SCHOOL OF HISTORY, CLASSICS AND ARCHAEOLOGY Dr Tatiana Ivleva was nominated for Current Archaeology prize, research project of the Year, for “Britons abroad: the untold story of emigration and object mobility from Roman Britain” Dr Adam Morton organised a conference and workshop in September: Historicising Belief Workshop (12 Sept) – The workshop focussed on ancient Greece to post-Stalinist Russia, and was concerned with how we access belief in the past. International speakers: Prof Susan Karant-Nunn (Arizona) and Prof Nicholas Terpstra (Toronto). Auckland Castle participated. Reformation Colloquium (14-16 Sept) which is the largest Reformation conference in UK. There were speakers from nine different countries, including two world-leading plenaries (Susan Karant-Nunn [Arizona], Marc Forster [Connecticut College]). Research Projects and Awards Dr Rachel Hammersley is involved in Inspiring Archives: A story of the Civil War in the North East of England, an exciting outreach project inspired by some of the unique and distinctive resources in Newcastle University’s Special Collections. Rachel will be working with Year 8 pupils from Kenton School next semester to produce a pop-up museum on the story of the Civil War in Newcastle and a history trail around Tynemouth Priory. The whole project will culminate in a Civil War Day at Tynemouth Priory on 22 June 2017. The project is supported by the Heritage Lottery Fund and is running in conjunction with English Heritage. Dr Violetta Hionidou with M. Nazou (Universite Catholique de Louvain) and Y. Gassias (University of Crete), received funding from École Française d’Athénes for their project ‘Μυκονιάτικη κοινωνία και ανασκαφές στη Δήλο, 1873-1914 (The society of Mykonos and the Delos excavations, 1873-1914).’ Dr Jen Kain started her year-long post-doctoral project at the Institute of Historical Research, School of Advanced Studies, University of London, at the start of October, where she is the Pearsall Junior Fellow in Naval and Maritime History. Jen remains attached to Newcastle University where she completed her MA in the History of the Americas, and will be teaching on the Slavery, American Freedom module in semester two. Dr Thomas Rütten, and his collaborator Dr Oommen-Halbach from the University of Düsseldorf, received 5000€ from the German Society for the History of Medicine, Natural Sciences and Technology for a project which aims to edit and annotate the correspondence between Karl Sudhoff and Tibor Győry covering the period from 1898 to 1937. Dr Lisa-Marie Shillito has won two major grants recently. A Wellcome Trust Seed Award in Humanities and Social Sciences for a project on ‘Biofuels’ and respiratory health – the potentials of the archaeological record’ (£42,620.99) and NERC Standard Grant (Natural Environment Research Council UK) for ‘Investigating the nature and timing of the earliest human occupation of North America’ (£578,667.21). Newsletter December 2016 Dr Sarah Campbell organised a half-day workshop in October on Oral History and Deindustrialisation which included keynote papers from Prof Arthur McIvor (Strathclyde), Dr Graham Smith (Royal Holloway) and Prof Sean O’Connell (QUB). Dr Philip Garret was appointed member of Japan Foundation Educational Committee, a national funding body
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SCHOOL OF HISTORY,
CLASSICS AND ARCHAEOLOGY
Dr Tatiana Ivleva was
nominated for Current
Archaeology prize,
research project of the
Year, for “Britons
abroad: the untold
story of emigration
and object mobility
from Roman Britain”
Dr Adam Morton organised a conference and workshop in September: Historicising Belief Workshop (12 Sept) – The workshop focussed on
ancient Greece to post-Stalinist Russia, and was concerned with how we access belief in the past. International speakers: Prof Susan Karant-Nunn (Arizona) and Prof Nicholas Terpstra (Toronto). Auckland Castle participated.
Reformation Colloquium (14-16 Sept) which is the largest Reformation conference in UK. There were speakers from nine different countries, including two world-leading plenaries (Susan Karant-Nunn [Arizona], Marc Forster [Connecticut College]).
Research Projects and Awards Dr Rachel Hammersley is involved in Inspiring Archives: A story of the Civil
War in the North East of England, an exciting outreach project inspired by some of
the unique and distinctive resources in Newcastle University’s Special Collections.
Rachel will be working with Year 8 pupils from Kenton School next semester to
produce a pop-up museum on the story of the Civil War in Newcastle and a history
trail around Tynemouth Priory. The whole project will culminate in a Civil War Day at
Tynemouth Priory on 22 June 2017. The project is supported by the Heritage Lottery
Fund and is running in conjunction with English Heritage.
Dr Violetta Hionidou with M. Nazou (Universite Catholique de Louvain) and Y.
Gassias (University of Crete), received funding from École Française d’Athénes for
their project ‘Μυκονιάτικη κοινωνία και ανασκαφές στη Δήλο, 1873-1914 (The society
of Mykonos and the Delos excavations, 1873-1914).’
Dr Jen Kain started her year-long post-doctoral project at the Institute of Historical
Research, School of Advanced Studies, University of London, at the start of October,
where she is the Pearsall Junior Fellow in Naval and Maritime History. Jen remains
attached to Newcastle University where she completed her MA in the History of the
Americas, and will be teaching on the Slavery, American Freedom module in
semester two.
Dr Thomas Rütten, and his collaborator Dr Oommen-Halbach from the University of
Düsseldorf, received 5000€ from the German Society for the History of Medicine,
Natural Sciences and Technology for a project which aims to edit and annotate the
correspondence between Karl Sudhoff and Tibor Győry covering the period from
1898 to 1937.
Dr Lisa-Marie Shillito has won two major grants recently. A Wellcome Trust Seed
Award in Humanities and Social Sciences for a project on ‘Biofuels’ and respiratory
health – the potentials of the archaeological record’ (£42,620.99) and NERC
Standard Grant (Natural Environment Research Council UK) for ‘Investigating the
nature and timing of the earliest human occupation of North America’ (£578,667.21).
Dr Claudia Baldoli, ‘Catholic neutralism, 1914-1918’ at conference
on 'Pope Benedict XV in the world of the useless slaughter',
Bologna, 3-5 November 2016.
Prof Jeremy Boulton, The Maddison Monument in St Nicholas
Cathedral: Faith, failure, fertility and death in seventeenth-century
Newcastle, Lit and Phil, Newcastle, 29 Sept 2016.
Dr Robert Dale, ‘“There, where they have grown accustomed to
flooding”: Responses to the Leningrad Flood of September 1924 in
Historical Perspective’, Cities and Disasters: Urban Adaptability
and Resilience in History, Centre for Metropolitan History, Institute
for Historical Research (3-4 November 2016).
Dr Robert Dale, "Rebuilding Socialist cities: reshaping urban
space and life in Soviet Russia after 1943", Centre for Urban
History, University of Leicester (18 November 2016).
Dr Rachel Hammersley, contribution to the Political Thought
in a time of Crisis, 1640-1660 conference, Folger Shakespeare
Library, Washington DC, December 2016. A summary of some of
the things she discussed in her paper can be found in the latest
post on her blog (http://www.rachelhammersley.com/new-blog/).
She also delivered the James H. Burns Memorial Lecture at the St
Andrews Institute of Intellectual History. Podcast available.
Dr Violetta Hionidou, “‘Αυτές οι Χιώτισσες, τις βάζανε οι γονείς
τους γιατί, δεν ξέρω για ποιο λόγο,… τις βάζανε
υπηρέτριες’:Υπηρέτριες στην Ελλάδα, 1860-1960” (“‘Those Chian
women, their parents sent them, I don’t know why, they sent
them as servants’: Female servants in Greece, 1860-1960”, Το
υπηρετικό προσωπικό στην ελληνική τέχνη, την κοινωνία και την
ιστορία. Μύθοι και πραγματικότητα, Crete, Greece (December
2016)
Prof Tim Kirk, ‘The Emergence of an Axis Intelligentsia:
intellectuals and cultural workers in south-east Europe during
World war II’, at the conference ‘Treason of the Intellectuals’, held
at Uppsala University, Sweden, 8-9 December.
Dr Thomas Rütten, ‘Mord in Waldniel, 1944? Eine
Fallstudie’ (Murder in Waldniel, 1944? A case study), University
of Düsseldorf (Department of the History, Ethics and Theory of
Medicine) in conjunction with the Mahn- und Gedenkstätte für die
Opfer nationalsozialistischer Gewaltherrschaft (Exhortation and
Memorial Space for the victims of National Socialist Tyranny), 7
December 2016.
Public Engagement Dr Joan Allen has written a press review for the
latest edition of the Revolution Papers (No 50). This
issue focuses on Dáil Éireann's enactment of the
constitution of the Irish Free State in 1922.
Dr Claudia Baldoli was appointed member of the academic board for the creation of the Museum of Fascism, Predappio (Italy). The first meetings were on 27 October and 5 December 2016.
Dr Sarah Campbell introduced former civil rights activist Bernadette Devlin at the annual Field Day
lecture in Derry, Northern Ireland, where Devlin spoke on ‘A Terrible State of Chassis’ in September 2016.
Dr Martin Farr has been busy commenting on Brexit, and its impact on the Labour leadership. He has been a guest on BBC Radio Newcastle a number of times, he published an online article on ‘Brexit and the Dead’, and gave the History Society pub lecture on Brexit and Trump in November 2016. He is also researching Margaret Thatcher’s World, and has given a number of talks on the topic.
Dr Martin Farr spoke in Parliament on David Lloyd George for Parliament Week.
Dr Ben Houston took part in the commemoration of Dr Martin Luther King’s 1967 visit to Newcastle in November. The event also launched highlights of the Freedom City programme to an invited audience of voluntary and community groups, representatives from cultural venues and other key partners from across the city, to which Ben will also be contributing.
Dr Adam Morton gave two lectures at Access to A-level days. One at Manchester Central Hall (24 Nov) one in Birmingham Carr’s Lane Centre (1
Dec). Both were on ‘Was there a mid-Tudor Crisis?’
Martin Luther King was awarded a honorary doctorate from
MA student, Caitlin Head, won the Joseph Cowen Memorial Prize for her MA
dissertation on Dr Margaret Balfour.
Two students won Research Excellence
Awards for their PhDs:
Jack Hepworth (supervisors Dr Matt Perry and Dr Sarah Campbell)
‘The Heterogeneity and Evolution of Irish Republicanism, c.1969-
c.1994'
and
Alicia Sawyer (supervisor Dr Lisa-Marie Shilito)
‘Geoarchaeology of Viking Age Icelandic
middens’ (starting January)
Dr David Lowther, who graduated with a PhD from Newcastle in December, won a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow (2016-2019), at Durham University for his project ‘Imagining India: Mughal Art and Colonial Knowledge Networks in the creation of Modern British Zoology, 1800 – 1858’
Publications Dr Claudia Baldoli, ‘With Rome and with Moscow: Italian Catholic
Communism and the anti-Fascist exile’, Contemporary European History,
25 (4), November 2016, pp. 619-643.
Dr Robert Dale, ‘“No longer Normal” Traumatized Red Army Veterans in
Postwar Leningrad’, in Peter Leese and Jason Crouthamel (eds), Traumatic
Memories: World War Two and After (New York: Palgrave Macmillan,
2016), pp. 119–41.
Dr Robert Dale, ‘“Being a Real Man”: Masculinities in Soviet Russia during
and after the Great Patriotic War’, in Corinna M. Peniston-Bird and Emma
Vickers (eds), Lessons of War: Gender and the Second World War (New
York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2016).
Dr Philip Garret, ‘A systematic review of geological evidence for Holocene
earthquakes and tsunamis along the Nankai-Suruga Trough, Japan’ in the
top-tier journal Earth Science Reviews (Vol. 159, 2016, pp. 337-357).
Dr Violetta Hionidou, ‘Popular medicine and empirics in Greece, 1900-
1950: an oral history approach’, Medical History (2016),60(4), 492-513.
Dr Violetta Hionidou, ‘Historical Demography of Greek populations’,
in Fauve-Chamoux, A; Bolovan, I; Sogner, S, eds, A Global History of
Historical Demography: Half a Century of Interdisciplinarity, History of
Historical Demography (Bern: Peter Lang, 2016), 291-300.
Dr Violetta Hionidou, “‘Ενα κυνήγι ήταν, της ζωής εναντίον του θανάτου’.
Βιώνοντας τον Λιμό στην Κατοχική Ελλάδα.” (“‘It was a race of life against
death’. Experiencing the famine in Occupied Greece”), Newspaper
Kathimerini.
Dr Joe Lawson, translation of one of the most influential Chinese books
about China's modern history, Mao Haijian's The Qing Empire and the
Opium War: Collapse of the Heavenly Dynasty, came out with Cambridge
University Press.
Dr Adam Morton, Popery, Politics and Play: visual culture in
Succession Crisis England. The Seventeenth Century 2016, (ePub ahead
of Print), 1-39.
Dr Adam Morton (and Watanabe-O'Kelly H,) ed. Queens Consort, Cultural
Transfer and European Politics, c.1500-1800.Abingdon: Routledge, 2016.
Dr Adam Morton, Punir le pape: honte, satire et action performative dans
la polémique anticatholique anglaise au temps de la
Réforme. In: Baranova,T; Szcech,N, ed. Usages et stratćégies polémiques
en Europe au temps de l’humanisme du XIV au milieu du XVII siècle.