Elizabeth Boyle
| Name: | Elizabeth Boyle |
| Affiliation: | University of Cambridge |
| E-mail: | (only provided to users who are logged into talks.cam) |
| Last login: | 18 Oct 2010, 4:33 p.m. |
Public lists managed by Elizabeth Boyle
Talks given by Elizabeth Boyle
Obviously this only lists talks that are listed through talks.cam. Furthermore, this facility only works if the speaker's e-mail was specified in a talk. Most talks have not done this.
Talks organised by Elizabeth Boyle
This list is based on what was entered into the 'organiser' field in a talk. It may not mean that Elizabeth Boyle actually organised the talk, they may have been responsible only for entering the talk into the talks.cam system.
- Following in the footsteps of Christ: text and context in the Vita Mildrethae
- Soldiers, saints and states? Another look at the Breton migrations
- Reading Ovid in Medieval Wales
- The Scipmen Scribe and Cambridge, Corpus Christi College MS 383
- Identity and Language in Early Iceland
- Tamerlane, Christopher Marlowe and Cogadh Gáedhel re Gallaibh: towards an edition of the Annals of Clonmacnoise
- Title to be confirmed
- Sagas and the Law: the Icelandic goði
- Episcopal Authority and Revenue before 1180
- Grantacæstir to Grontbricg: Did Offa of Mercia build the bridge at Cambridge?
- Understanding English Coinage c. 900-c. 973: Local, National and International
- The tale of Mis and Dub Ruis: antecedents and contemporary contexts
- Charters and Hagiography in Early Northumbria
- Féichín of Fore, Connacht and Pictland? Evidence for the cult of a midlands saint
- Morgan Llwyd's astrology and its contexts
- What Ealdorman Ordlaf did next: estate transmission and textual transmission in a charter of Edward the Elder
- Whithorn's renown in the early medieval period: Whithorn, Futerna and magnum monasterium
- A Ninth-Century Insular 't'? Statistical Palaeography at Work
- Eggertsbók: Texts and Contexts
- 'Sic et non' in Irish ecclesiastical law
- Uncertain Origins and Idiosyncratic Styles: Some Interpretive Dilemmas in the Old English Bede
![[Talks.cam]](/static/images/talkslogosmall.gif)
