Since 2014, the Faculty of History at the University of Cambridge and the Institute for Modern History at the University of Tübingen have organized the workshop series "Religious Knowledge in the Early Modern World" in cooperation between Prof. Dr. Ulinka Rublack and Prof. Dr. Renate Dürr and with the financial support of the DAAD Cambridge Research Hub for German Studies.
The resulting annual workshops provide opportunities for teaching staff, postdocs, and doctoral students from both universities to present their research, familiarize themselves with the different academic traditions, and extend their international scientific networks. The gatherings provide an interdisciplinary forum which, in addition to historians, has included scholars in disciplines such as anthropology, German Studies, Islamic Studies, and theology to promote dialogue across traditional disciplinary boundaries.
[Visit the relevant page on the website of the DAAD Cambridge Research Hub for German Studies]
2017
Religion, Culture & Society in the Early Modern World (Religion, Kultur und Gesellschaft in der Frühen Neuzeit) (4. Cambridge–Tübingen Workshop), Cambridge, 18–19 September 2017.
Organized by Professor Ulinka Rublack (Cambridge), and Dr Stefan Hanß (Cambridge).
[Download flyer] [Read the worshop report]
Programme
Monday, 18 September 2017
Ivory figurine of St Anthony (Toni Malau), Angola, eighteenth century. Source: The Metropolitan Museum of Art (image edited by Dr Stefan Hanß).
9:00–9:15 | Ulinka Rublack (Cambridge) and Renate Dürr (Tübingen), Welcome & Introduction |
Experiencing Religious Identities
9:15–10:00 | Alexandra Walsham (Cambridge), Recycling the Sacred: Material Culture & Cultural Memory in Post-Reformation England |
10:00–10:45 | Christina Farley (Cambridge), '[T]he livelier the counterfeit is, the greater error is engendered'?: Re-Assessing Vividness in Post-Reformation English Visual Culture |
10:45–11:00 | Coffee break |
11:15–12:00 | Emma Nicholls (Cambridge), Negotiating Convent Identities in Florentine Tuscany |
12:00–12:15 | Mary Laven (Cambridge), Commentary & Discussion |
12:15–13:45 | Lunch |
Shaping the Ottoman Empire
13:45–14:30 | Lejla Demiri (Tübingen), Doing Theology in the Eighteenth-Century Ottoman World |
14:30–15:15 | Helen Pfeifer (Cambridge), Ottoman Salons & the Making of an Imperial Elite |
15:15–16:00 | Philip Hahn (Tübingen), A Patrician as Button Maker: Hans Ulrich Krafft in Tripoli (1574–77) |
16:00–16:30 | Coffee break |
16:30–17:15 | Tobias Graf (Tübingen), Knowing the 'Arch-Enemy': Austrian-Habsburg Intelligence in the Ottoman Capital in the Late Sixteenth Century |
17:15–18:00 | Christiane Ackermann (Tübingen), Imago Turci: 'Turk Plays'’' as a Focal Point in Premodern Media Transformations (Fifteenth to Sixteenth Centuries) |
18:00–18:15 | Stefan Hanß (Cambridge), Commentary & Discussion |
19:30 | Dinner |
Tuesday, 19 September 2017
Religion & Power in the Spanish Americas
9:00–9:45 | Irina Pawlowsky (Tübingen), Making Mission Spaces: Jesuit Geographical Knowledge & Cartography of the Upper Amazon |
9:45–10:30 | Marie Schreier (Tübingen), The Limits of Mission & Imperial Control: The Case of Early Modern Panama |
10:30–11:00 | Coffee break |
11:00–11:45 | Laura Dierksmeier (Tübingen), Indigenous Knowledge as Enlightened Knowledge? A Priest's Defense of Herbs Prohibited by the Inquisition in Eighteenth-Century Mexico |
Religion(s) in the Transatlantic World
11:45–12:30 | Patrick McGhee (Cambridge), Sites of Unbelief in the Early Modern World |
12:30–13:30 | Lunch |
13:30–14:15 | Naomi Pullin (Warwick/Cambridge), 'A Holy Nation': The Transatlantic Quaker Community and the Problem of the American Revolution, c.1650-1775 |
14:15–15:00 | Fabian Fechner (Hagen), Commentary & Discussion |
15:00–15:30 | General discussion |
2016
Global Dimensions of European History (3rd Cambridge–Tübingen Workshop), Tübingen, 26–27 September 2016.
Organized by Prof. Dr. Renate Dürr, Dr. Anne Mariss, and Dr. Philip Hahn.
Programme
Monday, 26 September 2016
Portrait of an East India Company Official (probably William Fullerton of Rosemount) by Dip Chand, painted c. 1760–4. Via Wikimedia Commons
9:00–9:30 Welcome and introduction (Renate Dürr/Ulinka Rublack)
9:30–12:15 Panel 1: Ethnography, cartography and the transfer of knowledge
- Katy Bond: Charles V and religious ethnographies
- Irina Pawlowsky: Jesuit Geographic Knowledge and the Construction of the Amazon: Cartography between Empirical Knowledge, Missionary World Views and Political Claims
- Lena Moser: "For the unreasonable, I care not a fig for them": The masters of the Royal Navy and the production and transfer of knowledge
- Fabian Fechner: Commentary
- Discussion
12:15–14:30 Lunch and break
14:30–18:30 Panel 2: Material cultures
- Anne Mariss: "Por los ojos entre a los indios la fee": Jesuit pious practices in Mexico
- Gabriele Alex: Shifting meanings and contested ownership – the role of ethnographic artefacts in the museum and the collections
- Mary Laven: Madonnas and Miracles: Between the Micro and the Global
- Ulinka Rublack: Commentary
- Discussion
19:00 Dinner
Tuesday, 27 September 2016
9:00–10:30 Panel 3: Conflict and cohesion in early colonial societies
- Sarah Pearsell: Missionaries, Marriage, and the Global in North America
- Stephanie Mawson: Conflict and Conversion in the Seventeenth Century Philippines
10:45–12:15 Panel 4: Relations to the Ottoman Empire
- Theodor Dunkelgrün: The Pentateuch's early modern Mediterranean
- Yahya Nurgat: Space, Ritual and Religious Experience in the Ottoman Ḥajj
12:15–13:45 Lunch
13:45–15:00 Panel 3: Conflict and cohesion in early colonial societies (Fortsetzung)
- Stefan Hanß: Tübingen – Istanbul – Cambridge: Habsburg–Ottoman Imagery in the Making, 1574/75
- Helen Pfeifer: Commentary
- Discussion
15:00–16:00 Concluding discussion (Chair: Renate Dürr)
2015
Religious Knowledge in the Early Modern World (2nd Cambridge–Tübingen Workshop), Cambridge, 28–29 September 2015.
Organized by Prof Ulinka Rublack with the financial support of the Trevelyan Fund of the Faculty of History, University of Cambridge.
Programme
Monday, 28 September 2015
2–3 p.m. Session I: Keynote, chaired by Dr Simone Maganzani (Cambridge)
- Prof Deborah Howard (Cambridge): Anabaptism in the Circle of Palladio and the Diffusion of Cross-Cultural Knowledge
3–4 p.m. Session II, chaired by Dr Gabriela Ramos (Cambridge)
- Morgan Ring (Cambridge): Reading and Remembering the Golden Legend in Early Modern England
- Steven Tong (Cambridge): Doctrine and Worship in the Liturgy of Mid-Tudor Evangelicals
- Patrick McGhee (Cambridge): Knowing through Doubt in Seventeenth-Century England
4–4.30 p.m. Tea break
4.30–5.30 p.m. Session III, chaired by Dr Mary Laven (Cambridge)
- Dr Helen Pfeifer (Cambridge): Good Muslim, Better Muslim: The Sunnitization of the Ottoman Empire in the Sixteenth Century
5.30 p.m. Tour of Cambridge and dinner
Tuesday, 29 September 2015
9.30–11 a.m. Session IV, chaired by Prof Renate Dürr (Tübingen)
- Dr Fabian Fechner (Tübingen): Theological Examination, Discursive Knowledge and Negative Memory in Early Modern Peru
- Laura Dierksmeier (Tübingen): Competing Visions of Childhood: Assistance to Orphans by Sixteenth-Century Mexican Confraternities
11–11.30 a.m. Tea and coffee break
11.30 a.m.–12.30 p.m. Session V, chaired by Prof Alexandra Walsham (Cambridge)
- Katy Bond (Cambridge): Early Modern Costume Books' Fashioning of Religious Identity
- Dr Anne Mariss (Tübingen): Between Religious Knowledge and Empirical Knowledge: Johann Reinhold Forster as Enlightened 'World Maker'
2014
Visualizing Religious Beliefs: Images, Spatial Contexts and Religious Practice in Early Modern Europe and Beyond (1st Cambridge–Tübingen Workshop), Tübingen, 29–30 May 2014.
Organized by Dr. Philip Hahn and Dr. Fabian Fechner.
Programme
Panel 1: Theological positions
- Susanne Junk (Tübingen), How to recognize an angel at first sight: Lutheran uncertainties about visions
- Coral Stoakes (Cambridge), The Jesuits and Visualizing the Apocalypse
- Fabian Fechner (Tübingen), The Body of Christ in Early Colonial Peru – Visualizations between Miracle and Empirical Method
- Andreas Holzem (Tübingen), Commentary
Panel 2: Spatial contexts
- Daniela Blum (Tübingen), Churches in Sixteenth-Century Speyer: Sacral Buildings and Religious Beliefs in the Scope of the Protestant Reformation
- Christian Kühner (Freiburg im Breisgau), The confessional as a tool of Tridentine Catholicism
- Florian Bock (Tübingen), “Gute alte Gebräuch ...” – visualized space and arranged order in Catholic Baroque sermons
- Suzanna Ivanic (Cambridge), Visual and material pious culture in seventeenth-century Prague households during recatholicization
- Monique Scheer (Tübingen), Commentary
Keynote 1:
Alexandra Walsham (Cambridge), The Holy Maid of Wales: Visions, Politics, and Catholicism in Early Modern Britain
Panel 3: Creating Images
- Philip Hahn (Tübingen), The power of images: early modern theories of sensory perception
- Mary Laven (Cambridge), Picturing miracles in Renaissance Italy
- Irene Cooper (Cambridge), Retouching the Rosary in Early Modern Italy
- Renate Dürr (Tübingen), Count, survey, draw ... and believe? The debate on the Exodus of the Israelites in the eighteenth century
Keynote 2:
Ulinka Rublack (Cambridge), How symbolic was politics at the Augsburg Imperial Diet in 1530?