Citizenship Discourses in the Early Middle Ages

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Guest Reseachers Autumn 2019

We are pleased to receive this autumn two guest researchers from abroad: Prof. Dr. Gordon Blennemann from the Université de Montréal and Thomas Langely MPhil from the University of Cambridge. They will stay with us in the months November and December. Not only do we look forward to inspiring discussions but also to their presentations on November 28. (see also: Flyer guest lectures 28 Nov 2019

Prof. Dr Gordon Blennemann

Guest Researcher (November-December 2019)

I’m a professor  in the history department of Université de Montréal where I got appointed in 2014, holding before positions in Erlangen and in Paris. After several shorter visits to Utrecht (as for a UCMS-lecture in November 2018), I’m glad to be able to stay for a longer period (November 1 to December 15) in this beautiful town with its vibrant scientific community.

My current research focus is a book project which studies the ways how the idea of martyrdom was modelled and used as a mindset within early medieval societies. It is based on hagiographical case studies in the Rhône Valley between 500 and 700. I’m also interested in monastic history especially in the history of religious women. In general, I tend to say that I’m an historian with special interest in the Middle Ages always searching for new intellectual inspirations. I look forward to stimulating discussions with fellow historians and colleagues of other disciplines during my time as a guest researcher.

Thomas Langley MPhil

Guest Researcher (November 2019)

I’m a British PhD student at Peterhouse, University of Cambridge (Arts and Humanities Research Council Doctoral Training Partnership, 2017-20).  I study civic patriotic political language in the fourth century Greek sections of the Roman Empire, with a particular focus on Basil of Caesarea, Julian the Apostate, and Gregory Nazianzus.  I’m interested in comparing different approaches to civic patriotism in Greek-Roman Christian and pagan sources, and in the way civic patriotic ideas and terms were adopted, modified and rejected in late Roman elite discourse.  This transposes themes from my MPhil research, where I worked on early medieval episcopal histories and their portrayal of wealth and power in Rome and Ravenna.  Being attached to the Cambridge-based Impact of the Ancient City project, I’m thus looking forward greatly to staying with Els Rose and the NWO VICI Citizenship Discourses Project here in Utrecht, continuing the collaboration that our two projects began in 2018, augmenting it with the Citizen in Late Antiquity Conference this November, and otherwise enjoying the university’s intellectual life and academic stimulation.