New Publication: ‘Transforming the Church Interior in Renaissance Florence’ by Joanne Allen

Before the late sixteenth century, the churches of Florence were internally divided by monumental screens that separated the laity in the nave from the clergy in the choir precinct. Medieval screens were impressive artistic structures that controlled social interactions, facilitated liturgical performances, and variably framed or obscured religious ritual and imagery. In the 1560s and 1570s, screens were routinely destroyed in a period of religious reforms, irreversibly transforming the function, meaning, and spatial dynamics of the church interior. In this volume, Joanne Allen explores the widespread presence of screens and their role in Florentine social and religious life prior to the Counter-Reformation. She presents unpublished documentation and new reconstructions of screens and the choir precincts that they delimited. Elucidating issues such as gender, patronage, and class, her study makes these vanished structures comprehensible and deepens our understanding of the impact of religious reform on church architecture.

To purchase, visit Cambridge.

‘An Artful Relic: The Shroud of Turin in Baroque Italy’ Wins Bainton Book Prize

Andrew Casper (Miami Univeristy) was awarded the 2022 Roland H. Bainton Book Prize by the Sixteenth Century Society and Conference (SCSC) for Best Book in Art and Music History.

His book An Artful Relic: The Shroud of Turin in Baroque Italy, published by Penn State University Press in 2021, examines the controversial Shroud of Turin as a religious image from the late 1500s through 1600s.

The Roland H. Bainton Book Prizes are awarded yearly for the best books written in English within the time frame of 1450-1660 in four categories: Art and Music History, History and Theology, Literature, and Reference Works. Criteria for selection include quality and originality of research, methodological skill and/or innovation, development of fresh and stimulating interpretations or insights, and literary quality.

Fellowship: Tucher Fellowship at the Germanisches Nationalmuseum, Nuremberg (Deadline 1 February 2023)

Every two years the Tucher’sche Kulturstiftung and the Germanisches Nationalmuseum award a fellowship to a doctoral candidate for research on a topic in German art and/or cultural history and, if possible, with a connection to the history of the patrician family Tucher. Applications from abroad receive priority.

The fellowship pays a monthly stipend of € 1,500 and makes possible a six-month research stay at the Germanisches Nationalmuseum. The earliest possible start date for the next fellowship is 6th June 2023.

While at the Germanisches Nationalmuseum (GNM), the fellow will:
• be supported by the museum’s curatorial and research staff,
• will have open access to the museum’s facilities,
• be welcome to participate in the museum’s various events.
Furthermore, they will be involved in the museum’s trainee program.

Prerequisites for a fellowship application are a master’s degree (or equivalent) with high marks, candidacy for a doctoral degree, and a very good and proven knowledge of the German language.

Required application materials (preferably in German):
• Research proposal (3 pages, 1.5 spaced), explaining one’s own interest in the topic, sketching the current state of the questions, describing preliminary work already completed, explaining how a stay at the GNM would advance the dissertation project and how it relates to the von Tucher family.
• Abstract of the research proposal (10–15 lines), which, if the fellowship is awarded, may be posted on the website of the GNM.
• Curriculum vitae, list of publications, study and work certificates (as applicable)
• 2 letters of recommendation

The fellow is required to present their findings at the Germanisches Nationalmuseum and also to present a final report at a meeting of the Tucher’sche Kulturstiftung, to which the Stiftung will invite guests and, as the case may be, the press. Furthermore, they agree to provide both the Germanisches Nationalmuseum and the Tucher’sche Kulturstiftung with a written final report and a copy of the dissertation (paper or electronic).

A travel allowance can be requested from the Tucher’sche Kulturstiftung.

Fellows from abroad must be in possession of a health insurance policy that covers possible costs of medical treatment in the Federal Republic of Germany. Proof of coverage must be submitted before the start of the fellowship period. The fellowship cannot be commenced without health insurance coverage.

A residence permit, if required, must be applied for by the fellow themself. The responsible authority in Nuremberg is the foreigners’ registration office (Ausländerbehörde) in the residents’ registration office. (Contact: Einwohneramt/Ausländerbehörde, Äußere Laufer Gasse 29, 90403 Nürnberg, Tel.: 0911/231-45000; https://www.nuernberg.de/internet/auslaenderbehoerde-/aufenthaltstitel.html)

Please submit applications with the requested materials via e-mail (as a single PDF file) by 1st February 2023 to one of the following addresses:

Germanisches Nationalmuseum
Personalabteilung
Kornmarkt 1
90402 Nürnberg
Germany

E-Mail: Bewerbungen@gnm.de

The decision to award a fellowship lies with the Tucher’sche Kulturstiftung and the Germanisches Nationalmuseum. Applicants have no legal claim to a fellowship.

Contact persons:
For questions relating to research: Herr Dr. Markus T. Huber (m.huber@gnm.de)
For administrative questions: Frau Rita Wolkersdorfer (r.wolkersdorfer@gnm.de)

New Publication: ‘Frankish Manuscripts: The Seventh to the Tenth Century’ by Lawrence Nees

Frankish Manuscripts covers the earliest period in this series devoted to manuscripts illuminated in France. The two volumes explore those manuscripts that originate in the period before the kingdom of France emerged at the end of the tenth century. From the seventh to the tenth century most of modern France was ruled by kings of the Franks, from dynasties known as Merovingian and Carolingian, whose territories also included significant portions of other modern nations, especially the Low Countries, Germany, Switzerland and Austria.

The introductory essay in Volume I offers an overview of salient issues in this creative period, formative for later medieval manuscripts produced in France and elsewhere, in the former Frankish territories and beyond; the volume includes 341 photographs from the manuscripts in the catalogue, the great majority reproduced in colour. Volume II comprises a detailed catalogue of 100 manuscripts from this large region, each with a detailed description, an interpretive commentary focused on the decoration of the text as well as illustrations, and a survey of previous scholarly literature, including digital access when available. The catalogue includes some of the most famous early medieval manuscripts, decorated with luxury materials and exceptionally beautiful script, ornament and illustrations. In the spirit of a survey intended to show the range of Frankish illumination, it also includes manuscripts of ancient and contemporary poems, scientific works, commentaries, a cookbook, and one manuscript in a vernacular language. Together, these two volumes provide the most comprehensive survey of manuscript illumination in Francia, its large corpus of illustrations making the manuscripts more readily available for study not only by scholars of illumination but also by others interested in early medieval culture.

Lawrence Nees is Professor in the Department of Art History and H. Fletcher Brown Chair of Humanities at the University of Delaware. He is a Fellow of the Medieval Academy of America and Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries.

To purchase, visit Brepols.

Lecture: ‘Dynastic Change, Family Networks and Female Genealogies in Medieval Armenia (11th-13th C.), by Zara Pogossian, University of Florence, East of Byzantium Lecture, 15 November 2022, 12:00 EST

This lecture will focus on a period of medieval Armenian history – eleventh to late thirteenth centuries – that was characterized by a gradual deterioration and break-down of its until then traditional social structure based on land-holding military families known as nakharars. In this context a number of new military men, mostly with no illustrious lineage and/or previous connection to certain specific regions, rose to power. As they sought ways of legitimizing their control of recently conquered land and resources in various parts of historical Armenia, marriage alliances and, hence, the building of new family networks via women acquired increasing importance. This is especially true in the case of wives that came from older, prestigious dynasties which had lost or were about to lose their significance. There are also cases of women who were themselves from ‘new families’ but who played a key role in entering local networks of power in different ways. These general considerations will be illustrated on specific cases bringing to the audience’s attention the significance of women from (new or old) élite families, particularly from the end of Bagratid rule, and through Seljuk and Mongol (particularly Ilkhanid) periods. The inter-religious aspects of such family networks will be equally highlighted. Although the talk will address various regions of historical Armenia, greater attention will be paid to Syunik‘, reflecting my on-going research-in-progress.

Zara Pogossian is a specialist in medieval Armenian history, culture and religion, especially in relation to other peoples, cultures and religions in the Near East and Asia Minor. She is Associate Professor of Byzantine Civilization at the University of Florence, and the Principal Investigator of the ERC Project ArmEn: Armenia Entangled: Connectivity and Cultural Encounters in Medieval Eurasia 9th–14th Centuries. In her research, Professor Pogossian has explored such diverse topics as female asceticism and ascetic communities in early Christian Armenia, the role of women in the spread of Christianity in Armenia, monastic establishments and territory control, hagiography and cult of relics, and inter-religious (Jewish-Christian-Muslim) dynamics in medieval Armenia, among others. She has contributed significantly to the study of apocalyptic traditions in Armenian, especially between the 11th and 13th centuries. Her critical edition, with comments and a thorough historical study of Agat‘angel, On the End of the World, an anonymous Armenian apocalyptic text which reflects aspects of Late Antique Jewish-Christian debates, is forthcoming. She is the author of a book acclaimed by reviewers (The Letter of Love and Concord, Brill 2011), as well as numerous articles and book reviews. She has been the recipient of several prestigious fellowships, such as from the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation, Käte Hamburger Collegium at the Center for Religious Studies (University of Bochum, Germany) and the International Consortium for Research in the Humanities (University of Erlangen, Germany). Dr. Pogossian is on the editorial board of the on-line journal Entangled Religions and a co-founder and co-editor-in-chief of Armeniaca: International Journal of Armenian Studies (first issue forthcoming in September 2022). She is one of the founding members and general editors of the series Eastern Christian Cultures in Contact (Brepols editors). She regularly serves on the evaluation committees of the European Institutes for Advanced Study (EURIAS), European Science Foundation, Alexander von Humboldt Foundation, Austrian Academy of Sciences and the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG).

Register here.

Summer School: Summer Institute for the Study of East Central and Southeastern Europe (SISECSE), 1-15 June 2023 (Deadline 1 December 2022)

The Summer Institute for the Study of East Central and Southeastern Europe (SISECSE) is a two-week residential fellowship, that provides scholars of Eastern Europe time and space to dedicate to their own research and writing in a collaborative and interdisciplinary setting. ACLS in partnership with the Centre for Advanced Study Sofia (CAS) will convene leading scholars from Eastern Europe and North America for a two-week residency in Blagoevgrad, Bulgaria from June 1, 2023 to June 15, 2023.

SISECSE will also provide participating scholars with the opportunity to undertake local fieldwork, including archival research, work in museum collections, interviews, site surveys, or other forms of data collection. (Fieldwork is not a requirement for participation in the institute.)

The program will cover travel, accommodation, and per diem expenses for the two-week residential institute. Institute members will be expected to be in residence and to participate in all planned events for the duration of the institute. 

In addition to conducting their own research, scholars will also have the opportunity to participate in small group writing workshops, as well as a series of immersive discussions on a broad topic of shared academic interest.

In 2023, discussions will explore “Scholarly Writing in the Digital Age.” Participants will be asked to consider broad questions of accessibility and audience; the democratization of scholarly writing, manifested in the expansion of acceptable writing styles in journals and books; the blur between scholarly writing and creative writing, essays, and memoirs; the implications of digital sources for the way scholars treat their work; the potential of graphics and digital publication; the perceived over-production of articles and books; changing institutional frameworks and cultures of academic writing, and the growing demands for wider impact while retaining intellectual substance; and more.

Eligibility

  • Applicants must have a PhD degree conferred by an accredited university by December 1, 2022. (An established scholar who can demonstrate the equivalent of the PhD in publications and professional experience may also qualify.)
  • The competition is open to scholars in any field or discipline in the humanities and interpretive social sciences pursuing postdoctoral or advanced research in the region (Albania, Belarus, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Czechia, Croatia, Hungary, Kosovo, Moldova, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Poland, Romania, Russia, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, Ukraine).
  • Applicants must have an affiliation—a long-term regular research or teaching appointment—with a university or college in North America (US, Canada, Mexico) or Central/Eastern Europe (see the list above).
  • There are no restrictions as to the citizenship of applicants.

Applications must be submitted online and must include:

  • A completed brief application form including demographic information.
  • A description of the applicant’s research project (no more than 4 double-spaced pages in Times New Roman 11-point font). The application essay should lay out the research project—what it is about, its location in the current literature, what sources are to be examined, and how the applicant plans to carry out the work.
  • Up to 2 additional pages of images, musical scores, or other similar supporting non-text materials. [Optional]
  • A bibliography (no more than 2 pages, double-spaced between entries, Times New Roman 11-point font).
  • A list of the applicant’s publications (no more than 2 pages, double-spaced between entries, Times New Roman 11-point font). Applicants should indicate if any of their publications resulted from prior ACLS funding.
  • A statement of interest by the applicant (no more than 1 page, single or double-spaced, in Times New Roman 11-point font) describing the type of research, writing, or fieldwork they intend to carry out in Bulgaria, the impact of this work on their research project, and their interest in participating in interdisciplinary conversations. ACLS is committed to diversity, equity, and inclusion in all aspects of the fellowship application process. Please use the applicant’s statement to note any relevant information about your personal background and/or ways in which your proposed research addresses issues related to diversity, equity, and inclusion.

The deadline for this programme is 1st December 2022. To apply, visit the ACLS website.

Symposium: ‘The Medieval Treasury in Iberia and Beyond’, CCHS-CSIC Madrid, 28-30 November 2022

Treasuries offer an opportunity for reading evidence over time, weighing the sometimes contradictory conclusions from textual or visual sources against technical analysis. This project delves into the medieval objects once gathered in ecclesiastical treasuries in order to highlight long-distance and transcultural networks, shining a light on issues of broad relevance for scholarship and society today. We investigate multiple collections in the Iberian Peninsula and beyond, carrying out comparative research on medieval metalworks, ivories, hardstones, and textiles, along with their representations in
miniatures and murals.

Monday 28 November 2022
Moderators: Therese Martin, CSIC, Madrid, and Alicia López Carral, UCM/CSIC, Madrid
15.30 Therese Martin, CSIC, Madrid: Introduction
16.00 María Judith Feliciano, independent scholar, New York: Reconsidering the Medieval Treasury: Absence and Transformation in Iberian Cathedrals.
16.30 Ana Cabrera Lafuente, Turespaña/Tourspain, Madrid: Unknown Pieces from Well Known Treasuries: Textiles at the Cathedrals of Ourense, Palencia, and Toledo.
17.00 Discussion
17.15 Break
17.30 Ignacio Montero, CSIC, Madrid, and Xosé Lois Armada, CSIC, Santiago de Compostela XRF Analysis of Treasured Objects.
18.00 Mariam Rosser-Owen, Victoria and Albert Museum, and Therese Martin, CSIC, Madrid: Looking Anew at Nielloed Silverworks in 10th- to 12th-Century Iberia.

18.30 Discussion

Tuesday 29 November 2022
Moderators: Verónica Abenza, CSIC, Madrid, and Teresa Martínez Martínez, University of Warwick
15.30 Laura Rodríguez Peinado, Universidad Complutense de Madrid:El Pendón de San Isidoro en contexto: el valor de los estandartes como reliquias en los tesoros medievales.
16.00 Jordi Camps, Museu Nacional d’Art de Catalunya: De la mesa del altar a la imagen mural: los cálices en la Plena Edad Media.
16.30 Eduardo Manzano, CSIC, Madrid: The Qur’an Captured at the Battle of Alhandega (939).
17.00 Discussion
17.15 Break
17.30 Alicia López Carral, CSIC, Madrid and Universidad Complutense de Madrid: El otro tesoro de la Catedral de Toledo: los libros litúrgicos a través de los inventarios.
18.00 Shannon Wearing, Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, Toronto: Louis’s Bible and Alfonso’s Cantigas: Royal Manuscripts in Dialogue.
18.30 Discussion

Wednesday 30 November 2022
Moderators: Therese Martin, CSIC, Madrid, and Hannah Thomson, UCLA
15.30 Silvia Armando, Ministero della Cultura, Italia Treasuries of the Norman South: Gift-Giving in Apulia between Episcopal and Secular Powers.
16.00 Jitske Jasperse, Humboldt Universität zu Berlin Caskets and Croziers: Limoges in Toledo.
16.30 Julie Harris, independent scholar, Chicago A Leap of Faith: Isaac Caro’s “Tefillin Case” and the
Quest for Sephardic Material Culture.
17.00 Discussion
17.15 Break
17.30 Verónica Abenza Soria, CSIC, Madrid: Towards a Corpus of Byzantine Objects in Spain: A
Tale of Travel and Reuse.
18.00 Pierre Alain Mariaux, Université de Neuchâtel, and Romain Jeanneret, Abbaye de St-Maurice
Singular Object, Multiple Views, Complex Response: The Great Shrine of St. Maurice as Paradigm.
18.30 Discussion/ Conclusions

Attendance is free. Please register at https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSeI%20aEXtErDVg8FXSkPtAs5U9keMym_4GCqARWXgq%20gurfapZJw/viewform?vc=0&c=0&w=1&flr=0

Seminar Series: The Medieval Black Sea Project, Princeton University, 17 November 2022 – 9 March 2023

This seminar series showcases new research on contact, conflict and exchange in the region of the medieval Black Sea. Our invited speakers will share their expertise on the various aspects of the region’s past, building on analyses of textual, art historical and archaeological material. A wide range of historical sources will be considered, allowing us to explore the agency not only of elite, but also of non-elite individuals and groups. 

Papers will trace the region’s historical development, beginning with the impact of the Roman, Hunnic, and Avar Empires in late antiquity. The expansion of these empires and the migrations of the peoples they displaced, as well as the later incursions of the Vikings, will be reconstructed on the basis of recently discovered archaeological evidence, such as early medieval ships preserved in the depths of the Black Sea and Byzantine and Viking coins unearthed in the hinterlands. The eventual formation from this dynamic context of the Kingdom of Rus’– and the foundation of the city of Kiev (Kiyv)  – will be examined, as will the interactions with the Byzantine Empire and the Abbasid and Fatimid Caliphates. We aim to evaluate the impact of the expansion of the Latins from the Mediterranean and the Mongols and Turks from Central and East Asia. We also examine the role played in the regional economy by the Ayyubid and Mamluk Sultanates as ‘slave states’ dependent on the importation of Slav and Kipchak captives. Finally, the question of the navigation (and possible appropriation) of the region’s past at the end of the Middle Ages and its influence on later Muscovite narratives of legitimation will be given attention. 

Each session will consist of two short papers, followed by a response and a discussion, in the hope of enriching our understanding and creating opportunities for future collaborations between scholars.

Advance registration required for Zoom participation.

The first lecture is Thursday 17th November 2022 at 16:30 EST. Please find the complete schedule below:

Thursday, November 17, 2022
4:30 PM | 211 Dickinson Hall & Zoom

  • Olenka Pevny, University of Cambridge | “St. Clement in Rus’: Subverting the Latin West-Eastern Orthodox Dichotomy”
  • Alexandra Vukovich, King’s College, London | “Tmutarakan on the Black Sea: A medieval crossroads”

Zoom Registration – For those who wish to attend this seminar virtually.

Registration is not required for in-person attendance of this seminar. We kindly ask that you please follow the current University Covid-19 guidelines.

Thursday, December 1, 2022
4:30 PM | 211 Dickinson Hall & Zoom

  • Jane Kershaw, University of Oxford | “Across the Black and Caspian Seas: Silver and the Viking Expansion”
  • Jonathan Shepard, University of Oxford [Zoom] | “Furs, Slaves and the Black Sea”

Zoom Registration – For those who wish to attend this seminar virtually.

Thursday, February 2, 2023
4:30 PM | 211 Dickinson Hall & Zoom

  • Rodrigo Pacheco-Ruiz, University of Southampton | “Documenting Archaeological Sites Using Deep Sea Robotics – The Black Sea MAP Project”
  • Johan Rönnby, Södertörn University | “Sea Change. A Maritime Archaeological Perspective to Black Sea Long-term Human and Environmental History”

Zoom Registration – For those who wish to attend this seminar virtually.

Thursday, February 9, 2023
4:30 PM | 211 Dickinson Hall & Zoom

  • Yulia Mikhailova, New Mexico Tech | “O Rus Land, Brightest of the Bright”: Land, Religion, and Identity between the Pontic Steppe and the Eastern Baltic, 10th – 13th cc.
  • Christian Raffensperger, Wittenberg University | “The Arc of Medieval Europe: Shifting our Focus in Medieval Studies”

Zoom Registration – For those who wish to attend this seminar virtually.

Thursday, March 2, 2023
4:30 PM | 211 Dickinson Hall & Zoom

  • Lilyana Yordanova, École française d’Athènes | “Entangled Past and Selective Present: the Bulgarian Black Sea Coast at the Crossroad of Cultures and Religions”
  • Valentina Izmirlieva, Columbia University | “How Moscow Usurped the Baptizer of Rus’: From Muscovy to Putin’s Russia”

Zoom Registration – For those who wish to attend this seminar virtually.

Thursday, March 9, 2023
4:30 PM | 211 Dickinson Hall & Zoom

  • Peter Sarris, University of Cambridge | “Justinian’s Black Sea Policy in the Context of Byzantium’s Eastern Strategy”
  • Alexander Sarantis, University of Warsaw | “The Strategic Importance of the Black Sea in the Age of Justinian”

Zoom Registration – For those who wish to attend this seminar virtually.

The recording of any meeting, activity or event relating to the Medieval Black Sea Project (and/or distribution of that recording) is not authorised without advance notice to, consultation with and express permission from the organisers and administrators of the project. Unauthorised recording is a violation of the policy of Princeton University and may result in disciplinary action. For further information on university policies, please consult with the Office of the General Counsel.

Summer School: ‘Intensity and the Grades of Nature: Heat, Colour, and Sound in the Ordering of Pre-Modern Cosmos: 1200-1600’, Domus Comeliana, Pisa, 11-14 July 2023 (Deadline 28 February 2023)

Held in the stunning premises and terrace of the Domus Comeliana, this summer school will explore how heat, colour, and sound have been used, conceptualised and graded in the pre-modern cosmos shaping both disciplines of knowledge and everyday life.

Central to the various cosmologies that developed throughout the period 1200-1600 was the idea that phenomena are subject to a variation in intensity. Intensity determined why objects were of higher or lesser temperature, speed, brightness, porous or dense texture, pitch, and so forth. And yet, intensity also had wider metaphysical, theological, political and cultural implications: it was instrumental to justify the order of the cosmos, the necessity of evil, and the need for hierarchies in maintaining social peace, with shades of colour especially used to mark social status, both in garments and buildings.

Linking back to Greek philosophy and medicine (i.e Aristotle, Galen, Dioscorides) theories of intensity (intensio et remissio formarum) blossomed in the late middle ages but remained vital in early modern philosophy (e.g. Galileo, Leibniz) up to the eighteenth century, with Baumgarten and Kant attempting at measuring the quantity of virtue (quantitas virtutis) necessary to the human subject to perceive (aesthetica) an object in the external world.

On the one hand, medieval and early modern theories of intensity developed an ancient desideratum to classify the world in a hierarchical order, also known as scala naturae or ‘the great chain of being’. At the extremes of the ‘chain’ were located respectively God, as the metaphysical grantor of order and the embodiment of perfection, and matter, embodying imperfection and chaos. However, on the other hand, the pre-modern period moved beyond previous attempts, as the cosmos is now spatialised and measurable. As comprehended within two opposites (i.e. perfection/imperfection, hot/cold, up/down, etc.), change occurs within “a range” (latitudo), wherein objects acquire or lose certain “degrees” (gradus) of the quality that is being intensified; thus hotter or brighter objects are so because they participate more in the specific properties (formae) of heat or light. In this sense, it is significant that, while the modern cosmos was consciously built on “number”, “weight” and “measure”, the fabric of the pre-modern world was textured in grades and shades.

Grades and shades were at once quantities and values, representing perfection or imperfection in theology, purity or impurity of distillation in alchemical preparations, physiological or pathological functioning of the body, where humours were refined by cooking and where everything, from fever to pulse frequency, was ordered in degrees of intensity. In cosmology, light was given a preeminent role, as Robert Grosseteste (1175-1253) developed his cosmology of light where intensity shapes every aspect of the universe, and Dante Alighieri (1265-1321) ordered Inferno in rounds of degrading sin while Paradiso in spheres of ascending beatitude.

A new vision of the cosmos prompted a larger use of visual aids, such as diagrams both to visualise change and to measure intensity. Health starts being measured in latitudes, the temperature in degrees, herbs and drugs by their colours and the intensity of their effects on the human body. Colours are used to represent aspects of the material world but also to highlight status, dignity, conceptual clarity, as well as religious and seasonal cycles while the sounds of the French Ars nova (14th century) intensify the rhythmic capacity of music by developing a new virtuosity, Flemish masters establish the multilayered notation of polyphony (15th century) and the Venetian Andrea and Giovanni Gabrieli at the end of the 16th-century start experimenting with piano and forte.

Although instrumental to the constitution of the pre-modern cosmos, intensity and associated theories have remained poorly studied in modern scholarship, with the bulk of studies available in German only. Attempting to fill the gap and to deliver the thematic fullness of the pre-modern cosmos to a larger audience, this summer school features world-leading experts discussing relevant aspects of intensity in alchemy, medicine, theology, natural philosophy, music, art, optics, as well as social and religious settings.

The summer school is open to scholars of all careers and stages. As per previous events, it takes place in the outstanding setting of the Domus Comeliana (50m from the leaning tower) and it spans four days, articulated as 3+1, namely three days of lectures and guided visits to the city, plus a final day dedicated entirely to workshops, roundtables, presentation and discussion of attendees’ reports. 

The summer school will present and discuss a variety of verbal and non-verbal sources (e.g. manuscripts, images, music pieces, and artefacts) in a multidisciplinary approach that aims at attracting and welcoming scholars with different backgrounds, interests and expertise.

The Summer School features three hands-on workshops on texts, materials, and instruments and one performance-based workshop. Workshop I (M. Kemp) will involve participants in the selection of passages and visual material from Leonardo’s extensive output and in the effort to contextualise his techniques as fitting his optical theories. Workshop II (G.M. Weston) will focus on the Renaissance colour palette and the mixture of pigments involving attendees in the mixing of colours to obtain shades in accordance with 15th- and 16th-century manuals. Workshop III (F. Bigotti) will be devoted to hands-on experimentation with the replica of Santorio’s pulsilogium, an early modern instrument invented by Santorio Santori (1561-1636) to ascertain the ‘degree’ and ‘latitude’ of the pulse. Participants will be invited to experiment with the instrument in small groups, by measuring and calibrating the instrument so as to revive the experience of using what has been called “the first precision instrument in the history of medicine”. Workshop IV (L. Karshan) held by distinguished artist and honorary fellow Linda Karshan will explore the ways in which contemporary art practice has embodied Renaissance concepts of latitude as especially related to the motions of the body and the soul.

To engage fully with the speakers during this four-day experience, attendees are strongly invited to elaborate their own contributions on the topics discussed, either in the form of PowerPoint presentations and/or as short papers (max. 5 min). These will be followed by thematic roundtables focusing on the analysis of non-verbal sources, including relevant artefacts, images, videos, and music tracks. Roundtables’ topics can also be proposed by the attendees upon reaching an agreement amongst at least 3 people. For organisational reasons, only two such round tables can be proposed and must be communicated to the panel at least 3 weeks prior to the beginning of the Summer School.

The deadline for Early Bird Registration is 28th February. For complete information and to register, visit CSMBR.

New Publication: ‘Dominicans and Franciscans in Medieval Rome: History, Architecture, and Art’, by Joan Barclay Lloyd

When Saint Dominic (c. 1174–1221) came to Rome to seek papal approval of the Order of Preachers, he founded two houses on the periphery of the city — a nunnery at  S. Sisto, in structures rebuilt by Pope Innocent III, and a priory next to the early Christian basilica of S. Sabina. The Dominicans modified and enlarged the existing buildings, according to their needs. Saint Francis of Assisi (c. 1182–1226) also came to consult the Pope, but he did not make any foundations in Rome. In 1229, Pope Gregory IX ordered the Benedictine monks of SS. Cosma e Damiano in Mica Aurea to cede to the Franciscans their hospice of S. Biagio in Trastevere, where Saint Francis had stayed. The friars built the church and friary of S. Francesco a Ripa there. Later, Gregory IX took over the Benedictine monastery itself, where he established the Franciscan nunnery of S. Cosimato in 1234. Moving into the more densely inhabited parts of the city, the Friars Minor built a new friary and church at S. Maria in Aracoeli on the Capitoline Hill from c. 1248–1252 onwards. The Dominicans, in 1266, acquired a convent near the Pantheon, where they constructed the Gothic church of S. Maria sopra Minerva. In 1285, the Colonna family established a Franciscan nunnery at S. Silvestro in Capite.

In the context of the origin and evolution of the two Mendicant Orders, this book traces the history of these thirteenth-century Dominican and Franciscan foundations, focussing on their location in Rome, the history of each site, their architecture, and the medieval works of art connected with them. Popes and cardinals, members of important families, and Franciscan Tertiaries contributed generously to their construction and decoration. The book ends with Saint Catherine of Siena, who lived near S. Maria sopra Minerva, where she was buried.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

List of Illustrations

Preface

Abbreviations

Colour Plates

Introduction

Part I. The First Dominican and Franciscan Foundations in Rome

Chapter 1. The Dominican Nunnery at S. Sisto (now S. Sisto Vecchio), founded c. 1218–1221

Chapter 2. The Dominican Priory at S. Sabina, founded c. 1220–1222

Chapter 3. The Franciscan Church and Friary of S. Francesco a Ripa, founded in 1229

Chapter 4. The Franciscan Nunnery of SS. Cosma e Damiano (S. Cosimato), founded in 1234

Part II. A New Generation of Dominicans and Franciscans and their Foundations in Rome

Chapter 5. The Friars Minor at S. Maria in Aracoeli, founded c. 1248–1252

Chapter 6. The Friars Preachers at S. Maria Sopra Minerva, founded c. 1266–1276

Chapter 7. The Franciscan Nunnery at S. Silvestro in Capite, founded in 1285

Chapter 8. Medieval Dominican Penitents from c. 1286 and Catherine of Siena (1347–1380)

Conclusion

Glossary

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