Skip to navigation | Skip to main content | Skip to footer
The University of Manchester home
Centre for Medieval and Early Modern Studies
  • Centre for Medieval and Early Modern Studies
  • Research
  • Projects
    • John Rylands Research Institute and Library projects
    • Connecting Collections
    • Foreign Bodies
    • How we used to sleep
    • Medievalism
  • Home
  • Research

    Projects

    • John Rylands Research Institute and Library projects
    • Connecting Collections
    • Foreign Bodies
    • How we used to sleep
    • Medievalism

    Resources, clusters and groups

    • Manchester Cluster for Anglo-Saxon Studies (MANCASS)
  • Study
    • Why study here?
    • Facilities
    • Societies
  • Connect
    • Events
    • Contact us
    • Blog
  • About

    People

  • Centre for Medieval and Early Modern Studies
  • Research
  • Projects
  • Centre for Medieval and Early Modern Studies
  • Research
  • Projects
    • John Rylands Research Institute and Library projects
    • Connecting Collections
    • Foreign Bodies
    • How we used to sleep
    • Medievalism

Research projects

Our research projects are undertaken in collaboration with other institutions. Close to home, we work with the John Rylands Research Institute, and further afield we run two initiatives with The University of Melbourne, Australia.

Golden calligraphy

John Rylands Research Institute and Library projects

Including 'The Syriac Galen Palimpsest: Galen's On Simple Drugs and the Recovery of Lost Text through Sophisticated Imaging Techniques', and 'Syriac Epidemics'.

Gerhardi Blasii, Licetus de Monstris, fol. 298, John Rylands Library (R 51216).

Connecting Collections

A research and teaching project driven by the early European art collections of the Universities of Manchester and Melbourne.

Saint Augustine

Foreign Bodies

Exploring how images and objects in the early modern period (1400-1700) constructed the foreign, the exotic, the other.

The word 'sleep' stitched onto hanging sheets

How we used to sleep

An innovative collaboration with the National Trust's Tudor property, Little Moreton Hall.

Black and white photograph of a train exiting a tunnel, courtesy Tameside Archive

Medievalism

Ongoing research into the impact and legacy of the Middle Ages on modernity.

Contact us

  • +44 (0)161 275 7973
  • Contact details

Find us

The University of Manchester
Oxford Rd
Manchester
M13 9PL
UK

Connect with us

  • Facebook page for Centre for Medieval and Early Modern Studies
  • X (formerly Twitter) page for Centre for Medieval and Early Modern Studies

  • Disclaimer
  • Data Protection
  • Copyright notice
  • Accessibility
  • Freedom of information
  • Charitable status
  • Royal Charter Number: RC000797