storia, Archeologia, Geografia, Arte e Spettacolo,
Università di Firenze
Lorenza Tromboni, Dipartimento di Storia, Archeologia, Geografia, Arte
e Spettacolo, Università di Firenze
Jussi Hanska, Department of Education, University of Tampere
A Dantesque Lenten Sermon Collection: Peregrinus cum angelo
(Language: English)
Pietro Delcorno, Leeds Humanities Research Institute, University of
Leeds
Roberto Caracciolo’s Quadragesimale de poenitentia:
Compilation, Structure, and Fortune of a 15th-Century Bestseller
(Language: English)
Giacomo Mariani, Scuola Internazionale di Alti Studi ‘Scienze della
cultura’, Fondazione San Carlo, Modena / Department of Medieval
Studies, Central European University, Budapest
‘Preaching during the fasting season is like being killed on the
rack’: Design, Performance, and Recording of Johann Geiler of
Kaysersberg’s Lent Sermons (Language: English)
Rita Voltmer, Geschichtliche Landeskunde, Universität Trier
519
University House: Beechgrove Room
MANAGING RESTRAINT: VOLUNTARY AND INVOLUNTARY ABSTINENCE AND
SHORTAGE
IMC Programming Committee,
Peter Firth, Centre for Lifelong Learning, University of Liverpool
Fasting for Others: Completing Penance by Proxy in the Early
Middle Ages (Language: English)
Gavin Fort, Department of History, Northwestern University
Bedfordshire 1272, 1297, 1309, 1332: The Great European
Famine, Population Dynamics, and Church Enlargement
(Language: English)
David H. Kennett, Independent Scholar, Shipston-on-Stour
Intercession: Praise and Hope (Language: English)
Ann Marie Caron, Department of Religious Studies, University of Saint
Joseph, Connecticut
Attitudes of the Polish Clergy towards Alcoholic Beverages in
the Middle Ages (Language: English)
Robert Bubczyk, Instytut Kulturoznawstwa, Uniwersytet Marii CurieSkłodowskiej, Lublin
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
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Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 520-a:
Paper 520-b:
Paper 520-c:
Session:
Title:
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Paper 521-a:
Paper 521-b:
Session:
Title:
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Paper 522-a:
Paper 522-b:
Paper 522-c:
520
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.17
ELITE INVESTMENTS IN AGRICULTURE AND IRRIGATION IN THE EARLY
ISLAMIC EMPIRE
European Research Council Project ‘The Early Islamic Empire at Work:
The View From the Regions Toward the Center’, Universität Hamburg
Hannah-Lena Hagemann, European Research Council Project ‘The Early
Islamic Empire at Work’, Universität Hamburg
Stefan Heidemann, Asien-Afrika-Institut, Universität Hamburg
Estates, Agricultural Development, and Elites in Early Islamic
Khurāsān (Language: English)
Ahmad Khan, Asien-Afrika-Institut, Universität Hamburg
Investments in Irrigation by Local and Regional Elites in Early
Islamic Fārs (Language: English)
Peter Verkinderen, Asien-Afrika-Institut, Universität Hamburg
Agriculture and Elites in the Early Islamic Jazīra (Language:
English)
Hannah-Lena Hagemann
521
University House: Cloberry Room
CROSS-CULTURAL TRANSMISSION IN NUBIAN CULTURE, IV: IDENTITY
Alexandros Tsakos, Institutt for arkeologi, historie, kultur- og
religionsvitenskap, Universitetet i Bergen
Vincent van Gerven Oei, punctum books / Centre for Modern Thought,
University of Aberdeen
Putting the Sudanic Back into the Sudan: The Middle Nile as Part
of the Sudanic Belt (Language: English)
Pieter Tesch, Independent Scholar, Croydon
We Study History to Discover Who We Are: Dongolawi and Kenzi
Nubian Perceptions of Their Own Medieval History (Language:
English)
Marcus Jaeger, Institut für Afrikanistik, Universität zu Köln
522
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.16
‘SCHÜTZENFEST’ MEETS ‘HOCHZEITSBRAUCH’: MEDIEVAL (SOUTH) GERMAN
FEASTS AND THEIR MODERN ADAPTATIONS
Zentrum für Mittelalterstudien (ZEMAS), Otto-Friedrich-Universität
Bamberg
Ingrid Bennewitz, Lehrstuhl für Deutsche Philologie des Mittelalters,
Otto-Friedrich-Universität Bamberg
Ingrid Bennewitz
Military Exercise or Folk Festival?: Schützenfests in Southern
Germany during the Late Middle Ages (Language: English)
Christian Chandon, Lehrstuhl für Mittelalterliche Geschichte / Zentrum
für Mittelalterstudien (ZEMAS), Otto-Friedrich-Universität Bamberg
Adaptations of Late Medieval Princely Wedding Feasts:
Historiographical Rewriting and Modern Re-Enactment
(Language: English)
Matthias Herm, Historisches Seminar, Albert-Ludwigs-Universität
Universität Freiburg
Dangerous Meals and Dangerous Feasts in Medieval Literature
and Their Adaptation in Modern Film (Language: English)
Ingrid Bennewitz
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 09.00-10.30
Session:
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Organiser:
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Paper 523-a:
Paper 523-b:
Paper 523-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
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Paper 524-a:
Paper 524-b:
Paper 524-c:
Session:
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Paper 525-a:
Paper 525-b:
Paper 525-c:
Paper 525-d:
523
Emmanuel Centre: Room 10
HUNGRVAKA: STIRRING UP AN APPETITE FOR OLD NORSE LITERATURE, I
Rebecca Merkelbach, Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse & Celtic,
University of Cambridge
Rebecca Merkelbach
Got Milk?: Lactose and Masculinity in the Sagas (Language:
English)
Yoav Tirosh, Department of Icelandic & Comparative Cultural Studies,
Háskóli Íslands, Reykjavík
Consumption and Intoxication in Vǫlsunga Saga (Language:
English)
Andrew McGillivray, Department of Rhetoric, Writing, &
Communications, University of Winnipeg
Bad Beef and Mad Cow Disease in Bósa Saga (Language: English)
Jonathan Hui, Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse & Celtic, University of
Cambridge
524
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.10
FOOD, FEAST, AND FAMINE IN DIGITAL HUMANITIES
Mittelhochdeutsche Begriffsdatenbank, Interdisziplinäres Zentrum für
Mittelalter und frühe Neuzeit (IZMF), Universität Salzburg
Katharina Zeppezauer-Wachauer, Mittelhochdeutsche
Begriffsdatenbank, Interdisziplinäres Zentrum für Mittelalter und frühe
Neuzeit (IZMF), Universität Salzburg
Ingrid Matschinegg, Institut für Realienkunde des Mittelalters und der
Frühen Neuzeit, Universität Salzburg, Krems
Where to Put the Food?: Digital Art History and the Image
Database REALonline (Language: English)
Isabella Nicka, Institut für Realienkunde des Mittelalters und der frühen
Neuzeit, Universität Salzburg, Krems
A Digital Look at Wining and Dining in Byzantium (Language:
English)
Joanita Vroom, Faculteit Archeologie, Universiteit Leiden
Nutritious Medieval Poetry: A Digital Food Glossary in
Cooperation with the Mittelhochdeutsche Begriffsdatenbank
(MHDBDB) (Language: English)
Katharina Zeppezauer-Wachauer
525
Baines Wing: Room 1.13
WOMEN WHO HUNT: ECOCRITICISM, GENDER THEORY, POSTHUMANISM
Sara Petrosillo, Department of English, University of California, Davis
Roberta Magnani, Centre for Medieval & Early Modern Research
(MEMO), Swansea University
Hostess or Huntress?: Women and Agency in Feasting Spaces of
the Íslendingasögur (Language: English)
Aidan Holtan, Department of English, Purdue University
Queer/Trans/Butch Hunting (Language: English)
Anna Klosowska, Department of French & Italian, Miami University,
Ohio
‘Þer is fair game’: Women, Birds, and the Hunt in Sir Orfeo
(Language: English)
Amy Louise Morgan, School of English & Languages, University of
Surrey
The Falcon’s Feast: Falconry as Feminist Poetics (Language:
English)
Sara Petrosillo
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
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:
526
Michael Sadler Building: Rupert Beckett Theatre
FROM WEST FRANKISH CAROLINGIANS TO FRENCH CAPETIANS, I:
FRAMEWORKS OF CONTENTION
Geoffrey Koziol, Department of History, University of California,
Berkeley
Geoffrey Koziol
The King and the Count: Charles the Simple and Hagano Thoughts on the Limits of Royal Power in the Early 10th Century
(Language: English)
Horst Lößlein, Centre de Recherche Interdisciplinaire en Histoire,
Histoire de l’Art et Musicologie, Université de Limoges / LudwigMaximilians-Universität München
‘Contentions Arising’: The Thibaudines and Hugh Capet, 956995 (Language: English)
Fraser McNair, Pembroke College, University of Cambridge
The Giveaway Bride: Bertrada of Montfort and the End of King
Philip I of Francia’s Carolingian ‘Renovatio’ (Language: English)
Matthew Gabriele, Department of Religion & Culture, Virginia Tech
527
Stage@leeds: Stage 3
RETHINKING CARTULARIES, 900-1200: CARTULARIES AS HISTORY,
HISTORY IN CARTULARIES, III - 12TH-CENTURY CONTEXTS
John Rylands Research Institute, Manchester
Charles Insley, Department of History, University of Manchester
Linsey F. Hunter, Centre for History, University of the Highlands &
Islands
The Becerro Gótico of Sahagún as an Expression of Monastic
Authority: Strategies of Production and Legitimisation
(Language: English)
Leticia Agúndez San Miguel, Departamento de Historia Medieval,
Moderna y de América, Universidad del País Vasco, Vitoria-Gasteiz
Cartularies as Narrative Texts: The Monasteries of the Hirsau
Reform Movement in South-Western Germany during the 12th
Century (Language: English)
Johannes Waldschütz, Historisches Seminar, Albert-Ludwigs-Universität
Freiburg
Cartularies and Legal Change in the Later 12th Century
(Language: English)
Nicholas Karn, Department of History, University of Southampton
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 528-a:
Paper 528-b:
Paper 528-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 529-a:
Paper 529-b:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 530-a:
Paper 530-b:
528
Baines Wing: Room G.36
ROYAL IDEALS, FUNCTIONS, AND TYPOLOGIES OF POWER: KINGSHIP IN
COMPARISON IN THE HIGH MIDDLE AGES, I
Haskins Society / Battle Conference for Anglo-Norman Studies
Ryan Kemp, Department of History & Welsh History, Aberystwyth
University
Stephen Church, School of History, University of East Anglia
‘More with prudence than with steel’: Comparative Kingship and
Royal Characterization in Angevin Historical Narratives
(Language: English)
Peter Raleigh, Department of History, University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill
Balance of Power: Anglo-Norman Kings and the Episcopacy
(Language: English)
Stefanie Schild, Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn
William Rufus, Henry II, and the Embrace of Fortuna (Language:
English)
Tom Forster, Selwyn College, University of Cambridge
529
Parkinson Building: Room B.11
THEORETICAL APPROACHES TO MIDDLE ENGLISH TEXTS
IMC Programming Committee,
Catherine J. Batt, School of English, University of Leeds
Down to Earth, Down to Turd: Deconstructing the Book of
Nature in The Owl and the Nightingale (Language: English)
Michael John Warren, Department of English, Royal Holloway,
University of London
‘Not al on slepe, ne fully waking’: Wakeful and Hypnagogic
Narrators of Vision Poetry (Language: English)
Imogen Forbes-Macphail, Medieval & Renaissance Literature, University
of Cambridge
530
Emmanuel Centre: Wilson Room
PERCEIVING ANGELS IN THE MEDIEVAL WEST, I: ANGELIC IMAGERY
School of History, University of East Anglia
Sophie Alexandra Sawicka-Sykes, School of History, University of East
Anglia
Sophie Alexandra Sawicka-Sykes
A Pseudo-Dionysian Reading of Wolfram’s Parzival (Language:
English)
Gudrun Warren, Norwich Cathedral Library
The Bread of Angels, Sweet Wine, and Bitter Dregs:
Representing Angels with the Chalice and Host in East Anglian
Parish Church Timber Roofs, c. 1400-1540 (Language: English)
Sarah Cassell, Art History & World Art Studies, University of East Anglia
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 531-a:
Paper 531-b:
Paper 531-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 532-a:
Paper 532-b:
Paper 532-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 533-a:
Paper 533-b:
Paper 533-c:
531
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.19
DIGITAL METHODS, I: THREE CASE STUDIES FOR DIGITAL PALAEOGRAPHY
Arts & Humanities Research Council Project ‘Models of Authority:
Scottish Charters & the Emergence of Government, 1100-1250’
Stewart J. Brookes, Department of Digital Humanities, King’s College
London
Joanna Tucker, School of Humanities (History), University of Glasgow
Models of Authority: Charting New Territory for Medieval
Scottish Charters (Language: English)
Stewart J. Brookes
DigiPal and the Austrian Romanesque: A Case Study in
Aspirational Paleography (Language: English)
Lisa Fagin Davis, Medieval Academy of America, Massachusetts
VisigothicPal: la escritura visigótica al descubierto (Language:
Español)
Ainoa Castro Correa, Department of History, King’’s College London
532
Baines Wing: Room 2.14
LEGACY OF SEFARAD: THE MATERIAL AND INTELLECTUAL PRODUCTION IN
LATE MEDIEVAL SEPHARDIC JUDAISM
Plan Estatal de Investigación Científica y Técnica y de Innovación
‘I+D+I FFI2012-38451’
Ryan Szpiech, Department of Romance Languages & Literatures / Jean
& Samuel Frankel Center for Judaic Studies, University of Michigan
Carmen Caballero-Navas, Departamento de Estudios Semíticos,
Universidad de Granada
Abner of Burgos and the Legend of the Karaites (Language:
English)
Ryan Szpiech
La transmisión de la literatura hebrea hispano-aragonesa del
s.XV (Language: Español)
Arturo Prats, Departamento de Estudios Hebreos y Arameos,
Universidad Complutense de Madrid
The Strange Woman in Proverbs (Language: English)
Esperanza Alfonso Carro, Instituto de Lenguas y Culturas del
Mediterráneo y Oriente Próximo, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones
Científicas (CSIC), Madrid
533
University House: Little Woodhouse Room
AT THEIR MAJESTIES’ PLEASURE: NECESSARY EXTRAVAGANCES? - FASHION,
FOOD, AND GIFT-GIVING IN LATE MEDIEVAL AND EARLY MODERN EUROPE
Royal Studies Network
Zita Eva Rohr, Department of History, University of Sydney
Elena Woodacre, Department of History, University of Winchester
Beyond the Pleasure Principle: Consumption and Display at the
Late Medieval and Early Modern Courts of Aragon and France
(Language: English)
Zita Eva Rohr
Anne of France: Gift-Giving and the ‘Transmission of Affect’
(Language: English)
Tracy Adams, Department of European Languages & Literatures,
University of Auckland
Can a Princess Have Too Many Platform Shoes?: Style,
Patronage, and Display at the Court of the Fashionable
Catherine of Aragon (Language: English)
Theresa Earenfight, Department of History, Seattle University
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 534-a:
Paper 534-b:
Paper 534-c:
Paper 534-d:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 535-a:
Paper 535-b:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 536-a:
Paper 536-b:
Paper 536-c:
534
Baines Wing: Room 1.16
LANDSCAPES OF POWER IN EARLY MEDIEVAL BRITAIN
IMC Programming Committee,
Jonathan Jarrett, School of History, University of Leeds
The Roman Infrastructure in Early Medieval Britain as a
Governance Resource (Language: English)
Mateusz Fafinski, Friedrich-Meinecke-Institut, Freie Universität Berlin
Who Attended the Anglo-Saxon Hundred? (Language: English)
Richard Purkiss, Lincoln College, University of Oxford
The Geopolitical Landscape of Pre-Viking England: Five ‘Great
Hall Complexes’ and Their Hinterlands (Language: English)
Matthew Austin, Department of Archaeology, University of Reading
Conquest, Continuation, or Convenience?: Norman Castles Built
on Saxon Cemetery Sites (Language: English)
Therron Welstead, School of Archaeology, History & Anthropology,
University of Wales Trinity Saint David
535
Baines Wing: Room 2.13
TRADE IN THE MEDITERRANEAN, I: THE EARLY AND CENTRAL MIDDLE AGES
Daniele Morossi, Institute for Medieval Studies / School of History,
University of Leeds
James Hill, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
‘Adriatic Sea of Fire’: Commercial and Political Relations in the
12th Century (Language: English)
Daniele Morossi
Products and Partners: Byzantine Commercial Activities in the
Northern Black Sea Region - Crimean Cherson as the Centre of
Trade (Language: English)
Martina Čechová, Institute of Slavonic Studies, Czech Academy of
Sciences, Praha
536
Michael Sadler Building: Banham Theatre
HISTORICAL EUROPEAN MARTIAL ARTS STUDIES, I: MODERN PRACTICE AND
ITS CONNECTION TO THE SOURCE MATERIAL
Acta Periodica Duellatorum: An Open-Access Journal for Historical
European Martial Arts Studies
Daniel Jaquet, Max-Planck-Institut für Wissenschaftsgeschichte, Berlin
Daniel Jaquet
Limits of Understanding in Historical European Martial Arts
Studies (Language: English)
Eric Burkart, Abteilung Mittelalterliche Geschichte, Universität Trier
Prologues, Prose, and Portrayals: The Purposes of 15th-Century
Fight Books According to the Diplomatic Evidence (Language:
English)
Jacob Deacon, School of History, Archaeology & Religion, Cardiff
University
Martial Arts Manuscripts in Europe and Asia: A Comparison
(Language: English)
Sixt Wetzler, Deutsches Klingenmuseum, Solingen
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 537-a:
Paper 537-b:
Paper 537-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 538-a:
Paper 538-b:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 539-a:
Paper 539-b:
537
Leeds University Union: Room 5 - Kirkstall Abbey
FEASTING IN ARTHURIAN ROMANCE
IMC Programming Committee,
Anne Berthelot, Department of Literatures, Cultures & Languages,
University of Connecticut, Storrs
Les repas des héros de Chrétien de Troyes (Language: Français)
Angelica Rieger, Institut für Anglistik, Amerikanistik und Romanistik,
Rheinisch-Westfälische Technische Hochschule Aachen
Þe Mete and þe Masse: Physical and Spiritual Nourishment in Sir
Gawain and the Green Knight (Language: English)
Kyla Drzazgowski, Department of English, University of British
Columbia
Party Like It’s 1469: Dining in Malory’s Morte d’Arthur
(Language: English)
Kristina Hildebrand, School of Education, Humanities & Social Sciences,
Högskolan i Halmstad
538
Parkinson Building: Room B.08
THE DOMINICAN ORDER, I: INNOVATIONS OF THE DOMINICAN ORDER
Institut zur Erforschung der Geschichte des Dominikanerordens im
deutschen Sprachraum (IGDom), Köln
Elias H. Füllenbach, Institut zur Erforschung der Geschichte des
Dominikanerordens im deutschen Sprachraum, Dominikanerprovinz
Teutonia e.V., Köln and Sabine von Heusinger, Historisches Institut,
Universität zu Köln
J. Cornelia Linde, German Historical Institute London
The Dominican Order and the Book at the Early Universities
(Language: English)
Nikolaus Weichselbaumer, Institut für Buchwissenschaft, Johannes
Gutenberg-Universität Mainz
The Vision of Christ: Crucifixion and the Eucharist in 13thCentury Dominican Writing (Language: English)
Julian Vesty, Department of History, Canterbury Christ Church
University
539
Emmanuel Centre: Room 11
POOR AND RICH IN FRANKISH CHRISTIANITY
Onderzoekschool Mediëvistiek
Rob Meens, Departement Geschiedenis en Kunstgeschiedenis,
Universiteit Utrecht
Janneke Raaijmakers, Departement Geschiedenis en
Kunstgeschiedenis, Universiteit Utrecht
Christianity and Early Medieval Rural Communities: Inquiries on
the Faith of the Layman Through a Priest’s Handbook (BSB MS
Clm 14508) (Language: English)
Bastiaan Waagmeester, Departement Geschiedenis en
Kunstgeschiedenis, Universiteit Utrecht
The Just Ruler, the Poor, and His Inferiors: Social Hierarchy and
Mirrors of Princes in the 9th Century (Language: English)
Jelle Wassenaar, Departement Geschiedenis en Kunstgeschiedenis,
Universiteit Utrecht
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
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:
601
Emmanuel Centre: Room 2
HOMILIES IN ANGLO-SAXON ENGLAND, III: THE ANONYMOUS OLD ENGLISH
HOMILIES
Seminar für Englische Philologie, Georg-August-Universität Göttingen
Esther Lemmerz, Seminar für Englische Philologie, Georg-AugustUniversität Göttingen and Christine Voth, Seminar für Englische
Philologie, Georg-August-Universität Göttingen
Winfried P. Rudolf, Seminar für Englische Philologie, Georg-AugustUniversität Göttingen
Heartstrings and Pouch Strings: Calling Out the Rich in Vercelli
X and Ælfric’s Second Series Homily for the First Sunday in Lent
(Language: English)
Robert K. Upchurch, Department of English, University of North Texas
Of Old People and the Things that Pass: Motifs of Old Age in Old
English Homilies (Language: English)
Thijs Porck, Faculteit der Geesteswetenschappen, Universiteit Leiden
‘Incorrigibly plural’ (MacNeice): Mapping the Plural World of the
Old English Anonymous Homilies (Language: English)
Susan Irvine, Department of English Language & Literature, University
College London
602
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.10
ANGLO-SAXON RIDDLES AND WISDOM, I: MIND AND MOVEMENT
The Riddle Ages: An Anglo-Saxon Riddle Blog
Megan Cavell, Department of English, Durham University and Jennifer
Neville, Department of English, Royal Holloway, University of London
Jennifer Neville
Mind, Mood, and Meteorology in Exeter Book Riddles 1-3
(Language: English)
James Antonio Paz, School of Arts, Languages & Cultures, University of
Manchester
The Sothgied of the Seafarer (Language: English)
Eleni Ponirakis, School of English, University of Nottingham
Set in Stone or Food for Worms: Questioning the Stasis of
Writing in the Exeter Book Riddles (Language: English)
Victoria Symons, Department of English, University College London
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 603-a:
Paper 603-b:
Paper 603-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 604-a:
Paper 604-b:
603
University House: St George Room
DIGITISING PATTERNS OF POWER, II: FRONTIER, CONTACT ZONE, OR NO
MAN’S LAND? - THE MORAVA-THAYA REGION FROM THE EARLY TO THE HIGH
MIDDLE AGES
International Austrian-Czech Project ‘Frontier, Contact Zone or No
Man’s Land?’, Austrian Science Fund (FWF) & Czech Science Foundation
(GA ČR)
Stefan Eichert, Institut für Urgeschichte und Historische Archäologie,
Universität Wien / Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
Jiří Macháček, Department of Archaeology & Museology, Masaryk
University, Brno
GIS-Analyses on the Economical Hinterland of Settlements in
the Morava-Thaya Region (Language: English)
Stefan Eichert
Feast or Famine at Oberleiserberg, Austria: An Archaeological
and Anthropological Approach on the Nutrition Situation of a
10th- and 11th-Century Population (Language: English)
Nina Brundke, Institut für Urgeschichte und Historische Archäologie,
Universität Wien
The Subsistence Strategy on the Border: Between Early and
High Middle Ages, between Moravia and Lower Austria
(Language: English)
Petr Dresler, Department of Archaeology & Museology, Masaryk
University, Brno and Gabriela Dreslerová, Department of Archaeology &
Museology, Masaryk University, Brno
604
University House: Great Woodhouse Room
VIKING MONUMENTS AND LEGACIES
IMC Programming Committee,
Nelleke IJssennagger, Faculteit der Letteren, Rijksuniversiteit
Groningen
The Holy Hinterland: Christianisation and Material Culture in
Hiberno-Scandinavian Rathdown, County Dublin (Language:
English)
Gillian Boazman, Department of Archaeology, University College Cork
Coincidence and Connection in Norse and Gaelic Castles on
Scotland’s Northern and Western Coasts (Language: English)
William Wyeth, Royal Commission on the Ancient & Historical
Monuments of Scotland / School of Arts & Humanities, University of
Stirling
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 605-a:
Paper 605-b:
Paper 605-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 606-a:
Paper 606-b:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 607-a:
Paper 607-b:
605
Parkinson Building: Room B.10
GLOBAL BYZANTIUM: TRANSITIONAL RELATIONS, 500-1453, II
Centre for Byzantine, Ottoman & Modern Greek Studies, Department of
Classics, Ancient History & Archaeology, University of Birmingham
Lauren A. Wainwright, Centre for Byzantine, Ottoman & Modern Greek
Studies, Department of Classics, Ancient History & Archaeology,
University of Birmingham
Daniel Reynolds, Centre for Byzantine, Ottoman & Modern Greek
Studies, Department of Classics, Ancient History & Archaeology,
University of Birmingham
Cotton Conversions: Tracing the Adoption of a New Textile
throughout the Eastern Mediterranean (Language: English)
Anna C. Kelley, Department of Classics, Ancient History & Archaeology,
University of Birmingham
Barbarians on the Fringe: Byzantium and the Desert Peoples
(Language: English)
Arietta S. Papaconstantinou, Department of Classics, University of
Reading
Contextualising the Cantar del Mio Cid and the Digenes Akrites:
Connecting the Christian Mediterranean (Language: English)
Francisco Lopez-Santos Kornberger, Centre for Byzantine, Ottoman &
Modern Greek Studies, Department of Classics, Ancient History &
Archaeology, University of Birmingham
606
Parkinson Building: Room B.22
NEW PERSPECTIVES ON FEMALE MYSTICISM, II: CASE STUDIES
IMC Programming Committee,
Anne-Laure Méril-Bellini delle Stelle, Independent Scholar, Pissos
Food for the Faithful: Christ and Food in the Visions of Agnes
Blannbekin (Language: English)
Amanda Langley, School of History, Queen Mary, University of London
Maria of Oignies: Her Fasting and Its Theological Meaning in
Comparative Examination (Language: English)
Monika Gerundt, Mittelalterliche Geschichte, Justus-Liebig-Universität,
Giessen
607
Parkinson Building: Room B.09
MEDIEVAL EQUESTRIANISM, II: THE EATING HORSE - THEORETICAL AND
PRACTICAL CONSIDERATIONS
Timothy Dawson, Levantia, Leeds and Anastasija Ropa, Department of
Management & Communication Science, Latvian Academy of Sport
Education, Riga
Edgar Rops, Faculty of Law, University of Latvia, Riga
Feasting and Fasting with Horses in the Late Medieval French
Romance Cycle Lancelot-Graal (Language: English)
Anastasija Ropa
Bread for My Horses (Language: English)
Katrin Boniface, Department of History, University of California,
Riverside
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 608-a:
Paper 608-b:
Paper 608-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 609-a:
Paper 609-b:
Paper 609-c:
608
Baines Wing: Room 1.14
LEGAL, GRAMMATICAL, AND THEOLOGICAL KNOWLEDGE OF EARLY MEDIEVAL
SCRIBES AND TEACHERS, AND THEIR PRODUCTIONS, II: BOOKS,
EXEMPLARS, AND THEIR USE
Sonderforschungsbereich 950 ‘Manuskriptkulturen in Asien, Afrika und
Europa’, Universität Hamburg
Philippe Depreux, Historisches Seminar / Sonderforschungsbereich 950
‘Manuskriptkulturen in Asien, Afrika und Europa’, Universität Hamburg
Rosamond McKitterick, Faculty of History, University of Cambridge
The Use (and Non-Use) of the Collectio Sangallensis and Other
Early St Gall formulae (Collections) (Language: English)
Bernhard Zeller, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
Law and Order between Book Covers: The Normative
Manuscripts and Their Representation in the Library Catalogues
of Southern Germany (Language: English)
Arne Ulrich, Sonderforschungsbereich 950 ‘Manuskriptkulturen in Asien,
Afrika und Europa’, Universität Hamburg
Eastern Frankish Homiletic Manuscripts (Language: English)
Christoph Galle, Fachbereich Evangelische Theologie, PhilippsUniversität Marburg
609
Stage@leeds: Stage 2
CITIES OF READERS, II: MEDIALITY OF RELIGIOUS KNOWLEDGE
Project ‘Cities of Readers’, Rijksuniversiteit Groningen
Margriet Hoogvliet, Afdeling Geschiedenis, Rijksuniversiteit Groningen
Margriet Hoogvliet
Organising Religious Knowledge: Books, Libraries, and Readers
(Language: English)
Sabrina Corbellini, Oudere Nederlandse Letterkunde, Rijksuniversiteit
Groningen
‘And so he learned the entire Bible while he did not know one
letter’: Communicating Religious Knowledge in the Modern
Devout Collatio (Language: English)
Pieter Boonstra, Afdeling Geschiedenis, Rijksuniversiteit Groningen
Spaces of Religious Advice: The St. Thomas Altarpiece and the
Charterhouse of Cologne (Language: English)
Nathalie-Josephine von Möllendorff, Institut für Kunstgeschichte,
Technische Universität Dortmund / Universität Bern
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 610-a:
Paper 610-b:
Paper 610-c:
Paper 610-d:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 611-a:
Paper 611-b:
Paper 611-c:
610
Leeds University Union: Room 2 - Elland Road
SOCIAL NETWORKS OF CLERGY IN LATE ANTIQUITY, II
Project ‘Presbyters in the Late Antique West’, Uniwersytet Warszawski
Robert Wiśniewski, Department of Ancient History, Uniwersytet
Warszawski
David Hunter, Department of Modern & Classical Languages, Literatures
& Cultures, University of Kentucky
Friends and Enemies: The Female Relationships of Late Antique
Clerics in Exile (Language: English)
Julia Hillner, Department of History, University of Sheffield
Eating with Heretics: Nicene Clergy toward Homoian
Communities in the Successor Kingdoms (Language: English)
Marta Szada, Instytut Historyczny, Uniwersytet Warszawski
Managing Expectations in a Western Ascetic Network:
Augustine, Paulinus of Nola, Sulpicius Severus (Language:
English)
Michael Williams, Department of Ancient Classics, Maynooth University
Open Courtesy and Hidden Rivalry in Salutatory Formulas of
Clerics’ Letters in Late Antiquity (Language: English)
Stanisław Adamiak, Instytut Historyczny, Uniwersytet Warszawski
611
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.15
MASTERING KNOWLEDGE AND POWER, II: EPISCOPAL SETS OF DUTIES AND
SKILLS
Giacomo Vignodelli, Dipartimento di Storia Culture Civiltà, Università di
Bologna and Giorgia Vocino, Faculty of History, University of Cambridge
Irene van Renswoude, Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts & Sciences,
Den Haag
Masters of Speech: The Episcopal Promotion of the Trivium in
the Kingdom of Italy, 8th-10th Centuries (Language: English)
Giorgia Vocino
A Mirror for Bishops: The Carolingian Reception and
Transmission of Gregory the Great’s Regula Pastoralis
(Language: English)
Alberto Ricciardi, Dipartimento di Tecnologie, Comunicazione e Società,
Università degli Studi Guglielmo Marconi, Roma
Paganorum Regulis Erudiri: Adequate Episcopal Education and
Its Implementation in Atto of Vercelli’s Writings (Language:
English)
Giacomo Vignodelli
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 612-a:
Paper 612-b:
Paper 612-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 613-a:
Paper 613-b:
Paper 613-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 614-a:
Paper 614-b:
Paper 614-c:
612
Parkinson Building: Room 1.08
LANGUAGES AND LITERACY IN THE EARLY MEDIEVAL WEST, II: NEW
PERSPECTIVES ON ANGLO-SAXON MULTILINGUALISM
Project ‘The Languages of Early Medieval Charters’, Universidad del País
Vasco
Edward Roberts, Department of History, University of Liverpool /
Departamento de Historia Medieval, Moderna y de América, Universidad
del País Vasco and Francesca Tinti, Departamento de Historia Medieval,
Moderna y de América, Universidad del País Vasco
Elizabeth M. Tyler, Department of English & Related Literature,
University of York
Anglo-Latin Bilingualism before 1066: Going beyond Limitations
(Language: English)
Olga Timofeeva, Englisches Seminar, Universität Zürich
Another Day, Another Alphabet: Bilingualism in Runica
Manuscripta (Language: English)
Aya van Renterghem, Centre for the Study of the Viking Age / School
of English, University of Nottingham
The Languages of Money in Early Medieval England and Its
Neighbours (Language: English)
Rory Naismith, Department of History, King’s College London
613
Stage@leeds: Stage 1
PERSPECTIVES ON MEDIEVAL DIET, II: CULINARY CULTURES IN LATE
MEDIEVAL ENGLAND
Medieval Diet Group
Chris Woolgar, Department of History, University of Southampton
Chris Woolgar
The Medieval Table as a Noble Space: Diet and Feasting in 12thCentury Table Manner Poems (Language: English)
Fiona Whelan, Wolfson College, University of Oxford
Did Peasants Emulate the Gentry in Their Food Culture?
(Language: English)
Christopher Dyer, Centre for English Local History, University of
Leicester
Culinary Culture and the Small Town Enigma (Language: English)
Ben Jervis, School of History, Archaeology & Religion, Cardiff University
614
Baines Wing: Room 1.15
THE CHANGING FORTUNES OF SEIGNEURIAL AND COMMERCIAL MILLING IN
MEDIEVAL ENGLAND
Adam Lucas, School of Humanities & Social Inquiry, University of
Wollongong, New South Wales
Steven A. Walton, Department of Social Sciences, Michigan
Technological University, Houghton
The Structure of the Seigneurial Milling Industry in England,
1427-1437 (Language: English)
Matthew Tompkins, Department of History, University of Leicester
The Emergence of a Commercial Sector in the English Milling
Trade, 1086-1540 (Language: English)
Adam Lucas
The Windmill in England: A Feudal Enterprise rather than a
Commercial Proposition? (Language: English)
Richard Holt, Institutt for historie og religionsvitenskap, UiT Norges
arktiske universitet
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 615-a:
Paper 615-b:
Paper 615-c:
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:
615
Leeds University Union: Room 6 - Roundhay
THE ORGANISATION, LOGISTICS, AND PRACTICE OF WAR, 1050-1500, II:
DEARTH AND PLENTY
Alan V. Murray, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds and
Joanna Phillips, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Joanna Phillips
‘Jeo vous menrai a la rivere’: Women, Water, and Warfare in the
Roman de Thèbes and Early Chronicles of the First Crusade
(Language: English)
Sophie Harwood, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
The Crusades in the Balkans: Dearth amidst Plenty (Language:
English)
Jason T. Roche, Department of History, Politics & Philosophy,
Manchester Metropolitan University
On War, Food, and Crusades (Language: English)
Judith Bronstein, Department of Land of Israel Studies, University of
Haifa
616
Leeds University Union: Room 4 - Hyde Park
FOOD AND HEALTH IN EARLY BYZANTINE AND RABBINIC SOURCES
Mary Jaharis Center for Byzantine Art & Culture, Hellenic College, Holy
Cross, Massachussetts
Christine F. Salazar, Institut für Klassische Philologie, HumboldtUniversität, Berlin
Caroline Musgrove, Faculty of Classics, University of Cambridge
Telling Women What to Eat: Instruction and Agency in
Oribasius’ Medical Collections (Language: English)
Caroline Musgrove
Paul of Aegina on the Properties of Fruit and Vegetables:
Tradition and Creativity (Language: English)
Christine F. Salazar
The Dynamics of Diet and Regimen: Talmudic Appropriation and
Domestication of a Genre? (Language: English)
Lennart Lehmhaus, Sonderforschungsbereich 980 ‘Episteme in
Bewegung’, Freie Universität Berlin
617
Baines Wing: Room G.37
RELIGIOUS COMMUNITIES AND FOOD, II
Department for the Study of Religions, Masaryk University, Brno
David Zbíral, Department for the Study of Religions, Masaryk
University, Brno
David Zbíral
Impure Food - Impure Faith: The Heretic as a Polluted Body
(Language: English)
Daniela Müller, Faculteit der Filosofie, Theologie en
Religiewetenschappen, Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen
Bernard of Clairvaux, Heresy, and the War over Food: An
Analysis from a Foucauldian Perspective (Language: English)
Stamatia Noutsou, Department for the Study of Religions, Masaryk
University, Brno
Unholy Feast and Unholy Fast: Asceticism in the
Representations of Alleged Anomic Sects of the 13th Century
(Language: English)
František Novotný, Department for the Study of Religions, Masaryk
University, Brno
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 618-a:
Paper 618-b:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 619-a:
Paper 619-b:
Paper 619-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 620-a:
Paper 620-b:
Paper 620-c:
618
Parkinson Building: Nathan Bodington Chamber
‘NOT BY BREAD ALONE [...]’: LENTEN PREACHING IN THE 15TH AND 16TH
CENTURIES, II - MENDICANT PREACHING IN NORTHERN ITALY
International Medieval Sermon Studies Society (IMSSS)
Lorenza Tromboni, Dipartimento di Storia, Archeologia, Geografia, Arte
e Spettacolo, Università di Firenze
Eleonora Lombardo, Instituto de Filosofia, Universidade do Porto
The Christian ‘Other’ in Bernardino Caimi’s Lenten Preaching
(Language: English)
Valentina Covaci, Capaciteitsgroep Geschiedenis, Universiteit van
Amsterdam
Moralising the Faithful during Lent: Contrasting Views
Concerning Witches in Franciscan and Dominican Sermons at
the End of the 15th Century (Language: English)
Fabrizio Conti, Department of History & Humanities, John Cabot
University, Rome
619
University House: Beechgrove Room
EATING AND BEING EATEN BY GOD, I: THE IMAGERY OF FOOD AND DRINK IN
MYSTICAL WRITINGS IN THE LATER MIDDLE AGES
Mystical Theology Network (MTN) / Instituut voor de Studie van
Spiritualiteit, KU Leuven
Rob Faesen, Faculteit Theologie en Religiewetenschappen, KU Leuven
Louise Nelstrop, St Benet’s Hall, University of Oxford / Sarum College,
Salisbury
Drunkenness and Bulimia in Margaret Porete and John of
Ruusbroec (Language: English)
John Arblaster, Faculteit Theologie en Religiewetenschappen, KU
Leuven
The Taste of the Divinized Body in the Mulieres religiosae
(Language: English)
Sander Vloebergs, Faculteit Theologie en Religiewetenschappen, KU
Leuven
‘Through Eating, Tasting, and Seeing Interiorly’: Hadewijch on
Love’s Most Intimate Union (Poem in Couplets 16) (Language:
English)
Rob Faesen
620
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.17
CEREMONIAL BANQUETS IN MUSLIM COURT SOCIETIES
Departamento da História, Universidade de Lisboa
Hermenegildo Fernandes, Centro de História, Universidade de Lisboa
Hermenegildo Fernandes
Feast without Food?: Umayyad Andalusi Ceremonial in a
Comparative Perspective, 9th-10th Centuries (Language: English)
Elsa Cardoso, Centro de História, Universidade de Lisboa
Understanding Medieval Umayyad Court Society: The Role of the
munya as a Backdrop for Drinking Parties and Romantic Trysts
(Language: English)
Fatima Rhorchi, School of Law & Economics, Université Moulay Ismaïl,
Meknes
The Kings’ Gardeners: filaha Experts in 11th-Century al-Andalus
(Language: English)
Ana Miranda, Departamento da História, Universidade de Lisboa
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 621-a:
Paper 621-b:
Paper 621-c:
Session:
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Organiser:
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Paper 622-a:
Paper 622-b:
Paper 622-c:
621
University House: Cloberry Room
CULTIVATION, EXPLOITATION, AND IDENTITY: LITERARY USES OF THE
LANDSCAPE
IMC Programming Committee,
Jon Solomon, Department of the Classics, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign
From Acorns to Olive Oil: Food Cultivation and Culture in
Boccaccio’s Latin Prose Works (Language: English)
Jon Solomon
Rewriting the Forest as Exploited Space: Old Czech
Transformations of Latin and German Sources (Language:
English)
Matouš Turek, Filozofická fakulta, Univerzita Karlova, Praha
Unseasonable Fruit and Unreasonable Feasts: Bargaining for
Identity in Sir Cleges (Language: English)
Angela Geosits, Department of English, Catholic University of America,
Washington DC
622
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.16
SOLEMN AND SIGNIFICANT BANQUET: MYTHICAL, THEOLOGICAL, AND
LITURGICAL, IN THE ARTISTIC AND INTELLECTUAL CULTURE OF MEDIEVAL
POLAND
Institute of History of Art & Culture, Pontifical University of John Paul
II, Kraków
Dariusz Tabor, Institute of History of Art & Culture, Pontifical University
of John Paul II, Kraków
Arnold Otto, Erzbischöfliches Generalvikariat Erzbistumsarchiv,
Paderborn
The Mighty and Mysterious Bread: The Eucharistic Epos Based
on the Story of Gideon from the Chalice of Włocławek (Language:
English)
Dariusz Tabor
The Holy and Universal Feast: The Existential and Social Aspects
of the Eucharist in the Theology of St Bernard of Clairvaux
(Language: English)
Marek Chojnacki, Faculty of Theology, Pontifical University of John Paul
II, Kraków
The Feast of Piast: Romantic and National Reception of a
Medieval Myth (Language: English)
Barbara Ciciora-Czwórnóg, Institute of History of Art & Culture,
Pontifical University of John Paul II, Kraków
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 623-a:
Paper 623-b:
Paper 623-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 624-a:
Paper 624-b:
Paper 624-c:
Session:
Title:
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Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 625-a:
Paper 625-b:
Paper 625-c:
623
Emmanuel Centre: Room 10
HUNGRVAKA: STIRRING UP AN APPETITE FOR OLD NORSE LITERATURE, II
Rebecca Merkelbach, Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse & Celtic,
University of Cambridge
Andrew McGillivray, Department of Rhetoric, Writing, &
Communications, University of Winnipeg
‘Stropinn strýkur um bringuna’: Klári Saga and Its Possible
Continental Analogues (Language: English)
Védís Ragnheiðardóttir, Faculty of Icelandic & Comparative Cultural
Studies, University of Iceland, Reykjavík
Too Many Trolls Spoil the Broth: Food Preparation and the
Representation of Menial Tasks in Romantic and Legendary
Sagas and rímur (Language: English)
Philip Lavender, Nordisk Forskningsinstitut, Københavns Universitet
Savage Maneater or Knight in Shining Armour?: The Lion in Old
Norse Romance (Language: English)
Florian Schreck, Institutt for lingvistiske, litterære og estetiske studier,
Universitetet i Bergen
624
Emmanuel Centre: Room 7
PRODUCTIVE GROUND: PLACE-NAMES AND THE LANDSCAPES OF FOOD
PROVISION
Institute for Name-Studies, University of Nottingham
John Baker, Institute for Name-Studies, University of Nottingham
Jayne Carroll, Institute for Name-Studies, University of Nottingham
The Seasoned Traveller: Place-Name Evidence for Medieval Salt
Transport (Language: English)
Eleanor Rye, Institute for Name-Studies, University of Nottingham
Field-Names, Food, and Farming Practices in Medieval
Nottinghamshire (Language: English)
Rebecca Gregory, Institute for Name-Studies, University of Nottingham
A Balanced Diet?: Evidence for Hunting, Gathering, and Farming
in Shropshire Place-Names (Language: English)
John Baker
625
Baines Wing: Room 1.13
THE BODY IN THE CITY
Prato Consortium for Medieval & Renaissance Studies
Peter Francis Howard, Centre for Medieval & Renaissance Studies,
Monash University, Victoria
Anne Holloway, School of Philosophy, History & International Studies,
Monash University, Victoria
Missing Men and the Body Social in Tuscan Mountain
Communities (Language: English)
Cecilia Hewlett, Prato Centre, Monash University, Victoria
A Priest Walks into a Bar: The Clergy in Taverns in Late
Medieval Italy (Language: English)
Roisin Cossar, Department of History, University of Manitoba
Feeding the Body, Nourishing the Soul: Preaching and Food in
Renaissance Florence (Language: English)
Peter Francis Howard
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 626-a:
Paper 626-b:
Paper 626-c:
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:
626
Michael Sadler Building: Rupert Beckett Theatre
FROM WEST FRANKISH CAROLINGIANS TO FRENCH CAPETIANS, II:
FRAMEWORKS OF RECONCILIATION
Geoffrey Koziol, Department of History, University of California,
Berkeley
Matthew Gabriele, Department of Religion & Culture, Virginia Tech
‘A Church in Utter Ruin?’: The Archiepiscopal See of Rheims
under the Early Capetians, c. 987-1050 (Language: English)
Ortwin Huysmans, Onderzoeksgroep Geschiedenis van de
Middeleeuwen, KU Leuven
Rewriting Merovingian History in the 10th Century: Aimoin of
Fleury’s Gesta Francorum (Language: English)
Justin Lake, Department of International Studies (Classics), Texas A&M
University
Between Hincmar and Chrétien: The Celebratory Diplomas of
Robert the Pious (Language: English)
Geoffrey Koziol
627
Stage@leeds: Stage 3
RETHINKING CARTULARIES, 900-1200: CARTULARIES AS HISTORY,
HISTORY IN CARTULARIES, IV - THE 12TH AND 13TH CENTURIES
Institute for Medieval & Early Modern Studies, Durham University
Charles Insley, Department of History, University of Manchester
Robert Berkhofer, Department of History, Western Michigan University,
Kalamazoo
The Votos of San Millán: A ‘Historical’ Justification of San
Millán’s Domain (Language: English)
David Peterson, Departamento de Historia, Universidad de Burgos
Presenting, Representing, and Misrepresenting the Past:
Cartulary Texts from Bury St Edmunds (Language: English)
Kathryn A. Lowe, School of Critical Studies (English Language),
University of Glasgow
Investigating Complex Cartularies: The Earliest Examples From
Scotland (Language: English)
Joanna Tucker, School of Humanities (History), University of Glasgow
628
Baines Wing: Room G.36
ROYAL IDEALS, FUNCTIONS, AND TYPOLOGIES OF POWER: KINGSHIP IN
COMPARISON IN THE HIGH MIDDLE AGES, II
Haskins Society / Battle Conference for Anglo-Norman Studies
Emily J. Ward, Emmanuel College, University of Cambridge
Björn Weiler, Department of History & Welsh History, Aberystwyth
University
Becoming King in 12th- and 13th-Century Norway: Elite Ideal
Behaviour and Kingship in the Kings’ Sagas (Language: English)
Louisa Taylor, Department of Scandinavian Studies, University College
London
‘Do you not know I am a healer?’: Royal Authority and Miracles
of Healing in High Medieval Lives of Kings (Language: English)
Beth Hasseler, Department of History, University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill
Expressions of Judgement: Kings, Emperors, and Warfare in
12th-Century English and German Chronicles (Language: English)
Ryan Kemp, Department of History & Welsh History, Aberystwyth
University
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 629-a:
Paper 629-b:
Paper 629-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 630-a:
Paper 630-b:
Paper 630-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 631-a:
Paper 631-b:
Paper 631-c:
629
Parkinson Building: Room B.11
IT’S ONLY (SUPER)NATURAL?: LITERARY DEPICTIONS OF WEREWOLVES
AND OTHERWORLDLY CREATURES
IMC Programming Committee,
Mary Michele Poellinger, Brotherton Library, University of Leeds
Merlin and Issues of Identity in Arthurian Literature (Language:
English)
Rosanne Gasse, Department of English, Brandon University, Manitoba
Breaking the Taboo: Fairies in Robert Henryson’s Orpheus and
Eurydice (Language: English)
Piotr Spyra, Department of Studies in Drama & Pre-1800 English
Literature, University of Łodz
Human Beings as Food: Werewolves and Other Cannibal
Humanoid Creatures in Medieval Jewish Tales (Language: English)
Yoel Perez, Department of Hebrew Literature, Ben Gurion University
630
Emmanuel Centre: Wilson Room
PERCEIVING ANGELS IN THE MEDIEVAL WEST, II: ANGELIC MUSIC
School of History, University of East Anglia
Sophie Alexandra Sawicka-Sykes, School of History, University of East
Anglia
Gudrun Warren, Norwich Cathedral Library
Hermits and Angelic Song up to 1350 (Language: English)
Sophie Alexandra Sawicka-Sykes
The Hypothetical Song: Angels in Medieval Music Theory
(Language: English)
Tekla Bude, School of Writing, Literature & Film, Oregon State
University
Teaching Music through Art: Reinterpreting Depictions of
Musical Angels in Italian Devotional Images, c. 1500 (Language:
English)
Serenella Sessini, Department of Music, University of Sheffield
631
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.19
DIGITAL METHODS, II: COMPUTER-ASSISTED APPROACHES TO MANUSCRIPT
STUDIES
Arts & Humanities Research Council Project ‘Models of Authority:
Scottish Charters & the Emergence of Government, 1100-1250’
Stewart J. Brookes, Department of Digital Humanities, King’s College
London
David F. Johnson, Department of English, Florida State University
What is Digital Palaeography, Really? (Language: English)
Peter A. Stokes, Department of Digital Humanities, King’s College
London
Space between Words (13th-15th Centuries): Computer Vision
and Medieval Linguistic Consciousness (Language: English)
Dominique Stutzmann, Institut de Recherche et d’Histoire des Textes
(IRHT), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Paris
Transformed Materiality: Advanced Imaging Techniques and the
Study of Medieval Manuscripts (Language: English)
Bill Endres, Department of English, University of Oklahoma
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 632-a:
Paper 632-b:
Paper 632-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 633-a:
Paper 633-b:
Paper 633-c:
632
Baines Wing: Room 2.14
RELIGIOUS DEBATE AND TYPOLOGY IN MEDIEVAL TEXTS FROM FRANCE,
SOUTHERN ITALY, AND MAJORCA
IMC Programming Committee,
Alexander Fidora, Departament de Ciències de l’Antiguitat i de l’Edat
Mitjana, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona
Arguing with Christians or Arguing with Jews?: A New Approach
to Ha-Ta’anot (The Arguments) of R. Moses of Salerno
(Language: English)
Lior Yaary-Dolev, Department of General History / Center for Study of
Conversion & Inter-Religious Encounters, Ben-Gurion University of the
Negev
Interpreting Midrash in 12th-Century France: Abraham in Rashi
and the Glossa Ordinaria (Language: English)
Benjamin James Williams, Department of Theology & Religious Studies,
King’s College London
The Extent of Typology in the Majorcan Llabrés Play Manuscript
(Biblioteca de Catalunya, MS 1139) (Language: English)
Lenke Kovács, Departament de Filologia Catalana, Universitat Rovira i
Virgili, Tarragona
633
University House: Little Woodhouse Room
GENDER, AUTHORITY, AND EXPERTISE IN MEDICINE OF THE IBERIAN
PENINSULA
American Association of Research Historians of Medieval Spain
Iona McCleery, Institute for Medieval Studies / School of History,
University of Leeds
Elena Woodacre, Department of History, University of Winchester
‘Listen and know on the retention of menstrual blood’: Writing
in Hebrew on Female Physiology and Disease in Christian Castile
at the Turn of the 13th Century (Language: English)
Carmen Caballero-Navas, Departamento de Estudios Semíticos,
Universidad de Granada
Transforming Trota into Trotula: Female Authority and Female
Authorship in Catalan Medical Texts (Language: English)
Montserrat Cabré Pairet, Departamento de Fisología y Farmacología,
Universidad de Cantabria
Health, Diet, and Masculinity: The Male ‘Patient’ in Late
Medieval Portugal (Language: English)
Iona McCleery
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 634-a:
Paper 634-b:
Paper 634-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 635-a:
Paper 635-b:
Paper 635-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 636-a:
Paper 636-b:
634
Baines Wing: Room 1.16
GENDER AT THE INTERSECTION OF THE SECULAR AND SACRED IN LITERATURE
St Andrews Gender & Transgression Conference
Lydia Hayes, St Andrews Institute of Mediaeval Studies, University of St
Andrews
Victoria Turner, School of Modern Languages, University of St Andrews
Defrocking a Female Bishop: The French Lives of St Martha
(Language: English)
Huw Grange, Faculty of Medieval & Modern Languages, University of
Oxford
Holy and Transgressive Women in Gardens: A Literary
Perspective (Language: English)
Lydia Hayes
Three Men and a Baby: How Gendered was Foster-Fatherhood
within and without the Monastery? (Language: English)
Thomas O’Donnell, Department of Science & Technology Studies,
University College London
635
Baines Wing: Room 2.13
TRADE IN THE MEDITERRANEAN, II: THE LATER MIDDLE AGES
James Hill, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Jonathan Jarrett, School of History, University of Leeds
Divergent Paths, Divergent Needs: Provisions of Trade
Privileges between Armenian Cilicia, Venice, and Genoa in the
13th Century (Language: English)
Wei-Sheng Lin, Centre for Byzantine, Ottoman & Modern Greek
Studies, Department of Classics, Ancient History & Archaeology,
University of Birmingham
Satan’s Smugglers?: Reconsidering the Papal Embargo on the
Muslim World in the 14th Century (Language: English)
James Hill
Among Competition and Cooperation: Marseille, Montpellier, and
the Minor Trading Cities (Language: English)
Stephan Köhler, Historisches Institut, Universität Mannheim
636
Michael Sadler Building: Banham Theatre
HISTORICAL EUROPEAN MARTIAL ARTS STUDIES, II: THE ART OF FIGHTING
IN CONTEXT
Acta Periodica Duellatorum: An Open-Access Journal for Historical
European Martial Arts Studies
Daniel Jaquet, Max-Planck-Institut für Wissenschaftsgeschichte, Berlin
Daniel Jaquet
King Christian IV and His Fencing Masters (Language: English)
Claus Frederik Sørensen, Nyborg Castle, Museums of Eastern Funen,
Denmark
Depictions of Combat in Medieval Art: The Good, the Bad, and
the Ugly (Language: English)
James F. Hester, Department of History, University of Southampton
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 637-a:
Paper 637-b:
Paper 637-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 638-a:
Paper 638-b:
Paper 638-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 639-a:
Paper 639-b:
Paper 639-c:
637
Leeds University Union: Room 5 - Kirkstall Abbey
DISEASE, DISFIGUREMENT, AND DEATH
Department of History, University of Winchester
Patricia E. Skinner, Department of History, University of Winchester /
Centre for Medieval & Early Modern Research (MEMO), Swansea
University
Patricia E. Skinner
Looking for Epilepsy in the Medieval Record (Language: English)
Hillary Burgardt, Department of History, University of Winchester
Impact of the Black Death on the Clergy (Language: English)
John Merriman, Department of History, University of Winchester
Overcoming Impairment: The Representation and Construction
of Medieval Wheelbarrows (Language: English)
Rachael Gillibrand, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
638
Parkinson Building: Room B.08
THE DOMINICAN ORDER, II: INQUISITION IN CONTEXT
Institut zur Erforschung der Geschichte des Dominikanerordens im
deutschen Sprachraum (IGDom), Köln
Elias H. Füllenbach, Institut zur Erforschung der Geschichte des
Dominikanerordens im deutschen Sprachraum, Dominikanerprovinz
Teutonia e.V., Köln and Sabine von Heusinger, Historisches Institut,
Universität zu Köln
Elias H. Füllenbach
Good Counsel: The ‘Consilium Bonorum Virorum’ in Dominican
Heresy Inquisitions (Language: English)
Christine Caldwell Ames, Department of History, University of South
Carolina, Columbia
Dominican Historiographies of Inquisition: An Evolution of
Memory and Narrative (Language: English)
Robin Vose, Department of History, St Thomas University, New
Brunswick
Plurality within the Dominican Inquisition in Germany
(Language: English)
Klaus-Bernward Springer, Institut zur Erforschung der Geschichte des
Dominikanerordens im deutschen Sprachraum, Dominikanerprovinz
Teutonia e.V., Köln
639
Emmanuel Centre: Room 11
CISTERCIANS, I: CISTERCIANS IN PORTUGAL
Cîteaux: Commentarii cistercienses
Terryl N. Kinder, Cîteaux: Commentarii cistercienses
David N. Bell, Department of Religious Studies, Memorial University of
Newfoundland
Approaches to a 14th-Century Breviary from the Cistercian
Abbey of Alcobaça, MS Alc. 66 (Language: English)
Catarina Fernandes Barreira, Instituto de Estudos Medievais, Faculdade
de Ciências Sociais e Humanas, Universidade Nova de Lisboa
Portuguese Cistercian Nunneries in the Middle Ages (Language:
English)
Luís Miguel Rêpas, Instituto de Estudos Medievais, Faculdade de
Ciências Sociais e Humanas, Universidade Nova de Lisboa
Anxious Conscience in the Portuguese Nun Joana de Jesus
(1617-1681) (Language: English)
Joana Serrado, Faculty of Theology, Lady Margaret Hall, University of
Oxford
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 13.00-14.00
Session:
Title:
Purpose:
698
Parkinson Building: Treasures Gallery
SPECIAL LECTURE: EXPLORING MEDIEVAL TEXTS IN THE MODERN AGE
Special Collections is developing online learning resources which
combine high-quality digital images with informative text. This session
will introduce the Medieval Illuminated Manuscripts Digital Resource,
featuring high-resolution images of manuscripts from France, Italy,
Germany and the Low Countries. Next, the session will explore the
Universal Chronicle, a 15th-century manuscript nearly 18 metres long
that recounts the history of the world from the Creation to the reign of
King Louis XI of France. The Brotherton Ovid Digital Learning Resource
investigates the history of a set of three incunabula filled with drawings
and annotations. Finally, the session will outline current photographic
research on the collection of manuscript fragments hidden in bindings
from Ripon Cathedral Library.
Rhiannon Lawrence-Francis works in Special Collections at Leeds
University Library as Collections and Engagement Manager with
particular responsibility for rare books and maps.
The session will take place in The Sheppard Room, accessed via the
Treasures of the Brotherton Gallery, where some of these items will be
on display. Special Collections houses over 200,000 rare books and
seven kilometres (4.3 miles) of manuscripts and archives, including the
celebrated Brotherton Collection, the Melsteth Icelandic Collection, the
Archives of the Dean & Chapter of Ripon, the Roth Collection, and the
Oriental Manuscript Collection. The Reading Room of Special Collections
is open from 09.00-18.00 during the Congress week, and IMC
delegates are welcome to pursue their research and explore the
collection.
More
details
can
be
found
at
http://library.leeds.ac.uk/special-collections
Session:
Title:
Purpose:
699
Parkinson Building: Nathan Bodington Chamber
KEYNOTE LECTURE 2016: COOKBOOKS, HEALTH BOOKS, DRUG MANUALS:
CULINARY RECIPES IN SEARCH OF A GENRE (LANGUAGE: ENGLISH)
In medieval Europe cookbooks started appearing only towards the end
of the period. With over fifty recipe-collections ranging in length from
several to several hundred recipes, Germany boasts the richest
cookbook tradition, with all the extant manuscripts dating from ca.
1350-1500. A recently discovered Durham recipe-collection from the
12th century predates the oldest German cookbook by some two
hundred years and is proof that European culinary recipes were
recorded much earlier than previously known. The collection of ten
sauce recipes which claim Poitou as their place of origin is written in
Latin and included in a codex of medical recipes. The talk will explore
the early beginnings of European culinary writing in the context of
medieval medicine by using Germany as an example. It will look at
monastic medicine, such as the medical writings of the nun Hildegard
von Bingen, and the pharmacopoeias and regimens of health associated
with the newly established medical schools and those by physicians
from Germany and elsewhere who studied there. These sources
illustrate the important role medical literature played in the early
transmission of culinary recipes when a proper genre was still lacking
as well as in the genesis of the late medieval cookbook.
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.
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 701-a:
Paper 701-b:
Paper 701-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 702-a:
Paper 702-b:
Paper 702-c:
701
Emmanuel Centre: Room 2
CULTURAL CONTACTS, LINGUISTIC TRACES: COMPARATIVE APPROACHES TO
MEDIEVAL WORDS AND BOOKS
IMC Programming Committee,
Helen Fulton, Department of English, University of Bristol
Digression or Progression?: An Analysis of the Variant Spellings
of Old English -ht in the Early Middle English Period (Language:
English)
Koichi Kano, Department of Cross-Cultural Studies, Koeki University
Glossae collectae on Prudentius’ Psychomachia: A Medieval
Reference Book? - Some Reflections on the Function of the
Psychomachia Glosses in the Collection of Latin Chronological
Treatise, National Library of Russia, MS Lat. O. v. IV 1
(Language: English)
Gleb Schmidt, UFR d’histoire, Université Paris I - Panthéon-Sorbonne
Literature and Power in the 15th Century: Creation and
Dissemination of Political Satire in Castille (Language: English)
Nuria Corral Sánchez, Departamento de Historia Medieval, Moderna y
Contemporánea, Universidad de Salamanca
702
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.10
ANGLO-SAXON RIDDLES AND WISDOM, II: ‘OTHER’ SPEAKING AND
WRITING
The Riddle Ages: An Anglo-Saxon Riddle Blog
Megan Cavell, Department of English, Durham University and Jennifer
Neville, Department of English, Royal Holloway, University of London
Jennifer Neville
Freolic, Sellic: An Ecofeminist Reading of the Exeter Book
Riddles (Language: English)
Corinne Dale, Department of English, Royal Holloway, University of
London
Creation’s Chorus: Sound and Sentience in Anglo-Saxon Riddles
(Language: English)
Robert Stanton, Department of English, Boston College, Massachusetts
Riddling is the Best Remedy: Exeter Book Riddle 48 and the
Anglo-Saxon Medical Tradition (Language: English)
Megan Cavell
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
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Paper 703-a:
Paper 703-b:
Paper 703-c:
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Paper 704-a:
Paper 704-b:
Paper 704-c:
703
University House: St George Room
DIGITISING PATTERNS OF POWER, III: FLOCKS, FARMS, AND FRONTIERS
‘Digitising Patterns of Power (DPP): Peripherical Mountains in the
Medieval World’, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
Mihailo Popović, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Abteilung
Byzanzforschung, Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
Mihailo Popović
The Vlachs in Medieval Macedonia: Restless Nomadic
Neighbours? (Language: English)
David Schmid, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
How to Grasp Restless Nomadic Neighbours in Computer
Science: A Case Study on Prilep (Language: English)
Bernhard Koschicek, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
Between Conflict and Symbiosis: Sedentary and Nomadic
Communities across the 12th-13th-Century Byzantine-Turkish
Frontier (Language: English)
Ekaterini Mitsiou, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
704
Michael Sadler Building: Rupert Beckett Theatre
THE MATERIALITY OF LOVE
Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for the History of
Emotions / Centre for Medieval Studies, University of York
Kimberley-Joy Knight, Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence
for the History of Emotions, University of Sydney
Henry Bainton, Department of English & Related Literature, University
of York
Towards an Archaeology of Love: Intimate Gifts in Viking-Age
Europe (Language: English)
Steven Ashby, Department of Archaeology, University of York and Flo
Laino, L – P: Archaeology, London
Love on a Stick: The Role of Runic Twigs in Constructing and
Maintaining Relationships in Medieval Scandinavia (Language:
English)
Kimberley-Joy Knight
Love and Marriage?: Gifts after Marriage in Late Medieval
England (Language: English)
Anna Boeles Rowland, Merton College, University of Oxford
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
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Paper 705-a:
Paper 705-b:
Paper 705-c:
Session:
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Paper 706-a:
Paper 706-b:
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Paper 707-a:
Paper 707-b:
Respondent:
705
Parkinson Building: Room B.10
GLOBAL BYZANTIUM: TRANSITIONAL RELATIONS, 500-1453, III
Centre for Byzantine, Ottoman & Modern Greek Studies, Department of
Classics, Ancient History & Archaeology, University of Birmingham
Anna C. Kelley, Department of Classics, Ancient History & Archaeology,
University of Birmingham
Arietta S. Papaconstantinou, Department of Classics, University of
Reading
Waves and Footprints in a Cultural Exchange between
Byzantium and Egypt (Language: English)
Eunice Dauterman Maguire, Department of the History of Art, Johns
Hopkins University
A Long-Distance Relationship: The Patriarchate of Jerusalem
and the Medieval West, 800-1099 (Language: English)
Daniel Reynolds, Centre for Byzantine, Ottoman & Modern Greek
Studies, Department of Classics, Ancient History & Archaeology,
University of Birmingham
Mosaics from Sicily and Venice: Greek Inscriptions, Latin Artists
(Language: English)
Henry Maguire, Department of the History of Art, Johns Hopkins
University
706
Parkinson Building: Room B.22
NARRATIVE CONSTRUCTION IN 8TH- AND 9TH-CENTURY LATIN HAGIOGRAPHY
IMC Programming Committee,
Anne-Marie Helvétius, Département d’histoire, Université Paris VIII Vincennes-Saint-Denis
Structure and Narrative Sequence in Adomnán’s Vita Sancti
Columbae (Language: English)
Duncan Sneddon, Scottish History, School of History, Classics &
Archaeology, University of Edinburgh
The Potent and the Potable: Food and Drink in Carolingian
Miracle Narratives (Language: English)
Maximilian McComb, Department of History, Cornell University
707
Parkinson Building: Room B.09
MEDIEVAL EQUESTRIANISM, III: UNEARTHING THE HORSE AND ITS
EQUIPMENT - PRACTICAL APPROACHES
Timothy Dawson, Levantia, Leeds and Anastasija Ropa, Department of
Management & Communication Science, Latvian Academy of Sport
Education, Riga
Anastasija Ropa
Practical Considerations in the Reconstruction of Clothing and
Armour for Riding (Language: English)
Timothy Dawson
An Autopsy of Renaissance Equestrianism: The Materials,
Making, and Use of a 1530 War Saddle from the Musée des
Beaux-Arts of Rennes (Language: English)
Marina Viallon, Musée de l’Armée, Paris
Tina Anderlini, Independent Scholar, Russange
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
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Paper 708-a:
Paper 708-b:
Paper 708-c:
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Paper 709-a:
Paper 709-b:
Paper 709-c:
708
Baines Wing: Room 1.14
WRITING IN CONTEXT
Onderzoekschool Mediëvistiek
Rob Meens, Departement Geschiedenis en Kunstgeschiedenis,
Universiteit Utrecht
Rob Meens
‘Pray for me, John, priest, miserable sinner’: Devotional Graffiti
as a Source for Understanding Devotion and Conceptions of
Intercession in the Early Medieval West (Language: English)
Becca Grose, Departement Geschiedenis en Kunstgeschiedenis,
Universiteit Utrecht
Studying History in 9th-Century Auxerre: Marginal Annotations
on Justinus’s Epitome of Pompeius Trogus’s Historia (Language:
English)
Lenneke van Raaij, Departement Geschiedenis en Kunstgeschiedenis,
Universiteit Utrecht
Comparative Medieval Translation Study, 1100-1500: New
Theoretical Perspectives and an Analysis of a Multilingual
Narrative Tradition - An Interdisciplinary Approach (Language:
English)
Arend Elias Oostindiër, Faculteit der Letteren, Rijksuniversiteit
Groningen
709
Stage@leeds: Stage 2
CITIES OF READERS, III: NAVIGATING SPACES - PERFORMATIVE RELIGIOUS
READING
Project ‘Cities of Readers’, Rijksuniversiteit Groningen
Joanka van der Laan, Oudere Nederlandse Letterkunde,
Rijksuniversiteit Groningen
Sabrina Corbellini, Oudere Nederlandse Letterkunde, Rijksuniversiteit
Groningen
From Church Wall to Prayer Roll: Place, Media, Memory, and the
Performative Reading of Erthe unto Erthe (Language: English)
Mary Agnes Edsall, Independent Scholar, Maine
Setting the Stage for Reading: Spatial Demarcation in a Middle
Dutch Life of Christ (Language: English)
Bart Ramakers, Oudere Nederlandse Letterkunde, Rijksuniversiteit
Groningen
‘Go into a secluded space’: Performative Reading in Some Late
Medieval Devotional Texts from the Low Countries (Language:
English)
Joanka van der Laan
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
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Paper 710-a:
Paper 710-b:
Paper 710-c:
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Paper 711-a:
Paper 711-b:
Paper 711-c:
710
Leeds University Union: Room 2 - Elland Road
PARLIAMENT AND CONVOCATION IN LATE MEDIEVAL ENGLAND
Late Medieval Seminar, Institute of Historical Research, University of
London
Daniel Gosling, School of History, University of Leeds
Sean Cunningham, The National Archives, Kew
The Freedom of the English Church in 14th-Century
Parliamentary Rhetoric (Language: English)
Daniel Gosling
Second Parliament or Private Assembly?: Convocation in 15thCentury Constitutional Thought (Language: English)
Paul R. Cavill, Pembroke College, University of Cambridge
Procedure, Language, and Social Dynamic in the 15th-Century
English Parliament (Language: English)
Hannes Kleineke, History of Parliament Trust, London
711
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.15
MASTERING KNOWLEDGE AND POWER, III: EPISCOPAL CULTURE IN ACTION
TH
IN THE 9 CENTURY
Giacomo Vignodelli, Dipartimento di Storia Culture Civiltà, Università di
Bologna and Giorgia Vocino, Faculty of History, University of Cambridge
François Bougard, Département d’histoire, Université Paris Ouest
Nanterre La Défense
‘[…] correctionis gratia iuxta ministerium sibi iniunctum […]’:
Agobard and the Episcopal School of Lyons (Language: English)
Marie-Celine Isaïa, Département d’histoire, L’Université Jean Moulin
Lyon III
‘The blind leading the blind’: Regino of Prüm’s Representation
of Episcopal Involvement in the Divorce Case of Lothar II
(Language: English)
Terje Breigutu Moseng, Institutt for arkeologi, historie, kultur- og
religionsvitenskap, Universitetet i Bergen
Hincmar as a Teacher: A Late Carolingian ‘Quaestio’ on Baptism
and Penance (Language: English)
Warren Pezé, Sonderforschungsbereich 923 ‘Bedrohte Ordnungen’,
Eberhard-Karls-Universität Tübingen
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
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Moderator:
Paper 712-a:
Paper 712-b:
Paper 712-c:
Session:
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Paper 713-a:
Paper 713-b:
Paper 713-c:
712
Parkinson Building: Room 1.08
LANGUAGES AND LITERACY IN THE EARLY MEDIEVAL WEST, III: GERMANIC
VERNACULARS IN CONTINENTAL CHARTERS
Project ‘The Languages of Early Medieval Charters’, Universidad del País
Vasco
Edward Roberts, Department of History, University of Liverpool /
Departamento de Historia Medieval, Moderna y de América, Universidad
del País Vasco and Francesca Tinti, Departamento de Historia Medieval,
Moderna y de América, Universidad del País Vasco
Stefan Esders, Geschichte der Spätantike und des frühen Mittelalters,
Friedrich-Meinecke-Institut, Freie Universität Berlin
Traces of Bilingualism in Early Medieval Northern Italy: The
Evidence from Private Charters, 8th-10th Centuries (Language:
English)
Marco Stoffella, Dipartimento Culture e Civiltà, Università degli Studi di
Verona
The Use of the Vernacular in Fulda and Freising Charters, c. 770
- c. 900 (Language: English)
Edward Roberts
Germanic Names in Latin Charters: Reflections on the Saint-Gall
Charters (Language: English)
Hans-Werner Goetz, Historisches Seminar, Universität Hamburg
713
Stage@leeds: Stage 1
PERSPECTIVES ON MEDIEVAL DIET, III: DIET, STATUS, AND IDENTITY IN
BRITAIN AND IRELAND
Medieval Diet Group
Chris Woolgar, Department of History, University of Southampton
Christopher Dyer, Centre for English Local History, University of
Leicester
Of Flesh Meat and Milk-Meats: Exemptions from Fasting and
Abstinence Requirements in Late Medieval Britain (Language:
English)
Allison Fizzard, Department of History, Campion College, University of
Regina, Saskatchewan
Diet, Status, and Ethnicity in Medieval Ireland: The
Documentary Evidence (Language: English)
Margaret Murphy, Carlow College
Diet, Status, and Ethnicity in Medieval Ireland: The
Zooarchaeological Evidence (Language: English)
Fiona Beglane, Department of Environmental Science, CERIS, Institute
of Technology, Sligo
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
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Moderator:
Paper 714-a:
Paper 714-b:
Paper 714-c:
Session:
Title:
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Paper 715-a:
Paper 715-b:
Paper 715-c:
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Paper 716-a:
Paper 716-b:
Paper 716-c:
714
Baines Wing: Room 1.15
PRACTICALITIES OF FEAST, FAST, AND FAMINE
British Archaeological Association
Harriet Mahood, Graduate Centre for Medieval Studies, University of
Reading
Harriet Mahood
The Cost of Feeding London’s Poor at the Savoy Hospital in the
Early 16th Century (Language: English)
Charlotte Stanford, Humanities, Classics & Comparative Literature,
Brigham Young University
Medieval Odontology, Maturation, and the Reformation:
Patterns in Childhood Dental Disease in England, c. 1000-1700
(Language: English)
Bennjamin Penny-Mason, Department of Archaeology, Durham
University
‘Res ad bibendum et manducandum’: Ambassadors and Food
Transportation Privileges in Italian Communal Statutes, 13th15th Centuries (Language: English)
Edward Dettmam Loss, Dipartimento di Storia Culture e Civiltà,
Università di Bologna
715
Leeds University Union: Room 6 - Roundhay
THE ORGANISATION, LOGISTICS, AND PRACTICE OF WAR, 1050-1500,
III: ON AND OFF THE FIELD OF BATTLE
Alan V. Murray, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds and
Joanna Phillips, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Alan V. Murray
Problems in Port: Health and Illness at Points of Crusader
Embarkation (Language: English)
Joanna Phillips
Far from the Fighting Crowd: The Portrayal of Crusading Knights
away from the Field of Battle (Language: English)
Belinda Guthrie, Centre for the Study of Islam & the West, Queen Mary,
University of London
Feeding Mars in Times of Famine: Edward II’s Scottish
Operations after Bannockburn (Language: English)
Ilana Krug, Department of History & Political Science, York College of
Pennsylvania
716
Leeds University Union: Room 4 - Hyde Park
CUSTOMS OF EATING AND FASTING AMONG MEDIEVAL JEWS
Goldstein-Goren Diaspora Research Center, Tel Aviv University
Simha Goldin, Goldstein-Goren Diaspora Research Center, Tel Aviv
University
Eva Frojmovic, Centre for Jewish Studies, University of Leeds
Ceremonies and Customs of Eating and Fasting among Medieval
Jews (Language: English)
Simha Goldin
Wine Drinking in the Synagogue as a Guild Ceremony in
Ashkenaz (Language: English)
Joseph Isaac Lifshitz, Goldstein-Goren Diaspora Research Center, Tel
Aviv University / Shalem College, Jerusalem
Medieval Gastronomy in France: Jewish-Christian Relationships
(Language: English)
Maya Nestelbaum Guez, Goldstein-Goren Diaspora Research Center, Tel
Aviv University
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
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Paper 717-a:
Paper 717-b:
Session:
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Paper 718-a:
Paper 718-b:
Paper 718-c:
717
Baines Wing: Room G.37
RELIGIOUS COMMUNITIES AND FOOD, III
Department for the Study of Religions, Masaryk University, Brno
David Zbíral, Department for the Study of Religions, Masaryk
University, Brno
Sita Steckel, Historisches Seminar, Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität
Münster
Eating with the Other: Christian Missionaries among the
Mongols in the 13th and 14th Centuries (Language: English)
Jana Valtrová, Department for the Study of Religions, Masaryk
University, Brno
Dinner with the Inquisition: Feeding Inquisitors and Their
Prisoners in Medieval Italy (Language: English)
Jill Moore, Department of History, Classics & Archaeology, Birkbeck,
University of London
718
Parkinson Building: Nathan Bodington Chamber
‘NOT BY BREAD ALONE [...]’: LENTEN PREACHING IN THE 15TH AND 16TH
CENTURIES, III - SPIRITUAL AND THEOLOGICAL REFORMATION
Dipartimento di Storia, Archeologia, Geografia, Arte e Spettacolo,
Università di Firenze
Pietro Delcorno, Leeds Humanities Research Institute, University of
Leeds
Pietro Delcorno
The Spiritual Reformation: Food Metaphors in Girolamo
Savonarola’s Lenten Sermons (Language: English)
Lorenza Tromboni, Dipartimento di Storia, Archeologia, Geografia, Arte
e Spettacolo, Università di Firenze
Reforming quadragesimales in Renaissance Italy: Continuity
and Change in Lenten Sermons from Savonarola to Bernardino
Ochino (Language: English)
Michele Camaioni, Sonderforschungsbereich 923 ‘Bedrohte Ordnungen’,
Eberhard-Karls-Universität Tübingen
The Lenten Devil: The Heresies of Fasting in Protestant Lenten
Sermons in 16th-Century Germany (Language: English)
Joachim Werz, Sonderforschungsbereich 923 ‘Bedrohte Ordnungen’,
Eberhard-Karls-Universität Tübingen
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
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:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 721-a:
Paper 721-b:
719
University House: Beechgrove Room
EATING AND BEING EATEN BY GOD, II: ENGLAND AND THE LOW COUNTRIES
Mystical Theology Network (MTN) / Instituut voor de Studie van
Spiritualiteit, KU Leuven
Louise Nelstrop, St Benet’s Hall, University of Oxford / Sarum College,
Salisbury
Rob Faesen, Faculteit Theologie en Religiewetenschappen, KU Leuven
Gertrud of Helfta’s Use of the Thirst Metaphor from Psalms 42
and 63 to Articulate Her Longing for God and Absorption into
Christ (Language: English)
Regine Slavin, Sarum College, Salisbury
Richard Rolle on Eating, Satiation, and Nourishing Others
(Language: English)
Louise Nelstrop
Having Your Christ and Eating Him Too: Mutual Devouring and
Agency in Hadewijch of Brabant and Julian of Norwich
(Language: English)
Godelinde Gertrude Perk, Institutionen för språkstudier, Umeå
Universitet
720
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.17
CONSTRUCTING IDENTITIES, THEN AND NOW: ETHNICITY, NATION, AND
EMPIRE IN THE EARLY TO HIGH MIDDLE AGES
Eric Wolever, Centre for Medieval Studies, University of York
Harry Munt, Department of History, University of York
Gildas and Giddens: Structuration Theory, Anglo-Saxon
Archaeology, and Contemporary Cultural Politics (Language:
English)
James Michael Harland, Department of History, University of York
Spatializing History: The Cardinal Points and the Location of
Empire in the 12th Century (Language: English)
Eric Wolever
Apocalypse Now: A Man and His Horse (Language: English)
Heidi Stoner, Department of History of Art, University of York
721
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.19
HOW STRONG WERE MEDIEVAL ALES?
Medieval Brewers Guild
Stephen C. Law, College of Liberal Arts, University of Central Oklahoma
Nuri Creager, Department of Foreign Languages & Literatures,
Oklahoma State University
The Demon Drink: Anglo-Saxon Attitudes to Alcoholic
Consumption (Language: English)
Stephen Pollington, Independent Scholar, Basildon
Twy Brownum Ealu: Revisiting the Anglo-Saxon Secrets of
Twice-Brewed Ale (Language: English)
Stephen C. Law
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 722-a:
Paper 722-b:
Paper 722-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 723-a:
Paper 723-b:
Paper 723-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 724-a:
Paper 724-b:
722
University House: Little Woodhouse Room
BANQUETS AND FESTIVITIES IN MEDIEVAL ISLAM
Limor Yungman, Spécialité ‘Histoire et civilisations’, École des Hautes
Études en Sciences Sociales (EHESS), Paris
Hugh Kennedy, Department of the Languages & Cultures of the Near &
Middle East, School of Oriental & African Studies, University of London
Meal Festivals in Fatimid Egypt (Language: English)
Mohamed Ouerfelli, Laboratoire d’archéologie médiévale et moderne en
Méditerranée, Université d’Aix-Marseille
Alimentation carnée et repas de fête dans l’Occident islamique
médiéval (Language: Français)
Marianne Brisville, CIHAM-UMR 5648, Université Lumière Lyon II /
École des hautes études hispaniques et ibériques, Casa de Velázquez,
Madrid
Celebration Foods in the Abbasid Court (Language: English)
Limor Yungman
723
Emmanuel Centre: Room 10
HUNGRVAKA: STIRRING UP AN APPETITE FOR OLD NORSE LITERATURE, III
Rebecca Merkelbach, Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse & Celtic,
University of Cambridge
Joanne Shortt-Butler, Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse & Celtic,
University of Cambridge
Food and Exclusion: Selling Beer and Chicken in the Saga-World
(Language: English)
Marion Poilvez, Department of Icelandic & Comparative Cultural
Studies, University of Iceland, Reykjavík
‘Feast and Furious’: Feast-Related Conflicts in Old Norse
Literature (Language: English)
Viktória Gyönki, Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest / University of
Iceland, Reykjavik
‘If a Man Steals Apples or Turnips’: Law and Food in 13thCentury Norway (Language: English)
Helen F. Leslie-Jacobsen, Institutt for lingvistiske, litterære og estetiske
studier, Universitetet i Bergen
724
Emmanuel Centre: Room 7
SETTING THE TABLE: MEDIEVAL TABLESCAPES, DINING, AND THE VISUAL
CULTURE OF FOOD
International Center of Medieval Art (ICMA) Student Committee, New
York
Meg Bernstein, Department of Art History, University of California, Los
Angeles / Courtauld Institute of Art, University of London
Pablo Ordás-Díaz, Facultad de Geografía e Historia, Universidad de
Santiago de Compostela
Treason at the Table (Language: English)
Amy Jeffs, Department of History of Art, University of Cambridge
The Feasting Three-Faced Janus in 13th- and 14th-Century
English Calendar Illumination (Language: English)
Sophie Kelly, Centre for Medieval & Early Modern Studies, University of
Kent
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 725-a:
Paper 725-a:
Paper 725-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 726-a:
Paper 726-b:
Paper 726-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 727-a:
Paper 727-b:
Paper 727-c:
725
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.16
EATING IN THE EARLY CHRISTIAN COMMUNITY
IMC Programming Committee,
Giles E. M. Gasper, Department of History, Durham University
Food and Drink, Feeding and Drinking in Augustine’s
Confessions (Language: English)
Augustine Reisenauer, Department of Theology, University of Notre
Dame
The Eucharist as Spiritual Food in Gregory of Nyssa (Language:
English)
Ilaria Ramelli, Angelicum, Graduate School of Theology, Sacred Heart
Major Seminary, Detroit / Corpus Christi College, University of Oxford
‘gustaui et esurio et sitio’: Augustine and the Spiritual Taste
(Language: English)
Georgiana Huian, New Europe College, Bucharest / Institut de
Théologie Orthodoxe Saint-Serge, Paris
726
University House: Great Woodhouse Room
ARE THE MIDDLE AGES RELEVANT?: PERSPECTIVES, I
Mediävistenverband
Klaus P. Oschema, Historisches Seminar, Ruprecht-Karls-Universität
Heidelberg
Steffen Patzold, Seminar für Mittelalterliche Geschichte, EberhardKarls-Universität Tübingen
Crossing Cultural Boundaries or the Embodiment of
Colonialism?: Teaching the Middle Ages in New Zealand
(Language: English)
Chris Jones, Department of History, University of Canterbury,
Christchurch
Making it Matter: Audiences, Relevance, and Access at the
Tower of London (Language: English)
Sally Dixon-Smith, Tower of London, Historic Royal Palaces
Going Popular: How Charlemagne Might Still Become a
European (Language: English)
Klaus P. Oschema
727
Stage@leeds: Stage 3
SCANDINAVIAN HISTORY IN THE VIKING AND MIDDLE AGES, I
Paul Gazzoli, Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse & Celtic, University of
Cambridge
Paul Gazzoli
Voyages beyond Ohthere: The Case for Strong Regional
Demarcation and Identity in Pre-11th-Century Norway
(Language: English)
Benjamin Allport, Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse & Celtic,
University of Cambridge
Weak Kings - Strong Kingdom: Marionette Monarchs in 12thCentury Norway (Language: English)
Ian Peter Grohse, Historisches Seminar, Westfälische WilhelmsUniversität Münster
Trial by Ordeals in 12th- and 13th-Century Norway: Between
Politics and the Divine (Language: English)
David Brégaint, Institutt for historiske studier, Norges teknisknaturvitenskapelige universitet, Trondheim
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 728-a:
Paper 728-b:
Respondent:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 729-a:
Paper 729-b:
Paper 729-c:
Session:
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Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 730-a:
Paper 730-b:
Paper 730-c:
728
Baines Wing: Room G.36
CONQUEST AND COMMUNITY: NORMANDY IN THE 11TH AND 12TH CENTURIES
Leonie V. Hicks, School of Humanities, Canterbury Christ Church
University
Charles Insley, Department of History, University of Manchester
Building Community in the Gesta Normannorum Ducum of
William of Jumièges (Language: English)
Mark Hagger, School of History, Welsh History & Archaeology, Bangor
University
Landscapes of the Normans (Language: English)
Leonie V. Hicks
David Bates, School of History, University of East Anglia
729
Parkinson Building: Room B.11
GAMES AND COMPETITIONS IN MEDIEVAL SOCIABILITY
Deutsches Historisches Institut, Paris
Vanina Kopp, Deutsches Historisches Institut, Paris
Jessika Nowak, Max-Planck-Institut für Europäische Rechtsgeschichte,
Frankfurt am Main
‘My lady, may I ask you...’: Literary Games and Poetic
Competitions at the French Court (Language: English)
Vanina Kopp
Staging Configurations of Gender in the Late Medieval
Tournament: Representations, Norms, and Cultural Practices
between Gender Conformity and Gender Non-Conformity
(Language: English)
Constanze Buyken, Deutsches Historisches Institut, Paris
Union and Disunion of the Nobility: The Role of Passages of
Arms in Games of Rivalries in Princely Courts during the 15th
and 16th Centuries (Language: English)
Guillaume Bureaux, Deutsches Historisches Institut, Paris
730
Emmanuel Centre: Wilson Room
GRADATIONS OF LIFE, I: REPRESENTING INANIMATE MATTER IN MEDIEVAL
MANUSCRIPTS
Universität Hamburg
Isabella Augart, Kunstgeschichtliches Seminar, Universität Hamburg
and Ilka Mestemacher, Kunstgeschichtliches Seminar, Universität
Hamburg
Isabella Augart
Representation with Inanimate Matter in Medieval Manuscripts
(Language: English)
Spike Bucklow, Fitzwilliam Museum, University of Cambridge
Moving Patterns: Textile Pages in Medieval Manuscripts
(Language: English)
Anna Bücheler, Kunsthistorisches Institut, Universität Zürich
The Life of Silva and the Work of the Poet in the Cosmographia
of Bernard Silvestris (Language: English)
Anya Burgon, Department of History of Art, University of Cambridge
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 731-a:
Paper 731-b:
Paper 731-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 732-a:
Paper 732-b:
Paper 732-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 733-a:
Paper 733-b:
Paper 733-c:
731
University House: Cloberry Room
DIGITAL APPROACHES TO TEXTS, MANUSCRIPTS, AND BOOKS: METHODS
AND TRANSPOSABILITY
Institute of Polish Language, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warszawa /
Institut de Recherche et d’Histoire des Textes (IRHT), Centre National
de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Paris
Renaud Alexandre, Institut de Recherche et d’Histoire des Textes
(IRHT), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Paris and
Anna Ledzińska, Institute of Polish Language, Polish Academy of
Sciences, Kraków
Anna Ledzińska
Modularité et fonctionnalité dans les bréviaires manuscrits
(Language: Français)
Laura Albiero, Institut de Recherche et d’Histoire des Textes (IRHT),
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Paris
Translating the Life of Cicero and Stylistics Disagreements:
Leonardo Bruni versus Iacopo Angeli (Language: English)
Susanna Allés Torrent, Department of Modern Languages & Literatures,
University of Miami
Le manuscrit Yale, Beinecke Library, MS 625 est-il grand?
(Language: Français)
Renaud Alexandre
732
Baines Wing: Room 2.14
MEDIEVAL USES OF THE BIBLE: EXEGESIS, POETRY, AND HISTORY
IMC Programming Committee,
Gerda Heydemann, Geschichte der Spätantike und des frühen
Mittelalters, Friedrich-Meinecke-Institut, Freie Universität Berlin
‘Lovely Like Helen’: Paschasius Radbertus and Classical
Inspirations for Carolingian Biblical Exegesis (Language: English)
Owen M. Phelan, Department of Church History, Mount St Mary’s
University, Maryland
A Would-Be Poet?: Some Remarks on the Anonymous Libri
Regum of Cod. Paris. Lat. 14758 (Language: English)
Gottfried Eugen Kreuz, Fachbereich Altertumswissenschaften,
Universität Salzburg
Biblical Quotation and Christian Teaching: A Moral Lesson from
Orderic Vitalis’s Historia Ecclesiastica (Language: English)
Carolyn Cargile, Centre for Medieval Studies, University of York
733
Baines Wing: Room 1.13
‘DANTE NOW’: TRENDS IN DANTE STUDIES 2016, I - WOMEN’S VOICES
Rory D. Sellgren, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
James Robinson, Department of English Studies, Durham University
Buried in Dialogue: Towards an Archaeology of Beatrix loquax
(Language: English)
David Bowe, Somerville College, University of Oxford
Beatrice as Theologian: The Construction of a Female Authority
in Dante’s Commedia (Language: English)
Abigail Rowson, School of Languages, Cultures & Societies - Italian,
University of Leeds
Dante and Prejudice: The Female Voice in ‘Inferno V’ (Language:
English)
Nicolò Crisafi, Faculty of Medieval & Modern Languages, University of
Oxford
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 734-a:
Paper 734-b:
Paper 734-c:
Session:
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Organiser:
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Paper 735-a:
Paper 735-b:
Paper 735-c:
734
Baines Wing: Room 1.16
FEEDING THE CITY
IMC Programming Committee,
Peter Francis Howard, Centre for Medieval & Renaissance Studies,
Monash University, Victoria
Meat for the City: Cultural, Economic, and Political Aspects of
Meat Supply and Consumption in Medieval Urban Societies
(Language: English)
Valentina Costantini, Departamento de Historia Universal, Universidad
de la República, Uruguay
Regulating Urban Spaces for Food Merchandise in 15th-Century
Dubrovnik (Language: English)
Ana Marinković, Faculty of Humanities & Social Sciences, University of
Zagreb and Ana Plosnić Škarić, Institute of Art History, University of
Zagreb
Wooden Turned Vessels from Wrocław, Poland (Language:
English)
Małgorzata Rakoczy, Instytut Archeologii, Uniwersytet Wrocławski
735
Baines Wing: Room 2.13
WORDS ACROSS A CORRUPTING SEA, I: NEW DIRECTIONS IN THE STUDY OF
TRANSLATION IN THE MEDIEVAL MEDITERRANEAN
Spain-North Africa Project (SNAP)
Anthony Minnema, Howard College, Samford University
Alexander Fidora, Departament de Ciències de l’Antiguitat i de l’Edat
Mitjana, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona
The Genesis of the Medical Works of Constantine the African
and Their Circulation in the Long 12th Century (Language: English)
Monica Green, Department of History, Arizona State University
Hebrew-into-Latin: The Latin Translation of Maimonides’s Guide
and its Cultural Context (Language: English)
Diana Di Segni, Thomas Institut, Universität zu Köln
Toward a New Edition of the Latin Translation of al-Ghazali’s
Maqasid al-Falasifa (Language: English)
Anthony Minnema
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 736-a:
Paper 736-b:
Paper 736-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 737-a:
Paper 737-b:
Paper 737-c:
736
Michael Sadler Building: Banham Theatre
HOW TO PERCEIVE OF PIRACY AND MARITIME VIOLENCE IN LATE MEDIEVAL
EUROPE, I
Thomas Heebøll-Holm, Institut for Historie, Syddansk Universitet,
Odense and Gregor Rohmann, Historisches Seminar, GoetheUniversität, Frankfurt am Main
Georg Christ, School of Arts, Languages & Cultures, University of
Manchester
A Farewell to Piracy: The ‘Hanse’, the ‘Vitalian Brethren’, and
Maritime Violence in the Baltic around 1400 (Language: English)
Gregor Rohmann
Merchant Pirates? Pirate Traders?: Violent Seizure as Part of
Merchants’s Conflict Regulation in the Baltic Sea and North Sea,
1370-1430 (Language: English)
Philipp Höhn, Sonderforschungsbereich 1095 ‘Schwächediskurse und
Ressourcenregime’, Goethe-Universität, Frankfurt am Main
The Ruler and the Pirate: Accepting and Denying Political
Responsibility for the Actions of the ruyteren ter zee in
Northern Europe in the 16th Century (Language: English)
Justyna Wubs-Mrozewicz, Amsterdam School of Historical Studies,
Universiteit van Amsterdam
737
Leeds University Union: Room 5 - Kirkstall Abbey
LEPROSY AND IDENTITY, I: SOCIAL AND RELIGIOUS IDENTITY
St Andrews Institute of Mediaeval Studies, University of St Andrews
Anna Peterson, St Andrews Institute of Mediaeval Studies, University of
St Andrews
Elma Brenner, Wellcome Library, London
Connotation and Denotation: The Construction of the Leper in
Narbonne and Siena before the Plague (Language: English)
Anna Peterson
Good People, Poor Sick: The Social Identities of Lepers in the
Late Medieval Rhineland (Language: English)
Lucy Christine Barnhouse, Department of History, Fordham University
Leprosy and Sanctity: Reimagining Medieval Understandings of
Leprosy, 1100-1400 (Language: English)
Courtney Krolikoski, Department of History & Classical Studies, McGill
University
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 738-a:
Paper 738-b:
Paper 738-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 739-a:
Paper 739-b:
Paper 739-c:
738
Parkinson Building: Room B.08
THE DOMINICAN ORDER, III: THE IDENTITY OF DOMINICAN NUNS
Institut zur Erforschung der Geschichte des Dominikanerordens im
deutschen Sprachraum (IGDom), Köln
Elias H. Füllenbach, Institut zur Erforschung der Geschichte des
Dominikanerordens im deutschen Sprachraum, Dominikanerprovinz
Teutonia e.V., Köln and Sabine von Heusinger, Historisches Institut,
Universität zu Köln
Sarah Glenn DeMaris, Department of Foreign Languages & Literatures,
Valparaiso University, Indiana
The General Chapter, the Master, and cura monialium (Language:
English)
Steven Watts, School of History, University of St Andrews
Dominican Identity for Women during the First Centuries of the
Order of Preachers, 13th-15th Centuries (Language: English)
Sylvie Duval, Histoire, Archéologie, Littératures des mondes chrétiens
et musulmans médiévaux, Université Lumière Lyon II
Dyslexia in the Convent?: Women’s Libraries and Evidence of
Nuns Learning - How to Copy and Illuminate Manuscripts in
Dominican Cloisters of the 14th Century (Language: English)
Anne Winston-Allen, Department of Foreign Languages & Literatures,
Southern Illinois University
739
Emmanuel Centre: Room 11
CISTERCIANS, II: CISTERCIAN SYSTEMS - COMMUNICATION, INTERACTION,
MOBILISATION
Cîteaux: Commentarii cistercienses
Terryl N. Kinder, Cîteaux: Commentarii cistercienses
David N. Bell, Department of Religious Studies, Memorial University of
Newfoundland
Cistercian Monks in Medieval England: The Nature and Extent of
Their Support of the Female Religious Life, including Visitation
of Nunneries (Language: English)
Elizabeth Freeman, School of Humanities, University of Tasmania
Network Analysis and Cistercian Communication in the Early
13th Century (Language: English)
Helen Birkett, Department of History, University of Exeter
The Travelling City of God: Henry of Albano and the Third
Crusade (Language: English)
Alexander Marx, Institut für Geschichte, Universität Wien
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 801-a:
Paper 801-b:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 802-a:
Paper 802-b:
Paper 802-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 803-a:
Paper 803-b:
Paper 803-c:
801
Emmanuel Centre: Room 2
OATHS AND SWEARING IN SITUATIONS OF CONFLICT
Silke Schwandt, Fakultät für Geschichtswissenschaft, Philosophie und
Theologie, Universität Bielefeld
Joshua Hey, St Andrews Institute of Mediaeval Studies, University of St
Andrews
Swearing Burghers: Unification in Medieval Towns by Oath
(Language: English)
Gerhild Landwehr, Fakultät für Geschichtswissenschaft, Philosophie und
Theologie, Universität Bielefeld
Believing in Law and Justice: Legal Oaths as a Guarantee for
Social Stability in Medieval England (Language: English)
Silke Schwandt
802
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.10
ANGLO-SAXON RIDDLES AND WISDOM, III: MEDIEVALIST AND
COMPARATIVE APPROACHES
The Riddle Ages: An Anglo-Saxon Riddle Blog
Megan Cavell, Department of English, Durham University and Jennifer
Neville, Department of English, Royal Holloway, University of London
Jennifer Neville
Nightmare of the Rood: Enigmatic Terror in the Medievalist
Fiction of M. R. James (Language: English)
Patrick J. Murphy, Department of English, Miami University
Wonderwater: The Idea of the Riddle, Modern and Medieval
(Language: English)
Clare A. Lees, Department of English Language & Literature, King’s
College London and Gillian R. Overing, Department of English, Wake
Forest University, North Carolina
The Neglected Joys of Arabic and Finnish Riddles: Reading
Anglo-Saxon Riddles Comparatively (Language: English)
Alaric Hall, School of English, University of Leeds
803
University House: St George Room
DIGITISING PATTERNS OF POWER, IV: RECONSTRUCTING HISTORICAL
LANDSCAPES - CONCEPTUALIZATION, MAPPING, AND GEOCOMMUNICATION
Institut für Geographie und Regionalforschung, Universität Wien
Karel Kriz, Institut für Geographie und Regionalforschung, Universität
Wien and Alexander Pucher, Institut für Geographie und
Regionalforschung, Universität Wien
Stefan Eichert, Institut für Urgeschichte und Historische Archäologie,
Universität Wien / Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
Relational Modeling of Historical Data: A Technical Perspective
(Language: English)
Christof Rauchenberger, Independent Scholar, Wien and Alexander
Watzinger, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische Akademie
der Wissenschaften, Wien
Beyond the Google Map Marker: Visualizing Space and Time in a
Historical Context (Language: English)
Alexander Pucher
Cartographic Representation of Spatial and Temporal
Uncertainty of Historical Data (Language: English)
Markus Breier, Institut für Geographie und Regionalforschung,
Universität Wien
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 804-a:
Paper 804-b:
Paper 804-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 805-a:
Paper 805-b:
Paper 805-c:
Respondent:
804
Michael Sadler Building: Rupert Beckett Theatre
SEALS OF MEN, WOMEN, FAMILIES, CLERGY: CONTRASTING EUROPEAN
REGIONS, 1300-1500
Sigillvm - The Research Network for Seals
John Cherry, British Museum, London
Matthew Sillence, Faculty of Arts & Humanities, University of East
Anglia
Charters in Westphalia: Sealing Practice and Implications for
Social History (Language: English)
Arnold Otto, Erzbischöfliches Generalvikariat Erzbistumsarchiv,
Paderborn
An Investigation of Some Architectural Elements of Two
Icelandic Bishop’s Seals (Language: English)
Guðrún Harðardóttir, Faculty of History & Philosophy, University of
Iceland
How Women Made Their Mark: Women’s Seal Impressions from
a Medieval Market Town (Language: English)
Laura Evans, Department of History & Welsh History, Aberystwyth
University
805
Parkinson Building: Room B.10
GLOBAL BYZANTIUM: TRANSITIONAL RELATIONS, 500-1453, IV
Centre for Byzantine, Ottoman & Modern Greek Studies, Department of
Classics, Ancient History & Archaeology, University of Birmingham
Lauren A. Wainwright, Centre for Byzantine, Ottoman & Modern Greek
Studies, Department of Classics, Ancient History & Archaeology,
University of Birmingham
Rebecca Darley, Department of History, Classics & Archaeology,
Birkbeck, University of London / Institute for Medieval Studies,
University of Leeds
Coins, Conversions, and the Crimea: The Byzantine Northern
Border Under Michael III (Language: English)
Maria Vrij, Centre for Byzantine, Ottoman & Modern Greek Studies /
Barber Institute of Fine Arts, University of Birmingham
Clerical Marriage and the 1054 Schism (Language: English)
Maroula Perisanidi, Classics, Ancient History & Archaeology, University
of Nottingham
A ‘Neglected’ Material: The Use of Stucco Decorations in
Byzantine Buildings and Their Evidence in Written Sources
(Language: English)
Flavia Vanni, Centre for Byzantine, Ottoman & Modern Greek Studies,
Department of Classics, Ancient History & Archaeology, University of
Birmingham
Jonathan Jarrett, School of History, University of Leeds
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
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:
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Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 808-a:
Paper 808-b:
806
Parkinson Building: Room B.09
ORGANISING DAILY LIFE: BENEDICTINE MONASTICISM BETWEEN IDEAL AND
PRACTICE, 11TH - 13TH CENTURIES
Sonderforschungsbereich 1070 ‘RessourcenKulturen’, Eberhard-KarlsUniversität, Tübingen
Marco Krätschmer, Seminar für Mittelalterliche Geschichte, EberhardKarls-Universität Tübingen and Petra Lang, Seminar für Mittelalterliche
Geschichte, Eberhard-Karls-Universität Tübingen
Steffen Patzold, Seminar für Mittelalterliche Geschichte, EberhardKarls-Universität Tübingen
Eating and Drinking in the Monastic Community of Hirsau:
Benedictine Monasticism between Asceticism and Physical
Needs (Language: English)
Petra Lang
Spirituality and Economy: A Permanent Challenge to Abbatial
Leadership (Language: English)
Marco Krätschmer
Benedictine Monasticism and the Papacy: A Bottom-Up
Perspective from the Low Countries (Language: English)
Johan Belaen, Vakgroep Geschiedenis, Universiteit Gent
807
Parkinson Building: Room B.22
REINTERPRETING MEROVINGIAN AND IRISH HAGIOGRAPHY
IMC Programming Committee,
Anne-Marie Helvétius, Département d’histoire, Université Paris VIII Vincennes-Saint-Denis
‘The heroic fasting’ of St Radegund: Reality and Fiction
(Language: English)
Natalia Bikeeva, Department of World History, Kazan (Volga Region)
Federal University
The Inedia of St Íte and Bottomless Beers for Bishops: Fasting
and Feasting in Female Irish Saints’ Lives (Language: English)
Maeve Callan, Department of Religion, Simpson College, Iowa
‘Listening to Merovingian Hagiography’: A Sacred Sonography
(Language: English)
Nira Pancer, Department of General History, University of Haifa
808
Baines Wing: Room 1.14
ECLIPSE OF KNOWLEDGE: DEALING WITH AUTHORITATIVE TEXTS IN THE
HIGH MIDDLE AGES
International Medieval Society (IMS), Paris / Historisches Seminar,
Universität Zürich
Gerald Schwedler, Historisches Seminar, Universität Zürich
Irene van Renswoude, Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts & Sciences,
Den Haag
Chosing and Forgetting One’s Past: High Medieval Readings of
Early Medieval Texts (Language: English)
Gerald Schwedler
Focusing as Practice in Letter Collections of the High Middle
Ages (Language: English)
Roland Zingg, WissenschaftsCampus Mainz: Byzanz zwischen Orient
und Okzident, Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 809-a:
Paper 809-b:
Paper 809-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 810-a:
Paper 810-b:
Paper 810-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 811-a:
Paper 811-b:
Paper 811-c:
809
Stage@leeds: Stage 2
CITIES OF READERS, IV: GUIDES TO THE GOOD LIFE
Project ‘Cities of Readers’, Rijksuniversiteit Groningen
Catrien Santing, Afdeling Middeleeuwse Geschiedenis, Rijksuniversiteit
Groningen
Iona McCleery, Institute for Medieval Studies / School of History,
University of Leeds
Albertanus: An Illustrious Lay Guide for the Good Life of his
Brethren Judges and Notaries - Italy, Mid-13th Century
(Language: English)
Marina Gazzini, Dipartimento di Lettere, Arti, Storia, e Società,
Università degli Studi di Parma
How to be Human in Renaissance Mirrors: Magnus Hundt’s
Anthropologium and Its Italian Forebears (Language: English)
Catrien Santing
Of Bees and Burghers: How to Lead a Virtuous Life according to
Thomas of Cantimpré (Language: English)
Suzan Folkerts, Afdeling Geschiedenis, Rijksuniversiteit Groningen
810
Leeds University Union: Room 2 - Elland Road
CRUSADING MASCULINITIES
Katherine J. Lewis, Division of History, University of Huddersfield
Kim M. Phillips, Department of History, University of Auckland
Crusade and Masculinities in the Historia Albigensis of Peter of
Les Vaux de Cernay (Language: English)
Natasha Ruth Hodgson, School of Arts & Humanities, Nottingham Trent
University
Contextualising Masculinities in Matthew Paris: 13th-Century
Crusading Motives and Scepticism (Language: English)
Matthew Mesley, Historisches Seminar, Universität Zürich
Caxton’s Crusades: Kingship, Masculinity, and Holy War in Late
Medieval England (Language: English)
Katherine J. Lewis
811
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.15
MASTERING KNOWLEDGE AND POWER, IV: EPISCOPAL CULTURE IN ACTION,
10TH-11TH CENTURIES
Giacomo Vignodelli, Dipartimento di Storia Culture Civiltà, Università di
Bologna and Giorgia Vocino, Faculty of History, University of Cambridge
Stuart Airlie, School of Humanities (History), University of Glasgow
Fulk the Venerable and the Widonids: Political Ties and
Intellectual Exchanges between Reims and Lombardy, Late 9thEarly 10th Centuries (Language: English)
Frédéric Duplessis, Institut de Recherche et d’Histoire des Textes
(IRHT), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Paris
Strangers in Rome: Foreign Popes and the Impact of their
Episcopal Culture on the Papacy in the Ottonian and Salian
periods (Language: English)
Jochen Johrendt, Fachbereich Geschichte, Bergische Universität
Wuppertal
Bishop Bruno of Toul to Pope Leo IX: Lessons Learned from 20
Years as a Bishop (Language: English)
Andrew Smith, School of Humanities (History), University of Glasgow
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 812-a:
Paper 812-b:
Paper 812-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 813-a:
Paper 813-b:
Paper 813-c:
812
Parkinson Building: Room 1.08
LANGUAGES AND LITERACY IN THE EARLY MEDIEVAL WEST, IV: LANGUAGE
AND POWER IN ANGLO-SAXON CHARTERS
Project ‘The Languages of Early Medieval Charters’, Universidad del País
Vasco
Edward Roberts, Department of History, University of Liverpool /
Departamento de Historia Medieval, Moderna y de América, Universidad
del País Vasco and Francesca Tinti, Departamento de Historia Medieval,
Moderna y de América, Universidad del País Vasco
Levi Roach, Department of History, University of Exeter
Constructing Authority in Anglo-Saxon ‘Private’ Charters
(Language: English)
Robert Gallagher, Departamento de Historia Medieval, Moderna y de
América, Universidad del País Vasco
The Linguistic Features and Formulae of Anglo-Saxon Writs
(Language: English)
Albert Fenton, Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse & Celtic, University
of Cambridge
Languages of Boundaries and Boundaries of Language in
Cornish Charters, 900-1100 (Language: English)
Charles Insley, Department of History, University of Manchester
813
Stage@leeds: Stage 1
PERSPECTIVES ON MEDIEVAL DIET, IV: ARCHAEOLOGICAL APPROACHES TO
MEDIEVAL FOODWAYS AND IDENTITY
Medieval Diet Group
Chris Woolgar, Department of History, University of Southampton
Gundula Müldner, Department of Archaeology, University of Reading
Social Status as Expressed through Food in Medieval England:
Castles, Manor Houses, and the Zooarchaeological Evidence
(Language: English)
Umberto Albarella, Department of Archaeology, University of Sheffield
The Foodways of Religious Women: An Integrated Isotope
Perspective (Language: English)
Charlotte Scull, Department of Archaeology, University of Reading
Tapping the Message of the Mobile patellae: Organic Residue
Analysis and Two Southern English Pottery Traditions (Language:
English)
Lucy Cramp, Department of Archaeology & Anthropology, University of
Bristol and Maureen Mellor, Department for Continuing Education,
University of Oxford
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 814-a:
Paper 814-b:
Paper 814-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 815-a:
Paper 815-b:
Paper 815-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 816-a:
Paper 816-b:
Paper 816-c:
814
Baines Wing: Room 1.15
FISH, FISHING, AND FASTING
IMC Programming Committee,
Magne Njåstad, Institutt for historiske studier, Norges teknisknaturvitenskapelige universitet, Trondheim
Fishing, Fishermen, and Fishmongers in Medieval Sardinia, 12th14th Centuries (Language: English)
Bianca Fadda, Dipartimento di Storia, Beni culturali e Territorio,
Università degli Studi di Cagliari,Mariangela Rapetti, Dipartimento di
Storia, Beni culturali e Territorio, Università degli Studi di Cagliari and
Cecilia Tasca, Dipartimento di Storia, Beni culturali e Territorio,
Università degli Studi di Cagliari
Trading in the Baltic Sea: A New Look at the Vital Role of the
Herring Market of Dragør (Language: English)
Christian Etheridge, Centre for Medieval Literature, Syddansk
Universitet, Odense
Fish Fights: Lent’s Sour Victory (Language: English)
Ana Pairet, Department of French, Rutgers University, New Jersey
815
Leeds University Union: Room 6 - Roundhay
THE ORGANISATION, LOGISTICS, AND PRACTICE OF WAR, 1050-1500, IV:
THE CONDUCT OF WAR
Alan V. Murray, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds and
Joanna Phillips, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Trevor Russell Smith, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Twelve Hungry Normans: Fear, Famine, and Poetic Licence in
the Norman Conquest of Southern Italy (Language: English)
Francesca Petrizzo, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Military Manuals and Their Impact on Byzantines and Crusaders
around the Time of the First Crusade (Language: English)
Georgios Chatzelis, Department of History, Royal Holloway, University
of London
Facing Desertion in the Burgundian Armies, 1465-1477: A Legal
and Logistical Question (Language: English)
Quentin Verreycken, Université Catholique de Louvain, Louvain-laNeuve / Université Saint-Louis, Bruxelles
816
Leeds University Union: Room 4 - Hyde Park
TRANSCENDENTAL FEASTS
Sheri Smith, School of English, Communication & Philosophy, Cardiff
University and Gudrun Tockner, Institut für Anglistik, Karl-FranzensUniversität Graz
Victoria Shirley, School of English, Communication & Philosophy, Cardiff
University
A Moment Suspended in Time: Spiritual Feasting and the Grail
Tables in the Queste del Saint Graal (Language: English)
Martha Baldon, School of English, Communication & Philosophy, Cardiff
University
From Pandarus’s Board to Boethian Bliss in Chaucer’s Troilus
and Criseyde (Language: English)
Sheri Smith
Feasting with the Devil: Food, Drink, and Magical Practice on the
Early Modern English Stage (Language: English)
Gudrun Tockner
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 817-a:
Paper 817-b:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 818-a:
Paper 818-b:
Paper 818-c:
Session:
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Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 819-a:
Paper 819-b:
Paper 819-c:
817
Emmanuel Centre: Room 11
CISTERCIANS, III: HUNGRY CISTERCIANS - COOKING AND EATING IN A
CISTERCIAN ABBEY
Cîteaux: Commentarii cistercienses
Terryl N. Kinder, Cîteaux: Commentarii cistercienses
Terryl N. Kinder
Emotional Eating: Diet and the Cultivation of Affection in 12thand 13th-Century Cistercian Communities (Language: English)
Julia Elizabeth Bourke, School of History, Queen Mary, University of
London
Just Desserts: Kitchen Service in the Rule of St Benedict and
Abbot John of Ford (Language: English)
Sheryl Frances Chen, Tautra Mariakloster, Norway
818
Parkinson Building: Nathan Bodington Chamber
FOOD FOR THE STOMACH, AND THE SOUL
British Archaeological Association
Harriet Mahood, Graduate Centre for Medieval Studies, University of
Reading
Harriet Mahood
Gluttony: Beyond Feasting (Language: English)
Ann Montgomery Jones, Sarum Seminar, California
The Bodily Rhetoric and Processes in the Punishments of
Gluttons (Language: English)
Agata Anna Gomółka, School of Art History & World Art Studies,
University of East Anglia
The Crypt at Notre-Dame de Chartres: Food for the Salvation of
Souls (Language: English)
Julia Watson, British Archaeological Association / Graduate Centre for
Medieval Studies, University of Reading
819
University House: Beechgrove Room
EATING AND BEING EATEN BY GOD, III: MAJOR THEOLOGIANS,
PHILOSOPHERS, AND THEOLOGICAL IDEAS
Mystical Theology Network (MTN) / Instituut voor de Studie van
Spiritualiteit, KU Leuven
Louise Nelstrop, St Benet’s Hall, University of Oxford / Sarum College,
Salisbury
John Arblaster, Faculteit Theologie en Religiewetenschappen, KU
Leuven
It’s Complicated: Margery Kempe’s Relationship with the
Eucharist (Language: English)
Einat Klafter, Foundation for Interreligious & Intercultural Research &
Dialogue, Université de Genève
Hadewijch and the Most Dangerous Sense: Taste, Eroticism, and
Violence in Poem in Couplets 16 (Language: English)
Lydia Shahan, Faculteit Theologie en Religiewetenschappen, KU Leuven
Being God: Medieval Mystics in Schelling’s Idealism (Language:
English)
Andrés Quero-Sánchez, Max-Weber-Kolleg für kultur- und
sozialwissenschaftliche Studien, Universität Erfurt
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 820-a:
Paper 820-b:
Paper 820-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 821-a:
Paper 821-b:
Paper 821-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 822-a:
Paper 822-b:
Paper 822-c:
820
Baines Wing: Room 1.16
FOOD SUPPLY AND DIET IN EARLY MEDIEVAL EUROPE
IMC Programming Committee,
Ralph Mathisen, Department of History, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign
More Than a Church: The Archaeology of Early Church
Agricultural Production (Language: English)
Catherine Keane, Institut für Byzantinistik, Byzantinische
Kunstgeschichte und Neogräzistik, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität,
München
Food and Power in the Post-Roman North: The Role of Food
Supply in the Shaping of Power in Post-Roman Britannia
(Language: English)
Paul Gorton, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Dealing with a Hostile Environment: Food Supply and Food
Shortage in the Miracles of the Vita Columbani (Language:
English)
Christian Rohr, Abteilung für Wirtschafts-, Sozial- und
Umweltgeschichte, Universität Bern
821
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.17
FOOD SUPPLY, TRADE, AND TRANSPORTATION
IMC Programming Committee,
Balázs Nagy, Department of Medieval Studies, Central European
University, Budapest
Transporting Food in the Middle Ages and Its Infrastructure
(Language: English)
Magdolna Szilágyi, Institute of History, Hungarian Academy of
Sciences, Budapest
Salt and Cheese: The Morlachs’s Involvement in the Local
Markets of Dalmatia during the First Century of the Venetian
Administration (15th Century) (Language: English)
Dana-Silvia Caciur, Faculty of History, University of Bucharest
A River and Marshes as Sources of Subsistence for the Medieval
Town of Ljubljana (Language: English)
Tomaž Nabergoj, Narodni Muzej Slovenije, Ljubljana
822
University House: Little Woodhouse Room
FEASTS, POWER, AND HOSPITALITY: DISPLAYS AND BETRAYALS, I FEASTING IN MEDIEVAL NARRATIVE
Shenandoah University
Julie A. Hofmann, Department of History, Shenandoah University,
Virginia
Wendy J. Turner, Department of History, Anthropology & Philosophy,
Augusta University, Georgia
Feasts as Centers of Power and Betrayal in Frankish Sources
(Language: English)
Julie A. Hofmann
Betrayal at Ingeld’s Feast in the Scandinavian and English
Traditions (Language: English)
Melissa Venables, School of English, University of Nottingham
Hospitality and Betrayal in Old French Literature (Language:
English)
April Harper, Department of History, State University of New York,
Oneonta
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 823-a:
Paper 823-b:
Paper 823-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 824-a:
Paper 824-b:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 825-a:
Paper 825-b:
823
Emmanuel Centre: Room 10
HUNGRVAKA: STIRRING UP AN APPETITE FOR OLD NORSE LITERATURE, IV
Rebecca Merkelbach, Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse & Celtic,
University of Cambridge
Philip Lavender, Nordisk Forskningsinstitut, Københavns Universitet
Bitten Shields and Broken Families: Nature and Nurture in the
Genesis of Human Monsters in the Íslendingasögur (Language:
English)
Rebecca Merkelbach
Scraps at the Table: Searching for a Saga of Þorsteinn Kuggason
(Language: English)
Joanne Shortt-Butler, Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse & Celtic,
University of Cambridge
Feasting in Eyrbyggja Saga (Language: English)
Martina Ceolin, Faculty of Icelandic & Comparative Cultural Studies,
University of Iceland, Reykjavík
824
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.16
RECREATING MEDIEVAL FOOD
IMC Programming Committee,
Christopher Dyer, Centre for English Local History, University of
Leicester
Wastel, Cocket, and Treyt: Some Experimental Investigations
into the Manufacturing Methodology of Certain Medieval Breads
(Language: English)
Richard Fitch, Historic Royal Palaces
Cheesemaking in the Early Medieval British Isles (Language:
English)
Leslie Lockett, Department of English, Ohio State University
825
Emmanuel Centre: Room 7
HIGH TIMES: INTOXICATION IN THE MEDITERRANEAN WORLD
IMC Programming Committee,
Harry Munt, Department of History, University of York
Monasteries, Wine Production, and Consumption in Umayyad
Egypt (Language: English)
Myriam Wissa, University of London
Food Consumption and Hashish Intoxication in Medieval Europe
and Islam: A Comparative Literary Approach (Language: English)
Danilo Marino, Institut National des Langues et Civilisations Orientales
(INALCO), Paris
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 826-a:
Paper 826-b:
Paper 826-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 827-a:
Paper 827-b:
Paper 827-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 828-a:
Paper 828-b:
Respondent:
826
University House: Great Woodhouse Room
ARE THE MIDDLE AGES RELEVANT?: PERSPECTIVES, II
Mediävistenverband
Klaus P. Oschema, Historisches Seminar, Ruprecht-Karls-Universität
Heidelberg
Klaus P. Oschema
Medieval Sources and Modern Crises (Language: English)
Conor Kostick, Department of History, University of Nottingham
Le Moyen Âge vu d’ici ou de l’utilité d’être médiéviste au 21e
siècle (Language: Français)
Pierre Monnet, École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales,
Paris/Deutsch-französische Wissenschaftskooperation, Geistes- und
Sozialwissenschaften, Goethe-Universität, Frankfurt am Main
Why Does Medieval Sexuality Studies Matter Today? (Language:
English)
Sahar Amer, Department of Arabic Language & Cultures, University of
Sydney
827
Stage@leeds: Stage 3
SCANDINAVIAN HISTORY IN THE VIKING AND MIDDLE AGES, II
Paul Gazzoli, Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse & Celtic, University of
Cambridge
Thomas Foerster, Det norske institutt i Roma, Universitetet i Oslo
Liturgical Commemoration and the Divine Order: Hierarchies in
Text and Space in Medieval Denmark (Language: English)
Mads Vedel Heilskov, Centre for Scandinavian Studies, University of
Aberdeen
Great Danes: The Ethics of Lordship in Saxo Grammaticus’s
Gesta Danorum (Language: English)
Erik Niblaeus, Department of History, Durham University
Rimbert and the Text of the Vita Anskarii (Language: English)
Paul Gazzoli
828
Baines Wing: Room G.36
THE TROUBLESOME TWENTIES: ENGLAND IN CRISIS, 1320-1330
The National Archives, Kew / University of Cambridge
Paul R. Dryburgh, The National Archives, Kew
W. Mark Ormrod, Centre for Medieval Studies, University of York
England in Crisis?: The 1320s - An Overview (Language: English)
Paul R. Dryburgh
The Chamber Accounts of Edward II (Language: English)
Kathryn Warner, Independent Scholar, Düsseldorf
W. Mark Ormrod
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 829-a:
Paper 829-b:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 830-a:
Paper 830-b:
Paper 830-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 831-a:
Paper 831-b:
Paper 831-c:
829
Parkinson Building: Room B.11
CONDUCT, CON JOBS, AND THE STRUCTURES OF EVERYDAY LIFE IN MIDDLE
ENGLISH
IMC Programming Committee,
Andrew Galloway, Department of English, Cornell University
The Importance of Peter Idley’s Social Career to His Text,
Instructions to his Son (Language: English)
Yoshinobu Kudo, Department of English Language & Literature,
Kanazawa Gakuin University
Chaucer and the Art of the Grift (Language: English)
Kathryn Laity, Department of English, College of Saint Rose, New York
830
Emmanuel Centre: Wilson Room
GRADATIONS OF LIFE, II: REPRESENTING INANIMATE MATTER IN MEDIEVAL
MANUSCRIPTS
Universität Hamburg
Isabella Augart, Kunstgeschichtliches Seminar, Universität Hamburg
and Ilka Mestemacher, Kunstgeschichtliches Seminar, Universität
Hamburg
Sara Ritchey, Department of History & Geography, University of
Louisiana Lafayette
Being Licked into Shape: The Bestiary and the Medieval Margins
of Creation (Language: English)
Diane Heath, Centre for Medieval & Early Modern Studies, University of
Kent
Living Stones: Vegetated Architecture in Medieval Canon Tables
(Language: English)
Ilka Mestemacher
Recreating Transgressive Matter: Pearls in Girolamo da
Cremona’s Illuminations (Language: English)
Isabella Augart
831
University House: Cloberry Room
DIGITAL APPROACHES TO MEDIEVAL LATIN VOCABULARY
Institute of Polish Language, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warszawa /
Institut de Recherche et d’Histoire des Textes (IRHT), Centre National
de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Paris
Krzysztof Nowak, Institute of Polish Language, Polish Academy of
Sciences, Kraków
Michał Rzepiela, Institute of Polish Language, Polish Academy of
Sciences, Kraków
Medieval Latin Vocabulary Study in the Digital Age: Tools,
Resources, Perspectives (Language: Français)
Bruno Bon, Institut de Recherche et d’Histoire des Textes (IRHT),
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Paris
Glossarium Mediae Latinitatis Cataloniae and Corpus
Documentale Latinum Cataloniae: Lexicographic Practice and
the Concept of Hunger (Language: Español)
Ana Gómez Rabal, Departamento de Ciencias Históricas-Estudios
Medievales / Institució Milà i Fontanals, Consejo Superior de
Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC), Barcelona
Cena et cetera: Automatic Extraction of Food-Related
Terminology from the Patrologia Latina (Language: English)
Krzysztof Nowak
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 832-a:
Paper 832-b:
Paper 832-c:
Paper 832-d:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 833-a:
Paper 833-b:
Paper 833-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 834-a:
Paper 834-b:
Paper 834-c:
Paper 834-d:
832
Baines Wing: Room 2.14
EXPOSITIONS ON BIBLE USE FROM BONAVENTURE TO CAXTON
Society for the Study of the Bible in the Middle Ages
Gail Blick, Independent Scholar, Monmouth
Mary Raschko, Department of English, Whitman College, Washington
Bonaventure on the Presentation of Christ in the Temple (Luke
2:22-39) (Language: English)
William P. Hyland, School of Divinity, University of St Andrews
Catherine of Siena and St Paul’s Epistles (Language: English)
Karen Scott, Departments of History & Catholic Studies, DePaul
University, Chicago
Female Learning and Biblical Allusion (Language: English)
Gail Blick
Bible Use in the Vernacular in the 15th Century (Language:
English)
Mayumi Taguchi, Faculty of Human Environment, Department of
Culture & Communication, Osaka Sangyo University
833
Baines Wing: Room 1.13
‘DANTE NOW’: TRENDS IN DANTE STUDIES 2016, II - READER
ENGAGEMENT
Rory D. Sellgren, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
David Bowe, Somerville College, University of Oxford
New Life between Dante and Barthes (Language: English)
Jennifer Rushworth, St John’s College, University of Oxford
Singleton’s ‘Slip’: A New Perspective on Reader Engagement
with the Commedia from Video Game Critical Theory (Language:
English)
Katherine Powlesland, Department of Italian, University of Cambridge
Regula dilectionis: Love in Augustine and Dante (Language:
English)
Rory D. Sellgren
834
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.19
PREMODERN RULERS AND POSTMODERN VIEWERS: GENDER AND SEX IN THE
REPRESENTATION OF THE MEDIEVAL AND EARLY MODERN WORLD IN FILM
AND TELEVISION
Royal Studies Journal
Elena Woodacre, Department of History, University of Winchester
Karl Christian Alvestad, Department of History, University of
Winchester
Televising Boabdil, Last Muslim King of Granada (Language:
English)
Elizabeth Drayson, Department of Spanish & Portuguese, University of
Cambridge
A Man? A Woman? A Lesbian? A Whore?: Queen Elizabeth I and
the Cinematic Subversion of Gender (Language: English)
Aidan Norrie, Department of English & Linguistics, University of Otago
Queering Isabella: ‘The She-Wolf of France’ in Film and
Television (Language: English)
Michael Evans, Faculty of Social Science, Delta College, Michigan
‘She is my Eleanor’: The Character of Isabella of Angoulême in
Novels and Film - A Medieval Queen in Modern Media (Language:
English)
Carey Fleiner, Department of History, University of Winchester
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 836-a:
Paper 836-b:
Paper 836-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 837-a:
Paper 837-b:
Paper 837-c:
836
Michael Sadler Building: Banham Theatre
HOW TO PERCEIVE OF PIRACY AND MARITIME VIOLENCE IN LATE MEDIEVAL
EUROPE, II
Thomas Heebøll-Holm, Institut for Historie, Syddansk Universitet,
Odense and Gregor Rohmann, Historisches Seminar, GoetheUniversität, Frankfurt am Main
Flávio Miranda, Instituto de Estudos Medievais, Universidade Nova de
Lisboa / Centro de Investigação Transdisciplinar: Cultura, Espaço e
Memória, Universidade do Porto
‘By their fruits shall ye know them’: Telling Pirates apart from
Corsairs in the Medieval Mediterranean (Language: English)
Emily Tai, Department of History, Queensborough Community College,
City University of New York
Popes and Pirates: Paul Beneke and the Portinari-Triptych
(Language: English)
Tobias Daniels, Bibliotheca Hertziana, Max-Planck-Institut für
Kunstgeschichte, Roma
Between Piratae and Milites Maritimis: A Tentative Typology of
Medieval Maritime Predators (Language: English)
Thomas Heebøll-Holm
837
Leeds University Union: Room 5 - Kirkstall Abbey
LEPROSY AND IDENTITY, II: LIFESTYLE AND ENVIRONMENT
International Network for the History of Hospitals
Elma Brenner, Wellcome Library, London
Anna Peterson, St Andrews Institute of Mediaeval Studies, University of
St Andrews
Being a Leper in Medieval Portugal: The Lepers and the Leper
House of Coimbra, 12th-15th Centuries (Language: English)
Ana Rita Rocha, Centro de História da Sociedade e da Cultura,
Universidade de Coimbra
Leprosy, Disability, and Identity in Anglo-Saxon Great
Chesterford (Language: English)
Sonia Zakrzewski, Department of Archaeology, University of
Southampton
Diet as a Marker of Identity in the Leper Houses of Medieval
Northern France (Language: English)
Elma Brenner
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 838-a:
Paper 838-b:
Paper 838-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 839-a:
Paper 839-b:
Paper 839-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
838
Parkinson Building: Room B.08
THE DOMINICAN ORDER, IV: RENEWAL AND REFORM IN THE 15TH CENTURY
Institut zur Erforschung der Geschichte des Dominikanerordens im
deutschen Sprachraum (IGDom), Köln
Elias H. Füllenbach, Institut zur Erforschung der Geschichte des
Dominikanerordens im deutschen Sprachraum, Dominikanerprovinz
Teutonia e.V., Köln and Sabine von Heusinger, Historisches Institut,
Universität zu Köln
Sabine von Heusinger
Making Up Their Own Choices?: Religious Knowledge of
Observant Dominican Sisters (Language: English)
Stefanie Neidhardt, Institut für Geschichtliche Landeskunde und
Tübingen, Eberhard-Karls-Universität Tübingen
Dominican Friaries between Observant Movement and
Architectural Renewal in 15th-Century Transylvania (Language:
English)
Mihaela Sanda Salontai, Departamentul de Istoria Artei, Institutul de
Arheologie şi Istoria Artei, Cluj-Napoca
Providing a Mutual Impulse to Write: Elisabeth Kempf and
Johannes Meyer (Language: English)
Sarah Glenn DeMaris, Department of Foreign Languages & Literatures,
Valparaiso University, Indiana
839
Baines Wing: Room G.37
TH
RELIGIOUS AND LAITY IN 12 -CENTURY ENGLAND
Rebecca Springer, Merton College, University of Oxford
Janet Burton, School of Archaeology, History & Anthropology,
University of Wales Trinity Saint David
Shaping Knowledge in 12th-Century Cartularies: The Case of the
Codex Wintoniensis (Language: English)
Jennie England, Department of History, University of York
The ‘parvulis’ and Religious Responsibility to the Laity in
Baldwin of Forde’s Liber de sectis hereticorum (Language:
English)
Suzanne Coley, Department of History, University of Southampton
Augustinian Canons and Pastoral Care in Late 12th-Century
English Localities (Language: English)
Rebecca Springer
841
Baines Wing: Room 2.13
TRANSLATION IN THE TRENCHES: MEDIEVAL LATIN - A ROUND TABLE
DISCUSSION
Dumbarton Oaks Medieval Library
Danuta Shanzer, Institut für Klassische Philologie, Mittel- und
Neulatein, Universität Wien
Danuta Shanzer
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 19.00-20.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Purpose:
901
Michael Sadler Building: Rupert Beckett Theatre
ANNUAL MEDIEVAL ACADEMY OF AMERICA LECTURE: MANUSCRIPT EDGES,
MARGINAL TIME: WHY MEDIEVAL MATTERS (LANGUAGE: ENGLISH)
Medieval Academy of America
In an Early English manuscript, a later marginal addition in French that
is unedited and untranslated turns out to be potentially the earliest
avian verse fable in a vernacular of medieval England. The poem is
quite likely to be written by a woman at an institution that took
ownership of the manuscript perhaps fifty or more years after its
production.
This one example of text, like all instances of interventions by
contemporary and later manuscript perusers, reminds us of the
centrality of the marginal, the fundamental significance of that which
exists on the periphery. Here, a poem - elsewhere a note, a name, a
sequence of ink dots - signifies not the insignificant; rather, the space
around the manuscript’s initial contents becomes a site of discovery.
The biggest discovery, though, as this talk will show, is what medieval
books can teach modern scholarship about the nature of its own
categories, hierarchies, chronologies, biases, and myopia. This lecture
will demonstrate that a persistent fixation on the centre, the original,
the canonical, the literary period, and the new, frequently misses the
mark, revealing only a partial story, despite the fuller evidence
available to us from our extant textual objects.
About the Medieval Academy of America:
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
http://www.medievalacademy.org. All those attending are warmly
invited to join members of the Medieval Academy after the lecture for a
glass of wine.
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.
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 19.00-20.00
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Purpose:
902
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.15
1066 /1966 / 2016: REFLECTIONS ON APPROACHES TO THE NORMAN
WORLDS - A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
David Bates, School of History, University of East Anglia
David Bates
This round table discussion will reflect on how the role of the Normans
in English, British, and European history should be approached and
analysed in 2016, with the participants deliberately chosen to bring
multiple perspectives to bear on the subject. The starting-point will be
a tribute to the University of Leeds and the contribution of David
Douglas (1898-1982), Professor of Medieval History at the University of
Leeds (1939-1945), and the mastermind behind the University’s
Brotherton Library’s acquisition of its magnificent collection of French
cartularies. The time in Leeds was the great formative period for
Douglas’s work on Normandy and the Normans. His William the
Conqueror, which is still in print in the Yale University Press English
Monarchs series, was published a little in advance of the novocentenary
of the Battle of Hastings in 1966. Leeds was of course also John Le
Patourel’s university. With their commitment to analysing the history of
the Normans in a wide-ranging pan-European context being something
that we should celebrate, and remaining of absolutely central
importance to the subject, the members of the round table will reflect
from their own perspectives on what has changed since 1966 and,
since many stereotypes do still abound in popular perceptions, on what
has not changed. This, along with the round table discussion organised
by Catherine Clarke, will set out to define agendas for the future.
Hence, we will go from 1066 to 1966 to 2016, and beyond.
Participants will include Sarah Foot (University of Oxford), Mark Hagger
(Bangor University), Susan Johns (Bangor University), Andrew T.
Jotischky (Lancaster University), Graham Loud (University of Leeds),
and Keith J. Stringer (Lancaster University).
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
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910
Leeds University Union: Room 2 - Elland Road
CRUSADING MASCULINITIES: A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
Centre for the Study of Religion & Conflict, Nottingham Trent University
Katherine J. Lewis, Division of History, University of Huddersfield
Matthew Mesley, Historisches Seminar, Universität Zürich
This round table is a follow up to the international workshop on
crusading masculinities, held at the University of Zürich, Easter 2016.
In the last decade significant research on the role and representation of
women in the crusades has been produced, yet the rich varieties of
ideas about medieval manhood prevalent throughout crusade sources
remain largely untapped. Therefore the workshop and this round table
both aim to provide a space for the exchange of ideas between scholars
from the fields of gender history and crusader studies. We hope to
stimulate a lively and productive dialogue which can both draw initial
conclusions on the value of investigating crusade masculinities and
establish parameters for future discussions about the implications and
benefits of a gendered approach to the crusades.
Participants include Natasha Ruth Hodgson (Nottingham Trent
University), Katherine J. Lewis (University of Huddersfield), Alan V.
Murray (University of Leeds), and Joanna Phillips (University of Leeds).
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 19.00-20.00
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911
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.19
THE CAROLINGIANS AND THE WRITTEN WORD REVISITED: A ROUND TABLE
DISCUSSION
Medieval & Ancient Research Centre (MARCUS), University of Sheffield
Elina Screen, Trinity College, University of Oxford
Marios Costambeys, Department of History, University of Liverpool
Rosamond McKitterick’s The Carolingians and the Written Word
(Cambridge, 1989) has reshaped understanding of literacy and the use
of writing in the early Middle Ages, contributing to new directions in
research in the field. The round table discussionwill explore the impact
of this seminal work and also consider future directions for research
into the written word, including the role of archives and the use of
charters among other perspectives. This round table discussion has
been organised to mark Rosamond McKitterick’s retirement and
celebrate her contribution to the field.
Participants include Catherine Cubitt (University of York), Gerda
Heydemann (Freie Universität Berlin), Matthew J. Innes (Birkbeck,
University of London), Jonathan Jarrett (University of Leeds), Mayke de
Jong (Universiteit Utrecht), and Rosamond McKitterick (University of
Cambridge).
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919
University House: Beechgrove Room
EATING AND BEING EATEN BY GOD, IV: SPIRITUAL AND MYSTICAL
APPROPRIATIONS OF FEAST, FAST, AND FAMINE - A ROUND TABLE
DISCUSSION
Mystical Theology Network (MTN) / Instituut voor de Studie van
Spiritualiteit, KU Leuven / Gender & Medieval Studies Group (GMS) /
Society for Medieval Feminist Scholarship (SMFS)
Louise Nelstrop, St Benet’s Hall, University of Oxford / Sarum College,
Salisbury
John Arblaster, Faculteit Theologie en Religiewetenschappen, KU
Leuven
This round table explores the theme of eating and being eaten by God;
a topic that is central to many mystical texts, especially those produced
by women. Specific presentations on female heresy and female
mystical spirituality will be responded to and followed by a general
discussion on deification, women’s and men’s bodies, and theoretical
approaches to mystical eating.
Participants include Rob Faesen (KU Leuven), Kathryn Loveridge
(Swansea University), Laura Moncion (Memorial University of
Newfoundland), and Louise Nelstrop (University of Oxford / Sarum
College, Salisbury).
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 19.00-20.00
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922
University House: Little Woodhouse Room
FEASTS, POWER, AND HOSPITALITY: DISPLAYS AND BETRAYALS, II REPRESENTATIONS OF MEDIEVAL FEASTS ON THE BIG (AND SMALL) SCREEN:
A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
Shenandoah University
Julie A. Hofmann, Department of History, Shenandoah University,
Virginia
Julie A. Hofmann
The feast scene is a mainstay of films set in the Middle Ages, whether
real or fantastic. Despite many anachronisms, these scenes often draw
on examples from medieval sources. From the classic 1938 version of
The Adventures of Robin Hood to the most recent adaptation of The
Hobbit and HBO’s A Game of Thrones, such scenes also convey the
importance of feasting for displays of power and status, as well as
opportunities for creating personal bonds through giving and accepting
hospitality. The betrayal of that hospitality, either by host or by guest,
often provides a crucial conflict. The panelists will discuss a broad
range of feast scenes, and their effectivity (or lack thereof) in
conveying the multiple meanings of a feast.
Participants include Joanna Huntington (University of Lincoln), Felice
Lifshitz (University of Alberta), and Melissa Ridley Elmes (University of
North Carolina Greensboro).
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925
Leeds University Union: Room 6 - Roundhay
MIGRATION, BORDERS, AND REFUGEES IN MEDIEVAL CENTRAL EUROPE: A
ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
Medieval Central European Research Network (MECERN), Central
European University, Budapest
Balázs Nagy, Department of Medieval Studies, Central European
University, Budapest
Gerhard Jaritz, Department of Medieval Studies, Central European
University, Budapest
Migration, borders, and refugees play a particular role in today’s
Central European political, cultural, and social life and have developed
to situations of crisis. The round table discussion is meant to analyse
comparable realities in medieval Central Europe and to answer the
question to which extent similar crises situations can be traced in the
area during Middle Ages.
Participants include Emir Filipović (University of Eastern Sarajevo),
Emilia Jamroziak (Technische Universität Dresden / University of
Leeds), Felicitas Schmieder (FernUniversität Hagen), Dorottya Uhrin (
Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest), and Nada Zečević (University of
Eastern Sarajevo).
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 19.00-20.00
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926
University House: Great Woodhouse Room
ARE THE MIDDLE AGES RELEVANT?: A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
Mediävistenverband
Klaus P. Oschema, Historisches Seminar, Ruprecht-Karls-Universität
Heidelberg
Chris Jones, Department of History, University of Canterbury,
Christchurch
This round table discussion (and relating two sessions) is intended to
offer a wide-ranging exploration of the relevance of the study of
medieval history for modern society. They aim to consider this
relevance from a variety of perspectives, moving beyond traditional
tendencies to root the importance of medieval history in the
explanations it provides for the origins of political institutions, to
consider questions of broader social, cultural, economic, and artistic
significance. In exploring perspectives from France, Germany, UK, and
Australasia, participants will seek to move beyond traditional
Eurocentric boundaries and debate the case for the discipline’s global
importance.
Participants include Sahar Amer (University of Sydney), Wolfram Drews
(Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität Münster), Paul Dryburgh (The
National Archives, Kew), Pierre Monnet (École des Hautes Études en
Sciences Sociales (EHESS), Paris) and Madison Williams ( University of
Canterbury, Christchurch).
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933
Leeds University Union: Room 4 - Hyde Park
‘DANTE NOW’: TRENDS IN DANTE STUDIES 2016 - A ROUND TABLE
DISCUSSION
Leeds Centre for Dante Studies
Rory D. Sellgren, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
James Robinson, Department of English Studies, Durham University
In 1978, George Steiner wrote ‘Dante Now: The Gossip of Eternity’ in
which he predicted a decline in Dante Studies following the publication
of Charles S. Singleton’s translation of the Divine Comedy and its
accompanying three-volume commentary. In 1995, Theodore Cachey
published a collection of essays entitled Dante Now: Current Trends in
Dante Studies that demonstrated how Dante is still ‘central to ongoing
debates in the humanities about the relationship between literature and
philosophy, between literature and history, about allegory and/or
representation, about the formation and function of the Western
literary canon, about issues of gender, intertextuality, and translation’
(‘Introduction’, p. x). In 2016, this group of scholars will discuss
Dante’s continued presence at the centre of the humanities, particularly
in the relationship between literature and women’s voices and literature
and reader engagement.
Participants include David Bowe (University of Oxford), Nicolò Crisafi
(University of Oxford), Katherine Powlesland (University of Cambridge),
Jennifer Rushworth (University of Oxford), and Rory D. Sellgren
(University of Leeds).
TUESDAY 05 JULY 2016: 19.00-20.00
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937
Leeds University Union: Room 5 - Kirkstall Abbey
LEPROSY AND IDENTITY, III: A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
Wellcome Library, London
Anna Peterson, St Andrews Institute of Mediaeval Studies, University of
St Andrews
Elma Brenner, Wellcome Library, London
This discussion pulls together the different thematic strands of the two
sessions on ‘Leprosy and Identity’ and reflects upon how the issues
addressed in these sessions are pertinent to scholars of not only
medieval leprosy, but also other aspects of sickness, health, and
wellbeing in the Middle Ages. Particular attention is paid to social and
religious identity, environment, and lifestyle, including diet. Speakers
from the two sessions, alongside other specialists in the history of
medicine and hospitals, exchange ideas and consider how the
investigation of collective and individual identities may offer exciting
new avenues for future research in the field.
Participants include Lucy Christine Barnhouse (Fordham University),
Leonie V. Hicks (Canterbury Christ Church University), Courtney
Krolikoski (McGill University), Anna Peterson (University of St
Andrews), Katie Phillips (University of Reading), and Patricia E. Skinner
(University of Winchester).
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 09.00-10.30
Session:
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Paper 1001-a:
Paper 1001-b:
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Paper 1002-a:
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Paper 1003-a:
Paper 1003-b:
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1001
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.15
NEW VOICES IN ANGLO-SAXON STUDIES, I
International Society of Anglo-Saxonists (ISAS)
Peter Darby, Department of History, University of Nottingham
Sarah Foot, Faculty of Theology & Religion, University of Oxford
‘Father of the English, teacher and apostle’: Gregory the Great,
Apostleship, and English Ethnogenesis (Language: English)
Miriam Adan Jones, Faculteit der Godgeleerdheid, Vrije Universiteit,
Amsterdam
Kinship and Social Status in the Early vitae of St Cuthbert, St
Wilfrid, and St Guthlac (Language: English)
Sarah Leeser, Faculty of Theology, University of Oxford
Envisioning the oikumene: Reassessing the Anglo-Saxon Cotton
Map in Context (Language: English)
Margaret Tedford, School of English, Queen’s University Belfast
1002
Emmanuel Centre: Room 2
THE IMPERMANENCE OF BUILDINGS IN ANGLO-SAXON ENGLAND
Balliol Interdisciplinary Institute
Hannah McKendrick Bailey, Balliol College, University of Oxford
Meg Boulton, Department of History of Art, University of York
Shaping Buildings and Identities in 5th- to 9th-Century England
(Language: English)
Clifford Sofield, School of Archaeology, University of Oxford
Wilfrid’s Restoration of the Church at York in Stephen’s Vita
Wilfridi (Language: English)
Conor O’Brien, Churchill College, University of Cambridge
Building a House upon the Rock in Old English Literature
(Language: English)
Hannah McKendrick Bailey
1003
Stage@leeds: Stage 3
THE MEDIEVAL LANDSCAPE / SEASCAPE, I: FOOD, FORM, AND FUNCTION
Medieval Settlement Group / Landscape Research Group
Karl Christian Alvestad, Department of History, University of
Winchester and Kimm Curran, School of Critical Studies, University of
Glasgow
Andy Seaman, Department of Archaeology, Canterbury Christ Church
University
Interdisciplinary Approaches to Characterising the Medieval
Landscape: Identifying and Mapping the Influence of Secular
Lordship in Cumbria (Language: English)
Caron Newman, McCord Centre for Landscape, Newcastle University
Water Management for Agricultural Productivity in the
Cambridgeshire Peat Fens, 400-970 (Language: English)
Susan Oosthuizen, Institute of Continuing Education, University of
Cambridge
Widows and Foodways: Controlling Urban Agriculture in Early
Medieval Italy (Language: English)
Caroline Goodson, Department of History, Classics & Archaeology,
Birkbeck, University of London
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
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Paper 1004-a:
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Paper 1005-a:
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Paper 1006-a:
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1004
Baines Wing: Room 2.14
BISHOPS, POPES, AND SAINTS: CHRISTIAN CHURCHES IN THE NORTH
WESTERN BALKANS FROM GREGORY THE GREAT TO THE ‘BOSNIAN CHURCH’,
6TH-15TH CENTURIES
Daniel Syrbe, Geisteswissenschaftliches Zentrum für Kultur &
Geschichte Ostmitteleuropas e.V. (GWZO), Universität Leipzig
Nadine Ulrike Holzmeier, Historisches Institut, FernUniversität Hagen
Gregory the Great: Writing Letters to the Bishops of Dalmatia
and Illyricum (Language: English)
Daniel Syrbe
St Gregory: The Patron Saint of Bosnia (Language: English)
Emir O. Filipović, Faculty of Philosophy, University of Sarajevo
1005
Parkinson Building: Nathan Bodington Chamber
ADAPTING CONCEPTS OF LOVE
IMC Programming Committee,
Venetia Bridges, School of English, University of Leeds
‘De lui amer est toute folle’: Dido’s Downfall and the Concept of
Love in Two Manuscripts of the Roman d’Enéas (Language:
English)
Caitlin Watt, Department of English & Comparative Literature,
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
The Reception of the Roman de la Rose in the Duchy of Brabant
in the 14th Century (Language: English)
Anne Reynders, Faculteit Letteren, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven
‘Omnia vincit amor’: Dante’s Commedia as Lyric (Language:
English)
Ann-Maria Contarino, Department of English, Saint Anselm College,
New Hampshire
1006
University House: Beechgrove Room
BOOKS AND BOOK COLLECTIONS IN THE MEDIEVAL MIDDLE EAST
Torsten Wollina, Orient-Institut Beirut
Hugh Kennedy, Department of the Languages & Cultures of the Near &
Middle East, School of Oriental & African Studies, University of London
Textual Transmission among Circulating Communities: The
Different Travels of Arabic Manuscripts across the Western
Indian Ocean (Language: English)
Christopher Bahl, Department of History, School of Oriental & African
Studies, University of London
Building Up a Family’s Library in Late Medieval Syria (Language:
English)
Konrad Hirschler, Department of History, School of Oriental & African
Studies, University of London
A Public Act?: Writing and Trading Books in Late Medieval Syria
(Language: English)
Torsten Wollina
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 09.00-10.30
Session:
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Paper 1007-a:
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Paper 1008-a:
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Paper 1008-c:
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Paper 1009-a:
1007
University House: Great Woodhouse Room
RELIGIOUS POLEMICS COMPARED, I: INSIDE THE POLEMICIST’S WORKSHOP
Project ‘Diversitas religionum: 13th-Century Foundations of European
Discourses of Religious Diversity’
Sita Steckel, Historisches Seminar, Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität
Münster
Sita Steckel
From Anti-Heretical Polemics to Vernacular Catechism: Ulrich
von Pottenstein’s Translation of Petrus Zwicker’s AntiWaldensian Treatise (Language: English)
Reima Välimäki, Department of Cultural History / Turku Centre for
Medieval & Early Modern Studies (TUCEMEMS), University of Turku
Magistra Magistrorum: Hildegard of Bingen’s Polemical
Discourse on False Teaching (Language: English)
Andra-Nicoleta Alexiu, Historisches Seminar, Westfälische WilhelmsUniversität Münster
The Text as Heretic: Polemical Techniques and the Speculum
Simplicium Animarum (Language: English)
Justine Trombley, Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, University of
Toronto
1008
University House: Cloberry Room
EAT, DRINK, AND TEACH THE MIDDLE AGES
IMC Programming Committee,
Ursula Bieber, Fachbereich Slawistik / Interdisziplinäres Zentrum für
Mittelalter und frühe Neuzeit (IZMF), Universität Salzburg
Eat, Drink, and Be Beowulf: A Pedagogy to Unplug the
Technologically Obsessed Student (Language: English)
Charmae Cottom, Department of English, Kent State University
Medievalism on the Menu: Food as Adaptation in A Feast of Ice
and Fire (Language: English)
Melissa Filbeck, Department of English, Texas A&M University, College
Station
‘The Assassin’s Creed Curriculum’: Video Games and the Middle
Ages (Language: English)
Andrew Elliott, Lincoln School of Film & Media, University of Lincoln
1009
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.17
THE RECEPTION AND EVOLUTION OF CAROLINE MINUSCULE IN THE IBERIAN
PENINSULA, I: VISIGOTHIC TRADITION FADING
Network for the Study of Caroline Minuscule
Ainoa Castro Correa, Department of History, King’’s College London
Ainoa Castro Correa
Los centros escriptorios en el Reino de León: la transición de la
visigótica a la carolina a través de la escritura publicitaria
(Language: Español)
María Encarnación Martín López, Facultad de Filosofía y Letras,
Universidad de León
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
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Moderator:
Paper 1010-a:
Paper 1010-b:
Paper 1010-c:
Session:
Title:
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Paper 1011-a:
Paper 1011-b:
Paper 1011-c:
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Title:
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Paper 1012-a:
Paper 1012-b:
Paper 1012-c:
1010
Leeds University Union: Room 2 - Elland Road
BROKEN BOOKS: TRACING LITURGICAL MANUSCRIPTS FROM MEDIEVAL
SWEDEN
National Library of Finland, Helsinki
Jaakko Tahkokallio, National Library of Finland, University of Helsinki
Jaakko Tahkokallio
English, German, and French Liturgical Influences in the Chant
Books of Medieval Sweden (Language: English)
Sean Dunnahoe, Department of Music, Royal Holloway, University of
London
Liturgical Variation and the Localisation of Swedish Missal
Fragments of the Late 14th and Early 15th Centuries (Language:
English)
Lauri Hirvonen, Department of Philosophy, History, Culture & Arts
Studies, University of Helsinki
16th-Century Recycling as a Clue to the Medieval Provenance:
Understanding Early Modern Bureaucrats (Language: English)
Seppo Eskola, Department of Philosophy, History, Culture & Art
Studies, University of Helsinki
1011
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.10
CAROLINGIAN LOCAL PRIESTS, I: BEYOND EIGENKIRCHEN
Steffen Patzold, Seminar für Mittelalterliche Geschichte, EberhardKarls-Universität Tübingen
Carine van Rhijn, Departement Geschiedenis en Kunstgeschiedenis,
Universiteit Utrecht
Priests in the Village: Local Clergy in the Carolingian Empire
(Language: English)
Thomas Kohl, Sonderforschungsbereich 923 ‘Bedrohte Ordnungen’,
Eberhard-Karls-Universität Tübingen
The Priest, the Salvation of the Soul, and the Management of
Property in the Middle Rhine Region in the Early Middle Ages
(Language: English)
Miriam Czock, Historisches Institut, Universität Duisburg-Essen
Priests in the Carolingian World: A Typology (Language: English)
Steffen Patzold
1012
Parkinson Building: Room B.09
MURDER AND MAYHEM: DISORDER AND VIOLENCE IN ITALY, 568-1154, I
Christopher Heath, School of Arts, Languages & Cultures, University of
Manchester and Robert Houghton, Department of History, University of
Winchester
Roberta Cimino, Department of History, University of Nottingham
Morbidity and Murder: Lombard Kingship’s Violent
Uncertainties, 568-774 (Language: English)
Christopher Heath
The Hope of Italy: Narrative of Conquest and Resistance from
Charlemagne to Bernard, 774-818 (Language: English)
Francesco Borri, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
‘I predict a riot’: What Were the Parmese Rebelling Against in
1037? (Language: English)
Robert Houghton
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1013-a:
Paper 1013-b:
Paper 1013-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1014-a:
Paper 1014-b:
Paper 1014-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1016-a:
Paper 1016-b:
Paper 1016-c:
1013
Baines Wing: Room G.37
BALANCING REGIONAL AND CENTRAL POWER: NOBLE NETWORKS AND THE
CAPITAL IN LATE MEDIEVAL ENGLAND
Late Medieval Seminar, Institute of Historical Research, University of
London
Sean Cunningham, The National Archives, Kew
Chris Given-Wilson, St Andrews Institute of Mediaeval Studies,
University of St Andrews
‘Neither willing, nor able, to discuss any matter without them’:
The Intercommoning Committee in the Good Parliament, 1376
(Language: English)
Laura Tompkins, The National Archives, Kew
Social Whirl or Serious Business?: The Duke of Buckingham in
London, 1501-1502 (Language: English)
James Ross, Department of History, University of Winchester
A Northerner at Home in London?: William Smith, Bishop of
Lichfield, at Court and about Town, Christmas 1491 (Language:
English)
Sean Cunningham
1014
Stage@leeds: Stage 1
FROM COOKING POT TO MELTING POT: ARCHAEOLOGIES OF FOOD AND
IDENTITY IN THE EARLY MIDDLE AGES
Department of Archaeology, University of York
Steven Ashby, Department of Archaeology, University of York
Oliver E. Craig, Department of Archaeology / BioArCh, University of
York
Food, Lifestyle, and Identity in the Kingdom of Mercia: An
Integrated Archaeobiological Approach (Language: English)
Anita Radini, Department of Archaeology, University of York
Putting Flesh on the Bones: Zooarchaeology, Food, and Social
Identity in Early Medieval England (Language: English)
Kristopher Poole, Department of Archaeology, University of Sheffield
New Forms, New Foods?: Investigating Changes in Ceramic
Vessel Form in the 9th and 10th Centuries (Language: English)
Gareth Perry, Department of Archaeology, University of Sheffield
1016
Leeds University Union: Room 4 - Hyde Park
SUPPLY AND CONSUMPTION OF GRAIN IN THE NORTHERN MEDITERRANEAN:
LANGUEDOC AND ITALY, 12TH-15TH CENTURIES
Lucie Laumonier, Department of History, University of Calgary
Lucie Laumonier
From Cereals to Flour: Mills, Millers, and the Flour Supply in
Medieval Montpellier (Language: English)
Lucie Galano, Centre d’Études Médiévales de Montpellier, Université de
Montpellier III - Paul Valéry
Granum bonum: Grain and the State in Late Medieval Genoa
(Language: English)
John Manke, Department of History, University of Minnesota
The Multiplication of the Loaves: Bread Almsgiving and Charity
in a Mediterranean City (Language: English)
Lucie Laumonier
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1017-a:
Paper 1017-b:
Paper 1017-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1018-a:
Paper 1018-b:
Paper 1018-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1019-a:
Paper 1019-b:
Paper 1019-c:
1017
Baines Wing: Room G.36
NORMS AND PRACTICES: FOOD IN MEDIEVAL MONASTIC COMMUNITIES
Laboratoire CNRS Cultures et Environnements: Préhistoire, Antiquité,
Moyen Âge (UMR 7264), Université de Nice
Émilie Perez, Université de Polynésie Française / Laboratoire Culture et
Environnement, Préhistoire, Antiquité, Moyen Âge, Centre National de
la Recherche Scientifique
Albrecht Diem, Department of History, Syracuse University, New York
A Bioarchaeological Approach to Monastic Dietary Behaviour in
the Middle Ages (Language: English)
Émilie Perez
Diet in the Monastery of Sainte-Croix de Poitiers at the Time of
Radegonde in the Second Half of the 6th Century (Language:
English)
Isabelle Réal, Laboratoire FRAMESPA (UMR 5136), Centre National de
la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) / Université de Toulouse II - Jean
Jaurès
Adding to the Monks’ Table: Daily Kitchen Expenses at Norwich
Cathedral Priory, 1284-1329 (Language: English)
Harmony Dewez, Laboratoire de Médiévistique Occidentale de Paris
(LAMOP - UMR 8589), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique
(CNRS) / Université Paris I - Panthéon-Sorbonne
1018
Baines Wing: Room 2.13
SPIRITUAL FEASTS AND FASTS FOR THE SENSES: RESPONSES TO CHRISTIAN
RITUAL
IMC Programming Committee,
Sigbjørn Olsen Sønnesyn, Department of History, Durham University
The Central Place of the Eucharist in the Life and Thought of the
Church in the Second Half of the Middle Ages (Language: English)
Ole Fredrik Kullerud, Independent Scholar, Halden
Sensory Fasting and the Hungertuch (Language: English)
Ingrid Lunnan Nødseth, Institutt for kunst- og medievitenskap, Norges
teknisk-naturvitenskapelige universitet, Trondheim
Wall Paintings Representing the Body of Christ as Food in
Medieval Finland (Language: English)
Katja Fält, Department of Art & Culture Studies, University of Jyväskylä
/ Finnish Social Science Data Archive, University of Tampere
1019
Baines Wing: Room 1.16
FOOD AS A MARKER OF JEWISH IDENTITY
IMC Programming Committee,
Eva Frojmovic, Centre for Jewish Studies, University of Leeds
Evolution of the Foods Served at a Passover Seder in Ashkenazi
Europe during the Middle Ages (Language: English)
Catherine Mendelsohn, Independent Scholar, Towaco
Preparing Pessah in Medieval Illuminated Manuscripts from
Ashkenas (Language: English)
Annette Weber, Lehrstuhl für Jüdische Kunst, Hochschule für Jüdische
Studien, Heidelberg
‘Let Me Count the Ways’: Strategies, Dissimulation, and
Justifications Used by the Conversos of Spain to Avoid the
Consumption Of Pork - A Case of Semantic Fission (Language:
English)
Messod Salama, Department of French & Spanish, Memorial University
of Newfoundland
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1020-a:
Paper 1020-b:
Paper 1020-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1021-a:
Paper 1021-b:
Paper 1021-c:
1020
Parkinson Building: Room 1.08
SPIRITUAL NOURISHMENT: LATE ANTIQUE AND EARLY MEDIEVAL WORLD
CHRONICLES, I - EAST
Heidelberger Akademie der Wissenschaften
Jonas Borsch, Seminar für Alte Geschichte, Eberhard-Karls-Universität
Tübingen / Heidelberger Akademie der Wissenschaften, Christian
Gastgeber, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische Akademie
der Wissenschaften, Wien and Christine Radtki, Seminar für Alte
Geschichte, Eberhard-Karls-Universität Tübingen / Heidelberger
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Heidelberg
Mischa Meier, Abteilung für Alte Geschichte, Eberhard-Karls-Universität
Tübingen
Wealth and Poverty in John Malalas (Language: English)
Christine Radtki
Conceptions of Disaster in John Malalas: The Example of Food
Shortage and Famine (Language: English)
Jonas Borsch
On the Scriptor Incertus and the Continuation of Malalas
(Language: English)
Federico Montinaro, Sonderforschungsbereich 923 ‘Bedrohte
Ordnungen’, Eberhard-Karls-Universität Tübingen
1021
Parkinson Building: Room B.11
PEASANT LAND MARKETS AND FOOD PRODUCTION: THREE CASE STUDIES
FROM NORTH AND SOUTH OF THE ALPS, C. 1300 - C. 1520
Thomas Frank, Dipartimento di Studi Umanistici, Università degli Studi
di Pavia
Herwig Weigl, Institut für Österreichische Geschichtsforschung / Institut
für Geschichte, Universität Wien
Land Transfers in the Estate of a Northern Italian Hospital: The
Tenants of Santa Maria dei Battuti, Treviso, 15th and Early 16th
Centuries (Language: English)
Thomas Frank
The Rural Land Market in Sankt Gallen, 14th Century (Language:
English)
Rezia Krauer, Stadtarchiv der Ortsbürgergemeinde, St. Gallen
Vineyards on Vienna’s Doorstep: Late Medieval Land
Transactions in the Estate of the Monastery of Klosterneuburg
(Language: English)
Samuel Nussbaum, Institut für Wirtschafts- und Sozialgeschichte,
Universität Wien
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
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:
1022
University House: Little Woodhouse Room
FOOD AND FEAST IN MEDIEVAL SARDINIA AND SPAIN, 11TH-15TH CENTURIES
Università degli Studi di Cagliari
Rossana Martorelli, Dipartimento di Storia, Beni culturali e Territorio,
Università degli Studi di Cagliari
Rossana Martorelli
The Role of the Salt, Wine, and Fisheries Sectors in the
Development of a Medieval Town in the Centre of the
Mediterranean Sea: Cagliari (Language: English)
Claudio Nonne, Dipartimento di Storia, Beni culturali e Territorio,
Università degli Studi di Cagliari
Reaping and Grape-Harvest in the Beatus (Language: English)
Elisabetta Salis, Dipartimento di Storia, Beni culturali e Territorio,
Università degli Studi di Cagliari
The ‘Last Supper’ in the Paintings of the Church of Nostra
Signora de Sos Regnos Altos in Bosa: Food and Tools in a
Painting of the 14th Century in Sardinia (Language: English)
Nicoletta Usai, Dipartimento di Storia, Beni culturali e Territorio,
Università degli Studi di Cagliari
1023
Emmanuel Centre: Room 10
FEASTING, POWER, AND IDENTITY IN GERMANIC LITERATURE
IMC Programming Committee,
Hana Videen, Department of English, King’s College London
Feasting on the Body Politic: Hunger for Power in Beowulf
(Language: English)
Henning Bahr, Independent Scholar, Berlin
The Last Meal of the Nibelungs (Language: English)
Nadine Hufnagel, Ältere Deutsche Philologie, Universität Bayreuth
Good Feasting and Bad Feasting: Symbolic and Ritual Meals in
Ottonian Narratives (Language: English)
Laura Wangerin, Department of History, University of WisconsinMadison
1024
Stage@leeds: Stage 2
FOOD AND FEAST IN THE ROBIN HOOD TRADITION
International Association for Robin Hood Studies (IARHS)
Lesley Coote, Andrew Marvell Centre for Medieval & Early Modern
Studies, University of Hull
Kristin Bovaird-Abbo, Department of English Language & Literature,
University of Northern Colorado
‘Cheese in my bosom’: From Marion and Robin (!) to Robin Hood
(Language: English)
Lesley Coote
‘Whatso þai have, it may be myne, / Corne and brede, ale and
wyne’: Carnivalesque Feasting in the 15th-Century King and
Commoner Tradition (Language: English)
Mark Truesdale, School of English, Communication & Philosophy,
Cardiff University
Violence at the Feast in Medieval Outlaw Texts (Language:
English)
Melissa Ridley Elmes, Department of English, University of North
Carolina at Greensboro
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1025-a:
Paper 1025-b:
Paper 1025-c:
Paper 1025-d:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1026-a:
Paper 1026-b:
Paper 1026-c:
1025
Michael Sadler Building: Banham Theatre
EAT OR BE EATEN: CANNIBALISM AND OTHER MONSTROUS EATING HABITS
IMC Programming Committee,
Irina Metzler, Centre for Medieval & Early Modern Research (MEMO),
Swansea University / ‘Homo debilis’ Projekt, Universität Bremen
Cannibalism, Humanity, and the Problems of Species Definition
in the Middle Ages (Language: English)
Sarah Lambert, Department of History, Goldsmiths College, University
of London
Cannibalism as Erasure in the Ovidian Lay of Philomena
(Language: English)
Stefanie Goyette, Liberal Studies, New York University
Cannibalism and Conquest in the Middle English Richard Coeur
de Lion (Language: English)
Katherine Hikes Terrell, Department of English, Hamilton College, New
York
Monster Food: Diet, Difference, and Danger in a Medieval
Prodigy-Book (Language: English)
Miguel Ayres de Campos-Tovar, Courtauld Institute of Art, University of
London
1026
Leeds University Union: Room 6 - Roundhay
MODES OF HISTORIOGRAPHY IN MEDIEVAL EUROPE
Julia Verkholantsev, Department of Slavic Languages & Literatures,
University of Pennsylvania
Balázs Nagy, Department of Medieval Studies, Central European
University, Budapest
When Myth Becomes History: Etymology and Narrative in
Medieval Latinate Historiography from Isidore of Seville to
Cosmas of Prague (Language: English)
Julia Verkholantsev
Achronology and Chronicles: Perceptions of Time in the
Historical Writing of England and West Frankia, from the 8th to
the 12th Century (Language: English)
Elizabeth M. Tyler, Department of English & Related Literature,
University of York
Motherhood in History: Herstory in Byzantine Historiography
(Language: English)
Stavroula Constantinou, Department of Byzantine & Modern Greek
Studies, University of Cyprus
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1027-a:
Paper 1027-b:
Paper 1027-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1028-a:
Paper 1028-b:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1029-a:
Paper 1029-b:
Paper 1029-c:
1027
Parkinson Building: Room B.08
13TH-CENTURY ENGLAND, I: THE MARSHAL LEGACY
Thirteenth Century England
Harriet Kersey, School of Humanities, Canterbury Christ Church
University
Colin Veach, Department of History, University of Hull
The Brief Widowhood of Isabel Marshal: May 1219 - May 1220
(Language: English)
David Crouch, Department of History, University of Hull
Female Inheritance and Its Impact: The Seven Daughters of
Sybil and William de Ferrers (Language: English)
Harriet Kersey
The Marshal, the March, and the Honour of Totnes: Marcher
Lords and the South West of England (Language: English)
Melissa Julian-Jones, School of History, Archaeology & Religion, Cardiff
University
1028
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.16
EDUCATING THE LAITY IN LATE MEDIEVAL ENGLAND
IMC Programming Committee,
Johanna Scheel, Kunstgeschichtliches Institut, Philipps-Universität
Marburg
‘Art thou Besynesse?’: The Evolution of Idleness in the 14th and
15th Centuries (Language: English)
Emma Martin, Department of History, University of York
Reginald Pecock’s Vernacular Philosophy: Late Medieval Lay
‘receyuabilnesse’ and Religious Curiosity (Language: English)
Natalie Calder, School of English, Queen’s University Belfast
1029
Emmanuel Centre: Room 7
RELIGION, CONVERSION, AND IDENTITY IN THE EARLY MEDIEVAL WEST
Erica Buchberger, Department of History, College of Charleston
E. T. Dailey, Amsterdam University Press / Arc Medieval Press /
Medieval Institute Publications, Western Michigan University,
Kalamazoo
Religious Identity and Supernatural Efficacy in Early AngloSaxon Warfare (Language: English)
Katherine Cross, Wolfson College, University of Oxford / The British
Museum
Irish Past and Irish Identity in Félire Oengusso (Language:
English)
Katja Ritari, Helsinki Collegium of Advanced Studies, University of
Helsinki
The Many Meanings of ‘Roman’ in the Life of Eligius of Noyon
(Language: English)
Erica Buchberger
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1030-a:
Paper 1030-b:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1031-a:
Paper 1031-b:
Paper 1031-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1032-a:
Paper 1032-b:
Paper 1032-c:
1030
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.19
CAROLINGIAN RELIGIOUS CULTURE
IMC Programming Committee,
Rosamond McKitterick, Faculty of History, University of Cambridge
Paris, Bibliothèque Nationale Nouv. Acq. Lat. 1740: The Book of
Deuteronomy Interpreted as a Carolingian Christian Community
(Language: English)
Yin Liu, Department of History, University of Notre Dame
‘How many Dúngals are there anyway’?: A Question Revisited
(Language: English)
Julia Warnes, Centre for Medieval Studies, University of Toronto
1031
Baines Wing: Room 1.14
DIGITAL TOOLS AND RESOURCES: POSSIBILITIES AND CHALLENGES
IMC Programming Committee,
Catherine A. M. Clarke, Centre for Medieval & Renaissance Studies /
Department of English, University of Southampton
Transparency in Practice: Setbacks and Revelations in an Online
Edition of The Wanderer (Language: English)
Kyle Dase, Faculteit Letteren / Faculteit Wetenschappen, KU Leuven
How Interactive Maps Help Students and Researchers Study
Medieval Law (Language: English)
José Alfredo Sánchez Álvarez, Departamento de Historia del Derecho y
de las Instituciones, Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia,
Madrid
Medieval Markets and the Portable Antiquities Scheme Data
(Language: English)
Eljas Oksanen, Portable Antiquities Scheme, British Museum, London
1032
Emmanuel Centre: Wilson Room
THE WRITINGS OF ALFONSO X
IMC Programming Committee,
Graham Barrett, St John’s College, University of Oxford
The Medieval Rhetoric in Alfonso X, the Wise King (Language:
English)
Leonardo Augusto Silva Fontes, Scriptorium, Laboratório de Estudos
Medievais e Ibéricos, Universidade Federal Fluminense, Rio de Janeiro
Serving Revenge Hot: Procne, Philomela, and Tereus as Models
of Courtly Conduct in Alfonso X’s General estoria (Language:
English)
Erik Ekman, Department of Foreign Languages & Literatures, Oklahoma
State University
Codes of Feasting and Abstinence: Clerics and Knights in Afonso
X’s Partidas (Language: English)
Maria Clara Barros, Centro de Linguística da Universidade do Porto,
Universidade do Porto
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1033-a:
Paper 1033-b:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1034-a:
Paper 1034-b:
Paper 1034-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1035-a:
Paper 1035-b:
Paper 1035-c:
1033
Parkinson Building: Room B.10
WOMEN AND SACRED SPHERES
IMC Programming Committee,
Louise Nelstrop, St Benet’s Hall, University of Oxford / Sarum College,
Salisbury
Women Mystics: The Case of St Angela of Foligno - Life and
Context (Language: English)
Gabriella Turai, Társadalomtudományi és Nemzetközi Kapcsolatok Kar,
Corvinus Egyetem, Budapest
The Threshold, a Mighty Sacred Space: The Case of Mary of
Egypt - Fall and Redemption (Language: English)
Jeannine Horowitz, Department of Religious Studies, University of Haifa
1034
Parkinson Building: Room B.22
SOCIETAS, COMMUNITAS, YCONOMIA: CONCEPTUALISING THE POLITICAL IN
12TH-CENTURY LATIN EUROPE
Societas Latina Daniae
Mia Münster-Swendsen, Department of Communication & Arts, Roskilde
Universitet
Michael H. Gelting, Rigsarkivet (Danish National Archives), Statens
Arkiver, København / Centre for Scandinavian Studies, University of
Aberdeen
Public Duties and Personal Connections in Medieval Denmark
(Language: English)
Lars Kjaer, Department of History, New College of the Humanities,
London
A Dwarf on the Shoulders of a Giant: Sven Aggesen and
Ciceronian Ideas About Human Society (Language: English)
Tue Emil Öhler Søvsø, Saxo-Instituttet, Københavns Universitet
Distributing Power: Yconomia as a Political and Theological
Concept around 1200 (Language: English)
Mia Münster-Swendsen
1035
Baines Wing: Room 1.13
THE MEDIEVAL NILE AND RED SEA AS A PASSAGE OF TRANSMISSION, I: THE
COMING OF ISLAM
Adam Simmons, Department of History, Lancaster University
Alexandros Tsakos, Institutt for arkeologi, historie, kultur- og
religionsvitenskap, Universitetet i Bergen
Cairo - Aswan - Ibrim (- Dongola?): Task and Journey of a
Messenger from Islamic Egypt to Christian Nubia in Summer
760 (Language: English)
Joost Hagen, Ägyptologisches Institut, Universität Leipzig
Forgetting Sudanese Christianity: Wrongfully Depicting Nubians
and Ethiopians in Crusader Songs (Language: English)
Adam Simmons
‘Sail to Suakin, and then go twelve days through the desert’:
Two Episodes in Ethiopian-European Long-Distance Contact in
the 15th Century (Language: English)
Verena Krebs, Martin Buber Society of Fellows in the Humanities,
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1036-a:
Paper 1036-b:
Paper 1036-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1037-a:
Paper 1037-b:
Paper 1037-c:
1036
University House: St George Room
CULTURE AND CONFLICT, I: WRITING WAR
Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Trevor Russell Smith, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
and Iason-Eleftherios Tzouriadis, Institute for Medieval Studies,
University of Leeds
Alan V. Murray, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Divine Will, Human Agency, and Roman Ideals of War According
to the Chronicon de Lanercost and Geoffrey le Baker’s Chronicon
(Language: English)
Trevor Russell Smith
How Far Did John Barbour’s Bruce (c. 1375) Reflect Ideas
Concerning The Waging of War Expressed in Vegetius’ Epitoma
rei militaris? (Language: English)
Christopher Allmand, School of History, University of Liverpool
The Changing Faces of Warfare: The Depiction of Arthurian
Warfare in Geoffrey of Monmouth’s Historia Regum Britanniae
and the Alliterative Morte Arthur (Language: English)
Craig M. Nakashian, College of Education & Liberal Arts, Texas A&M
University, Texarkana
1037
Leeds University Union: Room 5 - Kirkstall Abbey
VISIONS OF COMMUNITY, I: WHAT’S IN A NAME? - ETHNONYMS AND
IDENTITY IN EARLY MEDIEVAL EURASIA
Sonderforschungsbereich 42 ‘Visions of Community’, Universität Wien /
DOC-Team ‘Ethnonyme im Vergleich’ / Österreichische Akademie der
Wissenschaften, Wien
Odile Kommer, Institut für Sozialanthropologie, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien and Salvatore Liccardo, Institut für
Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften,
Wien
Helmut Reimitz, Department of History, Princeton University
Setting Boundaries: ‘Barbaric’ Ethnonyms between Geography
and Imperial Ideology (Language: English)
Salvatore Liccardo
Label or Libel?: The Ethnonym ‘Saxo’ in the Latin Textual
Record, 300-900 (Language: English)
Robert Flierman, Afdeling Geschiedenis, Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen
Turks as Eurasian Nomads in Medieval Islamic Sources
(Language: English)
Zsuzsanna Zsidai, Institute of History, Hungarian Academy of Sciences,
Budapest
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1038-a:
Paper 1038-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1039-a:
Paper 1039-b:
Paper 1039-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1040-a:
Paper 1040-b:
Paper 1040-c:
1038
Michael Sadler Building: Rupert Beckett Theatre
SLAVERY IN THE MEDIEVAL ISLAMIC WORLD, I: OWNERSHIP AND LAW
Magdalena Kloss, Institut für Sozialanthropologie, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien and Thomas J. MacMaster,
Morehouse College, Georgia / School of History, Classics &
Archaeology, University of Edinburgh
Magdalena Kloss
Abbasid Cities and Their Slave Markets, c. 750-950 (Language:
English)
Matthew S. Gordon, Department of History, Miami University, Ohio
The Sacred Concept of Manumission in Islamic Law, 8th-12th
Centuries (Language: English)
Cristina de la Puente, Instituto de Lenguas y Culturas del Mediterráno,
Centro de Ciencias Humanas y Sociales, Consejo Superior de
Investigaciones Científicas
1039
Emmanuel Centre: Room 11
CISTERCIANS, IV: CISTERCIAN ARCHAEOLOGY
Cîteaux: Commentarii cistercienses
Terryl N. Kinder, Cîteaux: Commentarii cistercienses
Terryl N. Kinder
New Thoughts on an Old Chronology: Meaux Abbey in a New
Light, I (Language: English)
Glyn Coppack, Archaeological & Historical Research, Goxhill
New Thoughts on an Old Chronology: Meaux Abbey in a New
Light, II (Language: English)
Stuart Harrison, Ryedale Archaeology Services, Pickering
The Anatomy of Cistercian Industrial Granges: A Case Study of
the Property of Fountains, Rievaulx, and Byland in the Calder
Valley, West Yorkshire (Language: English)
Stephen Anthony Moorhouse, Institute for Medieval Studies, University
of Leeds
1040
Baines Wing: Room 2.15
TRESPASSING BORDERS, THRESHOLDS, AND FRONTIERS: SCULPTORS IN
IBERIA AND ITALY
IMC Programming Committee,
Jill A. Franklin, Corpus of Romanesque Sculpture in Britain & Ireland,
London
Turning the Stone: Conversion and Romanesque Sculpture in
Spain (Language: English)
Rose Walker, Courtauld Institute of Art, University of London
The Italian Trecento Cathedral Facade: Worlds Within and
Without (Language: English)
Catherine Harding, Department of History in Art, University of Victoria,
British Columbia
Sculptural Metaphors and Sculptural Practices in Trecento Italy
(Language: English)
Luca Palozzi, Edinburgh College of Art, University of Edinburgh
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1101-a:
Paper 1101-b:
Paper 1101-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1102-a:
Paper 1102-b:
Paper 1102-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1103-a:
Paper 1103-b:
Paper 1103-c:
1101
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.15
NEW VOICES IN ANGLO-SAXON STUDIES, II
International Society of Anglo-Saxonists (ISAS)
Peter Darby, Department of History, University of Nottingham
Christina Lee, School of English, University of Nottingham
Dating the Old English Life of St Chad (Language: English)
Kiera Naylor, Medieval & Early Modern Centre, University of Sydney
Feasting, Fasting, and Food as Characterisation Cues in Ælfric’s
Esther (Language: English)
Katrina Wilkins, School of English, University of Nottingham
The ‘Wisdom’ of Resignation B (Language: English)
Brett Roscoe, Department of English, The King’s University, Edmonton
1102
Emmanuel Centre: Room 2
EARLY MEDIEVAL BRITAIN: THE BRITONS IN CONTEXT
Ben Guy, Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse & Celtic, University of
Cambridge
Charles Insley, Department of History, University of Manchester
The Painted Peoples: Images of Britishness and Pictishness in
Some Late Antique Texts (Language: English)
Edwin Hustwit, School of History, Welsh History & Archaeology, Bangor
University
The Welsh in Context: Perceptions of Peoples in Asser’s De
rebus gestis Ælfredi (Language: English)
Rebecca Thomas, Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse & Celtic,
University of Cambridge
The Anglo-Saxon Background to the Welsh Genealogical
Tradition (Language: English)
Ben Guy
1103
Stage@leeds: Stage 3
THE MEDIEVAL LANDSCAPE / SEASCAPE, II: MEMORY
Landscape Research Group
Karl Christian Alvestad, Department of History, University of
Winchester and Kimm Curran, School of Critical Studies, University of
Glasgow
Kimm Curran
Tradition and Transformation in the Funerary Landscape of
Wessex, 450-850 (Language: English)
Kate Mees, School of Arts, University of Bristol
A Landscape of Legitimacy, a Landscape of Memory (Language:
English)
Karl Christian Alvestad
‘He came to Rouen and secured his ships’ - the topographie
légendaire of Dudo of Saint-Quentin (Language: English)
Daniel Brown, Historisches Institut, Universität zu Köln
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1104-a:
Paper 1104-b:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1105-a:
Paper 1105-b:
Paper 1105-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1106-a:
Paper 1106-b:
Paper 1106-c:
1104
Baines Wing: Room 2.14
RETHINKING THE HORN: NEW READINGS FROM TEXTS, IMAGES, AND
ARCHAEOLOGY
Carol Neuman de Vegvar, Department of Fine Arts, Ohio Wesleyan
University, Delaware
Victoria Whitworth, Centre for Nordic Studies, University of the
Highlands & Islands, Orkney
Fanfares and Feasts: Medieval Irish Horns in Text and Image
(Language: English)
Emma Jane Anderson, School of Literatures, Languages & Cultures,
University of Edinburgh
The Horn in the Grave: Burial Practices and Gender in Early
Anglo-Saxon England (Language: English)
Carol Neuman de Vegvar
1105
Baines Wing: Room 1.14
THE USE OF LETTERS IN EARLY CHRISTIAN POLEMICS, 4TH - 5TH CENTURIES
Katedra Filologii Klasycznej, Uniwersytet Mikołaja Kopernika, Toruń
Rafał Toczko, Katedra Filologii Klasycznej, Uniwersytet Mikołaja
Kopernika, Toruń
Przemysław Nehring, Katedra Filologii Klasycznej, Uniwersytet Mikolaja
Kopernika, Toruń
Polemical Strategies in the Anti-Donatist Letters of St Augustine
(Language: English)
Rafał Toczko
Jerome’s Polemic in His Letter to Sabinianus (Ep. 147)
(Language: English)
Philip Polcar, Institut für Klassische Philologie, Mittel- und Neulatein,
Universität Wien
The Letters of Julian of Aeclanum in the East (Language: English)
Giulio Malavasi, Dipartimento di scienze storiche, geografiche e
dell’antichità, Università degli Studi di Padova
1106
University House: Beechgrove Room
MONKS AND THE MUNDUS: CONCERNS ABOUT THE MATERIAL WORLD IN
SPIRITUAL HOUSES
IMC Programming Committee,
Steven A. Walton, Department of Social Sciences, Michigan
Technological University, Houghton
Material Supply and cibus spiritualis: The Short Poems of
Venantius Fortunatus to St Radegund and Agnes in Their SocioHistorical Context (Language: English)
Lorenzo Livorsi, Centre for Early Christianity & Its Reception, University
of Kent
Monastic Astrolabes: Interest in Astronomy in Late Medieval
England (Language: English)
Seb Falk, Department of History & Philosophy of Science, University of
Cambridge
The Subjunctive Language of Medieval Alchemy (Language:
English)
Zachary Matus, Department of History, Boston College
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1107-a:
Paper 1107-b:
Respondent:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1108-a:
Paper 1108-b:
Paper 1108-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1109-a:
Paper 1109-b:
Paper 1109-c:
1107
University House: Great Woodhouse Room
RELIGIOUS POLEMICS COMPARED, II: POLEMICS BETWEEN RHETORIC AND
POLITICS
Project ‘Diversitas religionum: 13th-Century Foundations of European
Discourses of Religious Diversity’
Sita Steckel, Historisches Seminar, Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität
Münster
Emilia Jamroziak, Forschungsstelle für Vergleichende Ordensgeschichte
(FOVOG), Technische Universität Dresden / Institute for Medieval
Studies / School of History, University of Leeds
Good and Bad Franciscans: The Construction of Mendicant
Identity in Polemical Discourse (Language: English)
Melanie Brunner, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
‘To eradicate their perfidy’: Anti-Jewish Sentiment in Everyday
Jewish-Christian Business Transactions (Language: English)
Birgit Wiedl, Institute for Jewish History in Austria, St. Pölten
Sita Steckel
1108
University House: Cloberry Room
THE PERSISTENCE OF THE MIDDLE AGES IN LAW, POLITICS, AND THEATRE
IMC Programming Committee,
Klaus P. Oschema, Historisches Seminar, Ruprecht-Karls-Universität
Heidelberg
Medieval Law in the Modern World (Language: English)
Christine Kozikowski, School of English Studies, College of The
Bahamas
Matilda di Canossa in the Italian and German Literature and
Iconography in the 19th Century (Language: English)
Donatella Jager Bedogni, L’Associazione ‘Amici di Matilde e del Castello
di Bianello’, Reggio Emilia
Why Do We Need Medieval Theatre?: Ideas, Categories,
Performances (Language: English)
Piotr Morawski, Institute of Polish Culture, Uniwersytet Warszawski
1109
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.17
THE RECEPTION AND EVOLUTION OF CAROLINE MINUSCULE IN THE IBERIAN
PENINSULA, II: RESISTANCE TO CAROLINE MINUSCULE
Network for the Study of Caroline Minuscule
Ainoa Castro Correa, Department of History, King’’s College London
Kati Ihnat, School of Arts, University of Bristol
De la escritura visigótica a la carolina: Pasos hacia la nueva
producción epigráfica en los centros de La Rioja (Language:
Español)
Irene Pereira García, Departamento de Patrimonio Artístico y
Documental, Universidad de León
Cultura escrita en el monasterio de Santa María de Monfero (A
Coruña): Notarios y ‘scriptores’ de los ss. XII y XIII (Language:
Español)
María Teresa Carrasco Lazareno, Departamento de Historia Antigua,
Historia Medieval y Paleografía y Diplomática, Universidad Autónoma de
Madrid
Abbreviation by Superscripted Vowel: Its Arrival and Use in
Documents and Books from Castile (Language: English)
Francisco J. Molina de la Torre, Departamento de Prehistoria,
Arqueología, Antropología Social y Ciencias y Técnicas Historiográficas,
Universidad de Valladolid
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1110-a:
Paper 1110-b:
Paper 1110-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1111-a:
Paper 1111-b:
Paper 1111-c:
1110
Leeds University Union: Room 2 - Elland Road
OLD NORSE HISTORIOGRAPHY, KNOWLEDGE, AND LORE: TRANSFORMATION
IN TRANSMISSION AND TRANSLATION
Abteilung für Skandinavische Sprachen und Literaturen, Rheinische
Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn
Michael Irlenbusch-Reynard, Abteilung für Skandinavische Sprachen
und Literaturen, Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn
Sabine Heidi Walther, Nordisk Forskningsinstitut, Københavns
Universitet
Translating and Rendering of Historiographical Texts in
Medieval Denmark and Sweden (Language: English)
Anja Ute Blode, Institut für Skandinavistik / Fennistik, Universität zu
Köln
Both Healers and Scholars: East Norse Medico-Literary
Networks (Language: English)
Regina Jucknies, Institut für Skandinavistik / Fennistik, Universität zu
Köln
Adjusted Paganity: A Proxy War or Just a Bias in the German
Reception of Jómsvíkinga Saga? (Language: English)
Michael Irlenbusch-Reynard
1111
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.10
CAROLINGIAN LOCAL PRIESTS, II: LOCAL MANUSCRIPTS, LOCAL
KNOWLEDGE
Carine van Rhijn, Departement Geschiedenis en Kunstgeschiedenis,
Universiteit Utrecht
Steffen Patzold, Seminar für Mittelalterliche Geschichte, EberhardKarls-Universität Tübingen
What Did Carolingian Local Priests Know (or Not)?: Some
Reflections on a Letter Sent by Raban Maur to the Priest
Regimboldus, c. 850 (Language: English)
Charles Mériaux, Institut de recherches historiques du Septenrion
(IRHiS), Université de Lille 3
‘Instruction-Readers for Priests’: Books for Educating
Carolingian Local Priests (Language: English)
Monika Wenz, Graduiertenkolleg 1662 ‘Religiöses Wissen im
vormodernen Europa (800–1800)’, Eberhard-Karls-Universität Tübingen
Prognostic Texts for Local Pastoral Care?: The Case of MS El
Escorial L III 8 (Language: English)
Carine van Rhijn
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1112-a:
Paper 1112-b:
Paper 1112-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1113-a:
Paper 1113-b:
1112
Parkinson Building: Room B.09
MURDER AND MAYHEM: DISORDER AND VIOLENCE IN ITALY, 568-1154, II
Christopher Heath, School of Arts, Languages & Cultures, University of
Manchester and Robert Houghton, Department of History, University of
Winchester
Giacomo Vignodelli, Dipartimento di Storia Culture Civiltà, Università di
Bologna
Sex, Denigration, and Violence: A Representation of Political
Competition between Two Aristocratic Kinships in 9th-Century
Italy (Language: English)
Edoardo Manarini, Istituto Italiano per gli Studi Storici, Napoli
‘Italy and Her [German] Invaders’: Otto III’s and Frederick
Barbarossa’s Early Tours of Italy - Pomp, Generosity, and
Ferocity (Language: English)
Penelope Joan Nash, Department of History, University of Sydney
Violence in Rome: The Papal Election of Honorius II (Language:
English)
Enrico Veneziani, St Andrews Institute of Mediaeval Studies, University
of St Andrews
1113
Baines Wing: Room G.37
CANNIBALISM: OF MAN EATING MEN
Centre of Archaeometry & Molecular Archaeology, Universität Salzburg
/ Interfaculty Department of Legal Medicine, Universität Salzburg /
Oswald von Wolkenstein-Gesellschaft
Jan Cemper-Kiesslich, Interfakultärer Fachbereich Gerichtsmedizin und
Forensische Neuropsychiatrie, Universität Salzburg
Jan Cemper-Kiesslich
Forensic Evaluation of Cannibalism (Language: English)
Herwig Brandtner, Interfakultärer Fachbereich Gerichtsmedizin und
Forensische Neuropsychiatrie, Universität Salzburg
The Magic of the Human Heart: Why Heart-Eaters Devour the
Human Heart (Language: English)
Christa Agnes Tuczay, Institut für Germanistik, Universität Wien
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1115-a:
Paper 1115-b:
Paper 1115-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1116-a:
Paper 1116-b:
1115
Baines Wing: Room 1.15
FOOD PROCESSING, CONSUMPTION, TRADE, AND SUPPLIES IN MEDIEVAL
SARDINIA: THE KINGDOM OF ARBOREA
Istituto di Storia dell’Europa Mediterranea (Consiglio Nazionale delle
Ricerche), Cagliari, and Museo Multimediale del regno di Arborèa, Las
Plassas
Giovanni Serreli, Istituto di Storia dell’Europa Mediterranea (Consiglio
Nazionale delle Ricerche), Cagliari
Rossana Martorelli, Dipartimento di Storia, Beni culturali e Territorio,
Università degli Studi di Cagliari
Farming Medieval Sardinia: Geoarchaeology in the Historic
Landscape of Marmilla (Language: English)
Federica Sulas, Istituto di Storia dell’Europa Mediterranea (Consiglio
Nazionale delle Ricerche), Cagliari
Food Ware and Wastes from the Excavations at the Medieval
Castle of Marmilla (Language: English)
Alex Metcalfe, Department of History, Lancaster University and
Gabriella Uccheddu, Museo Multimediale del regno di Arborèa, Las
Plassas
Marmilla (Kingdom of Arborea, Sardinia), Its Castle, and Food
Supplies, 14th-15th Centuries (Language: English)
Giovanni Serreli
1116
Michael Sadler Building: Banham Theatre
FAMINE, DEARTH, AND FOOD SUPPLY IN THE MEDITERRANEAN WORLD: NEW
APPROACHES FROM CATALONIAN EVIDENCE, I
Project ‘Mercados alimenticios en la Edad Media: actores, mecanismos
y dinámicas’ (HAR2012-31802, MINECO, Gobierno de España),
Universitat de Lleida / Departament d’Història Medieval, Paleografia i
Diplomàtica, Universitat de Barcelona
Pere Benito i Monclús, Departament d’Història, Universitat de Lleida,
Rosa Lluch Bramon, Departament d’Història Medieval, Paleografia i
Diplomàtica, Universitat de Barcelona and Antoni Riera i Melis,
Departament d’Història Medieval, Paleografia i Diplomàtica, Universitat
de Barcelona
Paul Freedman, Department of History, Yale University
The Mediterranean Great Famine of 1333-1334 from Catalonian
Evidence (Language: English)
Joan Montoro i Maltas, Departament d’Història, Universitat de Lleida
Medieval Conceptions of Food Dearth and Famine in Catalan and
European Literary Sources (Language: English)
Pol Serrahima Bàlius, Departament d’Història, Universitat de Lleida
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 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:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1119-a:
Paper 1119-b:
Paper 1119-c:
1117
Baines Wing: Room G.36
FOOD IN THE MONASTERY, I
IMC Programming Committee,
Spencer Jacob Weinreich, Faculty of Theology & Religion, University of
Oxford
Rebellion, Starvation, and Romantic Dinners: The Role of Food
in Late Medieval Monastic Misconduct (Language: English)
Christian Knudsen, Faculty of Humanities & Social Sciences, Sheridan
College, Ontario
Eucharistic Theology, Monastic Practice, and Feeding Body and
Soul (Language: English)
Jerome Joseph Day, Department of English, Saint Anselm College, New
Hampshire
Gestures in the Refectory: Sign Language as Evidence for
Monastic Diet (Language: English)
Debby Banham, Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse & Celtic, University
of Cambridge
1118
Baines Wing: Room 2.13
FLOWERS, GOURDS, AND GREEN MEN: THEOLOGY AND SYMBOLISM IN
MEDIEVAL ART
IMC Programming Committee,
Julian Gardner, Department of the History of Art, University of Warwick
The Green Man, the Misericord, and Death of the Wilderness in
the Monastic Choir (Language: English)
Paulette Barton, Department of Modern Languages & Classics,
University of Maine, Orono
The Virgin in the Garden: From Earthly Delights to Divine Music
(Language: English)
Laura-Cristina Stefanescu, Department of Music, University of Sheffield
Jonah and the Gourd: Symbolic Flora in Quattrocento Ferrara
(Language: English)
Claudia Wardle, School of Modern Languages & Cultures, Durham
University
1119
Baines Wing: Room 1.16
FOOD IN THE BIBLE AND AUGUSTINE
IMC Programming Committee,
Messod Salama, Department of French & Spanish, Memorial University
of Newfoundland
Picturing Food in the Bible: From Eve’s ‘Apple’ to the Last
Supper (Language: English)
C. M. Kauffmann, Courtauld Institute of Art, University of London
The Bread of Life: Culinary Evidence in Biblical Manuscript
Illumination (Language: English)
Christine Sciacca, Department of Manuscripts, J. Paul Getty Museum,
Los Angeles
Biblical and Anthropological Foundations of Augustine’s Food
Metaphors (Language: English)
Irena Avsenik Nabergoj, Scientific Research Centre, Slovenian Academy
of Sciences & Arts, Ljubljana
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1120-a:
Paper 1120-b:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1121-a:
Paper 1121-b:
Paper 1121-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1122-a:
Paper 1122-b:
Paper 1122-c:
1120
Parkinson Building: Room 1.08
SPIRITUAL NOURISHMENT: LATE ANTIQUE AND EARLY MEDIEVAL WORLD
CHRONICLES, II - EAST AND WEST
Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
Jonas Borsch, Seminar für Alte Geschichte, Eberhard-Karls-Universität
Tübingen / Heidelberger Akademie der Wissenschaften, Christian
Gastgeber, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische Akademie
der Wissenschaften, Wien and Christine Radtki, Seminar für Alte
Geschichte, Eberhard-Karls-Universität Tübingen / Heidelberger
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Heidelberg
Hans-Werner Goetz, Historisches Seminar, Universität Hamburg
Shortage of Fish or Lack of Wine: Greek and Roman
Mythological Elements in the Easter Chronicle (Language: English)
Erika Juhász, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien / ELTE Eötvös József Collegium,
Budapest
Why Reporting Catastrophes: The Case of the Easter Chronicle
(Language: English)
Christian Gastgeber
1121
Parkinson Building: Room B.11
SCANDINAVIAN INFLUENCES ON CHANGING TASTES IN DENMARK,
NORMANDY, AND ENGLAND
Sally N. Vaughn, Department of History, University of Houston, Texas
Kerstin Hundahl, Historiska Institutionen, Lunds Universitet
Weapons of Wine: 11th-Century Norman Women and the Use of
Food-Based Poisons (Language: English)
Crescida Jacobs, Department of History, University of Houston, Texas
The Case of the Pickled Herring: Evidence of Viking Settlement
Food Transfers to Normandy and England in the 11th Century
(Language: English)
Sally N. Vaughn
‘They feasted each other sumptuously’: Food as Luxury in High
Medieval Denmark (Language: English)
Maria Dahlstrøm Corsi, Hilton Archives, School of Hotel & Restaurant
Management, University of Houston, Texas
1122
University House: Little Woodhouse Room
COMMUNITY, SOCIALISING, AND FEASTING IN LATE MEDIEVAL ENGLAND
Charlotte Berry, Institute of Historical Research, University of London
Samuel John Drake, Department of History, Royal Holloway, University
of London
‘Don’t Hog the Drinking Cup!’: Saints and Socialising in
Lincolnshire’s Guilds (Language: English)
Claire Kennan, Department of History, Royal Holloway, University of
London
Flemings and Their Social Networks in 14th-Century London
(Language: English)
Milan Pajic, Vakgroep Geschiedenis, Universiteit Gent / Université de
Strasbourg
Policing, Networking, and Dining: The London Wardmote
Inquest as a Social Occasion (Language: English)
Charlotte Berry
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1123-a:
Paper 1123-b:
Paper 1123-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1124-a:
Paper 1124-b:
Paper 1124-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1125-a:
Paper 1125-b:
Paper 1125-c:
1123
Emmanuel Centre: Room 10
FEASTING IN MIDDLE ENGLISH ROMANCE
IMC Programming Committee,
David F. Johnson, Department of English, Florida State University
Fathers, Friends, and Feasting: Food as a Metaphor for Social
Stability in Emaré (Language: English)
Amy Brown, Département de langue et littérature anglaises, Université
de Genève
Sir Gawain and the Green Diet: A Quest (Language: English)
Tania Azevedo, Centro de Estudos Humanísticos, Universidade do
Minho
‘For she made sucha noyse’: Gender, (Dis)Courtesy, and the
Intrusion of the Other at the Malorian Feast (Language: English)
Colin Gordon Davey, Department of English Studies, Durham University
1124
Stage@leeds: Stage 2
ECOCRITICAL OUTLAWS IN MIDDLE ENGLISH LITERATURE
International Association for Robin Hood Studies (IARHS)
Kristin Bovaird-Abbo, Department of English Language & Literature,
University of Northern Colorado
Lesley Coote, Andrew Marvell Centre for Medieval & Early Modern
Studies, University of Hull
Ecomedieval Justice in Robin and Gandelyn and The Tale of
Gamelyn (Language: English)
Valerie B. Johnson, School of Literature, Media & Communication,
Georgia Institute of Technology
Robin Hood as Wolf: Feast or Famine in A Lytell Geste of Robyn
Hode? (Language: English)
Kristin Bovaird-Abbo
Conspicuous Consumption, Masculinity, and Nihilism in the
Outlaw Feasts of the Late Medieval Greenwood (Language:
English)
Sarah Harlan-Haughey, Department of English, University of Maine
1125
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.16
FESTIVE CULTURES AND EVERYDAY LIFE IN THE MIDDLE AGES
Interdisziplinäres Zentrum für Mittelalter und frühe Neuzeit (IZMF),
Universität Salzburg
Siegrid Schmidt, Interdisziplinäres Zentrum für Mittelalter und frühe
Neuzeit (IZMF), Universität Salzburg
Siegrid Schmidt
The Syncretism of Pagan and Christian Festival Rituals in Old
Russia’s Daily Life (Language: English)
Ursula Bieber, Fachbereich Slawistik / Interdisziplinäres Zentrum für
Mittelalter und frühe Neuzeit (IZMF), Universität Salzburg
You Are What You Eat?: The Festive Cultures of Bondsmen and
Everyday Life in the Medieval Eastern Alps Region by Means of
Decrees, Urbaria, and Historiography (Language: English)
Wolfgang Neuper, Archiv der Erzdiözese Salzburg
Innkeepers and Landlords: Gastronomic Regulations in Late
Medieval Salzburg (Language: English)
Jutta Baumgartner, Fachbereich Geschichte, Universität Salzburg
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 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:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1128-a:
Paper 1128-b:
Paper 1128-c:
Paper 1128-d:
1126
Leeds University Union: Room 6 - Roundhay
POLITICAL CHANGE AND METAMORPHOSIS OF CULTURAL LANDSCAPE IN
SOUTHERN ITALY
Francesco Gangemi, Biblioteca Hertziana, Max-Planck-Institut für
Kunstgeschichte, Roma
Maddalena Vaccaro, Dipartimento di Scienze del Patrimonio Culturale
(DISPAC), Università degli Studi di Salerno
New Churches, New Saints?: Architectural and Iconic Change in
Norman Italy in the 11th Century (Language: English)
Oliver Becker, Independent Scholar, Bad Sachsa
Norman Architecture for Norman Monks?: The First Benedictine
Foundations in the County of Sicily (Language: English)
Margherita Tabanelli, Dipartimento di Storia dell’arte e Spettacolo,
Università degli Studi di Roma ‘La Sapienza’
From Kingdom to Empire: Reshaping the Apulian Landscape and
Built Environment Under Frederick II (Language: English)
Francesco Gangemi
1127
Parkinson Building: Room B.08
13TH-CENTURY ENGLAND, II: PIETY, POLITICS, AND POLITICAL CAPITAL,
1215-1272
Thirteenth Century England
Antonia Shacklock, Faculty of History, University of Cambridge
Stephen Church, School of History, University of East Anglia
Swearing at Runnymede: An Oath of 38 Royalists in 1215
(Language: English)
Joshua Hey, St Andrews Institute of Mediaeval Studies, University of St
Andrews
Sacred Place and Sacred Time: Henry III’s Use of the Sacred in
His Kingship (Language: English)
Antonia Shacklock
Simon de Montfort and the ‘Unknown Knight’: The First Crusade
and the Battle of Lewes (Language: English)
Sophie Ambler, School of History, University of East Anglia
1128
Leeds University Union: Room 4 - Hyde Park
VOICING DISSENT IN LATE MEDIEVAL POLITICAL CULTURE
W. H. Oliver Humanities Research Academy, Massey University
E. Amanda McVitty, School of Humanities, Massey University
Gwilym Dodd, Department of History, University of Nottingham
Public Opinion in Late Medieval English Towns: An Anachronistic
Concept? (Language: English)
Christian Liddy, Department of History, Durham University
The Language and Landscape of Political Protest (Language:
English)
E. Amanda McVitty
By Common Consent?: The Involvement of Craftsmen in Urban
Politics in 15th-Century Liège (Language: English)
Ben Eersels, Faculteit Letteren, KU Leuven
Non-Verbal Dissent in Late Medieval Urban Culture (Language:
English)
Pablo González Martin, Wadham College, University of Oxford
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1129-a:
Paper 1129-b:
Paper 1129-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1130-a:
Paper 1130-b:
Paper 1130-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1132-a:
Paper 1132-b:
Paper 1132-c:
1129
Emmanuel Centre: Room 7
CONFESSION IN LATE ANTIQUITY AND THE EARLY MIDDLE AGES
Network for the Study of Late Antique & Early Medieval Monasticism
Albrecht Diem, Department of History, Syracuse University, New York
Rob Meens, Departement Geschiedenis en Kunstgeschiedenis,
Universiteit Utrecht
Self-Disclosure in the Eastern Monastic Tradition in Late
Antiquity (Language: English)
Inbar Graiver, Department of History, Tel Aviv University
Confessional Practice as Pedagogy in Early Medieval Iberian
Rules (Language: English)
Jamie Wood, School of History & Heritage, University of Lincoln
‘[...] because confession and penance free from death’:
Confession as Ascetic Practice and as Pastoral Tool (Language:
English)
Albrecht Diem
1130
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.19
VISUAL FEASTS: TRIONFI, ROYAL ENTRIES, AND CITY FESTIVALS IN LATE
MIDDLE AGES - A SYNOPTIC VIEW FROM CASTILLE, ENGLAND, AND ARAGON
Research Group ‘Understanding, Image & Memory of Past Art’,
Universitat de València
Encarna Montero Tortajada, Departamento de Historia del Arte,
Universitat de València
Lenke Kovács, Departament de Filologia Catalana, Universitat Rovira i
Virgili, Tarragona
Mirror Moves: Art, Court, and City in 15th-Century Valencian
Festivals (Language: English)
Amadeo Serra Desfilis, Departamento de Historia del Arte, Universitat
de València
Royal Entries in Late Medieval Castile: From Aristocratic
Statements to Royal Manifestations of Power (Language: English)
María Teresa Chicote Pompanin, Warburg Institute, University of
London
Designing Queen Elizabeth’s Royal Entry into London, and the
Mystery of the Missing Pageant (Language: English)
Gordon L. Kipling, Department of English, University of California, Los
Angeles
1132
Emmanuel Centre: Wilson Room
FAMINE AND FOOD CULTURE IN THE NORTH
IMC Programming Committee,
Christian Krötzl, School of Social Sciences & Humanities, University of
Tampere
Agricultural Systems, Socio-Economic Transformations, and
Changing Climatic and Environmental Conditions in Medieval
Iceland: 10th-14th Centuries (Language: English)
Jón Haukur Ingimundarson, Stefansson Arctic Institute, Háskólinn á
Akureyri
Hunger Games: Magic, Miracles, and Rituals to Fight Famine in
Medieval Scandinavia (Language: English)
Andrea Maraschi, Department of History & Philosophy, University of
Iceland
The Changes in the Finnish Food Culture after the Reformation
(Language: English)
Marja Hartola, Department of European Ethnology, University of Turku
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1133-a:
Paper 1133-b:
Paper 1133-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1134-a:
Paper 1134-b:
Paper 1134-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1135-a:
Paper 1135-b:
1133
Parkinson Building: Room B.10
CONCEPTUALIZING COMMUNITY IN HIGH MEDIEVAL LITERATURE
Thomas O’Donnell, Department of English, Fordham University
Henry Bainton, Department of English & Related Literature, University
of York
Ascesis and Fictions of Community in the Passio Sancti Albani
(Language: English)
Thomas O’Donnell
The Production of Community in the Chansons de geste
(Language: English)
Luke Sunderland, School of Modern Languages & Cultures, Durham
University
Suffering the Law: Mourning and the Making of a Communitas
Regni (Language: English)
Jennifer Jahner, Division of the Humanities & Social Sciences, California
Institute of Technology
1134
Parkinson Building: Room B.22
ALBERTUS MAGNUS
International Albertus Magnus Society
Irven Resnick, Department of Philosophy & Religion, University of
Tennessee, Chattanooga
Irven Resnick
Why Albert the Great is Not a Dualist on Human Nature
(Language: English)
Paul Hellmeier, Independent Scholar, München
Albertus Magnus on the Eucharist as True Food (Language:
English)
David Torrijos-Castrillejo, Departmento de filosofia, Universidad
Eclesiástica San Dámaso
The Sense of Hearing as sensus disciplinalis (‘Learning’ Sense)
in Albertus Magnus’s Natural Philosophy (Language: English)
Isabelle Draelants, Institut de Recherche et d’Histoire des Textes (UPR
841), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Paris
1135
Baines Wing: Room 1.13
THE MEDIEVAL NILE AND RED SEA AS A PASSAGE OF TRANSMISSION, II:
PILGRIMAGE
Adam Simmons, Department of History, Lancaster University
Joost Hagen, Ägyptologisches Institut, Universität Leipzig
Pilgrimage Relationships in Christianity and Islam (Language:
English)
Jacke Phillips, Department of Art & Archaeology, School of Oriental &
African Studies, University of London
Buying Relics from Paradise: Western Christians at the Nile
(Language: English)
Jessica Tearney-Pearce, Woolf Institute, University of Cambridge
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1136-a:
Paper 1136-b:
Paper 1136-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1137-a:
Paper 1137-b:
Paper 1137-c:
1136
University House: St George Room
CULTURE AND CONFLICT, II: IMAGINING WEAPONS
Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Trevor Russell Smith, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
and Iason-Eleftherios Tzouriadis, Institute for Medieval Studies,
University of Leeds
Joanna Phillips, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
The Word in the Sword: Towards an Understanding of the
Inscribing of Medieval Blades (Language: English)
Robert W. Jones, Advanced Studies in England, Franklin & Marshall
College, Pennsylvania
Unfamiliar Objects in Medieval German Literature: Military
Objects between History and Fiction (Language: English)
Romana Kaske, Institut für Kunstgeschichte, Ludwig-MaximiliansUniversität München
The Image of the Soldier and His Equipment in Art: Changes and
Perception, 1450-1550 (Language: English)
Iason-Eleftherios Tzouriadis
1137
Leeds University Union: Room 5 - Kirkstall Abbey
VISIONS OF COMMUNITY, II: PERCEPTIONS OF THE ‘SELF’ AND THE ‘OTHER’
IN MEDIEVAL IBERIA AND YEMEN
Sonderforschungsbereich 42 ‘Visions of Community’, Universität Wien /
DOC-Team ‘Ethnonyme im Vergleich’ / Österreichische Akademie der
Wissenschaften, Wien
Odile Kommer, Institut für Sozialanthropologie, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien and Salvatore Liccardo, Institut für
Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften,
Wien
Walter Pohl, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische Akademie
der Wissenschaften, Wien
‘Nomen est adimpletio’: The Typological Meaning of Ethnic
Naming in Post-Visigothic Historical Writing (Language: English)
Patrick Marschner, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
Dynamics of Inclusion and Exclusion: Linguistic and Religious
Conceptions in 10th Century Yemen (Language: English)
Odile Kommer
In the Background of Narrative Discourse: Stereotyping of
Ethnic Groups in Ibn al-Mujawir’s Account of a Journey through
13th-Century Arabia (Language: English)
Andrea Nowak, Institut für Orientalistik, Universität Wien
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1138-a:
Paper 1138-b:
Paper 1138-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
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Paper 1139-a:
Paper 1139-b:
Paper 1139-c:
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Paper 1140-a:
Paper 1140-b:
Paper 1140-c:
1138
Michael Sadler Building: Rupert Beckett Theatre
SLAVERY IN THE MEDIEVAL ISLAMIC WORLD, II: SLAVES AMONG THE ELITES
Magdalena Kloss, Institut für Sozialanthropologie, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien and Thomas J. MacMaster,
Morehouse College, Georgia / School of History, Classics &
Archaeology, University of Edinburgh
Matthew S. Gordon, Department of History, Miami University, Ohio
The Treatment of Slaves in the Medieval Islamic World
(Language: English)
Deborah Tor, Department of History, University of Notre Dame
Going beyond the Harem: Eunuchs in the Fatimid Empire
(Language: English)
Serena Tolino, Historisches Seminar, Universität Zürich
Queen Trumps Knave?: Royal Women and Elite Slaves in
Medieval Yemen (Language: English)
Magdalena Kloss
1139
Emmanuel Centre: Room 11
THE CISTERCIAN ABBEY OF RIEVAULX
Cîteaux: Commentarii cistercienses
Michael Carter, English Heritage, London
Stuart Harrison, Ryedale Archaeology Services, Pickering
Guarding Sacred Treasures: The Sacristy and Strong Rooms of
Rievaulx Abbey (Language: English)
Lesley Milner, Independent Scholar, London
‘This house is a holy place’: Rievaulx Abbey - People and Piety,
c. 1300-1538 (Language: English)
Michael Carter
The Rievaulx Abbey Collections (Language: English)
Susan Harrison, Helmsley Archaeological Store, English Heritage
1140
Baines Wing: Room 2.15
PATRONAGE, PIETY, AND PASSOVER: ARTISTIC IMPLEMENTATIONS OF
LATERAN IV IN ROME, OXFORD, AND BARCELONA
IMC Programming Committee,
Catherine Harding, Department of History in Art, University of Victoria,
British Columbia
A New Book for the Laity: Personal Devotion through Text and
Image after the Fourth Lateran Council (Language: English)
Claire Donovan, College of Humanities, University of Exeter
Eating and Feasting in Christian and Jewish Miniatures
(Language: English)
Maria Portmann, Kunsthistorisches Institut, Universität Zürich
Panel Paintings as Reliquaries: The Madonna Advocata of San
Lorenzo in Damaso (Language: English)
Laura Horne, Edinburgh College of Art, University of Edinburgh
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 13.00-14.00
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Purpose:
1198
Michael Sadler Building: Rupert Beckett Theatre
EMBRACING THE #FEMFOG
IMC Programming Committee,
Diane Watt, School of English & Languages, University of Surrey
The misogynist invention of ‘femfog’ and the racist praise of medieval
‘white men’ had unintended positive consequences: an online surge of
willingness to name and act against abuse and unethical behaviour in
medieval studies, not just in Anglo-Saxon studies, not just against
women. Continuing these discussions, we want to expose the
structures that enabled and enable unethical behaviour in universities,
and aim to make medieval studies more fully inclusive, collegial, and
ethical. We want to explore ways of working against emotional, verbal,
and sexual abuse, gate-keeping, exploitation, and bullying especially of
students and younger scholars, racism, homophobia, transphobia,
ablism, and misogyny in medieval studies, and affirm the openness,
collegiality, and inclusivity of our fields.
Participants include David Bowe (University of Surrey), Liz Herbert
McAvoy (Swansea University), Jonathan Hsy (George Washington
University), Dorothy Kim (Vassar College, New York), Christina Lee
(University of Nottingham), Robert Stanton (Boston College,
Massachusetts), Elaine Treharne (Stanford University), and Helen
Young (University of Sydney).
Session:
Title:
Purpose:
1199
Parkinson Building: Treasures Gallery
SPECIAL LECTURE: WHILE SHEPHERDS ATE (LANGUAGE: ENGLISH)
The shepherds in the medieval biblical plays from Chester and
Wakefield (Towneley) are depicted sharing a supper before being
interrupted by an angel who tells them of the birth of Jesus in
Bethlehem. The two groups describe contrasting menus. Using the
cookery book collection from the Leeds University Library’s Special
Collections, this session will examine what the shepherds ate, and the
menus to which they refer. Links will be made to traditional food of the
north of England.
Eileen White is a food historian with a keen interest in how these books
can be a source for historical research.
The session will take place in The Sheppard Room, accessed via the
Treasures of the Brotherton Gallery, where some of these items will be
on display. Special Collections houses over 200,000 rare books and
seven kilometres (4.3 miles) of manuscripts and archives, including the
celebrated Brotherton Collection, the Melsteth Icelandic Collection, the
Archives of the Dean & Chapter of Ripon, the Roth Collection, and the
Oriental Manuscript Collection.
The Reading Room of Special Collections is open from 09.00-18.00
during the Congress week, and IMC delegates are welcome to pursue
their research and explore the collection. More details can be found at
http://library.leeds.ac.uk/special-collections.
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
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Paper 1201-a:
Paper 1201-b:
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Paper 1202-a:
Paper 1202-b:
Paper 1202-c:
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Paper 1203-a:
Paper 1203-b:
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1201
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.15
ECCLESIASTICAL FAMILIES AND NETWORKS IN LATE ANGLO-SAXON
ENGLAND
Mary Blanchard, Department of History, Ave Maria University, Florida
Sarah Foot, Faculty of Theology & Religion, University of Oxford
Keeping it in the Family?: The Extent of Nepotism among the
Late Anglo-Saxon Bishops and Ealdormen (Language: English)
Mary Blanchard
Saints and Ecclesiastical Property Strategies in 10th- and 11thCentury England and Flanders (Language: English)
Alison Hudson, Ancient, Medieval & Early Modern Manuscripts, British
Library
1202
Emmanuel Centre: Room 2
BLOOD, SEX, AND MURDER: THE LIVES AND DEATHS OF MARTYRS IN
MEDIEVAL ENGLAND
Centre for Late Antique & Medieval Studies (CLAMS), King’s College
London
Hana Videen, Department of English, King’s College London
Kathryn Maude, Centre for Late Antique & Medieval Studies, King’s
College London
Hagio-Graphic: The Appearance of Blood in Aldhelm’s De
uirginitate and Aelfric’s Lives of Saints (Language: English)
Hana Videen
She’s Asking For It: Torture, Gender, and Desire in the Old
English Lives of St Margaret (Language: English)
Beth Crachiolo, Department of English, Berea College
The Passio of William of Norwich (Language: English)
Miri Rubin, School of History, Queen Mary, University of London
1203
Stage@leeds: Stage 3
THE MEDIEVAL LANDSCAPE / SEASCAPE, III: PERFORMANCE, POWER, AND
MEMORY
Landscape Research Group
Karl Christian Alvestad, Department of History, University of
Winchester and Kimm Curran, School of Critical Studies, University of
Glasgow
Karl Christian Alvestad
Bordering on the Defensive: Forestal Liminality and Castle
Siting in Medieval Cheshire (Language: English)
Rachel Elizabeth Swallow, Independent Scholar, Altrincham
Landscape and Identity in the Court of Chancery and Star
Chamber: The Leicestershire Gentry in the 15th and 16th
Centuries (Language: English)
Katie Bridger, Centre for English Local History, University of Leicester
‘Walking the line between the past and present’: Recording
Memory in Present-Day Monastic Landscapes (Language: English)
Kimm Curran
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1204-a:
Paper 1204-b:
Paper 1204-c:
Session:
Title:
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Paper 1205-a:
Paper 1205-b:
Paper 1205-c:
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Paper 1206-a:
Paper 1206-b:
1204
University House: Cloberry Room
VIOLENCE, CONFLICT, AND NEGOTIATION IN MEDIEVAL IRELAND AND
BRITAIN, I: INVASION, BUREAUCRACY, AND THE LAW
Medieval History Research Centre, Trinity College Dublin
Áine Foley, Medieval History Research Centre, Trinity College Dublin
Stephen Church, School of History, University of East Anglia
Recalling the Invasion in Late Medieval Ireland (Language:
English)
Caoimhe Whelan, Department of History, Trinity College Dublin
Lordship and Empire: Conflicting Patterns of English Rule in
13th-Century Ireland (Language: English)
Colin Veach, Department of History, University of Hull
Hibernica, Anglica, or Other?: The Experiences of Free Gaelic
Women in English Royal Courts in Ireland, 1252-1327
(Language: English)
Stephen Hewer, Department of History, Trinity College Dublin
1205
Baines Wing: Room 2.14
SINS, SOURCES, AND SALVATION: INNOCENT III’S LAST DAYS
Christoph Egger, Institut für Österreichische Geschichtsforschung,
Universität Wien
Damian Smith, Department of History, Saint Louis University, Missouri
‘Qui tetigerit picem inquinabitur ab illa’: What Is Innocent III’s
Commentary on the Penitential Psalms? (Language: English)
Christoph Egger
How to Learn about The Lost Registers of Pope Innocent III:
Original Letters, Rubricelle, Indice nr. 254, Inventaries and
Decretal Collections (Language: English)
Rainer Murauer, Historisches Institut beim Österreichischen
Kulturforum, Roma
Innocent III’s First Tomb in Perugia (Language: English)
Brenda M. Bolton, University of London
1206
University House: Beechgrove Room
MEMORY, POWER, AND CULTURAL EXCHANGES IN THE MIDDLE AGES
Carlile Lanzieri Júnior, Departamento de História, Universidade Federal
de Mato Grosso
Carlile Lanzieri Júnior
The Picatrix as a Product of the Transcultural Exchange
(Language: English)
Aline Dias da Silveira, Departamento de História, Universidade Federal
de Santa Catarina / Institut für Geschichtswissenschaften, Humboldt
Universität, Berlin
‘In the treasure of our memory’: The Memory according to Three
Characters of the 12th Century (Language: English)
Carlile Lanzieri Júnior
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1207-a:
Paper 1207-b:
Paper 1207-c:
Session:
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Paper 1208-a:
Paper 1208-b:
Paper 1208-c:
1207
Parkinson Building: Room B.10
FROM LEÓN TO LINCOLN: TWO DIOCESES COMPARED
IMC Programming Committee,
Philippa Hoskin, School of History, University of Lincoln
Local Churches, Rural Elites, and Episcopal Jurisdiction in the
Diocese of León, 11th-12th Centuries (Language: English)
Mariel Verónica Pérez, Instituto de Historia Antigua y Medieval,
Universidad de Buenos Aires
A Fight for Church Reform: Richard Gravesend’s Action in 1261
(Language: English)
Sam Howden, School of History & Heritage, University of Lincoln
Piety or Economics?: 14th-Century Charity and the Finances of
Lincoln Cathedral Chapter (Language: English)
Abigail Dorr, Department of History, University of Lincoln
1208
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.10
CROSS-CULTURAL STUDIES OF THE BOOK IN THE GLOBAL MIDDLE AGES, I:
BOOKS ACROSS BOUNDARIES
Centre for the Study of the Middle Ages (CeSMA), University of
Birmingham / Program in Medieval Studies, University of Illinois,
Urbana-Champaign
Arezou Azad, Department of History, University of Birmingham and
William Purkis, Centre for the Study of the Middle Ages (CeSMA),
University of Birmingham
Paula Carns, Literature & Languages Library, University of Illinois,
Urbana-Champaign
Reading Cultures in the 9th Century: Arab, Byzantine,
Carolingian (Language: English)
Leslie Brubaker, Centre for Byzantine, Ottoman & Modern Greek
Studies, University of Birmingham / Institute of Archaeology &
Antiquity, University of Birmingham
Cultural Encounters of the Arabic Book (Language: English)
Neelam Hussain, Department of English Literature, University of
Birmingham
A Sum of Its Parts: The Medieval Persian Book (Language:
English)
Arezou Azad
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1209-a:
Paper 1209-b:
Paper 1209-c:
Session:
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Organiser:
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Paper 1210-a:
Paper 1210-b:
Paper 1210-c:
1209
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.17
THE RECEPTION AND EVOLUTION OF CAROLINE MINUSCULE IN THE IBERIAN
PENINSULA, III: PARALLEL CHANGES - OUTSIDE THE CONFLICT VISIGOTHIC
VERSUS CAROLINE
Network for the Study of Caroline Minuscule
Ainoa Castro Correa, Department of History, King’’s College London
Irene Pereira García, Departamento de Patrimonio Artístico y
Documental, Universidad de León
The Signatures in the Mozarabic Documents in 12th- and 13thCentury Toledo (Language: English)
Yasmine Beale-Rivaya, Department of Modern Languages, Texas State
University
The Signs of the Times: Traditio and Renovatio in the
Illustrations of the 12th-Century Beatus Manuscripts (Language:
English)
Ana de Oliveira Dias, Department of History, Durham University
A Psalter from the Age of Transition: Puzzling Out Old Hispanic
Psalmody in the Late 11th Century (Language: English)
Kati Ihnat, School of Arts, University of Bristol
1210
Leeds University Union: Room 2 - Elland Road
THE CRUSADES IN FRANCE, OCCITANIA, AND NORMAN ITALY: ROOTS,
IMPACT, AND CULTURAL SIGNIFICANCE
Project ‘Crusades in France & Occitania’
Thomas Lecaque, Department of History, University of Tennessee,
Knoxville
Simon Parsons, Department of History, Royal Holloway, University of
London
Hugh of Troyes and the Impact of the First Crusade (Language:
English)
James Doherty, School of Modern Languages, University of Bristol
Some Thoughts and Reflections about a Missed Opportunity:
Norman Italy and the Holy Land, 11th-12th Centuries (Language:
English)
Luigi Russo, Scienza Storiche, Università Europea di Roma
Robert of Bellême, Rotrou of Perche, and Norman Participation
on the First Crusade: New Evidence from the Old French
Tradition (Language: English)
Simon Parsons
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 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:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1213-a:
Paper 1213-b:
Paper 1213-c:
1211
University House: Great Woodhouse Room
FORMING CHRISTIAN AUTHORITY IN LATE ANTIQUITY, I: BUREAUCRATS AND
BISHOPS
Oxford Medieval Studies Programme
Robin Whelan, Brasenose College / The Oxford Research Centre in the
Humanities (TORCH), University of Oxford
Stefan Esders, Geschichte der Spätantike und des frühen Mittelalters,
Friedrich-Meinecke-Institut, Freie Universität Berlin
Elite Competition in Ecclesiastical Patronage at Constantinople,
c. 400 (Language: English)
Meaghan McEvoy, Abteilung für Alte Geschichte, Goethe-Universität,
Frankfurt am Main
The Christianisation of Political Service in the Late Antique West
(Language: English)
Robin Whelan
All Episcopal Politics are Local: Strategies of Creating
Communities in Late Antique Gaul (Language: English)
Merle Eisenberg, Department of History, Princeton University
1212
Stage@leeds: Stage 1
POLITICAL RELATIONS AND TERRITORIAL CONTROL IN CAROLINGIAN ITALY,
8TH-10TH CENTURIES, I
Roberta Cimino, Department of History, University of Nottingham and
Clemens Gantner, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
Marios Costambeys, Department of History, University of Liverpool
Lothar I and Louis II: A Successful Carolingian Father-Son
Partnership? (Language: English)
Elina Screen, Trinity College, University of Oxford
Louis II and Rome: On the Relationship of the Carolingian
Emperor of Italy with ‘His’ Popes Nicholas I and Hadrian II
(Language: English)
Clemens Gantner
Framing the Kingdom: The Sees of Parma and Arezzo between
Louis II and Berengar (Language: English)
Igor Santos Salazar, Dipartimento di Lettere e Filosofia, Università degli
Studi di Trento
1213
Baines Wing: Room 1.14
FOOD IN THE PORTUGUESE MEDIEVAL UNIVERSITY
Departamento da História, Universidade de Lisboa
Hermenegildo Fernandes, Centro de História, Universidade de Lisboa
Maria Helena da Cruz Coelho, Departamento de História, Universidade
de Lisboa
Earning for Learning: The Income of the Portuguese University,
14th and 15th Centuries (Language: English)
António Castro Henriques, Departamento de História, Universidade de
Lisboa
How to Supply a Scholar’s Table (Language: English)
Hermínia Maria Vasconcelos Vilar, Departamento de História,
Universidade de Lisboa
The Liturgy of Feast (Language: English)
Hermenegildo Fernandes
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1214-a:
Paper 1214-b:
Paper 1214-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1215-a:
Paper 1215-b:
Paper 1215-c:
1214
Baines Wing: Room 1.15
WINE AND BEER: TRADING AND PRODUCING ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES IN THE
LATER MIDDLE AGES
IMC Programming Committee,
Philip Slavin, School of History, University of Kent
The Production and Consumption of ‘Landwein’ in the Teutonic
Order’s State in Prussia at the Turn of 15th Century (Language:
English)
Maciej Antoni Badowicz, Wydział Historyczny, Uniwersytetu Gdańskiego
The Import of Luxury Drinks in 16th-Century Turku (Language:
English)
Jenni Lares, School of Social Sciences & Humanities, University of
Tampere
Castelló d’Encús: A Medieval Wine Factory? - Wine Production in
the Northwest of Catalonia (Language: Español)
Ignasi López Trueba, Departament de Geografia i Història, Universitat
de Lleida
1215
Parkinson Building: Room B.09
THE LONG LIVES OF MEDIEVAL ART AND ARCHITECTURE, I: MANUSCRIPTS
AND VIRGINS, PATRONAGE AND PERFORMANCE
Association Villard de Honnecourt for the Interdisciplinary Study of
Technology, Science & Art (AVISTA)
Amanda W. Dotseth, Courtauld Institute of Art, University of London /
Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC), Madrid
Amanda W. Dotseth
‘I pray you remember your suster elizabeth’: The Carew-Poyntz
Hours and Its Patrons (Language: English)
Emily Savage, School of Art History, University of St Andrews
Outliving Destruction: The Virgin(s) of Le Puy-en-Velay
(Language: English)
Elisa Foster, Henry Moore Institute, Leeds
Flying Pigs, Fiery Whirlwinds, and a 300-Year-Old Virgin:
Costume and Continuity in Sacred Performance (Language:
English)
Laura Jacobus, Department of History of Art & Screen Media, Birkbeck,
University of London
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1216-a:
Paper 1216-b:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1217-a:
Paper 1217-b:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1218-a:
Paper 1218-b:
1216
Michael Sadler Building: Banham Theatre
FAMINE, DEARTH, AND FOOD SUPPLY IN THE MEDITERRANEAN WORLD: NEW
APPROACHES FROM CATALONIAN EVIDENCE, II
Project ‘Mercados alimenticios en la Edad Media: actores, mecanismos
y dinámicas’ (HAR2012-31802, MINECO, Gobierno de España),
Universitat de Lleida / Departament d’Història Medieval, Paleografia i
Diplomàtica, Universitat de Barcelona
Pere Benito i Monclús, Departament d’Història, Universitat de Lleida,
Rosa Lluch Bramon, Departament d’Història Medieval, Paleografia i
Diplomàtica, Universitat de Barcelona and Antoni Riera i Melis,
Departament d’Història Medieval, Paleografia i Diplomàtica, Universitat
de Barcelona
Antoni Riera i Melis
Medieval Food Markets: Origin, Structure, and Food Products of
the Rural Markets in the County of Barcelona, 9th-13th Centuries
(Language: English)
Maria Soler Sala, Departament d’Història Medieval, Paleografia i
Diplomàtica, Universitat de Barcelona
Famine, Dearth, and Credit in North-Eastern Catalonia before
the Black Death (Language: English)
Joel Colomer Casamitjana, Departament d’Història Medieval,
Paleografia i Diplomàtica, Universitat de Barcelona
1217
Baines Wing: Room G.36
FOOD IN THE MONASTERY, II
IMC Programming Committee,
Christian Krötzl, School of Social Sciences & Humanities, University of
Tampere
History and Provisions for the Convent in Central Italian
Cartulary Chronicles (Language: English)
Lari Ahokas, Department of Philosophy, History, Culture & Art Studies,
University of Helsinki
Zawiyah Cuisines in the Anatolian Seljukian’s Era (Language:
Deutsch)
Zehra Odabaşi, Department of History, Selçuk Üniversitesi
1218
Leeds University Union: Room 5 - Kirkstall Abbey
VISIONS OF COMMUNITY, III: WHERE FOOD CONNECTS COMMUNITIES RURAL-URBAN INTERDEPENDENCIES IN FOOD SUPPLIES DURING THE
MIDDLE AGES
Sonderforschungsbereich 42 ‘Visions of Community’, Universität Wien
Elisabeth Gruber, Institut für Realienkunde des Mittelalters und der
frühen Neuzeit, Universität Salzburg, Krems
Hugh Kennedy, Department of the Languages & Cultures of the Near &
Middle East, School of Oriental & African Studies, University of London
Balancing an Island Community’s Food Supply: Rural-Urban
Interdependencies and Intra-Communal Conflict on Korčula,
15th Century (Language: English)
Fabian Kümmeler, Institut für Osteuropäische Geschichte, Universität
Wien
Ṣa‘da, a Yemeni Town between the 9th and 12th Centuries
(Language: English)
Johann Heiss, Institut für Sozialanthropologie, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1219-a:
Paper 1219-b:
Paper 1219-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1220-a:
Paper 1220-b:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1221-a:
Paper 1221-b:
Paper 1221-c:
1219
Baines Wing: Room 1.16
A FEAST FOR THE SENSES: TASTE, SOUND, AND SMELL IN MEDIEVAL DREAM
VISIONS
Charlotte Rudman, Department of English, King’s College London
Francesca Brooks, Department of English, King’s College London
‘Owt at the mowthe the fure brast’: The Tastes and Smell of the
Afterlife in Medieval Visionary Literature (Language: English)
Charlotte Knight, Department of English, King’s College London
Feed Your Fear: Fire and Brimstone in Türlîn’s Diu Crône
(Language: English)
Madelon Köhler-Busch, Department of Humanities, University of
Wisconsin-Platteville
Can You Hear That Too?: Sound Perception in Medieval Dream
Poems (Language: English)
Charlotte Rudman
1220
Parkinson Building: Room 1.08
SPIRITUAL NOURISHMENT: LATE ANTIQUE AND EARLY MEDIEVAL WORLD
CHRONICLES, III - WEST
Nordrhein-Westfälische Akademie der Wissenschaften und der Künste,
Düsseldorf
Jonas Borsch, Seminar für Alte Geschichte, Eberhard-Karls-Universität
Tübingen / Heidelberger Akademie der Wissenschaften, Christian
Gastgeber, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische Akademie
der Wissenschaften, Wien and Christine Radtki, Seminar für Alte
Geschichte, Eberhard-Karls-Universität Tübingen / Heidelberger
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Heidelberg
Steffen Patzold, Seminar für Mittelalterliche Geschichte, EberhardKarls-Universität Tübingen
Eutropius: Writer of History or Poliorcetics? (Language: English)
Jonathan Groß, Seminar für Klassische Philologie, Heinrich-HeineUniversität Düsseldorf
The Chronicler as Part of the Chronicle: Explaining Some
Differences in the Accounts of Latin Chronicles of the 5th
Century (Language: English)
Jan-Markus Kötter, Lehrstuhl für Alte Geschichte, Heinrich-HeineUniversität Düsseldorf
1221
Parkinson Building: Room B.11
HUNTING AND HUSBANDRY
IMC Programming Committee,
László Bartosiewicz, Institutionen för Arkeologi och Antikens Kultur,
Stockholms Universitet
Pigs, Transhumance, and the Weald: Rethinking the Evidence
for Extensive Pig Husbandry Regimes in Earlier Medieval SouthEast England (Language: English)
Robert Briggs, Institute of Archaeology, University College London
Hunting Regulations in Medieval Sweden (Language: English)
Sirpa Aalto, Department of History, University of Oulu
The Otherwordly Lure: Supernatural Aspects of the Hunt in
Medieval Welsh Literature (Language: English)
Zoe Bartliff, School of Modern Languages & Cultures, University of
Glasgow
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1222-a:
Paper 1222-b:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1223-a:
Paper 1223-b:
Paper 1223-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1224-a:
Paper 1224-b:
Paper 1224-c:
1222
University House: Little Woodhouse Room
FEASTS AT THE PAPAL COURT IN THE LATE MIDDLE AGES, I
Max-Planck-Institut für Europäische Rechtsgeschichte / Albert-Ludwigs
Universität Freiburg / Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
Jessika Nowak, Max-Planck-Institut für Europäische Rechtsgeschichte,
Frankfurt am Main and Georg Strack, Historisches Seminar, LudwigMaximilians-Universität München
Jessika Nowak
‘Caeremoniarum reformatio’: Reforming Papal Court and Chapel
in Late Medieval and Renaissance Rome (Language: English)
Jörg Bölling, Seminar für Mittlere und Neuere Geschichte, GeorgAugust-Universität Göttingen
A Banquet on the Occasion of the Creation of Cardinal Annibaldo
Annibaldi (Language: English)
Marco Petoletti, Dipartimento di Studi medioevali, umanistici e
rinascimentali, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Milano
1223
Emmanuel Centre: Room 10
GOOD MANNERS / GOOD MORALS: FEASTING AND FASTING IN GERMAN
LITERATURE
IMC Programming Committee,
Ingrid Bennewitz, Lehrstuhl für Deutsche Philologie des Mittelalters,
Otto-Friedrich-Universität Bamberg
(Re)Functionalising Rumold’s Advice: Food and Drink in
Wolfram’s Willehalm (Language: English)
John Greenfield, Centro de Investigação Transdisciplinar ‘Cultura,
Espaço e Memória’ (CITCEM), Universidade do Porto
The Iconography of Feasting in Sebastian Brant’s Das
Narrenschiff (Language: English)
Zita Turi, Institute of English Studies, Károli Gáspár University,
Budapest
Teaching Good Manners with Boorish Manners?: Höfische and
Grobianische Tischzuchte in Medieval Germany (Language:
English)
Mamina Arinobu, Institut für vergleichende Städtegeschichte,
Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität Münster
1224
Stage@leeds: Stage 2
SPIRITUAL NOURISHMENT IN EARLY ENGLISH TEXT AND IMAGE
Centre for Medieval & Early Modern Studies, Stanford University
Elaine Treharne, Department of English, Stanford University
David F. Johnson, Department of English, Florida State University
‘Till ȝure sawles fode’: Nourishing the Body and Soul in the
Ormulum (Language: English)
Carla María Thomas, Department of English, New York University
Food for the Soul or Poison?: Curiosity in Ælfric (Language:
English)
Nicole Guenther Discenza, Department of English, University of South
Florida
Feeding on Blood: Spiritual Nourishment and the Arrows of the
Crucifixion (Language: English)
Catherine E. Karkov, School of Fine Art, History of Art & Cultural
Studies, University of Leeds
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1225-a:
Paper 1225-b:
Paper 1225-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1226-a:
Paper 1226-b:
Paper 1226-c:
1225
Leeds University Union: Room 4 - Hyde Park
EATING (AND BEING EATEN) IN THE AFTERLIFE AND OTHERWORLDS
IMC Programming Committee,
Maria Grasso, Independent Scholar, London
The Food of the Afterlife (Language: English)
William Storm, Department of English, Eastern University, Pennsylvania
Feeding Worms: The Decaying Body in the Context of Prayer
and Devotion (Language: English)
Johanna Scheel, Kunstgeschichtliches Institut, Philipps-Universität
Marburg
‘A pade pikes on the polle’: Women and Punishment in the Later
Middle English Romances (Language: English)
Zoë Eve Enstone, Lifelong Learning Centre, University of Leeds
1226
Leeds University Union: Room 6 - Roundhay
NEW APPROACHES TO REFUGEES AND DISPLACED PERSONS IN LATE
ANTIQUITY AND THE MIDDLE AGES, I
Deutsches Archäologisches Institut, Berlin
Guido M. Berndt, Geschichte der Spätantike und des frühen Mittelalters,
Freie Universität Berlin, Roland Steinacher, Friedrich-Meinecke-Institut,
Freie Universität Berlin and Philipp von Rummel, Deutsches
Archäologisches Institut, Berlin
Mischa Meier, Abteilung für Alte Geschichte, Eberhard-Karls-Universität
Tübingen
Vagi, praedatores, and laeti: Barbarian Refugees in Late
Antiquity (Language: English)
Ralph Mathisen, Department of History, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign
Alans and Goths in the South of Gaul between 411 and 418:
Migrants or Federates? - The Experiment by Honorius and
Constantius Imitating the Pro-Gothic Policy of Theodosius
(Language: English)
Christine Delaplace, Centre Michel de Boüard (CRAHAM) / UFR
d’Histoire, Université de Caen Basse-Normandie
A Scholarly Retrospect: Re-Reading and Appropriating Ancient
Refugees in the Early Modern Era (Language: English)
Stefan Donecker, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1227-a:
Paper 1227-b:
Paper 1227-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1228-a:
Paper 1228-b:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1230-a:
Paper 1230-b:
Paper 1230-c:
1227
Parkinson Building: Room B.08
13TH-CENTURY ENGLAND, III: KING, EARL, AND BARON - LORDSHIPS AND
REALITIES OF POWER IN 13TH-CENTURY ENGLAND
Thirteenth Century England
Rodolphe Billaud, Department of History, Canterbury Christ Church
University
Charles Insley, Department of History, University of Manchester
John de Lacy: Royal Government, Politics, and Rebellion, 12101235 (Language: English)
Andrew David Connell, Department of History, Canterbury Christ
Church University
Henry III’s Takeover of the Honour of Chester: Royal Policy and
Local Discontent, 1237-1254 (Language: English)
Rodolphe Billaud
The Image of Lordship: Richard of Cornwall, Ecclesiastical
Patronage, and the Assertion of Secular Authority (Language:
English)
Adrian Jobson, Independent Scholar, San Francisco
1228
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.16
THE MANY CONCERNS OF A MEDIEVAL ELITE: NOBLES AND GENTRY IN MID14TH-CENTURY ENGLAND AND FRANCE
Society for Fourteenth Century Studies
James Bothwell, School of History, University of Leicester
James Bothwell
Edward III’s Household Knights and the Crécy Campaign
(Language: English)
Matthew Hefferan, Department of History, University of Nottingham
William Montagu, First Earl of Salisbury: The Inversion of A
Royal Favourite (Language: English)
Matt Raven, Department of History, University of Hull
1230
Baines Wing: Room 2.15
LET THE WATERS BRING FORTH: CONCEPTUALISING WATER IN THE EARLY
MIDDLE AGES
Northern / Early Medieval Interdisciplinary Conference Series
Meg Boulton, Department of History of Art, University of York and
Carolyn Twomey, Department of History, Boston College,
Massachusetts
Carolyn Twomey
Pearls before Paradise: Liminal Spaces, Precious Stones, and
Heavenly Waters in Early Christian Mosaics (Language: English)
Meg Boulton
Swimming for Pleasure and Profit in Anglo-Saxon England
(Language: English)
Simon Trafford, Institute of Historical Research, University of London
Eanswythe’s Water: Landscape, Lore, and Literature in Early
Medieval Folkestone (Language: English)
Michael Bintley, School of Humanities, Canterbury Christ Church
University
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1232-a:
Paper 1232-b:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1233-a:
Paper 1233-b:
Paper 1233-c:
Session:
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Organiser:
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Paper 1234-a:
Paper 1234-b:
Paper 1234-c:
1232
Emmanuel Centre: Wilson Room
INTERACTIONS AMONG NORTHERN ITALIAN TOWNS IN THE LONG 13TH
CENTURY
Centre for Medieval & Renaissance Studies, University of Edinburgh
Gianluca Raccagni, School of History, Classics & Archaeology,
University of Edinburgh
Thomas Brown, School of History, Classics & Archaeology, University of
Edinburgh
Peer Polity Interaction in the Italian City Communes (Language:
English)
Edward Coleman, School of History & Archives, University College
Dublin
The First Crusade Against a Holy Roman Emperor and Its
Impact: The Evolution of Factional Strife in the Age of Frederick
II (Language: English)
Gianluca Raccagni
1233
Baines Wing: Room G.37
QUEENS AND QUEENSHIP BETWEEN THE EARLY AND CENTRAL MIDDLE AGES,
I: THE 10TH AND 11TH CENTURIES
Centre for Medieval Studies, University of Exeter
Levi Roach, Department of History, University of Exeter
Alice Hicklin, Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse & Celtic, University of
Cambridge
Henry II, Cunigunde and the Canon Law of Marriage (Language:
English)
Levi Roach
Feed the Birds: Queens, Empresses, and the Politics of Food in
the 10th and 11th Centuries (Language: English)
Megan Welton, Medieval Institute, University of Notre Dame
Richeza, Queen of Poland: Profiting from Ottonian Descent and
Royal Status (Language: English)
Grzegorz Pac, Wydział Historyczny, Uniwersytet Warszawski
1234
Parkinson Building: Room B.22
THOMISM IN THE 14TH CENTURY: DEARTH OR DEVELOPMENT?
Holly Hamilton-Bleakley, Department of Philosophy, University of San
Diego
Chris Jones, Department of History, University of Canterbury,
Christchurch
Hervaeus Natalis and Duns Scotus’s Theories of Sameness and
Identity (Language: English)
Richard Cross, Department of Philosophy, University of Notre Dame
Thomist Natural Law Theory after Ockham: Contexts and
Concerns (Language: English)
Holly Hamilton-Bleakley
The Dominican Charism in the Canonisation of Thomas Aquinas
(Language: English)
Anna Milne-Tavendale, Department of History, University of
Canterbury, Christchurch
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1235-a:
Paper 1235-b:
Paper 1235-c:
Session:
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Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1236-a:
Paper 1236-b:
Paper 1236-c:
1235
Baines Wing: Room 1.13
THE MEDIEVAL NILE AND RED SEA AS A PASSAGE OF TRANSMISSION, III:
MONKS AND MONASTERIES
Adam Simmons, Department of History, Lancaster University
Giovanni Ruffini, Department of History, Fairfield University
Transmission of Religious Literature between Islamic Egypt and
Christian Nubia (Language: English)
Alexandros Tsakos, Institutt for arkeologi, historie, kultur- og
religionsvitenskap, Universitetet i Bergen
Deir Anba Hadra: A Monastery between Christianity and Islam
(Language: English)
Lena Krastel, Berlin Graduate School of Ancient Studies, Freie
Universität Berlin and Sebastian Olschok, Berlin Graduate School of
Ancient Studies (BerGSAS), Freie Universität Berlin
Language Contact and Translation Practices in Medieval Nubia
(Language: English)
Vincent van Gerven Oei, punctum books / Centre for Modern Thought,
University of Aberdeen
1236
University House: St George Room
CULTURE AND CONFLICT, III: IDEALS AND WAGING WAR
Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Trevor Russell Smith, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
and Iason-Eleftherios Tzouriadis, Institute for Medieval Studies,
University of Leeds
Natalie Anderson, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Strategic and Tactical Changes in the Byzantine Cavalry of the
10th Century: Theory and Practice in the Battlefields of the East
(Language: English)
Georgios Theotokis, Department of History, Fatıh University, Istanbul
The Art of Fighting and War: Analysing Contexts of Application
of the Martial Gesture as Codified in the Fight Books and Their
Relation to Warfare (Language: English)
Daniel Jaquet, Max-Planck-Institut für Wissenschaftsgeschichte, Berlin
Picturing Siege Warfare: Siege Views and the Reconstruction of
Early Gunpowder Fortifications (Language: English)
Simon M. Pepper, School of Architecture, University of Liverpool
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1237-a:
Paper 1237-b:
Paper 1237-c:
Paper 1237-d:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1238-a:
Paper 1238-b:
1237
Baines Wing: Room 2.13
A FEAST OF NAMES, I: PLACE NAMES AND MULTICULTURALISM
Dictionary of Medieval Names from European Sources
Sara L. Uckelman, Institute of Medieval & Early Modern Studies,
Durham University
James Chetwood, Department of History, University of Sheffield
Medieval Place Names of Ecclesiastical Reference: A CrossCultural Approach (Language: English)
Andrea Bölcskei, Institute of Hungarian Linguistic, Literary & Cultural
Studies, Károli Gáspár Református Egyetem, Budapest
A Frisian Place Name on the Southwestern Norwegian Coast and
Its Relationship to Old Norse bákn and Old Frisian bāken
(Language: English)
Andrea Maini, Independent Scholar, Vegårshei
Siculo-Arabic Toponyms in the Book of Roger (Language: English)
Katherine Jacka, Department of Arabic Language & Cultures, University
of Sydney
About the Different Hydronymic Layers of the Multilingual
Hungary in the Middle Ages (Language: English)
Erzsébet Győrffy, Department of Hungarian Linguistics, Debreceni
Egyetem
1238
Michael Sadler Building: Rupert Beckett Theatre
SLAVERY IN THE MEDIEVAL ISLAMIC WORLD, III: SLAVES WITHIN THE
HOUSEHOLD
Magdalena Kloss, Institut für Sozialanthropologie, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien and Thomas J. MacMaster,
Morehouse College, Georgia / School of History, Classics &
Archaeology, University of Edinburgh
Lisa Nielson, Department of Music, Case Western Reserve University,
Ohio
Domestic Slavery as a One-Generational Phenomenon:
Importation and Manumission in Medieval Damascus (Language:
English)
Jan Hagedorn, School of History, University of St Andrews
Foreigners Twice Over: Slaves in the Itinerant Household of Ibn
Battuta (Language: English)
Marina Tolmacheva, Department of History, Washington State
University
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1239-a:
Paper 1239-b:
Paper 1239-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1240-a:
Paper 1240-b:
Paper 1240-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1241-a:
Paper 1241-b:
Paper 1241-c:
1239
Emmanuel Centre: Room 11
EVERYDAY LIFE IN RELIGIOUS HOUSES OF NORMANDY AND BRITTANY
Ancient Abbeys of Brittany Project
Claude Lucette Evans, Department of Language Studies, University of
Toronto, Mississauga
Janet Burton, School of Archaeology, History & Anthropology,
University of Wales Trinity Saint David
Réflexion sur les besoins de stockage et la circulation des
denrées dans les abbayes cisterciennes normandes, XIIe-XIVe
siècle (Language: Français)
Jean-Baptiste Vincent, Centre de Recherches Archéologiques et
Historiques Médiévales (UMR 6273), Université de Caen BasseNormandie / Groupe de Recherche d’Histoire, Université de Rouen
The Last Will and Testament of Guillaume Le Borgne, Sénéchal
of Goëlo (1225) (Language: English)
Kenneth Paul Evans, School of Administrative Studies, York University,
Ontario
Eating and Drinking at Beauport and Bégard, 13th-14th Centuries
(Language: English)
Claude Lucette Evans
1240
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.19
ANGLO-SAXON RIDDLES AND WISDOM, IV: LEARNED CONTENT AND
CONTACTS
The Riddle Ages: An Anglo-Saxon Riddle Blog
Megan Cavell, Department of English, Durham University and Jennifer
Neville, Department of English, Royal Holloway, University of London
Megan Cavell
Sorting out the Rings: Astronomical Tropes in Exeter Book
Riddle 4 (Language: English)
Jennifer Neville
When is an Anglo-Saxon Riddle Not a Riddle?: Cracking the
Enigma Code (Language: English)
Andy Orchard, Pembroke College, University of Oxford
How Far Did the Influence of Anglo-Saxon Riddling Reach the
Continent? (Language: English)
Mercedes Salvador-Bello, Departamento de Literatura Inglesa y
Norteamericana, Universidad de Sevilla
1241
Emmanuel Centre: Room 7
FASTING OR FEASTING: NOBLE WOMEN IN CONFLICT
Karl-Franzens-Universität Graz / Oswald von Wolkenstein-Gesellschaft
Käthe Sonnleitner, Institut für Geschichte, Karl-Franzens-Universität
Graz
Sieglinde Hartmann, Oswald von Wolkenstein-Gesellschaft, Frankfurt
am Main
Theodora of Byzantium: A Feasting Empress? (Language: English)
Martina Krall, Institut für Alte Geschichte, Karl-Franzens-Universität
Graz
Fasting: A Cornerstone of Holy Queenship? (Language: English)
Käthe Sonnleitner
Beatrix and Matilda of Canossa: Fasting and Feasting as
Symbols of Power (Language: English)
Ingrid Schlegl, Institut für Geschichte, Karl-Franzens-Universität Graz
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 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:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1303-a:
Paper 1303-b:
Paper 1303-c:
1301
Parkinson Building: Room B.22
THE LIVES AND AFTERLIVES OF ELITE WOMEN IN CONQUEST ENGLAND
Haskins Society / Battle Conference for Anglo-Norman Studies
Chris Lewis, Institute of Historical Research, University of London /
Department of History, King’s College London
Amy Livingstone, Department of History, Wittenberg University, Ohio
The Afterlives of St Wulfthryth and St Wulfhild at Wilton and
Barking (Language: English)
Casey Beaumont, Department of History & Archaeology, University of
Chester
The Madness of Countess Gode (Language: English)
Chris Lewis
What Happened to Anglo-Saxon Women after the Norman
Conquest? (Language: English)
Berenice Wilson, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
1302
Emmanuel Centre: Room 2
USES (AND ABUSES?) OF ANGLO-SAXON SAINTS AND HAGIOGRAPHY
IMC Programming Committee,
Christina Lee, School of English, University of Nottingham
Agency of Impaired People in Their Care and Cure in AngloSaxon England (Language: English)
Marit Ronen, Department of History, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Creating a Nautical Network: Merchant Mariners in the Old
English Life of St Nicholas (Language: English)
Rebecca Shores, Department of English & Comparative Literature,
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Vain Spells or Vain Songs?: The ‘vanissima carmina et friuoleas
incantationes’ in the Hagiography of St Dunstan of Canterbury
(Language: English)
Jesse Harrington, Corpus Christi College, University of Cambridge
1303
Stage@leeds: Stage 3
THE MEDIEVAL LANDSCAPE / SEASCAPE, IV: JOURNEY(S)
Landscape Research Group
Karl Christian Alvestad, Department of History, University of
Winchester and Kimm Curran, School of Critical Studies, University of
Glasgow
Leonie V. Hicks, School of Humanities, Canterbury Christ Church
University
Quentovic (France) in Landscape: A New Approach on the
portus, Its Materiality and the Use of Space between River and
Sea (Language: English)
Inès Leroy, Centre de recherches d’archéologie nationale, Université
Catholique de Louvain-la-Neuve
An Tóchar Phádraig: A Trip Along a Changing Landscape
(Language: English)
John Tighe, Department of History, Trinity College Dublin
Medieval Shrines, Roads, Water, and Livestock in Pyrenean
Mountain (Language: English)
Marta Sancho i Planas, Institut de Recerca en Cultures Medievals,
Universitat de Barcelona
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
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:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1306-a:
Paper 1306-b:
Paper 1306-c:
1304
University House: Cloberry Room
VIOLENCE, CONFLICT, AND NEGOTIATION IN MEDIEVAL IRELAND AND
BRITAIN, II: MAGIC, GENDER, VIOLENCE, AND THE COMMON LAW
Medieval History Research Centre, Trinity College Dublin
Áine Foley, Medieval History Research Centre, Trinity College Dublin
David Ditchburn, Department of History, Trinity College Dublin
Murder, Magic, and Misogyny: The Female Viking Burials of
Dublin (Language: English)
Christina Wade, Department of History, Trinity College Dublin
Women as Victims and Perpetrators of Violence in Late Medieval
Ireland and Britain (Language: English)
Áine Foley
Women’s Experiences of English Law in 15th-Century Ireland
(Language: English)
Sparky Booker, Department of History & Classics, Swansea University
1305
Baines Wing: Room 2.14
PREACHING MERCY IN LATE MEDIEVAL EUROPE
International Medieval Sermon Studies Society (IMSSS)
Marc B. Cels, Centre for Humanities, Athabasca University, Alberta
Pietro Delcorno, Leeds Humanities Research Institute, University of
Leeds
The Unforgiving Servant in Late Medieval Model Sermons
(Language: English)
Marc B. Cels
The Soul’s Computatorium: Images of Mercy in the Sermons of
Robert Rypon (Language: English)
Holly Johnson, Department of English, Mississippi State University
Merciful Flowers: Misericordia in Two Parisian Florilegia for
Preachers, the Manipulus florum and the Liber pharetrae
(Language: English)
Chris Nighman, Department of History, Wilfrid Laurier University,
Ontario
1306
University House: Beechgrove Room
PICNIC IN PARADISE
Leverhulme Trust Project ‘The Enclosed Garden: Pleasure,
Contemplation & Cure in the Medieval hortus conclusus, c. 1100-1450’
Patricia E. Skinner, Department of History, University of Winchester /
Centre for Medieval & Early Modern Research (MEMO), Swansea
University
Roberta Magnani, Centre for Medieval & Early Modern Research
(MEMO), Swansea University
Mysticism, Food, and Sex (Language: English)
Liz Herbert McAvoy, Centre for Medieval & Early Modern Research
(MEMO), Swansea University
Edible Plants in Eden (Language: English)
Theresa Lorraine Tyers, Department of English Language & Literature,
Swansea University
Overindulgence (Language: English)
Patricia E. Skinner
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1307-a:
Paper 1307-b:
Paper 1307-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1308-a:
Paper 1308-b:
Paper 1308-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1309-a:
1307
Parkinson Building: Room B.10
CREATING ORTHODOXY?: THE ESTABLISHMENT AND IMPACT OF NOVEL
RELIGIOUS PRACTICES IN SOCIETY
IMC Programming Committee,
Hope Williard, School of History, University of Leeds
Arianism as Social ‘Phenomenon’ (Language: English)
Astrid Schmölzer, Institut für Alte Geschichte und Altertumskunde,
Karl-Franzens-Universität Graz
What To Do on Sunday?: Answers from Heavenly Letters and
Earthly Laws (Language: English)
Uta Heil, Institut für Kirchengeschichte, Universität Wien
‘Non est ergo idem peccatum ADAE et infantum’: Anselm of
Canterbury, Analogy, and the Origins of Limbo (Language:
English)
Daniel W. Houck, Department of Religious Studies, Southern Methodist
University, Texas
1308
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.10
CROSS-CULTURAL STUDIES OF THE BOOK IN THE GLOBAL MIDDLE AGES, II:
KEEPING, USING, AND DESTROYING BOOKS
Centre for the Study of the Middle Ages (CeSMA), University of
Birmingham / Program in Medieval Studies, University of Illinois,
Urbana-Champaign
Arezou Azad, Department of History, University of Birmingham and
William Purkis, Centre for the Study of the Middle Ages (CeSMA),
University of Birmingham
Wendy Scase, Department of English Literature, University of
Birmingham
St Margaret of Scotland’s Gospel Book (Language: English)
Claire Harrill, Department of English Literature, University of
Birmingham
Rethinking the Courtly Scenes in the Macclesfield Psalter
(Language: English)
Paula Carns, Literature & Languages Library, University of Illinois,
Urbana-Champaign
Postmedieval Responses to 15th-Century Medica (Language:
English)
Rebeca Cubas-Peña, Department of English Literature, University of
Birmingham
1309
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.17
THE RECEPTION AND EVOLUTION OF CAROLINE MINUSCULE IN THE IBERIAN
PENINSULA, IV: THE BRIEF LIFE OF CAROLINE MINUSCULE
Network for the Study of Caroline Minuscule
Ainoa Castro Correa, Department of History, King’’s College London
Ainoa Castro Correa
El proceso de gotización de la escritura carolina en Cataluña
(Language: Español)
Mireia Comas, Departament d’Història i Arqueologia, Universitat de
Barcelona and Daniel Piñol, Departament d’Història i Arqueologia,
Universitat de Barcelona
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1310-a:
Paper 1310-b:
Paper 1310-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1311-a:
Paper 1311-b:
Paper 1311-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1312-a:
Paper 1312-b:
Paper 1312-c:
1310
Leeds University Union: Room 2 - Elland Road
NOT ALL ROADS LEAD TO ROME: BARBARIANS, NOMADS, OUTLAWS, AND
THE ANTITHESIS OF THE ROMAN WORLD
Cooperative Centre for the Centrality of Peripheries
Hervin Fernández-Aceves, School of History, University of Leeds
Hervin Fernández-Aceves
Primitivism and the Concept of the Noble Savage in the Works
and Thought of Dio Chrysostom (Language: English)
Ioannis Papadopoulos, School of History, University of Leeds
‘Better to Live Free as a Barbarian than as a Slave under Rome’:
The Rhetoric and Reality of Lower-Class Alignment with
Barbarians during the 4th and 5th Centuries (Language: English)
Michael Burrows, School of History, University of Leeds
‘Father Gradivus, Who Rules over the Getic Fields’: Jordanes
and the Ontological Question of Nomadic and Pastoral Societies
(Language: English)
Otávio Luiz Vieira Pinto, School of History, University of Leeds /
Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)
1311
University House: Great Woodhouse Room
FORMING CHRISTIAN AUTHORITY IN LATE ANTIQUITY, II: HERESIOLOGY,
HAGIOGRAPHY, AND CHURCH POLITICS
Oxford Medieval Studies Programme
Robin Whelan, Brasenose College / The Oxford Research Centre in the
Humanities (TORCH), University of Oxford
Julia Hillner, Department of History, University of Sheffield
Heresiology as Church Politics (Language: English)
Richard Flower, Department of Classics & Ancient History, University of
Exeter
Heresy and communio in the Letters and tractates of Gelasius I
(Language: English)
Samuel Cohen, Department of History, Sonoma State University
Creating a Chalcedonian Saint: The Career of Euthymius the
Great (Language: English)
Daniel Neary, Corpus Christi College, University of Cambridge
1312
Stage@leeds: Stage 1
POLITICAL RELATIONS AND TERRITORIAL CONTROL IN CAROLINGIAN ITALY,
8TH-10TH CENTURIES, II
Roberta Cimino, Department of History, University of Nottingham and
Clemens Gantner, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
Walter Pohl, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische Akademie
der Wissenschaften, Wien
The First Years of Carolingian Rule over Italy: A Reassessment
(Language: English)
François Bougard, Département d’histoire, Université Paris Ouest
Nanterre La Défense
The Carolingians in the Alpine Valleys (Language: English)
Roberta Cimino
Fiscal Estates in Tuscany, 8th-10th Centuries: Distribution,
Characteristics, and Management Strategies (Language: English)
Simone Maria Collavini, Dipartimento di Civiltà e forme del sapere,
Università degli Studi di Pisa
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1313-a:
Paper 1313-b:
Paper 1313-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1314-a:
Paper 1314-b:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1315-a:
Paper 1315-b:
Paper 1315-c:
1313
Baines Wing: Room 1.14
BOHEMIAN AND HUNGRY: TWO FACES OF A PORTUGUESE STUDENT’S DAILY
LIFE
Departamento da História, Universidade de Lisboa
Maria Helena da Cruz Coelho, Departamento de História, Universidade
de Lisboa
Hermínia Maria Vasconcelos Vilar, Departamento de História,
Universidade de Lisboa
Provisions for Scholars: Suppliers, Goods, and Privileges
(Language: English)
Maria Helena da Cruz Coelho
‘Tabula rasa’: Feeding the Body to Feed the Spirit (Language:
English)
Armando Norte, Departamento de História, Universidade de Lisboa
Eat, Drink, and Study: A Student’s Lifestyle (Language: English)
André de Oliveira-Leitão, Faculdade de Letras, Universidade de Lisboa
1314
Baines Wing: Room 1.15
FARM TO TABLE IN EARLY MEDIEVAL ITALY: ECONOMY, ECOLOGY, AND
SOCIETY OF FOOD PRODUCTION
Slow Food [TM] UK
Caroline Goodson, Department of History, Classics & Archaeology,
Birkbeck, University of London
Marios Costambeys, Department of History, University of Liverpool
Feeding the Early Medieval Venetians: Orchards, Fish Farms,
and Cattle among the Water (Language: English)
Diego Calaon, Department of Anthropology, Stanford University /
Dipartimento di Scienze Ambientali, Informatica e Statistica (DAIS),
Università Ca’ Foscari
The City and the Country: Olives in the Early Medieval Lucchesia
(Language: English)
Benjamin Graham, Department of History, University of Memphis
1315
Parkinson Building: Room B.09
THE LONG LIVES OF MEDIEVAL ART AND ARCHITECTURE, II: BUILDINGS
AND THEIR FRAGMENTS
Association Villard de Honnecourt for the Interdisciplinary Study of
Technology, Science & Art (AVISTA)
Amanda W. Dotseth, Courtauld Institute of Art, University of London /
Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC), Madrid
Amanda W. Dotseth
Recycling Santa Tecla: The Demolition and Afterlife of an Early
Christian Basilica (Language: English)
Charles Morscheck, Westphal College of Media Arts & Design, Drexel
University, Pennsylvania
The ‘Afterlives’ of the Tomb of Bishop Bingham at Salisbury
(Language: English)
Catherine Walden, Independent Scholar, Virginia
The Portal from Coulangé: A Peripatetic Journey (Language:
English)
Nancy Wu, The Cloisters, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1316-a:
Paper 1316-b:
Paper 1316-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1317-a:
Paper 1317-b:
Paper 1317-c:
1316
Michael Sadler Building: Banham Theatre
FAMINE, DEARTH, AND FOOD SUPPLY IN THE MEDITERRANEAN WORLD: NEW
APPROACHES FROM CATALONIAN EVIDENCE, III
Project ‘Mercados alimenticios en la Edad Media: actores, mecanismos
y dinámicas’ (HAR2012-31802, MINECO, Gobierno de España),
Universitat de Lleida / Departament d’Història, Medieval Paleografia i
Diplomàtica, Universitat de Barcelona
Pere Benito i Monclús, Departament d’Història, Universitat de Lleida,
Rosa Lluch Bramon, Departament d’Història Medieval, Paleografia i
Diplomàtica, Universitat de Barcelona and Antoni Riera i Melis,
Departament d’Història Medieval, Paleografia i Diplomàtica, Universitat
de Barcelona
Flocel Sabaté, Grup de Recerca en Estudis Medievals Espai Poder i
Cultura, Universitat de Lleida
The Bread as a Strategic Foodstuff: Demand and Consumption
of Bread in the Late Medieval Catalan Cities (Language: Español)
Antoni Riera i Melis
Fighting Famine in Towns and Cities of the Crown of Aragon,
14th to 15th Century: The Almodí and Its Function (Language:
English)
Pablo José Alcover Cateura, Departament d’Història Medieval,
Paleografia i Diplomàtica, Universitat de Barcelona
Meat Supply, Scarcity, and Conflict in Barcelona at the End of
Middle Ages (Language: English)
Ramón Agustín Banegas López, Departament d’Història Medieval,
Paleografia i Diplomàtica, Universitat de Barcelona
1317
Baines Wing: Room G.36
FOOD IN THE MONASTERY, III
IMC Programming Committee,
Sita Steckel, Historisches Seminar, Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität
Münster
Regular Meals: Refectory and Reform in Anglo-Saxon England
(Language: English)
Max Stevenson, Department of English & Program in Medieval Studies,
University of California, Berkeley
The Physical and Spiritual Food of Gregory VII and Bernard of
Clairvaux (Language: English)
Peter Firth, Centre for Lifelong Learning, University of Liverpool
Eat, Drink, and Be Holy: Food and Community in Religious Rules
(Language: English)
Spencer Jacob Weinreich, Faculty of Theology & Religion, University of
Oxford
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1318-a:
Paper 1318-b:
Respondent:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1319-a:
Paper 1319-b:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1320-a:
Paper 1320-b:
Paper 1320-c:
1318
Leeds University Union: Room 5 - Kirkstall Abbey
VISIONS OF COMMUNITY, IV: RITUAL ASPECTS OF FOOD IN URBAN
COMMUNITIES AND BEYOND
Sonderforschungsbereich 42 ‘Visions of Community’, Universität Wien
Elisabeth Gruber, Institut für Realienkunde des Mittelalters und der
frühen Neuzeit, Universität Salzburg, Krems
Anu Mänd, School of Humanities, Tallinn University
Common Meal as a Sign of Honour in a 15th-Century Urban
Community of the Hungarian Kingdom (Language: English)
Judit Majorossy, ‘Visions of Community’ Project, Institut für
Österreichische Geschichtsforschung, Universität Wien
Food Donations for the Poor in Central Europe and Its Impact on
Stabilizing Urban Communities (Language: English)
Elisabeth Gruber
Felicitas Schmieder, Historisches Institut, FernUniversität Hagen
1319
Baines Wing: Room 1.16
BEGGING FOR IT?: FOOD FOR MENDICANTS AND MISSIONARIES
IMC Programming Committee,
Melanie Brunner, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Travelling Friars on the Food of the Mongols: Comparing the
Perceptions of Friars John of Plano Carpini and William of
Rubruck (Language: English)
Tessa Hosking, Independent Scholar, Isleworth
Dietary Dispositions of Dominicans in Dacia (Language: English)
Johnny Grandjean Jakobsen, Nordisk Forskningsinstitut, Københavns
Universitet
1320
Leeds University Union: Room 4 - Hyde Park
FOOD IN THE CITIES DURING WAR AND PEACE: WESTERN EUROPE AND
CENTRAL-EASTERN EUROPE - A COMPARISON
Beata Możejko, Zakład Historii Średniowiecza Polski i Nauk
Pomocniczych Historii, Uniwersytet Gdański
Balázs Nagy, Department of Medieval Studies, Central European
University, Budapest
Food Provisioning of the Gdansk Naval Squadron in the Late
Middle Ages (Language: English)
Paweł Sadłoń, Zakład Historii Średniowiecza Polski i Nauk Pomocniczych
Historii, Uniwersytet Gdański
Spying on the Enemy’s Food: Intelligence and Provision of Food
during the Preparations of Naval Campaigns - Ceuta (1415) and
Tripoli (1551) Compared (Language: English)
Ardian Muhaj, Academia Portuguesa da História, Lisbon / The Institute
of History, Tirana
The Oaths of Office of Municipal Servants as a Source for
Townspeople’s Food in the Middle Ages and Early Modern Era The Example of Silesian and Moravian Towns (Language: English)
Hana Komárková, Ústav historických věd, Slezská univerzita v Opavě
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
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:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1323-a:
Paper 1323-b:
Paper 1323-c:
1321
Parkinson Building: Room B.11
BEHAVING LIKE ANIMALS?: EATING, HUNTING, AND STEALING FOOD
IMC Programming Committee,
Alice Choyke, Department of Medieval Studies, Central European
University, Budapest
A Hunter of Men: The Human Animal in Sir Gawain and the
Green Knight (Language: English)
Pax Paula Gutierrez-Neal, Department of English, University of Texas at
Austin
Honey, Milk, and Porridge: Food Theft in Reynard the Fox,
Scrapefoot the Fox, and The Three Bears (Language: English)
Rose Williamson, Sussex Centre for Folklore, Fairy Tales & Fantasy,
University of Chichester
Friend or Foe (or Both)?: The Wolf in the Carolingian Age
(Language: English)
Amy Bosworth, Department of History, Muskingum University, Ohio
1322
University House: Little Woodhouse Room
FEASTS AT THE PAPAL COURT IN THE LATE MIDDLE AGES, II
Max-Planck-Institut für Europäische Rechtsgeschichte / Albert-Ludwigs
Universität Freiburg / Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
Jessika Nowak, Max-Planck-Institut für Europäische Rechtsgeschichte,
Frankfurt am Main and Georg Strack, Historisches Seminar, LudwigMaximilians-Universität München
Vanina Kopp, Deutsches Historisches Institut, Paris
Banquets and Conflict Resolution at the Time of Pius II
(Language: English)
Jessika Nowak
Dans les coulisses: Les collecteurs pontificaux (Language:
Français)
Amandine Le Roux, Laboratoire de Médiévistique Occidentale de Paris,
Université Paris I Panthéon-Sorbonne
In the Shadow of the Papal Court: The Teutonic Knights
between Dearth and Inflation (Language: English)
Gabriele Annas, Historisches Seminar, Goethe-Universität, Frankfurt
am Main
1323
Stage@leeds: Stage 2
AULD ENEMIES?: ENGLAND AND SCOTLAND IN THE LATER MIDDLE AGES
Andy King, Department of History, University of Southampton
Sean Cunningham, The National Archives, Kew
‘The Scots, our enemies, taken in war’: Edward III and the
Prisoners of Neville’s Cross, 1346 (Language: English)
Andy King
‘In warre sharpe and fierce’: James II and England, 1449-1460
(Language: English)
Alastair Macdonald, School of Divinity, History & Philosophy, University
of Aberdeen
Spies, Lies, and Diplomacy: English Relations with Scottish
Marchers in the Reign of Henry VIII (Language: English)
Claire Etty, Oxford English Dictionary, Oxford University Press
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 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-b:
Paper 1325-c:
1324
Emmanuel Centre: Room 10
MEDIEVAL HEROES AND RULERS IN GREAT FEASTS, 16TH-21ST CENTURIES
Interdisziplinäres Zentrum für Mittelalter und frühe Neuzeit (IZMF),
Universität Salzburg
Ursula Bieber, Fachbereich Slawistik / Interdisziplinäres Zentrum für
Mittelalter und frühe Neuzeit (IZMF), Universität Salzburg
Ursula Bieber
Medieval Gardens as Setting for Lordly Feasts: From Sorcerous
Creations to Engineering Masterworks (Language: English)
Manuel Schwembacher, Interdisziplinäres Zentrum für Mittelalter und
frühe Neuzeit (IZMF), Universität Salzburg
Historical Rulers of the Past in Feasts in (Post)Modern Times:
From Landshut to Disneyland (Language: English)
Siegrid Schmidt, Interdisziplinäres Zentrum für Mittelalter und frühe
Neuzeit (IZMF), Universität Salzburg
‘A Stomach for Honest Meat’: Medieval Feasting on the Big
Screen (Language: English)
Marlene Ernst, Zentrum für Gastrosophie, Universität Salzburg
1325
Parkinson Building: Room 1.08
‘EYE OF NEWT AND TOE OF FROG’: WITCHCRAFT, CANNIBALISM, AND OTHER
FORMS OF FOOD ADULTERATION
IMC Programming Committee,
Iona McCleery, Institute for Medieval Studies / School of History,
University of Leeds
Witches and B*tches in the Medieval Kitchen: Women and Food
in Medieval Iberia (Language: English)
Dianne Moneypenny, Department of World Languages & Cultures,
Indiana University East
From Boiled Babies to Gingerbread: Medieval Witches’
Connections to Food, Harvest, and Cannibalism (Language:
English)
Monica J. Stenzel, Department of History, Spokane Falls Community
College, Washington
‘Waiter, there’s a hair in my soup’: Food Adulteration by Body
Part (Language: English)
Irina Metzler, Centre for Medieval & Early Modern Research (MEMO),
Swansea University / ‘Homo debilis’ Projekt, Universität Bremen
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1326-a:
Paper 1326-b:
Paper 1326-c:
Paper 1326-d:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1327-a:
Paper 1327-b:
Paper 1327-c:
Paper 1327-d:
1326
Leeds University Union: Room 6 - Roundhay
NEW APPROACHES TO REFUGEES AND DISPLACED PERSONS IN LATE
ANTIQUITY AND THE MIDDLE AGES, II
Deutsches Archäologisches Institut, Berlin
Guido M. Berndt, Geschichte der Spätantike und des frühen Mittelalters,
Freie Universität Berlin and Roland Steinacher, Friedrich-MeineckeInstitut, Freie Universität Berlin
Stuart Airlie, School of Humanities (History), University of Glasgow
‘The Other Völkerwanderung’: Some Thoughts on the
Displacement of Roman Refugees in the Early Medieval West
(Language: English)
Thomas Brown, School of History, Classics & Archaeology, University of
Edinburgh
Differing Fates?: Roman and Barbarian Refugees and Displaced
Persons: Some Case Studies (Language: English)
Guido M. Berndt
The ‘Migration Period’ in Africa: Questions of Refugees and
Migration around the Sahara in Late Antiquity and the Early
Middle Ages (Language: English)
Philipp von Rummel, Deutsches Archäologisches Institut, Berlin
Byzantines, Petchenegs, and Cumans: The Crimea and the
Population Movements of the Northern Black Sea Area since the
10th Century (Language: English)
Thomas Brüggemann, Research Center of Ancient Studies, Berliner
Antike-Kolleg
1327
Parkinson Building: Room B.08
13TH-CENTURY ENGLAND, IV: MINORITIES, INTERREGNA, AND REGENCIES THE PROBLEMS OF SUCCESSION IN THE MIDDLE AGES
The National Archives, Kew / University of East Anglia
Paul R. Dryburgh, The National Archives, Kew
Paul R. Dryburgh
Royal Successions and Interregna before 1100 in Western
Europe (Language: English)
Susan Reynolds, Independent Scholar, London
Minorities as Interregna: The Case of Henry III (Language:
English)
Stephen Church, School of History, University of East Anglia
Interregna in the Welsh Lands in the 13th Century (Language:
English)
Euryn Rhys Roberts, School of History, Welsh History & Archaeology,
Bangor University
‘A wretched outcome’: Queen Yolande after the Death of
Alexander III of Scotland (Language: English)
Jessica Nelson, The National Archives, Kew
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1328-a:
Paper 1328-b:
Paper 1328-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1329-a:
Paper 1329-b:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1330-a:
Paper 1330-b:
1328
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.16
RULES AND BOUNDARIES: LAW AND CRIME IN 14TH-CENTURY ENGLAND
Society for Fourteenth Century Studies
James Bothwell, School of History, University of Leicester
Gwilym Dodd, Department of History, University of Nottingham
Borough Customary Law and Civic Officials in the 14th Century
(Language: English)
Esther Liberman Cuenca, Department of History, Fordham University
Sedition, Subsistence, and Suspicious Foresters: Poaching in
14th-Century England (Language: English)
Toby Salisbury, Faculty of History, University of Cambridge
You ‘Demeaned her Tenderness’: Child Sexual Abuse in the 14th
Century (Language: English)
Alan Kissane, School of History, University of Nottingham
1329
Emmanuel Centre: Room 7
KINGSHIP IN SCANDINAVIAN LITERATURE
IMC Programming Committee,
Alaric Hall, School of English, University of Leeds
A Promising Young Man: Narrating Youth in Old Norse Royal
Biography (Language: English)
Sabine Heidi Walther, Nordisk Forskningsinstitut, Københavns
Universitet
King Sigurd on a Crusade to Eastern Småland as Presented in
12th- and 13th-Century Scandinavian Literature (Language:
English)
Ralf Palmgren, Department of Philosophy, History, Culture & Art
Studies, University of Helsinki
1330
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.19
INTERPRETING THE MEDIEVAL MEAL: MEDICINE, INGREDIENTS, AND
ALLEGORY
Department of History, Durham University
Giles E. M. Gasper, Department of History, Durham University
Sigbjørn Olsen Sønnesyn, Department of History, Durham University
Composing the Medieval Meal: Tracing Recipe Ingredients from
the 12th-15th Centuries (Language: English)
Caroline S. Yeldham, Institute of Medieval & Early Modern Studies,
Durham University
Allegorising the Medieval Meal: Robert Grosseteste and Food
(Language: English)
Giles E. M. Gasper
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1332-a:
Paper 1332-b:
Paper 1332-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1333-a:
Paper 1333-b:
Respondent:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1334-a:
Paper 1334-b:
Paper 1334-c:
1332
Emmanuel Centre: Wilson Room
DANGEROUS BOOKS: READERS’ RESPONSES TO HERETICAL LITERATURE,
APOCRYPHAL SOURCES, AND OTHER SUSPICIOUS TEXTS, 500-1500
Irene van Renswoude, Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts & Sciences,
Den Haag
Yitzhak Hen, Department of General History, Ben-Gurion University of
the Negev, Beer Sheva
Banned Books before the Index Librorum Prohibitorum
(Language: English)
Irene van Renswoude
Spinning Apocrypha: Hrotsvit of Gandersheim and the
Dissemination of Apocrypha for Court and Cloister in Ottonian
Saxony (Language: English)
Helene Scheck, Department of English, State University of New York,
Albany
‘Libri hereticorum sunt legendi’: Jan Hus and His Defence of
John Wyclif, 1410 (Language: English)
Pavlina Rychterová, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
1333
Baines Wing: Room G.37
QUEENS AND QUEENSHIP BETWEEN THE EARLY AND CENTRAL MIDDLE AGES,
II: THE 12TH AND 13TH CENTURIES
Centre for Medieval Studies, University of Exeter
Levi Roach, Department of History, University of Exeter
Björn Weiler, Department of History & Welsh History, Aberystwyth
University
Infantas as Queens: Feminine Lineages and Royal Power in 11thand 12th-Century Iberia (Language: English)
Lorena Fierro, Department of History, University of Exeter
The Myth of Abandonment?: Queen Mothers and Child Kings, c.
1150 - c. 1250 (Language: English)
Emily J. Ward, Emmanuel College, University of Cambridge
Amalie Fößel, Historisches Institut, Universität Duisburg-Essen
1334
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.15
BIBLICAL EXEGESIS AND ITS CAROLINGIAN CONTEXTS
Marie Skłodowska-Curie Individual Fellowship ‘BIBLACE’ / Institut für
Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften,
Wien
Gerda Heydemann, Geschichte der Spätantike und des frühen
Mittelalters, Friedrich-Meinecke-Institut, Freie Universität Berlin
Mayke de Jong, Departement Geschiedenis en Kunstgeschiedenis,
Universiteit Utrecht
Exegesis and the Liberal Arts in Walafrid Strabo’s Handbook
(Language: English)
Richard Corradini, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
Exegesis and Preaching: Hrabanus Maurus’s Homiliary for
Lothar I (Language: English)
Marianne Pollheimer-Mohaupt, Institut für Mittelalterforschung,
Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
Exegesis and Legal Thought: 9th-Century Examples (Language:
English)
Gerda Heydemann
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1335-a:
Paper 1335-b:
Paper 1335-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1336-a:
Paper 1336-b:
Paper 1336-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1337-a:
Paper 1337-b:
Paper 1337-c:
1335
Baines Wing: Room 1.13
THE MEDIEVAL NILE AND RED SEA AS A PASSAGE OF TRANSMISSION, IV:
THE LATER SHIFTING FRONTIERS
Adam Simmons, Department of History, Lancaster University
Adam Simmons
Between Holy War and Symbiosis in the Horn of Africa:
Ethiopia’s Position between the Red Sea Sultanates and Mamluk
Egypt, 1270-1543 (Language: English)
Andrew Kurt, Department of History, Clayton State University, Georgia
The (Vanishing) Frontier of Islam and Christianity (Language:
English)
Petra Weschenfelder, Independent Scholar, Berlin
The Nubian Frontier as a Refuge Area Warrior Society between
c. 1200 and c. 1800 (Language: English)
Henriette Hafsaas-Tsakos, Høgskulen i Volda, Norge
1336
University House: St George Room
CULTURE AND CONFLICT, IV: THE WARS OF EDWARD III
Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Trevor Russell Smith, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
and Iason-Eleftherios Tzouriadis, Institute for Medieval Studies,
University of Leeds
Trevor Russell Smith
Technology, Manpower, and the Matter of England: Revisiting
Edward III’s Early Strategic Thought (Language: English)
Daniel Franke, Department of History, Marist College / State University
of New York, New Paltz
Infantry Discipline and English Martial Culture in Edward III’s
Wars (Language: English)
Kelly DeVries, Department of History, Loyola College, Maryland / Royal
Armouries, Leeds
Crécy and the Memorialization of War (Language: English)
Michael Livingston, Department of English, The Citadel, South Carolina
1337
Baines Wing: Room 2.13
A FEAST OF NAMES, II: CONTACT OF CULTURES AND THE EVOLUTION OF
GIVEN NAMES
Dictionary of Medieval Names from European Sources
Sara L. Uckelman, Institute of Medieval & Early Modern Studies,
Durham University
Drew Shiel, National Institute for Digital Learning, Dublin City
University
You Can Call Me Al-Cuin: A Re-Evaluation of Medieval English
Personal Naming, 900-1100 (Language: English)
James Chetwood, Department of History, University of Sheffield
A Typology of Contact Phenomena in Medieval Personal Names
(Language: English)
Mariann Slíz, Institute of Hungarian Linguistics & Finno-Ugric Studies,
Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest
Þá hálgan: An Etymological and Cross-Linguistic Analysis of
Anthroponyms (Language: English)
Serena Martinolich, Scuola di Lingua e Cultura Italiana per Stranieri,
Università degli Studi di Genova
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 16.30-18.00
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1338-a:
Paper 1338-b:
Paper 1338-c:
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Organiser:
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Paper 1339-a:
Paper 1339-b:
Paper 1339-c:
1338
Michael Sadler Building: Rupert Beckett Theatre
SLAVERY IN THE MEDIEVAL ISLAMIC WORLD, IV: CONCUBINAGE AND
SLAVERY IN THE ISLAMICATE WORLD
Magdalena Kloss, Institut für Sozialanthropologie, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien, Thomas J. MacMaster, Morehouse
College, Georgia / School of History, Classics & Archaeology, University
of Edinburgh and Lisa Nielson, Department of Music, Case Western
Reserve University, Ohio
Thomas J. MacMaster
Slavery, Gender, and Music in Kitab al-Aghani: Revisiting the
Cultural Boundaries of Women Musicians in Medieval Islam
(Language: English)
Karen Moukheiber, Orient-Institut Beirut
Concubinage and Sexual Slavery in Medieval Arab-Islamic Erotic
Literature (Language: English)
Pernilla Myrne, Institutionen för språk och litteraturer, Göteborgs
Universitet
Gender, Ethnicity, and Slavery in Early Islamic Music Discourse
(Language: English)
Lisa Nielson
1339
Emmanuel Centre: Room 11
FROM REVISIONIST NARRATIVES TO NEW TECHNOLOGY: NEW RESEARCH ON
MEDIEVAL MONASTIC STUDIES
Journal of Medieval Monastic Studies (JMMS)
Karen Stöber, Departament d’Història, Universitat de Lleida
Janet Burton, School of Archaeology, History & Anthropology,
University of Wales Trinity Saint David
‘MonkBook’: Towards an Understanding of Social Networking in
Medieval Monastic Orders (Language: English)
Harriett Webster, School of Archaeology, History & Anthropology,
University of Wales Trinity Saint David
The Augustinian Canons in Ireland: Landscape and Settlement
(Language: English)
Miriam Clyne, Monastic Ireland, Landscape & Settlement Project, Trinity
College Dublin
The Figure of Bernard of Clairvaux as a ‘Founding Father’ in the
Late Medieval Cistercian Order (Language: English)
Emilia Jamroziak, Forschungsstelle für Vergleichende Ordensgeschichte
(FOVOG), Technische Universität Dresden / Institute for Medieval
Studies / School of History, University of Leeds
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 19.00-20.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
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Moderator:
Purpose:
1401
Leeds University Union: Room 2 - Elland Road
TRESPASSING (IMAGINED) BORDERS: FROM A PERIPHERAL TO A GLOBAL
GAZE IN MEDIEVAL STUDIES - A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
Martin Buber Society of Fellows in the Humanities & Social Sciences,
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Verena Krebs, Martin Buber Society of Fellows in the Humanities,
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Rebecca Darley, Department of History, Classics & Archaeology,
Birkbeck, University of London / Institute for Medieval Studies,
University of Leeds
Centre and periphery was one of the defining debates of medieval
studies in the late 1970s-1990s, but modern discourses of globalism
and global history, of pluricentrism, and of networks and connectivity
have radically changed the conceptual landscape. ‘Global history’ in its
various and contested forms sometimes seems to place the periphery
at the centre and sometimes to deny the existence of any such
relationship. Networks and connections studies emphasise the
subjectivity of these labels and place increasing emphasis on interstitial
spaces. And yet, scholars working within all of these debates, aware of
the value and nuance they offer, continue also to respond to the model
of centre and periphery. Whether because of source bias, structures of
academic departments, or current accessibility of sites, certain areas
somehow seem peripheral even as we argue for their vital place in the
landscape of medieval studies. Other places seem to be in jeopardy,
should they lose their ‘central’ status, of losing with it the material
underpinnings which make their study possible. In a world of shrinking
resources, do we need some citadels around which we can all rally a
defence? In the world of modern medieval studies, this round table
asks what to do with centre and periphery, whether it remains
meaningful and, if so, how it fits with other models available.
Participants include Alexandra Cuffel (Ruhr-Universität Bochum),
Jonathan Jarrett (University of Leeds), Jakub Kabala (Davidson College,
North Carolina), Fraser McNair (University of Cambridge), Daniel
Reynolds (University of Birmingham), and Felicitas Schmieder
(FernUniversität Hagen).
Session:
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1406
University House: Cloberry Room
THE LIMITS OF THE HUMAN: A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
International Medieval Society (IMS), Paris
Victoria Turner, School of Modern Languages, University of St Andrews
Victoria Turner
Representations, transformations, and interpretations of the human
and/or the human body have long occupied medieval scholars and
continue to encourage us to question ontological categories as well as
boundaries between human and animal, human and object, and nature
and culture. In particular, recent scholarship in this field has been
informed by notions of liminality, hybridity, and translation; critical
animal and object theory; and a renewed interest in the relationship
between science and literature. The aim of this round table is thus to
provide a multi-disciplinary approach to the question of the limits of the
human and to explore new avenues for further study and collaboration
by uniting scholars working across literature, material culture, and the
history of science.
Participants include Françoise Hazel Marie Le Saux (University of
Reading), Elly R. Truitt (Bryn Mawr College, Pennsylvania), and Sophia
Wilson (King’s College London).
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 19.00-20.00
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1407
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.15
EQUIDS: A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
Medieval Animal Data-Network (MAD), Central European University,
Budapest
Alice Choyke, Department of Medieval Studies, Central European
University, Budapest
Gerhard Jaritz, Department of Medieval Studies, Central European
University, Budapest
As has become customary, MAD is organising a discussion on particular
animals in medieval life. This year we are concentrating on equids in all
their expected and unexpected forms.
Participants include László Bartosiewicz (Stockholms Universitet), Alice
Choyke (Central European University, Budapest), Irina Metzler
(Swansea University), and Kathleen Walker-Meikle (University College
London).
Session:
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1409
Leeds University Union: Room 5 - Kirkstall Abbey
THE LEARNED CLERK, II: A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
Learned Clerk Working Group
James G. Clark, Department of History, University of Exeter and Sylvia
A. Federico, Department of English, Bates College, Lewiston
W. Mark Ormrod, Centre for Medieval Studies, University of York
This is the second of two panels organised by the Learned Clerk
Working Group. We seek to further the conversation started at the
Learned Clerk Symposium in July 2015 at Bates on how we might reenvision late medieval textual structures and strategies through a focus
on the manuscript practices of the learned clerk in 14th-century
England. Rather than a study of historiographical versus literary
narrative, the panel aims to bring back into contact these discursive
modes (and subsequent fields of inquiry) through an examination of
their convergence in the work of clerks in several crucial aspects of late
medieval life. How did clerks structure themselves and their topics
through narrative? How did clerical narrative shape events and
thought?
Participants include Katharine Breen (Northwestern University), Sylvia
A. Federico (Bates College, Lewiston), Andrew Galloway (Cornell
University), Esther Liberman Cuenca (Fordham University), and Andrew
Prescott (University of Glasgow).
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 19.00-20.00
Session:
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Purpose:
1430
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.19
‘ARE YOU TWEETING THIS?’: BEST PRACTICES AND POSSIBLE GUIDELINES
FOR SOCIAL MEDIA IN THE ACADEMY - A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
Shenandoah University
Julie A. Hofmann, Department of History, Shenandoah University,
Virginia
Julie A. Hofmann
Social media has become a significant aspect in the professional lives
and relationships of an increasing number of academics. The very
nature of social media platforms, however, can make it difficult for
people to opt out. Regular conference attendees will be familiar with
the wide-ranging opinions academics hold on conference reports posted
without permission on Twitter and on academic blogs. The panelists will
discuss these concerns, help to familiarize the audience with the
current state of best practices, and help to further a conversation about
whether our professional meetings should establish codes of conduct
and guidelines for reporting on panels via social media.
Participants include Leonie V. Hicks (Canterbury Christ Church
University), Dorothy Kim (Vassar College, New York), Rutger Kramer
(Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien), and Kathryn
Laity (College of Saint Rose, New York).
Session:
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Purpose:
1432
Leeds University Union: Room 4 - Hyde Park
THE UNICORN VIRTUAL MUSEUM OF MEDIEVAL STUDIES AND
MEDIEVALISM: A CONCEPT MOVING TO CONSTRUCTION - A ROUND TABLE
DISCUSSION
Medieval Electronic Multimedia Organization
(http://www.medievalelectronicmultimedia.org/)
Carol L. Robinson, Department of English, Kent State University,
Trumbull
Andrew Elliott, Lincoln School of Film & Media, University of Lincoln
The UNICORN Virtual Museum of Medieval Studies and Medievalism is
an online multimedia and multimodal 3D virtual environment. Founded
by members of Medieval Electronic Multimedia Organization (MEMO),
The UNICORN is a public museum/library in cyberspace, including
virtual halls of exhibits that will be open and free to the general public.
This museum is intended to serve as a neutral zone (for researchers,
teachers, organizations, and schools) in which to work, discover, and
play with the medieval. The purpose of this discussion is to inspire
contributions, to invite scholars and artists (as individuals or as part of
organizations) to contribute exhibits.
Participants include Lesley Coote (University of Hull), Jonathan Hsy
(George Washington University), and Helen Young (University of
Sydney / La Trobe University).
WEDNESDAY 06 JULY 2016: 19.00-20.00
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
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Purpose:
1436
University House: St George Room
CULTURE AND CONFLICT: NEW RESEARCH OPPORTUNITIES IN LATE
MEDIEVAL WAR - A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Trevor Russell Smith, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
and Iason-Eleftherios Tzouriadis, Institute for Medieval Studies,
University of Leeds
Eric Burkart, Abteilung Mittelalterliche Geschichte, Universität Trier
War was a constant in the Middle Ages and affected every aspect of
life. In recent years studies have moved away from looking at war in
isolation, and instead began to approach war in its greater medieval
context. This session explores these new avenues of research that have
opened up. In particular, it considers the interaction between culture
and war in the late Middle Ages as manifested in ideals,
representations, and realities. The intersections of these three fields of
research provide fresh perspectives that allow for advances in our
understanding of war and also the reciprocal relationship between war
and medieval society.
Participants include Matthew Bennett (Independent Scholar, Hartley
Wintney),
Daniel
Jaquet
(Max-Planck-Institut
für
Wissenschaftsgeschichte, Berlin), Michael Livingston (The Citadel,
South Carolina), and Georgios Theotokis (Fatıh University, Istanbul).
Session:
Title:
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1437
Michael Sadler Building: Banham Theatre
NETWORK SCIENCE AND MEDIEVAL SOURCES: A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
Applied Mathematics Research Centre (AMRC), Coventry University
Máirín Mac Carron, Department of History, University of Sheffield
Máirín Mac Carron
Building on the success of our session on network analysis and
medieval sources at Leeds IMC 2015, this round table will discuss the
potential applications of network science to various types of evidence
from the Middle Ages and consider the issues and questions that may
arise in such ground-breaking interdisciplinary research. The
participants are all exploring new approaches and methodologies in
their research and represent a broad range of expertise (Maths/Physics,
Late Antiquity, the Viking Age, and Anglo-Saxon England) allowing for a
wide-ranging and lively discussion.
Participants include James Chetwood (University of Sheffield), Julia
Hillner (University of Sheffield), Judith Jesch (University of
Nottingham), Ralph Kenna (Coventry University), Helen Lawson
(University of Edinburgh), and Francesca Tinti (Universidad del País
Vasco).
THURSDAY 07 JULY 2016: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1501-a:
Paper 1501-b:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1502-a:
Paper 1502-b:
Paper 1502-c:
Session:
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Paper 1503-a:
Paper 1503-b:
Paper 1503-c:
1501
Parkinson Building: Room B.08
AD 716: BEDE, WEARMOUTH-JARROW, AND BEYOND, I
Bedenet.com / Bede’s World Museum, Jarrow
Peter Darby, Department of History, University of Nottingham and
Máirín Mac Carron, Department of History, University of Sheffield
Máirín Mac Carron
Accounts of Ceolfrith’s Departure from Wearmouth-Jarrow
(Language: English)
Alan Thacker, Institute of Historical Research, University of London
The Impact of 716 on the Community(ies) of WearmouthJarrow (Language: English)
Paul Hilliard, Mundelein Seminary, University of St Mary of the Lake,
Illinois
1502
Emmanuel Centre: Room 2
OLD ENGLISH TEXTS AND CONTEXTS: NEW READINGS
IMC Programming Committee,
Jennifer Neville, Department of English, Royal Holloway, University of
London
Empathetic Interpretation in the Moralia in Job and the Father’s
Lament (Language: English)
Katherine Norcross, Department of English, University of Illinois,
Urbana-Champaign
The Lacnunga and Early Insular Grammatica (Language: English)
Emily Kesling, Brasenose College, University of Oxford
‘oþþæt ic wæs yldra’: Defining Adulthood through Work in
Anglo-Saxon Writings (Language: English)
Harriet Soper, Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse & Celtic, University
of Cambridge
1503
Stage@leeds: Stage 3
MEDIEVAL MODERN: THE USE OF THE MEDIEVAL IN MODERN AND
CONTEMPORARY ARTS
Centre for Late Antique & Medieval Studies (CLAMS), King’s College
London
Francesca Brooks, Department of English, King’s College London
Meg Boulton, Department of History of Art, University of York
Tracing a Creative Network of the Old English Seafarer Poem in
the 20th and 21st Centuries (Language: English)
Fran Allfrey, Department of English, King’s College London
Multilingual and Multimedia Passion Narratives: David Jones’s
‘Dream of the Rood’ Inscription in The Anathemata (Language:
English)
Francesca Brooks
Fair Field: A Radical Re-Imagining of Piers Plowman across
Theatre, Digital Art, and Site-Specific Performance (Language:
English)
Tom Chivers, Penned in the Margins, London
THURSDAY 07 JULY 2016: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1504-a:
Paper 1504-b:
Paper 1504-c:
Session:
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Moderator:
Paper 1505-a:
Paper 1505-b:
Paper 1505-b:
Session:
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Paper 1506-a:
Paper 1506-b:
Paper 1506-c:
1504
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.10
VIOLENCE, CONFLICT, AND NEGOTIATION IN MEDIEVAL IRELAND AND
BRITAIN, III: SUBVERSION, INTERCULTURAL VIOLENCE, AND ETHNIC
CONFLICT
Medieval History Research Centre, Trinity College Dublin
Áine Foley, Medieval History Research Centre, Trinity College Dublin
Seán Duffy, Department of History, Trinity College Dublin
Resistance and Subversion in Early Medieval Ireland (Language:
English)
Ronan Mulhaire, Department of History, Trinity College Dublin
Relations between the Uí Conchobair and the English in
Connacht, 1249-1318 (Language: English)
Eoghan Keane, Department of History, Trinity College Dublin
Aspects of Peasant Identity and Ethnic Conflict in Post-Conflict
Wales (Language: English)
Matthew Frank Stevens, Department of History & Classics, Swansea
University
1505
Baines Wing: Room 1.13
MEDIEVAL PROSOPOGRAPHY, I: PROFESSIONS AND OFFICES IN MEDIEVAL
EUROPE
Medieval Prosopography
Jonathan Lyon, Department of History, University of Chicago
Alan V. Murray, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Chasing Wild Geese? Prosopography in the Early Middle Ages
(Language: English)
Luca Larpi, School of Arts, Languages & Cultures, University of
Manchester
Catholic Missionaries in the Christianisation of Livonia: A
Prosopographical Approach (Language: English)
Alan V. Murray
Help Wanted: Who Was Qualified to Hold the Office of Church
Advocate in Medieval Germany? (Language: English)
Jonathan Lyon
1506
Parkinson Building: Room B.22
SPIRITUAL NOURISHMENT ON THE MEDIEVAL PERIPHERIES, I
Centre for Medieval Literature, University of York & Syddansk
Universitet, Odense
Steffen Hope, Centre for Medieval Literature, Syddansk Universitet,
Odense
Sigbjørn Olsen Sønnesyn, Department of History, Durham University
From the Ends of the Earth: The Typology of the North in
Medieval Hagiography (Language: English)
Steffen Hope
Spiritual Nourishment on the Anglo-Saxon Peripheries: The
Cults of St Bertellin of Stafford (Language: English)
Lindy Brady, Department of English, University of Mississippi
The Local Cults of Saints and Lay Piety: From Periphery to
Christian Centre (Language: English)
Sara Ellis Nilsson, Department of Historical Studies, Göteborgs
Universitet
THURSDAY 07 JULY 2016: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1507-a:
Paper 1507-b:
Paper 1507-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1508-a:
Paper 1508-b:
1507
Parkinson Building: Nathan Bodington Chamber
DIVIDING AND COLLECTING BODILY RELICS IN LATE ANTIQUITY AND THE
EARLY MIDDLE AGES, I: THE CULTURAL VALUE OF BONES
European Research Council Project ‘The Cult of Saints’, University of
Oxford
Julia M. H. Smith, School of Humanities (History), University of
Glasgow and Bryan Ward-Perkins, Faculty of History, University of
Oxford
Bryan Ward-Perkins
The Real and Imaginary Distribution of the Relics of St Stephen
in Late Antiquity (Language: English)
Robert Wiśniewski, Department of Ancient History, Uniwersytet
Warszawski
‘And they took away from them the bones of their own kings
that the Persians were carrying away into captivity’: The
Significance of Bones in Armenian, Zoroastrian, and Early
Christian Beliefs (Language: English)
Ani Honarchiansaky, Department of Near Eastern Languages &
Cultures, University of California, Los Angeles
Relics of the Ancestors?: Links between Saints’ Relics and
Objects from Reopened Graves (Language: English)
Martine van Haperen, Faculteit Archeologie, Universiteit Leiden
1508
University House: Cloberry Room
TH
POPE HONORIUS III 800 ANNIVERSARY, I
Damian Smith, Department of History, Saint Louis University, Missouri
and Thomas William Smith, Department of History, Trinity College
Dublin
Thomas William Smith
Gregory the Great in the Writings of Honorius III (Language:
English)
Iben Fonnesberg-Schmidt, Department of Culture & Global Studies,
Aalborg Universitet
The Influence of the Paris Masters during the Pontificate of
Honorius III (Language: English)
Jan Vandeburie, Dipartimento di Studi Storici, Università Degli Studi
Roma Tre
THURSDAY 07 JULY 2016: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1509-a:
Paper 1509-b:
Paper 1509-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1510-a:
Paper 1510-b:
Paper 1510-c:
1509
University House: Beechgrove Room
RELIGIOUS MISCELLANIES, I: THEORETICAL APPROACHES TO
MISCELLANEITY
Project ‘Literacy for All’, University of Hull / Project ‘Cities of Readers’,
Rijksuniversiteit Groningen
Sarah McKeon, Department of English & Creative Writing, University of
Hull
Rob Lutton, Department of History, University of Nottingham
Heterarchy, Hierarchy, and Ordinatio: Late Medieval English
Religious Miscellaneity (Language: English)
Ian Johnson, St Andrews Institute of Mediaeval Studies / School of
English, University of St Andrews
Literacy for All: The Poetics of Miscellaneity in Practice
(Language: English)
Elisabeth Salter, Department of English & Creative Writing, University
of Hull
Shedding New Light on Religious Miscellanies: New Insights
through Digital Humanities (Language: English)
Anna Dlabacova, Institut des Civilisations, Arts et Lettres, Université
Catholique de Louvain, Louvain-la-Neuve and Giacomo Signore,
Philosophisches Seminar, Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg
1510
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.15
RETHINKING THE MEDIEVAL FRONTIER, I: CONTROL AND AUTONOMY IN THE
IBERIAN PENINSULA, 5TH-10TH CENTURIES
Jonathan Jarrett, School of History, University of Leeds
Naomi Standen, Centre for the Study of the Middle Ages, University of
Birmingham
The Long Frontier: The Ebro River Valley from the 5th to the 9th
Centuries (Language: English)
Sam Ottewill-Soulsby, Sidney Sussex College, University of Cambridge
Heartland and Frontier from the Perspective of the Banu Qasi,
825-929 (Language: English)
Jonathan Jarrett
Battlefront Ter-Llobregat: Traces of Carolingian Forward
Operating Bases in Catalonia (Language: English)
Albert Pratdesaba, Grup de Recerca en Arqueologia Medieval i
Postmedieval (GRAMP), Universitat de Barcelona
THURSDAY 07 JULY 2016: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1511-a:
Paper 1511-b:
Paper 1511-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1512-a:
Paper 1512-b:
Paper 1512-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1514-a:
Paper 1514-b:
1511
Parkinson Building: Room B.09
STYLUS AS A PAINT BRUSH: WRITING AND ARTISTIC CREATION, 6TH-9TH
CENTURIES, I
‘ICONOPHILIA’: Marie Skłodowska-Curie Fellowship 657240 / Horizon
2020 Framework Programme for Research & Innovation (2014-2020)
Vincent Debiais, Centre d’Études Supérieures de Civilisation Médiévale
(CESCM), Université de Poitiers / Centre National de la Recherche
Scientifique (CNRS), Paris and Francesca Dell’Acqua, Centre for
Byzantine, Ottoman & Modern Greek Studies, Department of Classics,
Ancient History & Archaeology, University of Birmingham
Vincent Debiais
Reading Christian Images before Pope Gregory I: The Case of
the Phoenix in Late Antique Mosaics (Language: English)
Diego Maria Ianiro, Dipartimento di Scienze del Patrimonio Culturale,
Università degli Studi di Salerno
The Iconography of the Dormition after Dionysius the
Areopagite and Hierotheos (Language: English)
Ernesto Sergio Mainoldi, Dipartimento di Studi Umanistici, Università
degli Studi di Milano
Byzantine Hymnography as Spiritual Ekphrasis (Language:
English)
Jaakko Henrik Olkinuora, School of Theology, University of Eastern
Finland
1512
Stage@leeds: Stage 1
THE TRANSFORMATION OF THE CAROLINGIAN WORLD, I
Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische Akademie der
Wissenschaften, Wien
Maximilian Diesenberger, Institut für Mittelalterforschung,
Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
Steffen Patzold, Seminar für Mittelalterliche Geschichte, EberhardKarls-Universität Tübingen
‘For everything to change, everything has to stay the same’:
Dynastic Visions and Revisions in the 10th Century (Language:
English)
Stuart Airlie, School of Humanities (History), University of Glasgow
Bishops and Their Books: The Evidence of the Early ‘Pontifical’
Collections (Language: English)
Sarah M. Hamilton, Centre for Medieval Studies, University of Exeter
Vocabularies of Belonging in the Long 10th Century (Language:
English)
Maximilian Diesenberger
1514
University House: Great Woodhouse Room
FOOD AS TREATMENT, I: DIET AND HEALTH
Wendy J. Turner, Department of History, Anthropology & Philosophy,
Augusta University, Georgia
Iona McCleery, Institute for Medieval Studies / School of History,
University of Leeds
Food for Thought: Diet and Mental Health (Language: English)
Wendy J. Turner
Dietary Advice for the Pregnant and Nursing Mother (Language:
English)
Belle Tuten, Department of History, Juniata College, Pennsylvania
THURSDAY 07 JULY 2016: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1515-a:
Paper 1515-b:
Paper 1515-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1516-a:
Paper 1516-b:
Paper 1516-c:
1515
Baines Wing: Room 1.15
FROM THE FIELD TO THE TABLE: THE CIRCULATION OF FOODSTUFF IN
EUROPE AND THE MEDITERRANEAN IN THE LATER MIDDLE AGES, I
Flávio Miranda, Instituto de Estudos Medievais, Universidade Nova de
Lisboa / Centro de Investigação Transdisciplinar: Cultura, Espaço e
Memória, Universidade do Porto
Thomas Heebøll-Holm, Institut for Historie, Syddansk Universitet,
Odense
Exotic Fruits as Normal Diet: The Import and Consumption of
Rice, Figs, and Raisins in the Hanseatic (Language: English)
Carsten Jahnke, Saxo Instituttet, Københavns Universitet
Mediterranean Flavours in Northern Markets: The Export of
Portuguese Olive Oil and Wine in the 14th and 15th Centuries
(Language: English)
José Miguel Zenhas Mesquita, Departamento de História, Universidade
do Porto and Flávio Miranda
In a Haste for Better Taste?: Continuity and Change in Late
Medieval and Early Modern Food Matters - Bruges (Language:
English)
Inneke Baatsen, Centrum voor Stadgeschiedenis, Universiteit
Antwerpen
1516
Baines Wing: Room 2.14
THE ANNONA, CHARITY, AND THE MATERIALITY OF MARKETS IN LATE
ANTIQUITY, I
Gregor Kalas, College of Architecture & Design, University of
Tennessee, Knoxville
Michele R. Salzman, Department of History, University of California,
Riverside
The Economies of Giving?: Methods, Models, and Material
Cultures of Charitable Consumption (Language: English)
Victor Martínez, Department of Art History, Arkansas State University
Feed the Masses: Some Thoughts on Food Distribution in Late
Antiquity and Beyond (Language: English)
Monica Hellström, Department of Classics & Ancient History, Durham
University
The Changing Landscape of Rome’s Tiber Markets in Late
Antiquity (Language: English)
Simon Malmberg, Institutt for arkeologi, historie, kultur- og
religionsvitenskap, Universitetet i Bergen
THURSDAY 07 JULY 2016: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1517-a:
Paper 1517-b:
Paper 1517-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1518-a:
Paper 1518-b:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1519-a:
Paper 1519-b:
Paper 1519-c:
1517
Baines Wing: Room 2.13
SPIRITUAL FOOD AND ITS PREPARATION
IMC Programming Committee,
Marco Mostert, Onderzoekinstituut voor Geschiedenis en
Kunstgeschiedenis, Universiteit Utrecht
Food for Thought: Feasts and Famines of Religious Writing at
the End of the Middle Ages in England (Language: English)
Katherine Krick, Department of History, Durham University
Preparing Food for Thought: Liturgical Punctuation in the
Copenhagen Leven van Lutgard (Copenhagen, Kongelige
Bibliotek, Ny kongelige samling 168, 4°)? (Language: English)
Jacqueline Elizabeth Wessel, Capaciteitsgroep Nederlandse
Letterkunde, Universiteit van Amsterdam
Making Written Texts Palatable Before and After Gutenberg, or:
What Did Printing Add to the Grammar of Legibility? (Language:
English)
Marco Mostert
1518
Baines Wing: Room G.37
WASTELANDS OR WONDERLANDS?: INTERPRETING MEDIEVAL LANDSCAPES
IMC Programming Committee,
Catherine A. M. Clarke, Centre for Medieval & Renaissance Studies /
Department of English, University of Southampton
Between Guthlac and Hereward: Contrasting Ideals of Fenland
Sustenance (Language: English)
Joseph Grossi, Department of English, University of Victoria
Charnwood Circles: Relationships between People and Place in
Medieval Charnwood Forest, Leicestershire (Language: English)
Ann Stones, Centre for English Local History, University of Leicester
1519
Baines Wing: Room 1.16
FEASTING AND FASTING IN ANGLO-SAXON ENGLAND
Daniel Thomas, Wadham College, University of Oxford
Daniel Thomas
High Feasts in Late Anglo-Saxon England and Later Based on
Calendar Evidence (Language: English)
Kazutomo Karasawa, Department of English & American Literature,
Komazawa University, Tokyo
Ember Days in Anglo-Saxon England (Language: English)
Helen Appleton, St Hilda’s College, University of Oxford
Abundance and Famine in Anglo-Saxon Prognostics (Language:
English)
Marilina Cesario, School of English, Queen’s University, Belfast
THURSDAY 07 JULY 2016: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1520-a:
Paper 1520-b:
Paper 1520-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
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Paper 1521-a:
Paper 1521-b:
Paper 1521-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
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Paper 1522-a:
Paper 1522-b:
1520
Parkinson Building: Room 1.08
ROME AND AFTER, I: FOOD OF THE DIVINE
Oxford Centre for Late Antiquity (OCLA), University of Oxford
Christopher Doyle, Department of History, National University of
Ireland, Galway
Mark Humphries, Department of History & Classics / Centre for
Medieval & Early Modern Research, Swansea University
Idolothyta, Pauline, and Post-Pauline: The Evolution of Food as
Discrimen (Language: English)
Danuta Shanzer, Institut für Klassische Philologie, Mittel- und
Neulatein, Universität Wien
Sun Gods and Saturnalias: Establishing Christmas and Fixing Its
Date in the Late Roman Church (Language: English)
Adrastos Omissi, Faculty of History, University of Oxford
A Banquet of Genres: Eutropius’s War Council, Eut. 2.322-461
(Language: English)
Catherine Ware, Department of Classics, University College Cork
1521
Leeds University Union: Room 6 - Roundhay
FOOD ANIMALS / ANIMAL FOOD, I
Medieval Animal Data-Network (MAD), Central European University,
Budapest
Gerhard Jaritz, Department of Medieval Studies, Central European
University, Budapest
Gerhard Jaritz
Eating Animals: Usual and Unusual Uses of Animal Body Parts
(Language: English)
Ingrid Matschinegg, Institut für Realienkunde des Mittelalters und der
Frühen Neuzeit, Universität Salzburg, Krems
Monasteries and the Sea: Franciscan Marine Foods on Kökar in
the Ålandic Archipelago, Baltic Sea (Language: English)
Beatrice Krooks, Institutionen för Arkeologi och Antikens Kultur,
Stockholms Universitet
The Raven in the Münchner Oswald: A Feathered Foodie?
(Language: English)
Gabriele Schichta, Interdisziplinäres Zentrum für Mittelalter und frühe
Neuzeit (IZMF), Universität Salzburg
1522
Parkinson Building: Room B.11
EATING THE UNKNOWN: TRAVEL AND THE EXPLORATION OF EXOTIC FOOD IN
THE MIDDLE AGES
IMC Programming Committee,
Felicitas Schmieder, Historisches Institut, FernUniversität Hagen
Food From Another World: Medieval Travellers and the
Gastronomical Culture of the Far East (Language: English)
Irene Malfatto, Società Internazionale per lo Studio del Medioevo
Latino, Firenze
Ritual Feasting at the Court of Kublai Khan: Marco Polo’s
Accounts of Food and Drink during His Travels to Yuan China
(Language: English)
Phillip Grimberg, Institut für Archäologische Wissenschaften, GoetheUniversität, Frankfurt am Main
THURSDAY 07 JULY 2016: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
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Paper 1523-a:
Paper 1523-b:
Paper 1523-c:
Session:
Title:
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Paper 1525-a:
Paper 1525-b:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
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Moderator:
Paper 1526-a:
Paper 1526-b:
Paper 1526-c:
1523
Leeds University Union: Room 2 - Elland Road
COOKING AND EATING IN THE CANTERBURY TALES, I
IMC Programming Committee,
Stefanie Goyette, Liberal Studies, New York University
‘Eating Well’?: Food Consumption and Social Disruption in the
Canterbury Tales (Language: English)
Huriye Reis, Department of English Language & Literature, Hacettepe
University, Ankara
The Cooks of The Canterbury Tales: The Backstage of Bourgeois
Social Drama (Language: English)
Oya Bayıltmış Öğütcü, Department of English Language & Literature,
Hacettepe University, Ankara
‘That porter of the gate is of delices’: Chaucer’s Nuns and
Gluttony (Language: English)
Martin Laidlaw, School of Humanities, University of Dundee
1525
Leeds University Union: Room 4 - Hyde Park
FESTIVE SPACE: PREPARING AND DECORATING THE EXTRAORDINARY IN THE
MIDDLE AGES
Gerhard Ammerer, Zentrum für Gastrosophie, Universität Salzburg
Gerhard Ammerer
The Festive Space in a Late Medieval Residence (Language:
English)
Michael Brauer, Zentrum für Gastrosophie, Universität Salzburg
Preparing a Feast (Language: English)
Simon Edlmayr, Zentrum für Gastrosophie, Universität Salzburg
1526
University House: Little Woodhouse Room
MATTHEW PARIS: NEW PERSPECTIVES, I
Centre for Historiography & Historical Culture, Aberystwyth University /
Institute of Medieval & Early Modern Studies (IMEMS), Aberystwyth &
Bangor Universities
Björn Weiler, Department of History & Welsh History, Aberystwyth
University
Thomas O’Donnell, Department of English, Fordham University
Matthew Paris’s Reputation: Fact or Fiction? (Language: English)
Jessica Coatesworth, School of Arts, Languages & Cultures, University
of Manchester
Representing St Albans’s Saintly History in Matthew Paris’s
Manuscripts (Language: English)
Judith Collard, Department of History & Art History, University of Otago
News Gathering in Matthew Paris’s Chronica Majora (Language:
English)
Nathan Greasley, Department of History & Welsh History, Aberystwyth
University
THURSDAY 07 JULY 2016: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
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Paper 1527-a:
Paper 1527-b:
Session:
Title:
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Paper 1528-a:
Paper 1528-b:
Paper 1528-c:
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Title:
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Paper 1529-a:
Paper 1529-b:
Paper 1529-c:
1527
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.19
CELEBRATING EXCESS?: CROSS-CULTURAL PERSPECTIVES ON COURT,
CONSUMPTION, AND AUTHORITY, I - PATRONAGE AND VIRTUE
Geoffrey Humble, Department of History, University of Birmingham and
Sami Kalliosaari, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Geoffrey Humble
Wise Objects?: Luxury Production and Royal Patronage
Promoting the Ideology of Wisdom in the Court of Alfred the
Great (Language: English)
Sami Kalliosaari
Between the ‘Moderation’ and the ‘Excess’: ‘Eating’ and
‘Drinking’ in Don Juan Manuel de Castilla (Language: English)
Federico Javier Asiss González, Departamento de Historia, Universidad
Nacional de San Juan and Hugo Roberto Basualdo Miranda, Gabinete
Historia Universal, Departamento de Historia, Universidad Nacional de
San Juan
1528
Baines Wing: Room G.36
CULTURAL TRANSFER IN THE STAUFEN EMPIRE NORTH AND SOUTH OF THE
ALPS: THE EARLY STAUFEN IN ITALY - PERCEPTIONS, PRACTICES,
ENCOUNTERS, I
Jürgen Dendorfer, Lehrstuhl für Mittelalterliche Geschichte, AlbertLudwigs-Universität Freiburg
Levi Roach, Department of History, University of Exeter
The Court of Frederic Barbarossa in Italy (Language: English)
Jürgen Dendorfer
Imperial Vicars between Germany and Italy during the Empire
of Frederick I Barbarossa and Henry VI (Language: English)
Alberto Spataro, Dipartimento di Storia, archeologia, e storia dell’arte,
Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Milano
Royal Charters of Barbarossa in Italy and the Use of Feudal Law
(Language: English)
Rebekka de Vries, Lehrstuhl für Mittelalterliche Geschichte, AlbertLudwigs-Universität Freiburg
1529
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.16
WAR AND FAMINE
IMC Programming Committee,
Adam Franklin-Lyons, Department of History, Marlboro College,
Vermont
Food, Famine, and Sieges of the Eastern Mediterranean World in
Late Antiquity (Language: English)
Shih-Cong Fan Chiang, Centre for Hellenic Studies, King’s College
London
The Great Crisis…of the Intellectuals?: A Study of the Egyptian
Famine and Civil War of 1058-1072 (Language: English)
Rachel Howes, Department of History, California State University,
Northridge
From Famine to Feast in Portuguese Silves: Muwahid Xelb in the
Iberian Crusades (Language: English)
Dana Cushing, Independent Scholar, Florida
THURSDAY 07 JULY 2016: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1531-a:
Paper 1531-b:
Paper 1531-c:
Session:
Title:
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Paper 1532-a:
Paper 1532-b:
Paper 1532-c:
Session:
Title:
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Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1533-a:
Paper 1533-b:
Paper 1533-c:
1531
Emmanuel Centre: Room 11
NEW LIGHT ON OLD FOLIOS: RE-EXAMINING THE RESEARCH POTENTIAL
WITHIN (ARCH)BISHOPS’ REGISTERS
University of York
Gary Brannan, Borthwick Institute for Archives, University of York
W. Mark Ormrod, Centre for Medieval Studies, University of York
Unstitching the Divine: Research Potentialities from the
Conservation, Digitisation, and Dissemination of the York
Archbishops’ Registers (Language: English)
Gary Brannan
On the Fringes of England to the Centre of Rome: Bishops’
Careers, Networks, and Their Registers, 1282-1317 (Language:
English)
James Richardson, Department of History, University of York
‘Parishioners worthier by estate and degree’: Looking for Lay
People in York’s Archbishops’ Registers (Language: English)
Louisa Foroughi, Department of History, Fordham University
1532
Emmanuel Centre: Room 10
MEDIEVAL FORTIFICATION: TACTICS OF DEFENCE, STRATEGIES OF OFFENCE
IMC Programming Committee,
Kelly DeVries, Department of History, Loyola College, Maryland / Royal
Armouries, Leeds
Conquest or Factionalism: Castle Building and the Expression of
Political Authority (Language: English)
Scott Stull, Department of Sociology & Anthropology, State University
of New York, Cortland
The Siege of London in 1471 (Language: English)
Daniel Spencer, Department of History, University of Southampton
Offence and Defence in the Gunpowder Revolution (Language:
English)
Steven A. Walton, Department of Social Sciences, Michigan
Technological University, Houghton
1533
Parkinson Building: Room B.10
WRITING WOMEN’S LETTERS, I: NOBILITY AND NATIONAL IDENTITY
Epistolae: Medieval Women’s Letters Database
Kathryn Maude, Centre for Late Antique & Medieval Studies, King’s
College London
Hana Videen, Department of English, King’s College London
The Letters of Some Queens from the House of Barcelona as an
Example of Relationships between Courtiers and of Political
Action (Language: English)
Núria Jornet-Benito, Departament de Biblioteconomia i Documentació /
Institut de Recerca en Cultures Medievals, Universitat de Barcelona and
Mª Elisa Varela-Rodríguez, Departament d’Història i Història de l’Art /
Institut de Recerca Històrica, Universitat de Girona
Amor et Virginitas: Addressing Women in Baudri of Bourgueil’s
Verse Epistles (Language: English)
Diana Marie Jeske, Centre for Medieval & Renaissance Studies, Monash
University, Victoria
The Letters of Elizabeth Cressener to Thomas Cromwell:
Communal Negotiation of a Pre-Dissolution English Convent
(Language: English)
Elizabeth Goodwin, Department of History, University of Sheffield
THURSDAY 07 JULY 2016: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
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Paper 1534-a:
Paper 1534-b:
Paper 1534-c:
Session:
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Organiser:
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Paper 1535-a:
Paper 1535-b:
Paper 1535-c:
1534
Stage@leeds: Stage 2
THE ART OF SUCCESSION, I: IDEALS IN THE CAROLINGIAN EMPIRE
Sarah Greer, St Andrews Institute of Mediaeval Studies, University of
St Andrews
Mayke de Jong, Departement Geschiedenis en Kunstgeschiedenis,
Universiteit Utrecht
Lucky 813: Charlemagne’s ius regni and the Empire of Louis the
Pious (Language: English)
Rutger Kramer, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
Tears, Prayers, and the Reception of Power in the Reign of Louis
the Pious (Language: English)
Frances Murray, St Andrews Institute of Mediaeval Studies, University
of St Andrews
With Priestly Sanction: Childlessness at the Carolingian Court
(Language: English)
Zubin Mistry, School of History, Classics & Archaeology, University of
Edinburgh
1535
University House: St George Room
EXPLORING THE 14TH CENTURY ACROSS THE EASTERN AND WESTERN
CHRISTIAN WORLD, I: MONASTIC THOUGHT IN ART AND LITERATURE
Courtauld Institute of Art, London / University of York
Livia Lupi, Department of History of Art, University of York and Maria
Alessia Rossi, Courtauld Institute of Art, University of London
Jessica N. Richardson, Kunsthistorisches Institut in Florenz, MaxPlanck-Institut, Firenze
Hesychasm as a Pan-Orthodox Movement among South Slavs in
the 14th Century (Language: English)
Jonel Hedjan, Centre d’histoire et civilisation de Byzance, College de
France, Paris
Changing Narratives: Ecclesiological Interpretations in 13th- and
14th-Century Serbian Hagiography in its Relations to Byzantium
and the West (Language: English)
Dragoljub Marjanović, Seminar for Byzantine Studies, University of
Belgrade
Saints from the East: Or, What Exactly is the ‘Byzantine’ Nature
of Italian Tre and Quattrocento Thebaid Cycles? (Language:
English)
Christine Ungruh, Kunsthistorisches Institut, Freie Universität Berlin
THURSDAY 07 JULY 2016: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
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Paper 1536-a:
Paper 1536-b:
Paper 1536-c:
Session:
Title:
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Organiser:
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Paper 1537-a:
Paper 1537-b:
Paper 1537-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
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Paper 1538-a:
Paper 1538-b:
1536
Michael Sadler Building: Banham Theatre
MILITARY CULTURE AND IMAGINATION IN LATE ANTIQUE ITALY
IMC Programming Committee,
Ralph Mathisen, Department of History, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign
The Power of Propaganda: Portrayals of Flavius Aëtius in
Panegyric, Epigraphy, and Historiography (Language: English)
Martin M. Bauer, Institut für Sprachen und Literaturen, Universität
Innsbruck
Looking Out to Sea: City-Personification and Maritime Imagery
in Ostrogothic Ravenna (Language: English)
Samuel James Barber, Medieval Studies Program, Cornell University
Weapons of Righteousness: Episcopal Leadership and Barbarian
Threat in Italy, 400-461 (Language: English)
Ulriika Vihervalli, School of History, Archaeology & Religion, Cardiff
University
1537
Leeds University Union: Room 5 - Kirkstall Abbey
CROSSING CULTURAL AND RELIGIOUS BOUNDARIES, I: EXCHANGE AND
CONFLICT IN THE BLACK SEA AND ASIA
Society for the Promotion of Byzantine Studies
Michael Carr, School of History, Classics & Archaeology, University of
Edinburgh
Georg Christ, School of Arts, Languages & Cultures, University of
Manchester
The City and the Sea: Byzantine Naval and Mercantile Policy
between Andronikos II and John VI (Language: English)
Brian McLaughlin, The Hellenic Institute, Royal Holloway, University of
London
Papal Privileges during the Mongol Siege of Caffa and the Black
Sea Crisis of the 14th Century (Language: English)
Michael Carr
The Trading Khans: Commercial Partnerships and Social
Cohesion within the Golden Horde, 1260-1360 (Language:
English)
Marie Favereau, Faculty of History, University of Oxford
1538
Michael Sadler Building: Rupert Beckett Theatre
ASPECTS OF MEDIEVAL SLAVERY, I: SLAVE SPACES?
Marek Jankowiak, Faculty of Oriental Studies, University of Oxford
Thomas J. MacMaster, Morehouse College, Georgia / School of History,
Classics & Archaeology, University of Edinburgh
Slavery in Medieval Hungary: Historiographical Connections
(Language: English)
Cameron Sutt, Department of History & Philosophy, Austin Peay State
University, Clarksville
From Sclavus to Slavus: Tracing a Semantic Shift (Language:
English)
Marek Jankowiak
THURSDAY 07 JULY 2016: 09.00-10.30
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1539-a:
Paper 1539-b:
Paper 1539-c:
1539
Emmanuel Centre: Room 7
DOMINICAN SCHOLASTICISM
German Historical Institute, London
J. Cornelia Linde, German Historical Institute London
Anne Holloway, School of Philosophy, History & International Studies,
Monash University, Victoria
Dominicans on Bodily Identity (Language: English)
Antonia Fitzpatrick, St John’s College, University of Oxford
Cases of Conscience in Dominican Confessors’ Manuals
(Language: English)
Emily Corran, Department of History, St John’s College, University of
Oxford
Who is Your Priest?: The Discussion of Omnis utriusque sexus in
Dominican Commentaries on the Sentences (Language: English)
J. Cornelia Linde
THURSDAY 07 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
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Paper 1601-a:
Paper 1601-b:
Paper 1601-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
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Paper 1602-a:
Paper 1602-b:
Paper 1602-c:
Session:
Title:
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Paper 1603-a:
Paper 1603-b:
1601
Parkinson Building: Room B.08
AD 716: BEDE, WEARMOUTH-JARROW, AND BEYOND, II
Bedenet.com / Bede’s World Museum, Jarrow
Peter Darby, Department of History, University of Nottingham and
Máirín Mac Carron, Department of History, University of Sheffield
Sarah Foot, Faculty of Theology & Religion, University of Oxford
716: Year of Regime Change (Language: English)
Barbara Yorke, Department of History, University of Winchester
AD 716 and Bede’s Portrayal of the Easter Controversy
(Language: English)
Immo Warntjes, School of History & Anthropology, Queen’s University
Belfast
Writing History: Bede and Pope Gregory II (Language: English)
Joanna Story, School of Historical Studies, University of Leicester
1602
Emmanuel Centre: Room 2
NEW PERSPECTIVES ON OLD AND MIDDLE ENGLISH POETICS: LEXIS,
FORMULAE, AND METRE
IMC Programming Committee,
Francis Leneghan, Faculty of English Language & Literature, University
of Oxford
A Feast of Speaking: The Case of ‘secgan soð’ and Its Use in Old
English Poetry (Language: English)
Myriam Frenkel, Faculty of English, Exeter College, University of Oxford
Using Formulaic Diction to Test Extrametricality in Word-Foot
Theories of Old English Poetry (Language: English)
Britt Mize, Department of English, Texas A&M University, College
Station
Old English and Middle English Alliterative Ranks: The Devil in
the Details (Language: English)
Maria Volkonskaya, Faculty of Humanities, National Research University
Higher School of Economics, Moscow
1603
Stage@leeds: Stage 3
CASTLES AS CULTURAL, SOCIAL, AND ECONOMIC CENTRES OF MEDIEVAL
SOCIETY, I
Tobias Grüßing, Fachbereich Geschichtswissenschaft, Seminar für
Mittelalterliche Geschichte, Eberhard-Karls-Universität Tübingen
Steffen Patzold, Seminar für Mittelalterliche Geschichte, EberhardKarls-Universität Tübingen
Exploring Local Administration beyond Legal History:
Ministerials and Servitude Reconsidered (Language: English)
Uwe Grupp, Promotionsverbund Burg und Adel, Eberhard-KarlsUniversität Tübingen
Castles and Nobility in the Middle High German Prose Lancelot
(Language: English)
Daniela Czink, Deutsches Seminar, Eberhard-Karls-Universität
Tübingen
THURSDAY 07 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1604-a:
Paper 1604-b:
Paper 1604-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1605-a:
Paper 1605-b:
Paper 1605-c:
Session:
Title:
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Organiser:
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Paper 1606-a:
Paper 1606-b:
Paper 1606-c:
1604
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.10
VIOLENCE, CONFLICT, AND NEGOTIATION IN MEDIEVAL IRELAND AND
BRITAIN, IV: GENTRY VIOLENCE, PARLIAMENT, AND INTERMARRIAGE
Medieval History Research Centre, Trinity College Dublin
Áine Foley, Medieval History Research Centre, Trinity College Dublin
Paul R. Dryburgh, The National Archives, Kew
Politics by Other Means: Gentry Violence in 15th-Century Ireland
(Language: English)
Brian Coleman, Department of History, Trinity College Dublin
Negotiated Authorities in Ireland and Britain: Parliamentary
Discourse in the 15th Century (Language: English)
Lynn Kilgallon, Department of History, Trinity College Dublin
Intermarriage in Colonial Ireland: Past Interpretations and
Future Questions (Language: English)
Freya Verstraten Veach, Department of History, University of Hull
1605
Baines Wing: Room 1.13
MEDIEVAL PROSOPOGRAPHY, II: KINSHIP AND FAMILY TIES
Medieval Prosopography
Jonathan Lyon, Department of History, University of Chicago
Amy Livingstone, Department of History, Wittenberg University, Ohio
Looking for Clergymen’s Wives in the Diocese of Lincoln, 1050–
1150 (Language: English)
Hazel Freestone, Lucy Cavendish College, University of Cambridge
Nikephoros III Botaneiates’s Supposed Relation to the Family of
Phokas: The Varied Roles of Falsified Kinship in 11th-Century
Byzantium (Language: English)
Nathan Leidholm, Department of History, University of Chicago
The Vanishing Princess: Florina of Burgundy in the
Historiography of the First Crusade (Language: English)
Hilary Rhodes, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
1606
Parkinson Building: Room B.22
SPIRITUAL NOURISHMENT ON THE MEDIEVAL PERIPHERIES, II: HEALING
THE SOUL AND THE BODY
Centre for Medieval Literature, University of York & Syddansk
Universitet, Odense
Sara Ellis Nilsson, Department of Historical Studies, Göteborgs
Universitet
Sara Ellis Nilsson
The Parish as a Place for Spiritual Nourishment: Parish Guilds,
Indulgence, Preparation for Death (Language: English)
Anders Fröjmark, School of Cultural Sciences, Linnaeus University,
Kalmar
Nourishing Souls at a Distance: Healing Miracles and
Geographical Peripheries in the Later Middle Ages (Language:
English)
Jenni Kuuliala, School of Social Sciences & Humanities, University of
Tampere
Music as Spiritual Nourishment (or Not) at the Periphery of
Page and Sound (Language: English)
Kate Maxwell, Musikkonservatoriet, UiT Norges arktiske universitet
THURSDAY 07 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
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Paper 1607-a:
Paper 1607-b:
Paper 1607-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
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Paper 1608-a:
Paper 1608-b:
Paper 1608-c:
Session:
Title:
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Organiser:
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Paper 1609-a:
Paper 1609-b:
Paper 1609-c:
Paper 1609-d:
1607
Parkinson Building: Nathan Bodington Chamber
DIVIDING AND COLLECTING BODILY RELICS IN LATE ANTIQUITY AND THE
EARLY MIDDLE AGES, II: BONES AND COMMUNITY IDENTITY
European Research Council Project ‘The Cult of Saints’, University of
Oxford
Julia M. H. Smith, School of Humanities (History), University of
Glasgow and Bryan Ward-Perkins, Faculty of History, University of
Oxford
Janneke Raaijmakers, Departement Geschiedenis en
Kunstgeschiedenis, Universiteit Utrecht
Holy Men on a Holy Mountain and a Holy Mountain in Holy Men
(Language: English)
Saskia Dirkse, Theologische Fakultät, Universität Basel
The Forty Martyrs of Sebaste and the Paradigm of Division and
Unity in Cult and Relics Veneration (Language: English)
Efthymios Rizos, Faculty of History, University of Oxford
The Circulation of Body-Part Relics in Pre-Carolingian Gaul
(Language: English)
Julia M. H. Smith
1608
University House: Cloberry Room
POPE HONORIUS III 800TH ANNIVERSARY, II
Damian Smith, Department of History, Saint Louis University, Missouri
and Thomas William Smith, Department of History, Trinity College
Dublin
Damian Smith
Council and Consent in the Pontificate of Honorius III
(Language: English)
Danica Summerlin, Department of History, University College London
The Relationship between Honorius III and Frederick II
(Language: English)
Guy Perry, School of History, University of Leeds
Honorius III and the Crusading Movement (Language: English)
Thomas William Smith
1609
University House: Beechgrove Room
RELIGIOUS MISCELLANIES, II: THE TRANSMISSION OF IDEAS
Project ‘Literacy for All’, University of Hull / Project ‘Cities of Readers’,
Rijksuniversiteit Groningen
Johanneke Uphoff, Afdeling Geschiedenis, Rijksuniversiteit Groningen
Elisabeth Salter, Department of English & Creative Writing, University
of Hull
English Women’s Manuscript Miscellanies and the Female
Culture of Religious Knowledge, 1500-1600 (Language: English)
Amanda Capern, Department of History, University of Hull
The Tretyse of Love and the Impact of Early Print Culture
(Language: English)
Diana Denissen, Section d’anglais, Université de Lausanne
The Transmission of Ideas out of Scholarly and Ecclesiastical
Communities into Popular Culture: The Case of Durham
Cathedral, MS Hunter 15 (Language: English)
Sarah McKeon, Department of English & Creative Writing, University of
Hull
Religious Miscellanies and Lay Devotional Readership in the
Late Medieval Low Countries (Language: English)
Johanneke Uphoff
THURSDAY 07 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1610-a:
Paper 1610-b:
Paper 1610-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1611-a:
Paper 1611-b:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1612-a:
Paper 1612-b:
1610
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.15
RETHINKING THE MEDIEVAL FRONTIER, II: DEFINING AND DISSOLVING
BORDERS IN THE LATE ROMAN AND BYZANTINE EMPIRES
Jonathan Jarrett, School of History, University of Leeds
Sarah Lambert, Department of History, Goldsmiths College, University
of London
Fatal Permeability: The Roman Frontier in Late Antiquity
(Language: English)
Thomas Edmund Kitchen, Independent Scholar, Walsall
Trading with the Enemy across the Byzantine-Sasanian Frontier
(Language: English)
Rebecca Darley, Department of History, Classics & Archaeology,
Birkbeck, University of London / Institute for Medieval Studies,
University of Leeds
The Lower Danube Frontier Zone, 441-602 (Language: English)
Alexander Sarantis, Department of History & Welsh History,
Aberystwyth University
1611
Parkinson Building: Room B.09
STYLUS AS A PAINT BRUSH: WRITING AND ARTISTIC CREATION, 6TH-9TH
CENTURIES, II
‘ICONOPHILIA’: Marie Skłodowska-Curie Fellowship 657240 / Horizon
2020 Framework Programme for Research & Innovation (2014-2020)
Vincent Debiais, Centre d’Études Supérieures de Civilisation Médiévale
(CESCM), Université de Poitiers / Centre National de la Recherche
Scientifique (CNRS), Paris and Francesca Dell’Acqua, Centre for
Byzantine, Ottoman & Modern Greek Studies, Department of Classics,
Ancient History & Archaeology, University of Birmingham
Francesca Dell’Acqua
Sans l’ombre d’un doute: renifler la Maiestas Domini (Language:
Français)
Eric Palazzo, Centre d’Études Supérieures de Civilisation Médiévale
(CESCM), Université de Poitiers
Descriptions and Evocations of the Cross in Alcuinus’s tituli
(Language: English)
Vincent Debiais
1612
Stage@leeds: Stage 1
THE TRANSFORMATION OF THE CAROLINGIAN WORLD, II
Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische Akademie der
Wissenschaften, Wien
Maximilian Diesenberger, Institut für Mittelalterforschung,
Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
Simon MacLean, School of History, University of St Andrews
Ethnicity and the ‘Nation’ in 9th- and 10th-Century Europe:
Questions and Perspectives (Language: English)
Walter Pohl, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische Akademie
der Wissenschaften, Wien
The Transformation of Carolingian Art (Language: English)
Beatrice Kitzinger, Department of Art & Archaeology, Princeton
University
THURSDAY 07 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1613-a:
Paper 1613-b:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1614-a:
Paper 1614-b:
Paper 1614-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1615-a:
Paper 1615-b:
Respondent:
1613
Baines Wing: Room 1.14
LAW, RULES, AND REALITY: FOOD STANDARDS IN LATE MEDIEVAL POLAND
Beata Możejko, Zakład Historii Średniowiecza Polski i Nauk
Pomocniczych Historii, Uniwersytet Gdański
Beata Możejko
Fraud in Gdańsk Food Trade in the Late Middle Ages (Language:
English)
Marcin Grulkowski, Instytut Historii im. Tadeusza Manteuffla, Polish
Academy of Science, Gdansk
Culinary Taste in Medieval Monastic Orders in the Gdańsk
Pomerania: Rules Versus Reality (Language: English)
Jędrzej Szerle, Zakład Historii Średniowiecza Polski i Nauk
Pomocniczych Historii, Uniwersytet Gdański
1614
University House: Great Woodhouse Room
FOOD AS TREATMENT, II: CURATIVES FOR WHAT AILS
Wendy J. Turner, Department of History, Anthropology & Philosophy,
Augusta University, Georgia
Wendy J. Turner
Medieval Diseases and Treatments: A Focus on Paget’s Disease
of Bone (Language: English)
Carla Burrell, Research Centre in Evolutionary Anthropology &
Palaeoecology, Liverpool John Moores University,Michael M. Emery,
Poulton Research Project / School of Natural Sciences & Psychology,
Liverpool John Moores University,Silvia Gonzalez, School of Natural
Sciences & Psychology, Liverpool John Moores University and Lynn
Smith, Norton Priory Museum & Gardens
Isaac Israeli’s Universal and Particular Diets and the Regimen
of Constantine the African (Language: English)
Anna Dysert, Osler Library of the History of Medicine, McGill University
Eating with the Virtues (Language: English)
Shana Worthen, Department of History, University of Arkansas at Little
Rock
1615
Baines Wing: Room 1.15
FROM THE FIELD TO THE TABLE: THE CIRCULATION OF FOODSTUFF IN
EUROPE AND THE MEDITERRANEAN IN THE LATER MIDDLE AGES, II
Flávio Miranda, Instituto de Estudos Medievais, Universidade Nova de
Lisboa / Centro de Investigação Transdisciplinar: Cultura, Espaço e
Memória, Universidade do Porto
Inneke Baatsen, Centrum voor Stadgeschiedenis, Universiteit
Antwerpen
‘Dried bread for the biscoto per la zurma’: Food and Drinks on
Board a Medieval Venetian Galley (Language: English)
Stefania Montemezzo, Dipartimento di Scienze Politiche e Sociali,
Università di Bologna
The Exotic or the Familiar?: Food in the Eyes of Medieval
Pilgrims on Their Way to the Holy Land, 15th and 16th Centuries
(Language: English)
Peter Stabel, Centrum voor Stadsgeschiedenis, Universiteit Antwerpen
Flávio Miranda
THURSDAY 07 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1616-a:
Paper 1616-b:
Paper 1616-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1617-a:
Paper 1617-b:
Paper 1617-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1618-a:
Paper 1618-b:
Paper 1618-c:
Respondent:
1616
Baines Wing: Room 2.14
THE ANNONA, CHARITY, AND THE MATERIALITY OF MARKETS IN LATE
ANTIQUITY, II
Michele R. Salzman, Department of History, University of California,
Riverside
Caroline Goodson, Department of History, Classics & Archaeology,
Birkbeck, University of London
From Civic Right to Christian Charity: The Office of the Urban
Prefect and the Annona of Rome, 4th-6th Centuries (Language:
English)
Michele R. Salzman
The Praefectus Annonae in Rome and Ostia during Late
Antiquity (Language: English)
Silvia Orlandi, Dipartimento di Scienze dell’Antichità, Università degli
Studi di Roma ‘La Sapienza’
The Architecture of Munificence at the Diaconiae of Early
Medieval Rome (Language: English)
Gregor Kalas, College of Architecture & Design, University of
Tennessee, Knoxville
1617
Baines Wing: Room G.37
RELIGIOUS COMMUNITIES AND DISSENTING IDENTITIES
Institut de Recerca en Cultures Medievals (IRCUM), Universitat de
Barcelona
Delfi-Isabel Nieto-Isabel, Departamento de Historia Medieval,
Paleografía y Diplomática, Universitat de Barcelona
David Zbíral, Department for the Study of Religions, Masaryk
University, Brno
What Gui’s Practica Can Tell Us about the Place of Dissidents in
the Languedoc in the Early 14th Century (Language: English)
Derek Hill, Department of History, Classics & Archaeology, Birkbeck,
University of London
Networks of Dissent: Social Network Analysis of Nonconformist
Religious Communities in Languedoc in the 13th and 14th
Centuries (Language: English)
Delfi-Isabel Nieto-Isabel
Time and Utopia: The Construction of the Collective Narrative of
the Beguine Movement of Languedoc (Language: English)
Carlos López-Arenillas, Institut de Recerca en Cultures Medievals
(IRCUM), Universitat de Barcelona
1618
Baines Wing: Room 2.13
FOOD AND FEMALE SANCTITY
IMC Programming Committee,
Diane Watt, School of English & Languages, University of Surrey
Bad Taste: Suffering through Eating by Medieval Religious
Women (Language: English)
Lieke Andrea Smits, Centre for the Arts in Society, Universiteit Leiden
Fasting Women: Past and Present (Language: English)
Kyle Ann Huskin, Department of English, University of Rochester
Miraculous Cures of Poisoning: Famous Cases in Medieval
Hagiography (Language: English)
Sabina Tuzzo, Dipartimento di Studi Umanistici, Università del Salento
Liz Herbert McAvoy, Centre for Medieval & Early Modern Research
(MEMO), Swansea University
THURSDAY 07 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1619-a:
Paper 1619-b:
Paper 1619-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1620-a:
Paper 1620-b:
Paper 1620-c:
1619
Baines Wing: Room 1.16
DANGEROUS FEMININITY?: MOTHERHOOD, MAIDEN BREASTS, AND
POISONOUS MILK
IMC Programming Committee,
Theresa Earenfight, Department of History, Seattle University
Monstrous Un-Making: Maternal Infanticide as Female Agency
(Language: English)
Dianne E. Berg, Department of English, Tufts University, Massachusetts
The Breasts of Virgins: Sexual Reputation and Female Bodies in
Later Medieval Society (Language: English)
Kim M. Phillips, Department of History, University of Auckland
Mother’s Poison: Representations of Mothers and Breastfeeding
in the High Middle Ages (Language: English)
Kate E. McGrath, Deaprtment of History, Central Connecticut State
University
1620
Parkinson Building: Room 1.08
ROME AND AFTER, II: FOOD FOR THE BODY, FOOD FOR THE SOUL
Moore Institute for Research in the Humanities & Social Studies,
National University of Ireland, Galway
Christopher Doyle, Department of History, National University of
Ireland, Galway
Adrastos Omissi, Faculty of History, University of Oxford
Eat Like an Emperor: Diet, Consumption, and the Rhetoric of
Imperial Habits (Language: English)
Rebecca Usherwood, Independent Scholar, London
Vinidarius and his Brevis pimentorum: The Transition from
Roman to Medieval as Seen Through the Use of Spices and
Seasoning (Language: English)
Sally Grainger, Independent Scholar, Surrey
Food for the Soul?: The Excerpta Vinidarii and the Codex
Salmasianus (Language: English)
Christopher Grocock, Department of Classics, Bedales School,
Petersfield
THURSDAY 07 JULY 2016: 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:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1623-a:
Paper 1623-b:
1621
Leeds University Union: Room 6 - Roundhay
FOOD ANIMALS / ANIMAL FOOD, II
Medieval Animal Data-Network (MAD), Central European University,
Budapest
Alice Choyke, Department of Medieval Studies, Central European
University, Budapest
Alice Choyke
Animals, Food, and Sanction in Burchard’s Corrector (Language:
English)
Andrea Vanina Neyra, Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y
Técnicas (CONICET) / Universidad Nacional de San Martín / Sociedad
Argentina de Estudios Medievales
‘Copia autem piscium excedit fere omnia regna’: Foreign
Travellers on the Animal Products of Medieval Hungary
(Language: English)
Balázs Nagy, Department of Medieval Studies, Central European
University, Budapest
The Zooarchaeological Evidence for Food Taboos in Medieval
Spain (Language: English)
Idoia Grau Sologestoa, Department of Archaeology, University of
Sheffield / Departamento de Geografía, Prehistoria y Arqueología,
Universidad del País Vasco
1622
Parkinson Building: Room B.11
FIT FOR A KING: FEASTING ON ROYAL OCCASIONS
IMC Programming Committee,
Paul Webster, School of History, Archaeology & Religion, Cardiff
University
Subtle Messaging: The Coronation of Henry VI (Language:
English)
Vanessa Jane King, Department of History, Goldsmiths College,
University of London
The Wedding-Feast: Philip the Good and Isabella of Portugal’s
Wedding Celebration and the Pinnacle of the Festivities
(Language: English)
Romina Westphal, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
‘Greater than any Caesar had known’: Sumptuous Banquets and
High Status Manhood at the Court of Henry VIII (Language:
English)
Emma Levitt, Division of History, University of Huddersfield
1623
Leeds University Union: Room 2 - Elland Road
COOKING AND EATING IN THE CANTERBURY TALES, II
IMC Programming Committee,
Huriye Reis, Department of English Language & Literature, Hacettepe
University, Ankara
‘To eten of the smale peres grene’: Food in Chaucer’s Fabliaux
(Language: English)
Azime Pekşen Yakar, Department of English Language & Literature,
Hacettepe University / Department of English Language & Literature,
Atilim University, Turkey
Heavy Eating, Meat Consumption, and the Manliness of
Chaucer’s Monk (Language: English)
Burçin Erol, Department of English Language & Literature, Hacettepe
University, Ankara
THURSDAY 07 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1624-a:
Paper 1624-b:
Paper 1624-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1625-a:
Paper 1625-b:
Paper 1625-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1626-a:
Paper 1626-b:
Respondent:
1624
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.17
FOOD, FEASTING, AND THE FLESH: BETWEEN CONFLICT AND COMMUNION
Taiwan Association of Classical, Medieval & Renaissance Studies
Sophia Ya-shih Liu, Department of Foreign Languages & Literatures,
National Taiwan University
Catherine J. Batt, School of English, University of Leeds
The Implication of beor (beer) in Beowulf (Language: English)
Dong- Ill Lee, Department of English, Hankuk University of Foreign
Studies, Seoul
Arthur’s Tables: The Feasts in Layamon’s Brut (Language:
English)
Sophia Ya-shih Liu
Incarnation, Embodiment, and Communion: Christ’s Body as
Antidote to Alienation in the Commedia (Language: English)
Brian Reynolds, Department of Italian, Fu Jen Catholic University,
Taiwan
1625
Leeds University Union: Room 4 - Hyde Park
FEAST AND FAMINE, HISTORICAL AND METAPHYSICAL, GOOD AND EVIL
Maria Grasso, Independent Scholar, London
James Pedersen, Independent Scholar, London
Rich Man, Poor Man: The Complex Metaphors in Early Depictions
of the Feasting of the Rich Man in Luke’s Parable (Language:
English)
Maria Grasso
Many Journeys: Images of Travel and Feasting in the Grandes
Chroniques of Charles V (Language: English)
Dominique Ann DeLuca, College of Arts & Sciences, Case Western
Reserve University, Cleveland
The Taste of Good and Evil: Spices, Serpents, and a 13th-Century
Parisian Nef (Language: English)
James Wehn, Department of Art History & Art, Case Western Reserve
University, Ohio / Cleveland Museum of Art
1626
University House: Little Woodhouse Room
MATTHEW PARIS: NEW PERSPECTIVES, II
Centre for Historiography & Historical Culture, Aberystwyth University /
Institute of Medieval & Early Modern Studies (IMEMS), Aberystwyth &
Bangor Universities
Björn Weiler, Department of History & Welsh History, Aberystwyth
University
Björn Weiler
Matthew Paris: New Perspectives on Scribal Collaboration
(Language: English)
Manuel Muñoz García, Department of History, King’s College London
The Textual Communities of Matthew Paris (Language: English)
James G. Clark, Department of History, University of Exeter
Judith Collard, Department of History & Art History, University of Otago
THURSDAY 07 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
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:
1627
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.19
CELEBRATING EXCESS?: CROSS-CULTURAL PERSPECTIVES ON COURT,
CONSUMPTION, AND AUTHORITY, II - CELEBRATION, GENEROSITY, AND
RHETORIC
Geoffrey Humble, Department of History, University of Birmingham and
Sami Kalliosaari, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Geoffrey Humble
The Caliphs’ Feasts in the Early Abbasid Court (Language: English)
Yuko Tanaka, Graduate School of Letters, Kyoto University
Sultan al-Ghawrī’s Salons: Between Pomposity, Theological
Positions, and Political Claims (Language: English)
Christian Mauder, Seminar für Arabistik und Islamwissenschaft, GeorgAugust-Universität Göttingen
Court, Consumption, and Authority in the Medieval Middle East:
Food Distribution on the Sacred Month of Rajab (Language:
English)
Daniella Talmon-Heller, Department of Middle Eastern Studies, BenGurion University of the Negev, Beer Sheva
1628
Baines Wing: Room G.36
CULTURAL TRANSFER IN THE STAUFEN EMPIRE NORTH AND SOUTH OF THE
ALPS: THE EARLY STAUFEN IN ITALY - PERCEPTIONS, PRACTICES,
ENCOUNTERS, II
Jürgen Dendorfer, Lehrstuhl für Mittelalterliche Geschichte, AlbertLudwigs-Universität Freiburg
Giuseppe Albertoni, Dipartimento di Lettere e Filosofia, Università di
Trento
Cultural Encounters?: Ritual as a Means of Political
Communication between ‘Germans’ and ‘Italians’ during the
12th Century (Language: English)
Christoph Dartmann, Fachbereich Geschichte, Universität Hamburg
The Basilica of St Ambrose as Cultural and Religious Bridge
between the German and Italian Kingdoms in the 12th Century
(Language: English)
Maria Pia Alberzoni, Dipartimento di Storia, archeologia, e storia
dell’arte, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Milano
Heroic Knight or Cruel Tyrant?: The Perception of Frederick
Barbarossa and His Italian Campaigns in Contemporary
Historiography (Language: English)
Thilo Tress, Lehrstuhl für Mittelalterliche Geschichte, Albert-LudwigsUniversität Freiburg
THURSDAY 07 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1629-a:
Paper 1629-b:
Paper 1629-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1631-a:
Paper 1631-b:
Paper 1631-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1632-a:
Paper 1632-b:
Paper 1632-c:
1629
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.16
FOOD AND FEAST IN LATE ANTIQUE AND EARLY BYZANTINE SARDINIA
Università degli Studi di Cagliari
Rossana Martorelli, Dipartimento di Storia, Beni culturali e Territorio,
Università degli Studi di Cagliari
Alex Metcalfe, Department of History, Lancaster University
Early Christian Feasts near Graves: Ordinary or Ritual Meals?
(Language: English)
Rossana Martorelli
Food Trade, Feeding, and Standards of Living in 6th- and 7thCentury Sardinia: The Example of Donori’s Lex portus (Language:
English)
Marco Muresu, Dipartimento di Storia, Beni culturali e Territorio,
Università degli Studi di Cagliari
South Sardinia within Routes of Food Transport in the Roman
Period (Language: English)
Laura Soro, Dipartimento di Storia, Beni culturali e Territorio, Università
degli Studi di Cagliari
1631
Emmanuel Centre: Room 11
STANFORD’S NEH-FUNDED GLOBAL CURRENTS: FEATURE MODELLING AND
THE MEDIEVAL MANUSCRIPTS
Stanford Text Technologies
Elaine Treharne, Department of English, Stanford University
Elaine Treharne
The Display of Manuscript Data (Language: English)
Benjamin Albritton, Stanford University Libraries, Stanford University
Managing Manuscripts (Language: English)
Celena Allen, Center for Spatial & Textual Analysis (CESTA), Stanford
University
Deductive and Inductive Research in Big Data Manuscript
Studies (Language: English)
Matt Aiello, Worcester College, University of Oxford
1632
Emmanuel Centre: Room 10
LANGUAGE AND IDENTITY IN THE ROMAN DE PERCEFOREST
Brooke Heidenreich Findley, Department of French, Pennsylvania State
University, Altoona
Brooke Heidenreich Findley
Les dialogues politiques dans Perceforest (Language: Français)
Corinne Denoyelle, Département Lettres et arts du spectacle, Université
Stendhal-Grenoble 3
Les pratiques de la ponctuation dans les versions manuscrites
et imprimées du Roman de Perceforest (Language: Français)
Huei-Chen Li, Department of French Language & Literature, National
Central University, Taiwan
Servants of the Sovereign God: Widows and Religion in the
Roman de Perceforest (Language: English)
Marie-Christine Payne, Centre d’Etudes et de Recherches Antiques et
Médiévales, Université Paris III - Sorbonne Nouvelle
THURSDAY 07 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1633-a:
Paper 1633-b:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1634-a:
Paper 1634-b:
Paper 1634-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1635-a:
Paper 1635-b:
Paper 1635-c:
1633
Parkinson Building: Room B.10
WRITING WOMEN’S LETTERS, II: EPISTOLARITY AND GENRE
Epistolae: Medieval Women’s Letters Database
Kathryn Maude, Centre for Late Antique & Medieval Studies, King’s
College London and Steven Watts, School of History, University of St
Andrews
Kathryn Maude
The Letters of Anglo-Jewish Women Converts, 1270-1420
(Language: English)
Adrienne Williams Boyarin, Department of English, University of Victoria
From Me to You: Gendered Permutations of the I/You
Relationship in Medieval Arabic Women’s Letters (Language:
English)
Marlé Hammond, Department of the Languages & Cultures of the Near
& Middle East, School of Oriental & African Studies, University of
London
1634
Stage@leeds: Stage 2
THE ART OF SUCCESSION, II: CAROLINGIAN AND POST-CAROLINGIAN
REALITIES
St Andrews Institute of Mediaeval Studies, University of St Andrews
Frances Murray, St Andrews Institute of Mediaeval Studies, University
of St Andrews
Stuart Airlie, School of Humanities (History), University of Glasgow
Carloman the Goat?: Charlemagne’s Succession and the Forest
at Yvelines (Language: English)
Eric J. Goldberg, Department of History, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology
The Power behind the Throne: Coronations, Anointing, and
Feasting in the 10th Century (Language: English)
Joanna Thornborough, St Andrews Institute of Mediaeval Studies,
University of St Andrews
Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner: The Stolen Feast at Werla and
the Succession Dispute of 1002 (Language: English)
Sarah Greer, St Andrews Institute of Mediaeval Studies, University of
St Andrews
1635
University House: St George Room
EXPLORING THE 14TH CENTURY ACROSS THE EASTERN AND WESTERN
CHRISTIAN WORLD, II: ABUNDANCE AND NEARNESS - COMMUNICATING
WITH THE VIEWER
Courtauld Institute of Art, London / University of York
Livia Lupi, Department of History of Art, University of York and Maria
Alessia Rossi, Courtauld Institute of Art, University of London
Christine Ungruh, Kunsthistorisches Institut, Freie Universität Berlin
Multiplying Figures and Expounding Narrative: The Role of the
Crowd in 14th-Century Depictions of Christ’s Miracle Cycle
(Language: English)
Maria Alessia Rossi
Architectural Delight: The Rhetoric of Painted Architecture in
the 14th Century (Language: English)
Livia Lupi
Byzantine Nearness and Renaissance Distance in 14th-Century
Italian Painting (Language: English)
Hans Bloemsma, Department of Art History, University College
Roosevelt, Universiteit Utrecht
THURSDAY 07 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1636-a:
Paper 1636-b:
Paper 1636-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1637-a:
Paper 1637-b:
Paper 1637-c:
1636
Michael Sadler Building: Banham Theatre
WARFARE IN MEDIEVAL IBERIA, I: ARAGON AND NAVARRE
Project ‘De la Lucha de Bandos a la hidalguía universal:
transformaciones sociales, políticas e ideológicas en el País Vasco
(siglos XIV y XV)’ / Project ‘Grupo Consolidado de Investigación
‘Sociedad, poder y cultura’’
Fernando Arias Guillén, Departamento de Historia Medieval, Moderna y
de América, Universidad del País Vasco / Euskal Herriko Unibertsitatea,
Vitoria
Fernando Arias Guillén
Military Obligations and Social Status in Aragon, 11th-14th
Centuries (Language: English)
Guillermo Tomás Faci, Departamento de Historia Medieval, Moderna y
de América, Universidad del País Vasco / Euskal Herriko Unibertsitatea,
Vitoria
State-Making, Nobility, and Warfare in the Kingdom of Aragon,
13th-14th Centuries (Language: English)
Mario Lafuente Gómez, Departamento de Historia Medieval, Universidad
de Zaragoza
The Cost of Waging War in Early 14th-Century Navarre
(Language: English)
Jon Andoni Fernández de Larrea Rojas, Departamento de Historia
Medieval, Moderna y de América, Universidad del País Vasco / Euskal
Herriko Unibertsitatea, Vitoria
1637
Leeds University Union: Room 5 - Kirkstall Abbey
CROSSING CULTURAL AND RELIGIOUS BOUNDARIES, II: EXCHANGE AND
CONFLICT IN THE EASTERN MEDITERRANEAN AND CYPRUS
University of Edinburgh
Michael Carr, School of History, Classics & Archaeology, University of
Edinburgh
Gianluca Raccagni, School of History, Classics & Archaeology,
University of Edinburgh
L’art roman en Chypre?: ‘Crusader’ Romanesque Sculpture in
Lusignan Cyprus (Language: English)
Michalis Olympios, Department of History & Archaeology, University of
Cyprus
Genoese-Mamluk Relations: The 1290 Treaty and Its Impact on
Christian-Muslim Relations (Language: English)
Olivier Berrou, Department of History, Royal Holloway, University of
London
Between Profit, Politics, and Piracy: The Use of Slaves by the
Knights Hospitaller and Its Effects on Their Position in Cyprus
and Malta (Language: English)
Nicholas McDermott, School of History, Archaeology & Religion, Cardiff
University
THURSDAY 07 JULY 2016: 11.15-12.45
Session:
Title:
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:
1638
Michael Sadler Building: Rupert Beckett Theatre
ASPECTS OF MEDIEVAL SLAVERY, II: SLAVE MOVEMENT
Marek Jankowiak, Faculty of Oriental Studies, University of Oxford
Marek Jankowiak
Medieval Russian Slave Trade (Language: English)
Jukka Korpela, Department of Geographical & Historical Studies,
University of Eastern Finland
The Lawfully and Unlawfully Enslaved: The Shifting Sources of
Supply (Language: English)
Thomas J. MacMaster, Morehouse College, Georgia / School of History,
Classics & Archaeology, University of Edinburgh
Unfreedom of Movement: Eligius of Noyon and Merovingian
Religious Travel (Language: English)
Courtney Luckhardt, Department of History, University of Southern
Mississippi
1639
Emmanuel Centre: Room 7
CONTRITION AND COMPUNCTION IN THE MIDDLE AGES, I
Medieval & Ancient Research Centre (MARCUS), University of Sheffield
Charlotte Steenbrugge, School of English, University of Sheffield and
Graham Willliams, School of English, University of Sheffield
Graham Willliams
The Harlot’s Tears: Compunction in Byzantine Hymns (Language:
English)
Andrew Mellas, Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for the
History of Emotions / School of Letters, Art & Media, University of
Sydney
Contrition in Early English Homilies (Language: English)
Ayoush Sarmada Lazikani, Hertford College, University of Oxford
The Inability to Feel Contrite in Medieval Drama (Language:
English)
Charlotte Steenbrugge
THURSDAY 07 JULY 2016: 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
Parkinson Building: Room B.08
BEDE’S CIRCLE AND BEYOND
Helen Lawson, School of History, Classics & Archaeology, University of
Edinburgh
Máirín Mac Carron, Department of History, University of Sheffield
‘Saracens’: Bede and Canterbury (Language: English)
Emma Vosper, Department of History, University of Nottingham
Social Network Analysis and Bede (Language: English)
Helen Lawson
Honesty is the Best Policy? Sources for Miracles Stories in the
Early Insular World (Language: English)
Tom Rochester, Department of History, University of Birmingham
1702
Emmanuel Centre: Room 2
REPRESENTATIONS OF WOMEN IN ANGLO-SAXON ENGLAND
Alice Hicklin, Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse & Celtic, University of
Cambridge
Albert Fenton, Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse & Celtic, University
of Cambridge
Purity and Pollution: Consecration and Condemnation of the
Female Body in the Anglo-Saxon Period, Dead and Alive
(Language: English)
Alexandra Aversa Sheldon, Faculty of History, University of Oxford
‘Widgongel wif word gespringeð’: Queens as Power-Brokers in
Anglo-Saxon England (Language: English)
Alice Hicklin
A Semantic Investigation of Anglo-Saxon Women (Language:
English)
Katherine Miller, School of English, University of Leeds
1703
Stage@leeds: Stage 3
CASTLES AS CULTURAL, SOCIAL, AND ECONOMIC CENTRES OF MEDIEVAL
SOCIETY, II
Tobias Grüßing, Fachbereich Geschichtswissenschaft, Seminar für
Mittelalterliche Geschichte, Eberhard-Karls-Universität Tübingen
Steffen Patzold, Seminar für Mittelalterliche Geschichte, EberhardKarls-Universität Tübingen
Origin of Hill Castles in Southwest Germany, Using the Example
of the Swabian Alb (Language: English)
Christian Kübler, Institut für Geschichtliche Landeskunde und
Historische Hilfswissenschaften, Eberhard-Karls-Universität Tübingen
Castles and Their Landscapes: Are There Possibilities to
Reconstruct the Past? (Language: English)
Sebastian Klaß, Institut für Ur- und Frühgeschichte und Archäologie des
Mittelalters, Eberhard-Karls-Universität Tübingen
Castles and Their Hinterland: Reconstruction of a Castle
Landscape at the Swabian Jura (Language: English)
Michael Weidenbacher, Institut für Ur- und Frühgeschichte und
Archäologie des Mittelalters, Eberhard-Karls-Universität Tübingen
THURSDAY 07 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1704-a:
Paper 1704-b:
Paper 1704-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1705-a:
Paper 1705-b:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1706-a:
Paper 1706-b:
Paper 1706-c:
1704
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.10
HONOUR, SOCIAL DIFFERENTIATION, AND GENDER IN EARLY IRELAND AND
FRANCIA
Irish Research Council (IRC) Project ‘Religious Landscapes in the 8th
Century: Ireland and Northern Francia in Comparison’
Elaine Pereira Farrell, Departement Geschiedenis en Kunstgeschiedenis,
Universiteit Utrecht
Sven Meeder, Afdeling Geschiedenis, Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen
Changing Perceptions of Legal Status and Rank in Early Irish
Ecclesiastical Thought (Language: English)
Roy Flechner, School of History & Archives, University College Dublin
Wergild and Penance: A Complex Interaction (Language: English)
Rob Meens, Departement Geschiedenis en Kunstgeschiedenis,
Universiteit Utrecht
Gender, Sexuality, and Female Penance in the Insular and
Frankish Penitentials (Language: English)
Elaine Pereira Farrell
1705
Baines Wing: Room 1.13
DRAMAS AND FESTIVALS LINKING RELIGIOUS AND SECULAR HISTORY
IMC Programming Committee,
Siegrid Schmidt, Interdisziplinäres Zentrum für Mittelalter und frühe
Neuzeit (IZMF), Universität Salzburg
The Feast of Fools and the Office of the Circumcision from Sens,
France (Language: English)
Océane Boudeau, Centro de Estudos de Sociologia e Estética Musical,
Universidade de Lisboa
The Repentant Villain’s Farce: François Villon and Medieval
Comic Theatre in France (Language: English)
Daniel Padilha Pacheco da Costa, Instituto de Letras e Linguística,
Universidade Federal de Uberlândia
1706
Parkinson Building: Room B.22
INTO THE WORDS?: LINGUISTIC APPROACHES TO LETTERS, TEXTS, AND
PLACE-NAMES
IMC Programming Committee,
Alaric Hall, School of English, University of Leeds
Solving a Salty Mystery: Finding Ala Chocha (Language: English)
Kathleen Tyson, Department of History, King’s College London
‘Men drynken ofte peyne and gret distresse’: Emotion and
Drinking Imagery in Troilus and Criseyde (Language: English)
Blythe Hsing-Wen Tsai, School of English, University of Leeds /
Department of Foreign Languages & Literature, National Chung Cheng
University, Taiwan
The Roles of Religious Expressions in the Paston Letters , with
or without a Relative Clause (Language: English)
Osamu Ohara, Department of English, Jikei University School of
Medicine, Tokyo
THURSDAY 07 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1707-a:
Paper 1707-b:
Paper 1707-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1708-a:
Paper 1708-b:
Paper 1708-c:
1707
Parkinson Building: Nathan Bodington Chamber
DIVIDING AND COLLECTING BODILY RELICS IN LATE ANTIQUITY AND THE
EARLY MIDDLE AGES, III: THE POLITICS OF BODY PARTS
European Research Council Project ‘The Cult of Saints’, University of
Oxford
Julia M. H. Smith, School of Humanities (History), University of
Glasgow and Bryan Ward-Perkins, Faculty of History, University of
Oxford
Caroline Goodson, Department of History, Classics & Archaeology,
Birkbeck, University of London
Bones of Contention: Stories of Division and Struggle over the
Bodies of Saints in Late Antique and Early Medieval SyriaMesopotamia (Language: English)
Sergey Minov, Faculty of History, University of Oxford
Church Decoration and Relic Translation in Early Medieval Rome
(Language: English)
Masue Kato, Graduate School of Christian Studies, Rikkyo University
Establishing and Maintaining the Cult of St Cyrus and St John in
Alexandria and Rome (Language: English)
Eileen Rubery, Institute of Continuing Education, University of
Cambridge
1708
University House: Cloberry Room
TAKING THE LONG VIEW: THE ROUTE TO THE EPISCOPACY AND BEYOND
Sarah E. Thomas, Department of History, University of Hull
Michael H. Gelting, Rigsarkivet (Danish National Archives), Statens
Arkiver, København / Centre for Scandinavian Studies, University of
Aberdeen
All Manner of Men?: The Identities and Career Paths of Scottish
and Norwegian Bishops (Language: English)
Sarah E. Thomas
The Effects of the Western Schism Upon the Dioceses of the
Norwegian Skattlands (Language: English)
Michael Frost, Centre for Scandinavian Studies, University of Aberdeen
Burying the Bishop: Episcopal Funerals in Medieval England?
(Language: English)
Katherine Harvey, Department of History, Classics & Archaeology,
Birkbeck, University of London
THURSDAY 07 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1709-a:
Paper 1709-b:
Paper 1709-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1710-a:
Paper 1710-b:
Paper 1710-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1711-a:
Paper 1711-b:
Paper 1711-c:
1709
University House: Beechgrove Room
RELIGIOUS MISCELLANIES, III: RELIGIOUS READING AND SPIRITUAL
PRACTICE
Project ‘Literacy for All’, University of Hull / Project ‘Cities of Readers’,
Rijksuniversiteit Groningen
Sarah McKeon, Department of English & Creative Writing, University of
Hull
Sabrina Corbellini, Oudere Nederlandse Letterkunde, Rijksuniversiteit
Groningen
‘In disem bůche vindet man gar schone lere von den gewaren
tůgenden’: 15th-Century Vernacular Religious Miscellanies
Compiled for the Sisters of the Cistercian Nunnery of Lichtenthal
(Language: English)
Ulla Bucarey, Independent Scholar, München
The Pleasure of the Miscellany: Medical and Spiritual Reading in
Late Medieval English Manuscripts (Language: English)
Michael Leahy, School of English, University of Nottingham
Looking for Jesus: Evidence for the Cult of the Holy Name in
Late Medieval English Religious Miscellanies (Language: English)
Rob Lutton, Department of History, University of Nottingham
1710
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.15
RETHINKING THE MEDIEVAL FRONTIER, III: FRANKISH FRONTIERS,
INTERNAL, AND EXTERNAL
Jonathan Jarrett, School of History, University of Leeds
Alan V. Murray, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
The Idea of Aquitaine in the Early Middle Ages (Language:
English)
Arkady Hodge, Trinity College, University of Oxford
Rewriting the Frontier in Carolingian and Ottonian
Historiography (Language: English)
Jakub Kabala, Department of History & Digital Studies, Davidson
College, North Carolina
Building Political Power on Feudal Frontiers: The Case of Landric
of Nevers (Language: English)
Niall Ó Súilleabháin, Department of History, Trinity College Dublin
1711
Leeds University Union: Room 2 - Elland Road
SHAPING THE THINGS TO COME: STRATEGIES FOR SECURING A FUTURE IN
RELIGIOUS AND URBAN CONTEXTS, 1100-1500
Universität Duisburg-Essen
Miriam Czock, Historisches Institut, Universität Duisburg-Essen and
Amalie Fößel, Historisches Institut, Universität Duisburg-Essen
Miriam Czock
Protecting What is Going to be Left Behind: Crusader Strategies
to Ensure Seigneurial Continuity at Home (Language: English)
Alexander Berner, Historisches Institut, Universität Duisburg-Essen
Charity as Precaution: Jewish Converts in 13th-Century England
(Language: English)
Franziska Klein, Historisches Institut, Universität Duisburg-Essen
Planning for One’s Old Age: Annuities, Bonds, and Rents in the
Northern German Medieval Town of Lüneburg (Language: English)
Anja Hoppe, Historisches Institut, Universität Duisburg-Essen
THURSDAY 07 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1712-a:
Paper 1712-b:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1713-a:
Paper 1713-b:
Paper 1713-c:
Paper 1713-d:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1714-a:
Paper 1714-b:
Paper 1714-c:
1712
Stage@leeds: Stage 1
THE TRANSFORMATION OF THE CAROLINGIAN WORLD, III
Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische Akademie der
Wissenschaften, Wien
Maximilian Diesenberger, Institut für Mittelalterforschung,
Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien
Stefan Esders, Geschichte der Spätantike und des frühen Mittelalters,
Friedrich-Meinecke-Institut, Freie Universität Berlin
Codifications of Frankish History in the Late and PostCarolingian World (Language: English)
Helmut Reimitz, Department of History, Princeton University
‘Dissonance of Speech, Consonance of Meaning’: The Council of
Aachen in 862 and the Origin and Function of Carolingian
Conciliar Texts (Language: English)
Charles West, Department of History, University of Sheffield
1713
Baines Wing: Room 1.14
FEEDING THE CASTLE, COURT, AND FORTIFIED SETTLEMENTS: HIGH STATUS
FOOD CONSUMPTION IN CENTRAL AND NORTHERN EUROPE
IMC Programming Committee,
Laura Wangerin, Department of History, University of WisconsinMadison
An Eternal Feast: Archaeozoological Remains as Indicator of
Social Status and Economic Organisation - The Case of Sand
(Lower Austria, 10th Century) (Language: English)
Konstantina Saliari, Institut für Urgeschichte und Historische
Archäologie, Universität Wien / Naturhistorisches Museum Wien
Food Fit for a King: Securing Ecclesiastical Lands and Renders in
Ottonian Germany (Language: English)
David Bachrach, Department of History, University of New Hampshire
‘Item ein libriczen pfeffer[…]’: Food at the Auersperg Castle in
the Late Middle Ages (Language: English)
Miha Preinfalk, Milko Kos Historical Institute, Slovenian Academy of
Sciences & Arts, Ljubljana
The Production and Consumption of Meat in the Bailiffs’ Castles
of Raseborg and Kastelholm (Language: English)
Hanna Kivikero, Department of Philosophy, History, Culture & Art
Studies, University of Helsinki
1714
University House: Great Woodhouse Room
FOOD AS TREATMENT, III: BELIEFS, DEFICIENCIES, AND APPETITES
Wendy J. Turner, Department of History, Anthropology & Philosophy,
Augusta University, Georgia
Wendy J. Turner
Early Evidence of the Association between Goitre and Folly in an
Irish Pseudo-Etymology of Boicmell ‘Fool’ (Language: English)
Anna Matheson, Centre de recherche bretonne et celtique (CRBC),
Université Rennes 2
Illness, Appetite, and Ecstatic Experiences in Eadmer of
Canterbury’s Vita sancti Anselmi (Language: English)
Hilary Powell, Department of English Studies, Durham University
Fish and Lust: The Contribution of Medicine to the Theological
Debate on Fasting Precepts in the 16th Century (Language:
English)
Gionata Liboni, Dipartimento di Studi Umanistici, Università degli Studi
di Ferrara
THURSDAY 07 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1715-a:
Paper 1715-b:
Paper 1715-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1717-a:
Paper 1717-b:
Paper 1717-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1718-a:
Paper 1718-b:
Paper 1718-c:
1715
Baines Wing: Room 1.15
FOOD, SUPPLY, AND CONFLICT IN THE MEDITERRANEAN BORDERLAND:
MOROCCO AND IBERIA
Departamento da História, Universidade de Lisboa
Hermenegildo Fernandes, Centro de História, Universidade de Lisboa
Fatima Rhorchi, School of Law & Economics, Université Moulay Ismaïl,
Meknes
When Two Empires Collide: Starvation in the Transition From
the Almoravid to the Almohad Rule in North Africa, 1139-1147
(Language: English)
Inês Lourinho, Departamento da História, Universidade de Lisboa
Eating and Fighting: Food in the Portuguese Army of the
Conquests in the Maghreb, 15th Century (Language: English)
Inês Meira Araújo, Departamento da História, Universidade de Lisboa
Supplying the Frontier in 15th-Century Morocco: An Analysis of
the Balance Sheet Reports of the Portuguese Governors
(Language: English)
Gonçalo Matos Ramos, Departamento da História, Universidade de
Lisboa
1717
Baines Wing: Room G.37
OBJECTS AND OBJECTIFICATION IN THE MEROVINGIAN WORLD
The Oxford Handbook of the Merovingian World
Isabel Moreira, Department of History, University of Utah
Isabel Moreira
Jews in the Sermons of Caesarius of Arles (Language: English)
Lisa Bailey, Department of Classics & Ancient History, University of
Auckland
Gregory of Tours and His Perception of Jews and Arians
(Language: English)
Wolfram Drews, Historisches Seminar, Westfälische WilhelmsUniversität Münster
The Balthild Seal Matrix and the Merovingian Erotic Glance
(Language: English)
Isabel Moreira
1718
Baines Wing: Room 2.13
URBAN FEASTING AND FASTING IN CENTRAL EUROPE
University of South Bohemia in, České Budějovice / Central European
University, Budapest
Kateřina Horníčková, Sonderforschungsbereich ‘Visions of Community’,
Universität Wien / University of South Bohemia, České Budějovice
Gerhard Jaritz, Department of Medieval Studies, Central European
University, Budapest
Seigneurial or Democratic?: Late Medieval Religious Urban
Feasts in Southern Bohemian Towns in Comparison (Language:
English)
Kateřina Horníčková
Tastes of Paradise: Spices in Medieval Livonian Festivals and
Diplomacy (Language: English)
Anu Mänd, School of Humanities, Tallinn University
The Slavic Carnival in the Work of Vavřinec Leandr Rvačovský
(Language: English)
Petr Adámek, ‘Faces of Community’ Project, National Institute of Mental
Health, Praha / University of South Bohemia, České Budějovice
THURSDAY 07 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1719-a:
Paper 1719-b:
Paper 1719-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1720-a:
Paper 1720-b:
Paper 1720-c:
Paper 1720-d:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1722-a:
Paper 1722-b:
1719
Baines Wing: Room 1.16
METHODS AND MORALITY OF LATE MEDIEVAL ALMSGIVING: THE
SIGNIFICANCES OF FOOD
Lucy Christine Barnhouse, Department of History, Fordham University
Maximilian Schuh, Historisches Seminar, Ruprecht-Karls-Universität
Heidelberg
On the Quantity of Alms Received: The Regulation of the Size of
Bread Distributions in Late Medieval Konstanz (Language:
English)
Allison Edgren, Department of History, University of Notre Dame
Food in Almsgiving in the Southern Low Countries, c. 1250 - c.
1600 (Language: English)
Hadewijch Masure, Centrum voor Stadsgeschiedenis, Universiteit
Antwerpen
Transactions of Impoverishment: Roberto Rossellini’s
Franciscan Figures (Language: English)
Luke Fidler, Department of Art History, University of Chicago
1720
Parkinson Building: Room 1.08
ROME AND AFTER, III: FOOD FOR DIVERSE PALATES
Prato Consortium for Medieval & Renaissance Studies
Christopher Doyle, Department of History, National University of
Ireland, Galway
Danuta Shanzer, Institut für Klassische Philologie, Mittel- und
Neulatein, Universität Wien
Pretium inpone carni humanae: Instances of Cannibalism in
Roman Cities during Barbarian Sieges in the 5th Century
(Language: English)
Christopher Doyle
Feasting with Attila (Language: English)
Mark Humphries, Department of History & Classics / Centre for
Medieval & Early Modern Research, Swansea University
Ravenous Wolves and Slaughtered Sheep: Gildas and the
Wicked Shepherd (Language: English)
Stephen Joyce, Centre for Studies in Religion & Theology, Monash
University, Victoria
Prayer and Plenty: Food, Feeding, and Spiritual Authority in the
Lives of Female Saints - Considering the Case of St Brigit
(Language: English)
Shane Lordan, School of History & Archives, University College Dublin
1722
Parkinson Building: Room B.11
CONSPICUOUS CONSUMPTIONS: WHEN MORE IS MORE
Royal Studies Network
Zita Eva Rohr, Department of History, University of Sydney
Zita Eva Rohr
A Feast Fit for a King?: Henry III, Feasts, and the Cult of
Kingship (Language: English)
Paul Webster, School of History, Archaeology & Religion, Cardiff
University
Joan of Navarre: A Spendthrift and Avaricious Queen?
(Language: English)
Elena Woodacre, Department of History, University of Winchester
THURSDAY 07 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1723-a:
Paper 1723-b:
Paper 1723-c:
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1724-a:
Paper 1724-b:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1725-a:
Paper 1725-b:
1723
Emmanuel Centre: Room 10
QUEST, FOOD, AND FAMINE IN THE ROMAN DE PERCEFOREST
Brooke Heidenreich Findley, Department of French, Pennsylvania State
University, Altoona
Brooke Heidenreich Findley
Dragon-Slaying and the Terre Gaste Motif in Perceforest
(Language: English)
Karen G. Casebier, Modern & Classical Languages, University of
Tennessee, Chattanooga
L’aventure de Norgal: Quand le roman chevaleresque bascule
dans le fantastique (Language: Français)
Anne Berthelot, Department of Literatures, Cultures & Languages,
University of Connecticut, Storrs
Of Centres and Peripheries in the Roman de Perceforest: To the
Limits of (European) Identity/-ies? (Language: English)
Pauline Souleau, St Peter’s College, University of Oxford / Hertford
College, University of Oxford
1724
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.17
FROM JOY TO SORROW: FEASTING AND ITS EMOTIONAL AND PECUNIARY
CONCOMITANTS
Interdisziplinäres Zentrum für Mittelalter und frühe Neuzeit (IZMF),
Universität Salzburg
Manuel Schwembacher, Interdisziplinäres Zentrum für Mittelalter und
frühe Neuzeit (IZMF), Universität Salzburg
Manuel Schwembacher
How to Settle a Drinking Bill: Reckoning Books and the Regula
Virginis (Language: English)
Michaela Wiesinger, Institut für Germanistik, Universität Wien
The Emptiness of Plenty: Food, Wine, Love, and Hate in
Gottfried’s Tristan and the Icelandic Tristrams Saga (Language:
English)
Joshua Davis, Department of German, Wake Forest University, Wien
1725
Leeds University Union: Room 4 - Hyde Park
CONSTRUCTIONS OF MEDIEVAL MASCULINITY: EMOTIONS, EATING, AND
ENFORCERS
IMC Programming Committee,
Katherine J. Lewis, Division of History, University of Huddersfield
‘Dyrne Langað’: Homo-Amory and Longing between Men in
Beowulf (Language: English)
Chris Vaccaro, Department of English, University of Vermont
Eating and Fasting in the Construction of Manly Men (Language:
English)
Paul McFadyen, Department of English, University of Dundee
THURSDAY 07 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
Session:
Title:
Sponsor:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1726-a:
Paper 1726-b:
Paper 1726-c:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1727-a:
Paper 1727-b:
Paper 1727-c:
Respondent:
Session:
Title:
Organiser:
Moderator:
Paper 1728-a:
Paper 1728-b:
Paper 1728-c:
1726
University House: Little Woodhouse Room
JURORS, WITNESSES, AND THE ROLE OF WIDER SOCIETY IN THE
DEVELOPMENT OF JUDICIAL INSTITUTIONS IN 13TH-CENTURY ENGLAND
Institute of Legal & Constitutional Research, University of St Andrews
Will Eves, St Andrews Institute of Mediaeval Studies, University of St
Andrews
Matthew McHaffie, Department of History, King’s College London
Witnesses and Legal Arguments in the 13th-Century Court of
Canterbury (Language: English)
Sarah White, St Andrews Institute of Mediaeval Studies, University of
St Andrews
Judicial Servers?: An Assessment of Jewish Witnesses in 13thCentury Legal Procedure (Language: English)
Rebecca Searby, Centre for Medieval Studies, University of York
Justice Delayed?: Recalcitrant Jurors and Early Common Law
Land Litigation (Language: English)
Will Eves
1727
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.19
CELEBRATING EXCESS?: CROSS-CULTURAL PERSPECTIVES ON COURT,
CONSUMPTION, AND AUTHORITY, III - TRANSGRESSION, CONTROVERSY,
AND CONSEQUENCES
Geoffrey Humble, Department of History, University of Birmingham and
Sami Kalliosaari, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Sami Kalliosaari
Excessive Love at the Court of Edward II (Language: English)
Kit Heyam, School of English, University of Leeds
Largesse, Generosity, Theft, and Extraction: Reading Court
Consumption in ‘Mongol’ Historiography (Language: English)
Geoffrey Humble
The Rise of Wang Xizhi’s Calligraphy in Emperor Taizong’s Court
(Language: English)
Chen Xie, Department of History, University of Birmingham
Björn Weiler, Department of History & Welsh History, Aberystwyth
University
1728
Michael Sadler Building: Room LG.16
THE NATURE AND ROLE OF THE POLITICAL MESSAGE IN ITS SOCIAL CONTEXT
IMC Programming Committee,
Anna Adamska, Onderzoekinstituut voor Geschiedenis en
Kunstgeschiedenis, Universiteit Utrecht
The Messages within Messengers: Exploring Communication
beyond Letters (Language: English)
Eve Wolynes, Department of History, University of Notre Dame
Beyond sanctio: Exploring the Social Role of Secular Sanctions
in Early Medieval Charters from Iberia in the Light of the Early
Irish Laws (Language: English)
Álvaro Carvajal Castro, School of Archaeology, University College
Dublin
Faith, Pragmatism, and the Crusades (Language: English)
Jacqueline Derrick, Department of History, University College London
THURSDAY 07 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
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Paper 1729-a:
Paper 1729-b:
Paper 1729-c:
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Paper 1730-a:
Paper 1730-b:
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Paper 1731-a:
Paper 1731-b:
Paper 1731-c:
1729
Baines Wing: Room G.36
THE INFLUENCE AND LEGACY OF SCIENTIFIC KNOWLEDGE IN THE MIDDLE
AGES
IMC Programming Committee,
Lauren Moreau, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
The Planetary Symphonies of Giorgio Anselmi Parmense,
1385?–1443?: Reforming the Monophonic Tradition of the Music
of the Spheres for the Polyphonic Era (Language: English)
Johann F.W. Hasler, Facultad de Artes, Universidad de Antioquia,
Colombia
The Role of Impetus in Psychology: The Study of Human Soul in
Polish Medieval Philosophy (Language: English)
Magdalena Płotka, Instytut Filozofii, Uniwersytet Kardynała Stefana
Wyszyńskiego, Warszawa
The Medieval Inheritances of an ‘Early Modern’ Magus
(Language: English)
Rachel Reid, School of English, Queen’s University Belfast
1730
Emmanuel Centre: Wilson Room
SERPENTS, BITING, AND DEATH: THE UNCANNY AESTHETICS OF INSULAR
ART
Centre for Nordic Studies, University of the Highlands & Islands
Victoria Whitworth, Centre for Nordic Studies, University of the
Highlands & Islands, Orkney
Meg Boulton, Department of History of Art, University of York
Where Snakes Lead, I Will Follow: Insular Perception of Stone
Sculpture (Language: English)
Tasha Gefreh, School of Art, Culture & Environment, University of
Edinburgh
Death, the Picts, and Sigmund Freud (Language: English)
Victoria Whitworth
1731
Emmanuel Centre: Room 11
THE COLLABORATIVE PRODUCTION OF MEDIEVAL MANUSCRIPTS
Manuscript Collaboration Hub
Sarah Laseke, Centre for the Arts in Society (LUCAS), Universiteit
Leiden
Matthew Cheung Salisbury, Faculty of Music, University of Oxford
The Transition of Scribes: Collaboration in Middle English
Manuscripts (Language: English)
Sarah Laseke
Patterns of Scribal Work in the Glossed Books of the Bible in the
12th Century: Preliminary Observations (Language: English)
Jaakko Tahkokallio, National Library of Finland, University of Helsinki
Materially Different, Yet Visually Similar: Collaborative
Production Practices among Arthurian Manuscripts and Ivories
in 14th-Century Paris (Language: English)
Katherine Sedovic, Department of History of Art & Architecture, Trinity
College Dublin
THURSDAY 07 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
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Paper 1732-a:
Paper 1732-b:
Paper 1732-c:
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Paper 1733-a:
Paper 1733-b:
Paper 1733-c:
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Paper 1734-a:
Paper 1734-b:
Paper 1734-c:
Paper 1734-d:
1732
Parkinson Building: Room B.09
THE LIFE, DEATH, AND REPUTATION OF THE ROYAL PRINCE
Society for Fourteenth Century Studies
James Bothwell, School of History, University of Leicester
Alison McHardy, Department of History, University of Nottingham
Reputation and Public Opinion: The Political Trials and
Tribulations of John of Gaunt, 1376-1386 (Language: English)
Gwilym Dodd, Department of History, University of Nottingham
Starving Prisoner, Starving Guests: The Death of Richard II and
His Missing Funerary Meal (Language: English)
Anna Duch, Department of History, University of York
Royal Wills and the Royal Will (Language: English)
Chris Given-Wilson, St Andrews Institute of Mediaeval Studies,
University of St Andrews
1733
Parkinson Building: Room B.10
WRITING WOMEN’S LETTERS, III: INTIMACY AND AGENCY IN THE CLOISTER
Epistolae: Medieval Women’s Letters Database
Kathryn Maude, Centre for Late Antique & Medieval Studies, King’s
College London and Steven Watts, School of History, University of St
Andrews
Steven Watts
Migratory Feelings in the Boniface Correspondence (Language:
English)
Diane Watt, School of English & Languages, University of Surrey
From Anonymity to a New Identity: A 12th-Century Letter to a
Nun and Its Hagiographic Afterlife (Language: English)
Anne Clark, Department of Religion, University of Vermont
Letters, Papal Bulls, and Women’s Agency (Language: English)
Kirsty Day, Institute for Medieval Studies / School of History, University
of Leeds and Kathryn Maude
1734
Stage@leeds: Stage 2
THE RECEPTION OF PAPAL LEGATES: CEREMONIAL, RITUAL, AND HARD
WORK
Emil Lauge Christensen, Institut for Kultur og Globale Studier, Aalborg
Universitet
Mia Münster-Swendsen, Department of Communication & Arts, Roskilde
Universitet
The Ceremonial of Papal Legates: Questions and Problems
(Language: English)
Kriston Rennie, School of Historical & Philosophical Inquiry, University
of Queensland / Forschungsstelle für Vergleichende Ordensgeschichte
(FOVOG), Technische Universität Dresden
The Ritual Reception of Papal Legates, c. 1200 - c. 1250
(Language: English)
Emil Lauge Christensen
A Number of Failures?: Papal Legates to the Swedish Church
Province (Language: English)
Bertil Nilsson, Institutionen för Litteratur, Idéhistoria och Religion,
Göteborgs Universitet
When Money Counts: The Collection Delegation from Avignon to
Norway 1326-1328 (Language: English)
Torstein Jørgensen, VID Vitenskapelig Høgskole, Stavanger
THURSDAY 07 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
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Paper 1735-a:
Paper 1735-b:
Paper 1735-c:
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Paper 1736-a:
Paper 1736-b:
Paper 1736-c:
1735
University House: St George Room
EXPLORING THE 14TH CENTURY ACROSS THE EASTERN AND WESTERN
CHRISTIAN WORLD, III: TRANSMISSION, EXCHANGE, MANIPULATION
Courtauld Institute of Art, London / University of York
Livia Lupi, Department of History of Art, University of York and Maria
Alessia Rossi, Courtauld Institute of Art, University of London
Maria Alessia Rossi
A Lukan Legend and a Trecento Panel: The Invention of Two
Images extra moenia, Bologna (Language: English)
Jessica N. Richardson, Kunsthistorisches Institut in Florenz, MaxPlanck-Institut, Firenze
The Coronation of the Virgin in Siena c. 1260-1310: A
Comparative Study of Marian Images East and West (Language:
English)
Kayoko Ichikawa, Department of History of Art, University of Warwick
Translatio coquinae: Inspiring and Inheriting King Richard II’s
‘best and ryallest vyandier of all cristen kynges’ (Language:
English)
Dino Meloni, Centre d’Études Médiévales Anglaises (CEMA), Université
Paris IV - Sorbonne
1736
Michael Sadler Building: Banham Theatre
WARFARE IN MEDIEVAL IBERIA, II: AL-ANDALUS AND CASTILE
Project ‘De la Lucha de Bandos a la hidalguía universal:
transformaciones sociales, políticas e ideológicas en el País Vasco
(siglos XIV y XV)’ / Project ‘Grupo Consolidado de Investigación
‘Sociedad, poder y cultura’’
Fernando Arias Guillén, Departamento de Historia Medieval, Moderna y
de América, Universidad del País Vasco / Euskal Herriko Unibertsitatea,
Vitoria
Jon Andoni Fernández de Larrea Rojas, Departamento de Historia
Medieval, Moderna y de América, Universidad del País Vasco / Euskal
Herriko Unibertsitatea, Vitoria
Muslim Raids against the Northern Christian Kingdoms in the
Iberian Peninsula (Language: English)
Jesús Lorenzo Jiménez, Departamento de Historia Medieval, Moderna y
de América, Universidad del País Vasco, Vitoria
The Military Revolution Will Have to Wait: The Survival of Feudal
Elements in the Castilian Armies during the 14th Century
(Language: English)
Fernando Arias Guillén
Reappraising the Role of Cavalry in the 15th Century: The
Example of Castile (Language: English)
Ekaitz Etxeberría Gallastegi, Departamento de Historia Medieval,
Moderna y de América, Universidad del País Vasco / Euskal Herriko
Unibertsitatea, Vitoria
THURSDAY 07 JULY 2016: 14.15-15.45
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Paper 1737-a:
Paper 1737-b:
Paper 1737-c:
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Paper 1738-a:
Paper 1738-b:
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Paper 1739-a:
Paper 1739-b:
Paper 1739-c:
1737
Leeds University Union: Room 5 - Kirkstall Abbey
CROSSING CULTURAL AND RELIGIOUS BOUNDARIES, III: EXCHANGE AND
CONFLICT IN NORTHERN AND EASTERN EUROPE
University of Edinburgh
Michael Carr, School of History, Classics & Archaeology, University of
Edinburgh
Michael Carr
Hanseatic Embargoes against Bruges in the 14th Century
(Language: English)
Georg Christ, School of Arts, Languages & Cultures, University of
Manchester
‘And no one shall deliver any goods whatsoever to the
aforementioned heretics’: Embargo and Crusade during the
Hussite Wars, 1420-1431 (Language: English)
Alexandra Kaar, Centrum medievistických studií, Praha / Institut für
Österreichische Geschichtsforschung, Universität Wien
‘He was captured by the heretics […] and he can build a better
Wagenburg’: The Teutonic Order and Cross-Cultural Military
Exchange during the Hussite Religious Wars (Language: English)
Mark Whelan, Department of History, Royal Holloway, University of
London
1738
Michael Sadler Building: Rupert Beckett Theatre
ASPECTS OF MEDIEVAL SLAVERY, III: SLAVES, SERFS, OR SLAVS?
Marek Jankowiak, Faculty of Oriental Studies, University of Oxford
David Wyatt, School of History, Archaeology & Religion, Cardiff
University
Slavery and Serfdom Revisited: The Missing Variable? (Language:
English)
Judith Spicksley, Department of Economics, University of York
Between Slave and Serf: Forms of Servitude in Bavaria, 9751225 (Language: English)
Samuel S. Sutherland, Department of History, Ohio State University
1739
Emmanuel Centre: Room 7
CONTRITION AND COMPUNCTION IN THE MIDDLE AGES, II
Medieval & Ancient Research Centre (MARCUS), University of Sheffield
Charlotte Steenbrugge, School of English, University of Sheffield and
Graham Willliams, School of English, University of Sheffield
Charlotte Steenbrugge
Materialising Contrition in the English Charter Lyrics and
Chaucer’s Pardoner (Language: English)
Anne Schuurman, Department of English & Writing Studies, University
of Western Ontario
Anglo-Norman and Middle English Vocabulary of Compunction
(Language: English)
Catherine J. Batt, School of English, University of Leeds
Sincerity and Love in Medieval England (Language: English)
Graham Willliams
THURSDAY 07 JULY 2016: 16.15-17.00
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1798
Parkinson Building: Room B.08
USING THE INTERNATIONAL MEDIEVAL BIBLIOGRAPHY IN TEACHING AND
RESEARCH: A WORKSHOP
Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Melanie Brunner, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds and
Alan V. Murray, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
The International Medieval Bibliography (IMB) is the world’s leading
multidisciplinary bibliography of Medieval Studies, offering an online
database of over 400,000 publications in 62 disciplinary areas. This
workshop offers the opportunity to learn more about the possibilities
for using its search interface and functionality, controlled vocabulary,
and indices both to discover specific relevant publications and to
construct larger bibliographies. It will also demonstrate some of the
other new features - notably metrics for journals and authors - which
have recently been added to the IMB.
THURSDAY 07 JULY 2016: 18.00-19.00
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1799
Leeds University Union: Room 6 - Roundhay
CONSULTATION AND ‘PUBLIC MEDIEVALISM’: A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
Leeds University Union (LUU) Medieval Society
Rose A. Sawyer, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
Victoria Cooper, School of English, University of Leeds
With the popularity of TV shows like Game of Thrones and Vikings,
films like Kingdom of Heaven and games like Assassins Creed and
Crusader Kings, the Middle Ages are big business. But to what extent
does education need to play a role? The representation of the
‘medieval’ to a public audience can be a delicate balancing act between
entertainment and ‘historical accuracy’. This panel brings together
medievalists of all stripes to discuss consultation on films, TV, and
video games as a form of ‘public medievalism’. What do we mean by
‘historical accuracy’ in mass media? What role do medievalists have in
presenting the historical to the world via entertainment? What
challenges do medievalists face when they venture into the
entertainment business?
Participants include Kelly DeVries (Loyola University Maryland),
Catherine Fletcher (Swansea University), Robert Houghton (University
of Winchester), Justin Pollard (Independent Scholar, London), and Kate
Wiles (History Today, London).
FRIDAY 08 JULY 2016: 09.00-14.00
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1801
Parkinson Building: Room B.08
DIGITAL MEDIA AND MEDIEVAL STUDIES: HOW TO CREATE A PROFESSIONAL
AND FINANCIALLY SUSTAINABLE FUTURE FOR YOUR RESEARCH ONLINE - A
WORKSHOP
Medievalists.net
Are you interested in sharing your knowledge of the Middle Ages with
the online world? Would you like to build your audience and perhaps
earn some income by writing about medieval topics? This workshop will
help you learn about finding your own medieval niche on the World
Wide Web and the ways people earn revenues through this digital
media.
The first half of the workshop will examine how to write effectively for
websites, focusing on which topics and what kinds of posts will
generate strong audience engagement. We will also look at what search
engine optimization (SEO) is and how to market your website using
social media and email.
The second part of the workshop will turn to ways of earning revenues
from your online properties, starting with running advertisements and
making use of affiliate marketing. Then, we will look at how one can
sell products through their website, create ebooks, and the possibility
of using your online profile to teach courses. Finally, we will talk about
how one can earn money through Youtubing and podcasting.
This workshop will be very beneficial to anyone who wants to increase
the number of readers on their websites, use their medieval studies
knowledge to earn some income, or are planning to have a career in
digital media. It will be led by members of Medievalists.net, one of the
leading online resources in the field of medieval studies, who have been
creating and running websites for over seven years.
Since 2008, Medievalists.net has billed itself as the media site for the
Middle Ages, offering news, articles, and videos about medieval studies.
It is one of the largest online resources about the Middle Ages,
receiving over three-quarters of a million page views per month and
with a large social media following of over 42,000 followers on Twitter
alone.
There are no pre-requisites for attending the workshop, and tea and
coffee will be provided during the mid-morning break. Fee: £7.50.
Peter Konieczny was a librarian at the University of Toronto before
becoming part-owner of Medievalists.net. He has been developing
websites for 15 years and is based in Toronto. Sandra Alvarez’s
background is in human resources and social media, while being a
partner at Medievalists.net for over 7 years. A former Toronto native,
Sandra moved to London in 2013 to become Medievalists.net’s
European Correspondent, reporting on medieval events, historical sites,
and academic conferences. Peter and Sandra have extensive
experience in web design, blogging, social media, and the use of digital
media to support the dissemination of scholarship to wide-ranging
audiences.
FRIDAY 08 JULY 2016: 09.30-13.30
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1802
Parkinson Building: Room B.09
GOVERNMENT, LAW, LAND, AND CEREMONY: MEDIEVAL RECORDS AT THE
NATIONAL ARCHIVES - A WORKSHOP
The National Archives, Kew
Paul R. Dryburgh, The National Archives, Kew
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 often unclear.
This workshop will offer an introduction to TNA, show you how to
begin your research into its collections, and access research
support. A course-pack with facsimiles 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, Law and
Justice, Land and Landholders, and Royal Household and Material
Culture (following on from last year’s sessions on Church and
Religion and Warfare and Diplomacy).
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.
Tea and coffee will be provided during the mid-morning break. Fee:
£7.50.
Jessica Nelson is Head of Medieval, Early Modern, Legal, and Maps
and Photographs (MEMLAMP) at The National Archives and
specialises in queenship and government in the 12th and 13th
centuries in England and Scotland. Sean Cunningham is a Principal
Records Specialist Manager, Medieval & Early Modern, and
specialises in 15th- and 16th-century records of English royal
government. Laura Tompkins is a Medieval Records Specialist whose
research has focussed on government, parliament, and household in
the late Middle Ages. Paul Dryburgh is a Medieval Records Specialist
with interests in government, politics, and warfare in the British
Isles in the 13th and 14th centuries.