CALL FOR PAPERS – Who Ruled the World? Queen Urraca and Her Contemporaries in the Early Twelfth Century

International Conference
Dates: 3 – 5 March 2026
Place: Museo Arqueológico Nacional, Madrid
Organization:
Research Grant: Intersections of Gender, Transculturalism, and Identity in Medieval Iberia:
The Recycling and Long Life of Objects and Textile
s (Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation,
and Universities, PID2023-151143NA-I00, 2024-2027), PI: Verónica Carla Abenza Soria,
Universidad Complutense, Madrid

Organizer: Therese Martin, Instituto de Historia, CSIC, Madrid

This conference marks the 900th anniversary of the death of Queen Urraca of León-Castile (born
1079/80, r. 1109-1126) by investigating issues of ruling power and its material display in the early
twelfth century. Previous historiography has tended either to downplay Urraca’s seventeen-year
reign or at best to compare it with that of other queens, especially Matilda of England (d. 1167),
Melisende of Jerusalem (d. 1161), and to a lesser degree Petronila of Aragón (d. 1173). These
reigning queens, while instructive comparisons, were born respectively in 1102, 1105, and 1136;
they were from the generations after Urraca, more properly contemporaries of her son Alfonso
VII (born 1105, r. 1126-1157). Therefore this conference seeks instead to call attention to rulers
– male or female, of any religion – whose reigns were strictly contemporary to Urraca’s in the
first quarter of the twelfth century, in order to understand how her rule played out in its day, not
in hindsight.

We welcome paper proposals investigating the artworks and material culture that can be
associated with early twelfth-century rulership, including coins, seals, textiles, manuscripts,
metalworks, sculptures, buildings, etc., as well as written evidence. Of particular interest are
studies focused on objects and texts that demonstrate cross-cultural or long-distance networks, as
well as analyses of the concepts of gender and religion in the construction of power and authority
in the early twelfth century. We encourage both individual case studies and larger inquiries, for
Europe and beyond, that consider figures whose rulership, like Urraca’s, made an impact on the
social and material culture of this period.

Paper proposals are sought on rulers and the display of rulership from Urraca’s lifetime, especially
those that will contribute to clarifying the larger framework of her reign.
Send title with abstract and author bio, in English or Spanish (not more than 500 words
each), and any queries, by 1 April 2025 to: Urraca2026@gmail.com

Leave a comment