Date/Time
Date(s) - 7 Apr 2013
9:00 AM - 5:30 PM
Location
Cohen Hall
Category(ies) No Categories
One-day conference on the campus of the University of Pennsylvania on Shaping Legal Cultures from Late Antiquity to the Middle Ages
This one day conference will explore ways in which region affected the “packaging” of legal traditions within disparate cultures that flourished in geographic contiguity between the sixth and the twelfth centuries. Students of late Roman, Sassanian, Byzantine, Jewish, Islamic and Christian canon law will consider how their respective traditions of law were shaped by such extra-legal phenomena as patronage networks, institutions, circumstances of material production, compositional choices, modes of disseminating law and jurisprudential theories. By facilitating awareness of the regionalism of certain formative, extra-legal factors, this cross-cultural collaboration should stimulate new avenues of historical research.
WHAT: “Shaping Legal Cultures from Late Antiquity to the Middle Ages: Institutions, Genres, and Theories in Roman, Jewish, Sassanian, Christian, and Islamic Law”
WHEN: Sunday, April 7, 2013, 9:00 a.m. – 5:30 p.m.
WHERE: Cohen Hall, Terrace Room, 249 South 36th Street, Philadelphia
Graduate students from outside the Philadelphia area may be eligible for a modest transportation stipend. Those interested should contact Chrissy Walsh at [email protected] for further information.
To find out more information on the event, click on link: http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/jwst/legal

