Prof Anthony Bale, Faculty of English
apb90@cam.ac.uk

Biographical Information
Professor of Medieval & Renaissance Literature (1954)
Professorial Fellow, Girton College.
BA (Oxford), MA (York), DPhil. (Oxford).
Research Interests
I research later medieval English literature and culture. My early work focussed on Christian-Jewish relations, popular religion, and the history of antisemitism, followed by studies of the poetry of John Lydgate, the cult of St Edmund of East Anglia, and medieval histories of emotion. This then led me into pilgrimage studies, the history of Jerusalem and the Holy Land, and editing and translating The Book of Marvels and Travels (Oxford UP, 2012) by John Mandeville and The Book of Margery Kempe (Oxford UP, 2016). Throughout my work I've been concerned with the relationship between margins and peripheries in medieval culture, and with recovering neglected sources and voices from the medieval past.
My research has been supported by grants from the British Academy, the Leverhulme Trust, the Arts and Humanities Research Council, among others. I have spent several periods as a visiting scholar at the Huntington Library in California and have been awarded visiting fellowships at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor (Frankel Fellowship), the University of Melbourne (Distinguished International Fellowship in the History of Emotions), Harvard University (Bloomfield Fellowship), the University of Wisconsin at Madison (Brittingham Fellowship), and the National Humanities Center, North Carolina.
I have been involved in several projects curating exhibitions, as academic advisor for the Jewish Museum London’s Blood: Uniting and Dividing (2015-16) and Jews, Money, Myth (2019), which won the Museums Association Museums Change Lives award (2019). I also curated Capsule: Inside the Medieval Book with Leverhulme Artist-in-Residence collaborator, artist Shay Hamias, and was a member of the academic advisory team for the British Library's Medieval Women: In their Own Words exhibition (2024-5). From 2020-2022 I was President of the New Chaucer Society, the leading scholarly society for the study of the literature and culture of the age of Chaucer.
In 2023 I published A Travel Guide to the Middle Ages: the World through Medieval Eyes (Penguin, 2023; Norton 2024), which has since been translated into Bulgarian, Czech, Dutch, Chinese, German, Italian, Polish, Portuguese, and Russian, with further translations to follow. From 2023-26 I hold a Leverhulme Major Research Fellowship to support my research on the Ottoman Siege of Rhodes (1480) and the development of late medieval news media. The project website is under development here.
Areas of Graduate Supervision
My research interests cover many aspects of medieval English language and literature, as well as translation and adaptation, creative non-fiction, travel writing, religious writing, the cultural history of Jerusalem and the Holy Land, and manuscript studies.
Selected Publications
Some recent publications:
- Anthony Bale, 'Three funerals', in eds. Justin Bengry, Matt Cook, Rebecca Jennings, E. J. Scott, A Queer Treasury (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2025), in press
- Anthony Bale, 'Thinking with the renegade', Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies 55 (2025), in press.
- Anthony Bale, A Travel Guide the Middle Ages: the World through Medieval Eyes (London: Viking Penguin, 2023; New York: Norton, 2024). Also in Bulgarian, Chinese, Dutch, German, Italian, Portuguese translations.
- Anthony Bale, 'News from the East', Studies In The Age of Chaucer 45 (2023), pp. 3-33.
- Anthony Bale, Margery Kempe: A Mixed Life, Medieval Lives series (London: Reaktion Books, 2021).
- Anthony Bale and Daniela Giosuè, 'A women's network in fifteenth-century Rome: Margery Kempe encounters "Margaret Florentyne"', in eds. Laura Varnam and Laura Kalas, Encountering the Book of Margery Kempe (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2021).
- Anthony Bale and Kathryne Beebe, co-editors of special volume on 'Pilgrimage and textual culture', Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies 51 (2021), with introductory essay, pp. 1-8.
- Anthony Bale, 'Reflections on Chaucer, Pedagogy, and the Profession of Medieval Studies', New Chaucer Studies: Pedagogy and Profession 1 (2020), pp. 5-17.