June 7, 2024
09:00 Raphaela Averkorn/Giuseppe Cusa (Universität Siegen): Welcome and introduction
Section I: Contexts
09:20 Mikhail Khorkov (Instytut Historii Nauki, Polskiej Akademii Nauk, Warsaw): In searching for John Hagen’s forgotten chronicle. Towards a history of the origin of an ambitious 15th-century Carthusian project
10:00 Synnøve Midtbø Myking (Det Kgl. Bibliotek, Copenhagen): The papal chronicle of the Liber Polypticus in a 12th-century manuscript from Denmark
10:40 Alberto Cotza (Università di Pisa): The Catalogus Regum Tuscus (11th century). A historical analysis
Section II: Contents
11:40 Stanislav Mereminskii (Independent researcher): Between Hugh of St Victor and Martin of Opava. The genealogical chronicle in London, British Library, Cotton MS Faustina B VIII, its sources and context
12:20 Șerban Marin (Arhivele Naționale ale României, Bucharest): The place of the world chronicle in the Venetian manuscript tradition
14:00 Gábor Bradács (Independent researcher): Die landesgeschichtlichen ‚Meisternarrative‘ in den Papst-Kaiser-Chroniken des Spätmittelalters
14:40 Giuseppe Cusa (Universität Siegen): Urban history in the so-called Annales Veronenses Antiqui, a 13th-century Veronese chronicle of popes and emperors
Section III: Traditions
15:40 Alessio Marziali Peretti (Université de Montreal): Tradition latine et traductions vernaculaires du Chronicon Pontificum et imperatorum Romanorum de Gilbert. État de l’art et nouvelles perspectives
16:20 José Manuel Simões (Universidade de Évora): A canonist’s strange resonance, or the echoes of the Iberian Peninsula in the papal chronicle of Iohannes de Deo and its transmission
17:00 Matthias Kuhn (Independent researcher): Illustrated pope-emperor scrolls. Interpreting the world, telling history, depicting structures
17:40 Concluding remarks