Church Monuments Society Online Lecture Series: The Last Hour: Tombs for Women in the Kingdoms of Jerusalem and Cyprus, 11 March 2023 17:00-18:00 GMT (13:00-14:00 ET)

Church Monuments Society Online Lecture Series

The Last Hour: Tombs for Women in the Kingdoms of Jerusalem and Cyprus

Estelle Ingrand-Varenne and Maria Villano

11 March 2023 17:00 – 18:00 GMT (13:00 – 14:00 ET)

Image Credit: Estelle Ingrand-Varenne & Maria Aimé Villano

An event forming part of the Church Monuments Society's series of online lectures for Spring 2023. Everybody welcome!

To register: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/the-last-hour-tombs-for-women-in-the-kingdoms-of-jerusalem-and-cyprus-tickets-536146146557

The Word of the Last Hour: Tombs and Epitaphs for Women in the Kingdoms of Jerusalem and Cyprus: This talk will examine the funerary monuments and inscriptions of the Latin populations in the areas of the two kingdoms of Jerusalem and Cyprus, from the epigraphic point of view. A series of a case studies are highlighted, with a special focus on tombstones devoted to women. This perspective serves two purposes: on the one hand it allows an examination of the role of women in a given society, mainly through the mechanisms of (self) representation entrusted to the epitaphs and the images, while, on the other, it enables us to question the totality of the funerary heritage in terms of similiarity and difference, as far as more general questions are concerned, even if funerary inscriptions for women in the Latin East as in Europe represent a minority.

Estelle Ingrand-Varenne specializes in medieval epigraphy. After having studied the inscriptions’ shift from Latin to French in her doctoral thesis (2018), her research focus turned to the Outremer. She has worked on the inscriptions of the Latin kingdom of Jerusalem, producing a new corpus for studying this specific epigraphy. After three years at the French Research Center in Jerusalem, she is now at the Center for Advanced Studies in Medieval Civilisation (CESCM) in Poitiers. Estelle is the principal investigator of the ERC Starting grant project GRAPH-EAST, which deals with inscriptions and graffiti in Latin alphabet in the Eastern Mediterranean from the 7th to the 16th c. (2021-2026).

Maria Aimé Villano is an art historian, specializing in the Italian and Byzantine middle ages. She has an MA degree from the Università degli Studi di Firenze with a dissertation on the sculpted columns of the ciborium of San Marco at Venice. She received her doctoral degree in 2020 in cotutelle between the Università Ca’ Foscari of Venice and the Université de Poitiers on the study of these columns, focusing on their epigraphic and iconographic aspects and especially on the relationship between text and image. For the Graph-East project, she is currently working on the medieval Latin inscriptions of Cyprus.


Event Information

This online talk is FREE to all and will take place on Zoom. Places must be booked via Eventbrite. This is one of a series of online talks delivered by the Church Monuments Society for Spring 2023.

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Guidelines and handy Zoom hints

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During the webinar:

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• Enjoy the talk!