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Centre for Medieval Studies Visiting Fellows and Scholars

2007
Dr Piers Mitchell was in Sydney for a year as a Visiting Scholar in the Centre and Visiting Lecturer in the Discipline of Paediatrics and Child Health at the Children's Hospital at Westmead. He is a practising children's orthopaedic surgeon and a historian and archaeologist of medicine, usually located at Imperial College, London.

He specialises in palaeopathology, the investigation of diseases, war injuries, etc., in the past, and is especially interested in the history and archaeology of medicine during the twelfth and thirteenth centuries in the Crusader Levant where he has undertaken numerous archaeological investigations at various castles, towns, cemeteries, and battlefield sites. He is famous among Crusade historians for analysing remains in cess pits and had recently published a totally new and original book on Medicine in the Crusades.

In March Dr Mitchell lectured to Medieval Studies undergraduates, and Centre Members, on medicinal and surgical practice during the First Crusade. In the Centre's monthly evening lecture programme, on 24 May he lectured on injuries and their treatment in ‘The world of the Crusader surgeon’ and on 20 September on the spread of disease with the Crusades, Crusader perceptions of disease, and healing pilgrimage in ‘Health and medicine in the Crusades’.

10 April - 20 May 2006
Professor Anders Andrén, Professor of Archaeology at the University of Stockholm, and formerly Professor of Archaeology at the University of Lund, was a Visiting Professor in the Centre. Anders was the 2005-6 Swedish exchange visitor to Australia, supported by the Australian Academy of the Humanities and the Vitterhetsakademi in Stockholm. This scheme supports the visit of one Swedish scholar a year to Australia and one Australian researcher a year to Sweden.

Anders’ presence complemented the research interests of our own Old Norse-Icelandic group. His research specialisation is in Iron Age and Viking Age archaeology in Scandinavia, particularly in Sweden, and he has written many distinguished and insightful books and articles on these subjects. His main project, while Sydney, was to write up the final report on a major interdisciplinary research project about the diverse evidence (archaeological, linguistic, literary, religious) bearing on the nature of pre-Christian Scandinavian religion. He gave a seminar on this subject on 27 April, entitled ‘Mission impossible? The Archaeology of Old Norse Religion’.

9 January - 19 February 2006
Professor Torfi H. Tulinius, Professor of French and Medieval Literature at the University of Iceland, was a Visiting Professor in the Centre, working on various research projects, including a translation into English of his 2004 book on Egils saga and a French translation of the Old Icelandic Sverris saga.


September 2003 – August 2004
Professor Adrian Gully, H.H. Sheikh Dr Sultan ibn Muhammad al-Qasimi Chair of Arabic Studies, The Institute of Arab & Islamic Studies, Exeter University, Leverhulme Fellow and Visiting Fellow in the Centre for Medieval Studies.
Adrian Gully was working on a monograph on Epistolography in Islamic Society, 11-15th Centuries AD. More details in Newsletter 7.1 (PDF).

Semester 2 2003
Dr Louise D’Arcens, Department of English, University of Wollongong, and Centre for Medieval Studies Visiting Scholar
Louise D’Arcens used University of Sydney archives for a study of the work of George Arnold Wood, for a paper delivered at the International Studies in Medievalism conference and for an article submitted to Parergon.

1 January – 30 June 2003
Professor Michael Carter, Department of East Asian Studies, University of Oslo, and Ph.D. honoris causa, University of Lund and Centre for Medieval Studies Visiting Fellow
Mike Carter returned after a visit three years before. This time he was finishing the book A History of the Arabic Language while on study leave here. He lectured at the Centre for Medieval Studies and presented the A. R. Davis Lecture for the Australian Oriental Society. More details in Newsletter 6.1 (PDF).

9 November 2002 – 7 January 2003
Dr Judy Quinn, Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse and Celtic Studies, University of Cambridge
Judy Quinn, formerly of the English Department, University of Sydney, and on study leave from Cambridge, was working on a book on Old Norse eddic poetry, The Poetics of Dialogue in the Poetic Edda, while in Sydney.

12 February – 30 April 2002
Professor Christopher Given-Wilson, Department of Mediaeval History, University of St Andrews, Scotland, and Centre for Medieval Studies Visiting Scholar and Honorary Research Associate
Christopher Given-Wilson, a distinguished medieval historian, was writing a book on late medieval English historiography. More details in Newsletter 5.1 (PDF).

September 2001
Dr. Jenna Mead, School of English and European Languages & Literatures, University of Tasmania and Centre for Medieval Studies Visiting Scholar and Honorary Research Assistant.
Jenna Mead was working on Geoffrey Chaucer's Treatise on the Astrolabe.

Semester 2 2000
Professor Dr. Rudolf Simek of the Deutsches Seminar (Skandinavistische Abteilung) of the University of Bonn and Centre for Medieval Studies Academic Exchange Visitor (exchanging with Margaret Clunies Ross who taught at the Friedrich Wilhelms Universität in Bonn)
Professor Simek taught in the Department of English at Sydney University.

Semester 2 2000
Dr Hilary Carey of the University of Newcastle and Centre for Medieval Sudies Visiting Fellow
Dr Carey worked towards completing a major article on ‘Astrological folding almanacs’ and also lectured to the Centre on ‘Astrology and the Antichrist’.

Semester 1 2000
Professor Michael Carter, Professor of Arabic, University of Oslo and Centre for Medieval Sudies Visiting Fellow
Mike Carter worked on several major research projects, including an edition of the earliest extant Arabic grammar. He attended the ANZAMEMS Conference in Sydney in February; and gave a lecture to the Centre on ‘Infinity and lies in medieval Islam’.

Semester 2 1999
Professor Roberta Frank, Director of the Centre for Medieval Studies, University of Toronto, and Centre for Medieval Sudies Visiting Fellow
Roberta Frank was available to students and staff for discussion of medieval Scandinavian material and of the OED (based at the University of Toronto) of which she was on the editorial board. She lectured the Centre ‘On Viking Heads – Hats that Matter’

Semester 1 1998
Dr Richard Perkins, Senior Lecturer, Scandinavian Studies, University of London, and Centre for Medieval Sudies Visiting Fellow
Richard Perkins was working on runic Swedish and on correspondences between medieval Scandinavian languages and Arabic; was generally interested in connections between the Viking and Arab worlds; and was particularly interested in making contact with Ahmad Shboul. He gave a lecture on ‘Arab and Viking’; and was a valuable ‘source’ for staff and students alike.


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