Honors College Lecture Explores Early Medieval Gaul With 'Views from the Edge'
Scene from the Saint Remigius binding, last quarter of the ninth century C.E., ivory, Musée de Picardie in Amiens, France. The scene shows Clovis I being baptized by St. Remy.
Explore early medieval Gaul through the lens of its neighbors with Jon Arnold, an associate professor of ancient and medieval history and the director of classical studies at the University of Tulsa.
Join the Honors College and Medieval and Renaissance Studies for a lecture hinged on “Views from the Edge” at 12:30 p.m. Thursday, April 4, in Gearhart Hall 130.
Arnold will cull perspectives from individuals living in Italy, Byzantium and Spain during the sixth and seventh centuries to construct a picture of Gaul from outsiders’ perspectives.
While late Roman and eventually Frankish Gaul has been the subject of extensive scholarship, Gaul’s perception from outside the region has not. Arnold’s lecture dissects what Gaul was “thought to have been” and what it was “becoming.”
“Classical ethnographic traditions and stereotypes persisted, allowing Gaul, Gauls and Franks to be ‘Roman,’ but also, surprisingly, Celtic and Germanic — something out of the pages of Julius Caesar,” Arnold shared. “Religion also played an important role, allowing Gaul to seem Christian, pagan and even Jewish, depending on the context.”
Jon Arnold is an associate professor of ancient and medieval history and the director of classical studies at the University of Tulsa. He is the author of Theoderic and the Roman Imperial Restoration (CUP, 2014), co-editor of A Companion to Ostrogothic Italy (Brill, 2016) and is currently translating the major historical works of Magnus Felix Ennodius for Liverpool's Translated Texts for Historians series.
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Contacts
Shelby Gill, director of communications
Honors College
479-575-2024,
segill@uark.edu