Views Navigation

Event Views Navigation

Today

The Monastery of Elijah near Nepi: A History in Paint and Stone

Royce Hall Room 306 10745 Dickson Plaza, Los Angeles, CA

CMRS Roundtable Alison Locke Perchuk (Art, California State University Channel Islands) considers the production of individual and communal identity as a complex process operating at the intersections of exterior and interior, of physical environment and mental structures, of bodily comportment and spiritual and intellectual practices. Through research in art and architectural history, political and social...

Digital Heritage: Emerging Tool, Process and Contents for Spatial Designs

Digital tools for surveying and representing important architectural heritage have recently become available at low or no cost to everyone including designers, historians, facility managers and tourists. Takehiko Nagakura, an architect from Tokyo and Associate Professor of Architecture at MIT, talks about his digital heritage projects at MIT that use computer graphics animations, photogrammetric modeling,...

Shakespeare’s Greatest Riddle: M.O.A.I. Deciphered at Last

Royce Hall Room 306 10745 Dickson Plaza, Los Angeles, CA

CMRS Roundtable Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night is checkered with riddles. This talk by CMRS Associate Dr. Steve Sohmer (Fleming Fellow of Lincoln College, Oxford) proposes to solve them: from who is Quinapalus to the meaning of M.O.A.I. It's eye-opening fun. Advance registration not required. No fee. Limited seating. Funding for the CMRS Roundtable series is provided...

Art and Papal Politics in Twelfth-Century Rome

Annual Hammer Art History Lecture Art and architecture were important vehicles of communication for medieval patrons, including popes. In this lecture, Dale Kinney (Eugenia Chase Guild Professor Emeritus in the Humanities and Research Professor, Bryn Mawr College) presents a range of papal images thought to convey political messages, some of which caused international scandals in...

Food for Worms or Food for Birds? Sky Burial in Medieval Europe

Environmental Humanities Medieval people preferred to bury their dead, flesh still on bones, and to let worms do the work of breaking down the corpse; they thought it a horror to expose human bodies to the appetites of larger animals. They were aware, however, that their funeral rituals were not universal. Early medieval reactions to...

Minimal Animals: Medieval Oysters and Our Nonconsensual Existence

Humanities 193

Natural philosophy from Aristotle to Higden to Diderot conceived of oysters as the hinge between plant and animal life. Without any sense but touch, unable to move, and having no defense but a shell, oysters represented animal life at its barest. The usual move in the last decade’s work in posthumanist philosophy would be to...

Religious Polemic and Apocalyptic Traditions: Describing the Other

Royce Hall Room 306 10745 Dickson Plaza, Los Angeles, CA

Texts that in modern scholarship are classified as “historical apocalypses” have often been vectors of inter-religious polemic. Within the earliest Mediterranean Christian traditions (Latin-, Greek- and Syriac-language) these texts have incorporated anti-Judaic polemic, without necessarily belonging to the well defined adversus Iudaeos type compositions. On the other hand, the latter genre often included elements that...

East-West Relations in a Global Middle Ages

Royce Hall Room 306 10745 Dickson Plaza, Los Angeles, CA

After 1453, the year Constantinople fell to the Ottoman Turks, the Duke of Burgundy remained the last Western leader proposing a new crusade in the East. But the narrative of the defense of Christian faith and religious war was simply the most visible element of numerous exchanges between the Burgundian Low Countries and the East...

Re-visioning the Landscape in Carolingian Bavaria

Royce Hall Room 306 10745 Dickson Plaza, Los Angeles, CA

CMRS Roundtable This presentation by CMRS Affiliate Leanne Good (Assistant Professor of History, University of South Alabama) considers the re-conception of political space and concomitant changes to local administration brought about by the Carolingian takeover of the duchy of Bavaria in the late eighth and early ninth century. Professor Good will discuss the problems which local practices of land ownership and...

California Medieval History Seminar

Huntington Library, Seaver Classrooms 1 & 2 1151 Oxford Rd, San Marino , CA

The Winter session of California Medieval History Seminar meets at the Huntington Library to discuss four pre-distributed research papers. Participants are expected to read the papers in advance and come prepared to discuss them. Speakers and paper topics are announced by e-mail. To be added to the announcement list contact us. Advance registration is required —...

**RESCHEDULED for March 31** Graduate Student Career Forum: Milton was an Alt-Ac

Royce Hall Room 306 10745 Dickson Plaza, Los Angeles, CA

Please note that this program is now scheduled for March 31, 2016. This seminar for graduate students who study the Late Antique, Medieval, or Early Modern period, focuses on discovering intellectually stimulating and fulfilling career pathways that leverage the research, teaching, and service skills developed during the PhD. Come and share your ideas, questions, plans, and concerns,...

Nineteenth Winter Workshop in Medieval & Early Modern Slavic Studies

Royce Hall Room 306 10745 Dickson Plaza, Los Angeles, CA

Nineteenth Winter Workshop in Medieval & Early Modern Slavic Studies Friday, February 19, 2016 Royce Hall 306 Session 1: 9:30 - 10:30 a.m. DAVID MILLER, Roosevelt University “Law and Grace: The Seamless Faith of Ethiopian Christianity” DAVID PRESTEL, Michigan State University “The Last of the Avars: Where Did They Go and Why is it Important?”...

The Cultural Network: What Early Modern Theater Can Tell Us About Cultural Production

CMRS Distinguished Visiting Scholar Lecture - Please note that this lecture will begin at 5 pm (not at 4 pm as previously announced). Taking Early Modern European literature—and drama in particular—as a starting point of observation, CMRS Distinguished Visiting Scholar Joachim Küpper (Director, Dahlem Humanities Center, Freie Universität Berlin) presents new approaches for describing processes...

Re-reading the Historiographical Purpose and Strategies of the First ‘Anonymous Chronicle of Sahagún’

Royce Hall Room 306 10745 Dickson Plaza, Los Angeles, CA

CMRS Roundtable - In 1116, the burghers of Sahagún (Castile and León, Spain) forced the abbot of the local monastery to confirm a charter blunting the terms of their subjection to his local authority. When the burgher’s revolt was put down, and their charter destroyed, the monastery was left to restore its former sense of unquestionable dominance over the...

Annual E. A. Moody Medieval Philosophy Workshop

Location to be announced please check back.

The topic of this year’s workshop, organized by Professor Calvin Normore (Philosophy, UCLA), will be “Francisco Suarez and his Contemporaries.” CMRS is one of the co-sponsors of the workshop. Schedule to be announced. Funding for this program is provided by the Armand Hammer Endowment for the UCLA Center for Medieval & Renaissance Studies.

The Roman Inquisition in the Time of Galileo

A CMRS Symposium February 26th is the 400th anniversary of Galileo’s first encounter with the Holy Office of the Roman and Universal Inquisition. On that day he was warned by Cardinal Robert Bellarmine not to hold the Copernican thesis of heliocentrism, which a committee of the Holy Office had just declared to be heretical. In...

Medical Traditions for the 21st Century

“Medical Traditions for the 21st Century” A CMRS Ahmanson Conference Registration is requested. Please complete the registration form below. No fee. Limited seating. Saturday, February 27, 2016 8:30 Registration, coffee, fruit, pastries 9:00 Welcoming remarks: Massimo Ciavolella (UCLA), CMRS Director; Lee Walcott (The Ahmanson Foundation), Managing Director Emeritus; David Schaberg, (UCLA), Dean of Humanities; Kathryn Morgan (UCLA), Conference Co-organizer). 9:10...

What’s New about Italian Civic Religion? The Politics of Memory and Ambrosian Tradition in Medieval Milan

Royce Hall Room 306 10745 Dickson Plaza, Los Angeles, CA

CMRS Distinguished Visiting Scholar Patrick Boucheron (Professor, Collège de France) discusses his ongoing research on a political history of the commemoration of Ambrose, bishop and patron saint of the city of Milan. This history not only collects available and disputed recollections of the saint, but also attempts to grasp the manner in which memory is attached to place: topographical sites, but...

Construction of Beauty and Ugliness in Early Irish Literature

Royce Hall Room 306 10745 Dickson Plaza, Los Angeles, CA

CMRS Roundtable Physical and visual descriptions are important elements of characterization in medieval literature. In this talk, CMRS Distinguished Visiting Scholar Dr. Clodagh Downey (School of Irish, National University of Ireland, Galway) considers the language and function of human beauty, and its opposite, in the context of early Irish narrative literature, and what this can tell us about literary conventions,...

38th Annual UC Celtic Studies Conference

The 38th University of California Celtic Studies Conference, organized by Professor Joseph F. Nagy (English, UCLA) and the UCLA Celtic Colloquium, features papers on all aspects of Celtic culture including language, literature, history, art and archaeology, from late antiquity until the present day. THURSDAY, MARCH 10, 2016 — UCLA ROYCE HALL 314 2:30 pm Registration, coffee 3:00 Welcoming Remarks...

Graduate Student Career Forum: Milton was an Alt-Ac

Royce Hall Room 306 10745 Dickson Plaza, Los Angeles, CA

This program has moved from the originally scheduled date, February 18, 2016. This seminar for graduate students who study the Late Antique, Medieval, or Early Modern period, focuses on discovering intellectually stimulating and fulfilling career pathways that leverage the research, teaching, and service skills developed during the PhD. Come and share your ideas, questions, plans, and concerns,...

POSTPONED – Usury in Medieval English Literature and Law

Royce Hall Room 306 10745 Dickson Plaza, Los Angeles, CA

**POSTPONED To be Rescheduled** In this talk, Professor Arvind Thomas (English, UCLA) investigates the extent to which “literary” writers engaged and even transformed highly technical concepts of credit, need, excess, balance, doubt, risk, profit and loss central to the medieval legal discourse on usury. Texts, including the Ballads of Robin Hood, Piers Plowman, Vox Clamantis, will be explored alongside technical discussions...

Satan’s Biography, from Beginnings to Pepys’s London

UCLA Faculty Center 480 Charles E Young Dr East, Los Angeles

Annual William & Lois Matthews Samuel Pepys Lecture Satan appears in the Hebrew Scriptures (Books of Job and Zechariah) as a celestial accuser and prosecutor of humans, eager to uncover the vices that lie below seeming virtue; he is a figure on the order of our own J. Edgar Hoover. This characterization persists throughout the New Testament, with Jesus predicting...

Vernacular Edens: Tropes of Translation in Medieval Fiction

CMRS Distinguished Visiting Scholar Simone Marchesi (Associate Professor of French and Italian, Princeton University) explores the cultural roots of a double variable correlation in medieval vernacular fiction. One correlation is basic and unsurprising: medieval vernacular writers often take their narratives into gardens, and these gardens tend to conform to the topical model of the Earthly Paradise...

The Author as Hero in Twelfth-Century Latin Epic: Major Precedents for Dante’s Role in the “Commedia”

Royce Hall Room 306 10745 Dickson Plaza, Los Angeles, CA

CMRS Roundtable Ever since Eugène Bossard pointed out the similarities between Dante’s Commedia and Alan of Lille’s Anticlaudianus in 1885, modern scholars have recognized Alan’s epic as an important source of inspiration for Dante. However, one of Dante’s greatest debts to the Anticlaudianus, the central role of the author, has been underappreciated. In John of Hauville’s Architrenius, another twelfth-century allegorical...

How States & Societies Count: Censuses in Italy, the United States, and the United Kingdom

Royce Hall Room 306 10745 Dickson Plaza, Los Angeles, CA

A discussion with the authors of Antecedents of Censuses From Medieval to Nation States: How Societies and States Count (Volume 1) and Changes in Censuses from Imperialist to Welfare States: How Societies and States Count (Volume 2), published by Palgrave Macmillan in 2016. Authors: Rebecca Jean Emigh (UCLA, Sociology) Dylan Riley (UC Berkeley, Sociology) Patricia...

Informal Contemplation: Comedy and Participation in the Play of Wisdom

Morality plays are neither known nor studied for their serious contemplative content, much less their contemplative efficacy, partially because the plays seem so entrenched in the absurd, the grotesque, and the scatological. But these absurdist and comedic elements are part and parcel of the highly participatory mode of contemplation that these late medieval plays enact. In this lecture, CMRS Distinguished Visiting...

Feuding Popes and Emperors: Characterizing the Investiture Conflict

Royce 236 10745 Dickson Plaza, Los Angeles

The UCLA Mellon program in Post-Classical Latin is pleased to present a lecture by Maureen C. Miller (Professor of History, University of California Berkeley). This lecture will argue for an updating of the conceptualization of the ‘crisis of church and state’ in the context of recent work on violence and conflict in Medieval Europe. Please...

Imagined Medievalisms: Costuming HBO’s “Game of Thrones”

James Bridges Theater (Melnitz 1409) UCLA School of Theater, Film, and Television, Los Angeles, CA

From draped togas to shining armor to silken gowns, HBO’s award-winning drama Game of Thrones transforms diverse historical and geographical sources into costumes that both resonate with what we think we know about the past, and yet is also unfamiliar. As a result, we engage with the characters, prolonging our visual and mental negotiation between...

The Textual Lineaments of Three Medieval Identities: Reading “Targum Sheni” of the Book of Esther

Royce Hall Room 306 10745 Dickson Plaza, Los Angeles, CA

CMRS Roundtable The Second Targum of the Book of Esther, a “translation” of Esther from Hebrew into Aramaic, contains material about Solomon and Sheba not found in the Hebrew Esther, but found in the Koran. Targum Sheni was written in Byzantine Palestine before the rise of Islam and then used in Islam’s textual construction of...

California Medieval History Seminar

Huntington Library, Seaver Classrooms 1 & 2 1151 Oxford Rd, San Marino , CA

The Spring session of California Medieval History Seminar meets at the Huntington Library to discuss four pre-distributed research papers. Participants are expected to read the papers in advance and come prepared to discuss them. Speakers and paper topics are announced by e-mail. To be added to the announcement list contact us. Advance registration is required —...

Don Juan en las tablas / Don Juan on Stage

Don Juan en las tablas / Don Juan on Stage El burlador mítico: renacimiento, barroco y hoy / The Mythical Trickster: Renaissance, Baroque and Today Coloquio-Taller / Colloquium-Workshop With roots in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, the persistent Spanish myth of Don Juan first reaches Madrid's commercial stage around 1630 in the play, The...

The Flow of Ideas: Leonardo and Water

This CMRS Ahmanson conference, organized by Professor Constance Moffatt (Pierce College) and Dr. Sara Taglialagamba (École Pratique des Hautes Études, Sorbonne) explores the topic of water in the thought and works of Leonardo da Vinci. The topic of water appears in an obsessive way in Leonardo’s activity as both artist and scientist. Water is the...

On My Ignorance About the Italian Renaissance After Writing a 600+ Page Book on It

Royce Hall Room 306 10745 Dickson Plaza, Los Angeles, CA

Professor Guido Ruggiero earned an M.A. and a Ph.D at UCLA (where he studied first as a fellow of the Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies and later as a University of California Regents Intern Fellow) and now teaches in the Department of History at the University of Miami. He has published on the history...

Heroes and Villains, Ancient, Medieval, and Modern

A conference sponsored by the UCLA Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies and by the Freshman Cluster Course GE 30ABC, "Neverending Stories". Organized by Professor Joseph F. Nagy (English, UCLA). Friday, June 3, 2016 | UCLA Royce Hall, Room 314 3:00 pm Welcoming Remarks Patricia A. Turner, Dean and Vice Provost for Undergraduate Education of...

Dante and the Visual Arts Symposium

Humanities 193

This symposium is devoted to the study of the most important editions of the Comedy and of other visualizations of Dante’s masterpiece that were printed in the sixteenth century, and the analysis of the most important aspects and relationships that may emerge. Topics to be investigated are the relationship between text and image; the hermeneutic...

Why Ravenna?

In this talk, Judith Herrin (Professor Emerita of Late Antique & Byzantine Studies and Constantine Leventis Senior Research Fellow, King's College London) answers the question, "Why study Ravenna?" For 350 years this city served as the western capital of the Roman Empire where a very particular integration of Germanic and Roman occurred that had significant...

Boundaries in the Medieval and Wider World: Conference in Honor of Paul Freedman

CMRS Conference Paul Freedman (Chester D. Tripp Professor of History; Chair, History of Science, History of Medicine Program, Yale University) is a scholar who cannot be easily classified. He is a medieval historian, a social historian, a scholar of Spain and of Church history. Additionally, he is firmly established as a leading scholar in food...

Glass in the Late-Antique Mediterranean

Royce Hall Room 306 10745 Dickson Plaza, Los Angeles, CA

Glass was first created in Mesopotamia or Egypt as an artificial precious stone in the third millennium B.C.E. Until the late Hellenistic period, its use remained largely restricted to the highest echelons of society. The invention of the free-blowing technique in the first century B.C.E. along the Syrio-Palestinian coast led to an unprecedented expansion in...

Julius II: the Warrior Pope Between Celebration and Condemnation

Dodd Hall 275 Los Angeles

Julius II Della Rovere (1443-1513) is the epitome of the Renaissance pope. Impetuous politician, determined pontiff, and magnificent patron of art, he embodied all of the grandiosity and contradictions that characterized the Renaissance papacy. With his bloody wars and splendid artistic patronage, Julius II has strongly shaped our collective conception of the Renaissance. But what...

CMRS Open House

Royce Hall Room 306 10745 Dickson Plaza, Los Angeles, CA

Please join CMRS Director Massimo Ciavolella and the staff of the Center for our annual Open House celebrating the start of a new academic year.  This year marks CMRS’s 53rd year of promoting interdisciplinary and cross-cultural studies of the period from Late Antiquity to the mid-seventeenth century. Come meet faculty members, students, colleagues, and friends who share...

Singing Il Furioso: Stories of Knights, Enchanted Places, and Extraordinary Journeys of the Mind

Join the musical duo Il Ruggiero (Emanuela Marcante & Daniele Tonini) for a performance of music, words and images that gives the poetry of Ludovico Ariosto a new musical life. The stories and unforgettable characters of Orlando Furioso (first printed in 1516) are sung and narrated on Renaissance airs and original musical intonations, intertwined with musical...

The French Letters: Translation or Versification in the Correspondence of Thomas Becket?

Royce Hall Room 306 10745 Dickson Plaza, Los Angeles, CA

CMRS Roundtable Garnier (or Guernes) de Pont-Sainte-Maxence’s Vie de Saint Thomas Becket (finished by 1174) contains three letters, written in French alexandrines, sent by Thomas Becket in 1166 during his exile. Since E.Walberg’s 1922 edition of Garnier’s text, these letters have been considered translations of Becket’s official Latin letters (Desiderio desideraui, Expextans expectaui, and Mirandum et uehementer). In this...

CMRS Graduate Student Meet and Greet

Royce Hall Room 306 10745 Dickson Plaza, Los Angeles, CA

CMRS invites graduate students in all fields of study to attend an informational social gathering to get acquainted with other students involved in topics pertinent to medieval and Renaissance studies and to learn about the support and resources available to graduate students from the Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies. Come by and meet new colleagues...

Movie Night: Sita Sings the Blues

Sita is a goddess separated from her beloved Lord and husband Rama. Nina is an animator whose husband moves to India, then dumps her by email. Three hilarious shadow puppets narrate both ancient tragedy and modern comedy in this beautifully animated interpretation of the Indian epic Ramayana. Set to the 1920's jazz vocals of Annette...

California Medieval History Seminar

Huntington Library, Seaver Classrooms 1 & 2 1151 Oxford Rd, San Marino , CA

The fall session of California Medieval History Seminar meets at the Huntington Library to discuss four pre-distributed research papers. Participants are expected to read the papers in advance and come prepared to discuss them. Speakers and paper topics are announced by e-mail. To be added to the announcement list contact us. The following papers will...

Iberian Jewish Identities After 1492

Royce Hall Room 306 10745 Dickson Plaza, Los Angeles, CA

CMRS Roundtable Drawing on material from documents kept by the Inquisition, as well as Rabbinical and other Jewish sources relating to the 16th and 17th centuries, UCLA Research Professor of Germanic Languages, Marianna Birnbaum, identifies and discusses the lives and activities of five distinct groups as aspects of the Sephardic Jewish identity. Advance registration not...

The Future Is Now: Art & Technology in the Renaissance & Beyond

CMRS Symposium The Renaissance was a period defined by visions of the future. Renaissance humanists including Petrarch, Dante, Leonardo Bruni, and Vasari expressed a concern for the future, fame, and posterity. At the same time, European explorers, merchants, soldiers, and missionaries traversed the globe fueled by visions of the future as well as imperial ambition....

Human and Animal Conversions, c. 1600

Royce Hall Room 306 10745 Dickson Plaza, Los Angeles, CA

CMRS Roundtable   Professor Bronwen Wilson (Art History, UCLA) Ancient debates about similarities and differences between animals and humans were rekindled during the sixteenth century in Italy. In visual imagery, treatises, dialogues, and orations, artists, natural historians, physiognomists, poets, and polymaths examined the physical characteristics of animals, how they communicated, and the moral, social, and...

Pirate and Philosopher, Courtier and Cook: The Life and Work of Sir Kenelm Digby

CMRS Distinguished Visiting Scholar Lecture Sir Kenelm Digby (1603-65) lived a dazzlingly varied life: bouncing between the courts of London, Paris and Rome, befriending everyone from Ben Jonson and René Descartes to Oliver Cromwell, and producing original works of theology, philosophy, and experimental science. Despite these achievements he has faded from most accounts of the...

Not for Keeps: The Ephemeral in Medieval Manuscript Culture

Richard and Mary Rouse History of the Book Lecture Dr. Erik Kwakkel with students. While medieval manuscripts in Special Collection libraries were generally produced and preserved for posterity, not everything written down in the Middle Ages was intended to be kept forever: some information was disposable. Introducing a range of transitory objects, Dr. Erik Kwakkel...

Entertaining the Pope: International Diplomacy and Performance in the Roman Curia (1470-1530)

Royce Hall Room 306 10745 Dickson Plaza, Los Angeles, CA

CMRS Roundtable Marta Albalá Pelegrín (Assistant Professor, Medieval and Early Modern Iberian literature and drama, California State Polytechnic University, Pomona) explores the vital role of Spanish patronage in the Roman curia, with a keen eye on the importance that theater came to have for diplomatic enterprises. Spain, second only after Italy in number of prelates,...

‘My love is as a fever . . .’: Love Treatises in the Renaissance

CMRS Ahmanson Conference Treatises discussing the origin, nature, and effects of love are prevalent throughout the European Renaissance. The Neo-Platonic tradition of love treatises has been studied for its philosophical and literary implications and for its influence on sixteenth-century culture; these studies have illuminated how the "ladder of love" model permeates poetry, prose narratives, and...

CMRS Movie Night: “The Name of the Rose”

A murder mystery at a Benedictine abbey requires the sherlockian insight of Brother William of Baskerville (Sean Connery) and his young apprentice, Adso of Melk (Christian Slater). Confronted by the suspicious deaths of several friars amid the simmering tensions of monastic rivalries, the detectives come face to face with the Inquisition during their investigation. Join...

Umberto Eco, the Middle Ages, and “The Name of the Rose”

CMRS Symposium Umberto Eco (January 5, 1932 - February 19, 2016) is still best known today for his novel Il nome della rosa (The Name of the Rose). The novel was published in 1980 and became an international sensation, selling over 10 million copies worldwide. In reality, Eco was a Professor at the University of...

Decorated Manuscripts in Sixteenth- and Seventeenth- Century England

Royce Hall Room 306 10745 Dickson Plaza, Los Angeles, CA

CMRS Roundtable Manuscript studies scholars are well versed in the rich illuminations and miniatures in late-medieval English manuscripts, but scholars have spent less time considering the culture of decorated manuscripts in the early modern period. This talk by Vanessa Wilkie (William A. Moffett Curator of Medieval and British Manuscripts, The Huntington Library, and CMRS Associate)...

Hunting for Medieval & Renaissance Manuscripts: Greek Medicine Rediscovered

Royce Hall Room 306 10745 Dickson Plaza, Los Angeles, CA

The medical knowledge of ancient Greece has interested Western scholars for centuries. While Renaissance humanists read medical texts in whatever manuscripts were available to them, later scholars systematically sought out Greek medical texts. However, it took until the early 20th century for an inventory of Greek medical texts to be published. Although useful, this early...

Roma Aeterna in the Middle Ages

The medieval sources produced in Rome and about Rome collectively exhibit a singular characteristic  which scholars have not yet adequately identified or addressed as a uniquely Roman feature. In contrast with most other cities and institutions, Rome and its church did not develop the diachronic relationship with their memory and territory that would have resulted...

“Vulture in a Cage”: A New Translation of the Poems of Solomon Ibn Gabirol

Royce Hall Room 306 10745 Dickson Plaza, Los Angeles, CA

Author and translator Raymond Scheindlin will present his new book, Vulture in a Cage, and the eleventh-century poet at its center, Solomon Ibn Gabirol, one of the most celebrated poets and philosophers of the medieval Judeo-Arabic Golden Age. The author of delicate and intimate devotional poetry that holds an honored place in the liturgies of...

Jewish Properties, Inquisitorial Conflicts, and Probabilist Theology in Seventeenth-Century Rome

Royce Hall Room 306 10745 Dickson Plaza, Los Angeles, CA

CMRS Roundtable Professor Stefania Tutino (History, UCLA) uses the fascinating and dramatic story of the seventeenth-century Neapolitan Jewish nobleman Duarte Vaaz, Count of Mola, to discuss how the Roman Inquisition dealt with the economic implications of converting Jews. By investigating the complex relationship between theology, economy, and politics, this talk explores the important role that...

California Medieval History Seminar

Huntington Library, Seaver Classroom 3 1151 Oxford Rd, San Marino, CA

The winter session of California Medieval History Seminar meets at the Huntington Library to discuss four pre-distributed research papers. Participants are expected to read the papers in advance and come prepared to discuss them. Speakers and paper topics are announced by e-mail. To be added to the announcement list contact us. Advance registration is required...

Fossilized French: Using the Breton Language as a Window on French Linguistic (Pre-)History

CMRS Distinguished Visiting Scholar Breton – the Celtic language spoken in Brittany in the northwest of France – has been in close contact  with Romance (developing into French) ever since the Celtic migration from southern England and Cornwall. This contact has led to massive influence on Breton on all linguistic levels (especially phonology and lexicon)....

Vernacular Legal Culture in Medieval Armenia

CMRS Distinguished Visiting Scholar Lecture Taking up a field of research familiar to many medievalists but largely unknown from an Armenian  perspective, CMRS Distinguished Visiting Scholar Dr. Tim Greenwood (Senior Lecturer in Medieval History, University of St. Andrews)  explores the character and development of legal practice and performance across medieval Armenia from Late Antiquity down...

E. A. Moody Medieval Philosophy Workshop

Royce Hall Room 306 10745 Dickson Plaza, Los Angeles, CA

Organized by Professor Calvin Normore (Philosophy, UCLA), the topic of this year’s workshop is the “Deadly Sins.” Saturday, February 25 10 AM - Peter King (Toronto) - "Moral Fatigue" 11:30 AM - Janelle Aijian (Biola) - "Wishing and Hoping: Diverging sources of understanding acedia" 1 PM - Lunch 2:30 PM - Bonnie Kent (U.C. Irvine)...

Building on the Inquisition. How Did Poverty-Minded Friars Pay for Big Buildings?

A distinctive feature of the new religious orders of the thirteenth century (Franciscans and Dominicans among others) was their adoption of apostolic poverty. Friars focused their action on charity and outdoor preaching to convert the urban poor from heretical practices. In this talk, Caroline Bruzelius (Anne Murnick Cogan Professor of Art and Art History, Duke...

Mapping, Modeling, and Apps. Experiments in Scholarship and Teaching in the Humanities

Annual Armand Hammer Art History Lecture New digital tools are transforming the ways in which we do research and teach. Caroline Bruzelius (Anne Murnick Cogan Professor of Art and Art History) shares how at Duke University, the Wired! group has been experimenting with integrating technologies into traditional courses. They have also created a lab running...

Fables of The Bees in Sixteenth-Century France

Royce Hall Room 306 10745 Dickson Plaza, Los Angeles, CA

CMRS Roundtable Throughout the Renaissance, the interest in insects lagged behind the study of zoology and natural history. Yet the honeybee represents an exception because of its symbolic dimension in the Bible as well as in the Greek and Roman literary heritage. In this talk, Professor Cynthia Skenazi (French and Italian, UC Santa Barbara, and...

The Ark After Noah: Beasts, Books, and Bodies of Knowledge

This two-day symposium hosted at the University of California, Los Angeles and the J. Paul Getty Museum brings together scholars working on the aspects of image, text, knowledge, and culture that surround the bestiary tradition in the medieval world. Speakers will focus on how the development of encyclopedic texts and new structures of knowledge emerged...

“Translatio imperii”: The Formation of Emotive Literary Identities & Mentalities in the North

Royce 236 10745 Dickson Plaza, Los Angeles

The importation of French courtly material in thirteenth-century Norway and Iceland completes a cycle  of cultural transmission and expansion begun almost four centuries earlier with the Viking expansion  outward from the Northern peripheries of the known world to the neighboring insular regions of the  British Isles, to Northern France and finally to the medieval center...

CANCELED–Monarch, Maiden & Fool: The Book of Esther in Early Modern German, English, & Yiddish Drama

CMRS Lecture CANCELED To Be Rescheduled Scholars of Yiddish literature have proposed that the first extant Purim-Shpil (Purim Play) continued the tradition of early modern English and German dramatizations of the Book of Esther. In this talk, Professor Chanita Goodblatt (Foreign Literatures & Linguistics, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev) will focus on the carnivalesque aspect...

Medieval Books – Torn, Fetid, and Dripped On

Distinguished Visiting Scholar Lecture Is it possible to derive historical meaning from the grubby fingerprints and torn leaves that scholars find inside medieval books? Can surviving medieval manuscripts be matched to contemporary accounts of the mistreatment of books – those of Geoffrey Chaucer, whose Wife of Bath famously tears leaves from her husband’s book; or...

King Richard III: the Resolution of a 500-Year-Old Cold Case

NRB Auditorium Room 132 UCLA Neuroscience Research Building, Los Angeles, CA

King Richard III was one of the few English kings for whom the precise location of his grave had been lost. In 2012, during an excavation, his putative remains were found underneath a carpark in Leicester. Dr Turi King led the genetic analysis which led to the identification of the remains as those of King...

Shakespeare, Terry, Skinny and Me

Royce Hall Room 306 10745 Dickson Plaza, Los Angeles, CA

CMRS Roundtable Steve Sohmer (Fleming Fellow of Lincoln College, Oxford) considers why Her Majesty's Government has yet to reveal the inspiration for Shakespeare's Jessica - and the identity of the bard's Jewish girlfriend. Advance registration not required. No fee. Limited seating. Funding for the CMRS Roundtable series is provided by the Armand Endowment for the...

Approaching the Unknown: “They Saw It With Their Own Eyes”

A Conference Organized by the UCLA Mellon Program in Post-Classical Latin The starting point for this conference is the statement “they saw it with their own eyes”: this phrase appears frequently on Fra Mauro’s fifteenth-century map of the world, a landmark in cartography because of Mauro’s decision to use the most recent eyewitness testimony rather...

Fictional Knights, Literary Translators, and Araucanian Heroes; or the Emergence of the Spanish Historical Epic

UCLA Faculty Center 480 Charles E Young Dr East, Los Angeles

Annual Will & Lois Matthews Samuel Pepys Lecture Professor Efraín Kristal (Spanish and Portuguese, UCLA) traces the emergence of Early Modern Spanish epic poetry to allegorical poetry from Burgundy, to Ariosto's Orlando Furioso, and to translations of these works from French and Italian into Spanish.  He gives pride of place to Jeronimo de Urrea's La...

“La clere Diane droictement mena le Roy”: Representing the French Royal Mistress

Royce 236 10745 Dickson Plaza, Los Angeles

CMRS Lecture We are so used to the idea of the royal mistress as a constituent element of the French king’s grandeur that we tend not to think about how strange it is that in Ancien Régime France nine women who were not part of the royal family exercised significant political influence, their position imagined...

Comic Supernatural Movie Night – “La Fée” (“The Fairy”)

“La Fée” is a film released in 2011 written and directed by Dominique Abel. Arriving at a small hotel, a mysterious woman named Fiona informs night shift worker Dom that she is a fairy and will grant him three wishes. After she grants his first two wishes--and he falls in love with her--she disappears, and...

The Comic Supernatural

CMRS Conference The tropes are as well-known as they are myriad. Deals with the devil. Hell running short of guests, or being robbed of its prey. Heaven dispatching angels to save individuals from their own folly. Ghosts and goblins shaking mortals from their mundane complacency. Gods and goddesses from various pantheons trying on human guise....

First California Symposium on Catalan Studies

Of Books and Roses: First California Symposium on Catalan Studies “Of Books and Roses:  First California Symposium on Catalan Studies” grew from the idea of offering a point of reference on the west coast of the United States for scholars and students interested in Catalan Studies or related areas.  This year, we will hear presentations...

Lucrezia Borgia’s Self Representation

Royce Hall Room 306 10745 Dickson Plaza, Los Angeles, CA

CMRS Roundtable How did noble women represent themselves through the objects they acquired, wore, and used to outfit their living quarters? In this roundtable, Professor Diane Ghirardo (Architecture, USC) addresses this question by examining Lucrezia Borgia's jewelry, library, art and religious objects, and the decoration of her quarters in the Estense Castle and Palazzo di...

Making Worlds: Art, Materiality, and Early Modern Globalization

The early modern period (c. 1450-1750) witnessed a massive dislocation of people and artifacts as a result of migration, religious conflicts, expanding trade routes, missionary activities, slavery, and colonization. The confrontation between materiality and mobility that ensued gave rise to new, often unexpected, forms of creativity. Focusing on art — on making and engaging with...

Fortune, Hazard, Risk: Thinking about Contingency in the Pre-Modern Mediterranean

CMRS Distinguished Visiting Scholar Lecture How do human beings think about, talk about and prepare for contingency? How do we think about futurity – events to come, good or ill? In this talk, CMRS Distinguished Visiting Scholar, Karla Mallette (Department of Romance Languages and Literatures, University of Michigan) looks to the Muslim-Christian borderlands of the...

California Medieval History Seminar

Huntington Library, Seaver Classrooms 1 & 2 1151 Oxford Rd, San Marino , CA

The spring session of California Medieval History Seminar meets at the Huntington Library to discuss four pre-distributed research papers. Participants are expected to read the papers in advance and come prepared to discuss them. Speakers and paper topics are announced by e-mail. To be added to the announcement list contact us. Advance registration is required...

Anatomical Illustration and the “keen-eyed reader”: Lettering and Legibility in the Works of Andreas Vesalius (1514-1564)

Royce Hall Room 306 10745 Dickson Plaza, Los Angeles, CA

CMRS Roundtable The illustrations in Andreas Vesalius’s De humani corporis fabrica libri septem, first published in Basel in 1543, were revolutionary in their number, their quality, and in their integration with the text. In this talk, CMRS Associate Monique Kornell (Independent Scholar) looks at Vesalius’s concerns for the legibility of the identifying characters in the Fabrica illustrations and those...

CMRS Movie Night – “The Passion of Joan of Arc”

She heard a mission from God. They called it heresy. Join CMRS for a special screening of the 1928 silent movie masterpiece “The Passion of Joan of Arc” (Director: Carl Theodor Dreyer) with live musical accompaniment by renowned silent film pianist Cliff Retallick. Famous for its cinematography and early use of the close-up as well...

A City with a View: Florence and the Reinvention of the Renaissance

Marxiano Melotti (Università degli Studi Niccolò Cusano & Università degli Studi di Milano-Bicocca) speaks on Renaissance imagery as used in advertising. Co-sponsored by the UCLA Department of Italian. Advance registration not required. No fee. Limited seating. Funding is provided by the Armand Hammer Endowment for the UCLA Center for Medieval & Renaissance Studies and the...

Creature (Dis)comforts: On Human Thresholds from Classical Myth to Modern Day

CMRS Conference The threshold of the home constitutes a literal boundary between public and private, between the domestic and the political. It is also a border that, by its very nature, invites transgression. It is a boundary that exists to be crossed. This conference, organized by Dr. Sara Burdorff (UCLA, English) and the student group Colloquium...

CMRS Open House

Royce Hall Room 306 10745 Dickson Plaza, Los Angeles, CA

Please join CMRS Director Professor Massimo Ciavolella and the staff of the Center for our annual Open House celebrating the start of a new academic year. This year marks CMRS’s 54th year of promoting interdisciplinary and cross-cultural studies of the period from Late Antiquity to the mid-seventeenth century. Come meet other faculty members, students, colleagues, and friends...

Graduate Student Social

Royce Hall Room 306 10745 Dickson Plaza, Los Angeles, CA

Wind down first week with an evening of food, drink, and socializing with your fellow medieval and Renaissance scholars. Catch up with old friends and make new ones. This event is exclusively for UCLA graduate students--all departments are welcome! No registration necessary.

Split: Conservation of a World Heritage Site

Royce Hall Room 306 10745 Dickson Plaza, Los Angeles, CA

Founded in 305 as a fortified villa of a retired emperor, Split developed into a medieval town, keeping traces from all periods and incorporating them into one harmonic whole. In 1979 the historic core of Split was declared a World Heritage Site on account of its well preserved architecture from all periods, and also because...

French Graduate Student Conference

UCLA Department of French & Francophone Studies 22nd Annual Graduate Student Conference "Que sais-je?: Rethinking Learning and Knowledge" Keynote Speaker: Leon Sachs, University of Kentucky For further information, write Allison Kershner in the Department of French and Francophone Studies. Co-sponsored by UCLA-CMRS.

Beyond Nostalgia: Berber ‘Puritans’ and the End of Andalusian Convivencia?

Royce Hall Room 306 10745 Dickson Plaza, Los Angeles, CA

CMRS Roundtable Almost without exception, the established English-language scholarly and popular narratives of the history of Islamic Spain present the period of the Umayyad Caliphate of Córdoba and the era of the taifa kings that followed it as a “Golden Age” of tolerance, ethnoreligious diversity, and cultural dynamism.  In this view, the incursion first of...

Dante and Modernity

In a famous passage of Survival in Auschwitz, the memoir that emerged from his harrowing experience in the concentration camp, Primo Levi strives to recall from his memory Canto 26 of Dante’s Inferno – a canto that narrates the mad flight and tragic fall of the Greek hero Ulysses. Levi’s account of Ulysses’ speech to...

A Mercenary Logic? Muslim Soldiers in the Service of Christian Kings

CMRS Distinguished Visiting Scholar Lecture Over the course of the late-thirteenth and fourteenth centuries — as they subdued, expelled, and enslaved Muslim populations — the kings of the Crown of Aragon recruited thousands of North African cavalry soldiers, whom they called jenets, to serve in their armies and in their courts as body guards, members of...

Emerging Scholars Conference

The UCLA Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies Emerging Scholar conference directly engages the CMRS mission to support Graduate Student research. This one-day conference features UCLA graduate students from a variety of departments including Art History, Near Eastern Languages and Cultures, History, French, and English presenting recent research from topics that relate to CMRS’s sphere...