Notes On Contributors xxv
(1528) and the Parlamento Cabrero (1530), Cagliari. While on continental
Europe she wrote Mercanti toscani e Bruges nel tardo Medioevo (2009), which
book has been supported by several published studies on medieval documents
concerning other trading centers markets and fairs in the economies of Italy,
Sardinia, Spain, and Belgium.
Henrike Haug
received her doctorate from Humboldt University in 2009 and currently works
at the Institute of Art History and Historical Urban Studies at the Technical
University of Berlin. Her research focuses on art and cultural memory during
the communal period in medieval Italy. In particular, Haug is interested in
sixteenth-century goldsmithing and Kunstkammer objects. In addition to the
Technical University in Berlin, Haug has worked at the renowned Max Planck
Kunsthistorisches Institut in Florence. In 2016, Haug published her doctoral
thesis on the Annales of medieval Genoa, titled Annales Ianuenses: Orte und
Medien des historischen Gedächtnisses im mittelalterlichen Genua. She has
recently edited volumes on historic artistic techniques and materials, and con-
tributed chapters to books on Frederick Barbarossa and Giorgio Vasari.
Michelle Hobart
is Adjunct Assistant Professor at Cooper Union, New York. Her researched has
focused on architectural history, archaeology, and urbanism of the medieval
Mediterranean. She has a PhD from the IFA (Institute of Fine Arts), NYU and
a masters from CIA (Courtauld Institute of Art), besides working on numer-
ous excavations in Italy. She was Assistant Director of the American Academy
in Rome excavation of the Cosa Project (1990–1997), and co-director of the
University of Pennsylvania field school at San Pietro d’Asso (Siena, 2010).
She has just completed the publication of a 1970s’ excavation, and integrat-
ing it with new data from non-invasive campaigns in collaboration with State
University of New York at Buffalo. She has just completed, as author and editor
the volume Frontier Castle in Southern Etruria: Final Report of the Archaeological
research at Capalbiaccio/Tricosto (Grosseto, Italy) (1976–2010) (New York: SUNY
Press, forthcoming). Her other publications include “Merchants, Monks and
Medieval Sardinian Architecture,” in Studies in the Archaeology of the Medieval
Mediterranean, ed. James G. Schryver (Leiden, 2010), pp. 93–114; “Monasteri
contesi nella Tuscia Longobarda: il caso di San Pietro d’Asso, Montalcino
(Siena),” ed. Michelle Hobart, Archeologia Medievale 39 (2012), pp. 175–213;
“Peruzzi and their Urban Enclaves: Preserving Medieval fortifications in a
Changing Communal Florence,” in Archeologia Medievale (Firenze: Insegna
del Giglio, 2003).