Traditio Editorial Board
EDITORIAL BOARD
Scott G. Bruce (Editor-in-Chief) is a historian of religion and culture in the early Middle Ages. He specializes in the history of Christian monasticism. He has published widely on hagiography, medieval Latin texts, and the reception of classical and patristic traditions in western Europe.
Christopher S. Celenza is an intellectual historian. His publications encompass the Latin literature and philosophy of the Italian Renaissance; late medieval and Renaissance intellectual history; the history of philosophy; the history of books and reading practices; Latin paleography; and the history of the classical tradition.
Atria A. Larson is an interdisciplinary scholar of the high Middle Ages, with special expertise in the history of canon law and pastoral care. She has published on Gratian, canonistic jurisprudence, penance, twelfth-century schools, the papacy, and medieval exegesis and the Glossa ordinaria. Her interests extend to manuscript studies and text editing, particularly for biblical and canonistic texts.
Thomas O’Donnell is a scholar of the multilingual literatures and cultures of the early and central Middle Ages in northwestern Europe. He reads submissions on paleography, codicology, and literature in Latin, Old and Middle French, Old and Middle English, Old and Middle Irish, Old Occitan, and Middle Welsh.
Lucy K. Pick is a historian of medieval thought and culture with particular interests in medieval Iberia and the Mediterranean world. Her research interests include the relationships between gender, power, and religion; the translation and transmission of science and philosophy in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, and its impact on relations between religious groups; and the development of the thought and practice of women's monasticism.
Cristiana Sogno studies the history and literature of Late Antiquity. She has published on epistolography, ancient historiography, and biography.
Suzanne M. Yeager is a literary and cultural historian of the later Middle Ages. She specializes in global literatures of cultural contact in Europe and the Near East. She has published widely on medieval pilgrimage and crusade; race, religion, and gender identities in premodern texts; and the poetics of place, with particular regard to Jerusalem.
CONSULTING EDITORS
George E. Demacopoulos is a scholar of late ancient and medieval Christianity, with an emphasis on contact and conflict between the Greek and Latin Christian communities in this period. His most recent books have explored hymns of Christian violence, the Fourth Crusade, and the papacy.
Nicholas L. Paul is a historian of medieval political cultures. His particular interests concern elite cultures and the central Middle Ages, historiography and social memory, and crusading and settlement in the eastern Mediterranean. He has published on crusading and aristocratic culture, the society and culture of the medieval eastern Mediterranean, medieval literacy and documentary production, and the production of Latin and Old French narrative histories.
Nina Rowe is an art historian, specializing in the art of northern Europe in the high and late Middle Ages. She has published widely on topics ranging from Jewish-Christian dynamics as manifest in sculpture to German vernacular illuminated manuscripts. She also has expertise in nineteenth-century medievalism and current popular conceptions of the Middle Ages.