Personal profile
Expertise
I am a historian of the medieval Eastern Mediterranean, Black Sea, and Caucasus. My research has two main strands:
- The history of slavery in the Black Sea, and its connections with the wider Mediterranean and Afro-Eurasian world;
- The history of polities on the borderlands of the Byzantine Empire, notably in the Caucasus, and their interrelationship.
I did my PhD at the School of Oriental and African Studies in London on the North Caucasian Kingdom of Alania, supervised by Prof. Hugh Kennedy and Dr. Teresa Bernheimer. I then taught at Saint Xavier University and Wilbur Wright College in Chicago, USA, before moving to Ghent University in Belgium in 2019. From 2021 to 2024, I held an FWO Junior Postdoctoral Fellowship, which investigated comparisons and links between the medieval Black Sea slave trade and political developments in 14th-15th century Egypt and West Africa.
My book, 'The North Caucasian Kingdom of Alania, 850-1240', will be published this summer (2025) by Cambridge University Press. This introduces the Kingdom of Alania, the most powerful polity in the medieval North Caucasus, to a Western European and North American audience. It argues that it was possible for this kingdom to exercise sovereignty over the North Caucasus without a state structure, thus challenging the narrative which connects the rise of kingdoms on the Byzantine periphery to top-down Christianisation and state formation.
Education/Academic qualification
History, PhD, Political Authority in North Caucasian Alania, 800-1300, University of london, School of oriental and african studies
30 Sept 2014 → 28 Feb 2019
Award Date: 28 Feb 2019
Historical Research Methods, MA, University of london, School of oriental and african studies
22 Sept 2013 → 30 Sept 2014
Award Date: 30 Sept 2014
Medieval History, MA, University of Leeds
20 Sept 2011 → 25 Sept 2012
Award Date: 30 Nov 2012
History, BA, King's College London
22 Sept 2005 → 30 Jul 2008
Award Date: 31 Jul 2008
External positions
Voluntary Employee, Ghent University
15 Dec 2024 → …
Keywords
- free keyword
- History of slavery
- East Mediterranean history
- Global history
- History of the Caucasus
- Byzantine history
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Collaborations and top research areas from the last five years
Projects
- 1 Active
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FWOTM1299: Caucasians before Whiteness: The Racialisation of Indigenous Peoples of the Black Sea region, 1261-1475
Latham-Sprinkle, J. (Mandate), Henriet, B. (Administrative Promotor) & Lambert, B. (CoI (Co-Promotor))
1/11/25 → 31/10/28
Project: Fundamental
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Child Labour, Enslavement, and Moral Confusion in Early Medieval Georgia
Latham-Sprinkle, J., 2026, (Accepted/In press) Children at Work in a Period of Transition, 400-1000 AD. Laes, C. (ed.). De Gruyter, p. x-x 36 p.Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Chapter › Research › peer-review
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The Byzantine Empire as Segmentary Polity
Latham-Sprinkle, J., 2026, (Accepted/In press) In: Dumbarton Oaks Papers. 80, 30 p.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
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Bargaining with Byzantium: The North Caucasian Kingdom of Alania and the Empire
Latham-Sprinkle, J., 30 Jul 2025, Revisiting the Byzantine Commonwealth: Nodes, Networks, and Spheres. Oxford University Press, p. 657-671 15 p.Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Chapter › Research › peer-review
Open AccessFile4 Downloads (Pure) -
Greek Captives and Mediterranean Slavery, 1260–1460, by Alasdair C. Grant
Latham-Sprinkle, J., 2025, In: Journal of Global Slavery. 10, 2-3, p. 297-299 3 p.Research output: Contribution to journal › Book review
Open Access1 Downloads (Pure) -
The North Caucasian Kingdom of Alania, 850-1240
Latham-Sprinkle, J., 31 Aug 2025, Cambridge University Press. 300 p. (Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought)Research output: Book/Report › Book › Research