Georg Jostkleigrewe

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Georg Jostkleigrewe (* 1975 ) is a German historian .

Born in Westphalia, he grew up in Duisburg and attended the Steinbart high school there . After graduating from high school, he studied Middle and Modern History, Romance Philology (French), Latin Philology and Philosophy at the Universities of Tübingen , Aix-en-Provence , Düsseldorf and Cologne from 1996 to 2005 . From 2002 to 2005 he completed a doctoral degree in the Erlangen Graduate School 516 "Cultural Transfer in the European Middle Ages". He received his doctorate in the summer semester of 2005 with a thesis on Franco-German foreign images in vernacular literature and historiography of the 12th to 14th centuries, initiated by Ludger Körntgen and supervised by Klaus Herbers in Erlangen. From 2006 to 2008 he trained as a teacher at grammar schools and comprehensive schools (GyGe) in the subjects of Latin and history-bilingual (French). He acquired the qualification for teaching at grammar schools and comprehensive schools ("Second State Exam").

From 2008 to 2011 he was a research assistant in the SFB 496 “Symbolic Communication and Social Value Systems” at the University of Münster , sub-project A9 “Visualization of Diplomacy in the Western European Late Middle Ages” ( Martin Kintzinger ). In 2012 he was a research assistant at the Professorship for Medieval History I in Münster (Martin Kintzinger). From 2012 to 2013 he was a DAAD short-term scholar at the École Pratique des Hautes Études (archive research, cooperation with Jean-Marie Moeglin and Stéphane Péquignot). From 2013 to 2015 he was a research assistant in the DFG research project “Symbolic Communication and Cultural Difference. Visualization of Intercultural Diplomacy in the Western European Late Middle Ages ”at the University of Münster. He completed his habilitation in 2015 at the Department of History / Philosophy at the University of Münster with a thesis on the forms of political interaction in the late medieval French kingdom. He then worked from 2015 to 2019 as a research assistant at the SFB 1150. Since April 1, 2019, he has been Professor of “History of the Middle Ages” at the Institute for History at the Martin Luther University in Halle-Wittenberg .

His main research interests are the history of France, its rulership structures and its identity (s) in the high and late Middle Ages, history of knowledge: concepts of decision-making in the scientific theory of the late Middle Ages, historiographic history: conveying and generating historical knowledge in the vernacular; History of the medieval worlds of imagination and their expression in historiographical and literary texts; geographical concepts of the Middle Ages (maps of the world, descriptions of the earth), "foreign policy" and political communication in the European late Middle Ages: France and its nearer (England, Flanders, Empire) and more distant (Byzantium, Levant) interaction partners and British "dark ages" and the history of the Anglo-Saxon Rich.

Fonts (selection)

Monographs

  • The image of the other. Origin and effect of German-French foreign images in vernacular literature and historiography of the 12th to 14th centuries (= Orbis mediaevalis. Volume 9). Akademie-Verlag, Berlin 2008, ISBN 978-3-05-004394-4 .
  • with Nils Bock and Bastian Walter: fact and construct. Political boundaries in the Middle Ages. Compression - symbolization - reflection (= symbolic communication and social value systems. Volume 35). Rhema, Münster 2011, ISBN 3-86887-002-4 .
  • Monarchical state and 'Société politique'. Political interaction and state consolidation in late medieval France (= Medieval research. Volume 56). Thorbecke Ostfildern 2018, ISBN 3-7995-4378-3 .

Editorships

  • Breaking the contract. The binding nature of late medieval diplomacy and its limits (= journal for historical research. Supplement. Volume 55). Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 2018, ISBN 978-3-428-15454-8 .

Web links

Remarks

  1. Georg Jostkleigrewe: The image of the other. Origin and effect of German-French foreign images in vernacular literature and historiography of the 12th to 14th centuries. Berlin 2008. See the review by Stefan Weiß in: sehepunkte 9 (2009), No. 10 [15. October 2009], online
  2. See the review by Heribert Müller in: Francia-Recensio 2019–2 ( online )