Imagined Communities: Constructing Collective Identities in Medieval Europe
Maria Curie-Skłodowska University
Lublin 15-17. 10.2014
/Program wstępny/
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Abstrakty wystąpień
Wednesday
Department’s Council Room, New Humanities
1500 Opening speech – Dean of the Department of Humanities Robert Litwiński, Research project leader Andrzej Pleszczyński
Panel I: Dynasty and State
1530-1600 Huw Pryce (University of Bangor, Wales) – Dynastic Identity in XIIth- and XIIIth-century Wales;
1600-1630 Dániel Bagi (Pécsi Tudományegyetem, Hungary) – Genealogical fictions in traditions of the Czech, Hungarian, Polish and Ruthenian dynasties in the 11th-13th centuries;
1630-1700 Zbigniew Dalewski (IH PAN Warsaw) – Strategies of creating dynastic identity in Central Europe in the 10th-13th centuries;
1700-1730 Discussion
1730-1745 Coffee break
1745-1815 Tomasz Tarczyński (UMCS Lublin) – The King and the Saint against the Scots. The shaping of English national identity in the XIIth-century narrative of king Athelstan’s victory over his northern neighbours. (Miracula s. Johannis episcopi Eboracensis);
1815-1845 Wojciech Michalski (Wojewódzka Biblioteka im. H. Łopacińskiego w Lublinie) Creating knightly identities? Scottish lords and their leaders in the narratives about great moments in community’s history (between John Barbour’s The Bruce and Harry’s The Wallace);
1845-1915 Discussion
Thursday
Room 31, New Humanities
Panel I: Dynasty and State, pt. 2
930-1000 Karol Szejgiec (UMCS Lublin) – The identity of the secular elites in the late Middle Ages based on the example of ‘Gesta consulum Andegavorum’ (from the mid-12th c.);
1000-1030 Georg Jostkleigrewe (Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität Münster, Germany) – The role of the expression ‘rex imperator in regno suo’ in creating the identity of the political elite in late medieval France;;
1030-1100 Tatiana Vikul (Ukraine’s National Academy of Science, Kiev) – The perception of relations between the rulers and assemblies in Ruthenian sources from the 10th to the 13th century;
1100-1130 Discussion
1130-1145Coffee break
Panel II: Spirituality
1145-1215 Paweł Kras (KUL Lublin) - The image of heretics in Catholic writings in the late Middle Ages;
1215-1245 Michał Tomaszek (UMCS Lublin) – Objects, places and space in the process of building of monastic identities: few examples from 10th, 11th and 12th centuries;
1245-1315 Discussion
1315-1445 Lunch
Panel III: Regional Identities
1445-1515 Przemysław Wiszewski (UWr Wrocław) - Region as a social construct in medieval Central Europe. Consequences of multilayered attachment of Europeans (11th-15th);
1515-1545 Euryn Rhys Roberts (University of Bangor, Wales) A surfeit of identity? Regional solidarities, Welsh identity and the idea of Britain;
1545-1615 Stanisław Rosik (UWr Wrocław) – Shaping of post-barbarian identity: example of Pomerania in the 11-12th century;
1615-1715 Paweł Derecki (UW Warszawa) – Adventus Saxonum in Britanniam. The narrative revisited.
1715-1745 Discussion
1900 Banquet
Friday
Panel IV: Ethnos
930-1000 Mariusz Bartnicki (UMCS Lublin), Describing the Ruthenian ethnos and foreign people in Kievian and Galichian-Volodimir chronicles in the 12th-13th centuries;
1000-1030 Joanna Sobiesiak (UMCS Lublin) – Czechs and Germans – natives and foreigners in the Czech chronicles from Cosmas of Prague (12th c.) to Dalimil (14th c.);
1030-1100 Martin Nodl (Univerzita Karlova Praha, Czechy) - The national conflicts at Praque University in the late 15th century;
1100-1115 Coffee break
Panel V: Gender and self-government communities
1115-1145 PrzemysławTyszka (UMCS Lublin) - Defining masculinity and femininity in penitence books from the 6th until the 11th century.;
1145-1215 Andrzej Pleszczyński (UMCS Lublin) – The identity of self-government groups (guilds and communes) in the Middle Ages.
1215-1245Discussion and the conclusion of the conference
1245 Lunch