Videos

Videos of many conference contributions will shortly be available on this page and on our Vimeo Channel. If viewing on Vimeo, please note that we do not endorse products or services featured in advertisements or sponsored links. To receive a notification when a substantial number of videos are live, please join our Mailing List. Videos are displayed in alphabetical order by speaker surname, but are also linked from Schedule and Abstracts. The talks remain the intellectual property of their original authors who may request their removal at any time.

Philip Beeley (University of Oxford)
A World Apart: On the Scientific Correspondence between the Academia naturae curiosorum and the Royal Society (Abstract & Permalink)


Mark Brayshay (University of Plymouth)
Tudor and Stuart Provincial Posting and the Development of England’s Exchequer-Funded Postal Network (Abstract & Permalink)


Simon Burrows (University of Leeds)
Mapping the Intellectual and Business Networks of the Société Typographique de Neuchâtel (Abstract & Permalink)


Giovanna Ceserani (Stanford University)
Mapping the Republic of Letters: Visualizing Early Modern Networks (Abstract & Permalink)


Michal Choptiany (Jagiellonian University)
Socinian Education in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth: Intellectual Geography at Work (Abstract & Permalink)


Cory Cotter (University of Virginia)
Going Dutch: The Intellectual Geography of the Restoration Diaspora (Abstract & Permalink)


Mark Curran (University of Leeds)
The Geography and Structure of the Late Eighteenth-Century Book Trade (Abstract & Permalink)


Katherine East (Royal Holloway, University of London)
The Uniting Power of Freethought? Analysing the Intellectual Exchange between John Toland, Eugene of Savoy, and the Baron von Hohendorff (Abstract & Permalink)


Vittoria Feola (Medical University of Vienna)
The Viennese Imperial Library in the Republic of Letters, particularly in the period 1630-80 (Abstract & Permalink)


Charles van den Heuveul (Huygens Institute) & Nicole Coleman (Stanford University)
Visualizing Uncertainty and Complexity: Humanistic Methods for Mapping the Intellectual Geography of the Early Modern Period (Abstract & Permalink)


Kat Hill (University of Oxford)
The Contours of Non-Conformity in Lutheran Central Germany, 1550-1600 (Abstract & Permalink)


Howard Hotson (University of Oxford)
Small is Beautiful: Territorial Fragmentation and Intellectual Activity in the Holy Roman Empire, c.1550-1700 (Abstract & Permalink)


Vera Keller (University of Oregon)
Situating Thermometers: The Instrumentum Drebilianum, Invention Claims, and Intellectual Geography (Abstract & Permalink)


Magdalena Komorowska (Jagiellonian University)
Peregrination of a Jesuit Sermon: Piotr Skargha’s Mounting for Battle before the Livonian Campaign of 1601 (Abstract & Permalink)


Per Landgren (University of Gothenburg/University of Oxford)
From Imperial Free City to Baltic Empire: Political Humanism and its Ramifications in Sweden in the Era of the Thirty Years’ War (Abstract & Permalink)


Kim McLean-Fiander (University of Oxford)
Textual Geographies: The Literary and Social Networks of Aemilia Lanyer (1569-1645) (Abstract & Permalink)


Nausicaa Milani (University of Parma)
The Empirical Interpretation of French Cartesianism: The Académie des Sciences, the Journal des Sçavans, and the Relationship with the Royal Society (Abstract & Permalink)


Victor Morgan (University of East Anglia)
Place and Season: Some Changing Geographies of Communication in Elizabethan and Jacobean England (Abstract & Permalink)


Miles Ogborn (Queen Mary, University of London)
What is Intellectual Geography? (Abstract & Permalink)


Carol Pal (Bennington College)
An Ephemeral Academy at the Exile Court: The Hague in the 1630s (Abstract & Permalink)


Leigh Penman (University of Oxford)
Intellectual Geography and the Making of the First German Philosopher: Jakob Böhme (1575-1624) and Görlitz (Abstract & Permalink)


Tamson Pietsch (Brunel University)
Intellectual Geographies and the Universities of the British Empire, 1850-1939 (Abstract & Permalink)


Anna Marie Roos (University of Oxford)
Every Man’s Companion: Or, A useful Pocket-Book: The Travel Journal of Dr Martin Lister (1639-1712) (Abstract & Permalink)


Olaf Simons (Forschungszentrum Gotha)
The Production and Consumption of Books in Early Modern England and Germany: A Comparative Analysis of Markets (Abstract & Permalink)

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