西洋中世学会

Japan Society for Medieval European Studies


2021年2月26日(金)

Workshop on Latin Diplomatics


コロラド大学の友人Brian CatlosからWorkshop on Latin Diplomaticsに関する案内が届きました。

Zoomでの開催ですので、参加費を払えば日本からオンラインで参加が可能です。

参加を希望される方は案内にあるウェブ上のform経由で直接申し込んでください。高山博

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Enroll/ New Dates – “Introduction to the Archive of the Crown of Aragon (documents in Latin to ca. 1350)” Summer Online Skills Seminar (17-20 May 2021)

Given that it is uncertain whether in-person activities will resume at the University of Colorado prior to May 2021, the Mediterranean Seminar/ CU Mediterranean Studies Group is offering a second iteration of the virtual Summer Skills Seminar,  “Introduction to the Archive of the Crown of Aragon (documents in Latin to ca. 1350)”  to be held via Zoom from Monday 17 May 2021 through Thursday, 20 May 2021, from https://mediterraneanseminar.us9.list-manage.com/track/click?u=e1ae5bef9757e58afec01a89aid=fe333af0d2e=db749e688e.

Overview
The Archive of the Crown of Aragon (ACA) in Barcelona contains one of the largest and richest archival collections relating to medieval Europe, comprising hundreds of thousands of documents, most from the twelfth to fifteenth centuries, and including financial records, royal letters, administrative documents, trial records, treaties, and many other genres and types. The documentation can be used for a whole range of topics including social, economic, political, institutional, gender, diplomatic, cultural and religious history. 

The territories of the Crown of Aragon included much of the Iberian Peninsula, parts of southern France, Sicily and southern Italy, parts of Tunisia and Greece, the Balearics, Sardinia and other Mediterranean islands. It had a large and diverse urban population, was highly integrated into Mediterranean and European trade systems, and had significant populations of Muslims and Jews. It developed one of the earliest and most robust chanceries of medieval Europe; the collections of which have weathered the vicissitudes of history all but intact. Much of the documentation has yet to be used by modern historians. The skills seminar will focus on the Latin-language documentation (from the eleventh to the mid-fourteenth centuries) in the archive’s collections.

This four-day intensive skills seminar will provide participants with an overview of the collections of the ACA, including access to online resources and reproductions, and focus on a hands-on introduction to reading unedited documents from a variety of the archive’s fonds. 

Other topics will include: manuscript abbreviations, dating systems, place and personal names, and research resources and techniques. As much as possible the content will be catered to participants’ interests and needs. Medievalists of all disciplines, graduate students, and qualified undergraduate students, as well as library and archival professionals are encouraged to apply. 

The goal is to provides attendees with a solid preparation for conducting work remotely via the PARES web portal and on-site at the ACA. This will not only aid their research but provide them with a bona fide (in the form of a certificate of completion for those who attend the full seminar), which may be advantageous in securing grants or other funding for research and travel. The ability to do archival research with unedited documents is a skill relatively few doctoral students master, and it enhances the research profile and CV of academic job-seekers.

Participants will find the skills and techniques which the course focuses on useful not only at the Archive of the Crown but at other medieval archives across Spain and Europe.

Applicants should have at least an intermediate level of reading Latin. Those wishing to bone-up on their Latin fluency in advance of the course are encouraged to read the Latin Vulgate and review declensions and conjugations. 

This Summer Skills Seminar builds on the experience of earlier editions, which participants signaled as “transformative” in terms of their research, and which provided them with an opportunity to network and lay the foundations for future collaborations. For information and participant reviews of our former Skills Seminars (Ladino/Judezmo & Aljamiado) including the first edition of this course, go here.

Cost
The cost of the course is: $1000 for Full Professors, Librarians,  Professionals, Independent Scholars; $750 for tenured Associates; $500 for non-tenured Associates and Assistants & Graduate and Undergraduate students; $350 for Adjuncts, Lecturers & Contingent faculty. Members of supporting University of Colorado departments are eligible for a 50% discount. The cost may be tax deductible. Those who pay for the online course will be entitled to attend an in-person iteration planned for May 2021. Faculty and students from low per capita-GDP countries can apply for a bursary for partial or full remission of fees.

Program
The course will be held 17-20 May 2020 from 10am to noon and 1-3pm Mountain TIme via ZOOM.
For further program information and for sample documents, together with transcriptions click here

Faculty
The course will be conducted by Prof. https://mediterraneanseminar.us9.list-manage.com/track/click?u=e1ae5bef9757e58afec01a89aid=493d0302ede=db749e688e(Religious Studies, CU Boulder). A graduate of the University of Toronto’s Centre for Medieval Studies (Phd, 2000) and now a historian of pre-Modern Spain and the Mediterranean, Catlos has been using the collections of the ACA since 1995, primarily for research into the social and economic history of the Crown of Aragon and Muslim-Christian-Jewish relations. 

Important dates:
Application deadline: 1 April 2021
Registration confirmation: 7 April 2021
Tuition deposit (50%) 15 April 2021
Tuition balance:1 May 2021

Apply via this form

For further information or inquiries, contact Brian Catlos (brian.catlos@colorado.edu; subject: “Summer Skills Information”)

This program is organized by the CU Mediterranean Studies Group under the aegis of the Mediterranean Seminar and is made possible thanks to the support of the University of Colorado Boulder.

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