Call for Papers: Reenvisioning the Medieval World(s) in the 21st Century, The Annual Conference of the New England Medieval Consortium due 15 January 2026

Reenvisioning the Medieval World(s) in the 21st Century

(The Annual Conference of the New England Medieval Consortium)

Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Maine

Diptych icon with Saint George and The Virgin and Child. Saint George wing: possibly Crete, ca. 1480–1490. Virgin and Child wing: Ethiopia, ca. 1500. Wyvern Collection, 0472.

 

Keynote Lecture by Lloyd de Beer (Curator at the British Museum): Friday April 10

Conference: Saturday April 11, 2026

followed by a reception at the Bowdoin College Museum of Art,

Featuring the exhibition, Medieval Art from the Wyvern Collection: Global Networks and Creative Connections

 

This interdisciplinary conference will explore new ways of understanding the chronological, geographic, and conceptual contours of the Middle Ages. In recent years, every discipline within the field of medieval studies has experienced what some have called the “global turn,” informed by emerging scholarship that has demonstrated the profoundly interconnected nature of the medieval world. We seek papers that engage with these new scholarly directions. We envision a set of panels with papers interrogating material including works of art, archaeological sites, literary and theological texts, and archival documents. The papers will be unified by a shared commitment to reckoning with our developing understanding of the global dimensions of medieval culture, presenting new sets of questions and new methods for understanding such objects.

 

We hope to receive proposals for papers from a range of disciplines and adopting a variety of approaches to questions such as:

  • to what extent is a concept of “the Middle Ages” useful in structuring our knowledge of past cultures, and to what extent does it occlude important aspects of the past?

  • Is that manner of periodization applicable to cultures beyond Europe, or does the application of such terminology to non-European contexts reinscribe upon those cultures Eurocentric or even colonial ways of seeing the world?

  • How do we balance an ability to comprehend the specific, often highly local roots of phenomena, texts, or objects with an awareness of the broader networks (trade, intellectual, etc.) that they participated in or engaged with?

  • Are there ways in which the “global turn” risks obscuring key aspects of medieval culture—for instance, moments in which a culture turns inward rather than reaching beyond itself, or the fragmentary and incomplete nature of apprehending something from a different place?

  • Are analytical tools such as “style,” developed in disciplines like Art History, capable of accounting for the ways that certain medieval objects were designed to legible across political and religious boundaries, or do those disciplinary tools need to be supplemented (or even supplanted) by different analytic approaches?

  • How did conceptions of a broader world on the part of authors and artisans shape the forms that cultural productions adopted?

 

Speakers in the conference will be provided with lodging for two nights (April 10 and 11) as well as meals during the conference; they are responsible for their own transportation costs.

 

Deadline for submissions: January 15, 2026.

 

Submit proposals to Steve Perkinson (Professor of Art History, Bowdoin College): sperkins@bowdoin.edu

Exhibition Closing: Patterns of Luxury: Islamic Textiles, 11th–17th Centuries, St. Louis Art Museum, 13 June 2025 - 4 Jan. 2026

Exhibition Closing

Patterns of Luxury: Islamic Textiles, 11th–17th Centuries

June 13, 2025–January 4, 2026

Carolyn C. and William A. McDonnell Gallery 100

St. Louis Art Museum, MO

Persian; Textile Pieced with Two Panels with Design of Columns of Flowers, 17th century; silk cut voided velvet weave with satin weave foundation and silver and gilt thread brocading wefts; 23 × 26 3/16 inches; Saint Louis Art Museum, Museum Purchase 56:1919

Patterns of Luxury: Islamic Textiles, 11th–17th Centuries showcases rare and magnificent examples of SLAM’s collection of early Islamic textiles, including many that have not been on view in decades and some that have never before been exhibited at the Museum.

Textiles have had an important place in Islamic civilization since the seventh century. As the influence of Islam radiated outward from Arabia through conquest and trade, textile patterns absorbed various local design aesthetics. Featured in this exhibition are works spanning three continents—Africa, Europe, and Asia. They demonstrate the diversity of textile traditions with luxurious examples from Egypt in the Fatimid (909–1171) and Ottoman (1517–1867) periods, Islamic Spain during the Nasrid dynasty (1232–1492), Ottoman Turkey (1281–1924), Persia (present-day Iran) during the Safavid dynasty (1501–1736), and India during the Mughal period (1526–1858).

The exhibition showcases textiles with inscriptions (tiraz) that were popular during the early and middle Islamic periods—the 7th through 13th centuries—along with several pieces from Nasrid Spain that show the influence of architectural decoration and were hung as curtains or murals. Also included are carpet fragments and rugs from Egypt, Spain, Turkey, Iran, and India, collected by St. Louisan James F. Ballard (1851–1931), whose extraordinary collection is divided between The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York and the Saint Louis Art Museum.

Patterns of Luxury is curated by Philip Hu, curator of Asian art.

For more information, visit https://www.slam.org/exhibitions/patterns-of-luxury-islamic-textiles-11th-17th-centuries/

Exhibition: Ten Kings of Hell: The Afterlife in Medieval Korea, The Cleveland Museum of Art, 11 Oct. 2026 - 3 Jan. 2027

Exhibition

Ten Kings of Hell: The Afterlife in Medieval Korea

Sunday, October 11, 2026–Sunday, January 3, 2027

003 Special Exhibition Hall, The Kelvin and Eleanor Smith Foundation Exhibition Hall

The Cleveland Museum of Art, OH

The Fourth King of Hell, late 1300s. Korea, Goryeo dynasty (918–1392).

Organized in partnership with the National Museum of Korea, this landmark international exhibition, Ten Kings of Hell: The Afterlife in Medieval Korea, explores the artistic legacy of the Goryeo dynasty (918–1392), posing daring questions: How did medieval Koreans envision the world beyond death and how did works of art and materiality shape and reflect that imagined realm?

Presenting an exceptional array of important artworks, including the CMA’s recent acquisitions—the Fourth King of Hell from the late 1300s, the Knife Sheath from the 1100s (Apollo’s Acquisition of the Year Award 2022), and the Kṣitigarbha Bodhisattva from the 1300s—the exhibition unfolds across three interlocking sections, each illuminating the soul’s passage from death through purgatory to the Buddhist paradise. At its dramatic center is the historic reunification of a dispersed set of 10 hanging scrolls from the 1300s depicting the 10 Kings of Hell. Brought together for the first time since the 1960s, the scrolls offer a rare opportunity to experience the set’s panoramic sequence of judgment, atonement, and salvation.

Among its most compelling narratives, the exhibition examines how sociopolitical upheavals and environmental pressures shaped medieval Korea’s deep preoccupation with purgatorial afterlife—not only as a moral and devotional terrain but also as a response to broader natural forces, from climatic volatility during the Little Ice Age to the devastating reach of the Black Death. A select group of contemporary artworks is also included to underscore the enduring resonance of humanity’s existential concerns. 

Anicka Yi’s Bending Willow Branches (2025) makes a strong opening statement: that death adds to life’s continuum—mutating, persisting, and transforming rather than ending it. Park Chan-kyong’s Belated Bosal (2019) serves as a visually and psychologically immersive centerpiece, prompting viewers to confront human-induced environmental catastrophes and their far-reaching karmic consequences. The circuit further widens with The Third King of Hell Afterimage (2025) by 2025 MacArthur Fellow Gala Porras-Kim, created specifically for this show as a critical inquiry into the afterlives of objects within Western collecting practices.

Additionally, the exhibition incorporates innovative digital experiences that deepen engagement with the artworks and themes. Visitors have the opportunity to interact with the Sutra Container in 3-D and to look closer into the artwork by exploring intricate details of select paintings on a large-scale “Zoom Wall.” Complementing these visual experiences are carefully designed audio and video installations, from the meditative resonance of a Buddhist temple bell to the evocative projection of contemporary works. 

Featuring more than one hundred works drawn from leading public and private collections in Korea, Japan, the United States, and the United Kingdom, Ten Kings of Hell: The Afterlife in Medieval Korea is accompanied by a substantial, richly illustrated catalogue, anchored in the contributing scholars’ shared commitment to transregional and interdisciplinary investigation.

For more information, visit https://www.getty.edu/exhibitions/creation-story/

Upcoming Exhibition: Beginnings: The Story of Creation in the Middle Ages, Getty Center, January 27 – April 19, 2026

Upcoming Exhibition

Beginnings: The Story of Creation in the Middle Ages

January 27 – April 19, 2026

Museum North Pavillion, Plaza Level

Getty Center, Los Angeles, CA

Left: Portrait of Eve (detail), 2021, Harmonia Rosales. Oil, gold leaf, and silver leaf on panel. The Akil Family. © Harmonia Rosales. Photo: Brad Kaye

Creation stories imagine the world’s origins, often leading to a shared cultural vision of identity and values. For medieval Christians, the Biblical story of the seven days of Creation was essential to understanding the natural and spiritual realms, as well as humanity’s role in bridging the two. This exhibition features manuscripts from Getty’s collection alongside select contemporary paintings by LA-based artist Harmonia Rosales to explore how the Creation was visualized, represented, and interpreted both in the Middle Ages and today.

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/creation-story/

Call for Papers: Canadian Society of Medievalists Annual Conference, St Francis Xavier University, Nova Scotia (26-28 May 2026), Due by 15 Jan. 2026

Call for Papers

Canadian Society of Medievalists Annual Conference 

St Francis Xavier University, Antigonish, Nova Scotia

26-28 May 2026

Due by 15 January 2026

The Canadian Society of Medievalists will hold its Annual Conference 26-28 May 2026 at St Francis Xavier University, Antigonish, Nova Scotia.

The CSM welcomes proposals that concern any topic within Medieval Studies broadly defined, in one of the following formats:

  • Individual papers (no more than 20 minutes in length)

    1. Sessions (three papers plus question period over 90 minutes)

    2. Roundtables, Workshops, or other alternative forms, no more than 90 minutes

  • Individual paper proposals will include:

  • A title and abstract of about 250 words

    1. A one-page CV

  • Proposals for complete sessions, workshops, or roundtables will include

  • Session title, a brief rationale for the session, indication of format, and (if determined) name of session chair

    1. As applicable, depending on the format: titles and 250-word abstracts of papers; one-page CVs of presenters

Don't forget the Calls for Submissions for EDID Sessions

  • You Are On Native Land:  Understanding Medieval Studies in Turtle Island

  • Queer World-Making

  • Medieval Engagements with Disability

  • Understanding Medieval Race-Making

Link to submit your proposals

Deadline for submission 15 January 2026

Address any questions to CSM President Shannon McSheffrey (shannon.mcsheffrey@concordia.ca).

**NB: Scholars need not be members to submit proposals, but must be members in good standing to participate in the Annual Meeting and are expected to pay their 2025-26 annual membership fees to CSM / SCM by 15 April 2026.

For more information, visit https://www.canadianmedievalists.org/Annual

Call for Papers: Blessed Are Those Who Mourn: Grief from Antiquity to the Present, Interdisciplinary Conference, University of St. Andrews (24-25 June 2026), Due by 2 Feb. 2026

Call for Papers

Interdisciplinary Conference

Blessed Are Those Who Mourn: GRIEF FROM ANTIQUITY TO THE PRESENT

University of St Andrews, Wednesday 24 & Thursday 25 June 2026

Due by Monday 2 February 2026

More than fifty years after the publication of Philippe Ariès' Western Attitudes Toward Death (1974), it is past time for a comprehensive reassessment of the history, culture, and experience of grief, loss, and mourning. Recent decades have seen profound developments across fields, including the rise of global and transnational history; the history of emotions ano affect theory; the anthropology of death; analyses of the politics of "grievability"; and new interdisciplinary approaches to the relationship between brain, body, and society. Together, these innovations open up fresh ways of understanding how individuals and communities negotiate loss across diverse temporal, cultural, and social contexts.

Blessed Are Those Who Mourn seeks to initiate this reassessment by examining grief as a historically situated, socially embedded, and politically resonant phenomenon. Bringing together scholars working across disciplines, periods, and regions, the conference aims to break down siloed approaches and foster new dialogue on the history and culture of grief.

We welcome papers from across the humanities, social sciences and natural sciences. We are particularly, but not exclusively, interested in papers on the below themes:

  • What grief is: boundaries, definitions, and phenomenology

  • The politics of grief, including who is permitted to mourn, when, how, and for whom; the intersection between grief, status and power

  • The connection between grief and other emotions

  • Funerals, mourning and the "practice" of grief after death

  • Grieving, senses and the body

  • Continuity and change

  • Medical approaches to grief, grieving, and consolation

  • The materiality and material culture of grief, including art works, monuments, seals, effigies, tombs, jewellery.

Please send your proposals for twenty-minute papers (to be delivered in English), including a title, an abstract of c. 150 words, and short bio, to griefconference.sta2026@gmail.com by Monday 2 February 2026.

Call for Applications: Research grants funded by the State of Lower Saxony 2027, Herzog August Bibliothek, Due 31 Jan. 2026

Call for Applications

Research grants funded by the State of Lower Saxony 2027

Herzog August Bibliothek, Wolfenbüttel, Germany

Due January 31, 2026

start: January 1, 2027

The HAB offers different fellowships for post-docs and experienced researchers (senior level) and the state of Lower Saxony funds two different formats in the area of research fellowships. In addition, there are further fellowship opportunities with cooperation partners.

Post-doc Fellowships

Scholars who are within 6 years of receiving their PhD, may apply for a long-term fellowship of between 6 and 10 months. The library will award from 4 to 6 such fellowships annually. The monthly fellowship is € 2.200. The fellowship holder will receive a one-time reimbursement for the cost of travel to and from Wolfenbüttel (max. € 2.000). Fellows who bring their families to Wolfenbüttel may apply for a monthly child supplement (one child: € 300; two children € 400; three or more € 500).
*for applications submitted in January 2026 the PhD must have been awarded in 2020 or later.

Short-term Fellowships

The fellowships are addressed to a broad range of scholars of all career stages (from post-doc to emeriti) wishing to make a short visit in order to gather source material. Applications can be made for stays of between one and three months. The monthly fellowship is € 1.800. A travel subsidy will also be paid (between € 150 and max. € 650, depending on country of origin).

Application for a fellowship at the Herzog August Bibliothek

For your application please request the application forms for the respective fellowship program at ed.bah@gnuhcsrof, stating your research focus and the keyword "Post-doc" or "Short-term". Reviewers will be appointed to evaluate the applications, and the Scientific Advisory Board will select the fellows. You can find the guidelines for the awarding of scholarships in the download area on the right.

For more information, visit https://www.hab.de/en/forschungsstipendien/

Call for Papers: Mediterráneo gótico: redes, artistas y formas entre Italia y la península ibérica (1320-1420), Museo Nacional Del Prado (9-11 Sept. 2026), Due 15 Jan. 2026

Call for Papers

Congreso InternacionaL

Mediterráneo gótico: redes, artistas y formas entre Italia y la península ibérica (1320-1420)

9 al 11 de septiembre de 2026, Auditorio del Museo Nacional del Prado

Fecha límite 15 de enero de 2026

Jaume Serra, Virgen de Tobed [detalle], h. 1368 – 1371, Museo del Prado

Idiomas aceptados: Español, italiano, francés e inglés

La circulación artística en el Mediterráneo occidental y el papel que desempeñaron los modelos del Trecento italiano en la configuración del arte hispánico han adquirido un creciente interés en el ámbito académico durante las últimas décadas. Diversas investigaciones han contribuido a ampliar el conocimiento sobre los intercambios transnacionales de imágenes, técnicas y artistas en el gótico tardío, reformulando así los conceptos de frontera, originalidad e influencia. En este marco se inscribe la investigación desarrollada por el Departamento de Pintura Europea hasta 1500 del Museo Nacional del Prado, que culminará con la exposición A la manera de Italia. España y el Mediterráneo (1320–1420).

El congreso internacional que se presenta constituye una prolongación natural del proyecto expositivo y surge con el propósito de ahondar en las líneas de investigación abiertas por la muestra. Con esta iniciativa, el Museo del Prado convoca a la comunidad académica a explorar, desde un enfoque comparativo, crítico y material, las diversas formas en que el arte italiano fue apropiado, reinterpretado y adaptado en los territorios hispánicos. Concebido como una plataforma de reflexión, discusión e intercambio, el encuentro científico busca ser un espacio para el análisis tanto de obras y artistas concretos como de cuestiones históricas y teóricas más amplias: la circulación de formas, técnicas y artistas; las redes diplomáticas, mercantiles y eclesiásticas que propiciaron los intercambios; los valores estéticos y semánticos de las técnicas artísticas; o los límites del concepto de centro y periferia en el estudio del arte medieval.

Como sede de la exposición que ha dado origen a esta reflexión, el Prado respalda esta propuesta con el objetivo de promover un espacio de diálogo interdisciplinario que enriquezca la lectura del arte del gótico tardío desde una perspectiva genuinamente mediterránea.

Se invita a los participantes a enviar un resumen (máx. 2.000 caracteres, espacios incluidos) acompañado de un breve CV (máx. 1.500 caracteres, espacios incluidos) y un mínimo de tres palabras clave a: congreso.maneradeitalia@museodelprado.es
La solicitud será evaluada por el comité científico.

Fecha límite para la presentación de propuestas: 15 de enero de 2026

Para obtener más información, visite https://www.museodelprado.es/recurso/congreso-internacional-mediterraneo-gotico-redes/db869661-ded3-495d-8956-60c2c8b57681

Exhibition: 'Gold: Enduring Power, Sacred Craft', Norton Simon Museum, Pasadena, CA, 24 Oct. 2025 – 16 Feb. 2026

Exhibition

Gold: Enduring Power, Sacred Craft

Norton Simon Museum, Pasadena, CA

October 24, 2025 – February 16, 2026

Giovanni di Paolo (Italian, 1403-1482), Branchini Madonna, 1427, Tempera and gold leaf on panel, 72 x 39 in. (182.9 x 99.1 cm), The Norton Simon Foundation

This exhibition explores the artistic and cultural function of gold in approximately 60 works of art drawn from across the collections of the Norton Simon Museum, which encompass South and Southeast Asia, Europe, North Africa and North America. This compelling group of objects, spanning from around 1000 BCE to the 20th century, reveals unexpected intersections in the circulation, craft and meaning of gold across time and place.

Gold’s elemental nature lends significance to many of the artworks on view in the exhibition. In the realm of religious art, the metal’s malleable yet incorruptible quality enabled artists to create enduring images of devotion. Gilt Hindu and Buddhist sculptures from the 12th to 20th centuries were commissioned by donors to emphasize the spiritual attainments and deified status of various religious figures. The gold on these objects represents one of the highest forms of offering, in terms of both economic and aesthetic value, and it was intended to accumulate merit and provide protection for devotees. Intricate details wrought by the hands of skilled artisans centuries ago are still preserved in the corrosion-resistant metal, which ensured the longevity of the object’s splendor and spiritual power. In 14th- and 15th-century Europe, artists of Christian images used extraordinarily thin, hammered gold leaf to create shimmering divine realms, an effect once dramatically enhanced by candlelit churches and private altars.

Gold’s rarity, and the expertise required to harness it as a medium, contributed to its impact as a visual expression of power. The objects in this exhibition were crafted from metal excavated from mines across three continents and transported over vast regions, often in the form of currency. In the hands of trained craftspeople, this processed gold was transformed into jewelry that adorned Roman patrician women or spun into thread that was then woven into textiles for elite patrons in Europe and Asia. The long historical thirst for gold motivated California’s own extractive 19th-century mining practices, the legacy of which is explored through photographs by Ansel Adams and Edward Weston.

New technical analysis conducted for this exhibition helped to identify the objects’ fundamental material properties, which provoked further questions about their significance—are these works actually gold, and what does it mean if they are not? In some cases, gilding versus solid gold becomes an issue, because it is the purity and preciousness of the material itself that gives these objects power. Alternatively, when “gold” is created through the treatment of another metal such as brass, or by skillful illusionistic painting, the gleaming effect and impressive artistic alchemy become more important than the raw materials.

Organized on the occasion of the Museum’s 50th anniversary, a milestone traditionally associated with this metal, Gold: Enduring Power, Sacred Craft invites fresh inquiry into the nature of gold as an artistic medium. In the process, the exhibition generates new conversations about the cultural and material resilience of these objects, many of which will be displayed together for the first time.

For more information, visit https://www.nortonsimon.org/exhibitions/2020-2029/gold-enduring-power-sacred-craft

Lecture: Serene and Resplendent: Asian Gold at the Norton Simon Museum, Emma Natalya Stein, at Norton Simon Museum, Pasadena, CA, 10 Jan. 2026, 5-6pm

Lecture

Serene and Resplendent: Asian Gold at the Norton Simon Museum

Emma Natalya Stein

Associate Curator of Southeast Asian and South Asian Art, National Museum of Asian Art, Smithsonian

Norton Simon Museum, Pasadena, CA

Saturday, January 10, 2026, 5:00-6:00 pm

Gilt, pressed, painted or cast, gold has expressed power, prosperity, purity and transcendence throughout the history of Asian art. From gilt-bronze sculptures of Hindu and Buddhist deities to courtly paintings and items of personal adornment, gold has enjoyed a range of uses and enduring significance, from China to Nepal. In this richly illustrated talk, Stein delves into the Asian works on view in the exhibition Gold: Enduring Power, Sacred Craft and discovers more gold in the Museum’s South and Southeast Asian collections.

Advance tickets for members are available using the link below.
Tickets for all guests will be available for walkups on the day of the lecture starting at 4:00 p.m.

For more information and to register, visit https://www.nortonsimon.org/calendar/2026/winter-2026/Serene-and-Resplendent-Asian-Gold-at-the-Norton-Simon-Museum-1-10-2026-500pm

Lecture: Art and Arbitrage: Gold across the Mediterranean in the Middle Ages, Sarah M. Guérin, at Norton Simon Museum, Pasadena, CA, 7 Feb. 2026 5-6PM

Lecture

Art and Arbitrage: Gold across the Mediterranean in the Middle Ages

Sarah M. Guérin

Associate Professor of Medieval Art, History of Art Department, University of Pennsylvania

Norton Simon Museum, Pasadena, CA

Saturday, February 7, 2026, 5:00 pm – 6:00 pm

During the European Middle Ages, silver was more abundant for the northern shores of the Mediterranean, whereas coastal North Africa enjoyed easier access to gold via trans-Saharan trade. Each had something the other wanted, and sought to leverage the system to their own advantage. This differential led to rivalry, subterfuge and even war, with the Crusade to Tunis in 1270 being largely spurred and motivated by a thirst for gold. In addition to their use for exchange and coinage, gold and silver were artists’ materials, and their paucity or abundance profoundly shaped artistic practice. In this lecture, Guérin reveals how this valuable metal influenced both historical events and artistic production.

Advance tickets for members will be released on January 7.

For more information, visit https://www.nortonsimon.org/calendar/2026/winter-2026/Art-and-Arbitrage-Gold-across-the-Mediterranean-in-the-Middle-Ages-2-7-2026-500pm

Exhibition: Late Medieval European Blockbooks: The First Printed Picture Books, The Morgan Library & Museum, New York City, November 6, 2026 to May 16, 2027

Current Exhibition

Late Medieval European Blockbooks: The First Printed Picture Books

The Morgan Library & Museum, New York City

November 6, 2026 through May 16, 2027

Ars moriendi (Blockbook). Netherlands (or Lower Rhine), approximately 1467–1469. Purchased on the Gordon N. Ray, Curt F. Bühler, L. Colgate Harper D-1, and Henry S. Morgan Reference Funds, and as the gift of T. Kimball Brooker, Martha J. Fleischman, Mr. G. Scott Clemons and Ms. Karyn Joaquino, Marguerite Steed Hoffman and Tom Lentz, and Mr. and Mrs. Larry R. Ricciardi, 2022. The Morgan Library & Museum, PML 198786. 

This exhibition will highlight the short period in European book history (1450–80) when blockbooks competed with hand-written and typographically-printed books as commercial products for readers.

Blockbooks, now often referred to as “medieval graphic novels,” were highly illustrated books printed entirely from woodcuts (text and image together). As such, they were the first print-on-demand books in the West. While some works maintained texts and imagery popular from manuscript tradition, block cutters and printers also produced new and innovative texts specifically designed for the medium. Ultimately, the cumbersome production process of woodcut-book printing was surpassed by the greater capabilities of typographic printing that integrated woodcuts, and the blockbook genre had largely died out by 1480. This thirty-year span, however, reveals a critical moment in European book history as the increasing demand for books led to inventions and experimentation in book production.

The Morgan holds the largest collection of blockbooks in the United States. A highlight of this exhibition will be the Ars moriendi blockbook, a rare copy printed in the Netherlands about 1467–69. In 2022, the Morgan acquired fifteen leaves of this blockbook that had been held in a private collection. Remarkably, the Morgan already possessed the remaining nine leaves—purchased by J. Pierpont Morgan in 1902. This acquisition reunites the two parts, forming the only known complete copy of this monument to early European printing.

Organized by John McQuillen, Associate Curator, Department of Printed Books and Bindings.

For more information, visit https://www.themorgan.org/exhibitions/blockbooks

Call for Papers: Women Religious: Patronage and Networks from Medieval to Modern, Queen Mary University of London (11-12 June 2026), Due 30 Jan. 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

Call for Panels & Papers Extension: Small Worlds, Big Worlds, 9th International Conference of the Society for the Medieval Mediterranean (Lisbon, 22-25 June 2026), Due by 15 Dec. 2025

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.

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

Call for Papers: Close Enounters, 5th Oslo Student Conference on Medieval Europe, Oslo (12-14 Mar. 2026), Due by 12 Dec. 2025

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.

Call for Papers Extension: Sounds & Silence, Oxford Medieval Graduate Conference (OMGC) (23-24 Apr. 2026), Due by 15 Dec. 2025

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.

Call for Papers: The Symposium on Crusade Studies, Saint Louis University, MO (10-11 Apr. 2026), Due by 31 Dec. 2025

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

Call for Applications: Student Scholarship for 2026 BAA Romanesque Conference in Toulouse, Due by 31 Jan. 2026

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.

Call for Applications: Mary Jaharis Center Grants 2026–2027, Due 1 Feb. 2026

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.

Call for Participants in Workshop: Tractive Forces: Potentials of Art in the Trecento, Warburg-Haus and CAS, Hamburg (6-8 May 2026), Due by 15 Dec. 2025

Call for Participants in Workshop

Tractive Forces: Potentials of Art in the Trecento

6-8 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 the following link to access a PDF of the Announcement of the Workshop »›Tractive Forces‹ Potentials of Art in the Trecento«