
Curriculum Vitae
Link to full CV.
Highlights from CV:
Awards and Fellowships:
Predoctoral Research Residency, Center for the Art and Architectural History of Port Cities (La Capraia), Naples, Italy. Supported by the Edith O’Donnell Institute of Art History (University of Texas at Dallas), Franklin University Switzerland, Museo e Real Bosco di Capodimonte, and the Amici di Capodimonte. 2025-2026.
Simon Barton Memorial Junior Scholar Research Grant, American Academy of Research Historians of Medieval Spain, 2024.
Robert F. Kingdon Award, Sixteenth Century Society Conference, 2024.
Rosa Colecchio Travel Award, Binghamton University Graduate School, 2024.
Forcey Doctoral Research Grant in History, Binghamton University, 2024.
Dissertation Year Fellowship for archival research in Spain, Italy, and the United Kingdom. Binghamton University, Spring 2023.
Graduate School Travel Award, Binghamton University, 2024.
History Department Conference Travel Grant, Binghamton University, Summer 2024.
History Department Research Travel Grant, Binghamton University, Spring 2023.
Publications
Book Chapter:
Chapter title: “‘Sickly and Spent': Reassessing the Life and Afterlife of Anne of Great Britain” in Gregory, Eilish and Questier, Michael, eds., Later Stuart Queens, 1600-1735: Religion, Political Culture, and Patronage. Available here. Email me for a PDF copy.
Encyclopedia Articles:
Contributing Editor, “The Crown of Aragon and Mediterranean Expansion,” The Encyclopedia of the Global Middle Ages with Arc Humanities Press (2024). See the “Publications” section for the link.
“The Balearic Islands and the Crown of Aragon, 1230–1400” The Encyclopedia of the Global Middle Ages with Arc Humanities Press (2024). See the “Publications” section for the link.
“Queenship in Renaissance Sicily” forthcoming for the Routledge Resources Online – The Renaissance World (2024).
Book Reviews and Review Articles:
Minieri, Jessica. “Between Freedom and Unfreedom: Imprisonment and Crime in Premodern Europe.” European Review of History: Revue européenne d'histoire 31, no. 3 (2024): 520-525. https://doi.org/10.1080/13507486.2024.2348889.
Kagay, Donald and Andrew Villalon, eds., Conflict in Fourteenth-century Iberia: Aragon Vs. Castile and the War of the Two Pedros (Leiden: Brill, 2021) [Review forthcoming with the American Academy of Research Historians of Medieval Spain, 2024)
da Costa Dominguez, Rodrigo and Amélia Aguiar Andrade, eds., Portugal in a European Context: Essays on Taxation and Fiscal Policies in Late Medieval and Early Modern Western Europe, 1100–1700 (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2023) H-Portugal, 2023.
Brolis, Maria Teresa. Stories of Women in the Middle Ages. Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2018. Published in Comitatus: A Journal of Medieval and Renaissance Studies (51), 2020
Dodd, Gwilym and Taylor, Craig, ed., Monarchy, State and Political Culture in Late Medieval England: Essays in Honour of W. Mark Ormrod. York: York Medieval Press, 2020. History: Journal of the Historical Association, 2021.
Fleming, Gillian B. Juana I: Legitimacy and Conflict in Sixteenth Century Castile. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan, 2018. Published in Royal Studies Journal, 7(2), 154–155. DOI: http://doi.org/10.21039/rsj.250
Mielke, The Archaeology and Material Culture of Queenship in Medieval Hungary, 1000–1395 (Palgrave Macmillan, 2021). Royal Studies Journal, 9(1), pp.90–91.DOI: http://doi.org/10.21039/rsj.337
Pangonis, Queens of Jerusalem: The Women Who Dared to Rule (Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2021). Royal Studies Journal, 8(2), pp.226–227. DOI: http://doi.org/10.21039/rsj.320
Sarti, Cathleen. Women and Economic Power in Premodern Royal Courts. Leeds: ARC Humanities Press, 2020. Royal Studies Journal 8(1), 195–196. DOI: http://doi.org/10.21039/rsj.302
Teaching
Instructor of Record:
Professor –Binghamton University.
History Department:
“Mediterranean Encounters” (HIST 381 K), Summer 2022 and Summer 2023.
In the ancient and medieval periods, the Mediterranean served as the primary meeting place for the different cultures, ideas, religions, and commodities that shaped the histories of Eurasia and Africa from the height of the Roman Empire to the sixteenth century. Drawing upon readings of primary and secondary sources, this course will explore premodern Mediterranean cultural interactions and exchange through five interrelated themes: race and slavery, trade, science and medicine, crusading, and political expansion.
Medieval Studies Department:
“Dungeons and Outlaws: The Prison in Medieval History” (MDVL 381Q), Winter 2023-2024.
In modern films, games, and television shows that depict the Middle Ages, the dungeon sits at the heart of the “darkness” of medieval life. For prisoners inside dungeons, castles, monasteries, and towers, the experience of imprisonment differed based on one’s status, social class, and gender. Drawing upon readings of primary and secondary sources by prisoners and their jailers, this course will explore prisons in the cultural, social, religious, and political fabric of the medieval world in three interrelated themes: gender and sexuality, religion and inquisition, and crime and punishment. To look beyond the ways that modern culture views medieval dungeons and prisons, this course will explore how medieval people used, viewed, and experienced imprisonment between the Carolingian period and the Protestant Reformation.
Co- instructor in Digital Humanities Tableau Mapping Workshop – Fall 2021
Teaching Assistantship:
Graduate Teaching Assistant – Binghamton University – 2019 to Present
Courses Taught:
Ancient Law and Society (HIST 300/CLAS 381) with Dr. Nathanael Andrade – Fall 2019
Sex and Society in Medieval Europe (HIST 381/ MDVL 382) with Dr. Elizabeth Casteen
– Spring 2020, Spring 2022.
Foundations of Western Civilization (HIST 101A) with Dr. Richard Mackenney – Fall
2020, Fall 2022.
Modern American Civilization, 1865 to Present (HIST 104) with Dr. Chelsea Gibbon –
Spring 2021.
The Crusades (HIST 386D) with Dr. Elizabeth Casteen – Fall 2021.
Later Medieval Europe (HIST/MDVL 205) with Dr. Elizabeth Casteen – Fall 2023.