Laura Wangerin , Ph.D
Associate Professor of History
Department of History
(973) 275-2771
Email
Fahy Hall
Room 347
Laura Wangerin, Ph.D
Associate Professor of History
Department of History
I am a medievalist and a legal historian. My main areas of research are the Ottonians, the tenth century Saxon dynasty that founded what would become the Holy Roman Empire, and the Anglo-Saxons, who ruled in England from the fifth to the eleventh centuries. My recent book focuses on Ottonian government, and presents new ways of understanding medieval kingship, ideologies of rulership, and the administration of justice throughout the medieval European world. My next book-length project will explore noblewomen in the Ottonian and Salian periods of medieval Germany, continuing my examination of medieval governance by investigating the complex relationships between women, power, sanctity, and legitimacy.
Education
- PhD, Medieval History, University of Wisconsin-Madison (2014)
- MLIS, Library and Information Science, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee (2001)
- MA, History, Indiana University-Bloomington (1990)
- AB, History, English, Spanish, Ripon College (1988)
Scholarship
- “Communications and Power: Ottonian Queens.” Anglo-Norman Studies 45 (2023), 120-139.
- “Divine and Secular Justice in Liudprand of Cremona’s Antapodosis.” In A Global History of Crime and Punishment in the Medieval Age. Ed. Karl Shoemaker. London: Bloomsbury, 2023, 93-114.
- Kingship and Justice in the Ottonian Empire. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press (2019).
- "Octopuses and Ottonians: Biological Systems as Models for Decentralized Medieval Government," Annalen des Naturhistorischen Museums in Wien, Series A, 120, 31-49 (January 2018). http://verlag.nhmwien.ac.at/pdfs/120A_031049_Wangerin.pdf
- "The Governance of Ottonian Germany in Historiographical Perspective," History Compass 15, no. 1, 15e12367 (January 2017). https://doi.org/10.1111/hic3.12367
- "Holy Relics, Authority, and Legitimacy in Ottonian Germany and Anglo-Saxon England," Haskins Society Journal 27, 2015, 15-28 (December, 2016). https://boydellandbrewer.com/the-haskins-society-journal-27-hb.html
- "Empress Theophanu, Sanctity and Memory in Early Medieval Saxony," Central European History 47, no. 4, (December 1, 2014), 716-736. https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/central-european-history/article/div-classtitleempress-theophanu-sanctity-and-memory-in-early-medieval-saxonydiv/3BA47130D8EAC2B64A74D9C1A92ED4E6
- "Royal Feuds and the Politics of Sanctity in Anglo-Saxon England and Ottonian Saxony." Mirabilia 18, no. 1 (2014), ed. Ian Wood, et al., 78-94. http://www.revistamirabilia.com/sites/default/files/pdfs/18-06.pdf
Accomplishments
- Center for Faculty Development Summer Writing Retreat, Seton Hall University (2017)
- University Teaching Fellowship, Seton Hall University (2017)
- Honorary History Department Fellow, University of Wisconsin-Madison (2014-present)
- Passed all four History Doctoral Examination fields with Distinction: Early Middle Ages, Central Middle Ages, Late Middle Ages, and Roman History, University of Wisconsin-Madison (2012)
- Phi Kappa Phi, University of Wisconsin-Madison (2012)
- Golden Key International Honour Society, University of Wisconsin-Madison (2012)
- Hagenlocker Teaching Award, Cranbrook Schools (2004)
- Medieval Studies Institute Fellow, Indiana University-Bloomington (1988)
- Phi Alpha Theta, Ripon College (1988)
- Phi Sigma Iota, Ripon College (1988)