History PhD student @KCL • working on 13th-century documentary culture in England
Palaeography nerd • coffee fan • feminist • she/her 🏳️🌈
Marie Tranchant
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One more week to apply! This is a friendly, low-commitment group and a great opportunity to meet new early career scholars.
Do consider applying even if you are not in London full-time but not too far (we currently have a Cambridge member, for instance!)
Friendly reminder to send in your app to the London Soc for Medieval Studies by 21 June!
the LSMS has been PG/EC researcher-led since 1970, showcasing the latest research on the Middle Ages by global scholars, committed to the critical & creative possibilities of interdisciplinary work & learning 🗣️
Tomorrow is this term's last seminar! We can’t wait to hear Dr Tim Pestell from @norwichcastle.bsky.social speak about the redesign of Norwich Castle's Royal Keep!
🗓️ Tues 9 December
⏰ 17.30 GMT
💻 ONLINE
Remember to sign up here 👉 bit.ly/londonmedieval
Entertaining the animals 🎶
BL Add MS 19352; Theodore Psalter; 1066 CE; Eastern Mediterranean (Constantinople); f.189v
Marie Tranchant
Very grateful to Prof. @medievalfemina.bsky.social, Dr Adrian Jobson and Dr Tony Moore for this!
Maia Blumberg
The London Society for Medieval Studies is recruiting for its 2025/26 committee!
One of the longest running IHR seminars, we are also one of the few ECR-led.
If you are a PGR or ECR based in London, working on anything medieval, please do get in touch!
@ihr.bsky.social
Many thanks to the reviewers, numerous proofreaders, my wonderful team of supervisors @ajt55.bsky.social Julia Crick and David Carpenter, and to my test audiences at @ihr.bsky.social and @kingshistory.bsky.social
London Society for Medieval Studies
More generally, if you are passionate about anything medieval, you are more than welcome to attend our seminars, online or in person: www.history.ac.uk/seminars/lon...
Do get in touch if you would like to hear more, or join the mailing list, at [email protected]
Delighted that some of my recent PhD research has just been published in Historical Research! It explores connections between the chronicle written at Burton Abbey in the mid-C13 and the royal chancery
More here: academic.oup.com/histres/adva...
Abstract. This article aims to demonstrate that much of the information found in the chronicle of Burton for the 1250s was obtained through Henry of Marchi