IMC 2005: Keywords
IMC 2005: Sessions tagged with Historiography - Medieval
- Adapting Genres to National Contexts (1010)
- A Genius Revisited: Enea Silvio Piccolomini (1405-1464) and his 600th Birthday (1020)
- Alfonso X Studies (503)
- Ancient Presences, III: Petrarch, the Cronaca di Partenope, and the Myth of Naples (1322)
- Anglo-Saxon England through its Outsiders (101)
- Constructions of Humanity in Devotio Moderna (1523)
- Dynastic Ties and Regional Issues in Medieval Germany (1207)
- Fighting for Succession: Conflicts between Fathers and Sons in the Quest for Rulership (11th-15th Centuries) (1215)
- Fresh Looks at Medieval Frisia (608)
- Ideal and Practicality in Missionary Efforts and Conversion Issues (1619)
- Images of the Past, I: Creating Identities, I (1006)
- Images of the Past, II: Creating Identities, II (1106)
- Images of the Past, V: Appropriating the Past / Legitimizing the Present, I (1518)
- Islands of the World and the Seven Seas in Medieval Myths and History, I (621)
- Kings Gone to Kingdom Come: Images of Old and Dying Rulers (514)
- Literary Images of Youth and Medieval Heroes, II (717)
- Mapping Territories and Texts (1123)
- Medieval Writing Traditions over Space and Time (210)
- Queens and their Courts, I: Rights and Duties of Medieval Queens (207)
- Queens and their Courts, II: Queens' Income and Patronage (307)
- Rendering the Past: Medieval Historiography and Self-Reflexivity (1302)
- Rendering the Past and Visualizing the Future in Medieval Literature (801)
- Retiring in a Byzantine Monastery (1316)
- Rulership and Youth, I: Rulership and Youth in the Early Middle Ages (1015)
- Rulership and Youth, II: Narratives on Young Rulers (1115)
- Sagas, Histories, and Power (321)
- Textual (Ab)Uses of the Women of the Past (518)
- The Changing Face of the English (701)
- The Vandal Regnum and the Mediterranean World (1005)
- Visualizing the Invisible, II (1602)
- Young Ones Waiting for Power (1515)
- Young or Old Counsellors and Councillors?: Their Role in Periods of Transition and Disorder (1315)
- Youth Is Rarely Pure, and Never Simpleā¦ (812)