Daily Archives: 5 February 2025

PhD Scholarship in Medieval History – Flinders University

Flinders University is currently advertising a HDR scholarship opportunity as a part of Dr Matthew Firth’s Australian Research Council DECRA Fellowship project ‘Contesting Conquests: Pre-Modern Attempts to Come to Terms with the Past’.

This scholarship is for a candidate wishing to pursue a PhD in history, with a relevant undergraduate or masters degree in history or a cognate discipline.

The larger project looks at how societies experience and remember the trauma of conquest and colonisation, taking an especial interest in England’s early medieval histories of invasion (pre-1066) and how these were received and transmitted in the historiography of the later Middle Ages and early modern period.

The scholarship opportunity is to conduct a PhD project that either:

  • examines the distinctive contributions to English historiography of twelfth-century historians. This HDR project would consider:
    • what social contexts and authorial interests encouraged the unprecedented volume of history writing that was produced in this period
    • what role these histories had in shaping common perceptions and subsequent accounts of England’s pre-Conquest past

OR

  • examines the links between narrative genres, such as hagiography, and traditions of history writing in the medieval or early modern period. This HDR project would consider:
    • the extent to which the chosen narrative genre can be (or was) considered a form of history writing
    • how these texts shaped narratives of England’s pre-Conquest past and can so be located within wider networks of medieval history writing 

The recipient of this scholarship will be able to design the scope of their project within these frameworks.

For further details, see the advertised opportunity.

Member News: AFCEMS Best Book in Medieval Art 2024

Congratulations to Pippa Salonius and her co-editor, Mike Bintley, whose collection, Trees as Symbol and Metaphor in the Middle Ages: Comparative Contexts, has been awarded the 2024 Best Book in Medieval Art prize by the Association of Friends of the Center for Early Medieval Studies. The judges concluded:

This profoundly researched, well written, and clearly composed book has been deemed outstanding for its stimulating contribution to a nuanced and profound understanding of the nexus between nature and human creativity as expressed through various media in the visual arts and literature as well as theology and cosmology. Although mainly focusing on the European continent, it also comprises analyses of Maori and Islamic cultures for comparison and thereby embraces a ‘global’ approach to its common arboreal focus.

The book is now available in harcover and ebook formats through Boydell & Brewer.