Comparative Diplomatics: “Mapping Japan in the Iberian Archive: 16th Century Accounts from the Christian Mission”
David Rivera, Spanish and Portuguese
Thu, 10/3 · 4:30 pm—6:00 pm · Jones 202
Center for Collaborative History; Program in Medieval Studies
Comparative Diplomatics is an exploratory workshop on documents in late antiquity and the middle ages with occasional forays into the modern era, as distinct from narrative and normative long-form texts. Its goal is twofold: to stimulate the production of new translations of late antique and medieval documentary sources that can be used in the classroom, and/or harvest some of the translations already being made; and to bring languages, subfields and approaches into contact in order to clarify methodological questions.
Each presenter will translate an unpublished document or retranslate a previously published document that needs fresh examination, and roughly one week ahead of time, provide the group with an edition, a translation and an image of the original.
To receive the image(s), edition(s), and translation(s) of the document(s) to be discussed,
Conveners: Tom Conlan (EAS/History), Helmut Reimitz (History), Marina Rustow (NES/History)
Coordinators: Lucia Waldschuetz (History), Stephanie Luescher (NES).
Comparative Diplomatics is sponsored by the Center for Collaborative History with support from the Program in Medieval Studies.