News
Medieval Icelandic Manuscripts Lecture and Workshop hosted by the OSU Saga Club
Introduction to Medieval Icelandic Manucripts: Lecture
Ohio Union, Ohio Staters Inc. Founders Room, 1739 N. High Street
2 pm
Elizabeth Ashman Rowe (Department of Anglo-Saxon,…
New novel about the Lindisfarne Gospels
Eadfrith: Scribe of Lindisfarne
by Michelle Treeve
This is the tale of the making of a masterwork, a landmark in the human journey — the Lindisfarne Gospels, one of the world’s most…
Congratulations to Quinn Radziszewski
Quinn Radziszewski received a Nicholas Howe Award from the Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies in support of her enrollment at the Summer Institute for Neo-Latin Studies at Sassoferrato,…
Graduate students Brandon Bourgeois and Kelly Dugan have been accepted
Graduate students Brandon Bourgeois and Kelly Dugan have been accepted to the Greek Palaeography seminar to be held at Lincoln College, Oxford in July, 2014.
Quinn Radziszewski has been awarded a fellowship to attend the Neo-Latin Seminar
Quinn Radziszewski has been awarded a fellowship to attend the Neo-Latin Seminar held at Sassoferrato, Italy in June, 2014. This year the theme of the seminar is "Orpheus in the Renaisance." Quinn…
Virginia Brown Endowed Chair in Latin Palaeography established at Center
Through the generosity of James Hankins, Professor of History at Harvard, the Center for Epigraphical and Palaeographical Studies has established a fund to support the Virginia Brown Endowed Chair…
Consuelo Dutschke: "Cataloguing Medieval Manuscripts: Why Do We Do It This Way?"
Consuelo Dutschke (Curator of Medieval and Renaissance Manuscripts, Columbia University)
Monday, November 4, 2013 - 3:30pm - 5:00pm
448 University Hall
Lecture Event: Heather C. Key. "But Everybody Knows...! A Survey of Insular Scripts and 'Oddities'"
The OSU Saga Club and the OSU Scandinavian Department are presenting a lecture event with Heather C. Key of University College Cork. On November 14, 2013 at 2:00 pm in 150AB Thompson…
James Clark: "Reading Latin Literature in Late Medieval England"
James Clark
Professor of History, University of Exeter & Distinguished Visiting Professor in Medieval Studies
Visiting Professor, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign