Gerhard Lubich

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Gerhard Lubich (born September 21, 1964 in Ludwigsburg ) is a German historian .

Gerhard Lubich studied history and Romance studies in Cologne from 1986 and passed the first state examination for teaching in 1993. In 1996, his doctorate on Eastern Franconia in the Early and High Middle Ages, which had been supervised by Odilo Engels at the University of Cologne , was accepted. He then worked as a research assistant at the historical seminar at the University of Cologne until 2001 and then lecturer for medieval history at the Heinrich Heine University in Düsseldorf until 2005 . At the same time he worked from 2002 to 2007 as part of the Regesta imperil the Regesten Emperor Henry IV. In 2004 his was by John Laudage supervised Habilitationsschrift accepted via relationship in the early and high Middle Ages at the Heinrich-Heine University. From 2005 to 2006 Lubich represented the university professor for historical auxiliary sciences at the Ruhr University in Bochum . Since 2007 he has held the professorship for the history of the early Middle Ages and historical auxiliary sciences at the Historical Institute of the Ruhr University Bochum.

His main research interests are constitutional and cultural history, especially taking into account social and regional group formation, medieval historiography and method transfer. In his dissertation, he dealt with the Francia orientalis, i.e. Rhine and Main Franconia, from the Carolingian to the Staufer period . In his habilitation thesis, Lubich put forward the thesis that family relationships in the Franconian Empire of the early and high Middle Ages were of less social and political importance than research had previously assumed. In 2010 he published an introduction to medieval history. On the occasion of the 850th anniversary of the city, Lubich also presented a representation of the imperial city of Schwäbisch Hall “from the beginning to the end of the Middle Ages” . The focus of this presentation is on the late Middle Ages. In June 2011, a conference on Heinrich V took place at the Ruhr University in Bochum under the direction of Lubich . The articles published in 2013 attempted to make the government of Henry V, long neglected by recent research, “understandable not so much from the person as from the circumstances of the time”. Since 2016 he has been the project manager of the "Regesta Imperii" for Heinrich III. and Heinrich V. Lubich is currently working on a biography of Heinrich V.

Fonts

Monographs

  • On the way to the “Golden Freedom” (1168). Dominion and space in the Francia orientalis from the Carolingian to the Staufer period (= historical studies. Vol. 449). Matthiesen, Husum 1996, ISBN 3-7868-1449-X .
  • History of the city of Schwäbisch Hall. From the beginning to the end of the Middle Ages. Society for Franconian History, Würzburg 2006, ISBN 3-86652-952-X .
  • Be related to. Readings of a socio-political bond (6th – 12th centuries) (= European histories. Vol. 16). Böhlau, Cologne et al. 2008, ISBN 3-412-20001-8 .
  • The Middle Ages (= UTB. Vol. 3106). Schöningh, Stuttgart 2010, ISBN 978-3-8252-3106-4 .

Editorships

  • with Dirk Jäckel (Ed.): Heinrich III. Dynasty - Region - Europe (= research on the imperial and papal history of the Middle Ages. Vol. 43). Böhlau, Cologne et al. 2018, ISBN 978-3-412-51148-7 .
  • Heinrich V in his time. Rule in a European empire of the High Middle Ages (= research on the history of the emperors and papals in the Middle Ages. Vol. 34). Böhlau, Cologne. 2013, ISBN 3-412-21010-2 ( online ).

Web links

Remarks

  1. Franz-Reiner Erkens in: Historische Zeitschrift 266 (1998), pp. 477–478; Stefan Beulertz in: German Archive for Research into the Middle Ages 55 (1999), p. 799 ( online ); Geneviève Bührer-Thierry in: Francia 27 (2000), pp. 326-327 ( online ).
  2. Cf. on his habilitation thesis the discussions of Gerhard Schmitz in: Deutsches Archiv für Erforschung des Mittelalters 64 (2008), pp. 727–728 ( online ); Steffen Patzold in: Zeitschrift für Württembergische Landesgeschichte 68 (2009), pp. 435–437; Eva-Maria Butz in: H-Soz-Kult , May 20, 2009, ( online ); Robert Gramsch in: see points 9 (2009), no. 3 [15. March 2009], ( online ); Martin Clauss in: Rheinische Vierteljahrsblätter 74, 2010, pp. 276–278 ( online ).
  3. See the review by Dominik Wassenhoven in: Zeitschrift für bayerische Landesgeschichte 73 (2010), pp. 326–328.
  4. Gerhard Lubich: For the introduction: Heinrich V in the worlds of the high Middle Ages. In the S. (Ed.): Heinrich V. in his time. Rule in a European empire from the High Middle Ages. Cologne 2013, pp. 5–10, here: p. 8.