Monday, 17 September 2012

Alfonso, wine and medicine, and hunting and fishing

Jewish Collaborators in Alfonso’s Scientific Work
By Norman Roth

Wine and Medicine from Hippocrates to the Renaissance
By Christopher Hoolihan

Medieval Hunting and Fishing Practices and the Court Epics
By William John Slayton

Alfonso, wine and medicine, and hunting and fishing

Jewish Collaborators in Alfonso’s Scientific Work
By Norman Roth

Wine and Medicine from Hippocrates to the Renaissance
By Christopher Hoolihan

Medieval Hunting and Fishing Practices and the Court Epics
By William John Slayton

Tuesday, 11 September 2012

Medical book, build your own loom and Italian Villas

Rare 500-year-old illustrated medical book shows doctors analysing urine to diagnose illness and brushing lice from a boy's hair

  • Encyclopedia of knowledge and folklore on plants, animals and minerals
  • Book is on display for the first time at University of Aberdeen as part of the Pharmacopoeia exhibition

Build your own scrap wood loom



Decline and fall of the Italian villa: Haunting images of the forgotten palaces which are now spectacular ruins

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2181957/Italian-villa-The-palatial-rustic-retreats-Renaissance-lie-abandoned.html#ixzz26BAeZfO2

Thursday, 6 September 2012

Mosaics, and Scottish data base of people,

Renaissance mosaics uncovered in Italy



They are on display at the Cathedral until October 24th.

Data base of Medieval Scotland now on line

8,600 documents. 21,000 people. Scholars at the University of Glasgow have made an extraordinary wealth of historic data about people in Scotland available on the internet.

More info on the data base:  http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-19475461

Link to web site which includes a tutorial and glossary:  http://www.poms.ac.uk/

Tuesday, 4 September 2012

Interviews with experimental archeologists, specs, and storytelling

Thank you to Stitch in time for this one:


Striding toward Salvation: Medieval and Renaissance Pilgrimage in Europe and the Mediterranean.
During the Middle Ages and Renaissance, pilgrimage provided an important path to spiritual salvation; as such, a whole range of individuals—from peasants to kings, serfs to sultans—undertook these sacred journeys. The destinations of pilgrims varied, from the shrines of local saints to the two great pilgrimage cities of Jerusalem and Mecca, as did their motivations. This conference invites papers exploring Christian, Islamic, or Jewish pilgrimage in Europe and/or the Mediterranean between approximately 300 and 1600 CE. We welcome papers from all disciplines, including art history, history, literature, music, Near Eastern studies, religious studies, and others. Papers may address the theme of pilgrimage in a variety of ways, including, but not limited to:
• Historical accounts of pilgrimage
• Literary accounts of pilgrimage
• Imagery depicting the act of pilgrimage or associated with a specific pilgrimage site
• Shrines, relics, or reliquaries
• The impact of pilgrimage on the politics, economy, or community of a particular city
• Pilgrims’ souvenirs
The conference will be held on the campus of Saginaw Valley State University (located in University Center, Michigan) on February 22-23, 2013. Those interested in presenting a 20-minute paper at the conference should submit a brief CV and a 200-word abstract to Dr. Emily Kelley at edkelley@svsu.edu no later than September 7, 2012.

4th Global Conference: Storytelling (May 2013: Prague, Czech Republic)
full name / name of organization: 
Dr. Rob Fisher/ Inter-Disciplinary.Net
contact email: 
story4@inter-disciplinary.net
4th Global Conference
Storytelling
Tuesday 21st May – Friday 24th May 2013
Prague, Czech Republic

Early printed book contains rare evidence of medieval spectacles

34th Annual Medieval and Renaissance Forum
Plymouth State University
Plymouth, NH, USA

Friday and Saturday April 19-20, 2013

“Travel, Contact, Exchange”
For more information visit www.plymouth.edu/medieval




Friday, 31 August 2012

Textile journal’s old issues on line, Viking smith and building a castle the old fashion way

A Public Service Announcement!

 from Loose Threads: Yet Another Costuming Blog

Archaeological Textiles Newsletter (soon to be renamed Archaeological Textiles Review) has just made Issues No. 46 and 47 available on line here. One of the articles is unavailable for Issue No. 46, but it's good to know that ATN is carrying on with its stated intention of placing its back issues on line.


In the Austrian town of Friesach a castle to be rebuilt using only period methods of construction


Re-forging the smith: an interdisciplinary study of smithing motifs in Völuspá and Völundarkviða



Monday, 27 August 2012

Costuming, music, and prenatal food.

At the Victoria and Albert Museum London:

Fashioning the Early Modern: Creativity and Innovation in Europe 1500-1800

Additional Information

·                                 Programme
·                What:
Conferences and Symposia
·                When:
·                Where:
The Lydia & Manfred Gorvy Lecture Theatre
CONFERENCE: Explore three key themes of early modern fashion: Innovation, Dissemination and Reputation. Invited speakers include, Lesley Miller, John Styles, and Evelyn Welch. Friday 14 – Saturday 15 September, 10.00 – 17.15
In collaboration with Queen Mary, University of London and funded by HERA (Humanities in the European Research Area)

“LOS MOTZ E.L SO”:
WORDS, MELODY, AND THEIR INTERACTION IN THE SONGS OF FOLQUET DE MARSEILLE
A Dissertation Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of the Louisiana State University and
Agricultural and Mechanical College in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in The College of Music and Dramatic Arts
By Nancy Ellen Washer
 http://etd.lsu.edu/docs/available/etd-1106102-100713/unrestricted/Washer_dis.pdf

Fruit of the Womb: Prenatal Food in Renaissance Italy
By Heather Ruiter http://independent.academia.edu/HeatherRuiter/Papers/1402685/Fruit_of_the_Womb_Prenatal_Food_in_Renaissance_Italy