Exclusion in the Middle Ages

Exclusion in the Middle Ages

Organizer
Prof. Dr. Thomas Ertl, Dr. Milan Pajic (Friedrich-Meinecke-Institut, Freie Universität Berlin)
Host
Friedrich-Meinecke-Institut, Freie Universität Berlin
Venue
Holzlaube, Fabeckstr. 23-25, 2. OG, Room 2.2058
Funded by
Alexander von Humboldt-Stiftung
ZIP
14195
Location
Berlin
Country
Germany
Takes place
In Attendance
From - Until
28.09.2023 - 30.09.2023
By
Katharina Stauch, Friedrich-Meinecke-Institut, Freie Universität Berlin

The aim of our workshop is to discuss the historical moments in which mechanisms of religious, economic, social and political exclusion had a particular impact.

Exclusion in the Middle Ages

The aim of our workshop is to discuss the historical moments in which mechanisms of religious, economic, social and political exclusion had a particular impact. With this research question, we are touching on the prominent research fields of otherness, race/racism, migration, national identities, etc. A lot of work has been done in all these fields of research in recent decades. Among other things, it has become clear that the variety of distinction mechanisms in the Middle Ages was very large (political, ethnic, social, religious and cultural). In all these fields, there was the potential for a process of "othering" to take place, and this could lead to exclusion, stigmatization and marginalization. However, our aim is to link the exclusion of individuals, groups and peoples with the concrete socio- economic contexts – in a more intensive way than has been done in the past. Thus, the intersections of ethnic/biological and social/economic discrimination will be examined in order to discuss the ways in which horizontal (ethnic) and vertical (social) categorizations interacted with, complemented, reinforced and contradicted each other, and how they reacted to socio-economic change. This is based on our conviction that it was, and still is, often socio-economic shifts that reinforce mechanisms of inclusion and exclusion. In our informal workshop, we will discuss and compare some case studies from various centuries and regions in medieval Europe.

Programm

Thursday, Sept 28

17:00 Welcome and Introduction (Thomas Ertl and Milan Pajic)

17:30 Helmut Reimitz (Princeton):
The Danger of Binaries: the Study of Medieval Race and Ethnicity in Europe and the US
This lecture is available online:
https://fu-berlin.webex.com/fu-berlin/j.php?MTID=m6d46b81647f2065ca8b34d7b3e5b9ba7

19:00 Dinner

Friday, Sept 29

Morning Session (Chair: Klaus Oschema)

09:00 Gerda Heydemann (Berlin):
The Curse of Ham: Race and Biblical Exegesis (Response Sumi Shimahara)

10:00 Coffee Break

10:30 Clara Almagro Vidal (Madrid):
Drawing Lines of Demarcation: Inclusion and Exclusion among Muslims under the Rule of Military Orders in Medieval Iberia (Response Jörn R. Christophersen)

11:30 Coffee Break

12:00 Nora Berend (Cambridge):
Triggers of Exclusion in Medieval Hungary (Response Julia Burkhardt)

13:00 Lunch

Afternoon Session (Chair: Roy Flechner)

15:00 Bart Lambert (Brussel) / Joshua Ravenhill (Independent Scholar):
Bawd, Traitor, Fleming, Thief and Other Horrible Names: Immigration and Ethnic Slander in Late Medieval and Early Tudor London (Response Tanja Skambraks)

16:00 Coffee Break

16:30 Cordelia Heß (Greifswald):
Meetings in the Margins. Constructions of Race and Religion in Greenland and Sápmi before 1550 (Response Christian Hoffarth)

19:00 Dinner

Saturday, Sept 30

09:30 Jean-Frédéric Schaub on the History of Race and Racism: Round Table with Statements by Thomas Ertl, Karl Ubl and Daniel Allemann

11:00 Coffee Break

11:30 Final Discussion

Contact (announcement)

thomas.ertl@fu-berlin.de
mpajic@zedat.fu-berlin.de