A man giving a lecture

The Marco Institute

About Us

The Institute is dedicated to providing resources to researchers and students in premodern studies.

The Institute’s signature event is the annual Marco Symposium, which addresses pressing interdisciplinary issues in medieval and Renaissance scholarship which also have relevance and currency for the broader community. Over the course of the academic year we also sponsor the annual Riggsby Lecture on Medieval Mediterranean History and Culture and other invited talks. We support a number of endowed fellowships and scholarships, including the Jimmy and Dee Haslam Dissertation Fellowship and the Anne Marie Van Hook Travel Award for graduate students, and Lindsay Young Visiting Faculty Fellowships for regional scholars. Our Summer Language Program allows students at UT and beyond to study multiple levels of medieval Latin in preparation for the University of Toronto Latin Proficiency Exam, as well as other languages like Syriac.

The Marco Institute also has a vibrant partnership with Hodges Library, particularly the Special Collections Department, which houses a wonderful collection of manuscript, print and facsimile editions from the premodern world in partnership with Marco.

Explore The Marco Institute

A man teaching a class

Directory

Meet the faculty and staff crucial to the Institute’s mission.

Patrons entering The Newberry Library

Partnerships

Learn more about the Institute’s partnerships with the Newberry Consortium and the University of Poitiers

Students looking at old manuscripts in a conference room

Outreach

Experience the impact of the Marco Institute at local schools and through teacher resources.

History

The Marco Institute for Medieval and Renaissance Studies evolved in the early 2000s out of the long-standing interdisciplinary program in Medieval and Renaissance Studies at the University of Tennessee. Prior to the establishment of the Institute, the university already had an impressive record of attracting accomplished scholars in this field and building important library collections. The Institute’s creation provided a physical and academic center for these efforts in scholarship, education, outreach, and faculty and student development.

In December of 2003, the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) issued a highly competitive Challenge Grant to support the Institute’s goal of nationally recognized excellence in the interdisciplinary scholarship of the early periods. The fundraising program was completed in the summer of 2008, and has provided a nearly $4 million endowment for the Institute to pursue its scholarly programs and pedagogical missions.

The Marco Institute was originally housed in Temple Court until the fall of 2012, when it was relocated to the sixth floor of Greve Hall to make way for construction of the new Student Union. Since January 2024, the Marco Institute has been based at Cherokee Mills on Sutherland Avenue. The current location features office space for the Riggsby Director and Program Coordinator, a lounge and meeting space, and the Riggsby Library & Reading Room; the wider Cherokee Mills location includes several other UT offices (including the Denbo Center for Humanities and the Arts) as well as conference and event space.