Mass, baptism, penance, the last rites and burial
Our Free Lectures
•
1h 10m
Sarah Hamilton researches the medieval liturgy and has written variously about particular liturgies, including the sorts that might have been performed in local churches in the central Middle Ages, touching on how they might be performed in different spaces.
Professor Sarah Hamilton’s research focuses on exploring the nature of the relationships between ecclesiastical institutions and rites and medieval society, especially in the years which divide the early from the high Middle Ages, c. 900 - 1100 AD.
Sarah's first degree was in history at Peterhouse, University of Cambridge . After spending some time out of academic life as an accountant, she returned to do an MA in Medieval History at King's College, London and went on to do a PhD there on 'The Practice of Penance, 900-1050' under Professors Janet L. Nelson and Anne Duggan.
Since, Sarah has taught at Birkbeck, University of London, King's College, London, the Universities of Glasgow, Manchester and Southampton before being appointed to a lectureship at the University of Exeter in 2000. She held a British Academy Postdoctoral Fellowship from 1999-2002, first at Southampton, then at Exeter and has also held grants from the British Academy, the Arts and Humanities Research Council and HERA.
Up Next in Our Free Lectures
-
Architect: The evolving story of a pr...
From the very first moments of humanity we have had a need for shelter, and have sought to create it where it does not naturally occur. This talk will consider the role of architects in society almost from those first moments glimpsing some of the highs and lows of the profession throughout its w...
-
Missionaries and their Parish Churche...
These buildings were important, because they were not only where services took place, but they also created a 'home-away-from-home' and a sense of familiarity in what were often hostile and unfamiliar environments. Like the parish church buildings of England, these mission churches were at the ce...
-
Royalty, Murder and a Sidetrack
Saints Diuma, Wystan, Guthlac and... Chad. We were puzzled. Who were these people? Chad we knew, but the others? – and Eormenhild, Werburgh, Aelfritha and Edburga? And why did John Betjeman famously describe Repton crypt as ‘holy air encased in stone’? Derby Cathedral published a book 'Saints of...