Next November (11-13, 2021) we will host our closing international conference at the University of Bern. Towns were producers, organisers, and brokers of martial culture within the rapidly changing political world of late medieval Europe. Towns’ defences against and participation in local, regional and extra regional conflicts shaped military organisation and urban martial culture. This martial culture developed at the intersection of legal prerogatives, political requirements, physical skills, knowledge, and the evolving societal significance of the ownership and use of weapons
Si la question de la violence à la fin de l’ère médiévale a été amplement traitée par les historie...
My research looks into the institutional, operational and material aspects of medieval towns’ milita...
While medieval warfare has been a long established topic of study, focus to date has been primarily ...
Next November (11-13, 2021) we will host our closing international conference at the University of B...
Our research project (2018-22) considers towns as producers, organisers, and brokers of martial cult...
This paper demonstrates who was considered to be a martial expert in the fifteenth century, and it p...
International colloquium of Freiburg im Breisgau, 28-29 September 2018International audienceSince th...
The 2018 edition of the medieval culture and war conference will take place at the Saint-Louis Unive...
Martial Culture in Medieval Town is a research project of the University of Bern (2018-2022), suppor...
Brussels Medieval Culture and War Conference: Power, Authority, and Normativity Université Saint-Lou...
It is an undeniable fact of human history that war has been on many occasions and in many different ...
The goal of this thesis is to depict the golden era of European martial arts, which I consider to ha...
During the late Middle Ages and into the Renaissance, fighting books—Fechtbücher—were produced in no...
Centre for Advanced Study (Oslo) – Department of Archaeology, Conservation and History (University o...
From the 4th – 7th of July 2016, the annual International Medieval Congress was held in Leeds, Engla...
Si la question de la violence à la fin de l’ère médiévale a été amplement traitée par les historie...
My research looks into the institutional, operational and material aspects of medieval towns’ milita...
While medieval warfare has been a long established topic of study, focus to date has been primarily ...
Next November (11-13, 2021) we will host our closing international conference at the University of B...
Our research project (2018-22) considers towns as producers, organisers, and brokers of martial cult...
This paper demonstrates who was considered to be a martial expert in the fifteenth century, and it p...
International colloquium of Freiburg im Breisgau, 28-29 September 2018International audienceSince th...
The 2018 edition of the medieval culture and war conference will take place at the Saint-Louis Unive...
Martial Culture in Medieval Town is a research project of the University of Bern (2018-2022), suppor...
Brussels Medieval Culture and War Conference: Power, Authority, and Normativity Université Saint-Lou...
It is an undeniable fact of human history that war has been on many occasions and in many different ...
The goal of this thesis is to depict the golden era of European martial arts, which I consider to ha...
During the late Middle Ages and into the Renaissance, fighting books—Fechtbücher—were produced in no...
Centre for Advanced Study (Oslo) – Department of Archaeology, Conservation and History (University o...
From the 4th – 7th of July 2016, the annual International Medieval Congress was held in Leeds, Engla...
Si la question de la violence à la fin de l’ère médiévale a été amplement traitée par les historie...
My research looks into the institutional, operational and material aspects of medieval towns’ milita...
While medieval warfare has been a long established topic of study, focus to date has been primarily ...