Magnificent Women: Elite Female Agency and the Arts of Medieval Europe

Online

i Queen, from a group of Donor Figures including a King, Queen, and Prince, ca. 1350, marble, traces of paint & gilding. Gift of J. Pierpont Morgan, 1917, The Metropolitan Museum, New York. Image: metmuseum.org

Dr Maeve O’Donnell-Morales

5 pre-recorded lectures and 5 live Zoom seminars over 5 weeks at 18:00 [London time], from Thursday 6 November to Thursday 4 December 2025

£195

 

Course description

In the year 1200, Eleanor of Aquitaine accompanied her granddaughter, Blanche of Castile, from Spain to France to marry the young French dauphin, Louis VIII. Together, these two remarkable women embodied a vast network of political and cultural links across the medieval world. Separately, they would become powerful figureheads and prolific patrons of the arts.

Like Eleanor and Blanche, elite medieval women travelled extensively, often for the purpose of marriage, but also as a result of military conflict and as diplomats or pilgrims.  Their strategic employment of works of art led to the transmission of styles and techniques and to the creation of many of period’s great masterpieces.  This course will examine these works and use them as the basis for an exploration of the multifaceted lives of elite women in the medieval period, and as case studies for a critical discussion of gender and agency.

 

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Thursday 6 November - Thursday 4 December 2025

Online 

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Short Courses

Lecturer's Biography

Dr Maeve O’Donnell-Morales completed her PhD at The Courtauld in 2018, writing a thesis on medieval altar furnishings and liturgical objects from the Iberian kingdom of Castile. Before moving to London for her PhD, Maeve completed her MA at Hunter College (CUNY) and her BA at New York University and worked for four years at The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Following her PhD, Maeve curated an exhibition on the role of artists in the development of Marian theology at the Getty Museum (www.getty.edu/news/getty-museum-presents-visualizing-the-virgin-mary/ ). Returning to England, she then secured a position at the University of Bristol, where she is the art historian on a team investigating the development of cults of saints in medieval Iberia. She is currently helping to manage the collection of the Montpascal Foundation while completing several articles, a book manuscript, and a large grant application.

Citations