Medieval Matters: Week 5 MT2021

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Dear Medievalists,

The Old English Maxims II tells us that 'winter byð cealdost' ('winter is coldest') and I'm sure we're all feeling the chill. It is my civic duty as an Italian to remind you to wrap up warmly to avoid a colpo d'aria, and my academic duty as an Old English scholar to inform you that winter is officially here! In fact, the Old English Menologium (Metrical Calendar) informs us in no uncertain terms that 7 November is the start of the coldest season:

Syþþan wintres dæg wide gangeð

on syx nihtum, sigelbeortne genimð

hærfest mid herige hrimes and snawes

 

[Six nights after that (i.e. 1 November, the feast of All Saints) Winter’s Day comes far and wide, and seizes sun-bright autumn with an army of ice and snow]

Whilst it might be cold outside, we can all take shelter in the warmth of a medieval seminar, or indeed, in our own homes, joining in online! Here is this week's selection to keep the cold and the dark at bay:

 

ANNOUNCEMENTS:

  • On Monday, 15 November, 2021 at 5pm GMT, the East of Byzantium Lecture (Maray Jaharis Center for Byzantine Art and Culture) will take place on Zoom. The speaker will be Sören Stark, Institute for the Study of the Ancient World, New York University, 'Eternal ‘Silk Road’? The Rise of Sogdiana during the 3rd–4th Centuries A.D.' Advance registration is required. Registration closes at 2pm GMT on 15 November, 2021. Register: https://eastofbyzantium.org/upcoming-events/
     

EVENTS THIS WEEK:

Monday 8 November:

  • The Byzantine Graduate Seminar meets at 12.15pm - 2pm GMT on Teams. This week's speaker is Jessica Varsallona (Birmingham), 'Michael VIII Palaiologos and the southern shore of Constantinople'. To register, please contact the organiser at james.cogbill@worc.ox.ac.uk or visit the eventbrite page.
  • The Medieval Latin Manuscript Reading Group meets at 1pm - 2pm GMT on Teams. Contact Matthew HolfordAndrew Dunning or Tuija Ainonen to be added to the Teams call.
  • The Medieval Archaeology Seminar: 3pm GMT Helen Gittos (Oxford), ‘Sutton Hoo & Syria: The Anglo-Saxons who served in the Byzantine Army?’. Institute of Archaeology, Seminar Room (limited places must be booked) and on Teams https://www.arch.ox.ac.uk/files/medarchsemmt21linkpdf
  • The Medieval History Seminar meets at 5pm GMT on Teams and in the Wharton Room. Attendance at the Wharton Room is by advance booking only as the room has a strict Covid-19 capacity limit. Bookings can be made at https://medieval-history-seminar.reservio.com. This week’s speaker is Len Scales (Durham), 'The Holy Roman Empire: Global Histories 800-1519'.

Tuesday 9 November:

  • The Islamicate Manuscripts and Texts Reading Colloquium 2021 meets at 3pm GMT on Zoom. This week's speaker is Adam Flowers, Department of Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations, University of Chicago, 'The Qur'an, Early Arabic Letters, and P.Utah.Ar.120'
  • The Medieval Book Club meets at 3.30pm GMT in Magdalen College, Old Law Library. This week's topic is 'Supernatural Natural Sites'.
  • The Early Slavonic Webinar meets at 5pm GMT on Zoom. This week's speaker is Iulia Nitescu (Universityof Bucharest/New Europe College), ‘Let Your Brother be to you like a Heathen and a Tax Collector’: Fashioning an Orthodox Dynastic Identity during the Reign of Ivan III of Moscow.
  • The Medieval Church and Culture Seminar meets at 5pm GMT in Old Dining Hall, Harris Manchester College. This week's speaker is Ian Forrest (Oriel), 'Fragments of a feminist history of the late medieval clergy'.
  • The Medieval French Research Seminar meets at 5pm GMT at Maison française d’Oxford. This week's speaker is Prof. Catherine Croizy-Naquet (Université Paris III), ‘Les Historiens et la langue’.

Wednesday 10 November:

  • The Medieval German Seminar meets at 11.15am - 12.45pm GMT in New Powell Room, Somerville College. If you are interested in being added to the mailing list for the seminar, write to Linus Ubl.
  • The TORCH Book at Lunchtime talk this week is on The Oxford Handbook of Dante, edited by Professor Manuele Gragnolati, Professor Elena Lombardi, and Professor Francesca Southerden. The talk takes place at 1pm - 2pm GMT, and you can watch live online.
  • The Seminar in Medieval and Renaissance Music takes place at 5pm - 6.45pm GMT on Zoom. If you are planning to attend, please register online. This week's speaker is Paweł Gancarczyk (Associate Professor, Institute of Art, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw), 'Music in a vanished kingdom: traces of fifteenth-century polyphony in the Teutonic Order State in Prussia'. The discussants are Lenka Hlávková (Charles University, Prague), and Reinhard Strohm (University of Oxford).
  • The Late Antique and Byzantine Seminar meets at 5pm GMT on Google Meet, followed by drinks at 7pm GMT at Corpus Christi College. This week’s speakers are Theodora Antonopoulou (Athens), 'Preaching in the Second Iconoclasm. The homilies of Joseph of Thessalonica', and Stephanos Efthymiadis (Open University of Cyprus), 'People and Power in Hagia Sophia (532-1204)'
  • The Medieval English Research Seminar meets at 5.15pm GMT in Lecture Theatre 2, Faculty of English. This week's speaker will be Sarah McNamer (Georgetown), ‘A New Setting for the Pearl Poet’. For further information, contact daniel.wakelin@ell.ox.ac.uk.

Thursday 11 November:

Friday 12 November:

Saturday 13 November:

  • The Church Monuments Society Lecture Series: Whose Dead in Vaulted Arches Lie meets at 5pm GMT on Zoom. This week’s talk is ‘Death in the Churchyard: Skeletons, skulls and bones on slate tombstones with Elizabeth Blood'. Attendance is free, but places must be booked via Eventbrite.
  • ‘Serata Dantesca’: Performances in Celebration of Dante will take place at 7.30pm GMT at Holywell Music Room, Holywell Street, Oxford. A programme of music, poetry and dance presented in the Holywell Music Room, featuring performers who are almost all Oxford-based teachers, researchers and students. In addition to Italian and English readings and some older choral and solo musical compositions, new translations and settings have been specially commissioned for this commemorative occasion marking the 700th anniversary of the death of the great Italian poet. For tickets, please visit the Eventbrite page.

 

OPPORTUNITIES:

  • SCRIPTO at St Gall 2022: Medieval Writing Culture (V to XV c.): The Abbey Library of Saint Gall and the Chair for Mediaeval and Renaissance Latin at Friedrich-Alexander-University Erlangen-Nuremberg organize their third Summer School Medieval Writing Culture (V to XV century), which will be held from 16 till 20 May 2022. This SCRIPTO Summer School Saint Gall (SSSS) offers an introduction to history, morphology and cultural impact of western script. The application deadline is 1 March 2022. Those applicants accepted to the course will be charged 475€/500CHF (Accommodation included). It may be possible to receive a scholarship – if you are interested in a scholarship, send – an application for it together with your regular application. Further information (including the application form) may be obtained online: www.scripto.mittellatein.phil.fau.de.

Finally, some more wintery Old English wisdom from Bede:

 

he on þa tid þe he inne bið ne bið hrinen mid þy storme þæs wintres

[He during the time that he is inside will not be touched by winter's storm]

 

I interpret this advice to mean: when it's cold and dark outside, go to seminars! There might even be warming drinks afterwards...