Monthly Archives: April 2026

Registration and Programme for the “Mexico in Algiers, Rabat in Bahia: Rethinking Interactions between the Iberian Atlantic and the Maghrib” Workshop

received from Dr. Ana Struillou (King College London) and Dr. Kaja Cook (Royal Holloway, University of London) Date and Times: 22 May 2026 (09:00 – 18:00) Format: his will be a hybrid workshop. The online link will be circulated via email in advance of the session. Registration: via this form Event Overview Join CEMS on Friday 22nd May for a one-day workshop on interactions between the Iberian Atlantic and North Africa. This workshop has been organised by Dr. Ana Struillou (KCL) and Dr. Kaja Cook (Royal Holloway) and has been generously supported by Past & Present. Pre-modern Maghribi societies have so far been marginalised in Atlantic history and predominant global history narratives, being perceived as static and backward. Building on important scholarship on the African diaspora and Muslim presence in the Americas that has greatly contributed to enriching the picture of the early modern Atlantic and the Spanish Empire in particular, this workshop will explore how North Africans actively participated in, and helped constitute, the Iberian Atlantic world, be it as corsairs raiding the Iberian Islands of Madeira and the Canaries or as enslaved and free communities shaping the culture of the early modern Spanish Americas. At the same time, this […]

Studying Non-elites in the Medieval Caucasus: Reflections

by Dr. James Baillie (Austrian Academy of Sciences) One week ago (13-14 March) the Medieval Caucasus Network had its first international conference! We gathered at the Vrije Universiteit Brussel for two days of hybrid format discussions. The theme of the conference, led by Dr. John Latham-Sprinkle as its senior organiser, was studying non-elites in the medieval Caucasus. While exact definitions of a non-elite can vary significantly, a point discussed throughout the conference, the majority of people in the medieval Caucasus were clearly outside its socially and economically elite echelons. Non-elites represent most of human life: most of the food eaten and wine drunk, most of the stories spoken into a night sky and lost to time, most of the births and deaths and hopes and tears. Despite this, many of them are nearly invisible to us: lying outside the written record of states and chroniclers, and sometimes leaving little archaeological trace, the lives of even relatively wealthy specialist non-elites like merchants and craftspeople are rarely discoverable in the medieval period, let alone the much larger mass of agricultural labourers and pastoralists who made up most of the population. Working out how we can – and when we cannot – best […]