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Conference poster (click on image for larger version)
The Henry III Fine Rolls Team held an end of project
conference, which was open to everyone who wished to attend, on 24 and 25 June
2011 in the Edmond J. Safra Theatre at the Strand Campus of
King's College London. The programme (given below) included papers on a diverse range of material drawn from
the rolls: Henry III's piety and itinerary; royal finance; judicial writs; the
Church; the Jews; women; and royal record-keeping.
Conference Programme
Friday, 24 June (Edmond J. Safra Lecture Theatre).
9.30am |
Welcome |
9.45am |
"The Fine Rolls of King henry III" - David Carpenter, King's
College London |
10.30am |
"Early escheators in the fine rolls" - Scott Waugh, University of
California, Los Angeles |
11.15am |
Break |
11.45am |
"Another fine mess... tracing the source of Henry III's revenue" -
Nick Barratt, Historian and Broadcaster |
12.30pm |
Lunch |
1.30pm |
"The use of debt in the fine rolls" - Beth Hartland, King’s
College London |
2.15pm |
"The relationship of fines to Henry III's itinerary" - Julie
Kanter, King’s College London |
3pm |
"The fine rolls and the period of baronial reform and rebellion,
1258-67" - Adrian Jobson, Independent Scholar, San Francisco |
3.45pm |
Break |
4pm |
"The fine rolls as a source for the legal historian" - Paul Brand,
All Souls College, Oxford |
4.45pm |
"Fines for judicial writs and the expansion of the central courts
during the reign of Henry III" - Tony Moore, University of
Reading |
Saturday, 25 June (Edmond J. Safra Lecture Theatre).
9.30am |
Welcome |
9.45am |
"Henry III's piety in the fine rolls" - Sally Dixon-Smith, Tower
of London |
10.30am |
"Exploring the boundaries of ecclesiastical law through the fine
rolls" - Philippa Hoskin, University of Lincoln |
11.15am |
Break |
11.30am |
"Women in the fine rolls" - Louise Wilkinson, Canterbury Christ
Church University |
12.15pm |
"Modelling entities in the Fine Rolls Project" - Paul Caton,
King’s College London |
1pm |
Lunch |
2pm |
"The relationship between the fine and originalia rolls" - Paul
Dryburgh, The Borthwick Institute |
2.45pm |
"Enrollment in medieval Scottish government: some points of
comparison" - Alice Taylor, University of Cambridge |
3.30pm |
Closing remarks |