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Posts by flore

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Actus 2026/4 Événements Derniers jours pour l’inscription aux Semaines d’études médiévales … n’hésitez pas à (re)diffuser autour de vous ! Maison de l’épigraphie Jeudi 2 avril 2026, 10h-12h : webinaire avec Myrthe...

Actus 2026/4 cescm.hypotheses.org/36450

3 weeks ago 0 0 0 0
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International symposium on recent scientific studies in archaeology of Tamil Nadu concludes in Madurai International symposium on recent scientific studies in archaeology of Tamil Nadu concludes in Madurai

Tamil Nadu Archeology

www.thehindu.com/news/cities/...

2 months ago 0 0 0 0
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Excursion du 3 Mai 2025 Ce samedi 3 mai, la Compagnie des Archéografs est partie répertorier les graffitis de l’église Saint-Pierre à Saires dans la Vienne. Le mur extérieur, orienté vers le sud, comporte une diversité de gr...

Excursion du 3 Mai 2025 archeographs.hypotheses.org/854

2 months ago 0 0 0 0
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Claire Barbillon (École du Louvre) This is "Claire Barbillon (École du Louvre)" by News Tank Network on Vimeo, the home for high quality videos and the people who love them.

vimeo.com/1154593112

2 months ago 0 0 0 0
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Mathématiciennes de l'ombre, elles ont compté pour la NASA Dans cette émission, nous revenons sur les trajectoires de celles qui nous ont permis de marcher sur la Lune : les calculatrices de la NASA. Qui étaient ces femmes ? Leur parcours fût-il singulier da...

#Podcast Mathématiciennes de l'ombre, elles ont compté pour la NASA, à (ré)écouter via @franceculture.fr ! #ScienceCQFD
www.radiofrance.fr/francecultur...

3 months ago 83 40 4 0
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Dr. Gladys West, Mathematician Whose Work Made GPS Possible, Dies at 95 ALEXANDRIA, VA — Dr. Gladys West, the pioneering mathematician whose work laid the foundation for modern GPS technology, has died. She passed away

Dr. Gladys West, the pioneering mathematician whose work laid the foundation for modern GPS technology, has died. She was 95.

3 months ago 27239 9604 550 501
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Sign the Petition Block Republican Bill to Make Greenland the 51st State

c.org/BKvdXC6R6T

3 months ago 0 0 0 0

Une nouvelle fâcheuse, beaucoup moins grave qu’annoncée (comme d’habitude)

4 months ago 7 2 0 0
Several megaliths stood in a grassy field.

Several megaliths stood in a grassy field.

Carnac (🇫🇷) is the site of thousands of standing stones, constructed ~7,000-years-ago #StandingStoneSunday

Radiocarbon dates indicate people added to and changed the complex over a 300 year period, painting a picture of a dynamic #megalithic landscape

🆓 doi.org/10.15184/aqy...

🏺 #Archaeology

4 months ago 155 38 3 1
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ICOM-CC | FOCUS ON CONSERVATION 2025 – ROUTES TO RESILIENCE Online Conference December 2025

www.icom-cc.org/en/news/focu...

4 months ago 0 0 0 0
Accueil - Romane

base-romane.fr

Iconographie et photothèque du CESCM, Centre Études Médiévales.

5 months ago 0 0 0 0
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Home | Saving the Seas | Non-Profit Organization Saving the Seas is a non-profit organization dedicated to ocean education and conservation through our family-friendly educational programs, public events & more. Our team is made up of passionate ind...

www.savingtheseas.org

5 months ago 0 0 0 0
Protecting Heritage Together | ANCHISE Forum | ANCHISE Innovative Solutions against Trafficking of Cultural Goods

www.anchise.eu/event-detail...

5 months ago 0 0 0 0
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[30 oct. 2025] conférence de Thomas Herron Edmund Spenser and the Medieval Irish Landscape:  old and new approaches Conférence le Jeudi 30 octobre à 18hSalle Crozet du CESCMEntrée libre et gratuite A generation has passed since the last prolon...

[30 oct. 2025] conférence de Thomas Herron cescm.hypotheses.org/31638

6 months ago 0 0 0 0
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Human Population and Evolutionary Genetics This Mooc aims to provide basic knowledge on population genetics and the help of genetics in the study of human migrations and human adaptation to extreme conditions.

🧬 The MOOC “Human Population and Evolutionary Genetics” is open for registration!!
👉 bit.ly/4fw3Zje
💀🌍 Where do we come from? What was the migration history of our species? What role does the Neanderthal genome play in our genetic heritage? How has our species adapted to different environments?

7 months ago 23 8 0 1
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Qu’est-ce que le « trait de côte » des cartes géographiques ? Il ne s’agit pas d’une référence immuable au cours du temps et le changement climatique, sans surprise, vient encore compliquer la donne.

Les côtes et leur évolution. Explication par un spécialiste.

theconversation.com/quest-ce-que...

7 months ago 0 0 0 0
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Bayeux Tapestry: French voice fears over artwork's move to London The precious medieval work is to be displayed in London next year - but the French art world is strongly opposed.

French voice fears over Bayeux Tapestry move to UK
www.bbc.com/news/article...

7 months ago 1 1 0 0
Leeds IMC 2026 Call for Papers:
When is a Landscape?
The Landscape Consortium invites papers exploring medieval landscapes in and beyond time, their multiscalar and multitemporal constructions and interpretations, and their meanings within medieval or modern worlds.
 
When is a landscape? Following the lead of Yannis Hamilakis’ work (2013) demonstrating that object and place are witnesses to coexistences of times, this session seeks to explore medieval landscapes as carriers of concurrent past, present and future places and meanings, and as bridges between multiple scales of studies and multiple times. We are particularly interested in creative, theoretic and interpretive research to understand how landscape can – and do – transcend temporal boundaries. 

Topics may include, but are certainly not limited to:
•	Multiscalar explorations of place and landscapes
•	Dynamic theories and interpretations
•	Multiple, concurrent times understood in landscapes and places
•	Microhistories or biographies of landscapes

Papers are welcome from any area of the world and ‘medieval’ broadly conceived. 

Please send a 250-word abstract (plus key terms), short CV, and contact information to landscapeconsortium@gmail.com by 15 September.

If you have any questions, please feel free to contact the organizers at the same email.

The Landscape Consortium is dedicated to promotion of multidisciplinary research into the landscapes of the medieval world. The organizing directors are Drs Karl Christian Alvestad, Daniel Brown, Stefanie Schild, Johannes Waldschütz and Katherine Weikert.

Leeds IMC 2026 Call for Papers: When is a Landscape? The Landscape Consortium invites papers exploring medieval landscapes in and beyond time, their multiscalar and multitemporal constructions and interpretations, and their meanings within medieval or modern worlds. When is a landscape? Following the lead of Yannis Hamilakis’ work (2013) demonstrating that object and place are witnesses to coexistences of times, this session seeks to explore medieval landscapes as carriers of concurrent past, present and future places and meanings, and as bridges between multiple scales of studies and multiple times. We are particularly interested in creative, theoretic and interpretive research to understand how landscape can – and do – transcend temporal boundaries. Topics may include, but are certainly not limited to: • Multiscalar explorations of place and landscapes • Dynamic theories and interpretations • Multiple, concurrent times understood in landscapes and places • Microhistories or biographies of landscapes Papers are welcome from any area of the world and ‘medieval’ broadly conceived. Please send a 250-word abstract (plus key terms), short CV, and contact information to landscapeconsortium@gmail.com by 15 September. If you have any questions, please feel free to contact the organizers at the same email. The Landscape Consortium is dedicated to promotion of multidisciplinary research into the landscapes of the medieval world. The organizing directors are Drs Karl Christian Alvestad, Daniel Brown, Stefanie Schild, Johannes Waldschütz and Katherine Weikert.

When is a landscape? Join The Landscape Consortium @imc-leeds.bsky.social with this #imc2026 #cfp exploring multi-scalar research and interpretations of medieval landscapes. Full cfp in alt-text. TLC is Karl Alvestad, Daniel Brown, @jwfr.bsky.social and Stefanie Schild. Please share far and wide!

8 months ago 30 23 1 0

Great to see this published by our committee member Chris (@ccooijmans.bsky.social) A Middle Dutch text with some conspicuously Scottish influences!

8 months ago 8 4 0 0
The image is of a poster with the following text on a dark blue background:

CFP: Leeds International Medieval Congress (6-9 July 2026)
Thematic Focus: ‘Temporalities’ 

The past decades have seen exciting developments in medieval liturgical scholarship, moving beyond analysis of texts to examining liturgical practices as diverse, lived, localised, and contested devotional frameworks. Perhaps nowhere is this more apparent than in the study of the Divine Office or Liturgy of the Hours: the cycle of daily prayers structured around the eight canonical hours (Matins, Lauds, Prime, Terce, Sext, None, Vespers, and Compline) central to the spiritual, intellectual, temporal and communal life of the medieval Christian world.

This panel invites proposals for 15-20 minute papers on any aspect of Medieval Office Liturgy, especially those that address new perspectives, methodologies, or understudied sources.

Topics may include (but are not limited to): 
⁃ Office Manuscripts
⁃ Intersections with visual and material culture
⁃ Lay experiences of the Divine Office
⁃ Liturgical Reform
⁃ Performance Practices and/or Prescriptions
⁃ The Liturgy of the Hours in Medieval Literature
⁃ Temporality and the Canonical Hours
⁃ Saints lives, cults and offices

Please send an abstract of up to 250 words and short biography including your affiliation(s) to Rhiannon Warren (rlow2@cam.ac.uk) by the 31st of August 2025

The image is of a poster with the following text on a dark blue background: CFP: Leeds International Medieval Congress (6-9 July 2026) Thematic Focus: ‘Temporalities’ The past decades have seen exciting developments in medieval liturgical scholarship, moving beyond analysis of texts to examining liturgical practices as diverse, lived, localised, and contested devotional frameworks. Perhaps nowhere is this more apparent than in the study of the Divine Office or Liturgy of the Hours: the cycle of daily prayers structured around the eight canonical hours (Matins, Lauds, Prime, Terce, Sext, None, Vespers, and Compline) central to the spiritual, intellectual, temporal and communal life of the medieval Christian world. This panel invites proposals for 15-20 minute papers on any aspect of Medieval Office Liturgy, especially those that address new perspectives, methodologies, or understudied sources. Topics may include (but are not limited to): ⁃ Office Manuscripts ⁃ Intersections with visual and material culture ⁃ Lay experiences of the Divine Office ⁃ Liturgical Reform ⁃ Performance Practices and/or Prescriptions ⁃ The Liturgy of the Hours in Medieval Literature ⁃ Temporality and the Canonical Hours ⁃ Saints lives, cults and offices Please send an abstract of up to 250 words and short biography including your affiliation(s) to Rhiannon Warren (rlow2@cam.ac.uk) by the 31st of August 2025

#CFP for #IMC2026 'New Approaches to Medieval Office Liturgy'. @imc-leeds.bsky.social

Please share widely and get in touch if you have any questions!

8 months ago 11 10 0 1
We are particularly, but not exclusively, interested in how actors like bishops, clerics, monks and nuns, local administrators, state officials and landowners navigated the project to establish Christian orthodoxy on the ground. We propose a broad approach which encourages contributions that analyse administrative documents, ‘canon’, imperial or other legal and normative literature and juristic papyri, hagiographies, epistolography, narrative sources and epigraphic and archaeological evidence. How were doctrinal conflicts enmeshed within larger socioeconomic dynamics, i.e. of consumption, production and labour? How were economic or financial concerns deployed rhetorically in narratives attempting to establish or defend ‘orthodoxy’? How did the emergence, use and/or development of the concept of heresy affect relationships around ‘public’ or ‘private’ property, or vice versa? How did ecclesiastical and lay authorities approach questions regarding the administration of property in situations of doctrinal strife, to what ends and with what consequences? How did specific properties gain religious significance in these contexts, and how might this have affected economic relationships? How did the issues of property influence and were influenced by the questions of gender? We also welcome methodological or theoretical reflections on approaching the complex relationship between orthodoxy and economy in the late antique era.

The resulting sessions will offer a space for discussion about the manifold unexplored economic dimensions of doctrinal conflict, orthodoxy and heresy in the late antique world. The sessions will have pre-circulated papers and we are aiming at publishing an open access special issue with the resulting articles.

Please contact Dr Cinnamon Ducasse (cinnamon.ducasse@uni-erfurt.de) and Dr Mateusz Fafinski (mateusz.fafinski@uni-erfurt.de) with your proposed title and a short abstract (no more than 300 words) by 1st of September 2025.

We are particularly, but not exclusively, interested in how actors like bishops, clerics, monks and nuns, local administrators, state officials and landowners navigated the project to establish Christian orthodoxy on the ground. We propose a broad approach which encourages contributions that analyse administrative documents, ‘canon’, imperial or other legal and normative literature and juristic papyri, hagiographies, epistolography, narrative sources and epigraphic and archaeological evidence. How were doctrinal conflicts enmeshed within larger socioeconomic dynamics, i.e. of consumption, production and labour? How were economic or financial concerns deployed rhetorically in narratives attempting to establish or defend ‘orthodoxy’? How did the emergence, use and/or development of the concept of heresy affect relationships around ‘public’ or ‘private’ property, or vice versa? How did ecclesiastical and lay authorities approach questions regarding the administration of property in situations of doctrinal strife, to what ends and with what consequences? How did specific properties gain religious significance in these contexts, and how might this have affected economic relationships? How did the issues of property influence and were influenced by the questions of gender? We also welcome methodological or theoretical reflections on approaching the complex relationship between orthodoxy and economy in the late antique era. The resulting sessions will offer a space for discussion about the manifold unexplored economic dimensions of doctrinal conflict, orthodoxy and heresy in the late antique world. The sessions will have pre-circulated papers and we are aiming at publishing an open access special issue with the resulting articles. Please contact Dr Cinnamon Ducasse (cinnamon.ducasse@uni-erfurt.de) and Dr Mateusz Fafinski (mateusz.fafinski@uni-erfurt.de) with your proposed title and a short abstract (no more than 300 words) by 1st of September 2025.

It is this time of the year again! We are organising @imc-leeds.bsky.social sessions on orthodoxy and economy in late antiquity for the #IMC2026! Have a look at our CfP and come and join us next year!

Do get in touch and please share widely!

8 months ago 35 21 1 1
Call for papers for the 2026 Leeds IMC for "Old English in the Long 19th Century". Deadline 1 Sept. 2025. Description reads: 
Throughout the long 19th c., various advances were made in the study of Old English, ranging from the 1st edition of Beowulf (1815) the outlining of OE metre by Eduard Sievers, as well as discoveries of such OE texts as the Vercelli Book, the Épinal-Erfurt Glossary and the Brussels Cross. When approaching OE in the 21st c., it is impossible to deny the impact of 19th-c. scholarship. When we refer to titles of such OE poems as The Wanderer, The Seafarer and The Wife’s Lament, we are using titles bestowed on these texts by 19th-c. scholars. Several standard editions of OE texts were made in the 19th c. or heavily rely on earlier, 19th-c. editions. Lexicographical tools with a relevance for OE, including Bosworth and Toller’s An Anglo-Saxon Dictionary, A Thesaurus of Old English and the Oxford English Dictionary, also have their roots firmly in 19th-c. philological practices and how OE is taught still relies on paradigms and set texts from the 19th c. Thus, when studying OE, we often have to engage with material on multiple temporal levels, considering not just our own concepts of the early medieval period but also how that period was understood by 19th-c. scholars. Paper proposals are welcome from scholars from all academic backgrounds. Possible topics include but are not limited to:
- Discoveries of OE texts
- Disputes about linguistic or literary interpretations of OE
- Disciplinary developments in the field of OE studies
- Personal, religious, political and ideological motivations for the study of OE
- Biographical contributions about scholars of OE
- Scholarly correspondence on OE matters
- Editing and printing of OE texts
- Teaching of OE
Please send an abstract (300 words) to Rachel A. Fletcher (r.a.fletcher@hum.leidenuniv.nl), Ellen Gallimore (ellen.gallimore@york.ac.uk) and Thijs Porck (m.h.porck@hum.leidenuniv.nl).

Call for papers for the 2026 Leeds IMC for "Old English in the Long 19th Century". Deadline 1 Sept. 2025. Description reads: Throughout the long 19th c., various advances were made in the study of Old English, ranging from the 1st edition of Beowulf (1815) the outlining of OE metre by Eduard Sievers, as well as discoveries of such OE texts as the Vercelli Book, the Épinal-Erfurt Glossary and the Brussels Cross. When approaching OE in the 21st c., it is impossible to deny the impact of 19th-c. scholarship. When we refer to titles of such OE poems as The Wanderer, The Seafarer and The Wife’s Lament, we are using titles bestowed on these texts by 19th-c. scholars. Several standard editions of OE texts were made in the 19th c. or heavily rely on earlier, 19th-c. editions. Lexicographical tools with a relevance for OE, including Bosworth and Toller’s An Anglo-Saxon Dictionary, A Thesaurus of Old English and the Oxford English Dictionary, also have their roots firmly in 19th-c. philological practices and how OE is taught still relies on paradigms and set texts from the 19th c. Thus, when studying OE, we often have to engage with material on multiple temporal levels, considering not just our own concepts of the early medieval period but also how that period was understood by 19th-c. scholars. Paper proposals are welcome from scholars from all academic backgrounds. Possible topics include but are not limited to: - Discoveries of OE texts - Disputes about linguistic or literary interpretations of OE - Disciplinary developments in the field of OE studies - Personal, religious, political and ideological motivations for the study of OE - Biographical contributions about scholars of OE - Scholarly correspondence on OE matters - Editing and printing of OE texts - Teaching of OE Please send an abstract (300 words) to Rachel A. Fletcher (r.a.fletcher@hum.leidenuniv.nl), Ellen Gallimore (ellen.gallimore@york.ac.uk) and Thijs Porck (m.h.porck@hum.leidenuniv.nl).

CFP for @imc-leeds.bsky.social for July 2026: "Old English in the Long Nineteenth Century". Please share widely! Deadline for abstracts 1 September 2025. #IMC2026

8 months ago 23 12 1 3
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CfP related to Royal Studies for @imc-leeds.bsky.social 2026. Get your proposals in before the 25th September!

8 months ago 10 7 0 0
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Call for papers for the 2026 Leeds IMC, please feel free to share widely

8 months ago 5 6 0 2
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CFP: Leeds IMC 2026
The Society for Fourteenth-Century Studies invites papers on any aspect of the long 14thC across the Plantagenet estates.
📅 6–9 July 2026
📨 Title + abstract by 31 Aug 2025
✉️ Laura.Tompkins@hrp.org.uk & dgreen@harlaxton.ac.uk

8 months ago 17 11 0 0
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Call for Papers (deadline: 1 September, 2025):
'Old English in the Long Nineteenth Century'
(IMC Leeds, 6-9 July 2026)
@imc-leeds.bsky.social

8 months ago 5 4 0 0
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The Call for Papers for our strand on the Middle Ages in Modern Games for next year's @imc-leeds.bsky.social is now open with the conference theme of 'Temporalities'. Please circulate to any interested parties. Deadline 17 September. Text here: middleagesinmoderngames.net/announcement...

8 months ago 22 8 0 1
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CfP @imc-leeds.bsky.social 2026:

New Studies in Old Norse Hagiography

Session Jointly Sponsored by the Norse Hagiography Network and the Viking Society for Northern Research

Deadline: August 24.

[Alt text in thread]

8 months ago 12 11 1 1
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Working on early/high medieval trading places, exchange, contact? Check out our call for papers for #IMC2026 ! ⛵️
@imc-leeds.bsky.social @rmoudheden.bsky.social

8 months ago 8 6 0 0
Noblewomen played a central role in medieval society. They cultivated important networks both within their families and wider society, acting as rulers and politicians, as well as cultural and religious patrons and intermediaries. This is an ever-expanding field of research, with scholars exploring the plethora of roles that noblewomen could play in medieval life, and the ways in which they were viewed and represented by wider society. This strand of sessions will bring together scholars who work on medieval noblewomen – to build on and develop the discourse that has developed over the past few decades, with the continued aim of building a global network of scholars working in this vibrant area of research. 
We welcome papers spanning from across the medieval world, as well as across disciplines.
Topics could include, but are not limited to: Noblewomen in time; 	Noblewomen’s involvement in education and learning; Noblewomen’s roles in politics and political life; Noblewomen and society; Noblewomen and the family; Noblewomen and the law; Noblewomen and patronage; Noblewomen and material culture; Noblewomen and literature; Ecclesiastical women and interactions with religious communities; Historiographical approaches to noblewomen.

We invite proposals for 20-minute papers on all aspects of research relating to noblewomen. Expressions of interest and/or queries should be directed to NoblewomenIMC2020@gmail.com by 7pm on Friday 5 September 2025, with an abstract of no more than 250 words and a short biography.

Noblewomen played a central role in medieval society. They cultivated important networks both within their families and wider society, acting as rulers and politicians, as well as cultural and religious patrons and intermediaries. This is an ever-expanding field of research, with scholars exploring the plethora of roles that noblewomen could play in medieval life, and the ways in which they were viewed and represented by wider society. This strand of sessions will bring together scholars who work on medieval noblewomen – to build on and develop the discourse that has developed over the past few decades, with the continued aim of building a global network of scholars working in this vibrant area of research. We welcome papers spanning from across the medieval world, as well as across disciplines. Topics could include, but are not limited to: Noblewomen in time; Noblewomen’s involvement in education and learning; Noblewomen’s roles in politics and political life; Noblewomen and society; Noblewomen and the family; Noblewomen and the law; Noblewomen and patronage; Noblewomen and material culture; Noblewomen and literature; Ecclesiastical women and interactions with religious communities; Historiographical approaches to noblewomen. We invite proposals for 20-minute papers on all aspects of research relating to noblewomen. Expressions of interest and/or queries should be directed to NoblewomenIMC2020@gmail.com by 7pm on Friday 5 September 2025, with an abstract of no more than 250 words and a short biography.

CfP: The Noblewomen Network @imc-leeds.bsky.social 2026. If you're working on medieval noblewomen, we'd love to hear from you! Please share widely.

Deadline for abstracts: 5 September.

#IMC2026

8 months ago 32 28 0 0