Home

Home




  • Warsaw

    Study days - Europe

    Manuscripts on network(s)

    Elaborating tools for men

    Avec l’apport des technologies numériques, le travail en réseaux est aujourd’hui devenu une pratique inévitable de la recherche scientifique. Par définition, le réseau de médiévistes Ménestrel (Médiévistes sur le net : sources, travaux et références en ligne), pratique depuis sa création en 1995 la mise en relation des médiévistes de diverses communautés animés par la préoccupation de fournir, en ligne, un guide critique des ressources disponibles pour la médiévistique en France et dans les pays partenaires du réseau. Cette journée d'études est consacrée aux ressources Internet en matière de manuscrits et de bibliothèques en Pologne et en France, organisée à l'occasion de l'Assemblée générale du réseau de médiévistes « Ménestrel ».

    Read announcement

  • Lisbon

    Seminar - History

    Images and Liturgy in Portugal in the Middle Age

    The seminar Images and Liturgy in Portugal in the Middle Age, organized by the CEAACP Multidisciplinary Group Study in Arts (University of Coimbra), in partnership with the Association of Portuguese Archaeologists / Carmo Archaeological Museum, is part of the set of project initiatives of Carla Varela Fernandes’ Postdoc (Sculptures of the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries in collections of Portuguese museums. An imperative approach to a broader knowledge of the scientific reality). It aims the presentation and discussion of recent studies and reflections on works of Romanic and Gothic art existing in Portugal. It is intended to address the medieval images as part of the liturgical rituals and the buildings they were designed for. On the other hand, we’ll try to provide advances in the knowledge on the means as an iconographic innovation or aesthetic generated at a given location "moves" and appears in other geographies, serving similar purposes.

    Read announcement

  • Budapest

    Call for papers - History

    Religion in social relations

    Thematic issue of the Hungarian Historical Review 2014/4

    The social interactions of individuals and groups belonging to different denominations was and is one of the everyday experiences of social manifestations of otherness. Ever since the Middle Ages, Central Europe has been home to various and varying religious and ethnic groups who have lived side by side. The region has been a meeting point for the Latin, Orthodox, Islamic, Christian, and Jewish worlds, and the Reformation made it even more religiously diverse. We encourage the submission of papers that examine the phenomena of religious and cultural diversity in the region from the perspectives of political history and the history of ideas, and we are particularly interested in submissions that address the social, economic, and cultural aspects of religiously and denominationally diverse coexistence.

    Read announcement

RSS Selected filters

  • 2014

    Delete this filter
  • Middle Ages

    Delete this filter
  • Central and Eastern Europe

    Delete this filter

Choose a filter

Events

event format

    Languages

    Secondary languages

    Years

    • 2014

    Subjects

    Places

    Search OpenEdition Search

    You will be redirected to OpenEdition Search