![]() This is also an exciting time for collaborations between academics and heritage professionals: in the past two years, several events have focused on researching and curating women’s lives at heritage sites and properties across Britain. Recent scholarship has done much to re-assert Scotland’s place in the historiographical narratives relating to both women and gender and material culture, yet rarely have the two fields been considered together. The event was an outcome of my 8 months as Susan Manning Fellow at IASH, during which time I explored the architectural patronage of Queen Mary of Guelders (d.1463). On Friday 26 th April 2019, academics, heritage professionals and authors gathered at the University of Edinburgh’s Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities (IASH) for a one-day symposium on ‘Women and Materiality in Medieval and Early Modern Scotland’. ![]() ![]() Rachel Delman (York) is a report on the symposium Women and Materiality in Medieval and Early Modern Scotland that was held at the University of Edinburgh in April. ![]()
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