Cummings Foundation Grant Recipient

WOMEN AND POWER IN MEDIEVAL ARMENIA: Between Local Dynasties and Eurasian Empires ~ Thursday, March 21, 2024 ~ In Person, Catholic University of America

Catholic University of America Grace and Paul Shahinian Armenian Christian Art and Culture Lecture Series Institute for the Study of Eastern Christianity Medieval Armenia Women Zara Pogossian

Thursday, March 21, 2024, at 5:00pm Eastern
In-Person at the Catholic University of America, Heritage Hall, Father O'Connell Hall, 620 Michigan Avenue, NE, Washington, DC 20064
In-Person RSVP.

This talk was made possible by the Grace and Paul Shahinian Armenian Christian Art and Culture Lecture Series at the Institute for the Study of Eastern Christianity at the Catholic University of America

FEATURED SPEAKER
ZARA POGOSSIAN, Associate Professor of Byzantine Civlization at the University of Florence, and Principal Investigator of the Euroean Research Council Project ArmEn: Armenia Entangled: Connectivity and Cultural Encounters in Medieval Eurasia 9th-14th Centuries

“[This] valley was a ring without a gem. I built this [church] and put a gem on it”. These were the words left in an inscription on the wall of the Gndevank‘ monastery in Syunik‘ built by lady Sophia (Sop‘i) in the 10th century. She was an Artsruni noblewoman married into the princely house of Syunik‘. Anyone interested in the history of Armenia will know Sophia’s brother – king Gagik Artsruni of Vaspurakan – and his name may immediately conjure up his image on the façade of Gagik’s most famous foundation – the Church of the Holy Cross on the Aght‘amar Island. On the contrary, it is safe to imagine very few people having ever heard of Sophia. Yet, Sophia, like her mother, aunts, cousins, nieces, and many more non-related Armenian noblewomen, was an active patron of monastic establishments, endowed them with landed estates and, by doing so, played a key economic role at least on the local, if not pan-Armenian, level.

In this lecture, Prof. Pogossian will put back on the historical stage the many peers of Sophia – Armenian élite women – who have rarely received due attention in traditional historiography. Yet, they were crucial political actors and exerted a vital cultural, economic, and thus political influence not only in their traditional roles of cementing dynastic ties through matrimonial alliances, but also by possessing and disposing of their own wealth, and actively shaping the very landscape where they lived and ruled.

Zara Pogossian is a specialist on medieval Armenia. Her research has focused on exploring Armenia as a node of cross-cultural interactions and a hub of Eurasian connectitivies. She is Associate Professor of Byzantine Civlization at the University of Florence, and the Principal Investigator of the Euroean Research Council Project ArmEn: Armenia Entangled: Connectivity and Cultural Encounters in Medieval Eurasia 9th-14th Centuries. She has published extensively on Armenian monastic culture with a particular emphasis on female asceticism and women saints, apocalyptic literature, Cilician Armenia and its connections to Western Europe and Byzantium. Pogossian is on the editorial board of the journal Entangled Religions and a co-founder and co-editor-in-chief of Armeniaca: International Journal of Armenian. She is one of the founding members and general editors of a the series Eastern Christian Cultures in Contact (Brepols editors). Pogossian regularly serves on the evaluation committees of the European Institutes for Advanced Study (EURIAS), European Science Foundation, Alexander von Humboldt Foundation, Austrian Academy of Sciences, and the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG).

CO-SPONSORS
Institute for the Study of Eastern Christianity at Catholic University of America
National Association for Armenian Studies and Research (NAASR)

For further information and registration questions, email isec@cua.edu.
To request accommodations for individuals with disabilities, please call 202.319.5683

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