Skip to main content

The Murray Seminars on Art and Political Opinion in Early Fourteenth-Century England

When:
Venue: Birkbeck 43 Gordon Square

No booking required

'Spin' and reputation management were an established part of medieval politics. Laura Slater explores the role of art and architecture in challenging political ideas and opinions in early fourteenth-century England, focussing on the activities of Queen Isabella of France during the 1320s. Successful in invading England, deposing her husband Edward II and establishing herself asde facto regent in place of her teenaged son, Edward III, Isabella managed to use art and architecture to present herself as a loving, loyal and virtuous wife. Yet the queen's subjects may still have 'talked back to her' responding to these PR efforts in a similarly public and permanent setting.

All seminars this term are held at 5pm in the Keynes Library at Birkbeck’s School of Arts (Room 114, 43, Gordon Sq., London, WC1H OPD). A break at 5.50pm is followed by discussion and refreshments.

Contact name: