Caitlin Corning, PhD
Chair, Department of History and Politics
Professor of History
Teaching & Research Interests
- Early Medieval church history
- Late Antiquity
- Sub-Roman Britain
Caitlin Corning is a professor of history and serves as chair of the Department of History and Politics. She arrived at George Fox in 1996 after earning a bachelor's degree in history and Latin from Seattle Pacific University, a master's degree in Medieval studies from the Centre for Medieval Studies at the University of Leeds, and a PhD in early Medieval history from the University of Leeds.
Her specialties include early Medieval church history, specifically the relationship between the Roman and Celtic traditions in the sixth to eighth centuries. She also has interests in Late Antiquity and sub-Roman Britain, as well as the modern controversy surrounding the dating of Easter. Caitlin's book was published by Fortress Press in 2015.
Corning is also the director of the George Fox Museum Collection and oversees the courses and internships in Public History. She has been awarded numerous grants for public history projects, including the , a history of downtown Newberg that she designed with her students. She was the university's 2002 recipient of the Teacher of the Year Award.
Professor Corning teaches the following courses
- Modern and Postmodern Europe
- All Roads Lead to Rome
- Castles and Cathedrals: Europe 1050-1300
- Europe 1890 to Present
- England to 1688
- England from 1688
- Christianity: Ancient Rome to the Reformations
- Christianity: 1600 to Present
- Modern Middle East
- Modern Russia
- Making History Matter: Introduction to Public History
- From College to Career
Education
PhD, University of LeedsMA, Centre for Medieval Studies at the University of Leeds
BA, Seattle Pacific University