Antonio M. Zaldívar
Hello, my name is Antonio M. Zaldívar. I earned my Ph.D. from UCLA, where I studied
under Teo Ruiz. I joined the History Department at CSUSM in 2014. I specialize in
the history of the Iberian Peninsula and the western Mediterranean during the High
and Late Middle Ages. I am currently working on a book manuscript tentatively titled
The Power of Language Choice in the Lands of the Crown of Aragon, 1000-1291.
Education
Ph.D. University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA. History, June 2014
M.A. Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo, MI. History, April 2005.
B.A. Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL. History and Political Science, April
2002.
Research
Selected Publications:
Constructing Iberian Identities, 1000-1700. Edited by Thomas W. Barton, Marie A. Kelleher, and Antonio M. Zaldívar. Turnhout:
Brepols (forthcoming 2022).
“Reconsidering the Shift from Latin to Romance in the Castilian Chancery: A Historiographic
Review.” In Iberia: Worlds of Communication and Conflict. Ed. by Thomas Barton, Marie A. Kelleher, and Antonio M. Zaldívar. Turnhout: Brepols
(forthcoming 2022).
Iberia, the Mediterranean, & the World in the Medieval & Early Modern Periods. Edited by Thomas W. Barton, Marie A. Kelleher, and Antonio M. Zaldívar. Special
Issue of the journal Pedralbes, vol. 40 (2020), 47-208.
“La lengua como instrumento de diplomacia en la correspondencia entre las cancillerías
reales de Aragón y Mallorca, 1341-1349.” In Diplomacia y desarrollo del Estado en la Corona de Aragón (Siglos XIV-XVI). Ed. by Concepción Villanueva Morte. Gijón: Ediciones Trea, 2020, 345-58.
“Emphasizing Urgency in the Romance: An Example of Strategic Codeswitching in the
Crown of Aragon's Thirteenth-Century Royal Chancery.” In Authority and Spectacle in Medieval and Early Modern Iberia: Studies in Honor of Teofilo
F. Ruiz. Ed. by Yuen-Gen Liang and Jarbel Rodriguez. New York: Routledge, 2017, 73-83.
“James I and the Rise of Codeswitching Diplomacy in Thirteenth-Century Catalonia,” Viator 47:3 (2016).
“Language as a Diplomatic Instrument in the Correspondence between the Aragonese and
Majorcan Royal Chanceries, 1341-1349.” Society for the Medieval Mediterranean: Movement
and Mobility in the Medieval Mediterranean (6th-15th Centuries). Barcelona, Spain, July, 2019.
“El auge del castellano como lengua franca en la diplomacia Ibérica durante la baja
Edad Media.” Seminari d’Estudis Medievals. Mediacions de Pau i Arbitrates en les Fronteres
de la Corona d’Aragó (s. XII-XV): Llenguatge, Utilitat i Simbologia. Institució Milà
i Fontanals-CSIC. Departament de Ciències Històriques. Barcelona, Spain. June, 2019.
“La lengua como instrumento de diplomacia en la correspondencia entre las cancillerías
reales de Aragón y Majorca.” Diplomacia y desarrollo del Estado en la Corona de Aragón
(siglos XIV-XVI). Universidad de Zaragoza. Zaragoza, Spain. June, 2019.
“Fernando’s Castilian: From Latin to Romance in the Thirteenth-Century Royal Chancery.”
Iberia, the Mediterranean, & the World in the Medieval & Early Modern Periods. Center
for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, UCLA. Los Angeles, CA. October, 2018.
“The Language of the Courts in the Thirteenth-Century Kingdom of Valencia.” International
Medieval Meeting Lleida. Lleida, Spain. June, 2017.
“A Tribute to Sir John H Elliot’s Contributions to the Historical Craft.” Association
for Spanish and Portuguese Historical Studies Annual Meeting. Albuquerque, NM. April
2013.
“Barcelonans’ Patronage of Dominicans and Franciscans in the Thirteenth Century: The
Testamentary Evidence.” 44th International Congress on Medieval Studies. Kalamazoo,
MI. May 2009.
“Diglossia as an Instrument of Diplomacy in the Royal Chancery of the Late-Medieval
Crown of Aragon: The Majorcan Examples.” American Historical Association Annual Meeting.
New York, NY. January 2009.
“Religious Piety or Social Distinction? Patricians’ Patronage of the Dominican Convent
of Santa Catalina in Thirteenth-Century Barcelona.” Annual Mediterranean Studies Association
Conference. Evora, Portugal. May 2007.
Courses
California State University, San Marcos
HIST 101: “World History to 1500 AD”
HIST 301: "Historical Methods"
HIST 313: “Europe in the Middle Ages”
HIST 313a: "Early Medieval Europe"
HIST 313b: "Late Medieval Europe"
HIST 314: “The Crusades”
HIST 315: “Church Reform, Heresy, and Witchcraft in Medieval and Early Modern Europe”
HIST 317: “Renaissance and Reformation Europe"
HIST 400: “Medieval Spain: A Land of Three Religions”
HIST 513: “Teaching Practicum,” Spring 2019
HIST 699c: “Independent Study"