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Wednesday, March 09, 2016

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Welcome all to our last offer-holder open day for 2016!

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Law Research Seminar: ‘Localism as a form of regulatory governance in the planning process’
S2.12, ÌÇÐÄTV Law School, Social Studies Building

Speaker: Barbara Bogusz, Leicester University

All research seminars are held in S2.12 and will start at 12:30pm with lunch in S2.09.

The seminar will formally start at 1pm.

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Work In Progress Seminar, Visiting Scholar Special
S0.19

Weekly work-in-progress Research Seminars, where we come together to share our research.

Week 9 speakers:

TBA: TBC
followed by
Amber Gartrell, Oxford: "The Epiphanies of the Dioscuri- myth or history?"
Chaired by: TBC

Papers are 20 minutes long, with 10 minutes of questions each.
All are welcome - biscuits/chocolates will be provided.

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H4.03

Presentation of Ten steps. Critical enquiries on Leopardi (Peter Lang, 2015), with Fabio Camilletti (University of ÌÇÐÄTV) and Paola Cori (University of Birmingham

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History Research Seminar: Sir Noel Malcolm 'Agents of Empire'
R0.03/4 Ramphal building
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Agents of Empire, Sir Noel Malcolm (All Soul's College, University of Oxford)
R0.03/4, Ramphal building

What makes the Mediterranean fascinating is what makes writing its history such a challenge. Noel Malcolm’s magnificent Agents of Empire uses the intertwined stories of two Albanian families – the Brunis and the Brutis – as a prism through which to view the contacts and the conflicts that made the early modern Mediterranean. As diplomats, spies, bishops, soldiers, traders and interpreters, they were mobile and multilingual. From their Albanian roots, networks of kinship and contacts stretched in all directions, crisscrossing barriers of faith and nationality.

The sheer linguistic challenge of a study like this is evident from the beginning of the book: a prefatory note offers helpful tips on the pronunciation of Turkish, Albanian, Serbo-Croat and Romanian. Malcolm’s account represents a staggering archival achievement. He draws on material in upwards of 10 languages in archives from Rome and Warsaw to Dubrovnik and Malta. The result is a work of astonishing (if, at times, almost overwhelming) richness and detail: a deftly woven tapestry of Mediterranean history that incorporates “the all-too-neglected Albanian thread that is woven into the history of 16th-century Europe”.

In its attention to the stories of the Brunis and the Brutis – frontier families practically unknown outside of specialist histories – across multiple generations, this study is a wonderful contribution to the human history of the Mediterranean. It is impossible to read Malcolm’s account without a sense of its resonances for today. Every morning, we wake up to stories of new horrors and new heroics from the Mediterranean. It remains a zone of contact and conflict, a region that both defies and defines our ideas of Europe, Asia, Africa and the world in between. Through work such as Malcolm’s, we can come closer to understanding why it continues to resist our indifference: the Mediterranean remains, as it was for the Romans, “our sea”.

John Gallagher (University of Cambridge), the Guardian, June 2015

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Medieval Seminar Series-Simon gilson-All welcome
H0.56

Spekingon 'Dante's Doctrine: Knowledge and Learning in the Commedia'

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H0.56

Prof Simon Gilson

'Dante's Doctrine: Knowledge and Learning in the Commedia'

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