Hiberno-Latin Literature and Studies
Sponsoring Organization(s)
Special Session
Organizer Name
Shannon O. Ambrose
Organizer Affiliation
St. Xavier Univ.
Presider Name
Bryan Carella
Presider Affiliation
Assumption College
Paper Title 1
Continental Networks of Hiberno-Latin Knowledge
Presenter 1 Name
Sven Meeder
Presenter 1 Affiliation
Radboud Univ. Nijmegen
Paper Title 2
Early European Canon Law as a Measure for Intellectual Influence
Presenter 2 Name
Roy Flechner
Presenter 2 Affiliation
Univ. College Dublin
Paper Title 3
Hiding in Plain Sight? A Case for the Hiberno-Latin Affiliations of the Homily De reddendis decimis in British Library, Royal 5 E XIII
Presenter 3 Name
Christopher Robert John Scheirer
Presenter 3 Affiliation
Univ. of Notre Dame
Paper Title 4
A Quotation from the Apocryphal Questions of Bartholomew in a Hiberno-Latin Sermon
Presenter 4 Name
Stephen Pelle
Presenter 4 Affiliation
Centre for Medieval Studies, Univ. of Toronto
Start Date
16-5-2015 1:30 PM
Session Location
Schneider 1235
Description
In this traditional, four-paper panel, topics under discussion will include Hiberno-Latin influences on other traditions (i.e. Anglo- and Carolingian Latin or various Insular and Continental vernaculars) as well Hiberno-Latin literature for its own sake. Papers will focus on biblical exegesis, law, and homiletics and deal, in some way, with the definition of “Hiberno-Latin” and the so-called “symptoms” used to identify Latin texts of Irish production both within Ireland and in Irish monastic foundations abroad. This kind of panel will appeal to a variety of audiences that attend the congress, including palaeographers, codicologists, historians, literary scholars, and biblicists.
Shannon O. Ambrose
Hiberno-Latin Literature and Studies
Schneider 1235
In this traditional, four-paper panel, topics under discussion will include Hiberno-Latin influences on other traditions (i.e. Anglo- and Carolingian Latin or various Insular and Continental vernaculars) as well Hiberno-Latin literature for its own sake. Papers will focus on biblical exegesis, law, and homiletics and deal, in some way, with the definition of “Hiberno-Latin” and the so-called “symptoms” used to identify Latin texts of Irish production both within Ireland and in Irish monastic foundations abroad. This kind of panel will appeal to a variety of audiences that attend the congress, including palaeographers, codicologists, historians, literary scholars, and biblicists.
Shannon O. Ambrose