Center marks half century as hub for medieval and Renaissance scholars
The feat would be impressive enough had this specialist in the French Renaissance been on faculty at UCLA, but she’s not. Horowitz is a longtime professor at Occidental College in Eagle Rock, and, like a moth to a flame, she has been drawn to the center’s wide array of lectures, seminars and conferences in her field since 1973.
“It’s put me in the know,” said Horowitz of her association with the center.

From the beginning, the Center for Medieval Renaissance Studies embraced cultures beyond Europe. Above, the center's annual report features a 14th century Armenian manuscript. Courtesy of the Department of Special Collections, Charles E. Young Research Library
“Other universities have centers for medieval and Renaissance studies, but they rarely have the institutional permanence or mount the kind of programs that UCLA can,” said Richard Unger, a professor of medieval history at the University of British Columbia and president of the Medieval Academy of America, the field’s premiere scholarly association. “There will be one or two or three people who get a program going, and they’ll retire and the program will fade. But at UCLA, the center has gone from strength to strength.”

Massimo Ciavolella, director of the medieval and Renaissance studies center.
Centers bring together faculty from different disciplines not to offer courses to students, but to share the latest research and scholarship and to critique and encourage each other’s work. Centers also bring lecturers and visiting faculty to campus and fund research efforts beyond the means or scope of a single department.
By the late 1960s, the center’s first director, Lynn White Jr., a Stanford-educated historian who specialized in medieval technology, had done such a good job of creating a buzz that scholars were being lured here from the East.
A pamphlet from CMRS was what first caught Henry A. Kelly’s attention before he left Harvard to join the English faculty in 1967. “I was looking for something congenial and interdisciplinary, and the list of scholars on the brochure seemed to fit the bill,” he said.

Henry A. Kelly, past director of CRMS, was lured from Harvard to UCLA by a center brochure.
By 1972, the center’s reputation had grown to such an extent that the Medieval Academy of America decided to hold its annual convention at UCLA, the first held west of Chicago.
The center’s Golden Age, most agree, occurred in the 1980s under its third director, the late Fredi Chiappelli. The nationally recognized Renaissance scholar spearheaded research and planning for an ambitious commemoration of the 1992 quincentennial of Christopher Columbus' voyage to America. Some 14 years after Chiappelli’s death, the center published the 13-volume Repertorium Columbianum, featuring the publication of the most significant documents from Columbus’ era, including accounts of all four of his voyages.
Early on, CMRS decided to break with tradition. While other academic units devoted to the Middle Ages and Renaissance have tended to be humanities-based, CMRS embraced a wide range of disciplines. Its 121 scholars hail not just from English, the European languages, art history and history, but from architecture and medicine as well as the sciences. “It was interdisciplinary before that became a watchword,” said Michael Allen, a professor emeritus of English who twice served as CMRS director.

Galileo
The center has also developed an extraordinary geographic reach. While many of its peer institutions focus on Europe, UCLA’s center has always been much more inclusive, embracing faculty doing work in Near Eastern Languages and Culture and Latin America. Once considered iconoclastic, both foci are now widely accepted in the field.
“They’ve seen which way the wind is blowing and play a role in driving trends in the field,” Unger said of those who have charted the center’s course. More recently, the center has included scholars active in Asian studies. Last year, the center hosted talks by three UCLA faculty in Asian studies, including Humanities Dean David Schaberg.

The virtual cathedral of Santiago de Compostela is an ongoing project of CMRS member John Dagenais and the School of the Arts and Architecture.
“If you don’t have these skills at the high school level, it becomes difficult as undergraduates to enter the field,” Ciavolella said.
But the tide appears to be turning for the center. In April, CMRS will host a joint meeting of the Medieval Academy of America and the Medieval Association in the Pacific, drawing some 400 scholars from all around the world to more than 50 sessions on such topics as “Carolingian Voices” and “Crusade Encounters.”
And the ranks of medieval and Renaissance scholars at UCLA are growing again. Last year the history department signed on Jessica Goldberg, a medievalist who specializes in the economic and legal institutions of the Mediterranean basin, Christian Europe and the Islamic world. Arvind Thomas, who specializes in Middle English and early modern literature, joined the English faculty last summer.
College administrators will soon launch a search for a faculty member to helm a major grant in Renaissance Latin. The $700,000 grant is expected to establish UCLA as a leader for Renaissance Latin, which served as the lingua franca of intellectuals in medicine, law, literature and the arts from the 14th to the 17th centuries.
“We have a strong tradition at UCLA in medieval and Renaissance studies,” said Schaberg. “It began to wane a bit, but now we’re reinvesting again.”
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