Amsterdam as Haven

Veranstalter
Ritman Research Institute
Veranstaltungsort
Embassy of the Free Mind
PLZ
1015CJ
Ort
Amsterdam
Land
Netherlands
Findet statt
Hybrid
Vom - Bis
10.11.2022 - 12.11.2022
Von
Kyra Gerber, Ritman Research Institute

The Ritman Research Institute is hosting a conference 10 to 12 November 2022 on the role of Amsterdam as a haven for religious refugees.

Amsterdam as Haven

In the 17th century Amsterdam became a hotbed of religious exchange, as religious exiles from all over the continent flocked to the Netherlands and especially its capital city because of relatively lax laws on religious expression and publishing. One center of such exchange was the so-called House with the Heads on Keizersgracht, the home of Louis de Geer and later his son Laurens. Both men acted as patrons to a variety of religious free thinkers and reformers. Figures such as Jan Comenius, Friedrich Breckling and Christian Hoburg gathered in the de Geer home to discuss their ideas. Today, the House with the Heads is home to the Bibliotheca Philosophica Hermetica collection and its associated museum, the Embassy of the Free Mind. In the Autumn of 2022, we will present an exhibition on the history of the House with the Heads. In conjunction with this exhibition, we are hosting a conference 11–12 November 2022 on the role of Amsterdam as a haven for religious refugees.

Programm

Thursday, 10 November 2022

19:30 (19:30 CET, by Zoom 1:30 pm EST)
Greeting / Opening of Conference
Lucinda Martin, Director, Bibliotheca Philosophica Hermetica and Ritman Research Institute, The House with the Heads as Refuge in the 17th century

19:45
Keynote Address
Emil Schrijver, General Director, Jewish Cultural Quarter Amsterdam, The Book Culture of the first Generations of Portuguese Jewish Refugees in Amsterdam

21:00
Reception at the Foyer of the Embassy of the Free Mind

Friday, 11 November 2022

09:00
Guided Tour of the “House with the Heads” and Rare Book Tour in the Bibliotheca Philosophica Hermetica (for conference speakers only)

10:00 Coffee

Panel 1 (Chair: Bart Wallet, Universiteit Amsterdam)

10:30
Susanne Lachenicht (Universität Bayreuth)
Refugee Cities in 16th and 17th Century Europe

11:15
Hans Wallage (Universiteit Amsterdam)
Amsterdam as Haven: A Refugee Creation

12:00
Stephanie Bode (Universität Augsburg)
“Le Refuge & l’Azile de toutes les Nations” – The Construction of a Haven for Religious Refugees in Amsterdam Publications, 1680–1715

12:45 Lunch (Provided at the Conference Site for speakers)

Panel 2 (Chair: Heide Warncke, Ets Haim Library)

14:00
Kyra Gerber (Universität Amsterdam / Ritman Research Institute)
The Peculiar Ordinary: Everyday Jewish Amsterdam in the 17th and 18th Century

14:45
Florian Wieser (University of Edinburgh)
Señores de la Cofradía de Holanda: Amsterdam and the Jewish Diaspora in the 17th-Century Spanish Empire

15:30
Daniel Rafiqi (University of London, digital connection)
“That Town I Yearned For”: Representations of Arrival in Huguenot Refugees’ Autobiographical Writings, 1686–1712

16:30
“Radical Amsterdam” Walking Tour

20:00
Conference Dinner (for speakers only, location to be announced)

Saturday, 12 November 2022

Panel 3 (Chair: Fred van Lieburg, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam)

09:30
Leigh T.I. Penman (Monash University, Australia, digital connection)
Books in Exile: Toward a history of German-language heterodox printing in the United Provinces

10:15
Andreas Pietsch (Universität Münster)
A Hub in a Network of Dissent - Amsterdam’s Role in the Publication of Hiël’s Mystical Treatises around 1700

11:00
Viktoria Francke (Enschede)
The “Dutch Connection” in Friedrich Breckling’s Catalogue of Witnesses of Truth (1700) and his “Autobiography” (ca. 1704)

11:45 Lunch (provided for speakers on site)

Panel 4 (Chair: Andreas Pietsch, Universität Münster)

13:00
John Exalto (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam)
Comenius’ Latin School in Amsterdam: Pansophia, Didactics, and Chiliasm

13:45
Francesco Quatrini (University College Dublin, digital connection)
Unitarian Letters from Exile: The Polish Brethren between Betrayal, Liberty, and the Needs of a Banished Church (c.1658–1668)

14:30
Mike Driedger (Brock University, Canada, digital connection)
Digital Evidence of Amsterdam as a City of Refuge for Contributors to the Growing Book Industry during “the Golden Age”: The eCartico Website

15:15
Final Exchange and Dutch “Borrel” (tradition of snacking and drinking after work)

Kontakt

Those who wish to attend in person should contact the Director of the Ritman Research Institute, Lucinda Martin: lmartin@efm.amsterdam

Those who wish to view lectures remotely by zoom should request a link from Junior Researcher Kyra Gerber: kgerber@efm.amsterdam

Tickets to attend the evening lecture by Emil Schrijver will be sold separately.

https://embassyofthefreemind.com/en/library/271-amsterdam-as-haven
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