From the local-history list (apols to those who've already seen it).
I thought the grand-sounding notion of "a parish-by-parish electronic
inventory of religious devotion" might be of peripheral interest to
well-and-spas people (Saint X's Well, etc.).
Roger Fern.
------- Forwarded Message Follows -------
Date: Sat, 24 Feb 2001 12:06:40 +0000
Reply-to: "From: Local-History list" <[log in to unmask]>
From: Graham Jones <[log in to unmask]>
Subject: Reconstructing ancient boundaries
To: [log in to unmask]
Reconstructing ancient boundaries. A Call for Papers. (Please cross-post
this message.)
Work is underway on the Trans-national Database and Atlas of Saints' Cults
(TASC), constructing a parish-by-parish electronic inventory of religious
devotion across Europe and beyond, to be mapped using GIS (geographical
information systems). Much of the effectiveness of this project lies in its
capacity to display spatial (as well as temporal and thematic)
relationships between cults (and hence their adherents) at the most local
level, particularly where such relationships reflect(ed) local or regional
hierarchies of settlement, kin, lordship or administration.
Crucial to the unlocking of such patterns is the mapping of parish and
other ecclesiastical boundaries. Yet even in archive-rich countries,
records of boundaries are difficult to pin down earlier than the late
nineteenth century. This problem, and its solution, is a principal theme of
this year's TASC Colloquium, to be held at the Central European University,
Budapest, October 15-19, and papers are invited which explore methodologies
and, particularly, successes in reconstructing ancient boundaries, whether
in Europe or elsewhere. TASC is an interdisciplinary group of scholars and
proposals for papers are welcome from historical geographers,
archaeologists, cultural historians and anthropologists, and ethnographers,
as well as historians of church, sanctity, and community.
Please register your interest in an e-Mail message to Dr Graham Jones at the
address below, to be followed by an abstract of your proposal not later than
May 31.
****************************************
Dr Graham Jones
Lecturer in English Topography
University of Leicester
Centre for English Local History
Marc Fitch Historical Institute
5 Salisbury Road
Leicester LE1 7QR
United Kingdom
Tel: +44 (0)116 252 2764
Fax: +44 (0)116 252 5769
e-Mail: [log in to unmask]
Web pages: http://www.le.ac.uk/elh/grj1
--------------------------------------
Roger W. Fern,
27 Ladybank,
Chapel Park,
Newcastle upon Tyne,
NE5 1UJ.
(0191) 267-3074 [log in to unmask]
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