Institutions and Economic Growth in Historical Perspective - Contracting Institutions

9th February 2022, 10:00 am

This is an Advanced Course for the MPhil/MSc in Economic and Social History. It is held in the Old Library at All Souls College on Wednesdays 10 a.m. – 12 noon in Weeks 1-8 of the Hilary Term of 2022. 

Institutions and Economic Growth in Historical Perspective - Property Rights

2nd February 2022, 10:00 am

This is an Advanced Course for the MPhil/MSc in Economic and Social History. It is held in the Old Library at All Souls College on Wednesdays 10 a.m. – 12 noon in Weeks 1-8 of the Hilary Term of 2022. 

Institutions and Economic Growth in Historical Perspective - Serfdom

26th January 2022, 10:00 am

This is an Advanced Course for the MPhil/MSc in Economic and Social History. It is held in the Old Library at All Souls College on Wednesdays 10 a.m. – 12 noon in Weeks 1-8 of the Hilary Term of 2022.

Institutions and Economic Growth in Historical Perspective - What are Institutions?

19th January 2022, 10:00 am

This is an Advanced Course for the MPhil/MSc in Economic and Social History. It is held in the Old Library at All Souls College on Wednesdays 10 a.m. – 12 noon in Weeks 1-8 of the Hilary Term of 2022. 

Radhakrishnan Lectures 2022 - Princes at Midnight: Afterlives of Subjecthood in Post-Partition India

Professor Joya Chatterji (Trinity College, University of Cambridge)

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Events in this series

Radhakrishnan Lectures 2022 - Thinking with Refugee-Subjects: Why Seek the Shelter of a Prince after Independence?

24th February 2022, 5:00 pm

This lecture will be held online on Microsoft Teams. Click here to join

Ford Lectures 2022 - Dogsbodies and Dogs’ Bodies: A Social and Cultural History of Roman Britain’s Dogs and People

Professor Robin Fleming (Professor of Early Medieval History, Boston College)

Events in this series

Ford Lectures 2022 - Making Memories and Making Provincial Society… with Dogs

25th February 2022, 5:00 pm

Daily, domestic religion as it was lived, was a negotiation between older, indigenous practices and new ones that came with conquest.  Pre-Roman precedents––sacrifice, special deposits made in deep places, dog killing––were part of a repertoire of actions that continued throughout the Roman period, not in their exact Iron Age forms, but rather inflected with new ideas and practices from elsewhere in the empire.  The process, however, was two-way.  Soldiers, merchants, administrators, and others new to Britain came to embrace a host of local ritual practices, including dog killing.  Here, we take an in-depth look at a handful of communities where we can witness low-status locals and people from elsewhere in the empire participating side-by-side in ritual events centered on dogs.  We do this in order to discern the mechanisms and processes standing behind the development of a distinctly provincial, Romano-British society.

This lecture will take place online. Please see the History Faculty website for further information. 

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