Co-host of Mujeres imperiales, mujeres reales: representaciones públicas y representaciones del poder, Universidad de Alcalá, 27-29 November 2019. Papers contributed:
Rob Heffron, 'Women on the Move: Representations of Imperial Women and Urban Spaces in Late Antique Rome and Constantinople'
Julia Hillner, 'Helena Augusta and the Women of the Tetrarchy'
Máirín MacCarron, 'Queens and Networks in Early Medieval Sources'
Ulriika Vihervalli, 'Imperial Women and Gender-based violence in late antiquity – lay experiences projected?'
Sponsor of one panel at the International Congress on Medieval Studies, Kalamazoo, May 2020: 'Women, Conflict and Peace: Gendered Networks in Early Medieval Narratives' [cancelled due to Covid-19 emergency]
Máirín MacCarron, 'Women and networks in early medieval sources'
Silvío Dahmen, 'Complex Networks and History: Uses and Perspectives'
Julia Hillner, 'Gender, Names and Networks: Unnamed women and Church History in Late Antiquity'
Sponsor of two panels at the International Medieval Congress, Leeds, July 2020: 'Approaching Medieval Networks, I: Interdisciplinary Methodologies' and 'Approaching Medieval Networks, II: Visible and Invisible Women' [cancelled due to Covid-19 emergency]
Ralph Kenna, 'Cogadh Gaedhael re Gallaibh and Network Science'
Maik Patzelt (Universität Osnabrück), 'Widows as Borderline Figures, or: Degendering Widows'
Máirín MacCarron, 'Wilfrid of York's Gendered Networks'
Jessica van t’Westeinde (Universität Bern), 'Pushing Borders: Jerome and Paula's Travel Network'
Ulriika Vihervalli, 'Women, Violence, and Gendered Networks in the Historia Ecclesiastica of Eusebius and Rufinus'
Julia Hillner, 'Women, Names, and Networks in Late Antiquity'
Ulriika Vihervalli, 'Violent Women and Kinship in Gregory of Tours: A Network Approach', International Medieval Congress, Leeds, July 2021.
Silvio Dahmen, 'The Use of Complex Networks in History: a case study', Instituto de Ciencias Físicas, UNAM, 7 October 2020 (watch a recording here).
Máirín MacCarron, 'Women, Conflict and Peace: friendly and hostile networks in early medieval Britain', Digital Humanities Research Colloquium, University College Cork, 7 October 2020 (watch a recording here).
Ana Bazzan, 'Robustness in Network Extraction from Text: a Case Study', accepted for the 6th Historical Network Research Conference 2020, Luxembourg Centre for Contemporary and Digital History [conference has been postponed to June 2021].
Máirín MacCarron, 'Women's networks in early medieval sources', Department of History Research Seminar, University of Sheffield, 10 December 2019.
Julia Hillner, 'Helena and the Women of the Tetrarchy', Institute of Classical Studies, 14 November 2019 (watch a recording here).
Máirín MacCarron, 'Gendered Networks in Early Medieval Narratives', Digital Humanities Research Colloquium, University College Cork, 6 November 2019.
Máirín MacCarron, 'Bede, Women and Network Science', Medieval History Research Seminar, Trinity College Dublin, 19 September 2019.
Julia Hillner, ‘Networking Helena Augusta’, International Medieval Congress, Leeds, 3 July 2019.
Máirín MacCarron, ‘Gendered Networks in Late Antique and Early Medieval Church Histories’, International Medieval Congress, Leeds, 3 July 2019.
Julia Hillner, Roundtable participant, ‘Networked Middle Ages: The Opportunities and Challenges of Network Analysis’, International Medieval Congress, Leeds, 2 July 2019.
Máirín MacCarron, ‘Gendered Networks in Bede’s Historia Ecclesiastica Gentis Anglorum,’ Irish Conference of Medievalists, Cork, 27 June 2019.
Julia Hillner, ‘Theodora and the Exiling of Bishops’, at ‘Beyond Eusebius and Augustine: Rethinking Christian Political Thought in Late Antiquity’, University of Liverpool, 18 June 2019.
Ulriika Vihervalli, ‘Late Antique Women in Narratives of Popular Unrest’, at 'Unrest in the Roman Empire: A Discursive History', University of Tübingen, 14 June 2019.
Julia Hillner and Máirín MacCarron, panel participants, ‘Linked Data: Late Antique, Byzantine and Early Modern studies’, British Academy and the Prosopography of the Byzantine World Project, Institute of Classical Studies, London, 16-17 May 2019.
Sílvio Dahmen, ‚Die Netze der Helden und Täter: Geschichte physikalisch entflochten‘, at “Alles Netzwerke?", organised by the Junges Kolleg of the Academy of Sciences and the Arts of Nordrhein-Westphalen, Düsseldorf, 8 March 2019.
Sílvio Dahmen, ‘Complex Networks and Applications to History’, delivered to Physics Group of Prof. Dr. Dietrich Wolf, Universität Duisburg-Essen, 5 March 2019.
Máirín MacCarron, ‘Gendered Networks in the Early Middle Ages’, Mícheál Ó Cléirigh Institute, University College Dublin, 22 February 2019.
Máirín MacCarron, ‘Detecting and Analysing Gendered Networks in Early Medieval Narratives’, at ‘Decoding the Past: Digital Tools for the Analysis of Historical Data', organised by the ERC funding project Connected Clerics: Building a Universal Church in the Late Antique West, London, 21 February 2019.
Ulriika Vihervalli, 'Gender Based Violence and Elite Women in Late Roman Italy', at 'Late Roman Italy: Imperium to Regnum', Ghent University, 11 January 2019.
Máirín MacCarron, 'Using Network Science to examine the role of women in medieval society', at 'Insular Manuscripts AD 650-850: Networks of Knowledge (Leverhulme Trust International Network)', Trinity College Dublin and NUI Galway, 21 June 2018.
Project workshop at the University of Sheffield, 5-8 November 2018 (with a public masterclass by Ana Bazzan and Silvio Dahmen, 'Network Theory, History and Story-Telling')
Project Workshop at the University of Coventry, 22 November 2019.
Project Workshop at the Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Istituto de Informática and Istituto de Física, 18-25 October 2019.
Project Workshop at University College Cork, 27-30 January 2020 (with public talks by Ana Bazzan, 'Similar yet different: the structure of social networks of Characters in Seinfeld, Friends, How I Met Your Mother, and The Big Bang Theory', and Julia Hillner, 'Mind the Gap: Helena Augusta and the Women of the Tetrarchy').