3rd Floor
English Faculty Building
Cambridge
CB3 9DP
United Kingdom
Johanna Dale gained her undergraduate and master’s degrees in history from Cambridge, before working as a picture librarian in London for several years. In 2010, she began her doctoral research at the University of East Anglia and in 2013 spent a semester as a wissenschaftliche Mitarbeiterin at the University of Heidelberg. Her PhD comprised a comparative study of the influence of coronation liturgy on images of kingship in England, France and Germany c.1050-c.1250. She has published on an anonymous Latin chronicle from twelfth-century Germany and returned to Cambridge in 2013 to work with Mark Chinca and Christopher Young on the AHRC-funded Kaiserchronik project.
Comparative History, Medieval Germany, Anglo-Norman and Angevin England, Kingship, Queenship, Medieval Liturgy, Medieval Chronicles
‘Royal Inauguration and the Liturgical Calendar in England, France and the Empire, c.1050-c.1250’, in Anglo-Norman Studies 37 (forthcoming, 2015)
‘Imperial Self-Representation and the Manipulation of History in Twelfth-Century Germany: Cambridge, Corpus Christi College MS 373’, in German History 29 (2011)
‘The Provenance of Cambridge Corpus Christi College MS 373’, in The Transactions of the Cambridge Bibliographical Society 14 (2010)