Hans-Georg Aschoff

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Hans-Georg Aschoff (born October 17, 1947 in Duderstadt ) is a German historian .

Vita

Aschoff studied history, English, philosophy and education in Hanover and Clinton, New York; In 1971 he passed his state examination. In 1974 he received his doctorate in Hanover and in 1986 his habilitation. Since 1972 he has been working at the history seminar of the University of Hanover, since 1994 as a university lecturer for modern history and church history . He holds an unscheduled professorship .

From 1998 to 2000 he was the managing director of the history seminar. He is the liaison professor of the Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung's scholarship program and was visiting professor at the University of Nebraska , Lincoln (USA) in 2000 .

Research priorities

  1. Modern church history, especially the history of denominational minorities
  2. State church law problems
  3. Party history , especially conservative and Christian parties
  4. National history of modern times

Publications (selection)

  • The relationship between the state and the Catholic Church in the Kingdom of Hanover (1813–1866) (= sources and representations on the history of Lower Saxony. Vol. 86). Lax, Hildesheim 1976.
  • For the sake of man. The development of the Catholic Church in the Hanover region. Bernward, Hildesheim 1983.
  • Welfish Movement and Political Catholicism 1866–1918. The German-Hanoverian party and the center in the province of Hanover during the German Empire (= contributions to the history of parliamentarism and political parties. Vol. 83). Droste, Düsseldorf 1987.
  • Church prince in the empire. Georg Cardinal Kopp . Bernward, Hildesheim 1987.
  • Rule of Law and Emancipation. The political work of Ludwig Windthorst (= Emsland, Bentheim. Vol. 5). Emsland landscape for the districts of Emsland and Grafschaft Bentheim, Sögel 1988.
  • Ludwig Windthorst. A Christian politician in a time of upheaval. Lower Saxony State Center for Political Education, Hanover 1991.
  • The Guelphs. From the Reformation to 1918. Kohlhammer, Stuttgart 2010.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Vademecum of the historical sciences. Edition 1994/1995. P. 250.