2022

“Introduction.” In The Routledge Handbook of East Central and Eastern Europe in the Middle Ages, 500-1300, edited by Florin Curta, pp. 1-8. Abingdon/New York: Routledge, 2022. Publisher’s version

 

 

The Routledge Handbook of East Central and Eastern Europe in the Middle Ages, 500-1300. Abingdon/New York: Routledge, 2022. Publisher’s version

 

 

 

An interactive conversation on the “Slavs” of Macedonia, Muabet So Meto (February 23, 2022). Publisher’s version.

 

“The early Slavs in the Balkans (500-620),” online lecture for the Department of Linguistic and Literary Studies, University of Padova (March 14, 2022)

“Coins, trade and modes of production: a view from Eastern Europe,” keynote address for the FLAME conference “Networks in transition. Monetary exchange from Antiquity to the Middle Ages,” Princeton University (March 18, 2022)

“Where have all the Avars gone? A comparative view,” online lecture for the series “Nicolae Olahus–conectând istoria” organized by Societatea de Ştiințe istorice “Istros” together with the American Institute of South-East European Studies (April 13, 2022)

“Pseudo-Martin of Braga and the Slavs. A re-examination of the poem In basilica.” In “Omnium Magistra Virtutum.” Studies in Honour of Danuta R. Shanzer, edited by Andrew Cain and George Hays, 115-39. Publications of the Journal of Medieval Latin, 15. Turnhout: Brepols, 2022. Publisher’s version.

 

 

“‘Mais ou est le preux Charlemaigne?’ Charlemagne’s wars with the Avars between memory and oblivion,” online paper presented at the conference “Between East and West. Studies on the History of Memory, Commemoration and Reception of Medieval Culture” (Toruń, June 18, 2022)

“Imperial borderlands to the north and west of the Black Sea,” online paper presented at the international conference “Contextualizing Imperial Borderlands (9th c. BC-9th c. AD, and beyond),” Vorarlberg Museum (Bregenz, June 21, 2022)

“‘A very old book’: Geoffrey of Monmouth and Gesta Hungarorum,” paper presented at the Ninth Annual Symposium on Medieval and Renaissance Studies, St. Louis University (June 23, 2022)

“Bulgaria beyond the Danube: water under the bridge, or is there more in the pipeline?” In Christianization in Early Medieval Translyvania. The Oldest Church in Transylvania and its Interpretation, edited by Daniela Marcu Istrate, Dan Ioan Mureşan, and Gabriel Tiberiu Rustoiu, 57-77. Leiden/Boston: Brill, 2022. Publisher’s version.

 

 

 

Gesta Hungarorum ca parodie de gen,” keynote address for the National Congress of Romanian Historians (Alba Iulia, September 9, 2022)

“Common legacy? Roman nostalgias in Near Barbaricum (6th to 7th centuries),” online paper presented at 10th International Scientific Symposium on Byzantine Studies and Medieval Studies “Days of Justinian” (Skopje, November 10, 2022)

“To beard the lion: male identity in East Central Europe (6th to 9th century),” online lecture for the International Graduate Student Conference “‘Wer bin ich?’ Kulturkontakt und Identität (Entstehung, Pflege und Veränderung) in der Antike,” doctoral program of the Department of Antiquity (Altertumwissenschaft), University of Basel (Basel, November 28, 2022)

“Despre Sătmar în Faptele ungurilor.” Signet 25 (2022), 7-9.

“Slavii timpurii şi etnogeneza lor în arheologia sovietică şi post-sovietică.” In Cercetarea şi valorificarea patrimoniului arheologic medieval. Materialele conferinței ştiințifice internaționale, 4 noiembrie 2021, Chişinău, Republica Moldova. Omagiu colegului şi prietenului Ioan Tentiuc la 65 de ani, edited by Sergiu Musteață, 14-30. Chişinău: Pontos, 2022.

 

 

 

“Where have all the Avars gone? A view from Eastern Europe.” Prinosi kăm bălgarskata arkheologiia 12 (2022), 5-20.

 

 

 

 

“Aging levee. On the 25th anniversary of Gottfried Schramm’s Ein Damm bricht.” Historical Studies on Central Europe 2 (2022), no. 2, 179-213.