Claudio Leonardi Fellowship of the Schindler Foundation for Medieval Latin Studies

The Claudio Leonardi Fellowship of the Zeno Karl Schindler Foundation for Medieval Latin
Studies has been established to support scholarship in Medieval Latin Studies – in particular, research by young scholars – with a grant-in-aid in honor of Claudio Leonardi (1927-2010), founder and first president of SISMEL (Società internazionale per lo studio del Medio Evo latino – The International Society for Medieval Latin Studies).

The grant will allow one scholar (doctoral or postdoctoral candidate) to spend a period of three to six months abroad pursuing research in his/her chosen field with a monthly stipend of 2,000 Swiss francs. In addition, the recipient may make use of an additional subsidy of 3,000 Swiss francs toward the cost of publication of his/her doctoral thesis or postdoctoral research on condition that the print publication indicate foundation support (“published with the support of the Zeno Karl Schindler-Stiftung.“)

Applications should be submitted (with curriculum vitae, description of research project, and reason for research abroad) by September 1, 2012, via email to: Prof. Jean-Yves Tilliette, Langue et littérature latines médiévales, Université de Genève (Jean Yves.Tilliette@unige.ch).  Applications will then be submitted to the Governing Board of the Zeno Karl Schindler Foundation for evaluation during its fall meeting.

The fellowship assignment will be made during the annual SISMEL General Meeting which will be held on March 23, 2013. The winner will then be given the opportunity to present a fifteen minute lecture on his/her research or on particular aspects of his/her doctoral or postdoctoral research.

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Call for Papers: Session for the Society of Architectural Historians 2013 Annual Conference

Free-Standing Chapels in Medieval and Early Modern Europe

Session for the Society of Architectural Historians 2013 Annual Conference, Buffalo, New York, USA, 10-14 April 2013

The urban and rural landscapes of pre-modern Europe were dotted with free-standing chapels serving a wide variety of functions and constituencies. Many still stand above ground (sometimes with new uses), whereas others are documented to varying degrees through archaeological reports, drawings, and written accounts. Yet, despite—or perhaps because of—their ubiquity, these chapels still await the kind of thorough, systematic studies made of chapels built directly onto churches (as at Santa Croce and Santa Maria Novella in

Florence) or elite households (e.g., the Sainte-Chapelle). The premise of this panel is that a better understanding of the architectural features and functions of free-standing chapels is crucial to forming a more nuanced picture of their counterparts within churches and households, as well as to broadening our understanding of pre-modern European architecture. Even when visually modest—as many of them were—free-standing chapels raise complex issues of site, social functions, and semantic and architectural relationships to other elements of the built and natural environments. For example, as architecturally discrete religious spaces, free-standing chapels were always to some degree “a place apart,” emphasizing separation and distinction, whether devotional (as for the cult of a particular saint), liturgical, social, or some combination of these. Why erect a separate structure, and why in a particular place? Who designed and paid for them? Who used them, and how? This session invites participants to consider these questions and others in regards to free-standing chapels from any period between the High Middle Ages and the Council of Trent, whether presented as individual case studies or as groups of buildings united by shared patronage, architect, forms, or functions.  Please submit a CV and an abstract of not more than 300 words by 1 June 2012 via SAH’s online submission system:

http://sah.conference-services.net/authorlogin.asp?conferenceID=3143.

For questions or preliminary proposals, you may also e-mail Seth Hindin, shindin@richmond.edu.

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The Bonnie Wheeler Fellowship Fund Announces 3rd Annual Summer Research Fellowship

The Bonnie Wheeler Fellowship Fund announces its third annual Summer Research Fellowship, designed to support the research of women medievalists below the rank of full professor. The $7,000 award is to be used during the period of June 1–December 31, 2013. Applications will be accepted beginning September 1, 2012.  Full details may be found at bonniewheelerfund.org

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Munich Exhibition on Blockbooks

The Bayerische Staatsbibliothek in Munich is currently showing an exhibition on 15th-century blockbooks, which will be on display until 6 May 2012.

Blockbooks, i.e. books printed from woodblock rather than moveable type, served in the second half of the 15th century mainly for the distribution of works in which text and images were combined closely, often on the same page. Most of the books conveyed biblical knowledge or could be used for teaching the Christian faith. Occasionally, more secular topics were treated. For pupils and students, elementary schoolbooks and Latin grammars were produced. Wider circles of readers were reached by travel guides for pilgrims, calendars or a handbook on the art of palmistry.
In the exhibition, fifteen blockbooks from the collections of the Bayerische Staatsbibliothek are on show which give an insight into the wide range of themes covered in blockbooks. Every xylographic edition on display is placed in the context of contemporary manuscripts or typographic editions of the same work in order to demonstrate the variety of 15th-century media and the differences in content, layout and usage of the surviving textual witnesses.

Most exhibits can be viewed in full digital reproduction on the website
http://www.bayerische-landesbibliothek-online.de/xylographa-ausstellung

The exhibition is accompanied by a printed catalogue:

Vom ABC bis zur Apokalypse Leben, Glauben und Sterben in spätmittelalterlichen Blockbüchern
Ausstellung 17. Februar bis 6. Mai 2012
Ausstellung und Katalog: Bettina Wagner.
Luzern : Quaternio Verlag, 2012.
168 pages, over 100 colour illustrations.
(Schatzkammer ; 2012)
Preis: EUR 19,80

which can be purchased via the library’s online shop (order no. 070):
http://www.bsb-muenchen.de/Ausstellungskataloge-und-mehr.265.0.html

Admission free – Free audio guide

Opening hours
Monday-Friday 10-17, Thursday 10-19, Saturday/Sunday 13-17
Closed from 6-9 April (Easter) and on 1 May

Location
Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, Schatzkammer
Ludwigstr. 16, D-80539 München

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Les Belles Heures du duc de Berry

Paris, Musée du Louvre, 4.IV. – 25.VI.2012 : Les Belles Heures du duc de Berry. – http://www.louvre.fr/expositions/les-belles-heures-du-duc-de-berry

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I manoscritti datati dell’Archivio Storico Civico e Biblioteca Trivulziana

Milano, Castello Sforzesco, 3.IV.2012: presentazione del volume I manoscritti datati dell’Archivio Storico Civico e Biblioteca Trivulziana, a cura di M. Pontone, Firenze, SISMEL – Edizioni del Galluzzo, 2011 (Manoscritti datati d’Italia, 22). – Cfr. invito allegato.

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Rare Book School Welcomes Applications for Summer 2012 Courses

Rare Book School welcomes applications from medievalists for our Summer 2012 courses. Rare Book School (RBS) provides week-long, intensive continuing-education opportunities for students from all disciplines and levels to study the history of written, printed, and born-digital materials with leading scholars and professionals in the field.

Details for all courses, as well as our application form, can be found on the RBS website: http://rarebookschool.org

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Encodage de Documents et de Collections

 

29.-30.III.2012 :  séminaire Encodage de documents et de collections (Caen, Université de Caen Basse-Normandie, MRSH). – http://www.libraria.fr/sites/default/files/seminaireMRSHCaenMars2012.pdf

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MAA News – Medievalist Awarded National Humanities Medal

In a ceremony at the White House, on Monday 13 February 2012, President Barack Obama awarded the National Humanities Medal to nine honorees, including Professor Teófilo Ruiz, a scholar of medieval Spain, distinguished professor of history at UCLA, and the author of over 13 books.

Obama called Prof. Ruiz “an accomplished teacher and author, [who] has captivated students and scholars by deepening our knowledge of medieval Spain and Europe, and exploring the role terror has played in society for centuries.”

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MAA News – Speculum News

The January 2012 issue of Speculum (87.1) has now been published. The current issue includes five articles and 69 reviews. The articles cover a good range of geographical and disciplinary approaches and include Elizabeth A.R. (Peggy) Brown’s revised presidential address, “Moral Imperatives and Conundrums of Conscience: Reflections on Philip the Fair of France,” a close analysis of conscience and its effect (or not) on royal policy and action, with a fascinating and compelling analysis of Guillaume de Nogaret. Two articles discuss well-known linguistic histories and perceptions. Julia Verkholantsev’s “St. Jerome, Apostle to the Slavs, and the Roman Slavonic Rite” brings us through the history and cultural impact of the Glagolitic tradition from its uncertain and nearly mythical origins into its later official life in Bohemia, Silesia, Poland and the “Slavic Oikumene”; while Tim William Machan’s “Chaucer and the History of English” focuses on the issue of Chaucer’s language as paradigmatic – or not – of Middle English and its later descendants. Both shed new light on the role of language as culturally determinative and self-reflective. Erin L. Jordan’s “Gender Concerns: Monks, Nuns, and Patronage of the Cistercian Order in Thirteenth-Century Flanders and Hainaut” reexamines the assumptions underlying our received view of women’s monastic life – its relative poverty, marginalization, and lack of patronage – and demonstrates from close archival readings that, at least for these northern Cistercian houses, the situation was far more varied and complex than the historiography has allowed and that material conditions did not necessarily equate with prestige, influence, or spiritual impact in the medieval mind.

Further to the south, Ronald B. Herzman and William A. Stephany’s “Dante and the Frescoes at Santi Quattro Coronati” takes a fresh look at all the paintings and episodes in the famous Constantine cycle in Rome as a deep contextualization for Dante’s critique of the papacy and its temporal ambitions.

As we move forward, our next issues will offer even more articles with, we hope, an even greater mix of disciplines, methodologies, periods, and regions.

Perhaps the biggest news to report regarding Speculum, however, is what has transpired behind the scenes at the Medieval Academy itself. We are saddened to report the resignations of the twin pillars of Speculum. Both Doctors Jacqueline (Jackie) Brown and Mary-Jo Arn have left the Medieval Academy as of 31 January 2012. While we have been able to find successors (two PhDs with extensive editorial experience) for both our associate editors – and have taken on two new editorial assistants to pick up much of the day-to-day slack – Jackie and Mary-Jo’s long experience, high editorial standards, and genial relations with authors, reviewers, and MAA members will be sorely missed. We are sure that all members of the MAA will join us in congratulating Jackie and Mary-Jo for their many achievements and years of service and in wishing them well in the future. Together our editors emeritae helped make Speculum the premier journal in medieval studies and one of the most prestigious in the humanities. We will make every effort to live up to their legacy. We are certain that members of the MAA will be hearing more of Jackie and Mary-Jo soon.

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