Dec
12
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers: 25th Vagantes Conference on Medieval Studies, University of Rochester


Call for Papers

25th Vagantes Conference on Medieval Studies

The University of Rochester, Rochester, New York, 9-11 April 2026

Due by 12 December 2025

We are now accepting submissions for Vagantes 2026! 

The 25th Vagantes Conference on Medieval Studies will be hosted by The University of Rochester in Rochester, New York, April 9-11, 2026.  

Vagantes is an interdisciplinary community of junior and early career scholars that offers an ideal opportunity for sharing new research. The conference accepts submissions on any topic pertaining to the long Middle Ages. We encourage submissions from scholars across all disciplines that engage with medieval studies and welcome work that explores medieval culture, religion, philosophy, literature, art, historiography, as well as medievalisms and reception studies. There is no registration fee. 

Please submit an abstract of 300 words and a short CV as a PDF to vagantesboard@gmail.com by December 12th, 2025.

For more information, visit https://vagantesconference.org/submit-now-for-vagantes-2026-due-12-dec-2025/

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Dec
12
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers: Close Enounters, 5th Oslo Student Conference on Medieval Europe, Oslo (12-14 Mar. 2026)

Call for Papers

5th Oslo Student Conference on Medieval Europe

Close Encounters

12-14 March 2026 Oslo, Norway

Due by 12 December 2025

The Oslo Student Conference on Medieval Europe is an interdisciplinary conference on the study of the Middle Ages in Europe. We invite students at all levels to submit abstracts for a hybrid session held at the University of Oslo. This conference aims to provide an opportunity for Bachelors, Masters, and Doctoral students, as well as those who recently graduated, to present their research. We especially welcome those who have not presented a paper at a conference before.

Whether with family, other cultures, or the spiritual, encounters of all kinds abound in the sources left to us from the Middle Ages. Families are feuding in Medieval Iceland, friendly and not-so-friendly Vikings arrive on the British Isles, and an Irish monk details an encounter with someone from the Otherworld. In many ways, the meetings between people shaped the way they understood the world. The Middle Ages were a time of change, both cultural and religious, and this change comes to light when examining interactions between people. This year, we invite you to explore the theme of close encounters of a medieval kind with us.

Examples of topics:

  • Transmission of Knowledge

  • Cultural Encounters

  • History from Below

  • Communities of Practice

  • Medievalisms

  • Global Middle Ages

  • Tradition vs Innovation

  • Folklore

  • Conversion

  • We also invite abstracts on other topics.

A proceedings volume of this conference will be published through the university's e-publishing portal.

Abstracts must not be longer than 250 words. Please also include a title, your name, home university, study program, and whether you plan on presenting in person or online. Papers will be 20 minutes + 10 minutes for questions. Please submit your abstract before the 12th of December 2025 to oslomedievalstudentconference@gmail.com. For questions, please contact us at the same email address.

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Dec
12
to Dec 14

BAA Conference: Boundaries and Encounters in Medieval Art and Architecture: A Conference in Memory of John McNeill, University of Oxford, 12-14 Dec. 2025

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Conference

British Archaeology Association

Boundaries and Encounters in Medieval Art and Architecture: A Conference in Memory of John McNeill

Rewley House, Department for Continuing Education, University of Oxford

Friday 12 December to Sunday 14 December 2025

In memory of our much-missed friend and inspiration, The British Archaeological Association will be holding a  conference to celebrate our former secretary on 12-14 December 2025.  

The conference opens for registration at 12.30pm on Friday 12 December at Rewley House, 1 Wellington Square, Oxford  OX1 2JA. The President’s Welcome and Introduction will be at 2.00pm followed by the first lecture at 2.15pm. Tea &  coffee refreshments will be served during the lectures and a buffet lunch will be provided on Saturday and Sunday in addition to dinner on two evenings. The conference will also include an evening reception.  

Participants will need to arrange their own travel and accommodation. Oxford is well provided with hotels and B&Bs,  and further information will be supplied by the conference organisers along with the booking form. These will be sent out later this month. 

Speakers will include:

David Robinson, Augustinian Claustral Buildings

Eric Fernie, John McNeill and the Study of the Romanesque

Julian Luxford, The Black Book of the Exchequer

Nicola Coldstream, ‘Sweet Thames run Softly’: London Bridge and the Building of St Stephen’s Chapel, Westminster’

Richard Halsey , ‘Few are run of the mill’, the late C12th capitals of Oxford Cathedral

Lloyd De Beer, Solomon in the Crypt: Romanesque Reuse and Gothic Intervention at Canterbury Cathedral

Fernando Gutiérrez Baños, A Painted Castilian Tabernacle-Altarpiece from the 14th Century now in the Wellcome Collection

Alexandrina Buchanan, The Secretaries of the BAA

Roisin Astell, Gendered Boundaries: Women as Antithesis and Exemplar in an early-fourteenth-century English Illuminated Manuscripts

Costanza Beltrami, Unexpected Connections: Making Sense of Spanish Gothic in 19th-Century London and Beyond.

Arturo Carlo Quintavalle, Willigelmo and Roman Art.

Tom Nickson, Batalha and Las Huelgas: Forms and Functions in Cistercian Cloisters in Iberia

Sally Dormer, Thoughts on Some Fragments of Romanesque Sculpture in Abbotsbury, Dorset

Rosa Bacile, The Use of Spolia in the Abbey of SS Trinita’, Venosa, 11th-12th Centuries

Richard Gem, Encountering St Benedict: his Tomb and Shrine at Saint-Benoît-sur-Loire

Gerhardt Lutz, A Crucifixus Dolorosus in the Cleveland Museum of Art and Art Around 1300.

John Munns, How Norman is the Norman Chapel in Durham Castle?

Neil Stratford, Vézelay, Avallon et al.

Alison Perchuk, California Romanesque

Marcello Angheben, Romanesque images and Affective Piety

Sandy Heslop, Celebrating the Resurrection in Medieval Norwich

Jordi Camps, The sculptural program of the first construction phases of the Tarragona Cathedral: Contexts, tendencies and repertoires.

John Goodall, The North Transept Facade of Merton College Oxford

Øystein Ekroll, Corbels and Chess pieces. A Contribution to the Discussion on the Origin of the Lewis Chess Pieces.

Veronica Abenza, The Western Reception of Transcultural Objects: a Matter of Reuse or Recycling

Zoe Opacic and Alexandra Gajewski, Prague and Avignon

Conference Convenor: Richard Plant; Conference Secretary: Kate Milburn & Assistant Secretary: Ann Hignell.

Scholarships

A limited number of scholarships for students are available to help them cover the cost of the conference. Please apply by 16th October, 2025 attaching a short CV along with the name and contact details of one referee. Applications should be sent to: rplant62@hotmail.com. Any general enquiries about the conference should be sent to conferences@thebaa.org

This conference has been made possible by a generous donation from Tim and Geli Harris to whom the Association is very grateful.

For more information, visit https://thebaa.org/events/boundaries-and-encounters-in-medieval-art-and-architecture-a-conference-in-memory-of-john-mcneill/

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Dec
13
10:00 AM10:00

Exhibition Closing: The Nature of Gothic: Reflecting the Natural World in Historic and Contemporary Artistic Practice, Blackburn Museum & Art Gallery, England, 13 Sept. 2025 - 13 Dec. 2025

Exhibition Closing

The Nature of Gothic: Reflecting the Natural World in Historic and Contemporary Artistic Practice

Blackburn Museum & Art Gallery

Blackburn, England

13th September – 13th December 2025

Inspired by John Ruskin’s phrase “the nature of gothic”, this exhibition explores how artists across centuries have represented the natural world.

From Blackburn’s Hart collection of medieval and Islamic manuscripts, works from the Arts and Crafts Movement, including: ceramics, textiles, Private Press Books, and works by the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood. Contemporary artistic responses further demonstrate the influence of the natural world.

The exhibition is part of the outcomes from the Museum’s National Portfolio Organisation (NPO) status, awarded by Arts Council England, as part of a wider story of cultural renewal in Blackburn.

‘The Nature of Gothic’ has also been supported by the Brian Mercer Trust, and by loans from a wide range of museums and galleries across the UK.

Once shaped by industrial wealth, Blackburn is now redefining its identity through art, heritage and community partnerships.

For more information, visit https://blackburnmuseum.org.uk/whats-on/the-nature-of-gothic/

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Dec
13
11:00 AM11:00

Exhibition Closing: Painted Pages: Illuminated Manuscripts 13th-18th Centuries, University of St. Joseph, 19 September - 13 December 2025

Exhibition Closing

Painted Pages: Illuminated Manuscripts 13th-18th Centuries

University of St. Joseph, West Hartford, CT

September 19 – December 13, 2025

This exhibition explores the golden age of handmade books. Medieval European examples include a range of Christian devotional and liturgical texts—from psalters and books of hours to choir books and lectionaries. Among the non-Western examples are seventeenth-and eighteenth-century leaves from the Koran and the Shahnameh (the Persian Illustrated Book of Kings) as well as Hebrew texts. This exhibition is organized by the Reading Public Museum, Reading Pennsylvania. At the University of Saint Joseph it is supported in part by the Karen L. Chase ’97 Fund.

For more information, visit https://www.usj.edu/about/arts/art-museum/exhibition/current/

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Dec
14
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers: Memory and Medieval Material Culture, The Courtauld Medieval Postgraduate Colloquium, London (6 Mar. 2026)

Call for Papers

The Courtauld Medieval Postgraduate Colloquium

Memory and Medieval Material Culture

Friday 6 March 2026, London, UK

Due by 14 December 2025

Royal 14 B VI, genealogical roll of the kings of England, 1300-8, f. 7, British Library, London. Image: Wikimedia Commons.

In our digital age, memory is both permanent and fleeting: forever enshrined on the internet, and yet easily forgotten amid the endless scroll of new information. In the Middle Ages, however, memory was more consciously articulated by medieval makers, patrons and viewers, and was appropriated to serve carefully crafted political, devotional and cultural agendas. Far from being passive repositories of remembrance, medieval artworks, buildings and objects played active roles in constructing, shaping and transmitting memory, whether personal, collective or institutional. This colloquium invites papers that explore the complex and dynamic relationship between memory and the material culture of the Middle Ages. It seeks to consider how images from medieval Europe, Byzantium and the Islamic world engaged with the processes of remembering and forgetting, and how they mediated the relationship between the past and the present.

We invite submissions for 20-minute papers that investigate the relationships between memory, objects and buildings, as well as those involved in making, commissioning and viewing them. Respondents might consider themes including but by no means limited to:
● The role of images in preserving, rewriting or reframing the past, and in creating, re-creating and reinforcing memory
● Agendas of patronage and the politics of remembering and forgetting in the construction of memory
● Death, commemoration and the visual cultures of remembrance
● Genealogy, dynastic representation and strategies of commemoration
● Architecture, monuments and urban spaces as sites of shared or contested memory
● The staging and restaging of memory in rituals and processions
● The transmission of memory across geographical, cultural and temporal boundaries
● The afterlives of medieval images and their role in shaping modern memory of the Middle Ages

We invite PhD candidates to submit an up to 250-word paper proposal and title, a short CV, together with their complete contact details (full name, email, and institutional affiliation) by 14 December 2025. Please send these to Sophia Dumoulin (sophia.dumoulin@courtauld.ac.uk).

There may be some limited funding to support travel and accommodation costs for those without institutional support. If you would require funding support, please include a brief budget alongside your abstract.

For a copy of the call for papers, click here.

For more information online, visit https://courtauld.ac.uk/research/the-research-forum/calls-for-papers/call-for-papers-memory-and-the-medieval-image/

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Dec
15
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Panels & Papers Extension: Small Worlds, Big Worlds, 9th International Conference of the Society for the Medieval Mediterranean (Lisbon, 22-25 June 2026)

Call for Panels & Papers Extension

The Ninth International Conference of the Society for the Medieval Mediterranean (SMM)

Small Worlds, Big Worlds: Medieval Mediterranean Perspectives

22-25 June 2026, Lisbon

Due by 15 December 2025

Image: Oldest known view of Lisbon (circa 1500-1510), miniature from the Crónica de Dom Afonso Henriques de Duarte Galvão: source Wikimedia Commons

The medieval Mediterranean comprised a plethora of different and diverse 'worlds': literally from small farmsteads and cloistered religious communities to large cities and networks of trade; and conceptually from worldviews that comprehended little beyond their immediate locale to those who journeyed widely or studied, thought, and collected knowledge broadly. The variation in scope, scale, nuance and complexity shaped perspectives and phenomena, affected communication and understanding, influenced interactions and exchange, and facilitated or exacerbated peace and conflict.

For its Ninth International Conference, the SMM invites proposals for panels and papers that explore the medieval Mediterranean through the theme 'Small Worlds, Big Worlds: Medieval Mediterranean Perspectives! This should be interpreted broadly, literally and figuratively, from a range of disciplinary perspectives to consider actual and conceptual 'worlds' in the medieval Mediterranean.

We invite papers that examine the theme from different disciplinary perspectives, including History, Archaeology, Literary Studies, Linguistics, Art History, and Religious Studies/Theology, among others.

We welcome research papers that, through the analysis of diverse types of sources, apply innovative approaches and stimulate debates that will enhance our understanding of 'worlds' in and across the medieval Mediterranean.

Topics of the conference could include, but are by no means limited to:

  • Cross-cultural contacts, interactions, assimilations, tensions and conflicts

  • Religious and linguistic interactions, e.g., of pilgrims, missionaries, merchants, sailors, travellers and scholars

  • Diplomatic interactions, e.g., of emissaries, spies, translators and merchants

  • Military interactions, e.g. of mercenaries and crusaders

  • Interactions between peoples of the Mediterranean and the wider world, e.., the Atlantic and Indian Oceans, Asia and Africa

  • Currents of intellectual thought

  • Slavery, liberty and captivity

  • Pirates, renegades and rule-breakers

  • Migration, movement and settlement

  • Material evidence of exchange and interactions

  • Construction and/or deconstruction of identities'

  • Narrative, visual and material depictions of the everyday and the commonplace

Applicants are encouraged to submit proposals for panels of three 20-minute papers each for 1.5 hour sessions, and should nominate a chair. We will do our best to accommodate applications for individual papers, but panels will be prioritised.

Language: Papers will be delivered in English. However, panel chairs will be allowed to accept discussions in any other language, if able to guarantee translation into English.

Deadline:

Panel proposals in the form of a session title, session abstract (150-200 words), 3 paper titles with short abstracts (100-150 words), and the name of a nominated chair should be submitted to socmedimedit@gmail.com by 15 December 2025.

Individul paper proposals should be in the form of a paper title and short abstract (100-150 words) should be submitted to socmedimedit@gmail.com by 15 December 2025.

For more information, visit https://www.societymedievalmediterranean.com/2026-lisbon

Funded by national funds through the FCT - Foundation for Science and Technology, I.P., under the Multiannual Funding of the Institute for Medieval Studies - Reference UID/749/2025

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Dec
15
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Applications: Dorothy F. Glass Travel Award, Italian Art Society

Call for Applications

Italian Art Society

Dorothy F. Glass Travel Award

Due 15 December 2025

The Italian Art Society (IAS) welcomes applications for the Dorothy F. Glass Travel Award. The award of $1000 is meant to support an emerging or unaffiliated scholar traveling abroad to study, or to present on, the arts of the Italian Middle Ages. Preference will be given to scholars of sculpture, the major subject of Glass’s work. Recipients must be members of the Italian Art Society at the time of application and upon receipt of the award, and must not have received an IAS award in the previous two years. IAS officers are not eligible to apply. Deadline: December 15, 2025 Please email Dr. Silvia Bottinelli, Chair of the IAS Awards Committee, at awards@italianartsociety.org if you have any questions.

For more information, visist https://www.italianartsociety.org/grants-opportunities/travel-grants/dorothy-f-glass-icms-travel-award/

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Dec
15
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Applications: Folger Institute Long-Term Fellowships

Call for Applications

Folger Institute Long-Term Fellowships

Due December 15, 2025

Each year the Folger Institute awards research fellowships to create a high-powered, multidisciplinary community of inquiry. This community of researchers may come from different fields, and their projects may find different kinds of expression. But our researchers share cognate interests in the history and literature, art and performance, philosophy, religion, and politics of the early modern world.

The Folger Institute offers four Long-Term Scholarly fellowships at $70,000 for the 2026-2027 academic year (approximately $7,777 per month, for a standard period of 9 months). These fellowships are designed to support full-time scholarly work on significant research projects that draw on the strengths of the Folger’s collections and programs. Scholars must hold a terminal degree in their field in order to be eligible.

Additionally, The Folger Institute offers one Long-Term Public Humanities fellowship. For the 2026-27 year, the Folger Institute will offer one Long-term Public Humanities Fellowship at $70,000 for a standard period of 9 months (approximately $7,777 per month). This fellowship is designed to support significant, full-time research and public humanities project implementation related to the histories, concepts, art, and objects of the early modern world (ca. 1400-1800) and its legacies

The Public Humanities fellowship is open to college and university faculty, independent scholars, artists, public scholars, writers, PhD candidates, postdocs, community leaders, cultural workers, educators and other knowledge holders. Applicants are not required to hold a terminal degree but should describe their equivalent training and industry-specific experience in their CV.

Please note that for the 2026-27 fellowship year, all long-term fellows will have the option to take up to 3 months of their 9-month fellowship virtually. This virtual time may be taken at any point in the fellowship and does not have to be taken concurrently. Applicants may propose any research schedule that best fits their project’s needs.

The deadline for all Long-Term fellowship applications is December 15, 2025.

For more information and to apply, visit https://www.folger.edu/research/the-folger-institute/fellowships/apply-for-a-fellowship/

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Dec
15
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers Extension: Sounds & Silence, Oxford Medieval Graduate Conference (OMGC) (23-24 Apr. 2026)

Call for Papers Extension

Oxford Medieval Graduate Conference (OMGC) 2026

Sounds & Silence

Maison Française d'Oxford, 23-24 April 2026

Due by 15 December 2025

To give prospective speakers additional time to prepare their proposals, the Oxford Medieval Graduate Conference has extended its Call for Papers deadline to 15 December 2025.

Submissions are welcome from all disciplinary perspectives, including historical, literary, musical, archaeological, linguistic, and interdisciplinary approaches. Papers may address any geographical focus or subject related to the medieval period on the broad topic of ‘Sounds and Silences.’

Areas of interest may include, but are not limited to:

  • Vernacular song and folk music

  • Representations of sound and silence

  • Liturgical traditions

  • Monastic worship and silence

  • (Non)verbal (mis)communication

  • Taboo and censure

  • Vocalizations and orality

  • Linguistic change

  • Cultures of listening

  • Material culture of sound

  • Architecture and acoustics

  • Noises of nature

  • Soundscapes

  • Cosmological harmonies

  • Somatic and sensory experience

  • Epistemologies of sound

We welcome applications from graduate students at any university; a limited number of travel bursaries will be available to accepted presenters. We ask that all presenters attend in person, with hybrid participation available for attendees who cannot travel to the event.

Submission Guidelines

Papers should be no longer than 20 minutes. Please submit abstracts of 250 words to oxgradconf@gmail.com by 15 December 2025.

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Dec
15
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Participants for Workshop: Tractive Forces: Potentials of Art in the Trecento, Warburg-Haus and CAS, Hamburg (06–08 May 2026)

Call for Participants for Workshop

Tractive Forces: Potentials of Art in the Trecento

06–08 May 2026, Warburg-Haus and CAS, Hamburg

Due by 15 December 2025

The CAS »Imaginaria of Force« (UHH) invites applications for the workshop »›Tractive Forces‹ Potentials of Art in the Trecento«, which will take place from May 6 to 8, 2026 at the Warburg-Haus in Hamburg as well as the seminar room of the CAS »Imaginaria of Force«.

Pull, draw, attract, and captivate. The question of »tractive forces« in fourteenth-century Italian art has so far received only limited scholarly attention. Yet these forces illuminate qualities that allow us to examine production processes, materiality, and mediality, as well as motifs and their beholders, in their physical, metaphysical, technical, and aesthetic dimensions. It is not by chance, we hypothesise, that Francesco Petrarca speaks of a “force” (vis) in his Remedies for Fortune Fair and Foul (De remediis utriusque fortunae, 1350–1366) to warn his readers of the power of art – its capacity to make beholders “cling” (inhaere) to paintings and even to “capture” (capere) their intellect.

The workshop takes such »tractive forces« in an expanded sense as its point of departure, bringing art-historical analyses into dialogue with approaches from the history of science, literature, and philosophy. How are »tractive forces« modelled in Trecento works of art? Are they primarily derived from iconographic sources, or do they reveal a particular interest in tracing visible and invisible chains of effect? To what extent does this perspective allow us to consider works of art in relation to their reception? What visual strategies and technical procedures are adopted, refined, or developed to depict and generate pull and attraction? What roles do architectures, frames, and other devices (such as curtains, parapets, and grilles) play in the dynamics of attraction and distancing? Which literary, rhetorical, natural-philosophical, or moral-theological considerations underlie these dynamics?

Please send your proposals, including an abstract of no more than one page and the keyword »Tractive Forces« in the subject line, by December 15, 2025 to: imaginarien.der.kraft@uni-hamburg.de.

Click for the Announcement of the Workshop »›Tractive Forces‹ Potentials of Art in the Trecento« (PDF)

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Dec
17
5:30 PM17:30

Lecture: A Spectrum of Desires: Queering Medieval Art at the MET Cloisters, Nancy Thebault, The Courtauld, London

Lecture

A Spectrum of Desires: Queering Medieval Art at the MET Cloisters

Nancy Thebault, University of Oxford

Vernon Square Campus, Lecture Theatre 2

The Courtauld, London

17 December 2025, 17:30 - 19:00 GMT

Two Riddles of the Queen of Sheba, ca. 1490-1500, Strasbourg. Linen warp; wool, linen, and metallic wefts. 31.5 x 40 inches. The Cloisters Collection, 1971.43

On view from October 17, 2025 to March 29, 2026 at The Met Cloisters, New York, Spectrum of Desire explores the diverse and sometimes surprising ways that medieval people thought about love, sex, and gender in the medieval past. In this talk, Nancy will offer an overview of the exhibition, which she co-curated with Melanie Holcomb (Metropolitan Museum of Art) as well as share new research on one of the objects featured in the show, namely a tapestry of the Queen of Sheba posing riddles to Solomon. Her study of the tapestry, which was made in late 15th-century Strasbourg, aims to shed light on the ways that medieval people were thinking about the relationship between gender, nature, and art making itself.

Nancy Thebaut is Associate Professor of the History of Art at the University of Oxford and a tutorial fellow at St Catherine’s College. She earned her PhD from the University of Chicago in 2019, a museum studies diploma from the Ecole du Louvre in 2011, an MA in the History of Art from the Courtauld in 2009, and her BA from Agnes Scott College in 2008. She is co-curator of Spectrum of Desire: Love, Sex, and Gender in the Middle Ages with Melanie Holcomb, and she is also co-author of the accompanying exhibition catalogue, published by the Metropolitan Museum and Yale University Press. In addition to her curatorial work, Nancy is also completing a book on Carolingian and Ottonian liturgical images, entitled Lessons in Looking: Difficult Images of Christ ca. 850-1050.

Organised by Dr Jessica Barker, Senior Lecturer in Medieval Art History, The Courtauld, as part of the Medieval Work-in-Progress Series. This series is generously supported by Sam Fogg.

For information and to book tickets, visit https://courtauld.ac.uk/whats-on/a-spectrum-of-desires-queering-medieval-art-at-the-met-cloisters/

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Dec
19
5:00 PM17:00

CALL FOR PAPERS / APPEL À COMMUNICATION: 43rd Canadian Conference of Medieval Art Historians / 43e colloque canadien des historiens de l’art médiéval

CCMAH / CCHAM

CALL FOR PAPERS / APPEL À COMMUNICATION

The 43rd Canadian Conference of Medieval Art Historians will be co-hosted by the University of Toronto and the Art Gallery of Ontario on March 27–28, 2026. Papers are invited on any topic related to the art, architecture, and visual/material culture of the Middle Ages, broadly defined, or its post-medieval revivals. Papers may be delivered in English or French. Please submit a short abstract (max. 250 words) and a one-page c.v. to ccmah2026toronto@gmail.com by December 19, 2025. Scholars at every stage of their careers are encouraged to submit proposals. There may be funding available for graduate-student travel and accommodations.

L’Université de Toronto e le Musée des beaux-arts de l’Ontario accueilleront conjointement le 43e colloque canadien des historiens de l’art médiéval qui se tiendra à Toronto les 27 e 28 mars 2026. Les communications portant sur tout sujet relatif à l’art, à l’architecture et à la culture visuelle/matérielle du Moyen Âge, au sens large, ou à ses renaissances postmédiévales seront bienvenues, et peuvent être présentées en anglais ou en français. Veuillez soumettre un bref résumé de votre communication (250 mots maximum) et un c.v. d’une page à ccmah2026toronto@gmail.com avant le 19 décembre 2025. Les chercheurs/chercheuses à tous les stades de leur carrière académique sont encouragé(e)s à participer. Des fonds pourraient être disponible pour les frais de déplacement et d’hébergement des étudiant(e)s diplômé(e)s.

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Dec
20
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers: Princeton Symposium on Athonite Collections, 25-26 Sept. 2026, Due by 20 Dec. 2025

Call for Papers

Princeton Symposium on Athonite Collections

25-26 September 2026

Due by 20 December 2025

We are pleased to announce the CFP for the Symposium: The Athonite Collections and Their Challenges. Open Access, Traveling Exhibitions, and Digital Surrogates. The Symposium will take place in Princeton on September 25-26, 2026.

Organizers: Julia Gearhart (Visual Resources) and Maria Alessia Rossi (Index of Medieval Art)

Mount Athos holds a wealth of treasures that illuminate the expansive social network of the medieval and modern Christian world. This holy peninsula has shaped the history of Greece, the Mediterranean, Europe, and beyond.

This symposium aims to tackle the challenges of studying the Athonite collections and other such religious repositories. These are challenges that restrict scholarly inquiry and therefore limit the development of new perspectives and the full appreciation of the unique collections and the history of the communities themselves. The reservations of monastic communities over the public accessibility and display of their sacred objects are well known and understandable in view of the centuries-old traditions the monasteries are safeguarding. This symposium seeks to find new ways forward in reconciling these conflicting views, addressing questions such as: how could institutions preserve the agency of the monastic community whilst promoting accessibility and scholarship? Could openly accessible digital archives be fostered while still respecting the ownership of the living religious community?

This event is being organized in the context of the Connecting Histories: The Princeton and Mount Athos Legacy project. For this reason, most of the event and the papers will focus on Mount Athos; however, we will also consider papers that bring in comparative material from other communities that deal with similar issues, creating a conversation with the Athonite material.

For the full call for papers, visit the website: https://athoslegacy.project.princeton.edu/announcements/

Proposals for 30-minute papers (in English) should include a title, an abstract (max. 250 words) and a CV, and be sent to gearhart@princeton.edu and marossi@princeton.edu by December 20, 2025.

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Dec
31
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers: Journeys — Borders — Encounters, SASMARS Biennial International Conference (2-6 Sept. 2026, Stellenbosch, South Africa)

Call for Papers

The Southern African Society for Medieval and Renaissance Studies (SASMARS) Biennial International Conference

Journeys — Borders — Encounters

Mont Fleur Conference Venue, Stellenbosch, South Africa, 2-6 September 2026

Due by 31 December 2025

We are pleased to announce that the 27th Biennial International SASMARS Conference will be held from 3 to 6 September 2026 at the Mont Fleur Conference Venue in Stellenbosch, South Africa.

Papers for this interdisciplinary conference may cover any period within the Middle Ages and Renaissance, in any geographical space, and deal with any area of interest or discipline that could be relevant to the topic “Journeys — Borders — Encounters”.

Ideas to consider could include, but need not be limited to:

  • Travel and migration

  • Spiritual journeys and pilgrimage

  • Trade routes, trade, and trade goods

  • Encounters between cultures, peoples, religions, and the like

  • Physical or metaphorical boundaries

  • Maps and map-making

  • Evirnoments and ecology

  • Medicine and medical knowledge exchange

  • Intellectual and textual encounters and exchanges

  • War and campaigning

Proposals should consist of a title and abstract of up to 250 words, as well as the author’s name, affiliation, contact details, and a brief biography of no more than 100 words. Papers should be no longer than 20 minutes when read (approximately 2,500 words) and will be followed by a Q and A.

Please submit proposals to Carin Marais (samedrensociety@gmail.com) by 31 December 2025. Any enquiries can be sent to the same email address.

Our keynote speaker for the 2026 conference will be Professor Jordi Sánchez-Martí of the University of Alicante, Spain.

Professor Sánchez-Martí, B.A. (Jaume I), M.A. (Bristol), Ph.D. (Cornell) is a professor in English Literature and a Partner Principal Investigator on Re-mediating the Early Book: Pasts and Futures (REBPAF). Professor Sánchez-Martí has a particular interest in Middle English romances and their transmission, as well as Iberian books of chivalry in English translation and their circulation.


Please click for the conference details. More information and contact details on the SASMARS Facebook page and website.

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Dec
31
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers: The Symposium on Crusade Studies, Saint Louis University, MO (10-11 Apr. 2026)

Call for Papers

The Symposium on Crusade Studies

April 10 – 11, 2026, St. Louis, MO
Saint Louis University, Missouri Campus

Due by December 31, 2025

The Symposium on Crusade Studies is sponsored by the Crusade Studies Forum at Saint Louis University. Founded in 2006, the Forum is proud to celebrate its twentieth anniversary this upcoming year. The Symposium welcomes proposals for scholarly papers, complete sessions, and roundtable discussions on all topics related to the medieval crusading movement. Papers are typically twenty minutes in length, and sessions are scheduled for ninety minutes.

Abstracts of 250 words and session proposals should be submitted online at http://www.crusadestudies.org/symposium-on-crusade-studies.html The deadline for submission is December 31, 2025. Late submissions will be considered if space is available. Decisions will be made by the end of January, and the program will be published in February.

For more information, or to submit your proposal, go to
http://www.crusadestudies.org/symposium-on-crusade-studies.html

Contact: Evan S. McAllister at crusades@slu.edu

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Jan
4
10:00 AM10:00

Exhibition Closing: Gilded Books: Treasures of the Reading Room, Château de Chantilly, France, 15 Oct. 2025 - 4 Jan. 2026

Exhibition closing

Gilded Books: Treasures of the Reading Room

Reading Room, Château de Chantilly, France

15 October 2025 - 4 January 2026

Board covered with a repoussé copper plate, 14th-century.
Centre: enamel crucifix, circa 1200,  ©RMN-GP

The Reading Room is currently restoring its extensive collection of gilt bindings, providing visitors with an opportunity to explore the unrivalled brilliance of the Duke of Aumale’s princely library.

Gold leaf became more widely used in bookmaking with the introduction of the codex – bound collections of folded sheets – and the rise of Christianity from the 4th century, which increased demand for ornate texts. This exhibition will feature a collection of extraordinary books, from medieval ecclesiastical treasures to royal and princely collections and prestigious 19th-century works, and reveal the remarkable quality of their decorations, the metals employed and the techniques used to bind, illuminate and write them.

Among the techniques used for gilt bindings are metal setting, embossing and filigree-work. From the 14th century, brocaded or embroidered fabric bindings began to feature gold and silver metallic threads, often embellished with silk thread. Leather was commonly employed for bindings from the 16th to the 19th centuries, and the Duke of Aumale’s collection contains examples of many different types of gilding techniques and designs, including gilt tracing for complex decorations and patterns.

Gilt and gauffered edges, hidden from view, were tooled with decorative patterns well into the 19th century.

As visitors move through the exhibition, they delve deeper into the book. Gold was also used on board backs, which were often covered with decorative leather or gilt endpapers, a common 18th-century practice. Gauffered papers, a speciality of Augsburg and Nuremberg, featured brass and alloys of zinc, copper, tin or even lead.

Gold was also used for illuminations to illustrate text and for letters. Among the rarest books in the exhibition are works printed with gold ink, including a 1482 edition of Euclid’s Elements by Erhard Ratdolt dedicated to the Doge of Venice, and an 1836 Gospel printed with gold letters on porcelain paper from the library of King Louis Philippe at Neuilly.

For more information, visit https://chateaudechantilly.fr/en/evenement/exhibition-gilded-books-treasures-of-the-duke-of-aumale/

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Jan
4
10:30 AM10:30

Exhibition Closing: Sing a New Song: The Psalms in Medieval Art and Life, The Morgan Library & Museum, New York City, 12 Sept. 2025 - 4 Jan. 2026

Exhibition Closing

Sing a New Song: The Psalms in Medieval Art and Life

The Morgan Library & Museum, New York City, NY

September 12, 2025 through January 4, 2026

Chanting Clerics, from the Windmill Psalter, England, London, late thirteenth century. The Morgan Library & Museum, MS M.102, fol. 100r (det). 

Traditionally ascribed to King David, the Hebrew Book of Psalms is a collection of sacred poems that constitute the longest and most popular book of the Bible. These poems include expressions of lament and loss, petitions and confessions, as well as exclamations of joy and thanksgiving— universal themes that speak to what it means to be human.

Sing a New Song traces the impact of the Psalms on men and women in medieval Europe from the sixth to the sixteenth century. It encompasses daily practices and performance, as well as the creation of Psalters (Books of Psalms), among the most richly ornamented manuscripts ever made. Stressing the integration of the Psalms in medieval life, topics range from children saying their prayers to people preparing to die.

The beginning of the exhibition is devoted to the Psalms’ origins, with special emphasis on David as composer. The following two sections show how Psalms permeated the intellectual culture of medieval Europe through translations into Latin and the vernacular. Children used Psalters to learn to read, patrons commissioned versions in their native languages, and theologians, glossing the Psalms, authored the most influential interpretive writings of the Middle Ages. The next section is dedicated to the medieval Psalter. More than any other text, Psalms informed the language of the liturgy, and the Psalter served effectively as the prayer book of the Church. Priests, monks, and nuns were required to pray all 150 Psalms weekly. Lay people across Europe, imitating these practices, fueled a demand for Psalters —often gloriously illuminated. Another section examines performance of the Psalms within the monastery, the church, and the private home. The final section examines the apotropaic function of Psalm texts, the use of Psalms as penitential atonement, and how Psalms comforted the dying.

For more information, visit https://www.themorgan.org/exhibitions/sing-a-new-song

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Jan
11
9:30 AM09:30

Closing Exhibition: Le Moyen Âge du 19e siècle: Créations et faux dans les arts précieux; Musée de Cluny, Paris, France, 7 Oct. 2025 to 11 Jan. 2026

Closing Exhibition

Le Moyen Âge du 19e siècle: Créations et faux dans les arts précieux

Musée de Cluny, Paris, France

Du 7 octobre 2025 au 11 janvier 2026

Après les événements révolutionnaires, le 19e siècle redécouvre le Moyen Âge, tout en le réinterprétant. Ce siècle, qui cultiva une rêverie romantique et connut d’importants progrès technologiques et la constitution de grandes collections, s’est inspiré du Moyen Âge en produisant des copies, des pastiches, des oeuvres composites et des faux. L’exposition permet des confrontations, mettant en regard certains objets médiévaux avec leurs "résonances" du 19e siècle.

Le propos est centré sur les arts précieux, dans leur acception médiévale : pièces d’orfèvrerie et d’émaillerie, ivoires, tissus précieux. Ces domaines ont en effet connu au 19e siècle un foisonnement de redécouvertes techniques. Ces phénomènes culturels et artistiques émergent dès les années 1820-1830 jusqu’à la veille de la Première Guerre mondiale, soit pendant un siècle environ. Collectionneurs, ateliers de création et de restauration, mais aussi faussaires, en sont les principaux acteurs, autour d’un marché de l’art en pleine expansion, focalisé sur Paris, qui apparaît alors comme la capitale des arts précieux.

Retrouvez toutes les dates des visites guidées de l'exposition ici

Tarif(s) :

  • Droit d'entrée plein tarif : 12€

  • Droit d'entrée tarif réduit : 10€

Pour plus d’informations, visitez https://www.musee-moyenage.fr/activites/programmation/le-moyen-age-du-19e-siecle.html

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Jan
12
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers: Perspective, actualité en histoire de l’art, n° 2027 – 1, Figures of Naturalism

Call for Papers

Perspective

actualité en histoire de l’art, n° 2027 – 1

Figures of naturalism

Due by 12 January 2026

Leonardo da Vinci, Broad Bean Pods, Cherries, and Wild Strawberry, Manuscript B, c. 1487–89, detail from a paper notebook illustrated with drawings and sketches, parchment cover, 24.4 × 17 cm (page), Paris, Bibliothèque de l’Institut de France (Ms 2173), fo 3 ro.

At a time when ecology has become a major preoccupation and a key issue in political, economic and social terms alike, art historians have resolutely taken on the questions it raises through a profound renewal of their approach to nature. Can we speak of a new naturalism in art history?

In line with its editorial policy focused on the history of the discipline, Perspective has chosen to devote its next issue to naturalism, a complex question which goes beyond the framework of art history in various respects and one which its practitioners have approached in multiple ways. The theme is eminently topical, given its resonance with the ecological issues that are now at the forefront of political debates, as well as research in the natural and social sciences and the humanities. Naturalism is thus one of the concepts at the intersection of art history, other scholarly disciplines and social issues that Perspective seeks to highlight. The objective of this issue is to trace the use of naturalism in the history of art and explore the changes in the concept that have most marked the discipline in recent years by examining the most varied time periods and cultural areas possible.

The term “figures”, in the geometrical and metaphorical sense of forms, singular historical and cultural configurations, calls for identifying, investigating and understanding the different definitions of naturalism that the history of art has produced, depending on their specific intellectual contexts. We are therefore particularly interested in proposals based on a reflexive historiographic, theoretical or methodological approach to the concept.

1. THE NATURALIST SCHOOL: A 19TH-CENTURY ARTISTIC MOVEMENT

First of all, we are interested in the naturalist school of painting as it was
defined in the second half of the 19th century (Castagnary, [1857-1870] 1892); David-Sauvageot, 1889; Thomson, 2021) with regard to painters such as Gustave Courbet and Théodore Rousseau, who sought truth in nature,
relied on modern rationalism and strove for a more just representation of society. The term thus took on a political and moral connotation in that those supporting the school often shared socialist ideas and those who opposed it (cf. the criticisms waged against Émile Zola, the leading figure of the naturalists in literature) reproached its indulgence for crude images of the dregs of society. The questions raised here might include the discourse promoting this artistic movement (how it differs, for example, from realism), its justifications (what “nature” are we speaking about?) and its theoretical and historical extent (for Jules-Antoine Castagnary, naturalism went back to Cimabue); its possible origins in the artistic literature (e.g., Giovan Pietro Bellori’s disdainful qualification of Caravaggio’s followers as “naturalisti” in L’Idea del pittore, dello scultore e dell’architetto [1664]; see his Vite de’ pittori, scultori et architetti moderni,
ed. E. Borea, Turin, 1976: 21-22), or rather, in the natural sciences (since the 18th century, “naturalists” have primarily designated scholars studying nature).

2. NATURALIST ARTS AND SCIENCES OF THE PAST

A second research area concerns naturalist representations aimed at studying and promoting nature as a physical reality. In its first complete edition (1694), the dictionary of the Académie française defined a “naturalist” as a person who, like Aristotle, was devoted to the study of nature. In this sense, naturalist artists and scholars would be observers of plant and animal life, rock formations, oceans and stars, bacteria and insects, who employ their knowledge to represent the visible. While this field has been well explored since the pioneering studies of Erwin Panofsky on Galileo (Panofsky, 1954) or Ernst Kris on the rustic style (Kris, [1926] 2023), it has undergone many changes and has been considerably developed in recent years (Felfe, Sass, 2019). Studies on naturalist artists have helped to extend the boundaries of the discipline by considering topics that had long been ignored by art historians, such as late medieval marginal illustrations (Tongiorgi Tomasi, 1984), the arts of 16th-century gardens (Battisti, 1972; Brunon, 2001), scientific illustration from the 16th to the 18th century (aCkerman, 1985; O’Malley, Meyers, 2008) and taxidermy or fishkeeping in the 19th century (Laugée, 2022; Le Gall, 2022). Wildlife art, which was not highly regarded in the past, is now enjoying renewed interest among researchers who compare this production to knowledge about domestic and wild animals during the same period. The question here is how such studies challenge art history’s conventional hierarchies and enrich the discipline.

3. NATURALISM AS A FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLE OF ART

Third, naturalism seems to have become a widely used principle in art history during the first half of the 20th century, no longer to designate a specific school of painting but as one of the fundamental principles of artistic expression. Certain authors thus pointed to naturalist trends in medieval art (Dvořák, 1919; White, 1947) or ancient art, and describing an artwork as naturalist had almost become a compliment, as well as a sign of modernity. According to David Summers, this radical approach to visual naturalism was based on a presumed correspondence between the elements of the art in question and those of optical experience (Summers, 1987: 3). Briefly stated, in 1920, any work that appeared to be an imitation of reality could be described as naturalist. For the purposes of the present issue, we would be interested in a review of the debates that opposed the major art historians of that period concerning the origins of naturalism and its underlying rationales: can we speak of progress in the arts according to their degree of naturalism? Does the desire to imitate nature mean seeking to function in the same way, to know it, master it, or discover its aesthetic qualities? Is the source of artistic naturalism to be sought in universal human psychology or the material living conditions of certain societies? Has the discovery of prehistoric art overturned the convictions of art historians about the origins of the imitation of nature? What were the criticisms provoked by this extended use of naturalism, which justified its replacement or abandon? How is it treated today (kemP, 1990; Campbell, 2010; Barbottin, 2013; Guérin, Sapir, 2016; Boto Varela, Serrano Coll, McNeill, 2020)? Another issue at stake here is the distinction between mimetic practices that exist in several cultures and at different time periods and the naturalist spirit, in the sense of an undertaking aimed at the study of nature.

4. AT THE INTERSECTION OF ART HISTORY, THE NATURAL AND SOCIAL SCIENCES AND THE HUMANITIES: THE NEW NATURALISMS

It is also important to examine contemporary approaches to naturalism, in art history, the humanities and the natural sciences alike. In the history of science, philosophy and anthropology, naturalism has become a subject of investigation in its own right. How do art historians receive, utilise and/or criticise these studies? We can cite in particular science historians Lorraine Daston and Peter Galison, whose Objectivity (Daston, Galison, 2007) challenges the historical model prevailing, for example, in the work of Ernst Gombrich (Gombrich, 1960): rather than placing the representation of nature within a linear continuum (“progress”) common to art and science, between the 15th and 19th centuries, they posit a more discontinuous evolution of the regimes of truth, ways of observing and naturalistic images. Another relevant approach is that of anthropologist Philippe Descola who, in Les Formes du visible (DesCola, 2021), considers naturalism as an ontology, a way of dividing up the world intellectually. For Descola, it is typical of modern western culture and an intrinsic part of European and North American colonialism and extractivism since the 16th century, as symbolised by the form of the modern portrait and landscape. He thus seems to agree with Gombrich, whose ideas on the subject have been admirably summed up in a single phrase by James Elkins: “Naturalism is, in short, the history of western art” (James Elkins, Stories of Art, New York/ London, Routledge, 2002: 60). But where Gombrich perhaps sees a mark of western superiority, Descola finds a problem, which echoes certain political positions today.

On this point, we are particularly open to ecocritical and ecofeminist approaches to art, in order to explore the ways history draws on them and reconsider the history of the landscape, especially in terms of the concept of the Anthropocene (Arnold, 1998; Thomas, 2000; Nisbet, 2014; Demos, 2016; Patrizio, 2018; Ramade, 2022; Bessette, 2024; Fowkes, Fowkes, 2025), or to examine the museum and the ecological interventions transforming it (Domínguez Rubio, 2020; Quenet, 2024). Alongside Descola’s anthropology of nature, we have seen the emergence of artistic, visual and social narratives about human-animal relationships or the climate within the fields of animal studies or climatology (Rader, Cain, 2014; Cronin, 2018). Studies on colonialism and racism also provide a useful point of view for understanding cultural, visual and artistic phenomena such as tropicalism or primitivism (Noël, 2021). Last of all, we can note the recent spread of an art history investigating the origins of the materials used by artists or a history of decorative arts that seeks to bring out not only the aesthetic aspects of ornaments but their the economic and colonial implications. In all these areas, we would like to evaluate the contributions of the social history of animal representations and the environmental history of art as a way of studying the impact of human activity on the planet, its landscapes and its climate.

At the other end of the spectrum, however, certain specialists reject this ontological version of naturalism and its negative political implications and opt to study naturalist arts that manifest a detailed, sensitive attention to the environment (Zhong Mengual, 2021). Some of them thus maintain that a truly ecological history of the landscape should be free of all references to humans (Gaynor, McLean, 2005; Schlesser, 2016). Others, countering the idea that naturalism reflects a strictly modern, western way of thinking, apply it to prehistoric art (Moro Abadía, González Morales, Palacio Pérez, 2012; Guy, 2017), medieval art or non-western societies (Duran, 2001). In sum, we are seeking to address the contemporary debate on naturalism as a way of seeing and representing the world from the standpoint of art history.

5. A NATURAL HISTORY OF ART

The question of naturalism also leads us to consider what today’s natural sciences can contribute to the knowledge of art and its history. How do the neurosciences or behavioural psychology, for example, attempt to naturalise aesthetic responses, artistic creativity or the act of imitation (Dissanayake, 1995; Onians, 2007)? What are the bases of a natural history of art (Onians, 1996; Prévost, 2025) that places the appearance of forms in nature and art on the same level and studies the animal origins of culture (Lestel, 2001; Harkett, Hornstein, 2025)?

6. MAJOR FIGURES

A final approach entails the historiography of the prominent personalities – art critics, artists, art historians, philosophers of art, scientists coming from other disciplines – who have helped to make the concept of naturalism exist in art history. Here, intellectual biographies will allow us to study works of authors who have provided outstanding, original, noteworthy definitions of naturalism – on the one hand, individuals classified as “naturalists” (scientists who study nature), those who develop a theory or practice of art or a naturalist perspective on art, and, on the other, individuals (artists, specialists in the field of art) who identify a naturalist art. By way of example, we can cite well-known figures such as Galileo (the subject of classic studies by Panofsky [Panofsky, 1954], David Freedberg [Freedberg, 2002] and Horst Bredekamp [Bredekamp, 2007]), Charles Darwin, whose importance for the art of his time has been recognised in several recent exhibitions [Donald, Munro, 2009; Bossi, 2020]), art critic Castagnary (said to be the inventor of the “naturalist movement” in painting as of 1863 [Castagnary, (1857-1870) 1892]), Wilhelm Worringer (who considered it to be one of the two great universal trends in art, alongside that of stylisation [Worringer, (1907) 1953]). While their fascinating writings clearly deserve to be re-examined in the light of the vast bibliography now devoted to them, this issue of Perspective is also intended to draw attention to lesser-known or less prominent figures, whose unexplored contributions can allow us to reconsider the construction of naturalism as an art-historical category and reevaluate its impact.

Perspective : actualité en histoire de l’art

Published by the Institut national d’histoire de l’art (INHA) since 2006, Perspective is a biannual journal which aims to bring out the diversity of current research in art history, highly situated and explicitly aware of its own historicity. It bears witness to the historiographic debates within the field without forgetting to engage with images and works of art themselves, updating their interpretations as well as fostering intra- and inter-disciplinary reflection between art history and other fields of research, the humanities in particular. In so doing, it also puts into action the “law of the good neighbor” as conceived by Aby Warburg. All geographical areas, periods, and media are welcome.

The journal publishes scholarly texts which offer innovative perspectives on
a given theme. Its authors contextualize their arguments; using case studies allows them to interrogate the discipline, its methods, its history, and its limits. Moreover, articles that are proposed to the editorial committee should necessarily include a methodological dimension, provide an epistemological contribution, or offer a significant and original historiographic evaluation. Depending on the subject, the wider bibliographical corpus and the geographical area and time period under consideration, two types of contributions are possible:

Focus: an article based on a specific case that permits the examination of a historiographic, theoretical or methodological question of current interest (3,500-4,000 words / 20,000-25,000 characters);

Wide Angle: an essay or critical assessment addressing a broader question, an art-historical movement or a methodological or theoretical issue that takes into account recent changes in orientation or approaches on the basis of a selective bibliography (7,000 words / 40,000-45,000 characters, excluding the bibliography).

Figures of naturalism, no. 2027 – 1 Editor: Thomas Golsenne (INHA)

Editorial board/Comité de rédaction here.

Please send your proposals (a summary of 200-500 words/ 2,000-3,000 characters, a working title, a short bibliography on the subject and a brief biography) to the editors (revue-perspective@inha.fr).
Proposal deadline: 12 January 2026.

Proposals will be examined by the editorial board regardless of language (the translation of articles accepted for publication is handled by Perspective).

The authors of the pre-selected projects will be informed of the editorial board’s decision in February 2026. The full articles must be received by 1st June 2026. The texts submitted (4,000-7,000 words/25,000-45,000 characters, depending on the format chosen) will be accepted in final form after an anonymous peer-review process.

For a PDF of the Call for Papers in French, click here.

For a PDF of the Call for Papers in English, click here.

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Jan
15
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Applications: Folger Institute Short-Term Fellowships

Call for Applications

Folger Institute Short-Term Fellowships

Due 15 January 2026

Applications are open through January 15th, 2026 for Folger Institute Short-Term Fellowships!

Each year the Folger Institute awards research fellowships to create a high-powered, multidisciplinary community of inquiry. This community of researchers may come from different fields, and their projects may find different kinds of expression. But our researchers share cognate interests in the history and literature, art and performance, philosophy, religion, and politics of the early modern world.

Short-term fellowships support scholars whose work would benefit from significant primary research for one, two, or three months, with a monthly stipend of $5,000 per onsite month and $4,000 per virtual month. These fellowships are designed to support a concentrated period of full-time work on research projects that draw on the strengths of the Folger’s collections and programs.

For the 2026-27 fellowship year, short-term fellows will have the option to take their fellowship fully onsite, fully virtual, or a combination of the two. Applicants may propose any research schedule that best fits their project’s needs.

The deadline for short-term fellowship applications is January 15, 2026.

For more information, visit https://www.folger.edu/research/the-folger-institute/fellowships/apply-for-a-fellowship/short-term-fellowships/

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Jan
25
10:00 AM10:00

Exhibition Closing: Fra Angelico, Fondazione Palazzo Strozzi, Florence, Italy, 26 Sept. 2025 - 25 Jan. 2026

Exhibition Closing

Fra Angelico

Fondazione Palazzo Strozzi, Florence, Italy

26 September 2025 - 25 January 2026

Beato Angelico, Trittico francescano (det.), 1428-1429. Su concessione del Ministero della Cultura – Direzione regionale Musei nazionali Toscana – Museo di San Marco

From September 26, 2025, to January 25, 2026, the Fondazione Palazzo Strozzi and the Museo di San Marco present Fra Angelico, an extraordinary and unprecedented exhibition devoted to an artist who symbolises fifteenth-century Florentine art and stands out as one of the greatest masters of Italian art of all time.

The exhibition, organized in collaboration between the Fondazione Palazzo Strozzi, the Ministero della Cultura – Direzione regionale Musei nazionali Toscana and Museo di San Marco in a close dialogue between cultural institutions and the region, is one of the leading cultural events of 2025. It celebrates a father of the Renaissance in two venues: the Palazzo Strozzi and the Museo di San Marco.

The exhibition explores Fra Angelico’s art, development and influence and his relation to painters such as Lorenzo Monaco, Masaccio, and Filippo Lippi, as well as sculptors like Lorenzo Ghiberti, Michelozzo, and Luca della Robbia. Curated by Carl Brandon Strehlke, Curator Emeritus of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, with – for the Museo di San Marco – Angelo Tartuferi, former Director of the Museo di San Marco, and Stefano Casciu, Regional Director of Musei nazionali Toscana, Fra Angelico marks the first major exhibition in Florence dedicated to the artist exactly seventy years after the monographic show of 1955, creating a unique dialogue between institutions and the region.

For more information, visit https://www.palazzostrozzi.org/en/archivio/exhibitions/angelico/,

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Jan
26
10:00 AM10:00

Exhibition Closing: Gothicisms, Musée du Louvre Lens, France, September 24, 2025–January 26, 2026

Exhibition Closing

Gothicisms

Musée du Louvre Lens, Lens, France

September 24, 2025–January 26, 2026

From the birth of the cathedrals to the Goth counterculture and fantasy, Gothic art truly has traversed the centuries. In ground-breaking fashion, the Louvre-Lens is presenting its first ever panorama of Gothic art from the 12th to the 21st century, from its emergence through to the neo-Gothic style and right up to the “Goths” of today. 

Gothic art is closely associated with the age of the cathedral builders. As the first pan-European movement, it inspired exceptional artistic forms endowed with unparalleled expressive force. Sculptures, art objects, graphic arts, painting, photography, installations and furniture are gathered here in a journey through some 200 works of art. Together they reveal the recurrences and continuity of these Gothic languages, which blossomed during medieval times, came to life again in the 18th and 19th centuries, and still inspire us now. But where does the word Gothic come from? Why is this colourful art today associated with a dark aesthetic of black, night and the fantastic? How can this endlessly recurring attraction be explained? This chronological journey is interspersed with forays into specific topics, touching on the Gothic script, music, film and literature. It is an immersion into history and into society’s collective imagination to understand the origins and singularity of the Gothic movement: unique, multifaceted and very much alive today.  

Exhibition curators:
General curator: Annabelle Ténèze, director of the Louvre-Lens
Scientific curator: Florian Meunier, chief heritage curator at the Department of Art Objects, Musée du Louvre
Scientific advisor: Dominique de Font-Réaulx, general heritage curator, specialising in the 19th century, special advisor to the President-Director of the Musée du Louvre
Associate curator: Hélène Bouillon, general heritage curator
Assisted by Caroline Tureck, head of publications and documentation at the Louvre-Lens
Scenography: Mathis Boucher, scenographer, Louvre-Lens

This project was made possible thanks to the support of the Musée de Cluny – Musée national du Moyen Âge, Cité de l’architecture et du Patrimoine, Bibliothèque nationale de France and the Musée des Arts décoratifs de Strasbourg.

For more information, visit https://www.louvrelens.fr/en/exhibition/gothicisms-2/

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Jan
30
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers: Women Religious: Patronage and Networks from Medieval to Modern, Queen Mary University of London (11-12 June 2026)

Call for Papers

Women Religious: Patronage and Networks from Medieval to Modern

Queen Mary University of London, 11-12 June 2026

Due 30 January 2026

The History of Women Religious in Britain and Ireland annual conference will take place at Queen Mary University of London on the 11 and 12 June 2026 with the broad theme of: ‘Women Religious: Patronage and Networks from Medieval to Modern’.

We welcome papers on the following or related topics:

  • Transpational and/of national netwotks

  • Collaborations between female religious congregations and communities

  • * Relationships with the secular and regular dergy

  • Relationships with lay pattons

  • Family and friendship networks

  • Pinancial nerworke and economic patronage

  • Calcural networka

  • Digital networks

  • Network analysis

  • Queer nerworke

  • Missions as networks opirtual bones belween women religious and the wider community

  • The role of lay and choir sistere

  • Almsgiving and charitable networks

Abstracts of between 250-300 words together with a short biography may be sent to: hwrbi.conference@gmail.com on or before Friday, 30 January 2026.

H-WRBI encourages participants from all career stages and international participants

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Jan
31
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Applications: 2026-2027 Predoctoral Research Residencies at La Capraia, Naples, Due by 31 Jan. 2026

Call for Applications

2026-2027 Predoctoral Research Residencies at La Capraia, Naples

Due by 31 January 2026

Founded in 2018, the Center for the Art and Architectural History of Port Cities “La Capraia” (Centro per la Storia dell’Arte e dell’Architettura delle Città Portuali “La Capraia”) is a collaboration between the Museo e Real Bosco di Capodimonte, the Edith O’Donnell Institute of Art History at the University of Texas at Dallas, Franklin University Switzerland, and the Amici di Capodimonte.

Housed in “La Capraia,” a rustic eighteenth-century agricultural building at the heart of the Bosco di Capodimonte, the Center engages the Museo di Capodimonte and the city of Naples as a laboratory for new research in the cultural histories of port cities and the mobilities of artworks, people, technologies, and ideas. Global in scope, research at La Capraia is grounded in direct study of objects, sites, collections, and archives in Naples and southern Italy. Through site-based seminars and conferences, collaborative projects with partner institutions, and research residencies for graduate students, La Capraia fosters research on Naples and southern Italy as a site of cultural encounter, exchange, and transformation, and cultivates a network of scholars working at the intersection of the global and the local.

The Advisory Committee of the Center for the Art and Architectural History of Port Cities “La Capraia” invites applications for 2026-2027 Research Residencies for PhD students carrying out research for their dissertations. Projects, which may be interdisciplinary, may focus on art and architectural history, archaeology, histories of collecting, technical art history, cultural heritage, the digital humanities, music history, or related fields, from antiquity to the present. Projects should address the cultural histories of Naples and southern Italy as a center of exchange, encounter, and transformation, and, importantly, make meaningful use of local research materials including artworks, sites, archives, and libraries. We welcome applications for projects that engage with histories of the collections and grounds of Capodimonte, and/or artworks and monuments held there. Projects in the earlier phases of research are preferred.

All materials, including letters of recommendation, are due by January 31, 2026.

Read the full Call and learn how to apply at https://utdallas.box.com/v/LaCapraiaCall2026-2027

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Jan
31
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Applications: Student Scholarship for 2026 BAA Romanesque Conference in Toulouse

Call for Applications

2026 BAA Romanesque Conference in Toulouse

Student Scholarship

Due by 31 January 2026

A limited number of scholarships for students are available to help cover their cost of the 2026 Romanesque Conference in Toulouse: Transmission, Reception and Imitation in Romanesque art and architecture.

Please apply by 31  January 2026, attaching a short CV along with the name and contact details of one referee. Applications should be sent to: rplant62@hotmail.com

It would not be possible to mount this conference without John Osborn, and the British Archaeological Association wishes to take this opportunity to thank him for the boost to Romanesque scholarship afforded by his great generosity. For more information about this conference, head over to the conference event page.

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Feb
1
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Applications: Mary Jaharis Center Grants 2026–2027

Call for Applications

Mary Jaharis Center Grants 2026–2027

Due February 1, 2026

The Mary Jaharis Center for Byzantine Art and Culture is pleased to announce its 2026–2027 grant competition.

Mary Jaharis Center Co-Funding Grants promote Byzantine studies in North America. These grants provide co-funding to organize scholarly gatherings (e.g., workshops, seminars, small conferences) in North America that advance scholarship in Byzantine studies broadly conceived. We are particularly interested in supporting convenings that build diverse professional networks that cross the boundaries of traditional academic disciplines, propose creative approaches to fundamental topics in Byzantine studies, or explore new areas of research or methodologies.

Mary Jaharis Center Dissertation Grants are awarded to advanced graduate students working on Ph.D. dissertations in the field of Byzantine studies broadly conceived. These grants are meant to help defray the costs of research-related expenses, e.g., travel, photography/digital images, microfilm.

Mary Jaharis Center Publication Grants support book-length publications or major articles in the field of Byzantine studies broadly conceived. Grants are aimed at early career academics. Preference will be given to postdocs and assistant professors, though applications from non-tenure track faculty and associate and full professors will be considered. We encourage the submission of first-book projects.

Mary Jaharis Center Project Grants support discrete and highly focused professional projects aimed at the conservation, preservation, and documentation of Byzantine archaeological sites and monuments dated from 300 CE to 1500 CE primarily in Greece and Turkey. Projects may be small stand-alone projects or discrete components of larger projects. Eligible projects might include archeological investigation, excavation, or survey; documentation, recovery, and analysis of at risk materials (e.g., architecture, mosaics, paintings in situ); and preservation (i.e., preventive measures, e.g., shelters, fences, walkways, water management) or conservation (i.e., physical hands-on treatments) of sites, buildings, or objects.

The application deadline for all grants is February 1, 2026. For further information, please visit the Mary Jaharis Center website: https://maryjahariscenter.org/grants.

Contact Brandie Ratliff (mjcbac@hchc.edu), Director, Mary Jaharis Center, with any questions.

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Feb
20
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers: Church Archaeology Journal, Society for Church Archaeology

Call for Papers

Church Archaeology Journal

Society for Church Archaeology

Due 20 February 2026

The SCA's peer-reviewed journal Church Archaeology is seeking submissions for its vol 26 (2026) issue. We welcome and provide initial editorial feedback on main research articles, shorter articles, news pieces, and book reviews about all kind of ecclesiastical places of worship, their burial grounds, and material culture.

Contact: editorchurcharchaeology@outlook.com

For more information, visit https://www.churcharchaeology.org/journal and https://www.liverpooluniversitypress.co.uk/journal/churcharch

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Feb
20
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers for Journal: Church Archaeology, Vol. 2026, Due 20 Feb. 2026

Call for Papers for Journal

Church Archaeology

Deadline 20 February 2026

The SCA’s peer-reviewed journal Church Archaeology is seeking submissions for its Vol. 26 (2026) issue. We welcome and provide initial editorial feedback on main research articles, shorter articles, news pieces, and book reviews about all kind of ecclesiastical places of worship, their burial grounds, and material culture.

For a PDF of the Call for Papers, click here.

For more information on the journal, visit https://www.liverpooluniversitypress.co.uk/journal/churcharch

Contact: editorchurcharchaeology@outlook.com

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Feb
22
10:00 AM10:00

Exhibition Closing: Paws on Parchment, The Walters Art Museum, Baltimore, August 06, 2025–February 22, 2026

Exhibition closing

Paws on Parchment

Centre Street Building, Level 3, Medieval Gallery

The Walters Art Museum, Baltimore, MD

August 06, 2025–February 22, 2026

Flanders, Prayer Book, late 15th-century. Acquired by Henry Walters.

Cat lovers unite! The Walters is celebrating our feline friends with this paws-itively adorable exhibition. Paws on Parchment explores how medieval people thought about, engaged with, and admired cats through the animals’ presence in manuscripts from the period. Centuries before cat memes took over the internet, the antics of fanciful felines were already popular in the margins of medieval manuscripts. These furry animals delighted readers back then just as they amuse us today.

Cats played an important role in the medieval era. Like today, cats were considered beloved pets whose behavior amused and exasperated their owners. However, felines also served an important function as hunters that protected valuable books and textiles, food stores, and even people from disease-carrying rodents and other vermin. Cats also carried deep symbolic and moral meaning in this period.

In Paws on Parchment, visitors will enjoy medieval depictions of cats preserved in the pages of manuscripts from across the world, including a 15th-century “keyboard cat.” Most notably, visitors can see real pawprints left by a cat walking across the pages of a Flemish manuscript as the ink dried in the 1470s. A handful of these “pawprint” manuscripts are known around the world, and this is the first time the Walters’ example will ever be shown.

Curator: Lynley Anne Herbert, Robert and Nancy Hall Curator of Rare Books and Manuscripts

For more information, visit https://thewalters.org/exhibitions/paws/

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Dec
9
12:00 PM12:00

Online Lecture: The Quarry Church at Deir al-Ganadla (Asyut, Middle Egypt) and the Lost Timber Nave, Mikael Muehlbauer, On Zoom

Online Lecture

2025-2026 East of Byzantium Lecture Series

The Quarry Church at Deir al-Ganadla (Asyut, Middle Egypt) and the Lost Timber Nave

Mikael Muehlbauer, Columbia University

December 9, 2025 | Zoom | 12:00–1:30 pm (Eastern Standard Time, UTC -5)

The Mary Jaharis Center for Byzantine Art and Culture and the Mashtot Chair of Armenian Studies at Harvard University are pleased to announce the next lecture in the 2025–2026 East of Byzantium lecture series.

This presentation presents the little-known Quarry church of Mary at Deir al-Ganadla (near Asyut) as a tool for students of Late Antiquity to visualize lost timber-roofed basilicas in Egypt as well as the Mediterranean more broadly. The church’s value lies in its mural program, which orders the Pharaonic mine from which it was consecrated into a fictive freestanding basilica. These paintings depict painted timber ephemera from circa 500 that are largely lost to us. By fully documenting this largely unknown church and its decorative schema we may reconstruct elements of freestanding basilicas in Egypt and the wider Mediterranean which lack extant naves. Although modest, Ganadla’s import should not be understated, as it is the most in-tact Late Antique church in Egypt known.

Mikael Muehlbauer is Lecturer in the Discipline of Art History and Archaeology at Columbia University. He is a specialist in the architecture of Medieval Ethiopia, Egypt and the textile arts of the Western Indian Ocean world.

Advance registration required. Register: https://eastofbyzantium.org/upcoming-events/

Contact Brandie Ratliff (mjcbac@hchc.edu), Director, Mary Jaharis Center for Byzantine Art and Culture with any questions.

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Dec
8
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers: Sounds and Silence, Oxford Medieval Graduate Conference 2026 (23-24 Apr. 2026, Maison Française d’Oxford)


Call for Papers

Sounds and Silence

Oxford Medieval Graduate Conference 2026

23-24 April 2026, Maison Française d’Oxford

Due by 8 December 2025

The Oxford Medieval Graduate Conference Committee invites paper submissions for the upcoming conference on the theme of ‘Sounds and Silence’ on the 23rd and 24th of April 2026 at the Maison Française d’Oxford.

Submissions are welcome from all disciplinary perspectives, including historical, literary, musical, archaeological, linguistic, and interdisciplinary approaches. Papers may address any geographical focus or subject related to the medieval period on the broad topic of ‘Sounds and Silences.’

Areas of interest may include, but are not limited to:

  • Vernacular song and folk music

  • Representations of sound and silence

  • Liturgical traditions

  • Monastic worship and silence

  • (Non)verbal (mis)communication

  • Taboo and censure

  • Vocalizations and orality

  • Linguistic change

  • Cultures of listening

  • Material culture of sound

  • Architecture and acoustics

  • Noises of nature

  • Soundscapes

  • Cosmological harmonies

  • Somatic and sensory experience

  • Epistemologies of sound

We welcome applications from graduate students at any university; a limited number of travel bursaries will be available to accepted presenters. We ask that all presenters attend in person, with hybrid participation available for attendees who cannot travel to the event.


Submission Guidelines

Papers should be no longer than 20 minutes. Please submit abstracts of 250 words to oxgradconf@gmail.com by 8 December 2025.

In association with the Maison Française d’Oxford and Oxford Medieval Studies, sponsored by The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities (TORCH).

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Dec
7
12:00 PM12:00

Exhibition Closing: Medieval | Renaissance: A Dialogue on Early Italian Painting, McMullen Museum of Art, Boston College, 2 Sept. 2025 - 7 December 2025

Exhibition Closing

Medieval | Renaissance: A Dialogue on Early Italian Painting

Daley Family Gallery, McMullen Museum of Art, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, MA

September 2, 2025–December 7, 2025

Umbria or Marche, Croce dipinta, ca. 1295. Tempera and metals on panel. The Frascione Collection.

The closing centuries of the Middle Ages in Italy witnessed profound transformations in the art of painting. New techniques gave way to an expanded repertoire of formats and artistic styles; patronage systems and workshop practices evolved in tandem with reassessments of the merit of authorship; and long-standardized criteria for value and authenticity in representation were steadily redefined. These paradigm-shifting developments—exemplified in Early Italian painting—ramified into the academic study and connoisseurship of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, creating a blurry line between the Medieval period and early modernity that has proven difficult to shake.

Medieval | Renaissance foregrounds this distinction, exhibiting nineteen rarely shown works from the Frascione Collection in Florence, founded in 1893. Featuring devotional icons, altarpiece panels, narrative scenes, and portraits from the late thirteenth through early sixteenth centuries, the exhibition charts innovations in the craft and conceptualization of painting in Italy after 1300. These paintings represent a liminal epoch between the later Middle Ages and the Early Renaissance, whose works and artists are shared—even “claimed”—by two divergent art historical fields, “Medieval” and “Renaissance,” with their own cultures, questions, and interpretive methods.

Curated by John Lansdowne and Stephanie C. Leone, specialists in Medieval and Renaissance art, respectively, the exhibition invites viewers to contemplate the works through two distinct art historical lenses and from either side of a long-standing and long-debated disciplinary divide.

Organized by the McMullen Museum, Medieval | Renaissance has been underwritten by Boston College with major support from the Patrons of the McMullen Museum.

For more information, visit https://mcmullenmuseum.bc.edu/exhibitions/medieval-renaissance/

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Dec
6
9:00 AM09:00

Index of Medieval Art Conference: Art and Proof in the Ninth Century

Save the Date

Index of Medieval Art conference

Art and Proof in the Ninth Century

6 December 2025

Hrabanus Maurus, In honorem sanctae crucis, Fulda or Mainz, 820–840. Österreichische Nationalbibliothek, Cod. 652, fol. 17v, det.

Please save the date for the next Index of Medieval Art conference, “Art and Proof in the Ninth Century.” Organized by Professors Beatrice Kitzinger and Charlie Barber in collaboration with the Index and co-sponsored by the Department of Art & Archaeology, the conference will follow on the department’s 2025 Kurt Weitzmann Memorial Lecture by Francesca dell’Acqua (Università di Salerno) on December 5, which will double as the conference keynote.

The springing point of the conference is December 825, when the city of Paris witnessed a synod devoted to the discussion of the status of images in the Carolingian world. This meeting, convened in response to flare-ups of the “image question” in Constantinople and Rome, set forth a Latin Christian understanding of images that would remain dominant in early and high Medieval Europe. The dossier affirmed the value of images as mnemonics and devotional aids but ultimately re-asserted the primacy of verbal media in the religious sphere. However, as the conference speakers will show, artistic evidence itself suggests that ninth-century approaches to the role of images complicated and exceeded those prescribed for them by the bishops at Paris.

Prof. dell’Acqua’s lecture will directly address the Roman–Frankish context in which the Paris synod unfolded. The papers that follow will dramatically expand the lens through which we view the central questions by considering the notion of proof in the ninth century through a much wider lens, reaching from the British Isles to Japan and from Georgia to Egypt and representing a wide range of languages and religious communities. Key themes include: the terminology surrounding images and their uses; questions of representation, semiotics, authenticity and truth; propositions that need proving and their modes of proof; the functions and status of images in society, and how these are secured; how occasions for image discussion reflect on local circumstances and priorities; ways in which discussing the validity of images intersects with politics, diplomacy, or self-fashioning; whether the notion of proof in relation to images, which emerged from a specific Christian and European moment, resonates in other contexts; and whether a more global perspective provides different valences for the concept of “proof” through artwork.

Scheduled speakers

Francesca Dell’Acqua [Weitzmann Lecture, Dec. 5, 2025] Associate Professor, Università di Salerno

Andrea Achi, Associate Curator, Metropolitan Museum of Art

Nourane Ben Azzouna, Associate Curator, Metropolitan Museum of Art

Anouk Busset, Lecturer, Université de Lausanne                   

Zsuzsanna Gulacsi, Professor, Northern Arizona University

Rachel Saunders, Assistant Professor, Princeton University

Alexei Sivertsev, Professor, DePaul University

Erik Thunø, Professor, Rutgers University                     

Anca Vasiliu, [Respondent] Director of Research, CNRS, Sorbonne Université

The conference schedule and other details will be posted in the fall. We hope you can join us!

For more information, visit https://ima.princeton.edu/2025/06/17/save-the-date-for-the-next-index-conference-art-and-proof-in-the-ninth-century-dec-6-2025/

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Dec
5
5:00 PM17:00

Keynote for Index of Medieval Art Conference: Art as Proof: Statues and High Relief as Ideological Statements at the Time of the Image Controversy, c.750–850?, Francesca Dell’Acqua

Weitzmann Lecture—Keynote for Dec. 6 Index of Medieval Art Conference

Art as Proof: Statues and High Relief as Ideological Statements at the Time of the Image Controversy, c.750–850?

Francesca Dell’Acqua

Università di Salerno – DISPAC

Princeton University, Princeton, NJ

Friday, December 5, 2025, 5:00 pm – 6:00 pm

Virgin Mary, ’effigiem . . . in statum’, gilt silver, embossed, commissioned by Pope Paul I (757–67), artistic impression; ©Matilde Grimaldi for Francesca Dell’Acqua, 2025.

At a synod convened by Emperor Louis the Pious in Paris in November 825, Frankish clerics debated the correct use of images in churches. After carefully considering texts and the traditions of the Church, they confirmed the long-attested view that the Incarnation (the pivotal Christian doctrine that God took on human form in Jesus Christ) legitimizes images. They also established that images should neither be worshiped nor destroyed. In fact, images could be used to instruct people about religion and morals and to elevate the mind to spiritual things. In this lecture I shall limit myself to considering the presence of high-relief and three-dimensional images in repoussé metalwork or other media in western churches before and after the Paris Synod, in the period of the image controversy (c.720s–850). Generally lost, high-relief and three-dimensional images are recorded in written sources.

High-relief and three-dimensional images from Rome, Gaul/Francia, England, and Langobardia have occasionally been mentioned in studies on early medieval art, either to retrace the re-birth of three-dimensional statuary or to discuss image worship. They have also been occasionally construed as attestations of iconophilia, that is an attitude in favor of sacred images. Whether this kind of image might have functioned as an ideological statement should be evaluated not only by considering the specific circumstances in which they were situated, but also the broader body of evidence offered by written sources and material culture between the fourth and the ninth centuries in various regions of the West. I set out to do this in my paper.

For more information, visit https://artandarchaeology.princeton.edu/whats/events/art-proof-statues-and-high-relief-ideological-statements-time-image-controversy-c750

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Dec
5
9:30 AM09:30

Conference: Sanguis Christi. Culture visuelle/culture visionnaire (XIIIe-XVIIIe siècles), Louvain-la-Neuve, 3-5 December 2025

Conference

Sanguis Christi. Culture visuelle/culture visionnaire (XIIIe-XVIIIe siècles)

Louvain-la-Neuve, 3-5 December 2025

Ce colloque propose d’explorer comment la dévotion au Saint-Sang, sous ses multiples formes et manifestations (reliques, sacrement, miracles), a façonné et nourri l’émergence d’une culture visuelle en Europe depuis le Moyen Âge jusqu’au XVIIIe siècle.

C’est à travers la problématique du visuel, qu’il soit visible ou/et visionnaire, que seront approfondis les liens entre les questionnements théologiques, le développement et les évolutions d’une culture dévotionnelle, jusques et y compris dans ses dimensions sociales et politiques, ainsi que leurs effets sur les modes de représentation dans l’iconographie. Par culture visuelle / visionnaire, ce colloque entend ainsi donner une place à une approche qui sache interroger ce qui se donne à voir du Sang du Christ, en explorant l’articulation voire la tension qui émerge entre ce que le miracle rend perceptible aux sens et ce qui, par essence, échappe à la perception, ouvrant ainsi le fidèle à une dimension spirituelle et sacrée et à de nouvelles modalités de mise en visibilité du divin.

Comité organisateur : Manon Chaidron (UClouvain), Ralph Dekoninck (UCLouvain), Annick Delfosse (ULiège), Mathilde Marès (UCLouvain), Matthieu Somon (UCLouvain) et François Wallerich (UCLouvain).

For the conference program, click here.

For more information, click here.

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Dec
3
10:30 AM10:30

Conference: Sanguis Christi. Culture visuelle/culture visionnaire (XIIIe-XVIIIe siècles), Louvain-la-Neuve, 3-5 December 2025

Conference

Sanguis Christi. Culture visuelle/culture visionnaire (XIIIe-XVIIIe siècles)

Louvain-la-Neuve, 3-5 December 2025

Ce colloque propose d’explorer comment la dévotion au Saint-Sang, sous ses multiples formes et manifestations (reliques, sacrement, miracles), a façonné et nourri l’émergence d’une culture visuelle en Europe depuis le Moyen Âge jusqu’au XVIIIe siècle.

C’est à travers la problématique du visuel, qu’il soit visible ou/et visionnaire, que seront approfondis les liens entre les questionnements théologiques, le développement et les évolutions d’une culture dévotionnelle, jusques et y compris dans ses dimensions sociales et politiques, ainsi que leurs effets sur les modes de représentation dans l’iconographie. Par culture visuelle / visionnaire, ce colloque entend ainsi donner une place à une approche qui sache interroger ce qui se donne à voir du Sang du Christ, en explorant l’articulation voire la tension qui émerge entre ce que le miracle rend perceptible aux sens et ce qui, par essence, échappe à la perception, ouvrant ainsi le fidèle à une dimension spirituelle et sacrée et à de nouvelles modalités de mise en visibilité du divin.

Comité organisateur : Manon Chaidron (UClouvain), Ralph Dekoninck (UCLouvain), Annick Delfosse (ULiège), Mathilde Marès (UCLouvain), Matthieu Somon (UCLouvain) et François Wallerich (UCLouvain).

For the conference program, click here.

For more information, click here.

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Dec
2
12:00 PM12:00

Mary Jaharis Center for Byzantine Art and Culture Online Lecture: Worshipping the Mother Goddess: An Underground Cult Complex in Late Antique Aphrodisias, Ine Jacobs (Zoom)

Online Lecture

Worshipping the Mother Goddess: An Underground Cult Complex in Late Antique Aphrodisias

Ine Jacobs, University of Oxford

Mary Jaharis Center for Byzantine Art and Culture

December 2, 2025 | Zoom | 12:00–1:30 pm (Eastern Standard Time, UTC -5)

Late Antique Kybele statuette excavated from the House of Kybele, Aphrodisias. Image: © Aphrodisias excavations, photo by Ian Cartwright

The Mary Jaharis Center for Byzantine Art and Culture is pleased to announce the next lecture in our 2025–2026 lecture series.

Excavations in a suburban neighborhood of Aphrodisias have revealed a remarkably well-preserved underground cult complex dedicated to the Anatolian mother goddess Kybele. Concealed within the basement level of a large late antique private mansion—strategically positioned between the residence’s public quarters and an east–west street—the complex consists of a spacious central cult chamber, several smaller subsidiary rooms, a long subterranean corridor, and a lightwell that, in its final phase, was sealed and adapted for communal dining. To date, the sanctuary has been traced over an area of 26 by 15 meters, though it almost certainly extended further.

Originally established in the imperial period, the complex underwent several renovations in Late Antiquity, including a near-total rebuilding in the later 5th century. The sanctuary in this form remained active into the early 7th century, until the mansion that housed it was abruptly destroyed by fire in 617. Excavations have yielded a rich assemblage of cult equipment, including four statuettes of Kybele, effigies of other deities, three enigmatic “mountain busts,” amulets, numerous ceramic incense burners, ceramic and copper-alloy lamps, and copper-alloy tableware.

This presentation examines the architectural setting of the complex, structural features, cultic imagery, associated material culture, and the broader social and religious conditions at Aphrodisias that allowed pagan worship to endure into the 7th century.

Ine Jacobs is the Stavros Niarchos Foundation Associate Professor of Byzantine Archaeology and Visual Culture at the University of Oxford.

Advance registration required. Register: https://maryjahariscenter.org/events/worshipping-the-mother-goddess

Contact Brandie Ratliff (mjcbac@hchc.edu), Director, Mary Jaharis Center for Byzantine Art and Culture with any questions.

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Dec
1
6:00 PM18:00

In DC - Notre-Dame de Paris special evening: Film and Conversation

Notre-Dame de Paris special evening: Film and Conversation

La Maison Française - Villa Albertine
4101 Reservoir Road
Washington, D.C., United States 20007

Monday, December 1st, 2025 6:30 pm - 9:00 pm


Full information and to register, click HERE

Join us for a conversation with Jennifer Feltman, expert on the Notre-Dame renovation and Premiere Screening of “Notre-Dame Resurrection”

Program

6:30 PM : “New Discoveries and the Rebirth of Notre-Dame: Crossed Perspectives” with Jennifer Feltman and Paul Glenshaw, followed by a Q&A

About Jennifer Feltman

Dr. Jennifer Feltman is an art historian and Associate Professor at the University of Alabama, specializing in the art and architecture of medieval Europe. A leading American scholar involved in the scientific restoration project of Notre-Dame de Paris since the 2019 fire, her research focuses on Gothic sculpture, particularly the development of complex sculptural programs in the absence of primary textual sources. Her work bridges art history, religious studies, manuscript analysis, and technical studies of construction, with a special emphasis on the 13th century, iconography, and the new discoveries revealed through the cathedral’s restoration. She frequently lectures in Europe and the United States to share major discoveries from the ongoing reconstruction.

About Paul Glenshaw, moderator

Paul Glenshaw is a writer, filmmaker, and art historian known for his work on architectural history, aviation, and cultural heritage. He collaborates with major American cultural institutions, including the Smithsonian, and is a keen observer of sacred architecture and large-scale heritage projects. Bringing his perspective as both historian and cultural mediator, he offers insightful reflections on the intersections of history, restoration, and public engagement.

7:30 PM : Premiere screening of “Notre Dame Résurrection” : 5 years at the heart of the largest restoration project, inside and outside Notre-Dame de Paris.

On December 1, 2025, French in Motion will conclude its 2025 season of “Movie Nights”. As the final screening of the season, held in partnership with Villa Albertine, the evening will feature Notre-Dame Résurrection, an exceptional documentary directed by Xavier Lefebvre and written by Alain Zenou.

Filmed over FIVE years, this documentary offers a rare insight into the extraordinary reconstruction of Notre-Dame Cathedral in Paris after the 2019 fire.

Thanks to privileged access to the construction site, hours of previously unseen footage, and exclusive interviews with the craftsmen, architects, and teams involved, the film reveals the human, technical, and artistic challenges behind one of the most ambitious restoration projects of the 21st century.

This documentary is presented in French with English subtitles, thanks to the support of TV5 Monde.

Production: Electron Libre / Kisayang / Établissement Public Notre-Dame / France TV

Year: 2024

Format: 4K UHD

Length: 1 hour 30 minutes

This screening caps off a year of programming dedicated to highlighting contemporary French and Francophone audiovisual creation, carried by the exceptional members of our community — across the United States and in France — while strengthening the ties we continue to build with the Film & TV landscape of Washington, DC.

This event is organized as part of Movie Nights by French in Motion.



Photos: By registering for this event, you consent to being photographed and/or recorded, and authorize the organizers to use your image and likeness for promotional and archival purposes.

Security Rules: Each person attending the event must have a ticket registered in their name and a government-issued ID that matches the name on the reservation to enter the Embassy. No one will be admitted without a reservation and official ID. Due to strict security measures, please arrive on time, as doors will be closed at 6:30 pm sharp. Please allow for extra time for security screenings.

For security reasons, large bags, umbrellas, backpacks, and bike helmets are not allowed on Embassy grounds. The security team may confiscate any items considered inappropriate.

Parking:
There is no on-site parking.

  • Metered parking is available on Reservoir Road at $2.30/hour (max 4h until 10pm)

  • Garage parking is available at Georgetown MedStar Health (Entrance #2, 2800 Reservoir Road NW), approx. $25 for up to 3 hours



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Dec
1
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers: Ex Labore Fructus, IX International Congress O Camiño do Medievalista, Santiago de Compostela (25-27 Mar. 2026)

Call for Papers

IX International Congress O Camiño do Medievalista

Ex labore fructus

Santiago de Compostela, 25-27 March 2026

Due 1 December 2025

Once again, we are pleased to invite you to take part in this meeting, which aims to be a place of encounter for those who are beginning their research journey into the Middle Ages, where young medievalists join once more in this fruitful tradition. With this ninth edition of the International Congress O Camiño do Medievalista, we intend to create an interdisciplinary space where diverse lines of research converge, in order to gather and sow knowledge contributed by each field of study on the medieval world.

As in previous editions, we intend to offer a meeting open to all branches of Medieval Studies that we summarize in seven non-exclusive paths, since any other topic will be welcome:

  1. History: power, society, economy and culture.

  2. Art and Iconography.

  3. Philology, language and literature.

  4. Written culture and archives.

  5. Historiography, Innovation and Digital Humanities.

  6. Philosophy and Thought.

  7. Archaeology.

PhD students and PhDs who have read their thesis after January 1, 2022 may apply.

They must be sent by completing the next form: https://forms.gle/pRkMXqAg8QTu9dFq8.

The proposals, which must be original (not previously presented or published), must include a brief CV (150 words) and a summary (between 250 and 500 words) written in one of the accepted languages: Spanish, Galician, English, French, Portuguese or Italian.

Publication of accepted proposals: December 23, 2025.

Each communication will have a maximum duration of 15 minutes and may be given in any of the languages mentioned above.

Another form of participation will be round tables. In this case, a minimum requirement of three people and the presentation of a specific topic is required, for which they will have a total of 45 minutes, between presentation and debate.

Publication:

The resulting texts, provided they successfully pass the corresponding peer-review process, may be published as an electronic book as part of the editorial collection El Camino del Medievalista, under the publishing imprint of the University of Santiago de Compostela.

The price set for the communicators will be €30.

For more information, visit https://elcaminodelmedievalista.wordpress.com/call-for-papers-appel-a-communications-2023/

For a PDF of the full call for papers in English, click here.

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Dec
1
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers: Life and Landscape: Research Showcase, At University of Nottingham (13 June 2026)

Call for Papers

LIFE AND LANDSCAPE: RESEARCH SHOWCASE

UNIVERSITY OF NOTTINGHAM, INSTITUTE FOR NAME-STUDIES & INSTITUTE FOR MEDIEVAL RESEARCH

SATURDAY, 13 JUNE 2026

Due MONDAY 1 DECEMBER 2025

A day to celebrate the current exciting research of Early Career Researchers (postgraduate, post-doc, fixed-contract) at the University of Nottingham and beyond, on a fascinating mix of topics including Name-Studies, Medieval Studies, History, and English.

This Call For Papers seeks to offer an opportunity for ECRs to share their research with fellow-students and academics, and with the public outside the academic sphere. It is a great chance to engage with a diverse range of topics, to improve public-speaking skills and to network with people beyond our own institutions. We hope to focus on the benefits of knowledge exchange and public outreach, while promoting the work of up-and-coming researchers.

Papers are welcome from all ECRs on a broad variety of humanities and arts-based topics, focusing on but not limited to Name-Studies, Medieval Studies, History, English Language and Literature, Languages, and Linguistics.

TOPIC IDEAS COULD INCLUDE:

  • Analysis of place-names or personal

  • Political, social or cultural history
    names

  • Medieval languages and texts

  • Historical dreams, emotions, or philosophies

  • Linguistic changes

  • Language Interactions

  • Religion, theology and superstition

  • Migration and travel

  • Material culture

  • Literary analysis and critique

  • Ecocriticism/Blue Ecology

  • Multilingualism

ABSTRACT SUBMISSION

Papers are requested to be around 12-15 minutes long, with further time for questions.

Unfortunately, we cannot fund any travel costs for attendees, but the registration fee will be waived for accepted speakers.

Please submit an abstract of c. 250 words, a short bio (c. 50-100 words), and your details (name; institution & course (if applicable); email address) to rachel.maloney.@nottingham.ac.uk

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Dec
1
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers: Mirror Worlds, 6th annual Medieval Student Colloquium (MSSC), Cornell University (21 Feb. 2026)

Call for Papers

Cornell Medieval Studies Program

6th annual Medieval Student Colloquium (MSSC)

Mirror Worlds

A.D. White House, Cornell University, Saturday, 21 February 2026

Due by 1 December 2025

The Cornell Medieval Studies Program is pleased to announce the 36th annual Medieval Student Colloquium (MSSC) in person at Cornell University's A.D. White House on Saturday, February 21, 2026

The theme this year is "Mirror Worlds".

Abstracts should be 200–300s and submitted by December 1, 2025.

When we make a mirror of something, what becomes of the reflection? This year, our theme “Mirror Worlds” considers the metaphorical and material worlds crafted through mirror images. Mirrors in the medieval world act as thresholds, whether for inner worlds, outer worlds, or the otherworldly, both promising “access to other realms—earthly, imaginary, or divine” while also suggesting “the limitations of human perception, knowledge, and wisdom” (Frelick, The Mirror in Medieval and Early Modern Culture, 2–3). We invite proposals for twenty-minute papers exploring the multifaceted nature of mirrors and their worlds from a wide range of medieval literatures, histories, geographies, material cultures, and disciplines. Studies could examine, but are certainly not limited to, metaphors of mirrors, mirror worlds and dreamscapes, mirrored characters, twins, and doubles, as well as ideas of microcosm and macrocosm. Furthermore, we invite applicants to consider the stakes of representation involved with mirrors—how do mirrors represent or distort the mirrored image? What new realities can mirrors conjure and what dangers do they provoke? How does representation function like a mirror for meaning, and what is lost or gained through representation?

Other possible questions for consideration include:

  • How do the various “worlds” (spiritual, physical, bodily, political) of the Middle Ages mirror and overlap with one another?

  • What are the limitations of the mirror’s framing? What can the mirror not see?

  • To what extent is art a mirror for reality, and how?

  • How do anthropocentric mirrors distort physical environments, landscapes, and ecologies, or vice versa?

  • What is the relationship between performance and reality in the Middle Ages?

  • How are mirrors as material objects used in the Middle Ages?

  • When does memory become a mirror for experience?

Papers from underrepresented fields and backgrounds are particularly welcome. We invite submissions from all fields and disciplines adjacent to Medieval Studies, including but not limited to Africana Studies, Animal Studies, Anthropology, Archaeology, Art History, Asian Studies, Classics, Comparative Literature, Critical Identity Studies, Disability Studies, Ecocriticism, English Language & Literature, Gender and Sexuality Studies, History, Indigenous Studies, Music Studies, Near Eastern Studies, Philosophy, Romance Studies, Theology, Trans Studies, and Queer Theory.

For more information, visit https://events.cornell.edu/event/medieval-studies-student-colloquium-mssc-907

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Nov
30
10:00 AM10:00

Exhibition Closing: Going Places: Travel in the Middle Ages, Getty Center, Los Angeles, 2 Sept. - 30 Nov. 2025

Exhibition Closing

Going Places: Travel in the Middle Ages

Museum North Pavillion, Plaza Level, Getty Center, Los Angeles, California

2 September 2025 - 30 November 2025

Barlaam, Carrying a Shoulder Pack, Crosses a River (detail) from Barlaam and Josephat, 1469, follower of Hans Schilling. Ink, colored washes, and tempera colors. Getty Museum, Ms. Ludwig XV 9 (83.MR.179), fol. 38v

Free exhibition.

In medieval art, the act of movement from one place to another was conceptualized in a variety of imaginative forms. Featuring manuscripts from the Getty’s collection, this exhibition explores the reasons for travel, different modes of medieval travel, and examples of typical travelers. Illustrations often accurately documented the realities of travel and prompted viewers to travel virtually through their imaginations. The exhibition showcases the wide variety of contexts for medieval movement, from religious travel to diplomacy, trade, exploration, and exploitation.

This exhibition is presented in English and Spanish. Esta exhibición se presenta en inglés y en español.

For more information, visit https://www.getty.edu/exhibitions/going-places/

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Nov
30
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Applications: Society for Church Archaeology Research Grant

Call for Applications

Society for Church Archaeology Research Grant

Due by 30 November 2025

The Society for Church Archaeology invites applicants for its annual research grant. The amount requested should not exceed £1,500 and application is open to members of the Society proposing a research project, including fieldwork where appropriate, in any area of church archaeology. Applications from those outside the Society will also be considered, so long as they become a member, if successful. 

The grant can cover, or contribute to, research expenses, including travel, materials and accommodation, but not capital equipment nor the applicant’s salary (although specialist’s fees are eligible). The Society is pleased to accept applications for pilot projects; funding to help attract larger grants; discrete projects within the framework of a larger project; and small stand-alone projects. We welcome applications from academics, professionals, non-professionals and particularly from early career scholars and postgraduate students (although the Society will not cover university fees).

How to Apply

Please read the Notes for Applicants, which outlines the conditions of the grant, and use the application form provided. Applicants should email the form to Dr Kristján Ahronson at kristjan.ahronson@alumni.utoronto.ca by November 30th each year. Decisions are made in January of the following year.

For the relevant documents, previous winners, and more information, visit https://www.churcharchaeology.org/research

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Nov
28
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers: The Long Middle Ages, A New Seminar Series Hosted at the University of Leeds

Call for Papers

The Long Middle Ages

A New Seminar Series Hosted at the University of Leeds

Due by Friday, 28 November 2025

We are excited to announce a new interdisciplinary seminar series for postgraduate students and early career researchers on the Long Middle Ages, a period covering the Late Antique, Medieval, and Early Modern Periods. This series aims to bring together scholars working across this period to establish new connectivity and inclusivity between these disciplines, and to provide a more relaxed space for new and emerging researchers to present and test out ideas.

We welcome submissions of 20-30 minute papers from postgraduates and early career researchers working in any discipline and on any topic related to the late antique, medieval and early modern periods. Papers will be followed by time for questions and further discussion.  

Seminars will commence in early 2026 and run on a regular basis until summer. If you are interested in presenting a seminar, please send an abstract of no more than 250 words as well as a short biography to the organisers at thelongmiddleages@gmail.com by Friday 28th November 2025. 

For a PDF of the Call for Papers, click here.

All seminars will take place at the University of Leeds in a hybrid format, with fully online formats available upon request. Please provide your preference in your submission. If you have any further questions, please do get in touch! 

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Nov
27
7:20 AM07:20

Online Conference: British Archaeological Association Postgraduate Conference, Via Zoom

Online Conference

British Archaeological Association Postgraduate Conference

Via Zoom

27 November 2025, 12.20-17.30 (GMT) / 7.20-12.30 (EST)

The British Archaeological Association are excited to present a diverse conference which includes postgraduates and early career researchers in the fields of medieval history of art, architecture, and archaeology. The British Archaeological Association postgraduate conference offers an opportunity for research students at all levels from universities across the UK and abroad to present their research and exchange ideas.

The conference will take place online via Zoom.

Register to attend the conference using this link.

For more information, including the program, visit https://thebaa.org/events/2025-baa-postgraduate-conference/

For a PDF of the conference program, click here.

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Nov
22
10:00 AM10:00

Gallery Reopening: Arms and Armor Galleries, Worcester Art Museum, MA

Gallery Reopening

Arms and Armor Galleries

Worcester Art Museum, MA

Opens 22 November 2025

Image: Concept design rendering for the forthcoming arms and armor galleries. Courtesy TSKP x IKD.

Building a new home for a beloved collection

Work is currently underway on the Worcester Art Museum’s new Arms and Armor Galleries, opening on November 22, 2025. Through innovative design solutions and immersive displays, the new 5,000-square-foot galleries will allow visitors to explore more than 1,000 objects from the Museum’s Higgins Armory Collection, the second largest of its kind in the country. 

For more information about the opening, visit https://www.worcesterart.org/about/campus-transformation/arms-and-armor-gallery/

For more information about the Arms and Armor Galleries, visit https://www.worcesterart.org/exhibitions/arms-and-armor/

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Nov
20
to Nov 21

Conference: Zooming In and Out: Reconsidering Hans Memling, Brugge

Conference

Zooming In and Out: Reconsidering Hans Memling

Auditorium BRUSK, Musea Brugge (Bruges, Belgium)

20-21 November 2025

To celebrate its opening in 2025, BRON Research Centre (Musea Brugge), in collaboration with the Royal Institute for Cultural Heritage (KIK-IRPA, Brussels), is organising a two-day conference on new and ongoing research on the oeuvre of Early Netherlandish painter Hans Memling.

In 2023 the first phase of the research project Closer to Memling commenced. Closer to Memling is a project initiated by Musea Brugge in collaboration with other institutions to thoroughly examine the 9 works by Hans Memling in its collection. The aim of this project and conference is to contextualise previous studies and stimulate new research on the painter in an interdisciplinary exchange between leading and new scholars in the field.

For more information and to register, visit https://www.museabrugge.be/en/collections/bron/bron_academy/zooming_in_and_out_memling#anchor-35182164

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Nov
17
12:00 PM12:00

Online Lecture for Mary Jaharis Center: Mediating Touch: Ivory Pyxides and the Eucharist, Evan Freeman (Zoom)

Online Lecture

Mediating Touch: Ivory Pyxides and the Eucharist

Evan Freeman, Simon Fraser University

Mary Jaharis Center for Byzantine Art and Culture

November 17, 2025 | Zoom | 12:00–1:30 pm (Eastern Standard Time, UTC -5)

Circular Box (Pyxis) with the Miracle of Christ’s Multiplication of the Loaves. New York, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Gift of J. Pierpont Morgan, 1917 (17.190.34a, b). Photo: The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Creative Commons Zero (CC0) (https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/464317)

The Mary Jaharis Center for Byzantine Art and Culture is pleased to announce the next lecture in our 2025–2026 lecture series.

A large body of round ivory boxes, also known as pyxides, survive from late antiquity. Each pyxis was cut from a section of elephant tusk and decorated with carvings. Most were likely produced around the Eastern Mediterranean between the fifth and seventh centuries CE, but the precise origins and functions of these objects are difficult to pinpoint. Several boxes display motifs associated with the Eucharist, leading scholars to speculate that they may have been used to bring the Eucharist home, on journeys, or to those who could not come to church. More recently, it has been suggested that ivory pyxides were used by worshippers who felt unworthy to receive Communion directly in their hands, as prohibited by canon 101 of the Quinisext Council held in Constantinople in 691/692. This talk offers a close examination of ivory pyxides that may have been used for receiving Communion in church as described by this canon. It argues that these boxes and their iconographic motifs were designed to appeal to the senses of sight and touch. If they were used for receiving Communion as described by the Quinisext Council, such boxes would have mediated physical contact with the Eucharist, warned and protected against the dangers of faithless and unworthy touch, and offered biblical models for worshippers to imitate as they sought salvation in the celebration of the Eucharist.

Evan Freeman is Assistant Professor and Hellenic Canadian Congress of British Columbia Chair in Hellenic Studies in the Department of Global Humanities and the Stavros Niarchos Foundation Centre for Hellenic Studies at Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, Canada. He researches art and ritual in the Byzantine world, recently co-editing the volume Byzantine Materiality (2024) with Roland Betancourt. He is also Contributing Editor for Byzantine art at Smarthistory, the Center for Public Art History, where he co-edited Smarthistory Guide to Byzantine Art (2021) with Anne McClanan.

Advance registration required. Register: https://maryjahariscenter.org/events/mediating-touch

Contact Brandie Ratliff (mjcbac@hchc.edu), Director, Mary Jaharis Center for Byzantine Art and Culture with any questions.

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Nov
17
12:00 PM12:00

Murray Seminar: Imago Dei, Imago Mundi: Matthew Paris’s saints, relics, maps and wonders, Paul Binski, Birbeck (In-Person & Online)

Murray Seminar

Imago Dei, Imago Mundi: Matthew Paris’s saints, relics, maps and wonders

Paul Binski

Online and

Birkbeck 43 Gordon Square

17 November 2025, 17:00 — 18:30 GMT

Book your place to attend online.

Book your place to attend in-person (Waiting List).

At this Murray Seminar, Paul Binski will share his research on 'Imago Dei, Imago Mundi: Matthew Paris’s saints, relics, maps and wonders'.

This paper will place one aspect of Matthew’s work, his representations of exceptional things, in the context of his unfolding life story. It will discuss his unusual position as a writer and artist, his interest in saints and relics, his map-making and his recording of wonders as part of a single and in many ways coherent view of the World.

Paul Binski is a Fellow of the British Academy and a Corresponding Fellow of the Medieval Academy of America, and was Slade Professor, Oxford University, 2006-7.  A leading international authority on Gothic art and architecture, and medieval culture more widely, his publications include Westminster Abbey and the Plantagenets (1995), Becket’s Crown. Art and Imagination in Gothic England 1170-1300 (2004), Gothic Wonder: Art, Artifice and the Decorated Style 1290-1350 (2014). He published Gothic Sculpture in 2019 and Architecture and Affect in the Middle Ages in 2024. He now writes widely on general issues of aesthetics, ethics, affectivity and form in the Middle Ages, and is also a guest curator at the National Gallery, London.

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Nov
17
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Pre-Application Statement of Intent: Peter Fergusson PhD Scholarship in English Medieval Architecture, The Courtauld, London

Call for Pre-Application Statement of Intent

Peter Fergusson PhD Scholarship in English Medieval Architecture

The Courtauld, London

Due by 17 November 2025

Fountains Abbey. Photo: Tom Nickson

 The Courtauld is delighted to announce a new fully funded PhD scholarship in English medieval architecture, starting in September 2026. Architecture is understood broadly to encompass the built environment, from infrastructure, urban design and domestic buildings to churches, castles and cathedrals, but may also include architectural representation or micro-architecture. Eligible projects should focus on England in the period between the eleventh and early sixteenth centuries. 

The scholarship is made available thanks to a generous bequest by Professor Peter Fergusson (1934-2022), an internationally recognised scholar of medieval architecture. The scholarship includes full home or international tuition fees, as well as an annual stipend of £22,780 to support the costs of living in London. There is also an annual allowance of £1000 to support travel for research purposes, and the possibility of financial support for the scholar to organise a conference in their final year of study.  

The Courtauld is based in central London and has one of the largest communities of postgraduate art historians in the world. The extensive faculty includes several specialists of medieval art and architecture. Further details of research specialisms and contact details are available at https://courtauld.ac.uk/faculty and details of The Courtauld’s PhD programme and its application process can be found at https://courtauld.ac.uk/phd  

Candidates are expected to have a strong postgraduate degree in a relevant field and a feasible idea for an original research project. They are encouraged to contact prospective supervisors to discuss their application at the earliest opportunity and must submit a ‘pre-application’ statement of intent by 17 November 2025, in advance of formal submission of their application by 8 January 2026

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Nov
17
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers: Shaping the Word: the Form and Use of Biblical Manuscripts in the Early Medieval West, Durham University (2-5 July 2026)

Call for Papers

Shaping the Word: the Form and Use of Biblical Manuscripts in the Early Medieval West

Durham University, 2-5 July 2026

Due 17 November 2025

St. Matthew, Lindisfarne Gospels, BL Cotton MS Nero D IV, f.25v

In the second half of the first millennium, the Christian scriptures were produced, circulated, and put to use in a diverse range of forms and contexts. A manuscript may accommodate a single biblical text (the psalter, a gospel, the Apocalypse), a collection of texts (the Hexateuch, the fourfold gospel), or, rarely, a complete "New Testament" or "Bible" in the familiar modern sense. The distinctiveness of a manuscript is determined by its content and textual affiliation, its palaeographical and codicological characteristics, and its paratextual features - from illustrations of biblical narratives, author portraits, and illuminated lettering to canon tables, capitula, prefatory materials, and glosses. Once in circulation, a manuscript's contexts of use may include liturgical reading and preaching, meditation and mission, education and scholarship, gift-giving and display. Different uses correspond to different users with distinct and perhaps conflicting priorities and goals. Production and uses) may occur at the same site or at far distant times and places.

This conference aims to explore topics related to both the physical presentation and the use of scriptural manuscripts produced in the Early Medieval period (c. 500-1000 CE).

We welcome paper proposals from scholars working in all areas of this field, including PhD students. Whatever the specific topic, priority may be given to papers that also relate it to the wider focus of the conference on both "form" (or "production") and "use".

We hope to be able to cover presenters' full conference costs with the exception of travel.

Titles and Abstracts of proposed papers should be submitted to Lauren Randall (lauren.m.randall@durham.ac.uk), copied to Francis Watson (francis.watson@durham.ac.uk), no later than Monday 17 November. Abstracts should not exceed 150 words. Our current draft schedule can accommodate up to fourteen 45 minute sessions, with a maximum of 25 minutes for the presentation in order to allow substantial time for discussion. There will also be several keynote papers or presentations. Please feel free to contact us if you have any questions about this event!

For information, the context of this event is our sub-project "Text, Format, and Reader", focused primarily on Codex Amiatinus and funded by the Glasgow-based "Paratexts Seeking Understanding" project (Templeton Religion Trust). We are grateful to our Glasgow colleagues for their support.

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Nov
15
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers: Decentring Europe: Nordic–Iberian Histories in Transregional Perspective, 4th SWESP International Workshop, Gothenburg (21-22 May 2026)

Call for Papers

4th SWESP International Workshop

Decentring Europe: Nordic–Iberian Histories in Transregional Perspective

University of Gothenburg, 21-22 May 2026

Due 15 November 2025

The CFP for the 4th SWESP International Workshop has just been launched. With the title “Decentring Europe: Nordic–Iberian Histories in Transregional Perspective”, it will take place on 21-22 May 2026 at the University of Gothenburg.

The workshop is free of charge, and we offer partial bursaries to cover travel costs for doctoral students and early-career researchers with limited access to funding. Please see the attached CFP for details about how to apply for a bursary.

Conference Theme: This interdisciplinary conference seeks to explore the multifaceted connections and entanglements between the Nordic and Iberian worlds. Moving beyond traditional centre-periphery and modernisation narratives, the event aims to foster dialogue on how exchanges across these regions have shaped diplomatic, economic, political, and cultural networks from the late medieval period to the contemporary era. We welcome approaches from comparative and transnational history, histoire croisée (entangled history), and other interdisciplinary frameworks that examine both the continental lands and the overseas territories of these regions.

Topics: We invite contributions from a wide range of disciplines, including history, literature, arts, philosophy, and the social sciences. Topics may include, but are not limited to: Cross-regional diplomatic, religious, and military networks; Movements of people, goods, and ideas; political exile and migration; Comparative studies of governance, reform, and military/maritime infrastructures; Cultural exchange, translation, and artistic reception; Knowledge production and scientific transfer; Comparative gender, family, and welfare structures; Environmental and climatic histories; Transregional solidarities and intellectual entanglements.

Submission Guidelines: We encourage submissions that focus on specific historical periods or adopt cross-temporal perspectives. The workshop aims to illuminate the shared questions and conceptual paradigms that emerge from studying the Nordic and Iberian regions in relation to one another.

Key dates: Proposals should be sent in a Word or PDF document containing a title, a short abstract (max. 250 words), and the author’s name and affiliation to the organisers at swespnet@gmail.com no later than 15 November 2025. The results of the selection process will be communicated by 15 December 2025. If you wish to request a bursary, please include a short motivation letter (max. 250 words) explaining how attending the workshop may impact your career, with details of available funding.

Organising Committee: A. Jorge Aguilera-López (University of Helsinki), Enrique J. Corredera Nilsson (University of Bern), Lucila Mallart (Pompeu Fabra University, Barcelona), Kenneth Nyberg (University of Gothenburg), Ingmar Söhrman (University of Gothenburg).

Please see the full CFP here.

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Nov
15
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers: The Medici and the Dominicans, Florence (20 Jan. 2026)

Call for Papers

The Medici and the Dominicans

Friday, 30 January 2026

Palazzo Alberti, Florence

Due by 15 November 2025

In partnership with the the Library and Archive of Santa Maria Novella (Florence), the academic journal Memorie Domenicane, and the Leonine Commission (Paris), the Medici Archive Project is organizing a one-day conference on the relationship between the Medici (both the merchant-bankers of the quattrocento and the grand dukes of the later centuries) and the mendicant order founded by Dominic de Guzmán at the beginning of the thirteenth century.

This conference intends to reassess this complex relationship—sometimes symbiotic, often strained—that indelibly marked the history of Florence. Priority will be given to papers addressing the interpenetration between artistic production and patronage, religious dissent, political crises, book and print history, and humanist and scientific discourse. The organizers invite proposals for 20-minute unpublished papers in English or Italian, which address topics including, but not limited to:

  • Medici Presence at San Marco

  • Antonino Pierozzi: Patronage and Canonization

  • The Medici and Santa Maria Novella

  • The Medici Library and the Library at San Marco

  • The Medici and the Observant and Conventual conflict in the Quattrocento

  • The Studia of Florence and Pisa

  • Savonarola and Piagnonism

  • Neo-Piagnonism at the Time of the Medici Grand Dukes

  • Santa Caterina de' Ricci and the Convent of San Vincenzo in Prato

  • Cosimo I and the 1545 San Marco Crisis

  • Medici and Dominican Fonderie in Florence

  • Egnazio Danti and Mapmaking

  • The Medici Popes at Santa Maria Sopra Minerva in Rome

  • Plautilla Nelli and Santa Caterina da Siena in Florence

  • Paupertas, Majestas, and Simplicitas

  • The Dominicans in Florence during the "Forgotten Centuries"

The conference will take place at Palazzo Alberti in Florence on Friday, 30 January 2025.

To apply: please send an abstract (max 250 words) and a short bio (max 100 words) by 15 November 2025 to education@medici.org.
Successful applicants will be notified on 25 November 2025.

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Nov
15
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Applications: Assistant Professor in Medieval European Art and Architectural History in the World, Brown University, Reviewing of Applications Begins 15 Nov. 2025

Call for Applications

Assistant Professor in Medieval European Art and Architectural History in the World

Brown University

Reviewing of Applications Begins 15 November 2025

Position Description

The Department of the History of Art and Architecture at Brown University seeks applicants at the rank of Assistant Professor (tenure-track) whose scholarship focuses on histories of medieval (ca. 500s-1400s) European art and architecture in the world. We are interested in candidates whose work explores developments in Europe, and we consider scholarship that examines Europe’s relationship and connections to the wider world as a highly desirable additional area of investigation. We are especially interested in scholars who combine art or architectural historical and archaeological expertise. The position start date is July 1, 2026.

Qualifications

Applicants must have a doctorate in art or architectural history in hand by July 1, 2026. The successful candidate will demonstrate outstanding scholarly potential, as well as a commitment to classroom teaching of introductory as well as specialized courses at the undergraduate and graduate levels. They are expected to encourage cross-disciplinary collaborations through innovative teaching, research and mentoring, helping to make connections with students and faculty across the university.

Application Instructions

Candidates should provide a cover letter, a current curriculum vitae, a research statement, a teaching statement, a writing sample (ca. 30 pages) and the names and contacts of three recommenders (references will only be contacted for candidates under serious consideration). Applicants should state in their cover letter how they would contribute to the research and/or teaching missions of our diverse and inclusive university community. Please submit all materials online via Interfolio: apply.interfolio.com/174923 Review of applications will begin on November 15, 2025. The search will remain open until filled or closed.

Equal Employment Opportunity Statement

Brown University provides equal opportunity and prohibits discrimination, harassment and retaliation based upon a person’s race, color, religion, sex, age, national or ethnic origin, disability, veteran status, sexual orientation, gender identity, gender expression, or any other characteristic protected under applicable law, in the administration of its policies, programs, and activities. The University recognizes and rewards individuals on the basis of qualifications and performance. The University maintains certain affirmative action programs in compliance with applicable law.

For more information, visit https://hiaa.brown.edu/news/2025-10-06/hiaa-faculty-position-opening

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Nov
14
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers: Bridging the Past and Present in Cartography, 31st ICHC, Prague (7-11 July 2026)

Call for Papers

Bridging the Past and Present in Cartography

31st International Conference on the History of Cartography (ICHC)

7-11 July 2026, Prague, Czech Republic

Due by 14 November 2025

The Faculty of Science of Charles University, the Institute of History of the Czech Academy of Sciences, the Moravian Library in Brno, the Faculty of Science of Masaryk University, and the Czech Geographical Society, under the auspices of the Czech Cartographic Society, are pleased to invite proposals for papers and posters for the

ICHC is the only academic conference solely dedicated to advancing knowledge of the history of maps and mapmaking, regardless of geographical region, language, period or topic. ICHC promotes free and unfettered global cooperation and collaboration among cartographic scholars from many academic disciplines, curators, collectors, dealers and institutions through illustrated lectures, presentations, exhibitions, and a social program. In order to expand awareness of issues and resources, each conference is sponsored by a leading educational and cultural institution.

The biennial conferences are organized in conjunction with Imago Mundi CIO. ICHC 2026 builds upon Czechia’s robust tradition of research in the history of cartography and related disciplines, a tradition that has flourished for more than a century.

Under the broad rubric of Bridging the Past and Present in Cartography, ICHC 2026 welcomes paper and poster presentations on the following themes:

  1. Maps and Tourism - Encompasses the role of maps and related works in promoting tourism to regions or particular destinations and in the experience of touristic places.

  2. Maps as Artefacts - Investigates the nature of maps as cultural object s that circulate within the marketplace and other networks, and that are variously collected and preserved within institutions of memory (GLAM).

  3. The Third Dimension: Representing Elevation on Maps - Explores the particular strategies developed to represent the earth’s crumpled surface of hills and valleys for specific tasks, from military and geological mapping to forest management.

  4. Mapping the Past: Historical Cartography at the Turn of the Digital Era- Pursues interdisciplinary and critical perspectives on the ideological implications of new digital technologies in mapping the past, including the risks of distortion and of the instrumentalisation of historical content for political or ideological purposes.

  5. And any other aspect of the history of cartography.

Key Dates

  • Opening of the call for papers: 15 July 2025

  • Deadline for submission of proposals: 14 November 2025

  • Notification of acceptance: 15 January 2026

  • Early Bird Registration: until 15 April 2026

Papers

Paper presentations will comprise 15 minutes for presentation, followed by a short discussion.

Posters

Posters will be installed for a dedicated session on the second morning of the conference and will remain on display through the remainder of the conference.

Panel Proposals

We welcome the proposal of organized sessions. However, proposals for paper presentations, whether by one or more presenters, must be submitted and evaluated individually. Therefore, if a proposed paper is intended for an organized session, please include the information at the end of the submission form. The session’s organizer must also submit a separate proposal for the session that lists all the papers and presenters.

For more information, visit https://ichc2026.org/

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Nov
12
12:30 PM12:30

York Medieval Lecture: Video Games & the Work of Medieval Art History: Possibilities for Public Impact Through Industry Collaborations, Glaire Anderson, 12 Nov. 2025

York Medieval Lecture

Video Games & the Work of Medieval Art History: Possibilities for Public Impact Through Industry Collaborations

Dr Glaire Anderson (The University of Edinburgh)

Wednesday 12 November 2025, 5.30 PM to 7.00 PM GMT/ 12.30 PM to 2.00 PM ET

The lecture will be followed by a wine reception.

To attend in person, please register via Eventbrite
To attend online, please register via Zoom.

This lecture will be recorded, which we hope to upload to the Centre for Medieval Studies Youtube Channel shortly after the lecture.

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Nov
10
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers: 11th Conference of the Medieval Chronicle Society, Munich (27-30 July 2026)

Call for Papers

11th Conference of the Medieval Chronicle Society

27th-30th July 2026

Munich, Germany

Due by 10 November 2025

The 11th international conference on the Medieval Chronicle will be held in Munich, Germany, in the week of 27-30 July 2026. Papers in English, French or German are invited on any aspect of the medieval chronicle. These can for example be related to form, function, questions regarding historiography or images. However, we especially encourage papers related to our special focus “Chronicle in Danger”. Themes to be addressed may include, but are not limited to:

  • Use and abuse of the chronicle, both in the Middle Ages and thereafter

  • Creation of crisis narratives in chronicles, including blaming, scapegoating, hate, compassion, and cohesion during crises

  • Gender, race, class and religion in the chronicle: concepts of othering and exclusion

  • Materiality of the chronicle and future perspectives concerning preservation and digitization

  • Challenges of ‘outdated’ editions and of editing chronicles in the 21st century

We welcome submissions for individual papers and sessions. Each session will be 90 minutes and consist of three papers. For a session proposal please include three papers and a chair. Conference papers will be strictly limited to 20 minutes in length. Please note that the conference will take place in person and no hybrid access can be provided.

The submission deadline for abstracts (maximum length 200 words per paper) and sessions is Monday, November 10th, 2025. Please submit abstracts through our online platform: https://doo.net/de-de/widget/189361/buchung?booking_widget_config_name=booking-18400-84682&organizerId=18400&locale=de-de

Notifications of acceptance will be given by the end of January 2026 and the registration will follow in spring 2026. We are estimating a conference fee of €90 (reduced rate €60 for PhD/graduate students) and additional fees for a day trip to Regensburg on Thursday, July 30th including a guided tour and a conference dinner. Travel and accommodation have to be covered and organized individually.

Contact: Florian Datz (florian.datz@lmu.de)

Organizers: Prof. Julia Burkhardt, Florian Datz, M.A., Prof. Eva Haverkamp-Rott, Dr. Paul Schweitzer-Martin (LMU Munich)

For more information, visit https://medievalchronicle.org/2025/05/21/call-for-papers-11th-conference-of-the-medieval-chronicle-society-27-30-july-2026/

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Nov
10
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Sessions and Papers: 11th Conference of the Medieval Chronicle Society, Munich (27-30 July 2026)

Call for Sessions and Papers

11th Conference of the Medieval Chronicle Society

27-30 July 2026, Munich, Germany

Due by 10 November 2025

The 11th international conference on the Medieval Chronicle will be held in Munich, Germany, in the week of July 27th to 30th 2026. Papers in English, French or German are invited on any aspect of the medieval chronicle.

The 11th international conference on the Medieval Chronicle will be held in Munich, Germany, in the week of July 27th to 30th 2026. Papers in English, French or German are invited on any aspect of the medieval chronicle. These can for example be related to form, function, questions regarding historiography or images. However, we especially encourage papers related to our special focus “Chronicle in Danger”. Themes to be addressed may include, but are not limited to:
Use and abuse of the chronicle, both in the Middle Ages and thereafter

  • Creation of crisis narratives in chronicles. Including questions regarding blaming, scapegoating, hate, compassion, and cohesion during crises

  • Gender, race, class and religion in the chronicle: Concepts of othering and exclusion

  • Materiality of the chronicle and future perspectives concerning preservation and digitization

  • Challenges of ‘outdated’ editions and of editing chronicles in the 21st century

We welcome submissions for individual papers and sessions. Each session will be 90 minutes and consist of three papers. For a session proposal please include three papers and a chair. Conference papers will be strictly limited to 20 minutes in length. Please note that the conference will take place in-person and no hybrid access can be provided.

The submission deadline for abstracts (maximum length 200 words per paper) and sessions is Monday, November 10th, 2025. Please submit abstracts below.

Notifications of acceptance will be given by the end of January 2026 and the registration will follow in spring 2026. We are estimating a conference fee of €90 (reduced rate €60 for PhD/graduate students) and additional fees forexcursions on Thursday, July 30th and a conference dinner. Travel and accommodation have to be covered and organized individually.

Recommendations for accommodation in Munich can be found here.

Contact: Florian Datz (florian.datz@lmu.de)

Organizers: Prof. Julia Burkhardt, Florian Datz, M.A., Prof. Eva Haverkamp-Rott, Dr. Paul Schweitzer-Martin (LMU Munich)

To submit your proposed session or paper, click here.

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Nov
7
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers: Marginalities in the Insular Worlds of North-Western Europe (8th –13th c.), University of Caen (12 June 2026)

Call for Papers

Marginalities in the Insular Worlds of North-Western Europe (8th –13th c.)

FRIDAY, 12 JUNE 2026

UNIVERSITY OF CAEN / CRAHAM (FRANCE)

Due by 7 November 2025

The CRAHAM invite proposals for papers for a conference exploring the theme of marginalities in the insular worlds of North-Western Europe from the 8th to 13th centuries. This event aims to foster critical analysis of the processes, identities and representations that may have contributed to defining, structuring or even blurring the boundaries of inclusion and exclusion in medieval insular societies, with a particular emphasis on Britain and Ireland.

We are seeking contributions grounded in historical, literary, archaeological and/or interdisciplinary approaches that interrogate the experiences and perceptions of those situated at the margins of medieval society, whether socially, culturally, ideologically, or economically.

We strongly encourage analyses that approach marginality through the lens of intersectionality, recognising how multiple, overlapping identities shaped unique experiences at the margins. Contributors may also wish to question both the degree of marginalisation, exploring the spectrum from partial exclusion to profound social isolation. They may also consider the necessity or function of marginalised people within medieval societies.

Subjects may include (but are not limited to):

  • Gendered and sexual marginalities

  • Religious minorities, non-conformist spiritualities

  • Migrants, exiles

  • Individuals marginalized by the law

  • Disabilities (physical, mental, cognitive, psychological, sensory)

  • Marginal voices in legal, literary, or documentary sources

  • Representations of difference and exclusion

  • Networks and strategies of adaptation among marginal groups

Proposals (200 words maximum) as well as a short CV and a biography should be sent to sarah.vincent@unicaen.fr and to jocelyn.coulon@unicaen.fr before 7 November 2025. Informal inquiries are also welcome. Please note that the presentations will last 30 minutes and will be followed by a 15-minutes time for questions. We are aiming for publishing the papers in a French medieval studies journal. Priority will be given to in-person presentations. Accommodation and meals will be provided for confirmed speakers, but travel costs should be covered by your own institution.

We invite scholars at all stages, particularly early career researchers and PhD students, to contribute to a dynamic dialogue that will expand, challenge, and enrich current perspectives on marginalities in medieval insular worlds. We look forward to receiving innovative proposals and to fostering meaningful intellectual exchanges in Caen.

For a PDF of the call for papers, click here.

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