Cardiff Branch Programme


Cardiff Branch Programme 2024-25

Branch contact All enquiries to Professor Peter Edbury  Edbury@cardiff.ac.uk

Venue: All talks are on Zoom and free to all.

 

Putting Welsh History on Television   Wednesday 13th November 2024   Time: 7pm

Venue: Via Zoom

Description: Producer of the epoch-making television history of Wales "The Dragon has Two Tongues"(1985) voiced by Gwyn Alf Williams and Wynford Vaughan Thomas, Colin Thomas will be discussing the televised history of Wales since that landmark production.

Email: Edbury@cardiff.ac.uk

Lecturer: Colin Thomas

 

"Saving "the lives and limbs of many": at sea with sixteenth and seventeenth century ship’s surgeons  Wednesday 11 December 2024   Time: 7pm

Venue: Via Zoom

Description: This talk explores the experiences and emotions of early modern British sea surgeons aboard naval and mercantile ships. Diseases, including scurvy, typhus, and dysentery, along with accidents, foul living conditions, limited supplies, and violent warfare were only some of the challenges faced by a ship’s surgeon. A sea surgeon was usually the only trained medical practitioner on a ship: they treated bodies by manual operation, but also acted as physician (treating internal ailments) and apothecary, preparing and dispensing medicines. We are talking of crews in their hundreds, on hazardous voyages lasting months, even years, against the backdrop of the rapid expansion of maritime infrastructure and networks in the seventeenth century. This paper presents new research on this fascinating professional group, particularly printed and manuscript writings authored by sea surgeons. These surgeons’ accounts allow us to glimpse contemporary medical practices and customs aboard, such as how to treat wounds, ulcers, fractures, and dislocations. A close reading of these texts can also reveal something of the lived experiences of crew and surgeon on early modern ships, and even give insights into their cultural, social, and emotional lives.

How to book: Please book via the event link to join the Zoom talk

Email: Edbury@cardiff.ac.uk

Lecturer: Dr Jasmine Kilburn-Toppin Cardiff University

 

"The Crusade Text as Commemorative Artefact: Recent Developments and Future Directions in the Study of the Memorialisation of Crusading"     Wednesday 19th February 2025

Time: 7pm

Venue: Via Zoom

Description: How medieval societies remembered the protagonists and events of the crusading era represents one of the major developments in crusades scholarship over the last decade. The first part of this paper introduces and synthesises recent work in this direction, outlining the key developments, assessing the various approaches that have been devised and utilised, and tracing the genesis of this historiographical trend. The second part identifies several future avenues of enquiry, including marginalised source types that deserve further scrutiny and some of the theoretical approaches developed in memory studies which have had little bearing on crusade studies. The memorialisation of the Third Crusade in medieval England will serve as a case study.

How to book: Please book via event link to join the Zoom talk

Email: Edbury@cardiff.ac.uk

Lecturer: Dr Stephen Spencer University of Buckingham

 

“What made Florida so weird?: an eighteenth-century history”       Wednesday 19th March 2025

Time: 7pm

Venue: Via Zoom

Description: When I ask my students if they’ve travelled to the United States, their answers usually mention two states: New York, and Florida. Florida, which is known today for Disneyworld and alarming local news stories about alligators, is a weird place. This talk explores early modern maps of Florida to discuss some of the reasons why it became this way. In the sixteenth century the Spanish had called it La Florida. They drew it as a continent of rivers and a shortcut to the Pacific Ocean. By the 1730s English colonists in Georgia were trying to carve out space for themselves on the Atlantic coast with permission from Yamacraw leaders. The continuing Spanish presence in La Florida is why English maps of the Georgia colony locate St. Augustine so much further to the south than it actually was. By the 1760s, when a European treaty ceded Florida to the British and they split it into two Floridas with Atlantic and Gulf ports, maps of Florida became weirder. East and West Florida maps gained more inland rivers, lakes, swamps, and islands. In reality, Florida was a Creek and Seminole homeland populated by Indigenous people who contested borders on maps with British, then Spanish, and then American officials. Maps were tools of empire that allowed non-Indigenous people to claim land and water, but which also consistently failed to reflect lived realities on the ground. The trickiness of depicting where Florida was, which nations claimed it, and who lived in it helped to make it so very weird.

How to book: Please book via event link to join the  Zoom talk

Email: Edbury@cardiff.ac.uk

Lecturer: Dr Rachel Herrmann Cardiff University