Bounded Violence and Violence Unbound - Violence in Pre-Modern Warfare

Bounded Violence and Violence Unbound - Violence in Pre-Modern Warfare

Veranstalter
Dr. Lennart Gilhaus, Department of Ancient History, University of Bonn
Veranstaltungsort
Universitätsclub Bonn, Koviktstraße 9
Gefördert durch
Daimler and Benz Foundation
PLZ
53113
Ort
Bonn
Land
Deutschland
Findet statt
Hybrid
Vom - Bis
31.08.2022 - 03.09.2022
Von
Lennart Gilhaus, Abt. Alte Geschichte, Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn, Institut für Geschichtswissenschaft

War and violence belong among the most elementary phenomena in human history. The international conference will therefore focus on the culturally specific forms of violence and examine the bounds and delimitations of war violence for selected pre-modern societies.

Bounded Violence and Violence Unbound - Violence in Pre-Modern Warfare

War and violence belong among the most elementary phenomena in human history. The culture-specific forms taken by violence, the constituent ingredient of war, have nevertheless rarely been systematically investigated. War violence tends to be either reduced to the status of an epiphenomenon or treated as universal rather than culture specific.
The international conference will therefore focus on the culturally specific forms of violence and examine the bounds and delimitations of war violence for selected pre-modern societies. In addition to the world of the Greek poleis, the Roman Republic, the European Middle Ages, Japan in the Heian and Kamakura periods, the Inca Empire in South America, and Central and South Asia between the 12th and 16th centuries will be addressed. As the selected examples are remarkably different in their stability and dynamics and in their religious and military organisation, contrasting them has promise to uncover and define various factors determining the forms taken by social norms governing approaches to violence and the use of violent practices.
The conference will be held in presence and streamed via Zoom. For registration please contact: lgilhaus@uni-bonn.de

Programm

31/08/2022
VIOLENCE AND THE STATE
14:45–15:30 Daniel Schley (University of Bonn): „Killing the Buddha“ – „Praising the Buddha“. Some Preliminary Remarks on the Discourse of Religious Violence in Medieval Japan
14:45–15:30 Hans van Wees (University College London): War and Slavery in Early Greece
16:15–16:45 Coffee Break
16:45–17:30 David Bachrach (University of New Hampshire): Feud, Governmental Authority, and the Balance of Power in the Conduct of War in Ottonian Germany

01/09/2022
NARRATING VIOLENCE
9:15–10:00 Nathalie Barrandon (University of Reims): The Language of Transgression in Latin Sources
10:00–10:45 Werner Riess (University of Hamburg): Caesar´s Distinct Strategies of Violence in his Gallic and Civil War
10:45–11:15 Coffee Break
11:15–12:00 Birgit Zacke (University of Bonn): Swaz uns von strîte ist geseit – Narrativisation and Aestheticisation of Violence in Middle High German Literature
12:00–12:45 Stefanie Rüther (Max Planck Institute for Legal History and Legal Theory): Justified? Norms of War and Narratives of Excessive Violence in the Middle Age
12:45–14:00 Lunch Break

GENDER, IDENTITY AND VIOLENCE
14:00–14:45 Hendrik Hess (University of Bonn): Violence, Power, Masculinity – The Representation of the Ruler at the End of the 13th Century
14:45–15:30 Sarah Brucia Breitenfeld (Davidson College): They Forced Her to Drink – Violence, Gender, and Enslavement in Attic Oratory
15:30–16:00 Coffee Break
16:00–16:45 John Serrati (University of Ottawa): War as Controlled Violence – Masculinity and Female Agency in the Roman Republic
16:45–17:30 Hitomi Tonomura (University of Michigan): Gendered Narrative of Violence The Case of Premodern Japan

02/09/2022
PERFORMING VIOLENCE
9:15–10:00 Isabelle Pimouguet-Pedarros (University of Nantes): War, Extreme Violence and Transgression – Definitions and Case Studies for the Hellenistic Period
10:00–10:45 Stefanie Holders (University of the Federal Armed Forces Hamburg): The Desecration of the Fallen in the Ilias and in Herodotus
10:45–11:15 Coffee Break
11:15–12:00 Martin Clauss (University of Chemnitz): Violence and Heroism in the European Middle Ages
12:00–12:45 Beth Scaffidi (University of California, Merced): Trophy Heads as Agents of Intergroup Warfare in the Pre-Hispanic Andes
12:45–14:00 Lunch Break

VIOLENT ACTORS
14:00–14:45 Beatrice Manz (Tufts University): Why was the Mongol Conquest of Eastern Iran so Violent?
14:45–15:30 Karl Friday (Saitama University): Thugs & Thegns: Appraisals and Appropriations of Violence in Classical Japan
15:30–15:45 Coffee Break
15:45–16:30 Lennart Gilhaus (University of Bonn): The Violence of the Ten Thousand – Dynamics and Practices of a Greek Community of Violence
16:30–17:15 Ali Anooshahr (University of California, Davis): „Lest Your Justice Prove Violence“: Contested Defintions in 16th-Century Mughal India

18:15–19:30 Elizabeth Arkush (University of Pittsburgh): Relationships with Enemies: Cross-Cultural Patterns in War, Violence, and the Politics of Production

03/09/2022
CONQUEST AND THE IMPACT OF VIOLENCE
9:15–10:00 Jürgen Paul (University of Hamburg): Cities and their Hinterland: Scenes of Conquest and Devastation, Late 12th to Early 15th Century
10:00–10:45 Dominik Maschek (University of Oxford): From Fregellae to Actium – The Scale and Socio-Cultural Impact of Organised Violence in Late Republican Italy
10:45–11:00 Coffee Break
11:00–11:45 R. Alan Covey (University of Texas at Austin): Emerging Expressions of Military Violence in the Inca Empire

11:45–12:30 Concluding discussion

Kontakt

Dr. Lennart Gilhaus: lgilhaus@uni-bonn.de

https://www.altegeschichte.uni-bonn.de/aktuelles/veranstaltungen/conference-bounded-violence-and-violence-unbound-violence-in-pre-modern-warfare