Call for Papers /// Across Seas, Across Cultures: The Transmission of Female Saint Cults from East to West, San Francisco, 19-21 February, 2026
- s-architecture

- Jul 29
- 3 min read

Across Seas, Across Cultures: The Transmission of Female Saint Cults from East to West
San Francisco, 19-21 February, 2026
Deadline: 10 August 2025
72nd Annual Meeting of the Renaissance Society of America
Session Proposal
This panel invites papers that explore the cross-cultural transmission, reception, and reinvention of female saint cults from the Christian East to the Latin West in the centuries leading up to and following the Crusades, with particular attention to their resonance during the Renaissance (1300-1500 C.E.). During this period of intensified contact between East and West—through crusades, pilgrimage, trade, and manuscript circulation—the cults of women, such as Catherine of Alexandria, Thecla, Barbara, Pelagia, Marina/Margaret of Antioch, and others, were reimagined to suit the spiritual, political, and cultural needs of Latin Christendom. The panel seeks to explore how these Eastern-origin saints were integrated into the devotional, artistic, and intellectual frameworks of Renaissance Europe, and how their stories were reshaped through translation, visual culture, and localized liturgical practice.
We are particularly interested in papers that interrogate the interplay between gender, sanctity, and cross-cultural exchange in the construction of saintly authority during this transformative period. We seek contributions that examine how these cults were transmitted, adapted, and appropriated across cultural, linguistic, and theological divides. Interdisciplinary approaches are particularly welcome.
Topics may include, but are not limited to:
The role of the Crusades, pilgrimage, and holy sites in the movement of relics and saint cults from East to West
The role of Crusader memory and pilgrimage in sustaining or reshaping devotion
Visual representations of these saints in Renaissance Italy, Iberia, or Northern Europe
Theological or political uses of female saintly models in the context of ecclesiastical reform or royal patronage
Gendered readings of martyrdom, asceticism, and virginity across cultures
Monastic, mendicant, or courtly promotion of Eastern female saints
Gender, virginity, and martyrdom in cross-cultural saint narratives
Eastern case studies of individual saints and their cultic journeys
Political and theological motivations behind the promotion of Eastern female saints
Comparative East–West perspectives on virginity, martyrdom, and asceticism
Submission Guidelines
Proposals should include:
Paper Title (15-word maximum)
Abstract (150–200 words)
Curriculum Vitae (in .pdf or .doc format, maximum 2 pages)• PhD or other terminal degree completion date (past or expected)
Primary discipline.
Please send submissions to ichristoforaki@yahoo.co.uk or christof@academyofathensby August 10, 2025.
Papers should be no longer than 20 minutes and must be delivered in English.
Presenters must be RSA members at the time of the conference. For questions or informal inquiries, please contact the panel organizer at ichristoforaki@yahoo.co.uk or christof@academyofathens.gr.
We welcome proposals from scholars across disciplines focused but not limited to art history, history, literary studies, theology, and manuscript studies. Graduate students and early-career researchers are especially encouraged to apply.
s-architecture is intended for scholars of Architecture (academe, practice, students, and the public). The list posts scholarship and grant opportunities, academic jobs, calls for papers, notices of conferences which will be of interest to academic staff, postgraduate students, and those in the profession with a scholarly turn of mind.
This blog/email and any attachments are confidential and intended solely for the recipient(s) listed. If you are not the intended recipient, please notify the sender immediately and delete this email. Any unauthorised review, use, disclosure, or distribution is strictly prohibited. While we take precautions to protect against viruses and malware, we cannot guarantee that this email is free from harmful elements. The views expressed in this email do not necessarily reflect those of s-architecture or the Association of Architecture Schools of Australasia (AASA).



