• A
  • A
  • A
  • ABC
  • ABC
  • ABC
  • А
  • А
  • А
  • А
  • А
Regular version of the site

Advancing Medieval Studies in Halle

Mikhail Boytsov, Professor in the HSE’s Faculty of History, recently held the Christan Wolff professorship at the Martin Luther University in Halle and Wittenberg. He spoke with the HSE news service about his experience working in Germany and his plans for future research.

— Tell us a little about your cooperation with Martin Luther University of Halle-Wittenberg.

Martin Luther University has a rich history, having been formed as a union of two of Germany’s oldest universities. One was founded in Wittenberg back in 1502 where Martin Luther was professor, and the other was founded in Halle an der Saale in 1694. Today’s Martin Luther University takes great pride in its traditions in the humanities, especially history and archaeology. I first met colleagues from the Institute of History in Halle in 2008, having received an invitation to give a presentation there when I was a visiting professor in Heidelberg. However, I had met with the university’s leading medievalist, Professor Andreas Ranft, several times at various conferences in the past. He was the one whose initiative brought me to Halle for two months to fill the honoured role as holder of the Christian Wolff professorship, which was established relatively recently in 1999 to expand the university’s international connections. On the one hand, it is a great honour for the person who is invited, but on the other hand, it allows Halle professors and students to become better acquainted with research that is currently being conducted outside Germany.

— How is your work going in Germany? What obligations do you have as a guest professor?

The attractiveness of the Christian Wolff professorship, in particular, is that the person holding it does not usually face the burden of a large teaching load. First, it allows you to delve into your own research, using excellent library resources – not only Halle’s resources, but thanks to interlibrary loan, those of other German libraries as well. In addition, informal daily conversations with colleagues — both professors and students — play an important role. I would like to bring such friendly interdisciplinary communication to our country.

I did have an official duty to organize and lead a colloquium in the form of a weekly seminar inviting presenters not from Halle, but from other university centres. Thus, on the one hand, I had to use my connections to attract new people to the University of Halle, but on the other, I had an excellent opportunity to meet good friends and interesting colleagues. They all work on their own subjects, of course, but they belong to a broad research field in which I am very engaged. We decided to define this field using the short formula ‘The Court and Authority,’ which is how our colloquium became known.

— What is relevant today about a seminar on ‘The Court and Authority’?

A seminar on authority is always relevant, of course, because power relations are not only present during our lifetime, but in many ways shape this life. As for the court, this ancient and ever-changing institution, of course, was generally the source of power in societies of the past. In recent decades, historians increasingly focus on informal, unformalized, and non-verbalized aspects of power relations. Thus, the coronation ceremony was no less important for medieval society than, say, the constitution and written laws are for society today.

— What is your circle of colleagues and students like?

We agreed in the beginning that we would not limit our colloquium participants in Halle to academic luminaries, but rather would invite people of all ages and from different levels in academia. I don’t want to compare all of our guests together, but I would note that all the reports not only had highly professional content, but were also very well presented. Listeners – both students and professors — were truly fascinated.

— What are your future research plans?

Currently I am working on several articles devoted to topics that seem very different at first glance but are in fact quite closely related. First, I need to continue a review I started on one of the most famous legal artefacts of the Holy Roman Empire — the so-called Golden Bull of 1356 (also sometimes referred to as Germany’s first constitution). In my view, there are serious reasons to radically change our textbook understanding of ​​this artefact. Whether I am correct in this assumption will have to be determined by discussion. Second, I plan to write about funeral ceremonies and embalming bodies of medieval sovereigns as an important and highly indicative cultural practice. Third, I am finishing several drafts on the political symbolism of the early Middle Ages. Fourth, I need to finalize a collection on symbolic gifts in the Middle Ages and submit it for publication. Fifth, I need to take part in discussions on the essence of the Middle Ages and on estate representation…

Right now, however, the most important thing is for ‘The Dynamic Middle Ages II’ to be as successful as it was the last time; it’s a very unique and bold event. We are very proud that the Higher School of Economics is bringing together the best young medievalists from across Europe to Moscow — a wonderful start to a better future for our discipline.

Anna Chernyakhovskaya, specially for the HSE news service

 

See also:

How the Telephone Conquered the World. Episode Ten: 'Number, Please?'

The history of the invention of telephony reads like a captivating detective novel, but even more intriguing are the events that contributed to the worldwide adoption of this technology. In this series of columns on IQ.HSE, Anton Basov, HSE Faculty of Computer Science editor, discusses how telephones have become an integral part of our everyday life. The final episode of the series recounts how men were unable to cope with telephone operator jobs and were replaced by tall and polite young women. However, as telephone networks expanded, the role of the intermediary became unproductive, eventually rendering the switchboard operator profession obsolete due to automation—not the first nor the last time such a thing has happened. As for Alexander Graham Bell, he used the earnings from inventing the telephone to promote science, educate people about the world around us, and pursue new inventions.

How the Telephone Conquered the World. Episode Nine: Big Connections

The history of the invention of telephony reads like a captivating detective novel, but even more intriguing are the events that contributed to the worldwide adoption of this technology. In this series of columns on IQ.HSE, Anton Basov, HSE Faculty of Computer Science editor, discusses how telephones have become an integral part of our everyday life. The ninth episode of the series explores the development of the first long-distance, interstate, and transatlantic telephone lines, which suddenly made people thousands of kilometres away feel as close as if they were in the same room together.

How the Telephone Conquered the World. Episode Eight: The Russian Field of Experiments

The history of the invention of telephony reads like a captivating detective novel, but even more intriguing are the events that contributed to the worldwide adoption of this technology. In this series of columns on IQ.HSE, Anton Basov, HSE Faculty of Computer Science editor, discusses how telephones have become an integral part of our everyday life. The eighth episode of the series recounts how Russia first adapted the telephone for military and logistical purposes, created a shell company headed by a nominal executive for reselling the rights to Western competitors, and intensively developed communication infrastructure in the country's two capitals, making such progress that Vladimir Lenin insisted on capturing and maintaining control of telephone exchanges at all costs.

How the Telephone Conquered the World. Episode Seven: German Efficiency

The history of the invention of telephony reads like a captivating detective novel, but even more intriguing are the events that contributed to the worldwide adoption of this technology. In this series of columns on IQ.HSE, Anton Basov, HSE Faculty of Computer Science editor, discusses how telephones have become an integral part of our everyday life. The seventh episode in the series recounts the story of German bureaucrats, who proved to be the most astute in Europe by ensuring effective telephony first for themselves and subsequently for all major cities in Germany. However, even there, the government's dominant role over the free market slowed down the adoption of the new technology.

How the Telephone Conquered the World. Episode Six: The Telephone's Misadventures in France

The history of the invention of telephony reads like a captivating detective novel, but even more intriguing are the events that contributed to the worldwide adoption of this technology. In this series of columns on IQ.HSE, Anton Basov, HSE Faculty of Computer Science editor, discusses how telephones have become an integral part of our everyday life. The sixth episode of the series recounts events in France when the private owner of the telephone network was compelled to sell it to the government at a knockdown price, and the impact it had on the development of communications in the country. Spoiler alert: the impact, naturally, was detrimental.

How the Telephone Conquered the World. Episode Five: From the US Free Market to Conservative Britain

In this series of columns on IQ.HSE, Anton Basov, HSE Faculty of Computer Science editor, discusses how telephones have become an integral part of our everyday life. The fifth episode of the series chronicles the early experiences of the telegraph and telephone in Great Britain, shedding light on the challenges they faced, and explores the adverse impact of excessive government regulation and nationalisation on the evolution of telecommunications.

Peacocks, Pepper, and Petrol: The Early History of Imports from Asia

Petroleum for equine care, wood oil for lighting, sandalwood for Easter celebrations, and lemons and olives for entertaining unexpected guests. Russian monasteries often used these and other eastern goods in the period leading up to and during the reign of Peter the Great. Analysing their account books leads to a revision of the traditional assumptions about the primary consumers of oriental goods in Russia. These consumers, in addition to the royal and aristocratic circles, included monastery estates, as discussed in the paper ‘“Three altyns worth of petroleum…”: Oriental goods in Russia at the second half of the 17th and early 18th century’ by historian Arthur Mustafin of HSE University. Based on his paper, IQ.HSE explores the types of goods that were shipped from the East to Russia in the latter half of the 17th to the early 18th century, including the routes and purposes of these shipments.

How the Telephone Conquered the World. Episode Four: David the Start-up Versus the Corporate Goliath

The history of the invention of telephony reads like a captivating detective novel, but even more intriguing are the events that contributed to the worldwide adoption of this technology. In this series of columns on IQ.HSE, Anton Basov, HSE Faculty of Computer Science editor, discusses how telephones have become an integral part of our everyday life. The fourth episode of the series recounts the story of the fledgling start-up's confrontation with hordes of patent trolls and its subsequent victory in a full-blown corporate war against the largest telecommunications company of the late 19th century.

‘In Search of the Key to the Past’: Students of HSE Art and Design School in Nizhny Novgorod Develop Collection of Souvenirs

The HSE Art and Design School in Nizhny Novgorod, together with the ‘Protected Quarters’ project to revive Nizhny Novgorod’s historical territories, have carried out the ‘Timeless’ creative project, which included a design laboratory and an educational programme. As a result of the creative workshop, students made concepts for souvenir products based on the local identity.

How the Telephone Conquered the World. Episode Three: Connecting People

Today, we can make a telephone call to anyone, anywhere in the world—but this was not always the case. In this series of columns on IQ.HSE, Anton Basov, HSE Faculty of Computer Science editor, discusses how telephones have become an integral part of our everyday life. The third episode focuses on the evolution of telephone connections, the first subscribers, and the history of the telephone directory.