Mohamed Kenawi (University of Oxford) ‘EAMENA in Egypt: The quest for endangered living archaeology’
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Mohamed Kenawi (University of Oxford) |
‘EAMENA in Egypt: The quest for endangered living archaeology’ |
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Mohamed Kenawi (University of Oxford) |
‘EAMENA in Egypt: The quest for endangered living archaeology’ |
Eberhard Sauer (University of Edinburgh), Jebrael Nokandeh (National Musuem of Iran), Hamid Omrani Rekavandi (Gorgan Wall Base) and Davit Naskidashvili (Tblisi State University)
'The Late Antique world‘s largest fortresses, mountain warfare in the Caucasus and the defence of Sasanian Persia’
Claudia Glatz (University of Glasgow) : ‘Transitional landscapes and borderland communities in the Zagros-Mesopotamian interface’
Thursday 29 November:
5.15pm, Chrystal Macmillan Building, Seminar Room 5.
Professor Ewen Cameron (University of Edinburgh): A Climate of Fear? Scottish Universities and Devolution, 1974-1979.
Thursday 22 November:
5.15pm, Chrystal Macmillan Building, Seminar Room 5.
Lisa Baer (University of Guelph): Coding Gender and Ambition in Early Modern Scotland: Approaching the Sixteenth Century with the Digital Humanities.
Thursday 15 November:
5.15pm, Chrystal Macmillan Building, Seminar Room 5.
Charles Fletcher (University of Edinburgh): Justice and Society in the Highlands: A Study of Franchise Courts in Strathspey, c. 1695-1748.
Thursday 8 November:
5.15pm, Chrystal Macmillan Building, Seminar Room 5.
Dr Lizanne Henderson (University of Glasgow): (Super)natural Animals in Early Modern Scotland.
Thursday 1 November:
5.15pm, Chrystal Macmillan Building, Seminar Room 5.
Dr Amy Blakeway (University of Kent): Parliament and Convention in the Personal Rule of James V.
Thursday 25 October:
5.15pm, Chrystal Macmillan Building, Seminar Room 5.
Dr Emma Macleod (University of Stirling): How to Do a Treason Trial: Professor John Bruce and the Investigation of Precedent in the English and Scottish State Trials, 1793-1794.
Thursday 18 October
5.15pm, Chrystal Macmillan Building, Seminar Room 5.
Dr Chris Langley (Newman University): Charity, Discretion and the Kirk Session: Blurring Institutional and Personal Charity in Seventeenth-Century Scotland.