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X-WR-CALDESC:Akce na Denní medievista
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DTSTART:20191027T010000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Prague:20200317T080000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Prague:20200317T170000
DTSTAMP:20260428T014654
CREATED:20200227T231548Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200227T231548Z
UID:10001531-1584432000-1584464400@medievista.cz
SUMMARY:CfP: Digital Diplomatics 2020
DESCRIPTION:In the several years since the last conference/workshop dedicated to the study of Digital Diplomatics\, new technologies have emerged and new projects have come to fruition. This conference/workshop will bring together selected leading and upcoming experts in the study of Digital Diplomatics and related fields\, to facilitate a productive exchange on the state and the future of the field. The conference will include expert panels\, lightning talks\, and a poster session\, which is currently open for submissions. We are soliciting posters on any subject related to the study of charters and computing\, including: \n\nMachine Learning for Digital Diplomatics\nLinguistic Corpora for Digital Diplomatics\nDigitally Mediated Archives for Diplomatics\nThe Future of Diplomatics\n\nThe poster session will be attended by leading experts in the field. Currently confirmed guests include: Antonella Ambrosia (Naples)\, Sébastien Barret (CNRS)\, Michael Gervers (Toronto)\, Tobias Hodel (Bern)\, Timo Korkiakangas (Helsinki)\, Els De Parmentier (Ghent)\, Peter Stokes (Paris)\, and Zarko Vujesovic (Vienna/Belgrade). \nSubmission Guidelines:\nPlease send a 100-word abstract of the poster project and a short C.V. to Sean Winslow sean.winslow@uni-graz.at. Though there is a hard deadline of 17 March 12:00 GMT\, proposals received before then will be evaluated on a rolling basis\, and a decision will be made within a week of receipt\, and by 19 March at the latest.
URL:https://medievista.cz/akce/cfp-digital-diplomatics-2020/
LOCATION:Graz\, Graz\, Rakousko
CATEGORIES:Call for papers,Vše
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://medievista.cz/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/DigiDipl2020_Poster-1.jpg
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Prague:20200331T080000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Prague:20200331T170000
DTSTAMP:20260428T014654
CREATED:20191211T123724Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191211T123724Z
UID:10001511-1585641600-1585674000@medievista.cz
SUMMARY:CfP: Uneven regional development in the Middle Ages: “younger Europe” in transcontinental and intercontinental networks
DESCRIPTION:Uneven development is most commonly defined in terms of the gap between highly developed\, industrialized countries and agrarian countries whose economies are dominated by primary sector activities. Historians have been pointing out for years that the inequalities prevailing in the world arise from structural conditions that are resistant to change and therefore develop very slowly (F. Braudel). Thus\, inequalities are not only the consequences of the Industrial Revolution; they certainly also existed in pre-modern societies. \nBut how do inequalities arise and in which areas do they express themselves? Are they the result of the non-simultaneity of development in different regions\, which is partly due to geographical conditions (“disadvantaged places”) and thus a constant in pre-industrial societies? Or are they created through interactions and confrontations with more economically and technologically advanced structures? If the latter is true\, then inequalities are caused by external factors. \nThe starting point of the conference is the recognition that “younger Europe”\, which J. Kłoczowski essentially equates with East Central Europe\, although the Balkans\, Kievian Rus\, and Scandinavia could be considered a part of it in some centuries\, has been included in continental and intercontinental interaction networks since the Early Middle Ages. In the ninth and tenth centuries\, the economies of north-western Eurasia were already remarkably entangled. For example\, between about 900 and 950\, silver mines in Uzbekistan were running at full speed to serve markets that ranged from the Urals in the east to the Celtic lands on the Atlantic coast in the west\, and from the Crimea in the south to central Sweden in the north. But such interactions did not just involve the exchange of precious metals and goods\, which stimulated commercial cycles. Foreign trade (along with tributes and booty) formed the fiscal and economic basis of the rule of nascent early medieval dynasties. In parallel\, the elites of the emerging states converted to Christianity\, to both the Latin and Orthodox rites. \nFrom the twelfth to fifteenth centuries\, a profound transformation of society and culture took place\, resulting in the increasing emergence of cities with borough rights\, the resettlement of the countryside with free peasants\, the construction of castles\, the expansion of written communication\, and the founding of monasteries and universities. These phenomena spread from west to east. In the late fourteenth century and throughout the fifteenth century\, Ottoman campaigns led to the conquest of large parts of the Balkans\, which initiated the peripheralization of this region. \nThis transformation raises the question of to what extent\, and in what regional terms\, networks and interactions deepened or – on the contrary – levelled out existing social and economic differences in development. Papers that focus on the following topics and explore them in comparative perspective are encouraged: \n– Trade and goods production\n– Monetization and commercialization\n– Sovereigns and estates\n– Cities and borough rights\n– The status of peasants and rural commoners\n– The foundation of universities and monasteries\n– Imaginations of unevenness and the simultaneity of the non-simultaneous. \nConference languages are German and English.\nTravel and accommodation costs are covered by the organizers.\nPlease send proposals with an abstract (no longer than one page / 1800 characters) and a short CV in German or English by 31 March 2020 to adamczyk@dhi.waw.pl and region@waw.pl. \nPD Dr. Dariusz Adamczyk (German Historical Institute Warsaw)\nDr. Zdeněk Nebřenský (DHIW-Branch Office Prague) \nDeutsches Historisches Institut Warschau\nAußenstelle Prag\nValentinská 91/1\nCZ 110 00 Praha 1\nwww.dhi.waw.pl
URL:https://medievista.cz/akce/cfp-uneven-regional-development-in-the-middle-ages-younger-europe-in-transcontinental-and-intercontinental-networks/
CATEGORIES:Call for papers,Vše
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