Conferences in Medieval Studies

Regular academic conferences in medieval studies:

  • International Congress on Medieval Studies, annual conference (Kalamazoo MI, U.S.)
  • International Medieval Congress, annual conference (Leeds, UK)
  • Medieval Academy of America, annual conference (various locations in the US and Canada)
  • Canadian Society of Medievalists, annual conference (various locations in Canada)
  • UBC Medieval Workshop, annual conference (Vancouver, Canada)
  • Medieval Chronicle Society, triennial conference (various locations)
  • International Congress for Medieval Latin Studies, quinquennial conference (various locations)
  • International Medieval Society, annual symposium (Paris, France)
  • The Medieval Translator, biennial conference (various locations)
  • Association internationale pour l’étude du moyen français, biennial conference (various locations)
  • Société internationale pour l'étude du théâtre médiéval, triennial conference (various locations)
  • The Texas Medieval Association, annual conference (various locations in Texas)
  • Vagantes Graduate Student Conference, annual conference (various locations in North America)
  • International Reynard Society, biennial conference (various locations)
  • New College Conference on Medieval & Renaissance Studies, biennial conference (Sarasota, Florida)
  • New England Graduate Medieval Conference, annual conference (cycles between Brown University, University of Connecticut, and Yale University)
  • Byzantine Studies Conference, annual conference (various locations)

Famous quotes containing the words medieval and/or studies:

    Our medieval historians who prefer to rely as much as possible on official documents because the chronicles are unreliable, fall thereby into an occasionally dangerous error. The documents tell us little about the difference in tone which separates us from those times; they let us forget the fervent pathos of medieval life.
    Johan Huizinga (1872–1945)

    Possibly the Creator did not make the world chiefly for the purpose of providing studies for gifted novelists; but if he had done so, we can scarcely imagine that He could have offered anything much better in the way of material ...
    Elizabeth Stuart Phelps (1844–1911)