Early medieval, religion
Sam Collins is an historian of early medieval western Europe. His first book, The Carolingian Debate Over Sacred Space (2014), examined opposed ninth-century assessments of claims for and against the status of ecclesiastical architecture as sacred. His current work looks at eighth and ninth-century monastic reform and its use and misuse of the ascetic language of late antiquity to justify and shape those key medieval changes to western monastic practice. Professor Collins teaches widely on medieval and late Roman topics in both the graduate and undergraduate program here at Mason.
Hist 304: Western Europe in the Middle Ages
Hist 387: Crusade and Jihad
Hist 388: Fall of the Roman Empire
Hist 388: Pagans and Christians
Hist 388: Anglo-Saxon England
Hist 388: Medieval England
Hist 388: Medieval Monasticism
Arth 334: Early Medieval Art and Culture
Hist 604: Fall of the Roman Empire
Hist 604: Anglo-Saxon England
Ph.D. Medieval History, University of California, Berkeley
M.A. Medieval History, Durham University
B.A. History, Whitman College