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9:00-10:00 REGISTRATION AND COFFEE:UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN DENMARK ENTRANCE AREA
10:00-10:45 WELCOME: AUDITORIUM O-100 Chair: Torben Kjersgaard Nielsen, Aalborg UniversityDean Simon Møberg Torp, University of Southern DenmarkSSCLE President Bernard HamiltonKurt Villads Jensen, Stockholm University
11:00-12:30 PARALLEL SESSIONS
SESSION 1: AUDITORIUM O-100 CRUSADING MEMORY AND CRUSADING NARRATIVE IN EAST AND WESTOrganiser: SSCLEChair: Nicholas Paul, Fordham University New York• Paper 1: Susan Edgington, Queen Mary University of London, UK:
Another Lost Chronicle? The History of the First Crusade as Seen by Hans Tucher in the 1470s
• Paper 2: Christopher Rose, Fordham University New York, USA: (Re)Imagining the Past in Outremer: Competing Voices in Crusader Vernacular Narratives, 1193-1250
• Paper 3: Aphrodite Papayianni, Birkbeck University of London, UK: Has Henry of Flanders’ Legend Survived in Greek Folk poetry?
MONDAY, 27 JUNE 2016
SESSION 2: ROOM O-99 MUSLIM AND CHRISTIAN APPROACHES TO THE ENEMY, 1Organiser: SSCLEChair: Kurt Villads Jensen, Stockholm University• Paper 1: Betty Binysh, Cardiff University, Wales: Muslim Views of the
Crusaders and Franks: Diversity of Representations between the Twelfth and Thirteenth Century Levant
• Paper 2: Beth C. Spacey, University of Birmingham, UK: The Third Crusade, Natural Phenomena and the Planetary Conjunction of 1186
• Paper 3: Martin Bauer, Leopold-Franzens-Universität Innsbruck, Austria: Experience and Authorities: A Diversity of Approaches towards Muslim-Christian Relationship in the Writings of Ricoldus de Monte Crucis
SESSION 3: ROOM O-95 THE PAPACY AND THE CRUSADESOrganiser: SSCLEChair: Christoph Maier, University of Zürich• Paper 1: Jan Vandeburie, Leverhulme Trust Fellow/Università degli Studi
Roma Tre, Italy: ’Diversas proprietates terrae sanctae’ – Knowing the Holy Land and Crusade Planning in the Early Thirteenth Century
• Paper 2: Guilio Cipollone, Pontificia Università Gregoriana, Italy: ’Sive in Terrae sanctae subsidium, sive….’. Gerusalemme è dove manda il Papa, ovvero ‘prendere la croce’ in più direzioni
• Paper 3: Matthew E. Parker, Saint Louis University, USA: Crusading through Fiscal Reform: Innocent III’s Pre-Lateran Policies
SESSION 4: ROOM O-96 CRUSADING AGAINST FELLOW CHRISTIANS IN ITALY AND GREECE IN THE THIRTEENTH CENTURYOrganiser: Gianlucca Raccagni, University of Edinburgh Chair: Mike Carr, University of Edinburgh • Paper 1: Gianluca Raccagni, University of Edinburg, Scotland: Venice and
the Inception of the Italian Crusades in the Thirteenth Century• Paper 2: Juho-Erik Wilskman, Helsinki University, Finland: Greeks and
Other Indigenous Peoples in the Military Forces of Crusader Greece• Paper 3: Michelle T. Hufschmid, Oxford University, UK: The Route to
Success? Military Stations of the Crusade against the Staufen 1239-1268
12:30-13:30 LUNCHUNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN DENMARK CANTEEN IS OPEN
13:30-15:00 PARALLEL SESSIONS SESSION 5: AUDITORIUM O-100 NEW CASTLES STUDIESOrganiser and chair: Adrian Boas, University of Haifa• Paper 1: Adrian Boas, University of Haifa, Israel: The 1266 Mamluk Attack
on Montfort Castle – Siege or Deception?• Paper 2: Mathias Piana, German Archaeological Institute: Chastel Blanc,
the Templar Castle of Safita: New Findings• Paper 3: Rabei Khamisy, University of Haifa, Israel: Montfort Castle (Qal’at
Al-Qurayn) in Mamluk Sources
SESSION 6: ROOM O-99 PERSPECTIVES OF ROYAL CRUSADINGOrganiser: SSCLEChair: Nicholas Morton, Nottingham Trent University• Paper 1: Stephen Bennett, Royal Holloway University of London, UK:
Opportunism or a Far-sighted Strategy: Richard I’s Conquest of Cyprus• Paper 2: James Naus, Oakland University, USA: Specter of Failure: The
Risk and Reward of Royal Crusading• Paper 3: Photeine V. Perra, University of Johannesburg, South Africa:
‘Living in a Man’s World’: From Zabin of Beirut to Ντάμα Ζαμπέα of Achaia. Women and Power in the Latin East
SESSION 7: ROOM O-95 CRUSADING MASCULINITIES – MASCULINE EXEMPLARS AND CRUSADING CAREERSOrganiser: Natasha Hodgson, Nottingham Trent UniversityChair: Alan Murray, Leeds University• Paper 1: Natasha Hodgson, Nottingham Trent University, UK: Masculinity,
Reputation and Crusading Careers: The Case of Arnulf of Chocques• Paper 2: Matthew Mesley, University of Zürich, Switzerland: Competing
Masculinities and Conspiracy Theories: Matthew Paris and Salimbene De Adam on Thirteenth-Century Crusading Kings
• Paper 3: Katherine Lewis, University of Huddersfield, UK: ‘...doo as this noble prynce Godeffroy of Boloyne dyde’: Kingship, Crusading and Masculinity in Late Fifteenth and Early Sixteenth England
SESSION 8: ROOM O-96 REGULATION AND INTERACTION IN THE CRUSADER STATESOrganiser: SSCLEChair: Andrew Jotischky, Lancaster University• Paper 1: Tomislav Karlovic, University of Zagreb, Croatia: Legal Diversity
and the Role of Roman law in the Crusader States• Paper 2: Fabian Rösch, Justus-Liebig-Universität Gießen, Germany:
Crusader Legislation as Instruments of Power? • Paper 3: Miikka Tamminen, University of Tampere, Finland: ‘Suspicious
Beards and Foolish Ways’: Interaction and Hostility between Latins and Non-Latins in the Crusader States during the Thirteenth Century
15:00-15:30 COFFEEUNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN DENMARK BREAK-OUT AREA
15:30-17:00 PARALLEL SESSIONS
SESSION 9: AUDITORIUM O-100 SLAVES, THEFT AND MURDER – THE MISDEEDS OF THE MILITARY ORDERSOrganiser and chair: Helen Nicholson, Cardiff University• Paper 1: Nicholas McDermott, Cardiff University, UK: Licit and Illicit
Hospitaller Slave Holding on Rhodes and Malta• Paper 2: Gregory Leighton, Cardiff University, UK: The Teutonic Order’s
Behaviour in Fourteenth Century Prussia: Good, Bad, or Unavoidable?• Paper 3: Christie Majoros, Cardiff University, UK: ‘When the cat’s away…’:
An Investigation of the Autonomy of Hospitaller Priors and Preceptors in Medieval Britain and Ireland
SESSION 10: ROOM O-99 SCANDINAVIAN CRUSADING VISUALSOrganiser: SSCLEChair: Torben Kjersgaard Nielsen, Aalborg University• Paper 1: Line M. Bonde, Norwegian School of Theology: When Ideals
Materialize: Assessing the Proprietary Churches of Magnates in Twelfth Century Denmark
• Paper 2: Kersti Markus, Tallinn University, Estonia: Visual Rhetoric at the Time of the Danish Crusades: Interpreting the Round Churches
• Paper 3: Kristin Bliksrud Aavitsland, Norwegian School of Theology: Holy War in Scandinavian Village Churches (Twelfth to Thirteenth Centuries)
SESSION 11: ROOM O-95 RODRIGO XIMÉNEZ DE RADA, ARCHBISHOP AND CRUSADEROrganiser and chair: Miguel Gomez, University of Dayton OhioSponsor: American Academy of Research Historians of Medieval Spain • Paper 1: Miguel Gomez, University of Dayton Ohio, USA: Archbishop
Rodrigo as Papal Legate and the Spanish Crusade, 1214-1226• Paper 2: Kyle C. Lincoln, Webster University/University of Saint Louis,
USA: We are Prepared to Die Here Along With All of You’ – Rodrigo Ximénez de Rada, Crusade, and the Importance of Being Archbishop
SESSION 12: ROOM O-96 CRUSADE ARCHAEOLOGY, 1: ARCHITECTURE AND BUILDING TECHNIQUEOrganiser: SSCLEChair: Adrian Boas, University of Haifa• Paper 1: Michael Heslop, Royal Holloway University of London, UK:
Where was Villehardouin’s Castle of Grand Magne (Megali Maini)? A New Synthesis of the Evidence
• Paper 2: Benjamin Kedar, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel: The Strange Genesis of a Technique: Radiocarbon Dating of Frankish Mortar
• Paper 3: Vardit Shotten-Hallel, Israel Antiquities Authority: The Architecture of the Castle Chapel at Château Pèlerin – A New Reading
18:00-18:45 PLENARY LECTURE ASESSION 13: ODENSE CITY HALL Chair: Kurt Villads Jensen, Stockholm University• Jonathan Phillips, Royal Holloway University of London: Saladin: His Life,
Legend and the Memory of the Crusades
19:00-20:00 WELCOME RECEPTION ODENSE CITY HALLSponsored by the Faculty of Arts, University of Southern Denmark
TUESDAY, 28 JUNE 2016
9:30-10:30 PLENARY LECTURE BSESSION 14: AUDITORIUM O-100 Chair: Kurt Villads Jensen, Stockholm University• Iris Shagrir, Open University of Israel: The Persecution of the Jews in the
First Crusade: Memory, Liturgy and Nineteenth-Century Visual Culture
10:30-11:00 COFFEEUNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN DENMARK BREAK-OUT AREA11:00-12:30 PARALLEL SESSIONS SESSION 15: AUDITORIUM O-100 MATERIAL RELIGION IN THE CRUSADING WORLD, 1Organiser: William Purkis, University of BirminghamChair: Rosie Weetch, University of Birmingham• Paper 1: William Purkis, University of Birmingham, UK: The Materiality
of the Cult of the Holy Lance of Antioch• Paper 2: Nicholas L. Paul, Fordham University New York, USA: Cultural
Capital and the Crusader: Manasses of Hierges and the True Cross of Antioch
SESSION 16: ROOM O-99 JERUSALEM: URBAN DEVELOPMENT AND RURAL SETTLEMENTOrganiser: SSCLEChair: Benjamin Kedar, Hebrew University of Jerusalem • Paper 1: Ronnie Ellenblum, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel:
Jerusalem – The Building of a New Capital in the east: Physical Challenges and Societal Responses
• Paper 2: Simon Dorso, Université Lumière Lyon 2, France: Change or Continuity? Rural Settlement in Eastern Galilee at the Time of the Crusades: The Hospitaller Estate of Belvoir
• Paper 3: Anna Gutgarts, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel: De Situ Urbis Ierusalem – Urban Development and the Formation of Frankish Jerusalem’s Hinterland
SESSION 17: ROOM O-95 COMMUNICATING POPULAR LEGENDS IN THE CRUSADES Organiser: SSCLEChair: Nicholas Morton, Nottingham Trent University• Paper 1: Adam Simmons, Lancaster University, UK: Diversifying
Christianity in the Crusader States and the View of the Latins: The Case of the Nubians
• Paper 2: Ahmed M. M. Abdelkawy Sheir, Damanhour University, Egypt: The Legend of Prester John and its Implications on the Crusading–Muslim Conflict in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries
• Paper 3: Sophia Menache, Haifa University, Israel: Iter Dei or Vox Dei? Communication Challenges of the Crusades
SESSION 18: ROOM O-96 THIRTEENTH CENTURY CRUSADING: VENICE, BYZANTIUM – AND AFRICA Organiser: SSCLEChair: Jan Vandeburie, Leverhulme Trust Fellow/Università degli Studi Roma Tre• Paper 1: Luigi Andrea Berto, Western Michigan University, USA: The
Crusades and the Byzantines in Medieval Venetian Chronicles • Paper 2: Thomas Madden, Saint Louis University, USA: ‘All the Honor you
have left in this empire’: Venice and the Patriarchate of Constantinople after the Fourth Crusade
• Paper 3: Guy Perry, Leeds University, UK: The Hinge of the Mediterranean: Hafsid Ifriqiya and Louis IX’s Crusade to Tunis in 1270
SESSION 19: ROOM O-97 THIRD TO FIFTH CRUSADE: BATTLES AND SIEGESOrganiser: SSCLEChair: Stephen Bennett, Royal Holloway University of London• Paper 1: Stephen Donnachie, Swansea University, Wales: The Legacy of the
Battle of Hattin on the Military of the Kingdom of Jerusalem• Paper 2: Laurence W. Marvin, Berry College, USA: The Battle of 29 August
1219: Causes, Course and Consequences• Paper 3: Dana Cushing, Independent Scholar, USA: The Maritime
Technology Available for Denmark’s Crusades in 1216
12:30-13:30 LUNCHUNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN DENMARK CANTEEN IS OPEN
13:30-15:00 PARALLEL SESSIONS
SESSION 20: AUDITORIUM O-100 MATERIAL RELIGION IN THE CRUSADING WORLD, 2Organiser and chair: William Purkis, University of Birmingham• Paper 1: Anne E. Lester, University of Colorado in Boulder, USA:
Venerable Subjects: Objects, Devotion and Religious Discourse in the Time of the Crusades
• Paper 2: Rosie Weetch, University of Birmingham, UK: Display, Belief and Superstition: Pierced Coins in the Crusading World
• Paper 3: Cecilia Gaposchkin, Dartmouth College, USA: Transforming Local Devotion: The Fourth Crusade, Nivelon of Quirzy, and the Cathedral of Soissons
SESSION 21: ROOM O-99 MEMORY AND LEGACY OF THE CRUSADES, 1Organiser: Jonathan Phillips, Royal Holloway University of London/SSCLEChair: Jonathan Phillips, Royal Holloway University of London• Paper 1: Janus Møller Jensen, Nyborg Castle/Museums on East Funen,
Denmark: The Peace-Expedition to Algiers in 1746: War and Crusade in Eighteenth Century Denmark
• Paper 2: Elisabeth Siberry, Independent Scholar, UK: Letters home. Crusaders in France, Gallipoli and Palestine
• Paper 3: Mike Horswell, Royal Holloway University of London, UK: The Rise and Fall of British Crusader Medievalism, c.1825-1945
SESSION 22: ROOM O-95 THE CRUSADES IN FRANCE AND OCCITANIA, 1Organiser: Simon Parsons, Royal Holloway University of LondonSponsor: The Crusades in France and Occitania ProjectChair: Natasha Hodgson, Nottingham Trent University• Paper 1: Simon Parsons, Royal Holloway University of London, UK:
Destriers, Standards, and Pavilions: ‘French’ Linguistic Elements in Latin First Crusade Texts
• Paper 2: Carol Sweetenham, University of Warwick, UK: When the Saints Go Marching in: Reality and Fiction in the Depiction of Saints in the First Crusade
• Paper 3: Richard A. Leson, University of Wisconsin in Milwaukee, USA: ’They are painted in many great halls’: Extra-Textual Incursions in the Illuminated Histoire d’Outremer
SESSION 23: ROOM O-96 CRUSADING PIETY AND CRUSADER PROSECUTION IN THE ITALIAN PENINSULAOrganiser: SSCLEChair: Myra Bom, Royal Holloway University of London• Paper 1: Richard Allington, University of Saint Louis, USA: Crusading
Piety in the Defense of the Papal States• Paper 2: Giampiero Bagni, Nottingham Trent University, UK:
The Templars after Acre: The Last ‘Battle’ in Italy. Dante, Templar Brother Peter from Bologna and the Absolution of Templars at the Local Trial by Archbishop Rinaldo of Ravenna
• Paper 3: Kevin Dumke, University of Saint Louis, USA: In ecclesia hospitalis – The Mobile Property of the Hospitaller Priory of Rome, 1333
SESSION 24: ROOM O-97 THE MILITARY ORDERS INSIDE AND OUTSIDE OF THE HOLY LANDOrganiser: SSCLEChair: Judith Bronstein, University of Haifa• Paper 1: Marie Anne Chevalier, University Paul Valéry-Montpellier,
France: La « liberté » des ordres militaires, une vérité dans la Romanie et la Morée franque du premier siècle?
• Paper 2: Yvonne Friedman, Bar Ilan University, Israel: The Templars as Peacemongers
• Paper 3: Shlomo Lotan, Bar Ilan University, Israel: Unknown Leaders: The Contribution of the Substitutes of the Teutonic Grand Master to the Establishment of Teutonic Status and Position in the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem 1230-1244
15:00-15:30 COFFEEUNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN DENMARK BREAK-OUT AREA
15:30-17:00 ROUND TABLES
SESSION 25: AUDITORIUM O-100 ROUND TABLE A – CRUSADING MASCULINITIES: IDEALS AND DIVERSITIESOrganiser and chair: Natasha Hodgson, Nottingham Trent University, UK• Panel: Nicholas Paul, Fordham University New York, USA; Katherine
Lewis, University of Huddersfield, UK; Susan Edgington, Queen Mary University of London, UK; Yvonne Friedman, Bar Ilan University, Israel; Matthew Mesley, University of Zürich, Switzerland; Natasha Hodgson, Nottingham Trent University, UK
SESSION 26: ROOM O-77 ROUND TABLE B – THE USES OF THE WORD ‘CRUSADE’ IN MEDIEVAL TIMES – A RESPONSE TO THE DIVERSITY OF CRUSADING Organiser and chair: Benjamin Weber, University of Toulouse, France• Paper 1: Christoph Maier, University of Zürich, Switzerland: When was
the First History of the Crusade Written?• Paper 2: Alan Murray, Leeds University, U.K.: The Terminology for
Crusades and Crusaders in Middle High German textsDiscussants: Thomas Madden, Saint Louis University, USA & Martin Hall, Royal Holloway University London, UK
17:00-18:00 SSCLE GENERAL MEETINGAUDITORIUM O-100
18:00-19:00 WINE RECEPTIONUNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN DENMARK BREAK-OUT AREASponsored by Brepols Publishers, University Press at Kalamazoo, ARC Humanities Press and University Press of Southern Denmark
WEDNESDAY, 29 JUNE 2016 08:00-19:00 EXCURSION DAY (BUS TRANSPORTATION)MEDIEVAL CHURCHES ON ZEALAND & THE VIKING SHIP MUSEUM IN ROSKILDEPick up: Hotel Plaza and Hotel Radisson Blu, Odense Guide: Ane L. Bysted, Aarhus University
THURSDAY, 30 JUNE 20169:00-10:00 PLENARY LECTURE CSESSION 27: AUDITORIUM O-100 Chair: Torben Kjersgaard Nielsen, Aalborg University• Alan Murray, Leeds University: Unity and Diversity in Crusading: 1096,
1216, 1539
10:00-10:30 COFFEEUNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN DENMARK BREAK-OUT AREA
10:30-12:00 PARALLEL SESSIONS
SESSION 28: ROOM O-77 HETERODOXY AND CRUSADEOrganiser: SSCLEChair: Theresa Vann, University of Minnesota• Paper 1: Michael Ehrlich, Bar-Ilan University, Israel: The Crusaders and
the Survival of Heterodox Muslim Communities in the Levant• Paper 2: Claude Mutafian, Université Paris-I Panthéon-Sorbonne, France:
Les relations ecclésiastiques de l’Arménie cilicienne avec la Syrie franque (xiie–xiv siècle)
• Paper 3: Bernard Hamilton, SSCLE President, UK: The Work of the Franciscans in Thirteenth Century Cilicia
SESSION 29: ROOM O-95 MEMORY AND LEGACY OF THE CRUSADES, 2 Organiser and Chair: Mike Horswell, Royal Holloway, University of London• Paper 1: Adam Knobler, Ruhr University Bochum, Germany: Paradigms
for Understanding Modern Crusading• Paper 2: Judith Bronstein, University of Haifa, Israel: From Destruction to
Revival: Zionist Literature at the Beginning of the Twentieth Century• Paper 3: Jörg Schwarz: Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich,
Germany: Richard Lionheart, John Lackland and the Crusades from the Thirteenth to the Twentieth Century
SESSION 30: ROOM O-94THE CRUSADES IN FRANCE AND OCCITANIA, 2Organiser and chair: Simon Parsons, Royal Holloway University of LondonSponsor: The Crusades in France and Occitania Project• Paper 1: Gil Fishhof, University of Tel-Aviv, Israel: Crusading Iconography
in Twelfth-Century Berry: Patrons, Themes and Dynastic Identity• Paper 2: Lucas Villegas-Aristizabal, Richmond American International
University in London, UK: Did Savary of Mauléon Participate in Alfonso IX’s Failed Siege of Caceres?
• Paper 3: Martin Hall, Royal Holloway University of London, UK: Muscular Christianity in Toulouse and Paris: John of Garland’s Crusading Appeal
SESSION 31: ROOM O-97 NATIVES AND CRUSADERS IN THE BALTICOrganiser: SSCLEChair: Torben Kjersgaard Nielsen, Aalborg University• Paper 1: Raitis Simsons, University of Latvia in Riga: Participation of
Western Baltic people – Prussians and Curonians – in the Prussian and Curonian Land Administration
• Paper 2: Mihkel Mäesalu, University of Tartu, Estonia: Socio-Political Aspects of Christianisation in Thirteenth Century Livonia. Treaties of ’Acceptance of Faith’ between Crusaders and the Pagan Elite
• Paper 3: Anti Selart, University of Tartu, Estonia: Creating the Crusading Society in Thirteenth Century Livonia. Native Nobility and Crusaders
12:00-13:00 LUNCHUNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN DENMARK CANTEEN IS OPEN
13:00-14:30 PARALLEL SESSIONS SESSION 32: ROOM O-77 THE THIRD CRUSADE AND BEYOND: SOURCES AND MEMORYOrganiser and chair: Nicholas McDermott, Cardiff University,• Paper 1: Helen Nicholson, Cardiff University, UK: The Construction of a
Primary Source: The Creation of Itinerarium Peregrinorum 1• Paper 2: Jochen Burgtorf, California State University at Fullerton, USA:
Fugitives and Refugees in the Context of the Third Crusade• Paper 3: Massimiliano Gaggero, University of Milan, Italy: The Circulation
of the Eracles in Italy and Galeotto del Carretto’s Chronicles
SESSION 33: ROOM O-95CRUSADER LINEAGES AND CRUSADER TASKSOrganiser: SSCLEChair: Nikolaos Chrissis, University of Athens• Paper 1: William Murrell, Vanderbilt University, USA: The Role of
Frankish Interpreters in Diplomatic Negotiations between Franks and Muslims in the Crusader Period
• Paper 2: Isabelle Ortega, Université de Nîmes, France: The Brienne’s Dynasty in the Eastern Mediterranean at the Turn of the XIII–XIVth Centuries: An Exceptional Lineage
• Paper 3: Clément de Vasselot de Régné, Nantes University, France: A Crusader Lineage from Spain to the Throne of Jerusalem: The Lusignan
• Paper 4: Nicholas Coureas, Cyprus Research Centre: The Formation and Evolution of the Class of Burgesses in the Kingdom of Lusignan Cyprus (1192-1474)
SESSION 34: ROOM O-94 ’FAMILIAR MARVELS’? CRUSADER ATTITUDES TOWARDS AN INFIDEL ENEMY IN THE BALTICOrganiser: Rasa Mazeika, University of Toronto/SSCLEChair: Sini Kangas, University of Tampere• Paper 1: Antti Hannunen, University of Tampere, Finland: Was There Such
a Thing as ‘a Good Pagan’?• Paper 2: Rasa Mazeika, University of Toronto, Canada: Familiar Marvels?
The Attitudes of Henricus Lettus, Peter von Dusburg and Hermann von Wartberge towards Baltic Pagan Religion
• Paper 3: Loïc Cholet, University of Neuchatel, Switzerland: Familiar Marvels? Baltic Pagan Religion as seen by French Crusaders
SESSION 35: ROOM O-97 PREACHING THE CROSS, THE TEMPLE AND JERUSALEMOrganiser: SSCLEChair: Anti Selart, University of Tartu • Paper 1: Alexander Marx, University of Vienna/Austrian Academy of
Sciences, Austria: Between Space, Body, and Eschatology. The Motif of the Temple in the Preaching of the Third Crusade
• Paper 2: Alexander Baranov, Free University of Berlin, Germany: ‘To Preach the Cross against the Russians and All Others, who Attack Our Order’ –The Crusade Rhetoric of the Teutonic Order in Livonia at the End of the Fifteenth Century
• Paper 3: Mari H. Isoaho, University of Helsinki/Finnish Academy, Finland: The Battle for Jerusalem in Kievan Rus’: Igor’s Campaign (1185) and the Battle of Hattin (1187)
14:30-15:00 COFFEEUNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN DENMARK BREAK-OUT AREA
15:00-16:30 PARALLEL SESSIONS
SESSION 36: ROOM O-77 CRUSADING AND COMMEMORATING: THE CRUSADES AT SEAOrganiser: Mike Carr, University of Edinburgh/SSCLEChair: Thomas Heebøll Holm, University of Southern Denmark• Paper 1: Nikolaos G. Chrissis, University of Athens, Greece: Vanquishing
Deviance by Pen and Sword: Intellectual Currents in Western Europe and Crusading against Orthodox Christians
• Paper 2: Mike Carr, University of Edinburgh, Scotland: Turks, Mongols, Plague and Crusade: Diversity of Crusading in the Fourteenth-Century Aegean and Black Sea
• Paper 3: Theresa Vann, University of Minnesota, USA: The Order of the Hospital’s Commemorative Liturgies of Military Victories: Jerusalem, Rhodes, and Malta
SESSION 37: ROOM O-95 CRUSADING PILGRIMAGE: PRACTICE, PATRONAGE AND POETRYOrganiser: SSCLEChair: William Purkis, Birmingham University• Paper 1: Philip Booth, Lancaster University, UK: Diverse Pilgrim Practices
and the Absent Jerusalem in the Holy Land Pilgrimage Account of Thietmar (1217-1218)
• Paper 2: Jamie Doherty, University of Bristol, UK: Crusading and Pilgrimage in Church Foundation Narratives: A Study of the English Evidence
• Paper 3: Andrew Jotischky, Lancaster University, UK: Geoffrey Dutton and Norton Priory, Cheshire: An English Fifth Crusader and his Monastery
SESSION 38: ROOM O-94 CHRONICLES AND CHARTERS FOR THE BALTIC CRUSADESOrganiser: SSCLEChair: Torben Kjersgaard Nielsen, Aalborg University• Paper 1: Graham Loud, Leeds University, UK: Crusade and Holy War in
the Chronicle of Arnold of Lübeck• Paper 2: Ane Bysted, Aarhus University, Denmark: ‘Give me Thirty Horses
– Archbishop Anders Sunesen and the Preaching of the Crusades in the North
• Paper 3: Karl Borchardt, Monumenta Germaniae Historica, Germany: Petrus de Vinea and the Imperial Charters for Livonia 1224 and Prussia 1226 (1235)
SESSION 39: ROOM O-97 MUSLIM AND CHRISTIAN APPROACHES TO THE ENEMY, 2Organiser: SSCLEChair: Kristin Skottki, University of Rostock• Paper 1: Nicholas Morton, Nottingham Trent University, UK: Walter the
Chancellor’s Depictions of Ilghazi and Tughtakin: A Prisoner’s Perspective• Paper 2: Ben Halliburton, University of Saint Louis, USA: ‘The Greatest
Devil of All the Franks’ – Conrad of Montferrat and Foreign Perceptions of Crusaders, 1187–1192
18:00-c. 23:45 CONFERENCE DINNER NYBORG CASTLEDeparture from: Hotel Plaza and Hotel Radisson Blu, Odense at 18:00 Return: Nyborg Castle at 23:00; Arrival at Odense City Centre approx. 23:45
FRIDAY, 1 JULY 2016
10:00-11:30 PARALLEL SESSIONS
SESSION 40: ROOM O-140 CRUSADING VIOLENCE AND RHETORICOrganiser: SSCLEChair: Kurt Villads Jensen, Stockholm University• Paper 1: Connor Wilson, Lancaster University, UK: Holy War in North
Yorkshire: ‘Crusading’ Battle Rhetoric in Aelred of Rievaulx’s Relatio de Standardo
• Paper 2: Sini Kangas, University of Tampere, Finland: Categorizing Violence in the Gesta Francorum, the Livonian Chronicle of Henry, and the Chronica of Alberic of Trois-Fontaines
SESSION 41: ROOM O-95 CRUSADE ARCHAEOLOGY, 2: FINDS AND SITESOrganiser: SSCLEChair: Mathias Piana, German Archaeological Institute• Paper 1: Christer Carlsson, Independent Scholar, Sweden: Results of a
Geophysical Survey at Shingay Hospitaller Commandery, Cambridgeshire, England
• Paper 2: Robert D. Leonard, Independent scholar, USA: Cut Gold Coins of the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem
• Paper 3: James Petre, University of the Highlands and Islands, UK: Crusader Castles of Cyprus: Why?
SESSION 42: ROOM O-77 CRUSADES AND THEIR IMPACT ON EUROPEOrganiser: SSCLEChair: Susan Edgington, Queen Mary University of London• Paper 1: Valentin Portnykh, Novosibirsk State University, Russia: God
wants it! What are the Precise Reasons He is Interested in Crusade for?• Paper 2: Charles W. Connell, Northern Arizona University, USA: Is it Time
to Stop Studying the Crusades?
11:30-12:00 COFFEEUNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN DENMARK BREAK-OUT AREA
12:00-12:30 SESSION 43: ROOM U-140 CONCLUDING REMARKS AND GOODBYESBernard Hamilton, SSCLE PresidentTorben Kjersgaard Nielsen, Aalborg UniversityKurt Villads Jensen, Stockholm University
Jubilæumsfonden af 12. august 1971