[Antiquitas] Being Pagan, Being Christian in Late Antiquity and Early Middle Ages, November 2016
Isto Huvila
isto.huvila at abo.fi
Ke Syys 28 17:43:32 EEST 2016
> Begin forwarded message:
>
> From: "Kahlos, Maijastina" <maijastina.kahlos at helsinki.fi <mailto:maijastina.kahlos at helsinki.fi>>
> Subject: Being Pagan, Being Christian in Late Antiquity and Early Middle Ages, November 2016
> Date: 28 September 2016 at 15:46:43 GMT+2
>
>
> Being Pagan, Being Christian in Late Antiquity and Early Middle Ages
>
> 3.-4-11.2015
>
> Venue: Helsinki Collegium for Advanced Studies, Fabianinkatu 24 A, Seminar Room 136, Ground Floor.
> Organisers: Katja Ritari, William van Andringa, Jan Stenger & Maijastina Kahlos
> Registration: The symposium is open for all, but there is a limited number of seat. Registration is free but required. The deadline to register is October 26.
> http://www.helsinki.fi/collegium/events/being%20pagan/index.html <http://www.helsinki.fi/collegium/events/being%20pagan/index.html>
>
>
> Programme:
>
> Thursday 3.11.2016
> 09:00 Registration and coffee
> 09:30 Opening of the symposium
> 09:45 Session 1
> William Van Andringa (HCAS): Material Culture and Religious Identity in Fourth Century Gaul: Time of Invisibility
>
> Eric Rebillard (Cornell University): Archaeology and Identity: Being Christian, 250-450 CE
>
> 11:15 Coffee/Tea
> 11:30 Session 2
> Rosamond McKitterick (University of Cambridge): The Liber pontificalis and the Transformation of Rome from Pagan to Christian City in the Early Middle Ages
>
> Stefanie Dick (Bonn University): Christianity and the Development of Frankish Kingship: the Baptism of Clovis
>
> 13:00 Lunch
> 14:00 Session 3
> Elva Johnston (University College Dublin): Converting to Christianity in Fourth and Fifth Century Ireland: A Frontier Phenomenon?
>
> Katja Ritari (HCAS): Christian Identities and the Memory of the Conversion in Early Medieval Ireland
>
> 15:30 Coffee/Tea
> 16:00 Session 4
> Hervé Inglebert (l’Université Paris Ouest Nanterre-La Défense): Vanishing Identity: the Impossible Definition of Pagans and Paganism in the West (4th-6th Centuries)
>
> Raimo Hakola (University of Helsinki): Identities Renegotiated and Contested: Jews and Christians in Late Antiquity
>
> Maijastina Kahlos (University of Helsinki): Being Pagan and Everyday Nuisances. The Dynamics of Patronage in Late Antiquity
>
> 18:15 Reception
>
>
>
>
> Friday 4.11.2016
>
> 10:00 Session 5
> Jan Stenger (University of Glasgow): Paradise Lost/Regained: Healing the Ascetic Body in the Monastery of Dorotheus of Gaza
>
> Ine Jacobs (University of Oxford): Christianity and the Secular… and Other Explanatory Theories
>
> Ilkka Lindstedt (HCAS): The Spread of Monotheism in Late Antique Arabia
> 12:15 Lunch
> 13:15 Session 6
> Mark Humphries (Swansea University): Martyrs, Memories, and Identities in Christian Late Antiquity
>
> Elizabeth DePalma Digeser (University of California, Santa Barbara): Heretics and Collaborators: The Effect of Persecution on Multiple Identities
> 14:45 Coffee/Tea
> 15:15 Session 7
> Antti Lampinen (University of St Andrews): Christianity and Ethnography: ‘Barbarian Sages’ in Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages
>
> Frédérique Blaizot (Institut National de Recherches Archéologiques Préventives): Funerary Practices and Construction of Religious and Social Identities in the South-East of Gaul from the 4th to 10th Centuries
>
> 16:45 Ending of the symposium
> 19:00 Dinner
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