All Welcome – Annual Medieval Studies Lecture: Professor Miri Rubin on ‘Who were the Strangers of Medieval Cities?’ (Thursday 3 June 21 6pm)

Following on from the success of our Medieval Week, the Medieval Studies Research Group of the University of Lincoln are delighted to invite you to our free Annual Medieval Studies Lecture on Thursday 3rd June 2021 at 6pm (on Zoom).
This year, our speaker will be Professor Miri Rubin of Queen Mary, University of London, a leading writer, broadcaster, and medieval historian who works on religious cultures and identities in the Middle Ages. She is the highly acclaimed author of several important books, including: Mother of God. A History of the Virgin Mary (London, 2009); Thomas of Monmouth, The Life and Passion of William of Norwich, trans. with an introduction by Miri Rubin (London, 2014); and Cities of Strangers: Making Lives in Medieval Europe (Cambridge, 2020).
The title of her talk will be – ‘Who were the Strangers of Medieval Cities?’
Abstract (in the words of Prof. Rubin): The title of my recent book Cities of Strangers (2020) prompts me to reflect with you more explicitly on the category ‘stranger’. Current research is showing just how diverse medieval cities were, but also how constitutive of urban flourishing this diversity was. It is appropriate therefore to consider how the differences between groups were managed and understood. Was it safe to be a stranger? How made it a beneficial state of living? How did strangerhood relate to ideas about identity? How did all this change over time?
For a free ticket, please register here via Eventbrite: The Lincoln Annual Medieval Studies Lecture

(You can right-click on the link to open on a new window)

We do hope you can join us as we approach the end of the academic year.

Viva la differenza? Italian towns in the early middle ages

CONFERENCE: Viva la differenza? Italian towns in the early middle ages, 500-1100 
 
29th – 30th May 2015
Meadows Lecture Theatre Doorway 4, Old Medical School
Dr Tom Brown, well-known for his scholarly work on early medieval Ravenna, will be retiring from the History Subject Area in Edinburgh in the summer of 2015. This conference marks Tom’s wide contribution to the study of early medieval Europe, as well as his three decades of service as a lecturer in History at Edinburgh. The conference theme relates to Tom’s enduring interest in the development of urban settlement and culture across early medieval Europe.
 
More information in the pdf attachment and online at: www.shca.ed.ac.uk/tb-retirement