Workshop Medieval Suburbia
- When
- 18-05-2026 09:00 to 19-05-2026 13:00
- Where
- Ghent University, Campus Book Tower, Room 0.8 (entrance Sint-Hubertusstraat 8)
- Language
- English
- Organizer
- Stefan Meysman (UGent) and Lane Baker (BAEF)
- Contact
- Stefan.Meysman@UGent.be
International, multidisciplinary workshop on medieval suburbia, 18-19 May 2026 in Ghent.
Medieval Suburbia
Multidisciplinary Workshop, 18-19 May 2026, Ghent University
As medieval cities grew, so did their suburbs. From the eleventh century, amidst urbanization and population growth, new communities took root outside walled settlements throughout western Europe. Contemporaries described these extramural zones as suburbia, bannileugae, Vorstädte, faubourgs, and more. Far from the empty spaces evoked by Johan Huizinga in 1919, high and late medieval suburbs were busy places. Institutions of authority––lordships, municipal governments, religious houses, hospitals, guilds––jostled for suburban properties and resources. Suburbs were important sites of industry, grazing, fishing, and horticulture. These zones housed communities of lepers, itinerant encampments, and many so-called “dishonorable trades.” Suburbs were also uniquely vulnerable to the ravages of fire and warfare. By venturing beyond the walls and into the lively world of medieval suburbs, we learn more about institutional power struggles, changes to the environment, and the lives of nonelite populations. This conference proposes to move beyond the typical model of medieval suburbs as mere “margins,” defined by their remoteness from a socio-spatial “center” of urban life. We will consider diverse disciplinary approaches to medieval suburbia. We will look at the ways that medieval suburbs both differed from and mirrored intramural spaces. Finally, we will analyze the communities and activities for which the suburb was a center of its own. From a multidisciplinary variety of case studies, we hope to come closer to a comparative and theoretically robust understanding of medieval suburbia as a category of premodern space.
‘Medieval Suburbia’ is organised by the Henri Pirenne Institute for Medieval Studies at Ghent University. Organisers are Lane Baker and Stefan Meysman.
Program
Day 1 (Monday, 18 May, 2026)
Introductory Remarks (9:00–9:30)
Stefan Meysman and Lane Baker
Panel 1 (9:30–12:00) - Multidisciplinary Approaches to Medieval Suburbia
Respondent: Jeroen Deploige
- Jan Dumolyn: Suburbium, bannileuga, vetus burgus and nova villa: Urban Morphogenesis in the Southern Low Countries during the Central Middle Ages
- Lennert Lapeere: Reconstructing the Urban Fabric of Medieval Suburbia: Housing, Infrastructure, and Textile Production in Ypres (13th–14th Century)
- Elias Holmquist: An Extramural Redux: Re-evaluating Operationalization as Methodology
Lunch (12:00–13:15)
Panel 2 (13:30–16:00) - Beyond “Center and Periphery”
Respondent: Marc Boone
- Léa Hermenault: Suburban Materiality: Continuities and Discontinuities in the Urban Fabric between the City Center and its Suburbs in Late Medieval Paris
- Justin Colson: Inside and Outside the Walls? Mapping Inns and the Infrastructure of Movement in Late Medieval London
- Lane B. Baker: “Heathens” in the Suburbs: The Urban Topography of Romani Immigration (15th Century)
Conference Dinner (Participants Only): 19:00
Day 2 (Tuesday, 19 May, 2026)
Panel 3 (9:00–11:30)- Suburban Activity
Respondent: Wim Blockmans
- Mathijs Speecke: Weavers’ Quarters and Fullers’ Corners: Subaltern Topographies in Late Medieval Flemish Cities
- Janna Coomans: Fire Risk and Suburbia in Late Medieval Netherlandish Cities
- Leen Bervoets: Suburbian Discontent: Thirteenth-Century Uprisings and Collective Action in the Towns of Flanders
Concluding Remarks and Discussion (11:30–12:00)
Moderated by Stefan Meysman and Lane Baker
Lunch (12:00 - 13:00)
All are welcome to join for talks and discussions. Please note that participation is free, but registration is mandatory. Registration per session is allowed. You can register here.
Here you can download the poster and full program.
