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IHSHG Podcast
Confabulating History
130 episodes
1 week ago
​Join us every month for thought-provoking and educational discussions with international experts in various fields of history. Our talks feature innovative ideas and perspectives, and provide a space for exchange and exploration. Stay up-to-date with the latest developments in the world of history and connect with like-minded individuals. Watch our recorded talks on YouTube to deepen your understanding and appreciation for the past.
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History
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All content for IHSHG Podcast is the property of Confabulating History and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
​Join us every month for thought-provoking and educational discussions with international experts in various fields of history. Our talks feature innovative ideas and perspectives, and provide a space for exchange and exploration. Stay up-to-date with the latest developments in the world of history and connect with like-minded individuals. Watch our recorded talks on YouTube to deepen your understanding and appreciation for the past.
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History
Episodes (20/130)
IHSHG Podcast
Painting Heaven and Hell in the Wake of PlagueMural painting in Navarrese parish churches after 1348
Eneko is an early career scholar in the University of the Basque Country, department of Art History. He did my Ph.D. in a cotutel program between the University of Nevada and the University of the Basque Country. His dissertation titled, ‘Painting Heaven and Hell in the Wake of the Plague. A contribution to the Study of Parish Church Wall Paintings in the Kingdom of Navarre between 1348 and 1387’, deals with the art of mural painting done inside parish churches in the rural area of Navarre during the second half of the 14th century, from an interdisciplinary perspective. He gathered, a detailed local historical context, patronage of local elites and craft by painters, material used in the murals, as well as iconographic programs. Now he is expanding my research towards the general scenario of painting in this period of havoc.
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10 months ago
1 hour 8 minutes 19 seconds

IHSHG Podcast
Pandemic Chaucer: The Canterbury Tales and the Second Plague Pandemic
Lorenz Hindrichsen is a historian/cultural critic working primarily on anglophone texts (Chaucer to the Romantics) with a wide range of interests: colonial discourse, gender, visual arts, scientific writing, and travel accounts. He loves exploring new theory (CRT, temporality, spatiality, materiality, trauma theory, eco-criticism, affective turn), and he is currently working on pandemic literature (medieval/early modern), graphic trauma narratives, and religion and race in Romantic texts.
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11 months ago
1 hour 3 minutes 3 seconds

IHSHG Podcast
Gender, Symbolic Blackness and Demons in early Christian Hagiography from the Greek East
Gender, Symbolic Blackness and Demons in early Christian Hagiography from the Greek East.
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1 year ago
1 hour 4 minutes 56 seconds

IHSHG Podcast
Ambiguity of urban hospitality in the Norwegian realm

Miriam Jensen Tveit (born 1979 in Oslo) is a Norwegian historian at Nord University in Bodø.


She has her Ph.D. in Cultural and Social Sciences from the University of Tromsø in 2017, with the thesis In Search of Legal Transmission – Inheritance and Compensation for Homicide in Medieval Secular Law.[1]

Tveit has particularly worked on topics such as legal history in the early Middle Ages with particular emphasis on Western Europe.

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1 year ago
1 hour 46 seconds

IHSHG Podcast
Healing Miracles and Disability in Late Medieval Tuscany

Dr Alex Lee works on religious responses to plague in medieval Europe. She is currently a lecturer in Liberal Studies at New York University, London. Alex's book on the Bianchi of 1399 was published in 2021 with Brill, and she has published articles and chapters on plague and religion, as well as teaching with Twitter. She is currently editing a volume on disability in Higher Education based on the Medievalists with Disabilities roundtables that she organises at the annual Leeds International Medieval Congress.

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1 year ago
1 hour 2 minutes 41 seconds

IHSHG Podcast
Experiencing Climate change in the Middle Ages
Andrew Moore successfully defended his PhD thesis, “Manorial Regulation and Negotiation in a Late Medieval Environment: Land and Community at Herstmonceux, 1308-1440,” on 17 November 2021. His dissertation examines the role that environment played in the negotiation of rights and responsibilities on a fundamental socioeconomic institution of rural communities in late medieval England — the manor. It analyzes all of the extant documentation generated by the manor, especially a series of fourteenth-century court rolls, and uses it as a lens through which to observe this process. What emerges is a picture of continuous negotiation of power that affected, and was affected by, the environment. Some effects of this negotiation included the creation of new bureaucracies, the increasing standardization of procedure and documentation, and regulations promoting intensive, rather than extensive, land use. This occurred during a period of significant environmental crises, including marshland flooding, disease, and the increasingly unsustainable clearing of woodlands. Andrew is currently teaching a fourth-year seminar at St. Jerome’s University (SJU) in the University of Waterloo, and is coordinating research internships for UW’s Digital Research Arts and Graphical Environmental Networks (DRAGEN) Lab. Housed at SJU, the lab as part of the SSHRC-funded Partnership Grant, Environments of Change, directed by Dr. Steven Bednarski. Andrew is next planning to explore publication opportunities for his thesis. He is also investigating post-doctoral fellowship opportunities, with the aim to expand the geographical scope of his research to more coastal North Sea regions, and to analyze the relationship between environment and conflict in those areas during the Hundred Years’ War. The Tri-University Program in History was a great support to Andrew during his time at UW.
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1 year ago
1 hour 11 minutes 36 seconds

IHSHG Podcast
Male Homosexuality in The Galician-Portuguese Cantigas de Escárnio e Maldizer
Aleksandra Urbaniak Lecturer at the Adam Mickiewics University, Poznán COURSES COORDINATED 2022/SZ - Literature and culture of Italy I (Middle Ages) 09-LKW1k-1LW-16 2023/SL - Litarature and culture of Italy: Baroque, Classicism, Enlightenment 09-LKW4k-4LW-46 2023/SZ - (in Polish) Literatura i kultura Włoch - średniowiecze 09-LKWŚ-1LW-SNJL-11 2023/SZ - (in Polish) Literatura i kultura włoska - średniowiecze 09-LKWŚ-1LW-WN-11 2023/SZ - Literatura i kultura włoska - średniowiecze 09-S1FWL01-P13314 COURSES CONDUCTED 2022/SZ - Literature and culture of Italy I (Middle Ages) 09-LKW1k-1LW-16: discussion seminar (group 1) 2023/SL - Litarature and culture of Italy: Baroque, Classicism, Enlightenment 09-LKW4k-4LW-46: discussion seminar (group 1) 2023/SZ - (in Polish) Literatura i kultura Włoch - średniowiecze 09-LKWŚ-1LW-SNJL-11: discussion seminar (group 1) 2023/SZ - (in Polish) Literatura i kultura włoska - średniowiecze 09-LKWŚ-1LW-WN-11: discussion seminar (group 1) 2023/SZ - Literatura i kultura włoska - średniowiecze 09-S1FWL01-P13314: discussion seminar (group 1)
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1 year ago
1 hour 5 minutes 3 seconds

IHSHG Podcast
História Global da Alimentação
À Conversa com Isabel Drumond Braga Professora auxiliar com agregação da Faculdade de Letras da Universidade de Lisboa, na área de História, onde leciona desde 1990. Tem desenvolvido investigação e lecionado nas áreas de História Social, História de Género, História Cultural e História das Práticas do Quotidiano, em especial História da Alimentação, das épocas Moderna e Contemporânea. Membro de diversos projetos de investigação em Portugal, Espanha e Brasil, do qual se destaca, no presente âmbito, o projeto DIAITA: Património Alimentar da Lusofonia. Orientadora de projetos de pós-doutoramento, doutoramento e mestrado, nas áreas História da Inquisição, da História das Práticas Culturais e da História da Alimentação. Neste último âmbito tem trabalhado sobre produtos (doces, gelados, peixe e diversos produtos provenientes do continente americano); receituários (de origem leiga e conventual), literatura (provérbios e autores como Armando Ferreira), dietética e gastronomia (dietas alimentares das minorias, vegetarianismo em Portugal, gastronomia e turismo), sem esquecer a história dos menus e da sociabilidade e etiqueta à mesa, a publicidade alimentar e a economia doméstica. Publicações selecionadas BRAGA, Isabel Drumond, Das Origens do Vegetarianismo em Portugal: Amílcar de Sousa (1876-1940), o apóstolo verde, Lisboa, Biblioteca Nacional de Portugal, 2018, no prelo. ​BRAGA, Isabel Drumond, Sabores e Segredos. Receituários Conventuais Portugueses da Época Moderna, Coimbra, Imprensa da Universidade de Coimbra, Annablume, 2015, 412pp. ISBN 978-989-26-1079-5. ISBN Digital 978-989-26-1080-1. ​BRAGA, Isabel Drumond, Os Menus em Portugal. Para uma História das Artes de servir à Mesa, Lisboa, Chaves Ferreira Publicações, 2006, 240 pp. ISBN 972-794-264-4. Versão inglesa sob o título Menus. Towards a history of the art of serving at table, Lisboa, Chaves Ferreira Publicações, 2006, 240 pp. ISBN 972-8987-07-2. BRAGA, Isabel Drumond, Do Primeiro Almoço à Ceia. Estudos de História da Alimentação, Sintra, Colares Editora, 2004, 160 pp. ISBN 972-782-070-0. BRAGA, Isabel Drumond, “Carne e Peixe: Uma Hierarquia de Consumos Alimentares”, Animais e Companhia na História de Portugal, coordenação de Isabel Drumond Braga e Paulo Drumond Braga, Lisboa, Círculo de Leitores, 2015, pp. 35-85. BRAGA, Isabel Drumond, “Confeiteiros na Época Moderna: Cultura Material, Produção e Conflituosidade”, Ensaios sobre o Património Alimentar Luso-Brasileiro, coordenação de Carmen Soares e Irene Coutinho de Macedo, Coimbra, Imprensa da Universidade de Coimbra, 2014, pp. 165-192.
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1 year ago
55 minutes 27 seconds

IHSHG Podcast
How to make a ring jump in the manner of a locust
Vanessa’s research explores the medieval understanding and appreciation of magic tricks, particularly sleight-of-hand and chemical tricks, preserved in medieval manuscript recipe collections as a form of domestic play and popular science, meaning a general rather than specialist engagement with science and scientific principles, in the Middle Ages. As both material chemical practices and interpersonal performances, magic tricks are a valuable tool for interrogating how late medieval Europeans negotiated their relationships with the physical world, deceit, and each other. Medieval magic tricks intersect with artisanal craft practices; elite dining culture and cooking practices; theatre and public performance; literature; and alchemy, science, and technology. They offer an avenue for the analysis of play and experimentation across a broad spectrum of medieval society, showing how the display and collection of chemical knowledge was integrated into the popular culture of medieval Europe. Medieval magic tricks had a broad audience that cannot be differentiated by social or occupational setting. Recipes for entertaining chemical tricks were present in universities and monasteries, in the home and on the stage, at the banquet and in the kitchen. The experience of these tricks, and related phenomena such as pranks, required a specific relationship between the performer and audience. Combining the theory of active disbelief pioneered by modern magicians and the presentation of deceit in medieval literary genres, Vanessa argues that this relationship was predicated on a shared understanding of possibility underpinned by a willing consent to be deceived. Finally, Vanessa addresses the practical reality of magic tricks demonstrating that the properties of substances manipulated for magic tricks, such as mercury’s reactivity, were the same as those used by specialist craftsmen and alchemists. Across art technology, alchemy, and magic tricks, the same chemical process could be understood functionally, analytically, and ludically and consumed on a spectrum from practical procedure to intellectual record.
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1 year ago
1 hour 1 minute 47 seconds

IHSHG Podcast
After 1177: The Survival of Civilization
Dr. Eric H. Cline is Professor of Classical and Ancient Near Eastern Studies and Anthropology, the former Chair of the Department of Classical and Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations, and the current Director of the GWU Capitol Archaeological Institute. He is a National Geographic Explorer, a Fulbright scholar, an NEH Public Scholar, a Getty Scholar, and an award-winning teacher and author. In May 2015, he was awarded an honorary doctoral degree (honoris causa) from Muhlenberg College. An archaeologist and ancient historian by training, Dr. Cline’s primary fields of study are biblical archaeology, the military history of the Mediterranean world from antiquity to present, and the international connections between Greece, Egypt, and the Near East during the Late Bronze Age (1700-1100 BCE). He is an experienced and active field archaeologist, with more than 30 seasons of excavation and survey to his credit since 1980 in Israel, Egypt, Jordan, Cyprus, Greece, Crete, and the United States. He is perhaps best known for his work on collapse and resilience in the ancient world, specifically at the end of the second millennium BCE and the early first millennium BCE in the Aegean and Eastern Mediterranean, epitomized by the best-selling 1177 BC: The Year Civilization Collapsed (Princeton 2014; revised edition 2021).
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1 year ago
1 hour 3 minutes 45 seconds

IHSHG Podcast
How humans used law to shape civilization
Fernanda Pirie uses anthropological and comparative methods to compare legal practices and texts from around the world. She has carried out ethnographic fieldwork at both ends of the Tibetan plateau and also conducted historical work on Tibetan legal texts. The Rule of Laws: a 4,000-year quest to order the world (Profile Books, Basic Books, 2021), her most recent book, is a global history of law. It traces the rise and fall of the world’s major legal systems and compares examples of historic law-making worldwide. In her earlier monograph, The Anthropology of Law (OUP, 2013), Fernanda addresses the nature of law as a social form, as well as analysing its role in societies. This approach builds on themes and debates developed in the Oxford Legalism project, a collaboration between scholars from anthropology, history, and other disciplines, which produced four edited volumes (Legalism, OUP, 4 vols). Fernanda’s research on Tibetan legal texts was funded by the AHRC and established a web-site containing source material (https://tibetanlaw.org/project) as well as several publications on the nature of Tibetan law and its relationship with Buddhism. She has also has worked with historians of the region in two ANR/DFG projects to develop the social history of Tibet. Fernanda is currently writing on themes in global and historic comparative law, while developing a further research project on historic Tibetan legal texts. Qualifications DPhil in Social Anthropology (Oxford) 2002, MSc in Social Anthropology (UCL) 1998, Called to the Bar 1988, BA in French and Philosophy (Oxford) 1986.
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1 year ago
1 hour 41 seconds

IHSHG Podcast
A Ocupação Romana do Algarve
Formação académica: 2009 - Doutoramento em História, especialização em Arqueologia, pela Universidade de Lisboa com a dissertação intitulada “A ocupação romana do Algarve – estudo do povoamento e economia do Algarve central e oriental no período romano”. 2001 – Provas de aptidão científica e capacidade pedagógica com o trabalho de síntese intitulado “Cerâmica economia e comércio: A terra sigillata da Alcáçova de Santarém” e a aula sobre o tema “As termas da villa romana da Tourega”. 1989 - Licenciatura em História pela Faculdade de Ciências Sociais e Humanas da Universidade Nova de Lisboa. Docência: Unidades curriculares do 1º ciclo que leccionou ou lecciona : Arqueologia Clássica; Arqueologia Medieval; Arqueologia da Antiguidade Tardia ; Arqueologia do Mundo Provincial romano; Arquelogia Islâmica; Introdução ao Desenho Arqueológico; Técnicas de documentação gráfica em Arqueologia; Materiais Arqueológicos 9 – Cerâmica romana; Materiais Arqueológicos 10 – Cerâmica islâmica; Trabalho de Campo e Laboratório 1 e 2 (vertente Laboratório, na Faculdade de Letras de Lisboa e no Museu Nacional de Arqueologia. Unidades curriculares do 2º ciclo: Seminário opcional: Sistemas Tecnológicos de Produção artefactual 4 - Cerâmica romana. riInvestigação Ocupação romana do Algarve. Estudo da economia antiga a partir dos conjuntos cerâmicos. Experiência profissional anterior desde 2009 – Professora Auxiliar. Faculdade de Letras, Universidade de Lisboa 1997-2009 – Assistente. Faculadade de Letras, Universidade de Lisboa 1992-1997 – Técnica superior de Arqueologia. Câmara Municipal de Santarém, responsável pela direcção de diversos trabalhos arqueológicos no Centro Histórico da Cidade. 1990-1992 – Arqueóloga. Contratada para a realização de diversas intervenções arqueológicas, por parte do então Serviço Regional de Arqueologia do Sul (SRAS) do Instituto Português do Património Cultural (Évora) e Departamento de Arqueologia do IPPAR (Lisboa). Publicações Livros (autor) Viegas, C. (2011a) - A ocupação romana do Algarve – estudo do povoamento e economia do Algarve central e oriental no período romano. Série estudos e Memórias. Lisboa: UNIARQ. 3. Disponível: http://hdl.handle.net/10451/9775 Viegas, C. (2006a) – A cidade romana de Balsa (Torre de Ares- Tavira): (1) A terra sigillata, Tavira: Câmara Municipal de Tavira/Instituto Português de Museus. Viegas, C. (2003a) – Terra sigillata da Alcáçova de Santarém – Economia, comércio e cerâmica. Trabalhos de Arqueologia. Lisboa: Instituto Português de Arqueologia. 26. Viegas, C., Abraços, F., Macedo, M., (1993) - Dicionário de Motivos Geométricos no Mosaico Romano, Lisboa: Liga dos Amigos de Conímbriga. Livros (editor) Artigos de divulgação Viegas, C. (2012c) – Um Algarve cosmopolita, in Visão História. Portugal no tempo dos romanos. Nº 17 Setembro 2012, p. 92-95. Pinto, I. V., Viegas, C., (1994) - Les Thermes de la Villa romaine de Tourega. In Dossiers de L'Archaeologie. (Nov.). p. 60-63. Catálogo de exposição Arruda, A. M.; Viegas, C.; Almeida, M. J. (coord.)(2002) – De Scallabis a Santarém, Catálogo da Exposição. Lisboa: Museu Nacional de Arqueologia. Além de textos em colaboração (ver supra), elaborou dezenas de ficha de inventário do catálogo. Outras publicações Cláudia Costa, Cidália Duarte, João Tereso, Catarina Viegas, Miguel Lago, Carolina Grilo, Jorge Raposo, Mariana Diniz, Alexandra Lima, (2014) - Discovering the Archaeologists of Portugal 2012-14, Lisboa, APA. Projectos de Investigação Desde 2012 - Participação no Projecto de investigação internacional – Ex Amphora Hispania , do ICAC . Até 2016 - Participação no projecto de investigação Monte Molião na Antiguidade. 2001-2004 - Participou como investigadora no Projecto de Investigação FCT "Castro Marim e o seu território imediato na Antiguidade", sob direcção de Ana Margarida Arruda. 1995-2003 - Direcção, juntamente com Ana Margarida Arruda, do Projecto de Investigação "A ocupação da Alcáçova de Santarém dura
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1 year ago
1 hour 2 minutes 17 seconds

IHSHG Podcast
A Marinha Portuguesa no Século XVIII: o instrumento militar naval na estratégia nacional
Oficial da Marinha Portuguesa, com o posto de Primeiro-tenente da classe do Serviço Técnico, especialista em História. Licenciado em História pela Faculdade de Letras da Universidade de Lisboa e mestre em História da Expansão e dos Descobrimentos Portugueses pela mesma instituição. Desempenhou funções no Museu de Marinha entre 1999 e 2021, como chefe do Serviço de Investigação, no âmbito das quais desenvolveu diversos trabalhos de investigação em História Marítima Portuguesa, Museologia e Serviços Educativos. Atualmente exerce as funções de professor de História Naval na Escola Naval, sendo membro correspondente da Academia de Marinha e investigador do CINAV (Centro de Investigação Naval – Marinha Portuguesa | Escola Naval). Autor de diversos trabalhos de investigação e de comunicações em colóquios e encontros de História Marítima e Museologia, bem como acerca da história da Aviação Naval.
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1 year ago
1 hour 2 minutes 30 seconds

IHSHG Podcast
Relação entre os mitos e a realeza faraónica: como a teoria mítica se reflecte na prática governativ
Luís Manuel de Araújo é egiptólogo e professor na Faculdade de Letras da Universidade de Lisboa. Licenciado em História, fez depois um estágio de pós-graduação em Egiptologia na Faculdade de Arqueologia da Universidade do Cairo, e o doutoramento em Letras (História e Cultura Pré-Clássica) pela Universidade de Lisboa. É membro da Academia Portuguesa da História, Associação Portuguesa de Escritores, Associação dos Arqueólogos Portugueses, Associação Portuguesa de Museologia, Associação Internacional de Egiptólogos, Conselho Internacional dos Museus e Comité Internacional para a Egiptologia (CIPEG). Dirigiu o Dicionário do Antigo Egipto (Lisboa, 2001) e estudou as coleções egípcias públicas e privadas existentes em Portugal, tendo sido o comissário científico da exposição de antiguidades egípcias do Museu Nacional de Arqueologia e da nova sala de exposição da coleção egípcia da Universidade do Porto, e assessor científico de várias exposições.
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2 years ago
1 hour 4 minutes 43 seconds

IHSHG Podcast
Sex in the Middle Ages
Confabulating with Eleanor Janega: Dr Eleanor Janega is a medieval historian. More specifically, she specialises in late medieval sexuality, apocalyptic thought, propaganda, and the urban experience in general, and in central Europe more particularly. She teaches medieval and early modern history at the London School of Economics. She is the host of the Going Medieval series on HistoryHit TV, and the co-host of the history podcast We’re Not so Different. Going Medieval (https://going-medieval.com/tag/podcasts/) is a project aimed at making medieval history accessible and entertaining for non-expert audiences. It exists to explain the medieval influences on the everyday world, and hopefully to get people through the quotidian grind of life in late stage capitalism. If you want more of this premium content, you can consider ordering her book The Middle Ages, A Graphic History (https://www.amazon.co.uk/Middle-Ages-Graphic-History-Introducing/dp/1785785915?nodl=1&dplnkId=be349ad0-331d-41e3-87b4-791ddb6cd104) Otherwise her work can be found in The Washington Post, History Today, at the BBC History magazine, at sex education websites such as BISH, and on discerning erotica sites such as Frolic Me. Still not enough? You can get at her over at twitter (@eleanorjanega) For more content, you can consider subscribing her patreon, which helps support the blog, and where you will also get special presents for being so nice (https://www.patreon.com/GoingMedieval) Also you can buy her new book “The Once and Future Sex: Going Medieval on Woman’s Roles in Society” (https://www.amazon.co.uk/Once-Future-Sex-Medieval-Society/dp/0393867811?nodl=1&dplnkId=a22484e2-cfa0-4f8c-b699-e66a8de51a5a)
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2 years ago
1 hour 5 minutes 55 seconds

IHSHG Podcast
Dois poderes emergentes da Idade Média: o Papado e os reis de Portugal Afonso Henriques e Sancho I
À Conversa com o Dr. Francesco Renzi Doutor em História pela Universidade de Bologna "Alma Mater Studiorum" (2013). Trabalhou como investigador de pós-doutoramento na Universidade de Leiden- Instituto de História e na Universidade do Porto (FLUP-CITCEM), como bolseiro de pós-doutoramento FCT (Fundação para Ciência e a Tecnologia). A partir de março de 2019, trabalha como investigador na Universidade Católica Portuguesa, no Centro de Estudos de História Religiosa (CEHR). O seu principal interesse de investigação é a História da Igreja Católica na Itália e na Península Ibérica entre os séculos XI e XIII. Para acesso às publicações do Dr. Renzi usem o link: https://ciencia.ucp.pt/en/persons/francesco-renzi
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2 years ago
59 minutes 5 seconds

IHSHG Podcast
The Symbolic Aspects of the Medieval Alchemy’s Manuscripts
Confabulating with Pavel Bychkov With a BA and MA in History from the Russian State University for Humanities (RSUH).
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2 years ago
1 hour 4 minutes 31 seconds

IHSHG Podcast
Northern Lights in Icelandic Literature
Confabulating with Prof. Aðalheiður Guðmundsdóttir Professor of Medieval Icelandic literature at the University of Iceland Education 2002, Doktorspróf, University of Iceland, Dr. phil. 1993, Kandídatspróf, University of Iceland, Cand.mag. in Icleandic literature 1989, BA, University of Iceland, BA in Icelandic Professional Experience 2016 - , Professor in Medieval Icelandic literature, University of Iceland 2012 - 2015, Senior Lecturer in Folkloristics, University of Iceland 2006 - 2012, Adjunct in Folkloristics, University of Iceland 2008 - 2010, Sigurður Nordal Research Fellow, The Árni Magnússon Institute for Icelandic Studies 2005 - 2008, Rannís Research Fellow, The Árni Magnússon Institute for Icelandic Studies 1995 - 2008, Part time lecturer in Icelandic, University of Iceland 2000 - 2006, Part time lecturer in Folkloristics, University of Iceland Published works 2020 Philip Levander, Long Lives of Short Sagas: The Irrepressibility of Narrative and the Case of Illuga saga Gríðarfóstra (Odense: University Press of Southern Denmark, 2020). 401 pp.1700-tal: Nordic Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies
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2 years ago
1 hour 36 seconds

IHSHG Podcast
Origins da Guerra da Ucrânia
À Conversa com Bernardo Teles Fazendeiro Bernardo Teles Fazendeiro é investigador no Centro de Estudos Sociais e professor auxiliar em Relações Internacionais da Faculdade de Economia da Universidade de Coimbra. Foi docente na Universidade de St. Andrews, na qual se doutorou, e na Universidade Central Europeia. Os seus interesses de investigação englobam teorias das relações internacionais, conflitos armados, e o mundo pós-Soviético, com especial enfoque na Ásia Central.
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2 years ago
59 minutes 16 seconds

IHSHG Podcast
Ius Commune (Direito Comum)
À Conversa com o Prof. Dr. Gustavo Cabral Bio: Professor Adjunto da Faculdade de Direito da Universidade Federal do Ceará (UFC). Bolsista de Produtividade do CNPq (PQ-2). Coordenador do Programa de Pós-Graduação em Direito da UFC. Doutor em História do Direito pela USP. Pós-Doutorado (2014 e 2016-2017) pelo Max-Planck Institute für europäische Rechtsgeschichte. Foi professor visitante na Universidade Autônoma de Madrid (Espanha), Universidade de Maastricht (Holanda) e Universidade Nova de Lisboa (Portugal). Temas de pesquisa: História do Direito na Idade Moderna, especialmente na Península Ibérica e na América Portuguesa. Projetos em andamento: Normatividades na América Portuguesa: para uma teoria das fontes do direito colonial brasileiro. Bolsa Produtividade em Pesquisa CNPq. Direito colonial brasileiro: mapeamento e análise crítica das fontes (séculos XVI-XVIII). Edital Universal CNPq.
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2 years ago
55 minutes 6 seconds

IHSHG Podcast
​Join us every month for thought-provoking and educational discussions with international experts in various fields of history. Our talks feature innovative ideas and perspectives, and provide a space for exchange and exploration. Stay up-to-date with the latest developments in the world of history and connect with like-minded individuals. Watch our recorded talks on YouTube to deepen your understanding and appreciation for the past.