The University of Sheffield
Department of History

Dr. Julia Hillner, M.A., Ph.D. (Bonn)

Lecturer in Medieval History [Late Antiquity; in particular the city of Rome; the family; crime and punishment]

[On research leave, 2011-12]

Photo of Julia Hillner

Email: j.hillner@sheffield.ac.uk
Room: Jessop West: 3.09 | Telephone: 0114 22 22564
Office Hours, Spring 2011-12: On research leave.

Biography

Julia Hillner studied at the University of Bonn, the University of Perugia and the University of Padova (as a Visiting Doctoral Fellow), and graduated with a PhD in Ancient History in 2001. From 2001-2003 she worked as a research associate on the AHRB funded project "Religion, Dynasty and Patronage in Rome, c. 440-840" and taught as a Teaching Fellow in Early Christianity, both at the University of Manchester. Before joining the Sheffield History Department in 2008 she held a British Academy Postdoctoral Fellowship in Classics and Ancient History at the University of Manchester.

Grants and Awards

Graduiertenförderung des Landes Nordrhein-Westfalen (1998-2000)
British Academy Post-doctoral Fellowship (2003-2008)
Senate Award for Excellence in Teaching and Learning, Collaboration Category, Sheffield (2011)
Fellowship for Experienced Researchers, Alexander-von-Humboldt Stiftung (2011/12)

Membership of Professional Bodies

Julia is a member of the Associazione Internazionale di Archeologia Classica (AIAC) and also serves on the Roman Society’s Panel of Lecturers.

Research

Current Research
Julia's current research project is a monograph on imprisonment and reform in the late Roman world, to be published with Cambridge University Press, which investigates the roles of lay and monastic households in the conception and administration of private and public punishment.

Research Interests
Julia's research focusses on social history in the period 300 to c. 750. She has a particular interest in the transformations of the family and the household in this period and how these transformations are reflected in legal sources. Her research spans from the urban context of the family, particularly in the late antique city of Rome, where she has investigated issues such as settlement, property transmission and patronage, to issues of authority, hierarchy and discipline within the household. Julia is also a founding member, with Dr Charles West (History) and Dr Jane Rempel, of the Faculty of Arts and Humanities’ interdisciplinary Medieval and Ancient Research Seminar (MARS).

Research Supervision
Julia teaches late antique and early medieval social history. She is happy to supervise students interested in any aspect of this area, in particular those with interests in the city of Rome, the family, monasticism, crime and punishment, and late Roman and early medieval law.

Current PhD Students:

Hannah Probert, Fatherhood in the Early Middle Ages (primary supervisor)
Chrissy Davison, Late Antique Cities in the Rhineland (secondary supervisor)

Administrative Roles and Responsibilities

To follow.

Selected Publications

Books

Articles and Chapters