Medieval & Renaissance Studies
and Urban History
New College of Florida
Research

Current Work
I am presently Co-PI of the Sfera Project, a collaborative scholarly effort to translate, contextualize, and study Gregorio Dati's early-15th-century geographical treatise La sfera, or The Globe. This will result in both a published print edition (forthcoming from Italica Press in spring 2025) and a multimedia digital edition (probably late 2025) which has received over $200,000 in funding from the NEH. I am leading the team's work in geospatial analysis.
Past Research
Most of my published work deals with the interpretation, use, and manipulation of the past in the politics and culture of later medieval Europe. I am particularly interested in the cities of medieval Italy, in questions of urban culture, civic identity, and the representation of the past (see cartoon at right). I have also recently become interested in how landscape and space relate to these issues. While most of my recent research has been on the cities of Rome and Genoa, I have also worked on Bergamo, Florence, Lucca, Padua, Pisa, Pistoia, Viterbo, and other cities.

In General
I am interested in medieval urban life, the history of urban development, medieval cultural and intellectual history, classical Roman history, classical and medieval Latin (especially the transmission of classical texts in later centuries—for example, my note on the two Plinys below), palaeography and codicology (the study of medieval manuscripts and their writing), book history, medieval architecture and technology, and reception history (that is, the later history or "afterlife" of a famous person or idea).
Books
Mansionario on the Two Plinys
For a course on Renaissance Italy, I recently translated a humanist treatise—the Short Note on the Two Plinys of Verona, or Adnotatio de duobus Pliniae by Giovanni Mansionario (also known as Giovanni de Matociis), a canon of the cathedral chapter in Verona in the first decades of the fourteenth century. Until that time, it had generally been believed that all classical works attributed to "Pliny" were by the same person—both the Natural History of Pliny the Elder (ca. 23–79 CE) and the letters of his nephew Pliny the Younger (ca. 61–113 CE). Giovanni Mansionario was the first to distinguish these two and explain their true relationship. A PDF of my translation is available here: I am happy to have it circulate freely as long as it maintains my credit line and email address.