- akce již proběhla.
1st International Workshop Rural History and Archaeology in Prague. Historiographical perspectives
8. listopadu 2022 v 9:00 - 9. listopadu 2022 v 19:00
TUESDAY, 8TH NOVEMBER
9.00 Registration
9.30 Welcome
Session 1
9.40–10.10 Emmanuel HUERTAS (Université Toulouse Jean-Jaurès, Framespa), La thèse oubliée de Thérèse Sclafert (1926). Un travail pionnier en histoire rurale française
10.10–10.40 Christine RENDU (CNRS, Framespa), Les historiens-géographes de l’école vidalienne dans les Pyrénées (1910-1950) : retour archéologique sur des travaux fondateurs
10.40–11.10
Discussion
Coffee break
11.40–12.10 Samuel LETURCQ (Université de Tours, Citeres), Openfield et bocage en Hainaut au Moyen Age. La réflexion de Gérard Sivery sur les dynamiques paysagères
12.10–12.40 Roland VIADER (CNRS, Framespa), Intercommoning in Medieval Western Europe
Lunch break
Session 2
14.30–15.00 Tomáš KLÍR (Charles University, Prague), The beginning of the deserted medieval settlement research in Central Europe. Economic history, geography and archaeology.
15.00–15.30 László FERENCZI (Charles University, Prague), Farmsteads (Einzelhofsiedlungen) and settlement desertion – the example of the Great Hungarian Plain in the pre-modern period from the perspectives of historical, archaeological, ethnographical and landscape ecological research
Discussion
15.30–16.00
Coffee break
16.30–17.00 Anna STAGNO (Université de Gênes), Post-classical archaeology and medieval history: population geography, local history and history of material culture during Seventies in Italy
17.00–18.00
Discussion
WEDNESDAY, 9TH NOVEMBER
Session 3
09.30-10.00 Krzysztof FOKT (Jagiellonian University, Kraków), A few unconcluded legal-historical problems of Polish rural studies
10.00–10.30 Juan José LARREA (Université du Pays basque), Le devenir historiographique de l’appropriation de terre par défrichement (aprisio, presura, bifang, proprisum…). Un aperçu hispano-allemand
10.30–11.00
Discussion
Coffee break
Session 4
11.30–12.00 József LASZLOVSKY (Central European University), The Mongol Invasion of Central Europe: Historical and Archaeological Narratives
12.00–12.30 Mária VARGHA (Charles University, Prague), Approaches to Christianisation of rural population in East-Central Europe. An historiographical overview.
12.30–13.00
Discussion
Lunch break
14.00–19.00
Final discussion