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State Power, Political Conflict and Urban Ideologies in Medieval Northern Spain

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

CMRS Distinguished Visiting Scholar Lecture The Later Middle Ages are known as a time of violent outbursts of rebellion and repression. Recent historiography, however, has shown that both violent conflict and peaceful resistance were intrinsic parts of daily life in Late Medieval towns in the Kingdom of Castile. Subversive speech and petitioning were used by...

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 a social gathering to get acquainted with other students involved in topics pertinent to medieval and Renaissance studies. Come by and meet new colleagues and old friends! Advance registration not required. No fee. Limited seating. Image detail from Paradise (predella panel), ca. 1445, by Giovanni...

Platonic Words: Paolo Sarpi and Roberto Bellarmino as Translators in the Venetian Interdict Crisis

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

CMRS Roundtable Professor Darcy Kern (History, Southern Connecticut State University) considers translation practices in pre- and post-Tridentine Catholic Europe, particularly as they relate to the Venetian interdict crisis and the vernacular pamphlet battle between Paolo Sarpi and Cardinal Roberto Bellarmino. Close attention to debates about the meaning of words reveals that Sarpi, an anti-papalist and anti-Trent...

Fishing and Water Ecology in High Renaissance Florence: Some Preliminary Considerations

Environmental Humanities In 1509, Filippo Casavecchia wrote to Niccolò Machiavelli, inviting Niccolò to “stay with me (in the mountains between Florence and Lucca) for 4 days, because I am sure you will not be sorry for it, with respect to my having ordered an entire furnaceful of mortar that contains 40 moggia (660 bushels), with...

Silent Movie Screening: “Drums of Love”

On the occasion of the 750th anniversary of the birth of Dante, the UCLA Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies and the UCLA Department of Italian present a screening of D.W. Griffith's  "Drums of Love", the 1928 cinematic retelling of the tragic love story of Paolo and Francesca as told in Canto V of Dante's...

Free

The Seals of Lucrezia Borgia and Isabella d’Este

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

CMRS Roundtable Professor Diane Ghirardo (University of Southern California) discusses Lucrezia Borgia and Isabella d’Este who were related by marriage but shared little else. Sisters-in-law and spouses of lords of prominent Italian states (Ferrara and Mantua), the two women’s seals incorporated the arms of their natal families and those of their husbands, but the differences in...

The Ancient Mediterranean Pharmacopeia: A Source for Novel Medicines?

This lecture by Dr. Alain Touwaide, illustrates the Mediterranean pharmacopeia and shows how ancient drug making is an invaluable source for novel medicines.The search for novel medicines is on the agenda of the pharmacological world across the globe. New substances, new approaches, and new applications are expected to help fight multiple devastating medical conditions, old...

Love and Death in the Renaissance Castle – Day 1

An ethos of noble violence prevailed throughout the early modern period under the rubric of chivalry, often bound up with illicit romances in aristocratic and royal castles. Some of the most celebrated cases of sexual violence, illicit loves and murder in early modern Italy and France unfolded in castles such as those of Gradara and...

Love and Death in the Renaissance Castle – Day 2

An ethos of noble violence prevailed throughout the early modern period under the rubric of chivalry, often bound up with illicit romances in aristocratic and royal castles. Some of the most celebrated cases of sexual violence, illicit loves and murder in early modern Italy and France unfolded in castles such as those of Gradara and...

Exotic Lady Continents in Engraving, Tapestry, and Town Hall Pediment of the Northern Renaissance

CMRS Roundtable What were the key stages in the imagination of personified continents? In this presentation, Maryanne Cline Horowitz (Professor of History, Occidental College & UCLA-CMRS Associate) identifies sources for three distinct stages in the development of Renaissance and Baroque personifications of Africa, Asia, Europe, and America.  In the 1570s three variants of an allegorical...

Learning to Produce Literature in Medieval China

Members of the literate class in medieval China (ca. 6th through 10th centuries) were called upon to produce literary works in a wide range of contexts, from drunken poetry competitions to the civil service exam. In this talk, CMRS Distinguished Visiting Scholar Christopher Nugent (Associate Professor of Chinese, Williams College) examines a number of the...

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...