communities and networks in late medieval europe (c. 1300

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COMMUNITIES AND NETWORKS IN LATE MEDIEVAL EUROPE (c. 1300–1500) Online Conference, 9–10 September 2021 WordPress: https://communitiesandnetworks21.wordpress.com/ Twitter: @commsandnets21 Registration: https://communitiesandnetworks21.eventbrite.co.uk All times in British Summer Time (BST) THURSDAY 9 SEPTEMBER 09:00–09:15 Welcome (Teresa Barucci and Matthew Coulter, University of Cambridge) 09:15–10:45 Session 1: Communities in the Making (Chair: Matthew Coulter) Invited Speaker: Prof. Christina Lutter (University of Vienna), ‘How Do Groups Become Communities? Urban Spaces of Belonging in Late Medieval Central Europe’ Dr Joana Balsa de Pinho (University of Lisbon), ‘A Community and Networking Experience in Late Medieval Portugal: Art and Material Culture of the Confraternities of Mercy’ Dr Julien Le Mauff (Paris-Sorbonne University), ‘ Communitas perfecta and Regimes of Exclusion in Aristotelian Literature (13 th –14 th Centuries): The Growing Wariness towards Peregrins and Gens de mer 10:45–11:00 Break 11:00–12:30 Session 2: Networks of Strangers? (Chair: Dr Rodrigo García-Velasco, University of Cambridge) Dr Monica White (University of Nottingham), ‘Lands of Opportunity in the Medieval Orthodox World’ Filip Vukuša (Bielefeld University), ‘Networks of Newcomers from the Apennine Peninsula in 14 th -Century Zadar’ Guillermo López Juan (University of Valencia/University of Picardie – Jules Verne), ‘A Close-Knitted Community: Interrelation, Integration and Assimilation of the Conversos of Valencia (1391–1440)’ 12:30–13:30 Lunch Break 13:30–15:00 Session 3: Travel and Trade Networks (Chair: Jessica Tearney-Pearce, University of Cambridge) Invited Speaker: Dr Flávio Miranda (University of Porto), ‘Caught in a Web: Merchant Communities and Commercial Networks between Portugal and Flanders, 1300–1500’ Dr Prajakti Kalra (University of Cambridge), ‘The Mongol Empire and the Making of European Communities in Eurasia’ Annabel Hancock (University of Oxford), ‘Networks of Trade: The Benefits and Challenges of Using Network Analysis to Explore Connections in Literature, Archaeology, and Commercial Contracts, c. 1150–1400’ 15:00–15:15 Break 15:15–17:15 Session 4: Economics, Finance, and Networks (Chair: Annabel Hancock) Nicolò Zennaro (University of Antwerp; presenting author), Dr Jeroen Puttevils (University of Antwerp), and Prof. Francesco Guidi Bruscoli (University of Florence), Per chagione della Moria: A Social Network Analysis of an Epidemic Shock in the Datini Correspondence’ Dr Julia Exarchos (RWTH Aachen University), ‘The Networks of the Labouring Poor in the Late Medieval Rhineland’ Aviya Doron (Hebrew University of Jerusalem), ‘Communities of Credit or Communities of Debt? Jewish-Christian Financial Networks in 14 th -Century Frankfurt-am-Main’ Angus Russell (University of Cambridge), ‘Unjust Collection: Institutional and Monastic (Un-)Networks in Northern Rus’’ 17:15–17:30 Break 17:30–19:00 Keynote Session (Introduction: Prof. Nora Berend, University of Cambridge) Prof. Felicitas Schmieder (FernUniversität in Hagen), ‘Did “Magdeburg Law” Create a Network of Culturally-Mixed Urban Communities across Central Europe?’

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Page 1: Communities and Networks in Late Medieval Europe (c. 1300

COMMUNITIES AND NETWORKS IN LATE MEDIEVAL EUROPE (c. 1300–1500) Online Conference, 9–10 September 2021

WordPress: https://communitiesandnetworks21.wordpress.com/ Twitter: @commsandnets21 Registration: https://communitiesandnetworks21.eventbrite.co.uk

All times in British Summer Time (BST)

THURSDAY 9 SEPTEMBER

09:00–09:15 Welcome (Teresa Barucci and Matthew Coulter, University of Cambridge)

09:15–10:45 Session 1: Communities in the Making (Chair: Matthew Coulter)

Invited Speaker: Prof. Christina Lutter (University of Vienna), ‘How Do Groups Become Communities? Urban Spaces of Belonging in Late Medieval Central Europe’

Dr Joana Balsa de Pinho (University of Lisbon), ‘A Community and Networking Experience in Late Medieval Portugal: Art and Material Culture of the Confraternities of Mercy’

Dr Julien Le Mauff (Paris-Sorbonne University), ‘Communitas perfecta and Regimes of Exclusion in Aristotelian Literature (13th–14th Centuries): The Growing Wariness towards Peregrins and Gens de mer’

10:45–11:00 Break

11:00–12:30 Session 2: Networks of Strangers? (Chair: Dr Rodrigo García-Velasco, University of Cambridge)

Dr Monica White (University of Nottingham), ‘Lands of Opportunity in the Medieval Orthodox World’

Filip Vukuša (Bielefeld University), ‘Networks of Newcomers from the Apennine Peninsula in 14th-Century Zadar’ Guillermo López Juan (University of Valencia/University of Picardie – Jules Verne), ‘A Close-Knitted Community: Interrelation, Integration and Assimilation of the Conversos of Valencia (1391–1440)’

12:30–13:30 Lunch Break

13:30–15:00 Session 3: Travel and Trade Networks (Chair: Jessica Tearney-Pearce, University of Cambridge)

Invited Speaker: Dr Flávio Miranda (University of Porto), ‘Caught in a Web: Merchant Communities and Commercial Networks between Portugal and Flanders, 1300–1500’

Dr Prajakti Kalra (University of Cambridge), ‘The Mongol Empire and the Making of European Communities in Eurasia’

Annabel Hancock (University of Oxford), ‘Networks of Trade: The Benefits and Challenges of Using Network Analysis to Explore Connections in Literature, Archaeology, and Commercial Contracts, c. 1150–1400’

15:00–15:15 Break

15:15–17:15 Session 4: Economics, Finance, and Networks (Chair: Annabel Hancock)

Nicolò Zennaro (University of Antwerp; presenting author), Dr Jeroen Puttevils (University of Antwerp), and Prof. Francesco Guidi Bruscoli (University of Florence), ‘Per chagione della Moria: A Social Network Analysis of an Epidemic Shock in the Datini Correspondence’

Dr Julia Exarchos (RWTH Aachen University), ‘The Networks of the Labouring Poor in the Late Medieval Rhineland’

Aviya Doron (Hebrew University of Jerusalem), ‘Communities of Credit or Communities of Debt? Jewish-Christian Financial Networks in 14th-Century Frankfurt-am-Main’

Angus Russell (University of Cambridge), ‘Unjust Collection: Institutional and Monastic (Un-)Networks in Northern Rus’’

17:15–17:30 Break

17:30–19:00 Keynote Session (Introduction: Prof. Nora Berend, University of Cambridge)

Prof. Felicitas Schmieder (FernUniversität in Hagen), ‘Did “Magdeburg Law” Create a Network of Culturally-Mixed Urban Communities across Central Europe?’

Page 2: Communities and Networks in Late Medieval Europe (c. 1300

Background image: Master of the Small Passion,  Martyrdom of St Ursula at Cologne  (c. 1411), Wallraf-Richartz Museum, Cologne (source: Wikimedia Commons)

FRIDAY 10 SEPTEMBER

09:00–09:15 Welcome

09:15–10:45 Session 5: Urban Networks (Chair: Teresa Barucci)

Invited Speaker: Prof. Jan Dumolyn (Ghent University), ‘Guild Politics in the Medieval Low Countries: Class, Communities and Networks’

Dr Marios Dimitriadis (National and Kapodistrian University of Athens), ‘Drama as a Means of Networking for the World of Labour and a Field for the Debate on Social Hierarchy in Late Medieval English Towns’

Ward Leloup (Free University of Brussels/Ghent University), ‘“All Good Friends”? Economic and Social Relations of Leatherworkers in Late Medieval Bruges’

10:45–11:00 Break

11:00–12:30 Session 6: Material Culture and Social Networks (Chair: Rebecca Field, University of Cambridge)

Dr Natalie Calder (Queen’s University Belfast) and Dr Hannah Schühle-Lewis (University of Kent), ‘Theorising the Early Guildhall Library’s Social and Codicological Networks’

Johanna-Pauline Thöne (University of Oslo), ‘Late Medieval Music Manuscripts: Diachronic Testimonies to Musical and Cultural Networks, c. 1400’

Róisín Donohoe (University of Cambridge), ‘“To my Daughter”: Childbirth Networks in Late Medieval English Parish Communities’

12:30–13:30 Lunch Break

13:30–15:30 Session 7: Mobility and Communication (Chair: Dr Luca Zenobi, University of Cambridge)

Invited Speaker: Dr Justyna Wubs-Mrozewicz (University of Amsterdam), ‘Merchants’ Marks in Premodern Northern Europe: Communicating Networks’

Chiara Melchionno (Scuola Superiore Meridionale of Naples), ‘Qui nescit fingere nescit regnare: The Use of Paroemie in Italian Diplomatic Letters of the 15 th Century and the Building of a Linguistic and Political Network’

Dr Marco Ciocchetti (University of Rome Tor Vergata), ‘Networks and Exchanges in the Cardinals’ College in the First Half of the Fourteenth Century’

Dr Tamás Kiss (Eötvös Loránd University) and Dr Stephen Pow (St Petersburg State University), ‘The Expansion of Social Networks in the Late Middle Ages from Samarkand to Castile: The Case Study of Two Medieval Women’

15:30–15:45 Break

15:45–17:15 Session 8: Political and Dynastic Networks (Chair: Dr Vedran Sulovsky, University of Cambridge)

Dr Christa Birkel (Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf), ‘The Foreign Prince and the Realm: On the Difficulty of Developing a Community in Late Medieval Luxembourg (c. 1380–1440)’

Simon Bürcky (University of Giessen), ‘Dynastic Networks of the Non-Princely High Nobility in the Holy Roman Empire during the 15th Century’

Giovanni Contel (Sapienza University of Rome), ‘The Italian Contribution to the “Imperial Community” of Maximilian I during the First Italian Wars (c. 1490–1520)’

17:15–17:30 Break

17:30–18:30 Concluding Session (Introduction: Prof. Jan Dumolyn)

Prof. Wim Blockmans (Leiden University), Concluding Remarks

End of Conference

For further information, please visit the links above or email the organizers (Teresa Barucci and Matthew Coulter) at [email protected].

This conference is made possible by the generous support of the following sponsors: