Weston Library, Lecture Theatre, 10-12noon On the day after Henrike Lähnemann’s Inaugural Lecture, there was the opportunity to see all Medingen manuscripts held in Oxford together (list of manuscripts) and discuss various aspects with a panel of specialists. Henrike Lähnemann (Oxford): Introduction
Masterclass Medingen Manuscripts 2: The Bone Plaque
Andrew Honey (Conservator, Bodleian Library): The Plaque in the Psalter and the Bindings On the day after Henrike Lähnemann’s Inaugural Lecture, all four Medingen manuscripts held in Oxford (list of manuscripts) were displayed in the Weston Lecture Theatre and specialists discussed
Masterclass Medingen Manuscripts 1: Introduction
Henrike Lähnemann: Introduction to the Masterclass Medingen Manuscripts On the day after Henrike Lähnemann’s Inaugural Lecture, all four Medingen manuscripts held in Oxford (list of manuscripts) were displayed in the Weston Lecture Theatre and specialists discussed various aspects of the manuscripts.
Launch of the Reformation 2017 Website
As part of Henrike Lähnemann’s Inaugural events, there was the Launch of a Website Reformation 2017 at the Taylor Institution with presentations from German Studies students and a drinks reception in the Voltaire Room, sponsored by the Cultural Attaché Charlotte Schwarzer
Inaugural Lecture Online
Henrike Lähnemann’s Inaugural Lecture for the Chair in Medieval German Literature and Linguistics on The Materiality of Medieval Manuscripts took place on 21 January 2016, in the Lecture Theatre of the Taylor Institution, followed by a reception, 6pm. Now online! See
Celebrating German Studies
22 January 2016, 2pm, Taylor Institution: Round Table on the Future of German Studies on the Occasion of the Inaugural Lecture of Henrike Lähnemann, Chair in Medieval German Literature and Linguistics Speakers: Prof. Dr. Hans-Jochen Schiewer (University of Freiburg), Dr
Lüne Letters Project takes off
Henrike Lähnemann (Chair in Medieval German, Oxford, and Fellow of St Edmund Hall) and Eva Schlotheuber (Chair in Medieval History, Düsseldorf) have been granted a three-year fully funded project by the Gerda-Henkel-Stiftung to edit one of the most extensive and significant