Events
Past Events
The Foundations of Modern International Thought: half-day colloquium
Friday 25th October, 2013
2pm - 6pm, Senate House
This half-day colloquium was devoted to David Armitage’s latest book, The Foundations of Modern International Thought, and more broadly the ‘international turn’ in intellectual history to which it contributes. Papers were delivered by Hannah Dawson, Edward Keene, Iain McDaniel and Lea Ypi, and a response given by David Armitage.
Against War and Empire: half-day colloquium
Friday 17th May, 2013
2pm - 6.30pm, Arts Two Building, Room 3.20, QMUL
The Centre hosted a half-day colloquium on Richard Whatmore’s new book, Against War and Empire. Speakers: David Armitage, Béla Kapossy, Isaac Nakhimovsky, Michael Sonenscher, Richard Whatmore.
Sixth Nicolai Rubinstein Lecture
Thursday 21st March, 2013
6.30pm, Skeel Lecture Theatre
Professor Peter Brown (Princeton University) delivered the sixth annual Rubinstein Lecture, ‘Constantine, Eusebius and the Future of Christianity’.
For more information click here.
Fifth International Symposium in the Humanities and Social Sciences
Friday 11th January, 2013
9.30am - 7.30pm, Senate House, Malet Street, London WC1E 7HU
This one-day symposium was dediated to Noel Malcolm’s Clarendon edition of Thomas Hobbes’s Leviathan. Speakers included Noel Malcolm, Kinch Hoekstra, Monica Brito Vieira, David Scott and Jonathan Parkin.
New Perspectives on the French Revolution
Saturday 15th December, 2012
9.30am - 5.30pm, Arts Two Building, QMUL
A one-day conference was held on Saturday 15 December 2012, devoted to New Perspectives on the French Revolution. Speakers included: Charles Walton (Yale), Michael Sonenscher (Cambridge), Richard Whatmore (Sussex), Ultan Gillen (Teeside), William Doyle (Bristol), Colin Jones (Queen Mary).
First Popular Sovereignty Project workshop
Friday 6th July, 2012
9.30am, Queen Mary, University of London
The first meeting of the Popular Sovereignty Project was held on 6 July 2012. The following papers were presented:
- Melissa Lane: ‘Rethinking Offices: Athenians, Plato, and Aristotle on Popular magistracies and Political Knowledge’
- Eric Nelson: ‘”The King is the Only Sovereign of the Empire”: Prerogative, Representation, and the American Founding’
- Tim Stanton: ‘State Authority, Popular Sovereignty, and the Rule of Law: Weber, Schmitt, Kelsen, and the lessons of Weimar Germany’
Please see Proceedings and papers for more details.
Conference: ‘The Patriotism of the Expatriates’
Wednesday 4th July, 2012
10.30am - 6.15pm, Istituto Italiano di Cultura, London
One day conference titled ‘The Patriotism of the Expatriates: Diasporas and national consciousness between Europe, the Mediterranean and beyond in the long 19th Century’. The conference took place at the Istituto Italiano di Cultura, 39 Belgrave Square London SW1X 8NX.
Graduate conference: Property, Dominium and Self-Ownership
Monday 14th May, 2012
From 12pm, Senate House
The 2012 London Graduate Conference in the History of Political Thought was held on 14-15 May, on the theme of Property, Dominium and Self-Ownership. The keynote was Eric Nelson (Harvard) with Quentin Skinner (Queen Mary University of London) chairing.
Ideas of Power in the Late Middle Ages
Tuesday 3rd April, 2012
6pm, ArtsTwo, Mile End Campus
Queen Mary School of History was honoured to host Dr. Joseph Canning, Lecturer in History at Cambridge, in celebration of the publication of his latest work: Ideas of Power in the Late Middle Ages. Dr. Canning introduced the themes of his work, followed by a lively discussion chaired by Milan Zonca, PhD student in the School of History at QM, and a drinks reception. This event brought together over thirty graduate students and scholars in the fields of Medieval History and the History of Political Thought from QM, University of London Schools, Cambridge and even further afield.
Fifth Nicolai Rubinstein Lecture
Thursday 29th March, 2012
6.30pm, ArtsTwo Lecture Theatre, ArtsTwo Building
The fifth Nicolai Rubinstein Lecture, ‘What’s the Big Idea? Intellectual History and the Longue Duree’, was given by David Armitage (Harvard University).
History of European Ideas article (pdf)
Professor Armitage’s article for the Times Literary Supplement can be found here