Today is the day! Welcome to the newly revamped Middle Ages for Educators, sponsored by the Committee for the Study of Late Antiquity and the The Program in Medieval Studies at Princeton University. Many thanks to our generous sponsors! 1/ https://t.co/cQ6ZPLhUFd
Our next video comes from Princeton historian Jeremy Stitts (below) called: "Where are the Romans? What Attila's War Reveals about Barbarian Integration in the Late Roman Empire" https://t.co/nisEIH23lD
Our next video comes from Princeton historian Jeremy Stitts (below) called: "Where are the Romans? What Attila's War Reveals about Barbarian Integration in the Late Roman Empire" https://t.co/nisEIH23lD
Hello everyone! We have new content coming online!
Are you interested in Medieval Astronomy - then check out this new page, featuring several videos by super STAR @leoba https://t.co/H0FG4zkkJf
#manuscriptmonday: I am conducting “Encoding Manuscripts” workshop as part of the Digital Medieval Studies Institute held in conjunction with the #MAA Annual Meeting in Washington DC. In great company!
*Apply by 15 October. Scholarships available.* Info: https://t.co/LbISkc84I1
Are you a medievalist based in DC, or are you going to #MAA2023 in February? The Digital Medieval Studies Institute (DMSI), a wonderful new initiative at the intersection btw digital humanities and medieval studies, is accepting applications for its first workshop. Due Oct 15:
What have we learned about teaching since 2020? A valuable panel on pandemic teaching just posted on MAFE! Two sessions on "Pandemic Lessons & Post-Pandemic Pedagogy," from New England Medieval Consortium’s 2021 Conference.
View the content here: https://t.co/jHd0lyJJd1
Just in from Middle Ages for Educators! Sarah McDougall talks to @emilyjhutchison about how story maps can help us understand anti-pollution measures in medieval Paris. Very interesting!
Prefer to watch stuff on YouTube? We started a channel for you! --> https://t.co/26f8MhvlUD
A wonderful profile of one of MAFE's contributors, Hope Williard! See her beautifully-written and produced videos on "Gregory of Tours" and "Women's Letters in the Dark Ages" here: https://t.co/SWMSA6NLt0 https://t.co/jSy9KmLKtF
@AHAhistorians has just awarded @MagdaTeter the Mosse Prize in European Intellectual and Cultural History for her book, Blood Libel. Last March, Professor Teter spoke with @AgesEducators about her work and how it applies to us today. Our conversation: https://t.co/zmyjgw9Six
Once an authoritative text, Shepherd of Hermas fell into obscurity. We asked @ChanceBonar to introduce this influential book and such topics as enslavement, religion & manuscripts. We also get forgeries, Irish law & a jug-headed monster? Interesting!
https://t.co/kdP99xINHc
Hello! This is the Article Finder Network. We recognize that many academics don't have access to the digital resources they need, so this account serves to put academics who need resources in touch with academics who have resources.
"Hip-Hop & Holy Grail" is the latest in our growing Medieval Meets Modern video series! Richard Sévère (Valparaiso University) embarks on a 7-minute quest w/ Sir Lancelot, Jay-Z & Justin Timberlake, ultimately pondering the nature of fame. Have a look!
https://t.co/YRa76T9GWh
Middle Ages for Educators loves original video lessons on compelling topics; @AriellaElema is here to talk about duels, medieval intrigue, and...spoiler warnings for Ridley Scott's next film, The Last Duel? Just maybe!
Get the full video lesson here: https://t.co/LtINxPUKBd!
Do you host or follow a great medieval, late antique, or related podcast series? One that engages current scholarship and increases knowledge? Why not connect with more educators & students?
Message or email us a link (to [email protected]) so we can spread the knowledge!