Hauser, Stefan R.
Vorträge:
27.11.
Transformation:
Zwischen Nomadismus und Sesshaftigkeit
9.30–10.00
Prof. Dr. Bernhard Streck, Leipzig:
Introductory Remarks
10.00–10.30
Prof. Dr. Günther Schlee, Halle:
Forms of Pastoralism
10.30–11.00
Dr. Katharina Lange, Leipzig:
Shepherds versus Bedouins: Narratives of a Relation
11.00–11.30
Kaffee-Pause
11.30–12.00
Prof. Dr. Hermann Kreutzmann, Erlangen:
Marginality and Mobility. Pamirian Pastoralists and Global Contexts
12.00–12.30
Ingo Breuer, Leipzig:
Survival Strategies and Mobility among (ex-) Nomads in Morocco
12.30–14.30
Mittagspause
14.30–15.00
Prof. Dr. Emanuel Marx, Tel Aviv:
Relations Between Nomads and Town
15.00–15.30
Dr. Udo Mischek, Leipzig:
The Dual Morphology of an Oscillating Society
15.30–16.00
Kaffee-Pause
16.00–16.30
Prof. Dr. Anatoly Khazanov, Madison:
Nomads and Cities in the Eurasian Steppe Region. A Historical Overview
16.30–17.00
Kaffee-Pause
17.00
Films on Nomads
Empfang
Abendessen
28.11.
Austausch und Konflikt:
Nomaden und Sesshafte in der Geschichte
9.30–10.00
Dr. Kurt Franz / Prof. Dr. Jürgen Paul, Halle:
Nomads in the Near East and Central Asia
10.00–10.30
Dr. Donald Whitcomb, Chicago:
Archaeological Evidence of Sedentarization. An Example from Bilad al-Sham in the Early Islamic Period
10.30–11.00
Constance Dittrich, M.A., Leipzig:
Integration and Separation: Two Case Studies from Babylonia
11.00–11.30
Kaffee-Pause
11.30–12.00
Dr. Michal Biran, Jerusalem:
Khitans in Mongol and Yuan Armies (13th–14th Centuries)
12.00–12.30
Dr. Wolfgang Holzwarth, Halle:
Relations Between Uzbek Central Asia, the Great Steppe, and Iran (1722–1747). Patterns and Trends
12.30–14.30
Mittagspause
14.30–15.00
Prof. Dr. Irene Schneider, Halle/Göttingen:
Nomads in Qajar Iran
15.00–15.30
Dr. Peter Finke, Halle:
Some Remarks on Nomads and the State in Present Day Mongolia
15.30–16.15
Kaffee-Pause
Nomadisch oder Sesshaft?
Wahrnehmungen und Konzepte
16.15–16.45
Prof. Dr. Stefan Leder, Halle:
Nomadic and Sedentary Peoples – A Misleading Dichotomy?
16.45–17.15
Prof. Dr. Hans-Werner Fischer-Elfert, Leipzig:
Sedentarism and Nomadism as Criteria of Ancient Egyptian Culture
17.15–17.45
Kaffee-Pause
17.45–18.15
Gundula Tauscher, Halle:
The Impact of Scythian Presence in Transcaucasia
Abendessen
29.11.
9.30–10.00
Dr. Thomas Herzog , Halle:
One's own ancestor? The Bedouin in Mediaeval Arabic Popular Literature
10.00–10.30
Prof. Dr. Saad A. Sowayan, Riad:
Tribalism vs. Statehood. An Alternative Model to the Baduw Hadhar Dichotomy
10.30–11.00
Prof. Dr. Mohanna Haddad, Irbid:
The Force for Peaceful Relations among the Confessionally Divided Sedentaries Facing a Common Enemy: the Nomads. The Case of Jordan
11.00–11.30
Kaffee-Pause
11.30–12.00
Prof. Dr. Frank Stewart, Jerusalem:
Customary Law and Bedouins
12.00–12.30
Dr. Elena Marushiakova, Leipzig/Sofia:
The "Gypsy Court" as a Concept of Consensus among Service Nomads in the Northern Black Sea Area
12.30–13.30
Mittagspause
13.30–14.00
Prof. Dr. Svetlana Chervonnaya, Moskau:
Nogai: the Dwindling Steppe and the Last European Turkic Nomads
14.00–14.30
Dr. Marco Scholze, Bayreuth:
Tourists and Tuareg
14.30–15.00
Kaffee-Pause
15.00
Abschlußdiskussion