Birgit Studt

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Birgit Studt (born July 9, 1960 in Rheine ) is a German historian .

Birgit Studt studied history, German, educational science and folklore at the University of Münster and graduated in 1985 with the first state examination. In 1990 she received her doctorate under Peter Johanek on historiography and history culture at the Heidelberger Hof. From 1986 to 1995 she was a research assistant in the Münster Collaborative Research Center 231 “Carriers, fields, forms of pragmatic writing in the Middle Ages” under the direction of Hagen Keller . She completed her habilitation in 2000 on the reform policy of Pope Martin V between the councils of Constance and Basel . From 2001 to 2004 Studt worked as a research assistant at the Institute for Comparative Urban History at the University of Münster in a research project on gender roles in the home and family tradition of social elites in the late medieval city. After substitution and visiting professorships in Münster and Vienna and a research stay at the German Historical Institute in Rome , he was appointed to the Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg in 2005 . Brigit Studt has held the "Chair for Medieval History II" since then.

Studt publishes on the history of the 13th – 15th centuries. Century, late medieval written culture, the history of residences and court culture, political communication in the late Middle Ages, the Roman curia and court humanism as well as areas of modern cultural history. She is the director of the Freiburg Medieval Center and, among other things, a member of the Scientific Advisory Board of the German Historical Institute in Rome, the Commission for Historical Regional Studies in Baden-Württemberg and the Constance Working Group for Medieval History .

Fonts (selection)

Monographs

  • Fürstenhof and history. Legitimation through tradition (= norm and structure. Studies on social change in the Middle Ages and early modern times. Vol. 2). Böhlau, Cologne et al. 1992, ISBN 3-412-03592-0 (Also: Münster (Westphalia), University, dissertation, 1990).
  • with Heike Mierau and Antje Sander-Berke: Studies on the transmission of the “Flores temporum” (= Monumenta Germaniae Historica. Studies and Texts. Vol. 14). Hahn, Hannover 1996, ISBN 3-775-25414-5 .
  • Pope Martin V (1417–1431) and the church reform in Germany (= research on the history of the emperors and the popes in the Middle Ages. Vol. 23). Böhlau, Cologne et al. 2004, ISBN 3-412-17003-8 (also: Münster (Westphalia), University, habilitation paper, 2000; online ).
  • with Susanne Rau: making history. A source and study manual on historiography (approx. 1350–1750). Akademie-Verlag, Berlin 2010, ISBN 3-050-04569-8 .

Editorships

  • with Antje Sander-Berke: What will continue to work ... Law and history in tradition and literary culture in the Middle Ages. Scriptorium, Münster 1997, ISBN 3-932-61002-4 .
  • House and family books in urban society in the late Middle Ages and early modern times (= urban research. Publications by the Institute for Comparative Urban History in Münster. Vol. 69). Böhlau, Cologne et al. 2007, ISBN 3-412-24005-2 .

Web links

Remarks

  1. See the discussions by Andreas Meyer in: sehepunkte 5 (2005), No. 9 [15. September 2005] ( online ); Jürgen Miethke , in: H-Soz-Kult , March 1, 2006 ( online ); Volker Gummelt in: Theologische Literaturzeitung 131 (2006), Sp. 1302–1304; Ivan Hlaváček in: Ceský casopis historický 104 (2006), pp. 165–166; Dieter Giegensohn in: German Archive for Research into the Middle Ages 63 (2007), pp. 746–747 ( online ); Heribert Müller in: Journal for historical research 34 (2007), pp. 532-535.