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Henry, archdeacon of Huntingdon, England (ca 1088–ca 1154) has been admired for centuries as the author of the monumental Historia Anglorum. The recent discovery of the Anglicanus ortus opens a new window onto this important English... more
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      PharmacologyHistory of MedicineGarden HistoryLatin Didactic Poetry
One of the rarest afflictions to come across within twelfth century English hagiography is the double disability of being deaf and mute; in fact, of the eight hagiographic sources, and two-hundred and ninety-two accounts of individuals,... more
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    •   12  
      Twelfth-century EnglandMedieval MedicineMedieval Art, Pilgrimage, ReliquariesMedieval pilgrimage
A look at some of the evidence for twelfth century funerary effigies with some examples.
Taken from Medieval Battles, 1047 to 1295, Volume 1 (2010, ISBN 1-899376-85-2)
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    •   16  
      Medieval HistoryBritish HistoryMedieval StudiesMedieval Church History
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    •   5  
      High Medieval IrelandTwelfth-century EnglandAnglo-Norman historyLater Medieval Ireland
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    •   5  
      High Medieval IrelandTwelfth-century EnglandAnglo-Irish RelationsLater Medieval Ireland
Book review of Thomas Asbridge's Richard I: The Crusader King, and W.B Bartlett's Richard the Lionheart: The Crusader King of England
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    •   20  
      CrusadesHistory of CrusadesMedieval EnglandMedieval France
This chapter investigates the form and consequences of the English invasion of Ireland, c.1166-c.1254, situated within the wider framework of European political configurations and frontier societies. A rapid narrative of the cut and... more
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    •   20  
      Irish StudiesMedieval HistoryIrish HistoryHigh Medieval Ireland
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    •   3  
      William of MalmesburyTwelfth-century EnglandTwelfth-Century 'Renaissance
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    •   9  
      Latin LiteratureMedieval HistoryHagiographyMedieval Latin Literature
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    •   8  
      Medieval HistoryPower and Authority in the Middle AgesQueenship (Medieval History)Charters and Paleography
This article offers the first study and critical edition of the Liber de motibus planetarum (Lmp), a neglected Latin text on planetary theory that appears anonymously and without any clear indication of date or place of origin in nine... more
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    •   22  
      HistoryMedieval HistoryHistory of ScienceEnglish History
This chapter shows how a forged charter influenced the afterlife of King Edgar, founded the maritime claims of the British Empire, and shaped the legal status of the Massachusetts Bay Colony.
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    •   64  
      American LiteratureHistoryAmerican HistoryConstitutional Law
A frequently overlooked aspect of the knowledge transfer from Arabic into Latin in the twelfth century is the introduction of the Islamo-Arabic calendar, which confronted Western computists with a radically different scheme of lunar... more
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    •   14  
      History of Science and TechnologyMedieval HistoryHistory of ScienceMedieval Science
Aelred of Rievaulx died on Jan. 12, 1167, at Rievaulx Abbey, after twenty years as its abbot. Soon afterward a hagiographical life of Aelred appeared, written by Walter Daniel, a monk at Rievaulx who had apparently served as Aelred's... more
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    •   9  
      Medieval HistoryMedieval StudiesCisterciansTwelfth-century England
The thesis studies the specific problems that Muslim organisations struggle with as they navigate and position themselves amongst the churches, the state institutions and the many other relevant organisational actors in the... more
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    •   14  
      ReligionGerman StudiesPhilosophy Of ReligionIslam in Europe
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      Medieval HistoryMedieval HistoriographyTwelfth-century EnglandStoria medievale
The conference, held over three days, is comprised of twenty-five twenty-minute papers (we have no concurrent sessions, so all conference attendees can attend all papers) and three longer talks by featured speakers. This year's keynote... more
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    •   14  
      Medieval HistoryAnglo-Saxon StudiesCrusadesMedieval urban history
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    •   37  
      Medieval LiteratureMedieval HistoryMedieval StudiesMedieval English Literature
The Mediaeval Journal (2015)
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      Urban HistoryMedieval urban historyMedieval EnglandNorthern England
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    •   19  
      HistoryLatin LiteratureMedieval LiteratureMedieval History
Louée par les troubadours mais critiquée par les clercs, délaissée par son époux mais écoutée de toutes les cours royales, Aliénor d’Aquitaine a arpenté l’Occident, et même la Terre sainte, durant trois quarts de siècle. Cette activité a... more
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    •   10  
      Women's HistoryQueenship (Medieval History)Twelfth-century EnglandTwelfth-century France
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      Medieval HistoryIrish HistoryMedieval EnglandTwelfth-century England
Updated survey about glosses and commentaries on Virgil between 11th and 12th c., with 'specimina' from the commentary attributed to Hilaire d'Orléans (so-called 'Anselm of Laon') and unpublished examples taken from the manuscripts.
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      Medieval LiteratureHistory and Classical tradition studiesThe Classical TraditionAeneid
The book is devoted to one of the most fruitful and complicated periods of historiographical activity in medieval England. The work is the first research that takes into account all the survived sources of the period, dealing one way or... more
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      Medieval HistoryHistory of HistoriographyTwelfth-century EnglandAnglo-Norman history
Presented at Parenthood and Childhood in the Middle Ages, University of Edinburgh, UK, October 8-9, 2015
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      Twelfth-century EnglandMedieval FamilyMedieval Aristocratic Women
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    •   80  
      HistoryAncient HistoryEuropean HistoryIntellectual History
"This book examines the rise and fall of the aristocratic Lacy family in England, Ireland, Wales and Normandy. As one of the first truly transnational studies of individual medieval aristocrats, it provides a fresh look at lordship and... more
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    •   24  
      Medieval HistoryEarly Modern HistoryGenealogyBritish History
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    •   7  
      Anglo-Norman literature and cultureTwelfth-century EnglandAnglo-Norman historyAnglo-norman literature and hagiography.
Thesis in progress.
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    •   10  
      Medieval HistoriographyGeoffrey of MonmouthBoethiusWilliam of Malmesbury
This article examines the construction of national identity in John of Salisbury's Policraticus (c.1159). This well-known treatise has not been included in recent discussions of identities in medieval Britain. The focal point of the... more
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      Medieval HistoriographyNational IdentityMedieval EnglandEthnicity
"In the twelfth century anthologies were the most common form in which short poems in Latin such as lyrics, epigrams, and occasional verse circulated in written form among the reading public. Since twelfth-century anthologies are not... more
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      Intellectual HistoryRhetoricArabic LiteratureHigh Middle Ages
The object of this paper will be to analyse the reportage of Cardiff City’s historic FA Cup victory against Arsenal FC in 1927. Despite being a Welsh team, Cardiff City were eligible to play in the English FA Cup, and its 1927 victory has... more
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      Football (soccer)British HistoryPost-ColonialismMinority Studies
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      HistoryCultural HistoryMedieval PhilosophyArt History
Describes Roger of Hereford's pioneering integration of elements of Graeco-Arabic mathematical astronomy into the Latin discipline of 'computus'.
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      Medieval HistoryMedieval StudiesHistory of ScienceMedieval Science
Why, despite decades of research on powerful women in post-Conquest England, are those women seen as exceptions rather than the norm? This chapter considers this question as well as presenting the results of recent research on women in... more
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      Medieval HistoriographyMedieval WomenTwelfth-century EnglandAnglo-Norman history
This paper provides a close study of references to different aspects of material culture, as detailed in the chronicles of twelfth-century English historians. Scholars have long been aware of the materiality of the medieval world and the... more
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      Medieval HistoryMaterial Culture StudiesVisual CultureWilliam of Malmesbury
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    •   54  
      HistoryAncient HistoryCultural HistoryCultural Studies
"A microhistory of the case that Pope Alexander III decided in favor of the interpretation of Gratian on consent in matrimony, this study examines the life and marriage of Agnes of Essex, countess of Oxford (born 1151). The pope's... more
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      Medieval WomenMicrohistoryHistory of the FamilyWomen's Empowerment
This paper, a talk given at the International Congress of Medieval Studies in 2003, challenges us to consider what we think we know about famous historical characters. It begins with a tongue-in-cheek review of college textbook accounts... more
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      Gender HistoryMedieval HistoriographyMedieval WomenMedieval England
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    •   13  
      Anglo-Saxon StudiesCult of SaintsSaints' CultsQueenship (Medieval History)
Call for papers Orderic Vitalis: New Perspectives on the Historian and His World (9-11 April 2013, St John’s College, University of Durham) The organising committee of the Durham University Institute for Medieval and Renaissance Studies... more
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      Medieval LiteratureMedieval HistoryNarrativeMedieval Studies
The Chronicon of Marianus Scotus stands out from among the chronicles of high medieval Europe for being a pioneering exercise in historical chronology, geared towards reconciling seemingly irreconcilable data points provided by the... more
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      Medieval LiteratureHigh Middle AgesMedieval HistoryMedieval Historiography
Short article discussing a previously-unrecorded hoard of Henry I and Stephen coins found in the churchyard at St Mary’s, Dalton-in-Furness, Cumbria, in May 1859. The hoard was probably buried during the twelfth-century ‘Anarchy’ (1135–54).
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      Archaeology of CumbriaMedieval numismaticsCoins finds as archaeological artefactsCoin Hoards
To be delivered at the 94th Annual Meeting of the Medieval Academy of America in Philadelphia, PA in March 2019
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      Anglo-Norman literature and cultureTwelfth-century EnglandPetrus AlfonsiAnglo-Latin Literature
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      HagiographyKingship (Medieval History)William of MalmesburyTwelfth-century England
Article - Journal of Medieval History (2017)

http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03044181.2017.1391111
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      Anglo-Norman literature and cultureDivine ProvidenceWilliam of MalmesburyTwelfth-century England
Walcher, the prior of Great Malvern in Worcestershire (d. 1135), is a landmark figure in the history of medieval science, whose work brought the Latin computistical tradition to its apex while foreshadowing the twelfth-century Renaissance... more
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      HistoryMedieval HistoryHistory of MathematicsHistory of Education
My thesis analyses representations of madness in miracle narratives produced in England from 1090 to 1234, examining Vitae (saints’ Lives containing miracles) and Miracula (miracle collections unaccompanied by a Life). I explore the... more
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      Media StudiesMedieval HistoryHagiographyHistory of Medicine
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      William of MalmesburyTwelfth-century England
A presentation of five of the ways in which a hagiographical text is altered when it is turned into a liturgical text. The examples are taken from the liturgies of Saint Edmund of East Anglia and Saint Olaf of Norway.
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      Medieval HistoryCult of SaintsTwelfth-century EnglandMedieval Norway