Colloquium Origenianum Decimumtertium

Colloquium Origenianum XIII « Origen and the Development of the Christian Thought »
Tuesday, August 17th – Friday, August 20th, 2021
Santiago de Chile, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile

This is not the first circular letter, but just a monitum, that aims only to inform the date of the next Origeniana and to complete our mailing list. Please share this information with potential participants or send us their e-mail in order to include them in our list. We intend to send the first circular letter this July.
e-mail: origeniana@uc.cl
Scientific Committee:

  • Lorenzo Perrone (Bologna, Italia)
  • Marie-Odile Boulnois (Paris, France)
  • Alfons Fürst (Münster, Deutschland)
  • Emanuela Prinzivalli (Roma, Italia)
  • Peter Martens (St. Louis, USA)
  • Samuel Fernández (Santiago, Chile)

Power and Legitimacy in Rome and Byzantium: An Interdisciplinary Workshop

Power and Legitimacy in Rome and Byzantium: An Interdisciplinary Workshop
3 August 2019
The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia

Abstracts of 250 words due by 19 July 2019 to r.strickler@uq.edu.au.
The fields of Roman and Byzantine studies have developed as largely separate fields. Historians and classicists have typically treated Rome and Byzantium as two distinct empires, and rarely do the two fields intersect. Nevertheless, the subjects of study for both fields, from the early Republic to the last years of the Palaiologan Dynasty considered themselves to be first and foremost Romans, part of a polity stretching back to the mythical age of kings, and their leaders considered themselves to be the successors of emperors dating back to Augustus and relied on similar methods to secure their legitimacy. Whether gaining the support of the military, employing popular religion, using numismatic iconography and statuary, or employing rhetoric and panegyric, the tools used by Roman and Byzantine leaders to acquire and maintain authority changed very little in form over time.
This workshop seeks to bring together established scholars and students of any field examining the topics of Roman and Byzantine legitimacy, broadly conceived, to share ideas and promote cooperation.
Possible topics may include but are not limited to: The use of imperial cult, church and state relations, relationship between the emperor and the military, the emperor and the people, imperial ritual, coinage, statuary and monuments, identity, succession and usurpation, social networking, rhetoric, panegyric and propaganda, etc.
Registration Fees:
$A 40 – Waged participants
$A 20 – Unwaged
Free for Students

Thanks to the generosity of our sponsors a limited number of competitive stipends are available to defray travel expenses for postgraduates travelling from outside of Queensland or Australia to present papers.
Postgraduate attendees are invited to participate in a special session with the keynote speakers. Selected postgraduate students will be provided with pre-circulated papers and invited to prepare questions in advance for the speakers. Spaces are limited. Postgraduates may participate in the session even if they are not presenting.
Questions and Abstracts of 250 words or less should be sent to r.strickler@uq.edu.au by 19 July 2019. Abstracts should include email and affiliation. Postgraduates whether they wish to participate in the masterclass, and whether they wish to be considered for a stipend (please include a CV if so).
Keynote Speakers:
Dr. Gwynaeth McIntyre (University of Otago), “All in the Family: Legitimisation and the coins of Caligula”
Prof. David Olster (University of Kentucky), “The Something or Other that Occurred in the Trullan Hall in 691-692: The Legitimacy of the So-Called ‘Quintisext Council’”
Prof. Bronwen Neil (Macquarie University), “Byzantine Leadership in an Age of Crisis (500-750 CE): Managing the Impending Apocalypse”

CfP ‘The Citizen in Late Antiquity, The Postgraduate and Early Career Late Antiquity Network’

Call For Papers: The Citizen in Late Antiquity
University of Utrecht, 25th November 2019
The Postgraduate and Early Career Late Antiquity Network
‘Citizen’ in Late Antiquity was an emotive and complex term. In the classical world, the term not only signified the distribution of rights and duties of members of city and empire, but perhaps much more importantly reflected the intricate processes of inclusion and exclusion that shaped Greco-Roman culture in a myriad of ways. Conventional historiography, which tended to focus on legal citizenship almost exclusively, once characterized citizenship as defunct by the onset of Late Antiquity: it has argued that the mass enfranchisement of the edict of Caracalla and the gradual transformation – or collapse – of the classical city, turned the ‘citizen’ into an anachronism, with its social, cultural and political significance returning only at the onset of the Renaissance. Recent scholarship however has started to contest this view by positing that neither the collapse of the Roman Empire in the west nor the transformation of the classical city brought an end to the concept of the citizen.
Next to other forms of self-identification, such as gender, class and ethnicity, people in late Roman and post-Roman polities continued to imagine and conduct themselves as citizens and these categories could themselves be understood in terms of legal and social citizenship. The citizen was also omnipresent in religious discourses, most significantly in late antique Christianity where the followers of Christ could either be perceived as citizens par excellence (viz. of the civitas Dei) or as intrinsic strangers and outsiders, namely to the civitas of the transitory world. Furthermore, citizens, of whatever kind, were also represented in material and visual culture, they took part, as citizens, in economic and artistic life and they appear most frequently in a vast number of textual sources and genres. An understanding of the full spectrum of ‘citizenship’ and ‘the citizen’ in Late Antiquity thus requires the use of a wide range of sources and approaches, and the fresh insights of a new generation of scholars.
This workshop, The Citizen in Late Antiquity, aims at providing an informal, constructive environment for post-graduate and early career researchers to present their work, meet others working in the field, and discuss current trends and issues. The Late Antiquity Network provides a single platform for those working on a broad range of geographical and disciplinary areas within the period of Late Antiquity, and participants are thus encouraged to interpret ‘citizen’ in a broad sense, thinking about how the theme intersects with their own research. Papers will be of twenty minutes, with ten minutes allocated for discussion. Facilitating this will be an address by our visiting speaker, Professor Engin Isin of Queen Mary University London, an acclaimed and prolific theorist on the subject of citizenship. The workshop is generously supported and hosted by the Dutch NWO VICI research project “Citizenship Discourses in the Early Middle Ages” and the Utrecht Centre for Medieval Studies (UCMS) at Utrecht University. Some suggested topics for discussion are:
– Different types of citizens
– Citizens and material culture and imagery
– Citizens and non-citizens, and interactions between different kinds of citizenship
– The spatial dimensions of citizenship
– Citizens, universalism and cosmopolitanism
– Criteria for becoming or ceasing to be a citizen
– Alternatives to citizenship discourse
– Citizens and the city
– Citizens and religion
– Poverty and citizenship
– Citizens in different literary genres
– Citizens and lawmaking
Abstracts of no more than 400 words with a brief biography to be sent to the conveners Thomas Langley (trl36@cam.ac.uk) and Kay Boers (K.Boers@uu.nl) by Friday 26th July. Please include your affiliation (independent scholars welcome) and current academic status (or the year your PhD was awarded). If interested in the opportunity to run the seminar next year, please detail any relevant previous experience alongside the biography when you submit the abstract. Successful applicants will be notified by Monday 19th August.

CfP ‘Lived Ancient Religion in North Africa’

The LARNA project (Lived Ancient Religion in North Africa), based at the Institute of Historiography ‘Julio Caro Baroja’ (University Carlos III of Madrid) and funded the Autonomous Community of Madrid, invites researchers of ancient history, history of religion, archaeology, anthropology, classical studies, and further related fields to discuss the topic of “Lived Ancient Religion in North Africa”. The conference will be held at University Carlos III of Madrid, from 19-21 February 2020.
Proposals including a title and an abstract of 300-500 words should be sent to María Fernández Portaencasa (fportaen@hum.uc3m.es) by 30 June 2019. We accept papers in English and French language. All costs of travel (up to 200 euros), food, and accommodation (2 nights) will be covered by the organisation. Please see the attached PDF for more details.
CfP LARNA ENG

CfP ‘Origen in Lebanon’

At the initiative of a Lebanese journalist, Kinda Marie Elias, Prof. Marek Cieslik (Dean of the Faculté des Sciences Religieuses, Université Saint-Joseph, Beirut), Prof. Michel Fédou sj (Centre Sèvres – Facultés jésuites de Paris) and Prof. Lorenzo Perrone (Alma Mater Studiorum – Universita di Bologna) are organizing a symposium on Origen in Lebanon.
The general theme is: « Origen in Lebanon. The Interpretation of the Foundational Texts: A Challenge for the Inter-religious Dialogue ».
The symposium will take place in Beirut at the Faculté des Sciences Religieuses of the Université St.-Joseph on the 23rd-24th of March 2020. On the 25th there will be an excursion to Tyre to lay a commemorative plaque of Origen and the participation to the interreligious festival of the Annonciation, which is celebrated in Lebanon both by Christians and Muslims.
A call for proposals is attached. Younger scholars are especially encouraged to apply (twenty-five grants will be awarded). The deadline for proposals is the 31st of August 2019. Please see the attached PDF for more details.
Origen_in_Lebanon_EN

CfP ‘Third International Patristic Conference, Lublin 2019’

The 3rd International Patristic Conference in Lublin, on the theme ‘The Bible in the Patristic Time: Translations and Spiritual Interpretation in the 1600th Anniversary of the Death of St. Jerome,’ will take place on October 16–18, 2019, at John Paul II Catholic University of Lublin.
Applications with the subject and abstract (max 2000 characters) should be sent to patristic@kul.pl by June 30, 2019. Please see the attached document for more details.
Lublin_Conference_2019

CfP ‘International Kosmoi Conference’

Kosmoi (the association of scholars in the field of religious studies at the KU Leuven) is planning the international colloquium on the theme ‘Good–Better–Best: Asceticism and the Ways to Perfection”, which will be held from 21–23 October 2019 in Leuven, Belgium.
The international conference of this year will deal with the question of how ascetic practices and lifestyles as lived and practiced in various religious traditions are thought to help realise aspirations to transcend oneself and maybe even to reach ‘perfection.’
The organisers are inviting students and colleagues to submit a proposal for a paper of 20 minutes on a specific topic related to the overall theme of the conference. Those who are interested should send their proposal (title and summary of max. 300 words) by May 15 to Prof. Joseph Verheyden at jos.verheyden@kuleuven.be.
A scientific committee will decide which proposals are accepted. You will be informed of its decision by May 31.
Please see the document below for more details:
Kosmoi Conference 2019 CfP

2nd Circular of the Int’l Conference “Liturgy as Practice, Space, and Theory in Eastern Christianities”

2nd Circular of the International Conference “Liturgy as Practice, Space, and Theory in Eastern Christianities” that will be held from 1–4 October 2019 in Kirillov, Russia:
The editorial board of Scrinium. Journal of Patrology and Critical Hagiography (http://brill.com/scri) and Kirillo-Belozerky Federal State Museum (https://kirmuseum.org/en) as Organisers would like to ask those of you who intend to participate to finalize their submissions. In order to do so, please provide a paper title and an abstract (no more than 150 words) at liturgyconference2019@gmail.com by 1 May 2019. The only working language of the conference is English.
For more information, please see the PDF file.

CfP ‘Ministerium Sermonis’ Leuven, May 2020

Call for Papers: ‘Ministerium Sermonis: An International Colloquium on St. Augustine’s Sermons,’ which will be held at Hollands College, KU Leuven, from 27–29 May 2020.
This conference will bring together scholars who have recently made important contributions to the study of Augustine’s sermons. It is a sequel to the series of Ministerium Sermonis–conferences organised in Leuven-Turnhout (2008), Rome (2011) and Malta (2015), the proceedings of which have been published in the series Instrumenta Patristica et Mediaevalia 53, 65 & 75 (Turnhout: Brepols 2009, 2012, 2017). The main focus will be on three areas of research: (1) The transmission and reception of Augustine’s sermons, (2) Augustine’s argumentation (doctrine, exegesis and rhetoric), (3) Political doctrine(s) and praxis in Latin Patristic sermons.
If you would like to deliver a lecture during this conference, please send the provisional title, abstract (max. 500 words) and a concise CV (max. 500 words) before 31 May 2019, to Shari Boodts at s.boodts@let.ru.nl.
For more information, please see the file.