25–26 August 2022, Poznan
Session organised by Prof. Dr. Frank Hadler (GWZO) and Prof. Dr. Stefan Rohdewald (Universität Leipzig)at the
ICHS Poznań 2020/2022,
Commission Internationale des Études Historiques Slaves (CIEHS).
Thursday, August 25, 2022 from 9:00 to 12:30
Thursday, August 25, 2022 from 14:00 to 17:30
Friday, August 26, 2022 from 9: 00-12: 30
Transregional relations of Eastern Europe and the Near East belong to the most under- researched topics of international historiography. Focused on the encounters (Panel I), conflicts (Panel II), and cooperation (Panel III) of what might be called the Slavic and the Islamic Worlds the Commission Internationale des Études Historiques Slaves (CIEHS) intends to open the field from the Middle Ages to the Present for future investigation.
Opening
Words of Welcome by Giulia Lami (CIEHS President, University of Milan)
1. Slavs and Muslims - Neighbors, Combatants, Allies over Centuries: An Introduction Frank Hadler (CIEHS General Secretary, GWZO Leipzig)
2. The Slavic World: What’s in a Name?
Stefan Troebst (Berlin)
3. The Islamic World: What’s in a Name?
Nedim Zahirović (Independent Scholar, Halle)
Panel 1: Encounters
Chair: Márta Font (University of Pécs)
1. Muslims and the Islam in the Eyes of East-Central European Historians in the Late Middle Ages
Grischa Vercamer (University of Chemnitz)
2. The Curia on Religious Encounters and Economic Cooperation with the Ottomans in Posttridentine Dalmatia
Jadranka Neralic (Hrvatski Institut za povijest Zagreb)
3. Russian Islam and Slavdom between the Soviet and post-Soviet Eras
Giulia Lami (University of Milan)/Simona Merati (Florida International University
Panel 2: Conflicts
Chair: Giulia Lami (President of CIEHS)
1. Vakhtang VI. and the Russian-Iranian Conflict in the 1720s
Nana Kharebava (University of Marburg)
2. The Rearguard of European Civilization. Russian Historiographical Perspectives in the 19th Century on Muscovite/Russia's Fight Against Islamic States
Katarzyna Błachowska (University of Warsaw)
3. Islam Instrumentalized. Uses and Abuses of History in Polish anti-Muslim Discourses Monika Bobako (Adam Mickiewicz University Poznań)
Panel 3: Cooperation
Chair: Monika Saczynska-Vercamer (PAN Warszawa)
1. Transottoman Mobility Dynamics between the Near East and Eastern Europe: Constellations of Long Durée or just Situative Moments (1500-1950)
Stefan Rohdewald (University of Leipzig)
2. "Discussion Partners, Diplomatic Agents and Prisoners. The Catholic Missionaries' adventures in the Crimean Khanate in the 17th Century."
Natalia Królikowska-Jedlińska (University of Warsaw)
3. The Principality of Transylvania as Mediating Space between the Ottoman Orient and the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth“
Robert Born (BKGE Oldenburg)
4. Cairo as a Cultural Centre of Eastern European Muslims at the Beginning of the 20th Century
Dennis Dierks (University of Jena)