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Howard Williams deposited The Offa’s Dyke Collaboratory and the Offa’s Dyke Journal in the group
Early Medieval on Humanities Commons 5 years, 11 months agoOpening the first volume of a new open-access peer-reviewed academic publication, we are pleased to introduce the Offa’s Dyke Journal. This venture stems from the activities of the Offa’s Dyke Collaboratory, a research network founded in April 2017 to foster and support new research on the monuments and landscapes of the Anglo-Welsh bor…[Read more]
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Howard Williams deposited From Archaeo-Engage to Arts of Engagement: Conference to Publication in the group
Early Medieval on Humanities Commons 5 years, 11 months agoThe chapter outlines the rationale for the 2nd University of Chester Archaeology Student Conference – Archaeo-Engage: Engaging Communities in Archaeology. It serves as a companion chapter to this book’s Introduction. It reviews and contextualises the student presentations and keynote talks in relation to key current debates in public arc…[Read more]
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Jose Ángel Salgado Loureiro started the topic International Conference ” The Medieval Eschatology” (Call for papers) in the discussion
Early Medieval on Humanities Commons 5 years, 11 months agoInternational Conference ” The Medieval Eschatology”
(Santiago de Compostela, July 28-29th, 2020)
Eschatology is one of the central components of medieval Christian culture. The end of the world, the Last Judgment, salvation, Messianism, the Antichrist, the Apocalypticism and millenarianism are inescapable elements in what we may generally…[Read more] -
Evina Steinova deposited Call for Papers | Networks of Manuscripts, Networks of Texts (Oct 22-23 2020, Amsterdam) in the group
Early Medieval on Humanities Commons 5 years, 11 months agoThis conference aims to bring together researchers applying network analysis to pre-modern manuscripts and manuscript texts. Key topics include:
• Theoretical reflections on the challenges and advantages of applying network analysis, including social network analysis, to pre-modern written cultures;
• Application of network analysis to cor…[Read more] -
James M. Harland deposited Imagining the Saxons in Late Antique Gaul in the group
Early Medieval on Humanities Commons 5 years, 12 months agoPublished in Sächsische Leute und Länder Benennung und Lokalisierung von Gruppenidentitäten im ersten Jahrtausend, and a considerably expanded version of a paper delivered at the Internationales Sachsensymposion in Leipzig, 2015.
The article considers the literary representation of Saxons in the works of the late antique authors Sidonius Ap…[Read more]
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Matthew Suriano deposited No Rest for the Dead – The Reversal of Death in Ezekiel’s Valley of Dry Bones in the group
Biblical archaeology on Humanities Commons 5 years, 12 months agoEzekiel 37 is based upon Judean mortuary culture, and the revivification of bones is a reversal of death. Rather than a resurrection event, Ezekiel’s metaphor of Israel as a mass of dry bones is based upon the burial customs that occurred inside the family tomb.
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Matthew Firth deposited The Broken Body in Eleventh to Thirteenth-Century Anglo-Scandinavian Literature in the group
Early Medieval on Humanities Commons 6 years agoAnglo-Scandinavian literary and legal texts give evidence of two cultures which shared similar attitudes to punitive acts of violence; whether as literary trope or legislative recourse, deliberate mutilation was a familiar form of retribution. Why this is the case is not always clear within the context of the texts in which such episodes are…[Read more]
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Matthew Firth deposited The Politics of Hegemony and the ‘Empires’ of Anglo-Saxon England in the group
Early Medieval on Humanities Commons 6 years agoThe term ’empire’ is frequently applied retrospectively by historians to historical trans-cultural political entities that are notable either for their geographic breadth, unprecedented expansionary ambitions, or extensive political hegemony. Yet the use of the terminology of empire in historical studies is often ill-defined, as exemplified by the…[Read more]
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Matthew Firth deposited Constructing a King: William of Malmesbury and the Life of Æthelstan in the group
Early Medieval on Humanities Commons 6 years agoGesta regum Anglorum, written by William of Malmesbury in the twelfth century, is a key source for the life of the tenth-century Anglo-Saxon king, Æthelstan (924–939). Contemporary narrative histories provide little detail relating to Æthelstan’s kingship, and the account of Gesta regum Anglorum purports to grant an unparalleled insight into his l…[Read more]
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Matthew Firth deposited Allegories of Sight: Blinding and Power in Late Anglo-Saxon England in the group
Early Medieval on Humanities Commons 6 years agoThe practical necessity of sight to effective participation in Anglo-Saxon life is reflected in the multifaceted depictions of punitive blinding in late Anglo-Saxon literature. As a motif of empowerment or disempowerment, acts of blinding permeate the histories and hagiographies of the eleventh and twelfth centuries and each narrative mode…[Read more]
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Matthew Firth deposited London Under Danish Rule: Cnut’s Politics and Policies as a Demonstration of Power in the group
Early Medieval on Humanities Commons 6 years agoIn 1016 the young Danish prince who was to become Cnut the Great, King of England, Denmark, and Norway, laid siege to the city of London as part of a program of conquest that would see him crowned as King of England by 1017. This millennial year is an appropriate time to reflect on the consequences of London’s defiance as a city that was rapidly…[Read more]
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Asa Simon Mittman deposited “The Exotic in the Early Middle Ages,” with Susan Kim, Literature Compass, ed. Elaine Treharne (Blackwell Publishing, 2008) in the group
Early Medieval on Humanities Commons 6 years, 1 month agoThe dominant literate culture of early medieval England – male, European, and Christian – often represented itself through comparison to exotic beings and monsters, in traditions developed from native mythologies, and Classical and Biblical sources. So pervasive was this reflexive identification that the language of the monstrous occurs not onl…[Read more]
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Asa Simon Mittman deposited “Monsters and the Exotic in Early Medieval England,” The Oxford Handbook of Medieval Literature in English, ed. Elaine Treharne and Greg Walker (Oxford University Press, March 2010) in the group
Early Medieval on Humanities Commons 6 years, 2 months agoThe dominant literate culture of early medieval England – male, European, and Christian – often represented itself through comparison to exotic beings and monsters, in traditions developed from native mythologies, and Classical and Biblical sources. So pervasive was this reflexive identification that the language of the monstrous occurs not onl…[Read more]
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Asa Simon Mittman deposited Susan Kim and Asa Simon Mittman, “Keeping History: Images, Texts, Ciphers, and the Franks Casket,” with Susan Kim, in A Material History of Medieval and Early Modern Ciphers, ed. K Ellison and S Kim (New York: Routledge, 2017) in the group
Early Medieval on Humanities Commons 6 years, 2 months agoSusan Kim and Asa Simon Mittman, “Keeping History: Images, Texts, Ciphers, and the Franks Casket,” with Susan Kim, in A Material History of Medieval and Early Modern Ciphers, ed. K Ellison and S Kim (New York: Routledge, 2017)
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Asa Simon Mittman deposited England is the World and the World is England in the group
Early Medieval on Humanities Commons 6 years, 2 months agoMedieval Christians arguably lived in a ‘real’ world – a tangible place in which they lived, worked, loved, hated, and died – but through a process of worldbuilding continually reconstructed it anew around themselves as the mythical land they called ‘Christendom.’ This was predicated first on reconceptualizing and then ultimately on removing (o…[Read more]
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Roland Steinacher deposited Rex Vandalorum – The Debates on Wends and Vandals in Swedish Humanism as an Indicator for Early Modern Patterns of Ethnic Perception in the group
Early Medieval on Humanities Commons 6 years, 5 months agoFor more than four hundred years, up to the accession of the present king Carl XVI Gustaf in 1973, did the Swedish monarchs hold the title “King of the Wends“. The first evidence of this claim dates from the reign of Gustav I Vasa (1523-1560), who adopted the title Sveriges, Göthes och Wendes Konung in official sources around the year 1540. In L…[Read more]
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Roland Steinacher deposited Migrations and Conquest: Easy Pictures for Complicated Backgrounds in Ancient and Medieval Structures in the group
Early Medieval on Humanities Commons 6 years, 5 months agoWe must, first of all, ask what a barbarian is or could have been in our sources. There were different kinds of barbarians, based upon the Roman and Greek ethnographic tradition and view of geography. Greek writers defined identities of human societies in the known world and bequeathed ethnonyms. Since the sixth and fifth centuries B.C.E., these…[Read more]
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Roland Steinacher deposited Vom Ketzerkönig zum christianissimus rex. Politische Dimensionen der homöischen Christologie: Afrika im 5. und 6. Jahrhundert mit einem Ausblick nach Spanien in the group
Early Medieval on Humanities Commons 6 years, 5 months agoDas vandalische Afrika gilt als Musterbeispiel des „Kirchenkampfs“ zwischen homöischen Barbaren und katholischen Römern. Kronzeugen sind Victor von Vita, Fulgentius von Ruspe und Quodvultdeus von Karthago. Etwa 50 Jahre nach dem Ende der Vandalenkönige in Afrika 533 kam es in Spanien zum Ausgleich zwischen Katholiken und Homöern. Die westgot…[Read more]
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Roland Steinacher deposited Who is the Barbarian? Considerations on the Vandal Royal Title in the group
Early Medieval on Humanities Commons 6 years, 5 months agoThe Vandal royal title Rex Vandalorum et Alanorum is known from the reign of king Huneric (477-484) from two decrees preserved in Victor of Vita’s History of the Vandal persecution. This catholic polemic pamphlet itself derives from the eighties or nineties of the fifth century. As traditional diplomatics throughout the 19th and 20th centuries c…[Read more]
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Roland Steinacher deposited Minting in Vandal North Africa: coins of the Vandal period in the Coin Cabinet of Vienna’s Kunsthistorisches Museum in the group
Early Medieval on Humanities Commons 6 years, 5 months agoThis paper offers a re‐examination of some problems regarding the coinage of Vandal North Africa. The coinage of this barbarian successor state is one of the first non‐imperial coinages in the Mediterranean world of the fifth and sixth centuries. Based on the fine collection in the Coin Cabinet of Vienna’s Kunsthistorisches Museum, this art…[Read more]
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