Studying at the University of Verona

Here you can find information on the organisational aspects of the Programme, lecture timetables, learning activities and useful contact details for your time at the University, from enrolment to graduation.

This information is intended exclusively for students already enrolled in this course.
If you are a new student interested in enrolling, you can find information about the course of study on the course page:

Laurea in Beni culturali - Enrollment from 2025/2026

SOFT SKILLS  

Find out more about the Soft Skills courses for Univr students provided by the University's Teaching and Learning Centre: https://talc.univr.it/it/competenze-trasversali 

 

CONTAMINATION LAB 

The Contamination Lab Verona (CLab Verona) is an experiential course with modules on innovation and enterprise culture that offers the opportunity to work in teams with students from all areas to solve challenges set by companies and organisations.  

Upon completion of a CLab, students will be entitled to receive 6 CFU (D- or F-type credits).  

Find out more:  https://www.univr.it/clabverona 

 

PLEASE NOTE: In order to be admitted to any teaching activities, including those of your choice, you must be enrolled in the academic year in which the activities in question are offered. Students who are about to graduate in the December and April sessions are therefore advised NOT to undertake extracurricular activities in the new academic year in which they are not enrolled, as these graduation sessions are valid for students enrolled in the previous academic year. Therefore, students who undertake an activity in an academic year in which they are not enrolled will not be granted CFU credits.  

Academic year:
CuCi 1 A From 9/25/23 To 11/4/23
years Modules TAF Teacher
1° 2° 3° FAI Activities F Edoardo Bianchi (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Series of conferences Don Nicola Mazza University College F Alessandra Zangrandi (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Course of history and art of the C.T.G. F Marco Stoffella (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° GIS analysis for archaeology F Filippo Carraro (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Intercomprehension laboratory between the Romance languages F Alessandra Zangrandi (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Workshop on Noninvasive Analytical Techniques Applied to Paintings F Paola Artoni (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Worlds of Fashion: Themes and Actors F Alessandra Zamperini (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° San Giorgio di Valpolicella. New studies on the pieve F Fabio Coden (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° C.R.E.S. Seminars F Fabio Forner (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° University and DSA - Methods and strategies for tackling study and university studies F Chiara Melloni (Coordinator)
CuCi 1 B From 11/13/23 To 12/22/23
years Modules TAF Teacher
1° 2° 3° Art, memory and terrorism: the duty to protect our cultural heritage F Olivia Guaraldo (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° FAI Activities F Edoardo Bianchi (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Series of conferences Don Nicola Mazza University College F Alessandra Zangrandi (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Series of lectures: Maria Callas: musica, media, moda, arte F Vincenzo Borghetti (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Conference The management of local authority museums: critical issues, innovative models, development prospects F Dario Donetti (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Course of history and art of the C.T.G. F Marco Stoffella (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° From the fieldwork to the lab: study, cataloguing, database collection of protohistoric archaeological artefacts F Mara Gioia Migliavacca (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° GIS analysis for archaeology F Filippo Carraro (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Intercomprehension laboratory between the Romance languages F Alessandra Zangrandi (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Workshop on Noninvasive Analytical Techniques Applied to Paintings F Paola Artoni (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Worlds of Fashion: Themes and Actors F Alessandra Zamperini (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° San Giorgio di Valpolicella. New studies on the pieve F Fabio Coden (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° C.R.E.S. Seminars F Fabio Forner (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Stories and protagonists in Palazzo Miniscalchi F Alessandra Zamperini (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° University and DSA - Methods and strategies for tackling study and university studies F Chiara Melloni (Coordinator)
CuCi 2 A From 2/19/24 To 3/29/24
years Modules TAF Teacher
1° 2° 3° Building archaeology and mapping stratigraphy F Elisa Lerco (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° FAI Activities F Edoardo Bianchi (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Course of history and art of the C.T.G. F Marco Stoffella (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Felice Brusasorci protagonist of the “Divina alta maniera” in Verona. about "The value crowned by fame" and the "Portrait of a gentleman" of the Cariverona collections F Giorgio Fossaluzza (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Study day on the history of the De Stefani family F Renato Camurri (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Day of remembrance and Day of memory F Renato Camurri (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Historical investigation of Jesus of Nazareth F Mariaclara Rossi (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Intercomprehension laboratory between the Romance languages F Alessandra Zangrandi (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Workshop Introduction to the Christian writers of the early centuries F Tiziana Franco (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Workshop on reading and editing medieval documents F Mariaclara Rossi (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Reading the Middle Ages. Authors, Meetings, Debates F Marco Stoffella (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° San Giorgio di Valpolicella. New studies on the pieve F Fabio Coden (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° C.R.E.S. Seminars F Fabio Forner (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° University and DSA - Methods and strategies for tackling study and university studies F Chiara Melloni (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Illustrated Verona: the future of a cultural heritage. Balance sheets, perspectives and role of studies on the territory F Alessandra Zamperini (Coordinator)
CuCi 2 B From 4/9/24 To 5/31/24
years Modules TAF Teacher
1° 2° 3° Building archaeology and mapping stratigraphy F Elisa Lerco (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° FAI Activities F Edoardo Bianchi (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Conference Inner Islands. For a storytelling of loneliness in Italian Literature F Anna Maria Salvade' (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Course of history and art of the C.T.G. F Marco Stoffella (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Two lectures by the President of the “Accademia della Crusca”, Prof. Paolo D'Achille F Alessandra Zangrandi (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Day of remembrance and Day of memory F Renato Camurri (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Historical investigation of Jesus of Nazareth F Mariaclara Rossi (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Intercomprehension laboratory between the Romance languages F Alessandra Zangrandi (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Workshop Introduction to the Christian writers of the early centuries F Tiziana Franco (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Workshop on reading and editing medieval documents F Mariaclara Rossi (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Social theater workshop organized by the Compagnia Teatro Babilonia F Nicola Pasqualicchio (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Reading the Middle Ages. Authors, Meetings, Debates F Marco Stoffella (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Preparation and participation in the Youth Jury of the Totola Prize F Nicola Pasqualicchio (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° San Giorgio di Valpolicella. New studies on the pieve F Fabio Coden (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° C.R.E.S. Seminars F Fabio Forner (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° University and DSA - Methods and strategies for tackling study and university studies F Chiara Melloni (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Illustrated Verona: the future of a cultural heritage. Balance sheets, perspectives and role of studies on the territory F Alessandra Zamperini (Coordinator)
List of courses with unassigned period
years Modules TAF Teacher
1° 2° 3° Bridge film festival (XI Edition) F Alberto Scandola (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Cycle of Lectures by Associazione Universitaria Francofona F Laura Maria Colombo (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Venantius Fortunatus between the Piave and the Loire F Edoardo Ferrarini (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° International Conference: F Silvia Baroni (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° International Conference “Rudolf Nureyev and Literature: Dance, Choreography, and Reception” F Laura Maria Colombo (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Identity, power, and gender through clothing F Alessandra Zamperini (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Archaeological fieldwork - Valli del Leno (TN) F Mara Gioia Migliavacca (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Archaeological excavations at Nicopolis ad Istrum F Diana Sergeeva Dobreva (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Archaeological excavation in Aquileia (UD) F Patrizia Basso (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Archaeological excavation in Montebaranzone castle (MO) F Nicola Mancassola (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Archaeological excavation in Castelvecchio, Verona F Fabio Saggioro (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Archaeological excavation in Morfasso (PC) F Nicola Mancassola (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Archaeological fieldwork - Monte Palazzo di S. Tomio di Malo (Vicenza) F Mara Gioia Migliavacca (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Archaeological excavation in Toano (RE) F Nicola Mancassola (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Archaeological fieldwork - Terranegra (Legnago) F Mara Gioia Migliavacca (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Look Beyond the walls.Film Days of the city of Verona F Alberto Scandola (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Transforming the world into a hermitage? Romuald’s hermitic ideal to the test of history and contemporaneity F Edoardo Ferrarini (Coordinator)
1° 2° 3° Verona in Storia Cycle of public lectures F Giovanni Bernardini (Coordinator)

Teaching code

4S01294

Coordinator

Marco Stoffella

Credits

6

Language

Italian

Scientific Disciplinary Sector (SSD)

M-STO/01 - MEDIEVAL HISTORY

Period

CuCi 1 A dal Sep 25, 2023 al Nov 4, 2023.

Courses Single

Authorized

Learning objectives

The introductory course of Medieval History pursues the objective - shared with other teachings of the historical area - to enable the student to critically evaluate a historical testimony, placing it in the spatial and temporal coordinates of the European Middle Ages. The aim of the advanced course of Medieval History is to guide the student to the critical analysis of historical sources and to develop his / her capacity to analyze a historical problem in its complexity. Overall, the two courses - introductory and advanced - aim to provide students with the necessary skills to orient themselves independently in a problem of medieval history. In the introductory course, therefore, the teacher underlines some aspects that will be then deepened and recalled in the progress course. During the advanced course, a direct analysis of medieval sources and documents is foreseen (translated into Italian).

Prerequisites and basic notions

Students will be asked to have a basic knowledge of the social and political history of the Middle Ages and curiosity about the past and its complexity.

Program

After a short introduction, during which general concepts like the Middle Ages, historical sources, and their various typologies will be discussed, the course will synthetically analyse the following topics:
- Late Antiquity and the diffusion of Christianity (the growth of new religious communities that became a fundamental element in the Roman Empire and at the same time a tool of government)
- Western Europe in the early Middle Ages and his regna (the end of the Western Roman Empire, migrations, the birth of new political kingdoms based on ethnic distinctions)
- the Byzantine and Islamic Mediterranean (the progressive rupture of the unity of the Mediterranean See under the Arabic expansion and the role of Byzantium)
- Carolingian Europe (Lombard Italy, the Frankish expansion, Charlemagne and the supposed roots of contemporary Europe)
- the seigniorial order (post-Carolingian Europe, the “feudal society”, the control over work and security in the cities and in the countryside)
- Church reforms (the ideological and political conflicts related to the growth of papal prestige and of the Communal autonomy)
- Empire and Papacy in the Late Middle Ages (conflicts related to different concepts and practice of power between political and spiritual authority)
- political institutions of the Late Middle Ages (political experimentations to give equilibrium to representation and participation within society)
- society and culture in the Middle Ages (the various aspects related to knowledge, its access, and its administration)
- Religious experiences in the Middle Ages (principal religious movements that led to reforms and to very different experiences) - the economies of the Middle Ages (the organisation of work and commerce, with a long-lasting perspective)
Some lectures might be thought by specialists; according to the pandemic situation, during the last teaching weeks some excursions could take place. All practical aspects regarding the excursions will be discussed with those attending lectures.
During the academic year the lecturer will receive students during the office hours, published on the web page and in the announcements place; students are recommended to fix via e-mail an appointment with the lecturer.
READINGS FOR ALL STUDENTS:
All students, attending lectures or not, will be asked to study the introductory book: G. Sergi, L’idea di medioevo. Fra storia e senso comune, Rome, Donzelli, 2005.
All students must learn a handbook in Medieval History to be chosen among the following titles: L. Provero, M. Vallerani, Storia medievale, Firenze, Lemonnier, 2022 (second edition); Introduzione alla storia medievale, a cura di G. Albertoni, S.M. Collavini, T. Lazzari, Bologna, il Mulino, 2020 (second edition); A. Zorzi, Manuale di storia medievale, Novara, Utet, 2021 (second edition). Students with a good school knowledge of the Middle Ages might choose the more complex: R. Bordone, G. Sergi, Dieci secoli di medioevo, Torino, Einaudi, 2009.
Finally, the program includes at least one scientific essay, to be chosen on personal interest, on one of the main topics of the Medieval History, and that will be available in a folder in the Moodle of the introductory course.
Students attending lectures, and the one inscribed to the course, will receive didactical material related to the lectures on the e-learning platform; these materials are considered part of the exam program; they do not substitute the study of the essay written by Sergi, and the study of one of the handbooks listed above.
Students not attending lectures can receive help by the lecturer to better define the program. All students not attending lectures will be asked to choose an additional book among the following titles: P. Brown, P. Brown, Il riscatto dell’anima. Aldilà e ricchezza nel primo cristianesimo occidentale, Torino, Einaudi, 2015; A. Barbero, Carlo Magno Un padre dell’Europa, Bari, Laterza, 2000; T. Lazzari, Le donne nell’alto Medioevo, Milano-Torino, Bruno Mondadori, 2010; A.A. Settia, Castelli medievali, Bologna, il Mulino, 2017; J.M.H. Smith, L’Europa dopo Roma. Una nuova storia culturale 500-1000, Bologna, il Mulino, 2008; G. Milani, I comuni italiani. Secoli XII-XIV, Bari, Laterza, 2005; C. Wickham, Sonnambuli verso un nuovo mondo. L’affermazione dei comuni italiani nel XII secolo, Roma, Viella, 2017; P. Grillo, Le guerre del Barbarossa. I comuni contro l’imperatore, Roma-Bari, Laterza, 2014; J.C. Maire Vigueur, E. Faini, Il sistema politico dei comuni italiani (secoli XII-XIV), Milano-Torino, B. Mondadori, 2010; A. Zorzi, Le signorie cittadine in Italia (secoli XIII-XV), Milano-Torino, B. Mondadori, 2010; P. Freedman, Il gusto delle spezie nel Medioevo, Bologna, il Mulino, 2009, C. Wickham, L’Europa nel Medioevo, Roma, Carocci, 2020; N. D’Acunto, La lotta per le investiture. Una rivoluzione medievale (998-1122), Roma, Carocci, 2020; L. Provero, Contadini e potere nel Medioevo, Roma, Carocci, 2020; G. Melville, Le comunità religiose nel Medioevo. Storia e modelli di vita, a cura di N. D’Acunto, Brescia, Morcelliana, 2020. The choice of the additional text can be made autonomously; differently it can be discussed with the lecturer during office hours or per e-mail.

Bibliography

Visualizza la bibliografia con Leganto, strumento che il Sistema Bibliotecario mette a disposizione per recuperare i testi in programma d'esame in modo semplice e innovativo.

Didactic methods

Frontal lectures on main subjects will be followed by discussions with students; on some subjects, texts and sources will be read and analysed, followed by a discussion on their content.

Learning assessment procedures

After a short introduction, during which general concepts like the Middle Ages, historical sources, and their various typologies will be discussed, the course will synthetically analyse the following topics:
- Late Antiquity and the diffusion of Christianity (the growth of new religious communities that became a fundamental element in the Roman Empire and at the same time a tool of government)
- Western Europe in the early Middle Ages and his regna (the end of the Western Roman Empire, migrations, the birth of new political kingdoms based on ethnic distinctions)
- the Byzantine and Islamic Mediterranean (the progressive rupture of the unity of the Mediterranean See under the Arabic expansion and the role of Byzantium)
- Carolingian Europe (Lombard Italy, the Frankish expansion, Charlemagne and the supposed roots of contemporary Europe)
- the seigniorial order (post-Carolingian Europe, the “feudal society”, the control over work and security in the cities and in the countryside)
- Church reforms (the ideological and political conflicts related to the growth of papal prestige and of the Communal autonomy)
- Empire and Papacy in the Late Middle Ages (conflicts related to different concepts and practice of power between political and spiritual authority)
- political institutions of the Late Middle Ages (political experimentations to give equilibrium to representation and participation within society)
- society and culture in the Middle Ages (the various aspects related to knowledge, its access, and its administration)
- Religious experiences in the Middle Ages (principal religious movements that led to reforms and to very different experiences) - the economies of the Middle Ages (the organisation of work and commerce, with a long-lasting perspective)
Some lectures might be thought by specialists; according to the pandemic situation, during the last teaching weeks some excursions could take place. All practical aspects regarding the excursions will be discussed with those attending lectures.
During the academic year the lecturer will receive students during the office hours, published on the web page and in the announcements place; students are recommended to fix via e-mail an appointment with the lecturer.
READINGS FOR ALL STUDENTS:
All students, attending lectures or not, will be asked to study the introductory book: G. Sergi, L’idea di medioevo. Fra storia e senso comune, Rome, Donzelli, 2005.
All students must learn a handbook in Medieval History to be chosen among the following titles: L. Provero, M. Vallerani, Storia medievale, Firenze, Lemonnier, 2022 (second edition); Introduzione alla storia medievale, a cura di G. Albertoni, S.M. Collavini, T. Lazzari, Bologna, il Mulino, 2020 (second edition); A. Zorzi, Manuale di storia medievale, Novara, Utet, 2021 (second edition). Students with a good school knowledge of the Middle Ages might choose the more complex: R. Bordone, G. Sergi, Dieci secoli di medioevo, Torino, Einaudi, 2009.
Finally, the program includes one scientific essay, to be chosen on personal interest, on one of the main topics of the Medieval History, and that will be available in the moodle of the introductory course.
Students attending lectures, and the one inscribed to the course, will receive didactical material related to the lectures on the e-learning platform; these materials are considered part of the exam program; they do not substitute the study of the essay written by Sergi, and the study of one of the handbooks listed above.
Students not attending lectures can receive help by the lecturer to better define the program. All students not attending lectures will be asked to choose an additional book among the following titles: P. Brown, P. Brown, Il riscatto dell’anima. Aldilà e ricchezza nel primo cristianesimo occidentale, Torino, Einaudi, 2015; A. Barbero, Carlo Magno Un padre dell’Europa, Bari, Laterza, 2000; T. Lazzari, Le donne nell’alto Medioevo, Milano-Torino, Bruno Mondadori, 2010; A.A. Settia, Castelli medievali, Bologna, il Mulino, 2017; J.M.H. Smith, L’Europa dopo Roma. Una nuova storia culturale 500-1000, Bologna, il Mulino, 2008; G. Milani, I comuni italiani. Secoli XII-XIV, Bari, Laterza, 2005; C. Wickham, Sonnambuli verso un nuovo mondo. L’affermazione dei comuni italiani nel XII secolo, Roma, Viella, 2017; P. Grillo, Le guerre del Barbarossa. I comuni contro l’imperatore, Roma-Bari, Laterza, 2014; J.C. Maire Vigueur, E. Faini, Il sistema politico dei comuni italiani (secoli XII-XIV), Milano-Torino, B. Mondadori, 2010; A. Zorzi, Le signorie cittadine in Italia (secoli XIII-XV), Milano-Torino, B. Mondadori, 2010; P. Freedman, Il gusto delle spezie nel Medioevo, Bologna, il Mulino, 2009, C. Wickham, L’Europa nel Medioevo, Roma, Carocci, 2020; N. D’Acunto, La lotta per le investiture. Una rivoluzione medievale (998-1122), Roma, Carocci, 2020; L. Provero, Contadini e potere nel Medioevo, Roma, Carocci, 2020; G. Melville, Le comunità religiose nel Medioevo. Storia e modelli di vita, a cura di N. D’Acunto, Brescia, Morcelliana, 2020; A.A. Settia, Battaglie medievali, Bologna il Mulino, 2020; R. Santangeli Valenzani, Edilizia residenziale in Italia nnll'altomedioevo, Roma, Carocci, 2011; A. Marcone, Tarda Antichità. Profilo storico e prospettive storiografiche, Roma, Carocci, 2020. The choice of the additional text can be made autonomously; differently it can be discussed with the lecturer during office hours or per e-mail.

Students with disabilities or specific learning disorders (SLD), who intend to request the adaptation of the exam, must follow the instructions given HERE

Evaluation criteria

The target of the final oral exam is to verify the achievement level of this course. Questions will be based on knowledge acquired through the study of handbooks and material provided by the lecturer and published in the Moodle. The exams last the time necessary to understand the quality and the width of students' knowledge.

Criteria for the composition of the final grade

The oral exam will be expressed in thirtieth and will divided into two parts: in the first part students will be asked to answer to general questions on the main topics of the Middle Ages according to the essay of Sergi, on the topics discussed during lectures or on topics acquired through the study of the handbook. The second part will devotes to further knowledge acquired through the study of essays.

Exam language

Italiano