Τρίτη 5 Ιανουαρίου 2010

Les recueils hagiographiques : les libelli latins (conférence hors cycle, 14 octobre 2010)

Les recueils hagiographiques : les libelli latins (conférence hors cycle, 14 octobre 2010)



Mis en ligne le 1 juillet, 2009 - 13:27 / Mis à jour le 23/11/2009 Conférence hors cycle du cycle thématique 2009-2010 de l’IRHT consacré aux recueils hagiographiques.
Intervenants : Joseph-Claude Poulin et Francois Dolbeau, qui parleront des libelli latins
Type
Conférence


Date et lieu
Date(s)
Jeudi, 14 Octobre, 2010 (Jour entier)


Organisation
Organisateurs
Conférence organisée par l’IRHT.
Intervenants IRHT

Source: http://www.irht.cnrs.fr/colloques/libelli-recueils-hagiographiques 

Institut de recherche et d’histoire des textes - Les recueils hagiographiques (2009-2010)

Les recueils hagiographiques (2009-2010)

Mis en ligne le 27 juin, 2009 - 13:20 / Mis à jour le 24/11/2009
Cycle thématique de l’IRHT 2009-2010 : deux journées d’études consacrées aux recueils hagiographiques, la première le jeudi 3 décembre 2009, la seconde le jeudi 27 mai 2010.
L’importance de la littérature hagiographique pour notre connaissance de l’histoire des sociétés médiévales d’Orient et d’Occident n’est plus à démontrer ; en témoigne en particulier l’intérêt suscité par l’abondante production manuscrite dans ce domaine, aussi bien en latin ou dans les langues romanes que du côté byzantin et des christianismes orientaux, mais aussi dans le monde musulman, aussi bien en arabe et en persan qu’en turc. Or, un texte hagiographique est rarement isolé dans les manuscrits : il fait partie intégrante d’un groupe de textes, d’un corpus ou d’une collection, au travers desquels il est habituellement transmis et au sein desquels il interagit avec d’autres écrits. Dans le cadre de ces journées d’étude, on s’intéressera donc à la constitution des recueils hagiographiques, à leur production et à leur usage. Pour reprendre le vocabulaire du monde latin, on évoquera les grandes collections de vies de saints, classées selon un ordre liturgique ou méthodique, mais aussi les recueils structurés consacrés à un genre, à un type de sainteté particulière (par exemple, les apôtres, les femmes ou les ascètes), à un ordre, à un établissement ou à un saint particulier.
Pour commencer, on tentera donc de préciser la structure des grands types de collections et leur évolution, des libelli pré-carolingiens aux légendiers abrégés des xiiie-xve siècles pour l’Occident, des premières collections à caractère local au ménologe métaphrastique pour le domaine byzantin. Dans la continuité des perspectives prometteuses ouvertes par les recherches comparatistes ces dernières années, il paraît également intéressant, en contrepoint, d’inclure dans cette réflexion les tabaqāt (collections de biographies de saints hommes dans le domaine musulman) et leurs rapports avec les recueils hagiographiques des chrétientés orientales. Parmi les thèmes qui pourront être abordés, les questions de compilation et de réélaboration de recueils antérieurs, seront évidemment centrales, tout comme le problème des sources utilisées par les auteurs et les éditeurs des recueils médiévaux. On pourra s’interroger aussi sur le rapport entre patrimoine commun et hagiographie propre à un ordre ou à un lieu, sur l’apparition dans les recueils de la construction ou de la représentation d’une région, d’un pays, d’un milieu sociologique, sur le rôle des commanditaires dans la constitution d’un recueil, sur l’usage qui en était fait dans un milieu donné. Le classement de certains recueils hagiographiques selon l’ordre du calendrier liturgique, la présence de calendriers en tête de volume, la structuration de certains textes, ainsi que de nombreux autres indices, peuvent en outre éclairer les rapports que ces recueils entretenaient avec la liturgie, et l’usage liturgique qui pouvait en être fait.
Une première journée aura lieu le jeudi 3 décembre 2009, consacrée à un panorama dans les différentes aires culturelles et lnguistiques, la seconde en mai 2010, autour de deux thèmes : la tradition manuscrite de la Légende dorée et « Recueils hagiographiques et identité ».
Une conférence hors cycle aura lieu en novembre 2010, intitulée les libelli latins, par François Dolbeau et Joseph-Claude Poulin.
Un atelier spécifique sur l’hagiographie sera organisé dans le cadre du stage d’initiation de l’IRHT, (5-9 octobre 2009), animé par A.-F. Leurquin et C. Lanéry.
Type
Cycle thématique

Date et lieu
Date(s)
Jeudi, 3 Décembre, 2009 (Jour entier)
Mercredi, 27 Mai, 2009 (Jour entier)

Organisation
Organisateurs
Cyclé thématique organisé par l’IRHT.

Source: http://www.irht.cnrs.fr/colloques/recueils-hagiographiques


Cambridge International Chronicles Symposium 16th - 18th July 2010

In association with Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse and Celtic, The Faculty of History, The Faculty of English, and the University of Cambridge

round church

Chronicles are a fertile area of academic research focusing on a genre of historical literature written mainly in a time before departments of English and History had yet come into existence. The Cambridge International Chronicle Symposium (CICS) is a biennial interdisciplinary conference organized to promote research and to strengthen the network of chronicle studies worldwide. The aim of the CICS is to allow scholars from various departments of learning and critical approaches to meet, present new research, demonstrate new critical approaches and discuss prospects for ongoing, collective research between scholars and academic institutions.
The inaugural symposium took place on 11 - 13 July 2008 at the English Faculty Building, 9 West Road, Cambridge, and attracted over 60 delegates. Selected papers will be published in The Medieval Chronicle,vols VI and VII, by Rodopi in 2009 and 2010.
Forth-coming conference details and Call For Papers
The theme for CICS 2010 is Authority and Gender in Medieval and Renaissance Chronicles, which will be debated over the three days during open sessions of three twenty-five minute papers, alternating with longer keynote addresses. Selected papers will be published in a volume bearing the same title within two years of the conference. The 2008 inaugural proceedings appeared in the Medieval Chronicle, vols. VI (2009) and VII (2010, forthcoming).
The organisers welcome paper or article proposals on the following subjects:
            - Kingship and Queenship, Earls and Ealdormen;
            - Abbots and abbesses, monks and nuns;
            - Ecclesiastical and secular authorities;
            - Institutional authority;
            - National authority and identity;
            - Masculine, feminine, and neuter: linguistic authority;
            - Auctors and Auctoritas;
            - Textual authority, witnesses, traditions, and scribes;
            - Kinglists and genealogies;
            - Nuns in the scriptorium;
            - Female voices, male scribes – authority and authorship;
            - Gender and legal practices;
            - Moral authority;
            - Ritual and authority;
            - Establishment of authority: feuds, force, and warfare;
            - The construction of gender in chronicles.
More information will be available on this website soon; meanwhile, if you have any queries, do not hesitate to contact the organisers at CambridgeICS@gmail.com

Conference Programme (July 2008)

Friday 11 July 2008

3:00pm – 4:00pm
Welcome registration
Foyer, English Faculty Building, 9 West Road, Cambridge (map)
4:00pm – 5:00pm
Private viewing of chronicle manuscripts exhibition
Dr Christopher de Hamel, Corpus Christi College
5:15pm – 6:00pm
CICS 2008 Inaugural Lecture
Large Seminar Room, Ground Floor, English Faculty Building, 9 West Road, Cambridge: Professor Alan Deyermond, Written by the Victors: Technique and Ideology in Official Historiography in Verse in Late-Medieval Spain (Queen Mary and Westfield College, University of London). Chair: Dr Juliana Dresvina (University of Cambridge)
6:30pm – 7:30pm
Dinner in town

Saturday July 12 2008

8:30am – 9:00am
Welcome Reception (continued)
Coffee and Tea for speakers and guests, Foyer, English Faculty Building, 9 West Road, Cambridge
9:00am – 10:45am
Early Chronicles and Their Traditions
Large Seminar Room (GR06/07), Ground Floor, English Faculty Building, 9 West Road, Cambridge: Chair: Dr Elizabeth Van Houts (University of Cambridge)
  • Dr Maria Kouroumali, Creating the History of the World: Chronicles and Chroniclers in Sixth Century Byzantium (University of Oxford)
  • Prof. Emerita Julia Bolton Holloway, Romancing the Chronicle (Biblioteca e Bottega Fioretta Mazzei, Florence; olim University of Colorado)
  • Dr Richard Corridini, Chronicle-annals in the context of the scriptorium of Fulda in the Carolingian period (University of Vienna)
10:45am – 11:00am
Morning Tea
Foyer, English Faculty Building, 9 West Road, Cambridge
11:00am – 12:00pm
Keynote address
Large Seminar Room, Ground Floor, English Faculty Building, 9 West Road, Cambridge:
  • Professor Bernard Muir, The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle: A Paleographer's View (University of Melbourne). Chair: Nicholas Sparks (University of Cambridge)
12:15am – 1:15pm
Buffet Lunch
Newnham College, Sidgewick Hall (map)
1:15pm – 3:15pm
The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
Large Seminar Room, Ground Floor, English Faculty Building, 9 West Road, Cambridge: Chair: Dr Peter Stokes (University of Cambridge)
  • Dr Tatiana V. Bochkareva, Orthography of the Peterborough Chronicle (Moscow State University)
  • Nicholas Sparks, The Parker Chronicle: chronology gone awry (University of Cambridge)
  • Veronica Wieser, Calculations towards an End: the Chronicle of Sulpicius Severus (University of Vienna)
  • Dr Scott T. Smith, Culmination and Dissolution: the Edgar Poems in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle (Pennsylvania State University)
3:15pm – 3:45pm
Afternoon Tea
Foyer, English Faculty Building, 9 West Road, Cambridge
3:45pm – 5:45pm
Local Chronicles and Universal Chronicles
Large Seminar Room, Ground Floor, English Faculty Building, 9 West Road, Cambridge: Chair: Abigail Queen (University of Cambridge)
  • Tara Andrews, Post-Apocalyptic Armenian History and the Chronicle of Matthew of Edessa (University of Oxford)
  • Alison Alexander, Sticks, stones and ancient bones: ecclesiastical politics and the development of annalistic writing in eleventh-century Rouen (University of Cambridge)
  • Dr Alan Cooper Walter Map on Henry I: the Creation of a Useful Myth (Colgate University, NY)
  • Kathryn Dutton, Fulk IV and the Fragmentum historiae Andegavensis: the production, dissemination and intentions of an eleventh-century lay chronicle (The University of Glasgow)
5:45pm – 6:30pm
Wine Reception
Foyer, English Faculty Building, 9 West Road, Cambridge
7:30
Formal Dinner
St Catharine’s College, The Senior Common Room
Sunday July 13 2008
8:30am – 9:00am
Coffee and Tea for the delegates
Foyer, English Faculty Building, 9 West Road, Cambridge
9:00am – 10:55am
Historiography, Narrative, and Comparative Traditions-I
Large Seminar Room, Ground Floor, English Faculty Building, 9 West Road, Cambridge: Chair: Dr Natasha Romanova (University of Liverpool)
  • Sally Lamb, Evidence from absence – omission and inclusion in early medieval annals (University of Cambridge)
  • Dr Erik Kooper, ‘Other days, other ways’, or why differences matter (University of Utrecht)
  • Kathryn Green, Narrative Strategies in the Westminster Chronicle(University of Manchester)
  • Dr Bernadette Williams Annalists Compared: The Dublin Dominican and The Kilkenny Franciscan (Independent Scholar)
10:55am – 11:10am
Morning tea
Foyer, English Faculty Building, 9 West Road, Cambridge
11:10am – 12:30pm
Historiography, Narrative, and Comparative Traditions-II
Large Seminar Room, Ground Floor, English Faculty Building, 9 West Road, Cambridge: Chair: Abby Robinson (Univeristy of Melbourne)
  • Professor Andrew Jotischky, Mendicant Strategies for Incomplete Histories: the Carmelites and the Holy Land (University of Lancaster)
  • Matthew Phillpott, The compliation of a Sixteenth-century Ecclesiastical History: the use of Matthew Paris in John Foxe's Acts and Monuments (University of Sheffield).
  • Dr Anna Seregina, Religious controversies and history writing in the 16th century England (Russian Academy of Sciences).
12:30pm – 1:30pm
Buffet Lunch
Newnham College, Sidgewick Hall
1:30pm – 3:30pm
Holinshed Panel
Large Seminar Room, Ground Floor, English Faculty Building, 9 West Road, Cambridge: Chair: Professor Helen Cooper (University of Cambridge)
  • Dr Olga Dmitrieva, English ‘Pantheon of Fame’: intellectuals in Holinshed’s Chronicles, (Moscow State University)
  • Dr Ian Archer, A parallel-text electronic edition of the 1577 and 1587 editions of Holinshed’s Chronicle (University of Oxford)
  • Dr Felicity Heal, Confessional identities of the contributors to the 1587 edition of Holinshed’s Chronicle (University of Oxford)
  • Dr Paulina Kewes, Narrative Historiography and the Rules of Succession (University of Oxford)
3:30pm – 4:00pm
Afternoon tea; departures


Source: http://www.asnc.cam.ac.uk/diary/cics/index.html

 

The 45th International Congress on Medieval Studies May 13-16, 2010

Congress


The 45th International Congress on Medieval Studies takes place May 13-16, 2010.

The schedule of sessions and online registration will be available in February.

The Congress is an annual gathering of over 3,000 scholars interested in Medieval Studies. It features over 600 sessions of papers, panel discussions, roundtables, workshops, and performances. There are also some 90 business meetings and receptions sponsored by learned societies, associations, and institutions. The exhibits hall boasts nearly 70 exhibitors, including publishers, used book dealers, and purveyors of medieval sundries. The Congress lasts three and a half days, extending from Thursday morning until Sunday at noon.
Special Events

* Plenary Lectures
* Concert
* Film Screenings
* Dance
* Worship Services

Plenary Lectures
Why Were Latin Qur’ans Produced in Christian Spain but Never Read There?
Reflections on Spanish-Christian Culture during the Long Twelfth Century

Thomas E. Burman
Univ. of Tennessee–Knoxville
sponsored by the Medieval Academy of America
Friday, May 14, 8:30 a.m.
East Ballroom, Bernhard Center
The "Clerical Proletariat" and the Rise of English
A New Look at Fourteenth-Century Book Production

Kathryn Kerby-Fulton
Univ. of Notre Dame
sponsored by Boydell & Brewer, Ltd.
Saturday, May 15, 8:30 a.m.
East Ballroom, Bernhard Center

Top
Concert



Image of Anne AzemaImage of Shira Kammen

Chanterai pour mon courage: Spiritual Renewal in the Time of the Crusades
Anne Azéma and Shira Kammen

Friday, May 14, 8:00 p.m.
St. Luke's Episcopal Church
247 W. Lovell Street
in downtown Kalamazoo
(shuttle transportation provided from Congress registration)

general admission: $20.00

Top
Film Screenings
The Last Legion

directed by Doug Lefler and starring Colin Firth, Ben Kingsley, Aishwarya Rai, and Peter Mullan (2007)
Thursday, May 13, 7:30 p.m.
Fetzer 1005
Ladyhawke

directed by Richard Donner and starring Matthew Broderick, Rutger Hauer, Michelle Pfeiffer, and Leo McKern (1985)
Friday, May 14, 7:30 p.m.
Fetzer 1005

Top
Dance

Image of the Saturday night dancePlease join us at the 45th Congress for the traditional Saturday Night Dance

Saturday, May 15
East Ballroom, Bernhard Center
10:00 p.m. to 1:30 a.m.

As with other Congress activities, the Institute must observe Michigan law and campus regulations. In Michigan you must be 21 years of age to purchase alcohol or beer. You should be ready to prove that you are 21 or over before you approach the cash bar. You must have a photo ID with you. You may not bring your own drinks to the dance. All other beverages and snacks are free. Please note that there will be a smoking area outside the building.

The Dance is a social occasion for registered attendees of the Congress only. Please bring your registration badge to the Bernhard Center: it is your ticket of entry.

Top
Worship Services



Mass of the Ascension (Catholic)
Thursday, 7:00 a.m.
Fetzer 1040

Ascension Day Eucharist (Anglican-Lutheran)
Thursday, 8:30 a.m.
Fetzer 1040

Daily Vespers
Thursday–Saturday, 5:20 p.m.
Fetzer 1040

Daily Mass
Friday–Saturday, 7:00 a.m.
Fetzer 1040

Sunday Roman Catholic Mass
Saturday, 7:00 p.m.
Fetzer 1040
Sunday, 7:00 a.m.
Fetzer 1005

Anglican/Lutheran Eucharist
Sunday, 7:00 a.m.
Fetzer 1040

Source: http://www.wmich.edu/medieval/congress/

Hagiography online magazines- Gouden Hoorn



Unfortunately there are not many free hagiography magazines online. One of them is Gouden Hoorn but it's last issue was at spring 2001. The published issues of the magazine are free to read.
We give the links below.

Volume 8, issue 2 (spring 2001)
Volume 4, issue 2 (winter 1996-1997)
Volume 8, issue 1 (summer-fall 2000)
Volume 4, issue 1 (summer 1996)
Volume 7, issue 2 (winter 1999-2000)
Volume 3, issue 2 (winter 1995-1996)
Volume 7, issue 1 (summer 1999)
Volume 3, issue 1 (summer 1995)
Volume 6, issue 2 (winter 1998-1999)
Volume 2, issue 2 (winter 1994-1995)
Volume 6, issue 1 (summer 1998)
Volume 2, issue 1 (summer 1994)
Volume 5, issue 2 (winter 1997-1998)
Volume 1, issue 2 (winter 1993-1994)
Volume 5, issue 1 (summer 1997)
Volume 1, issue 1 (summer 1993)











Source: http://www.isidore-of-seville.com/goudenhoorn/index.html