Date
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Meg Leja (Binghamton University), “The Carolingians as Collectors and Creators: Assessing Medical Manuscripts from the Ninth Century” 
Abstract:
Meg Leja will explore a handful of manuscripts that were crucial to arguments she recently presented in her first monograph, Embodying the Soul: Medicine and Religion in Carolingian Europe (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2022). Representing the earliest sizeable corpus of medical material to survive in Latin, Carolingian manuscripts from the late eighth and early ninth centuries occupy an ambiguous position as both artifacts of medical thought during late antiquity and the Merovingian period and signs of new trends and beliefs at the moment of their production. Examining crucial pieces of evidence like the Lorscher Arzneibuch, this talk considers the ambiguity of originality when it comes to early medieval medicine. 
Biography:
Meg Leja is an associate professor of history at Binghamton University in upstate New York. She received her PhD from Princeton University in 2015, and her published work grapples primarily with issues of cultural history during the Carolingian period. Her teaching at Binghamton focuses on the early Middle Ages, premodern medicine, and religious studies. She is a contributor to the Corpus of Early Medieval Latin Medicine (CEMLM), a research group dedicated to cataloguing all extant Latin medical writing in the first millennium and challenging stereotypes regarding early medieval healthcare.