This project examines hoards from the late Roman to early medieval transition period in Britain (4th to 5th century) as complete assemblages, bringing together a team of scholars who specialise in researching the different types of material.
The Project provides the intellectual framework, research agenda, and impact ambition for The Oxford Marlowe: Collected Works (Oxford University Press). The edition seeks to establish and promote Marlowe’s preserved corpus of writing for scholars, students, general readers, producers and theatre-goers, and all those interested in the cultural history of early modern England.
Cross-border connections in Central Europe in the early modern period shaped the cultures, populations and development of Central European countries and their partners. This international interdisciplinary network of scholars and museum professionals, led by MEMS's Dr Suzanna Ivanic, investigates how these connected worlds were mutually constitutive through collaborative work, addressed primarily through a focus on material and cultural analysis of artefacts.
Cultures of Performance brings together staff and students interested in and investigating a range of performance events in Europe, c. 500 to c. 1700. From plays and pageants to poetry and processions, music, liturgy and dance, performance here is broadly conceived and studied from a variety of methodological and historical perspectives, including its place in modern performance practice.
Funded by the Leverhulme Trust, Whittington’s Gift aims to demonstrate that London citizens created new programmes of religious education for both the City’s clergy and for literate lay communities that have hitherto gone largely unnoticed by scholarship.
This project, led by Dr David Rundle, aims in a series of stages to build a union catalogue of manuscript fragments in the British Isles.
This website app presents eight walking tours to connect the stories of characters from Renaissance Prague to surviving historic sites, inviting you to experience the city through their eyes.
Collaborative project that brings together academics and researchers with the aim to share the wonderfully rich collections of Canterbury Cathedral Library & Archive’s collections with the wider public.
This project, which ran in 2018-19 and was funded by a Leverhulme Early Career Fellowship, explored how new approaches to law fueled wider changes in the institutional Church.
The aim of this collaborative research project is to document the scholarly European encounter with Oriental cultures, languages and religions between c. 1500 and 1800.
Discovering and augmenting historical documents in the Digital Age.
This research network investigated peoples’ experience of household life in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries and considered how we might use this information to enhance our experience of visiting historic properties in the twenty-first century.
This network’s research focused on mutual influences in the formation of states in fourteenth-century Europe and diplomatic contacts among polities. It looked at how they contributed to the creation of a “shared language of diplomacy” and European identities.