At the Conference: Monarchy and Modernity since 1500 University of Cambridge, 8-9 January 2019 Session P26: "Monarchy exhibited" More information: investigacion.pucmm.edu.do/monarchyandmodernity/home
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Imperial Cities: The Tsarist Empire, the Habsburg Empire and the Ottoman Empire in Comparison3/29/2018 Working on Imperial Cities as well.....
https://trafo.hypotheses.org/8155 And the programme of the conference in moscow, 26-27.April 2018 og.univie.ac.at/fileadmin/user_upload/i_iog/ news/Programm_Imperial_Cities_DHI_Moskau_2018_final.pdf www.herder-institut.de/fileadmin/user_upload/pdf/Aktuelles /call_for_paper /CfP_Exhibiting_Cities.pdf 15-16 October 2018, Herder Institute for Historical Research on East Central Europe MarburG Circulating practices: Networks and exchange between emerging cities in Europe's
Borderlands, 1880-1945 Until now the focus of the research in the case of the cities of Eastern and Southern Europe was mainly migration and institutions of technology transfer (such as universities) suggesting a transfer of knowledge and practices from the center to the periphery. But instead of following this topos of urban history, the proposed panel of the Herder-Institute Germany concentrates on the less researched exchanges of actors, practices and strategies of knowledge between the cities of the European borderlands such as East Europe. This will be achieved with a special focus on the production and distribution of civic engineering, which played a particularly important role in the modernization of the architectural and infrastructural system of these emerging cities in the late 19th and early 20th century with their fast growing population. Session organizer and chair: Dr. Eszter Gantner Commentator: Professor Till van Rahden Presentations Heidi Hein-Kircher (Herder Institute): The challenges of providing healthy living conditions. The Case of Lviv Eszter Gantner (Herder Institute): “Between local and global” – The network of a civil engineer at the turn of the 19th and 20th century from East Central Europe Máté Tamáska (Hungarian National AArchive, Budapest): „Little Vienna-Little Budapest”: Ring Roads and Circles in the Regional Cities of the Austrian-Hungarian Monarchy (1850-1920) Adrian Mitter (University of Toronto/Herder Institute): Danzig - From Emerging City to City-State: Performance of Unwanted Statehood and Germanization of Urban Heritage in a European Borderland More information: https://cisermgmt.cornell.edu/go/SSHA/SSHA_program_2017.pdf Journal of urban history Volume 43, Issue 4, July 2017 Special Section: “Emerging Cities”: Knowledge and Urbanization in Europe’s Borderlands 1880–1945 Guest Editor : Eszter Gantner, and Heidi Hein–Kircher http://journals.sagepub.com/toc/juha/current Eszter Gantner/Heidi Hein-Kircher (ed.)
Emerging Cities – Knowledge and Urbanisation in Europe´s Borderlands 1880 - 1945 Special Issue, Journal of Urban History, July 2017 Panel bei der BASEES Annual Conference, Cambridge 31 March - 2 April 2017 Saturday, 1st of April, 16:00-17:30: SESSION 6 Being Peripheral? Being Modern? Urban Perceptions and Self-Perceptions in Eastern Europe before WWI Chair: Eszter Gantner (Herder Institute for Historical Research on East Central Europe) Papers: Eszter Gantner (Herder Institute for Historical Research on East Central Europe): ‘Exhibiting Modernity – The national exhibition in Budapest 1885’ Anna Mazanik (Central European University): ‘Backwardness invented and overcome:Temporalities of urban reforms in Moscow’ Heidi Hein-Kircher (Herder-Institute on East Central Europe): ‘Lviv as the Polish Spare Capital and Bulwark against the East’ Discussant: Heidi Hein-Kircher (Herder-Institute for Historical Research on East Central Europe) Heidi hein - Kircher introduced the project at the Annual Conference of the Max Weber Stiftung "Austria-Hungary and Its Imperial Challenges in the 19th and Early 20th century".The title of the lecture was: "Habsburgs Emerging Cities: Wissenstransfer und Urbanisierung um 1900". More Information: habsb.hypotheses.org |