Home
2 Events
- 1
Sort
-
Budapest
The Hungarian Historical Review
Hagiography and the material cult of the saints inform today a wide variety of historical research from philology and theology through historical anthropology and cultural history to narratology and art history. Approaches vary from the local and national (dynastic saints, state religion, patron saints of cities and countries) to the universal (saints as healers, helpers and intercessors). We invite papers to this special issue on saints related to Pannonia and Hungary who crossed the frontiers and either “worked abroad”, or their relics, cults, texts and images scattered all over Europe.
-
Budapest
Thematic issue of the Hungarian Historical Review 2014/4
The social interactions of individuals and groups belonging to different denominations was and is one of the everyday experiences of social manifestations of otherness. Ever since the Middle Ages, Central Europe has been home to various and varying religious and ethnic groups who have lived side by side. The region has been a meeting point for the Latin, Orthodox, Islamic, Christian, and Jewish worlds, and the Reformation made it even more religiously diverse. We encourage the submission of papers that examine the phenomena of religious and cultural diversity in the region from the perspectives of political history and the history of ideas, and we are particularly interested in submissions that address the social, economic, and cultural aspects of religiously and denominationally diverse coexistence.
2 Events
- 1
Choose a filter
Events
- Past (2)
event format
Languages
- English (2)
Secondary languages
- French (1)
Years
Subjects
- Society (2)
- Ethnology, anthropology (1)
- History (2)
- Social history (2)
- Mind and language (2)
- Religion
- Periods
- Prehistory and Antiquity (1)
- Middle Ages (2)
- Early modern (1)
- Modern (1)
- Prehistory and Antiquity (1)
- Zones and regions (1)
- Europe (1)
Places
- Europe (2)
- Hungary
- Budapest főváros (2)
- Hungary
