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HomeAkceKonference a workshopyWorkshop: Scents of Religious Authority

Monday | 5. 6. 2023 - 6. 6. 2023 | 10:00

workshop | Day 1: Alchemies of Scent, Husova 7, Prague 1/ online Day 2: Jilská 1, Prague 1/ online

Workshop: Scents of Religious Authority

Organized by the Alchemies of Scent, Department for the Study of Ancient and Medieval Thought, and the Centre for Medieval Studies, Institute of Philosophy, Czech Academy of Sciences

Further information

INVITATION pdf
Alchemies of Scent Website

At this workshop, we take a cross-cultural look at the scents of religious authority in sources from Ancient Egypt, Ancient Greece and Medieval Europe. We will read and smell about the scent of divinity and death as they pertain to religious figures and their claims to authority.

MONDAY 5 JUNE 2023

10.0010.30. Scent in the Egyptian Temple: Worshipping the Gods with Fragrance in the Daily Ritual (Heike Wilde)

10.4011.10. "Death seems to me today like the fragrance of myrrh": Scent and stench in the Egyptian realm of the dead (Diana Míčková)

11.2011.50. Later Greek Medical Sources of Religious Scents (Sean Coughlin)

12.0013.30. Lunch

14.0016.00. The Fragrance of Authority: Did Medieval Folks Smell Power? And Did Power Want to be Smelled? (Joëlle Rollo-Koster)

18.00. Dinner

TUESDAY 6 JUNE 2023

10.00–12.00. Smelling: rose, musks, balsam

12.00–13.30. Lunch

13.30–17.00. Blending and experiment

Participation is free, but registration is required as space is limited. Email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. to register.


Day 1 (Morning), Day 2
: Husova 7, 110 00 Prague
Day 1 (Afternoon): Jilská 1, 110 00 Prague


ONLINE (HOSTED ON ZOOM)
Register here on EventBrite

 

Abstract

THE FRAGRANCE OF AUTHORITY: DID MEDIEVAL FOLKS SMELL POWER? AND DID POWER WANT TO BE SMELLED?

Joëlle Rollo-Koster, Professor of Medieval History, University of Rhode Island

Growing from research undertaken for my latest book, The Great Western Schism, 1378-1417: Performing Legitimacy, Performing Unity (CUP, 2022) my new project emphasizes the sense of smell as a vehicle to inculcate political authority. While seeing, hearing, tasting, and touching are overly emphasized by the historiography, smell has not been fully considered. Looking at the ceremonials surrounding the granting of the Golden Rose, a precious object that the pope offered to the most ardent defensor of Christianity of his time, I will discuss how the rose taught its audience (via its aroma) how to recognize legitimate authority, and maybe how authorities “controlled” this smell to assert themselves.