skip to content
 

The City Destroyed, the City Restored: Wilno in the Mid-Seventeenth Century

Wilno

3 March 2016, 5:00pm

Umney Lecture Theatre, Robinson College, University of Cambridge

 

As part of the 'Sense of Place' lecture series, the Cambridge Committee for Russian and East European Studies (CamCREES) and the Department of Slavonic Studies hosted Professor David Frick from University of California Berkeley for a lecture entitled The City Destroyed, the City Restored: Wilno in the Mid-Seventeenth Century.

Professor Frick evocatively presented the cacophony of bells and the multi-ethnic, multi-confessional diversity that filled the city of Wilno (Vilnius). The second capital of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth was home to Poles, Lithuanians, Germans, Ruthenians, Jews and Tatars. The city was conquered, heavily destroyed, and occupied by Muscovite forces from 8 August 1655 until early December 1661.

Professor David Frick is Professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures at the University of California Berkeley, where he has worked on Polish sacred philology of the Reformation and Counter-Reformation, Poland-Lithuania in the age of confessionalisation, and networks and neighbourhoods in seventeenth-century Wilno.

 

 

Latest News and Events

Escape from Colditz - an exhibition of works by Annette Schröter Papercuts, Collage and Installation

17 October 2025

Papercuts, Collage and Installation 25 October 2025 – 9 January 2026 Robert Cripps Gallery, Magdalene College, University of Cambridge We are delighted to announce Escape from Colditz , an exhibition of works by Leipzig-based artist Annette Schröter, co-curated by Professor Silke Mentchen (Magdalene College, University of...

Année haïtienne: Celebrating Haiti at MMLL

16 October 2025

This year, the Faculty of Modern and Medieval Languages and Linguistics (MMLL) and the French Section are celebrating Haiti. Our Année haïtienne pays tribute to the literature, culture, and thought through which the nation of Haiti continues to dream itself into being. Haitian literature emerged with independence in 1804...

Romanian at Cambridge: new Lectorate launches Open Courses in language and culture

16 October 2025

The Faculty of Modern and Medieval Languages and Linguistics (MMLL) is delighted to announce the institution of a Romanian Lectorate at the University of Cambridge. The Lectorate will offer Open Courses in Romanian language and a programme of cultural events open to all members of the University. In October 2025 the...

Masterclass: “Hail Mary: Motherhood on Page and Screen”

15 October 2025

Date: Friday 31 October 2025, 17:00–18:30 Location: Peterhouse, Lubbock Theatre Followed by: Drinks reception Join author and academic Katixa Agirre and members of the Leading Women project team for a masterclass exploring motherhood in contemporary Spanish literature and film. The masterclass follows double-bill...

Cambridge Film Festival Double-Bill Screening

14 October 2025

Thursday 30 October, 6.30pm Cambridge Arts Picturehouse As part of the Cambridge Film Festival, there will be a special double screening of: Salve María (Mar Coll, 2024; Catalan/Spanish with English subtitles) Carmen of Carabanchel (Cecilia Bartolomé, 1965; Spanish with English subtitles) The event will be followed by a Q...

Emma Claussen selected as Member of the Institute for Advanced Study

3 October 2025

The Faculty of Modern and Medieval Languages and Linguistics is delighted to share the news that Dr Emma Claussen, Fellow of Trinity College and Trinity Assistant Professor in French, has been selected as a Member of the Institute for Advanced Study (IAS) in Princeton for the 2025–26 academic year and will join for the...

Keep in Touch