Ghost Walk
Ghost Walk at the Guelph train station, sponsored by the Guelph History Society.
The History Department at the University of Guelph announces a search for a tenure-track assistant professor in Rural North American History.
Ghost Walk at the Guelph train station, sponsored by the Guelph History Society.
Graduate History students at the University of Guelph highlight innovative research using unique, hand-written travel diaries that form part of the University’s renowned Scottish Studies Collection. In-person.
LCSC Speaker Series with Dr. Geoffrey Hayes, Professor of History at University of Waterloo. Hybrid event.
LCSC partners with Guelph Museums to sponsor this Military Lecture by Dr. Tarah Brookfield, Wilfrid Laurier University.
Join the University of Waterloo community for a hoop dance performance and workshop with Feryn King, an Indigenous (Mohawk) artist, professional international hoop dancer, and member of the Wolf Clan in Akwesasne, Quebec.
The performance is in the Arts Quad (in front of Dana Porter Library) at the University of Waterloo and starts at 2:30
The workshop will be held in Alumni Hall at United College and runs from 4:00 - 6:00 pm. Email Lily MacKenzie by Friday, March 15th to reserve a spot. Spaces are limited.
Sponsored by the Waterloo Indigenous Student Centre, the Office of Indigenous Relations, and the Department of History.
Join MA student Nicole Vankooten of DRAGEN Lab for an historic forest walk. No registration, just meet at St. Jerome's DRAGEN Lab (#2 on map link), University of Waterloo campus at 12:45 pm.
Join Dr. Stephen Sherlock in an exploration of archeological sites in Northeast Yorkshire from the Neolithic period to the Roman arrival. Dr. Sherlock partners with DRAGEN Lab, a research project partner in the Tri-U.
In today's polarized world, anger is often celebrated as a tool for liberation, yet its roots in ancient and medieval thought have been largely overlooked. Join The Medieval DRAGEN Lab guest, Dr. Marc Cels of Athabasca University, who will meekly offer his observations about how the current debate could be enriched by becoming a bit medieval on the subject of anger.