Approaching Migration and Mobility in Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages
Eröffnungsveranstaltung der Kolleg-Forschergruppe "Migration und Mobilität in Spätantike und Frühmittelalter"
Mittwoch, 19.7.2017 (Neue Aula | Großer Senat) 18.00 Uhr
- Eröffnungsvortrag Michael McCormick (Harvard): Migration and Mobility in the Late Antique-Medieval Transition: How Should We Study Them in the 21st Century?
Donnerstag, 20.7.2017 (Alte Aula)
Re-Directing the Study of Migration and Mobility in 3rd-9th c. Europe
- 9.00-9.50 Uhr – Roland Steinacher (Greifswald): Römer und Barbaren: Meistererzählungen von den Wanderungen
- 9.50-10.40 Uhr – Michael Kulikowski (Pennsylvania State): Dis-Orienting Migration: From E-W/W-E to N-S/S-N in Eurasian History
- 11.10-12.00 Uhr – Carlos Eduardo G. Amorim (Stony Brook, New York): Applying Paleogenomics to the Migration Period
- 12.00-12.50 Uhr – Sebastian Brather (Freiburg): Migration and Mobility from an Archaeological Perspective
- 14.30-15.20 Uhr – Noel Lenski (Yale): GIS and the Analysis of Barbarian Migration
- 15.20-16.10 Uhr – Bastian Vollmer (Tübingen): Conceptualisations and Typologies of Migration in Late Antiquity and Early Middle Ages – A View from Sociological Theory
Migration: the Military Side
- 16.40-17.30 Uhr – Mischa Meier (Tübingen): Warlords, Dynastiebildung und Mobilität – Hypothesen zum Problem der ‚Ansiedlung‘
- 17.30-18.20 Uhr – Guido Berndt (Freie Universität Berlin): (Not) the „anarchists of the Völkerwanderung“ – New Approaches to the Military History of the Lombards
Freitag, 21.7.2017 (Alte Aula)
The Economics of Migration and Mobility
- 9.00-9.50 Uhr – Sebastian Schmidt-Hofner (Tübingen): Some Thoughts on the Economics of Migration in the Fourth and Fifth Century
- 9.50-10.40 Uhr – Paolo Tedesco (Tübingen): The Missing Factor: Migration and Workforce Mobility in the Vandal Century, 440-540 CE
- 11.10-12.00 Uhr – Thomas Kohl (Tübingen): Peasants, Merchants, Beggars – Economic Mobility in Carolingian Francia
Individual Mobility: Case Studies
- 12.00-12.50 Uhr – Stefan Esders (Freie Universität Berlin): Non cuivis homini contingit adire Romam: Episcopal Mobility and Its Limits in the 7th-century Western Mediterranean
- 14.30-15.20 Uhr – Steffen Patzold (Tübingen): Vagante Geistliche und die karolingische Reform
- 15.20-16.10 Uhr – Ekaterina Nechaeva (Bern): Studying Emigration from the Later Roman Empire: Challenges and Insights
Bei organisatorischen Fragen: luisa.luizspam prevention@uni-tuebingen.de