James Aitken has been appointed Grinfield Lecturer on the Septuagint for the years 2020-2021-2022 at the University of Oxford. James Aitken James Aitken has been appointed Grinfield Lecturer on the Septuagint for the years 2020-2021-2022 at the University of Oxford. The lecturer is required to offer three lectures per year...
After a long search process, we are pleased to announce that Prof David Fergusson (Edinburgh) has accepted the appointment as Regius Professor of Divinity. Prof Fergusson is a leading specialist in Christian Theology, with much experience of academic leadership, supervising PhD students and running grants. He can offer teaching in core areas of the field and will be a wise mentor for all in the Faculty. He will take up the post on April 1st 2021 and is currently planning a move to Cambridge with his wife.
Applications are invited for an Open-Oxford-Cambridge AHRC DTP-funded Collaborative Doctoral Award at the University of Cambridge, in partnership with the Everyday Muslim Heritage and Archive Initiative.
On Tuesday 3 November - the launch of Elizabeth Powell’s David Jones and the Craft of Theology: Becoming Beauty. Elizabeth is the La Retraite Fellow in Theology and Spirituality here at the CCS; she will be joined by: · Rowan Williams (former Archbishop of Canterbury) · Vittorio Montemaggi (Senior Lecturer in Religion and the Arts at King’s College London and Acting Director of the Von Hügel Institute of Critical Catholic Inquiry) The event will be hosted by Karen Kilby and (CCS) and Férdia Stone-Davis (Margaret Beaufort Institute of Theology, Cambridge).
The UK Rabbinics network launched this week, bringing together a diverse group including leading scholars in the field and PhD students from Cambridge, LBC, Oxford, UCL, KCL, Manchester, SOAS and beyond...
The Faculty of Divinity invites applications for a new fixed-term appointment as Teaching Associate in the field of Patristics for nine months from 1 January 2021.
The Faculty of Divinity’s Dr Joseph Webster has been awarded a prestigious Philip Leverhulme Prize. The prize is one of the most coveted awards for early career academics. It rewards emerging scholars whose work has already had an international impact and whose future career are exceptionally promising.
Divinity's Dr Joe Webster, named runner-up in the Vice Chancellor's Research Impact and Engagement awards and Dr Naures Atto (AMES) former Divinity Research Associate runner-up in Early Career Researcher Award