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IMC 2014: Sessions

Session 1216: Paul the Deacon, II: Between Empires and Identities

Wednesday 9 July 2014, 14.15-15.45

Organisers:Zachary Guiliano, Faculty of History, University of Cambridge
Christopher Heath, School of Arts, Languages & Cultures, University of Manchester
Moderator/Chair:Walter Pohl, Institut für Österreichische Geschichtsforschung, Universität Wien
Paper 1216-aPaul's Homiliary as the Product of Royal and Imperial Patronage
(Language: English)
Zachary Guiliano, Faculty of History, University of Cambridge
Index terms: Ecclesiastical History, Liturgy, Manuscripts and Palaeography, Monasticism
Paper 1216-bHow Carolingian Is Paul the Deacon's Historia langobardorum?
(Language: English)
Ross Balzaretti, Institute for Medieval Research, University of Nottingham
Index terms: Historiography - Medieval, Political Thought, Rhetoric
Abstract

As an individual, Paul the Deacon's life embodied that of a scholar, exegete, and writer who stood at the boundary between the end of one kingdom and its re-configuration into a wider European entity. How Paul negotiated this change on a personal level has pre-occupied scholars from the 19th-century onward and has been the subject of two conferences in Udine (1899 and 1999). This session of linked papers aims to explore the impact of the events of 774 upon Paul as an individual but also his responses revealed in his own works, thought, and activities. How did Paul engage with the Roman past and imperium? How did he portray the Byzantine empire in Italy and beyond? How did his activities, at the heart of the Carolingian programme of correctio, assist in the theological and theoretical foundations of the constellation of the Carolingian empire?