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‘How I miss the good times we have lost': fourteenth-century longing for the past


Tuesday 19 March 2024, 5.30PM

Speaker(s): Dr Hannah Skoda (St John’s College, Oxford)

The fourteenth century was a period of profound structural changes, eerily resonant with some of the challenges faced in our own times: pandemic, climate change, warfare, rampant inflation, political instability.  In the fourteenth century, this produced an overwhelming sense that even time was speeding up – and this in turn generated a nostalgia for slower-paced, more predictable and apparently more prosperous times.

This lecture will explore this nostalgia and its expressions across Italy, France and England, across a range of media – from political petitions, to chronicles, lyric poetry, sermons and manuscript illuminations. Nostalgia was never singular: it could be reactionary and a mode of response to change which privileged established interests.  But for the exploited and oppressed, nostalgia could mobilise powerful, emotive and hopeful visions of the future.



Limbourg brothers - Les très riches heures du Duc de Berry - Juin (June) - WGA13023.jpg


HYBRID EVENT:  Zoom registration link here

A co-sponsored event with the Centre for Medieval Studies at Fordham University, New York

Location: K/133, King's Manor, University of York, YO1 7EP Hybrid Event

Email: cms-office@york.ac.uk