Hannelore Putz

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hannelore Putz (* 1973 ) is a German historian .

Life

From 1994 to 1999 she studied history and German at LMU (1999 Magister artium). From 1999 to 2002 she completed a doctoral degree . Since 2000 she has been a research assistant in the research project "Edition of the Correspondence Between King Ludwig I and Leo von Klenze". After receiving his doctorate in 2002 as Dr. phil. under the supervision of Alois Schmid on the topic “The Domus Gregoriana in Munich. Education and training in the vicinity of the Jesuit College St. Michael until 1773 ”and his habilitation in 2010 on the subject of“ King Ludwig I of Bavaria as a builder and art collector. Monarchical patronage between art-political impulse and aesthetic pleasure in the area of ​​tension of early constitutionalism ”she represented the professorship for Bavarian regional history at the University of Regensburg in the winter semester 2010/2011 as part of a teaching assignment. In the summer semester 2011 she was the professor for Bavarian regional history at the LMU (Chair Alois Schmid). In 2011/2012 and 2013 she received a scholarship for excellent young scientists at LMU. In the 2012/2013 winter semester, she represented the chair for Saxon regional history at the TU Dresden . In 2013/2014 she did research as a visiting scholar at the DHI in Rome (formerly visiting professor). In the 2014/2015 winter semester, she represented the professorship for social and economic history at the TU Dresden. From 2015 to 2018 she was deputy head of the archive of the Diocese of Passau . She has been archive director of the Archives of the Diocese of Passau since 2018.

Her research and work areas are constitutional and institutional history of the 19th century (history of constitutionalism, history of monarchies and their financing), cultural-historical issues of the 18th and 19th centuries (history of monuments, monarchical staging of their own history, history of collecting and collection history, inter-territorial exchange in the artistic field, the importance of the Roman artist scene for the development of art in Germany, social networks in the artistic field), schools and universities in the early modern period, order history (history of the old Societas Jesu), edition of historical texts and correspondence between Ludwig I. and Leo von Klenze.

Fonts (selection)

Web links