CelineDauverd
- Professor
- EARLY MODERN MEDITERRANEAN
Professor Dauverd is on leave for the 2023-2024 academic year
Professor Dauverd teaches courses about thehistory of ancient and pre-modern Europe including"Early Modern Societies: Italy and Spain" "Mediterranean History, 600-1600,""Venice and Florence in the Renaissance," "Witchcraft and Magic,""The Cosmos in the Ancient Mediterranean,""Medieval Spain and Portugal," and “Gladiators and Prostitutes in Ancient Rome.” At the graduate level, she teaches seminars on Early Modern European cultural history and Mediterranean History.
Professor Dauverd received her Ph.D. from the University of California, Los Angeles. Her research focuses on the socio-cultural relations between Iberia, Italy, and North Africa during the early modern era (1440-1640). Her first book,(Cambridge University Press, NY 2015) examines the role of the Genoese trade diaspora in southern Italy in the context of the Spanish-Habsburg expansion in the Mediterranean Sea. Her second book, (Cambridge University Press, NY 2020) won the Eugene V. Kayden Book Award. It investigates the link between imperialism and religion through an analysis of the Spanish viceroys’ role in religious processions in Early Modern Naples. Dauverd’s third manuscript, Colonialism and Resistance in Early Modern Europe: Rebellion, Magic, and Reason in the Italian States,1530-1760(under peer review by Cambridge) explores Corsican resistanceto Genoese colonialism in the context of the religious wars between Spain and Türkiye. Her current book project, All the Kingsof the Mediterranean:Iberian Kings, Renaissance Popes, and Maghrebi Shariffs during the North African Conquests 1450-1630,assesses relations between Muslim and Christian rulers through the prism of the popes’pursuit of imperial power.
In recent years, Dauverd has won long-term fellowships from the Casa de Velázquez Madrid Institute for Advanced Studies, Center for Humanities and the Arts at CU 鶹ӰԺ, Council of American Overseas Research Center in Tangiers, European University Institute in Florence, Francis Weber and Andrew Mellon Foundation at the Huntington Library, Historisches Kolleg in Munich, Humanities Research Institute at the University of California Irvine, Institute for Research in the Humanities at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, Italian Academy for Advanced Studies at Columbia University in New York, and I Tatti Harvard University Center for Italian Renaissance Studies in Florence.She is spending the 2024-25 academic year as Visiting Professor of Mediterranean history at the Sapienza Università di Roma.
Professor Dauverd is accepting both M.A. and Ph.D. students.
Recent graduates have worked on Renaissance Italian map making, women and gender in medieval Spain, medieval race relations in Spain, Portuguese Sephardi in the Netherlands, early modern Spanish cookbooks, and French religious wars. Current graduate students work on culture and religion in premodern Europe.