Institute for Historical Research

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Kulturwissenschaftliches Zentrum (KWZ), location of the IHLF since March 2012

The Institute for Historical State Research (IHLF) of the Georg-August-Universität Göttingen is an institution for the conception and implementation of research projects on the history of Lower Saxony and on comparative regional history . It was founded in 1958.

management

The management of the institute has been associated with the Chair of Lower Saxony State History since 1959. Institute directors were Georg Schnath (1959–1967), Hans Patze (1969–1985) and Ernst Schubert (1985–2006). Arnd Reitemeier has been head of the institute since 2008 and at the same time holder of the professorship for Lower Saxony regional history at the University of Göttingen . Historian Peter Aufgebauer also works at the institute .

history

In the 19th century, today's area of Lower Saxony consisted of several independent territories: the Kingdom of Hanover , the Grand Duchy of Oldenburg , the Duchy of Braunschweig and the Principality of Schaumburg-Lippe . However, in the middle classes, especially in the Hanover area, a "Lower Saxony consciousness " emerged as a spatial construct : The emerging local associations and the associated magazines had the term "Lower Saxony" or "Lower Saxony" in their names, to culturally call the northwestern German region a "home" with a to define common tradition - from the "Saxon tribe" to modern times. At the end of the 1920s, discussions about imperial reform began, and the spreading homeland movements forced a twenty-five-year dispute between “Lower Saxony” and “Westphalia”. This dispute was carried out by administrative officials and politicians, with regional scientists from different disciplines providing the arguments, e.g. B. Georg Schnath and Kurt Brüning . In the 1930s, a real Lower Saxony did not yet exist, but there was an abundance of institutions that called themselves “Lower Saxony” - such as B. the Historical Association for Lower Saxony . The motives and arguments in the disputes between “Lower Saxony” and “Westphalia” were very similar on both sides: economic interests, political objectives, cultural interests and historical aspects.

In 1946 the state of Lower Saxony was finally established, but in many parts of the state - with the exception of the Hanover area - there was no real “Lower Saxony awareness” among the broad sections of the population. Likewise, the country was threatened on the one hand by reluctant parts of the country such as Osnabrück and Vechta, which saw themselves more as "Westphalia" and on the other hand by the plans to found a larger north-western state. On the initiative of Georg Schnath , an institute and a chair for Lower Saxony regional history were to be founded at the University of Göttingen with the task of researching the "historical lines of tradition" of the history of Lower Saxony and constructing a "home" for the residents of the new state. The concept of home should serve to offer the inhabitants of the previously independent territories with their own traditions and especially the refugees from the former eastern regions opportunities for integration and identification. The institute was to become the scientific center of the Heimat movement . Göttingen University offered itself as a founding location, since well-known historians such as Karl Brandi and Percy Ernst Schramm had been demanding the expansion of the state's history since the 1920s and 30s, thus paving the way for an independent institute.

Negotiation process between the state and the university

The tenth anniversary of the state of Lower Saxony in 1956 was taken as an opportunity by the Lower Saxony state government to announce the establishment of a state history institute. Nevertheless, it took two more years to actually establish, as the negotiations between the state and the university lasted longer. The University of Göttingen welcomed the establishment of an institute to reinforce the history of the state, as it offered the opportunity to participate in state-funded state research. However, the Lower Saxony Ministry of Culture was initially not ready to set up its own chair for regional history, which was justified with a lack of funds. In addition, they only thought of expanding the country's history and wanted to leave out other disciplines (folklore, linguistic research, etc.). The University's Philosophical Faculty was annoyed by the anticipated announcement and wanted to tie the chairs for Lower Saxony Language and Church History to the institute for organizational purposes. In addition, Kurt Brüning , Göttingen professor for regional studies and geography, saw his own “Institute for Regional Planning and Lower Saxony Regional Studies” threatened by the new establishment.

According to a proposal by the Historical Commission, chaired by Georg Schnath, the institute should be set up similar to the Institute for Historical Regional Studies of the Rhineland . The aim was to bundle the existing research on regional studies and history from the various disciplines in one institute. A faculty commission was set up by the dean of the Philosophical Faculty, Percy Ernst Schramm, to implement the proposal of the Historical Commission and to resolve the problems with the Ministry of Culture. The faculty commission defined the project fields of the new institute and was able to convince the ministry to set up a professorship for regional history. In 1958, after lengthy negotiations, the institute was founded after the then Minister-President of Lower Saxony, Heinrich Hellwege, had to intervene several times in order to prevent failure. A year later, Georg Schnath filled the newly established chair for Lower Saxony regional history.

With the establishment of the institute as a university institution, the original political objective - strengthening Lower Saxony's "state consciousness" - took a back seat. Rather, the institute developed into an interdisciplinary research institute for regional studies and history, especially demanded by Percy Ernst Schramm, with Hanoverian history being preferred in the early years under Georg Schnath. It was not until Hans Patze took over the institute in 1970 that the spectrum of research expanded to include topics from Braunschweig, Oldenburg and East Frisia, i.e. to include regional studies and history for the whole of Lower Saxony.

Current projects

Current research projects include a. the " Lower Saxony Dictionary ", the "Historical and Regional Regional Map of Lower Saxony" and the "Lower Saxony Place Name Book".

One of the larger projects is the Lower Saxony Monastery Book, funded by the State of Lower Saxony and the Hanover Monastery Chamber, which appeared in four volumes with around 2300 printed pages in June 2012; the work was written by more than 100 employees and published by Josef Dolle and DennisBNOENHAUER MA as part of the "Publications of the Institute for Historical Research". It documents the history of more than 360 monastic institutions, including the beguinages of the late Middle Ages and the new Catholic foundations in the course of confessionalization (Jesuits, Ursulines).

Another major research project, for which Arnd Reitemeier has raised state funding of more than € 1 million, deals with the Hanover-English personal union , which will be 300 years old in 2014. Eight doctoral students are researching the following aspects within the framework of this project on the basis of doctoral grants: The Hanoverian German law firm in London, the British-German science transfer using the example of the University of Göttingen, AF Chr. Kollmann as a musical mediator between Hanover and London, the personal union Hanover-London In the mirror of diplomatic correspondence, the universities of Halle and Göttingen against the background of the dynamic of rule in the 18th century, British students at the Göttingen University as actors in cultural transfer, religious music as a connecting cultural asset, art in the communication and action space of the personal union.

Library

The institute has a special library of approx. 15,000 volumes and approx. 200 current journals on the local and regional history of Lower Saxony as well as on comparative regional historical research.

Since March 2012, the library has been united with 13 other institute and seminar libraries under the umbrella of the Göttingen State and University Library . For this purpose, the new building of the “Cultural Studies Center” was built near the campus, into which the various institutes and seminars have moved.

Publications

So far, two historical atlases have been produced at the Institute for Historical State Research, and until 1985 the “ Blätter für deutsche Landesgeschichte ” was maintained here. The “Handbook of the History of Lower Saxony” is being developed in cooperation with the Historical Commission for Lower Saxony and Bremen .

Two series appear in the institute, on the one hand the publications of the Institute for Historical Research and on the other hand the Göttingen research on regional history .

Publications of the Institute for Historical Research

  • Volume 1: Jäger, Helmut (ed.), Methodical manual for local history research in Lower Saxony.
  • Volume 2: Historical and cultural excursion map of Lower Saxony
    • Part 1: Jäger, Helmut (Ed.), Blatt Duderstadt, 1: 50000 with explanatory booklet, 62 pages, a city map of Duderstadt, 1964
    • Part 2: Kühlhorn, Erhard (Ed.), Sheet Osterode am Harz, 1: 50000 with explanatory booklet, 117 pages, one map each of Northeim and Osterode, 1971
    • Part 3: Kühlhorn, Erhard (Ed.), Blatt Göttingen, 1: 50000 with explanatory booklet, 195 pages, one map each of Adelebsen, Dransfeld and Göttingen, 1972
    • Part 4: Kühlhorn, Erhard (Ed.), Blatt Moringen, 1: 50000 with explanatory booklet, 244 pages, one map each of Moringen, Hardegsen, Nörten-Hardenberg and Northeim, 1977
    • Part 5: Kühlhorn, Erhard (ed.), Sheets Diepholz and Rahden, 1: 50000 with explanatory booklet, 80 pages, 6 plates, one map each of Diepholz and Rahden, 1978
    • Part 6: Kühlhorn, Erhard (Ed.), Blatt Wolfsburg, 1: 50000 with explanatory booklet, 167 pages, 15 illustrations, one city map each of Fallersleben, Oebisfelde, Vorsfelde and 2 urban development plans, 1978
    • Part 7: Kühlhorn, Erhard (Ed.), Esens sheet, 1: 50000 with explanatory booklet, 83 pages, 6 plates, 1 Esen city map, 1 map of the Dorum area, 1 field map, 1978
    • Part 8: Kühlhorn, Erhard (Ed.), Blatt Lüneburg, 1: 50000 with explanatory booklet, 171 pages, 4 plates, a city map of Lüneburg, 1982
    • Part 9: Kühlhorn, Erhard and Gerhard Streich (eds.), Blatt Stadthagen, 1: 50000 with explanatory booklet, 126 pages, 8 plates, one map each of Bückeburg, Obernkirchen, Sachsenhagen, Stadthagen, 1985
    • Part 10: Kühlhorn, Erhard and Gerhard Streich (eds.), Sheet Wangerland / Hooksiel-West, 1: 50000 with explanatory booklet, 182 pages, 12 illustrations, 14 plates, 1986
    • Part 11: Kühlhorn, Erhard and Gerhard Streich (eds.), Sheet Rotenburg (Wümme), 1: 50000 with explanatory booklet, 200 pages, 35 illustrations, 1 folding table, 1989
    • Part 12: Streich, Gerhard (Ed.), Blatt Barsinghausen, 1: 50000 with explanatory booklet, 142 pages, 27 illustrations, 1994
    • Part 13: Streich, Gerhard (Ed.), Blatt Höxter, 1: 50000 with explanatory booklet, 124 pages, 27 illustrations, 1996, ISBN 3-89534-187-8
    • Part 14: Hüttermann, Armin and Gerhard Streich (eds.), Blatt Vechta, 1: 50000 with explanatory booklet, 116 pages, 21 illustrations, 1994, ISBN 3-89534-170-3
    • Part 15: Streich, Gerhard (Ed.), Sheet Holzminden, 1: 50000 with explanatory booklet, 138 pages, 32 illustrations, 1997, ISBN 3-89534-214-9
    • Part 16: Streich, Gerhard (Ed.), Blätter Hannover and Hannover-Nord, 1: 50000 with explanatory booklet, 320 pages, 66 illustrations, 2007, ISBN 978-3-89534-342-1 .
    • Part 17: At the Wieden, Brage and Gerhard Streich (eds.), Harsefeld-Stade sheet, 1: 50000 with explanatory booklet, 140 pages, 30 illustrations, 2003, ISBN 3-89534-427-3
  • Volume 3: Schnath, Georg , selected contributions to the history of Lower Saxony, 375 pages, 23 plates, 1968
  • Volume 4: Petke, Wolfgang, The Counts of Wöltingerode-Wohldenberg. Aristocratic rule, kingship and sovereignty in the northwest Harz in the 12th and 13th centuries, 639 pages, 5 maps, 2 family tables, 1971
  • Volume 5: Wrase, Siegfried, The beginnings of coupling in the area of ​​the former Kingdom of Hanover, 115 pages, 6 cards in a pocket, 1973
  • Volume 6: Wilmanns, Manfred, The land area policy of the city of Bremen around 1400 with special consideration of the castle policy of the council in the ore monastery and in Friesland, 286 pages, 2 folding maps, 1973
  • Volume 7: Müller-Scheeßel, Karsten, Jürgen Christian Findorff and the Kurhannoversche moor colonization in the 18th century
  • Volume 8: Mohrmann, Wolf-Dieter, Lauenburg or Wittenberg? On the problem of the Saxon course dispute up to the middle of the 14th century, 112 Be, 1975
  • Volume 9: Bloß, Otto, The older glassworks in Südniedersachsen, 214 pages, 1977
  • Volume 10: Upmeyer, Dietrich, The Lords of Oldershausen and the Development of the Westerhof Court, 318 pages, 10 folding plans in a pocket, 1978
  • Volume 11: Sachse, Burkhard, Social differentiation and regional distribution of the population of Göttingen in the 18th century, 149 pages, 21 folding plans in a slipcase, 1978
  • Volume 12: Hofmeister, Adolf E., Settlement and constitution of the Stader Elbmarschen in the Middle Ages, Part I: The Stader Elbmarschen before the colonization of the 12th century, 270 pages, 6 folding plates, 1979
  • Volume 13: Hellfaier, Detlef, studies on the history of the gentlemen from Oberg up to the year 1400, 288 pages, 1 family tree, 1 map, 1979
  • Volume 14: Hofmeister, Adolf E., Settlement and constitution of the Stader Elbmarschen in the Middle Ages, Part II: The Holler colonization and the state communities Land Kehdingen and Altes Land, 455 pages, 14 maps on 9 folding maps in a pocket, 1980
  • Volume 15: Stanelle, Udo, The Hildesheimer Stiftsfehde in reports and chronicles of the 16th century. A contribution to the history of Lower Saxony, 203 pages, 1982
  • Volume 16: Roseman, Johan Gilges (called Klöntrup), Low German-Westphaelic Dictionary I, Volume 1: A to M. Edited by Wolfgang Kramer, Hermann Niebaum and Ulrich Scheuermann, 308 pages, 1982
  • Volume 17: Roseman, Johan Gilges (called Klöntrup), Low German-Westphaelic Dictionary II, Volume 2: N to Z. Ed. By Wolfgang Kramer, Hermann Niebaum and Ulrich Scheuermann, 295 pages, 1984
  • Volume 18: Boetticher, Annette von , The Lehnregister der Herren von Bortfeld and von Hahnensee from the year 1476. Edition and commentary, 116 pages, 1 map, 1983
  • Volume 19: Mörke, Olaf, Councilors and Citizens in the Reformation. Social Groups and Church Change in the Welf Hanseatic Cities of Lüneburg, Braunschweig and Göttingen, 413 pages, 1983
  • Volume 20: Heyken, Enno, The Chronicle of the Bishops of Verden. Research on sources, authors, editors and editors, 138 pages, 1983
  • Volume 21: Bachmann, Karl, Die Pensionner der Lüneburger Saline (1200-1370), 286 pages, with text graphics, 1983
  • Volume 22: Gresky, Reinhard, The Finances of the Welfs in the 13th and 14th Centuries, 434 pages, 1984
  • Volume 23: Lamschus, Christian, Emden under the rule of the Cirksena. Studies on the rulership structure of the East Frisian royal seat 1470-1527, 609 pages, 1984
  • Volume 24: Pischke, Gudrun, Die Landesteilungen der Welfen in the Middle Ages, 316 pages, 10 colored maps, 16 tables, 6 overviews, 1 graph, 1987
  • Volume 25: Stanelle, Udo, Die Hildesheimer Bischofschronik des Hans Wildefüer , 235 pages, 6 illustrations, 1986
  • Volume 26: Reinbold, Michael, Die Lüneburger Sate. A contribution to the constitutional history of Lower Saxony in the late Middle Ages, 274 pages, 4 folding maps, 1987
  • Volume 27: Weise, Erich, History of Nienover Castle in Solling, 216 pages, 7 illustrations, 1989
  • Volume 28: Klausa, Alice, Friedrich Karl von Hardenberg (1696-1763), 172 pages, 1 ill. And 1 family tree, 1990
  • Volume 29: Heyken, Enno, The altars and vicarages in Verden Cathedral. A contribution to the legal, economic and social history of a medieval sacred space, 314 pages, 1 illustration, 1990
  • Volume 30: Neitzert, Dieter, The city of Göttingen leads a feud, 165 pages, 8 illustrations, 1992
  • Volume 31: Göbel, Ilka, The mill in the city. Müllerhandwerk in Göttingen, Hameln and Hildesheim, 272 pages, 9 illustrations, 1993, ISBN 3-927085-87-1
  • Volume 32: Stübig, Rikwa, Höxter's Path to National Socialism, 207 pages, 26 tables, 1992, ISBN 3-7848-3662-3
  • Volume 33: Steenweg, Helge, Göttingen around 1400. Social structure and social topography of a medieval city, 384 pages, 111 illustrations, 1994, ISBN 3-89534-112-6
  • Volume 34: Kühlhorn, Erhard, The Middle Ages Wüstungen in Südniedersachsen, 1848 pages in four volumes, 229 illustrations, 1994-1996, ISBN 3-89534-130-4
  • Volume 35: Mindermann, Arend, Nobility in the City of the Late Middle Ages. Göttingen and Stade 1300 to 1600, 512 pages, 16 illustrations, 1996, ISBN 3-89534-124-X
  • Volume 36: Kaufold, Claudia, A Musician as a Diplomat. Abbé Agostino Steffani in hannoverschen Diensten (1688-1703), 356 pages, 1 fig., 1997, ISBN 3-89534-195-9
  • Volume 37: Ohainski, Uwe and Jürgen Udolph, Lower Saxony Place Name Book, Volume I: The place names of the district and the city of Hanover, 616 pages, 1998
  • Volume 38: Diehl, Gerhard, Exempla for a changing world. Studies on North German historiography in the 15th and 16th centuries, 432 pages, 2000, ISBN 3-89534-257-2
  • Volume 39: Wilke, Jürgen, Die Ebstorfer Weltkarte, 352 p. + 160 p .; 200 b / w illustrations, 8 color illustrations, 1 map, 2000, ISBN 3-89534-335-8
  • Volume 40: Ohainski, Uwe and Jürgen Udolph, Lower Saxon Place Name Book, Volume II: The place names of the district of Osterode, 272 pages, 1 map, 2000, ISBN 3-89534-370-6
  • Volume 41: Aufgebauer, Peter et al. (Ed.), Johannes Mellinger: Atlas des Fürstentums Lüneburg around 1600, 160 p., 5 b / w illustrations, 46 color illustrations, 2 maps, 2001, ISBN 3-89534-391-9
  • Volume 42: Kruppa, Natalie, Die Grafen von Dassel 1097-1337 / 38, 664 p., 20 fig., 2002
  • Volume 43: Casemir, Kirstin, Lower Saxony Place Name Book, Volume III: The place names of the Wolfenbüttel district and the city of Salzgitter, 635 pages, 10 maps, 2003, ISBN 3-89534-483-4
  • Volume 44: Casemir, Kirstin / Ohainski, Uwe / Udolph, Jürgen, Lower Saxony Place Name Book, Volume IV: The Place Names of the District of Göttingen, 533 pages, 1 map, 2003, ISBN 3-89534-494-X
  • Volume 45: Loesche, Dietrich, Staatliche Bauverwaltung in Niedersachsen: from the local building officer in the agricultural district to the state construction management, 744 S., Kt., Graph. Illustrations, 2004, ISBN 3-89534-545-8
  • Volume 46: Storz, Harald, Acting beneficially as an enlightened Israelite: the Jewish doctor Philipp Wolfers (1796-1832), 252 pages, 2005, ISBN 3-89534-546-6
  • Volume 47: Casemir, Kirstin / Menzel, Franziska / Ohainski, Uwe, Lower Saxony Place Name Book, Volume V: The Place Names of the District of Northeim, 528 pages, 2 maps, 2005, ISBN 3-89534-607-1
  • Volume 48: Arend, Sabine et al. (Ed.), Diversity and Topicality of the Middle Ages. Festschrift for Wolfgang Petke on his 65th birthday, 750 pages, 2007 (2nd revised edition), ISBN 978-3-89534-728-3
  • Volume 49: Biermann, Friedhelm, The Weser Area in the High and Late Middle Ages. Aristocratic rule between Guelph power and spiritual territories, 800 pages, 2 illustrations, 2007, ISBN 978-3-89534-649-1
  • Volume 50: Körber, Karl-Otto, Lower Saxony. Maps and history from the beginning to the present, 304 pp., 15 figs., 105 maps, 2007, ISBN 3-89534-650-0
  • Volume 51: Casemir, Kirstin and Uwe Ohainski, Lower Saxon Place Name Book, Volume VI: The place names of the district of Holzminden, 312 pages, 2 maps, 2007, ISBN 978-3-89534-671-2 .
  • Volume 52: Oldermann, Renate (eds.), Built enclosure. Function and architecture of medieval monastery rooms, 244 p., 137 black and white 20 color illus., 2008, ISBN 978-3-89534-702-3
  • Volume 53: Casemir, Kirstin / Menzel, Franziska / Ohainski, Uwe, Lower Saxony Place Name Book, Volume VII: The place names of the Helmstedt district and the city of Wolfsburg, approx. 448 pages, 2009, ISBN 978-3-89534-823-5
  • Volume 54: Josef Dolle (arrangement), Die Schatzregister des Fürstentums Göttingen 1418-1527, Part 1: Edition, Part 2: Introduction and description of the manuscript, 1000 p., 10 bw. Fig. 16 color Fig. 2 maps., 2011 , ISBN 978-3-89534-834-1
  • Volume 55: Wilfried Zilz, The local dictionary from Eltze in the Hanover region. Practical and theoretical studies on syntopic lexicography, 560 pp., 2010, ISBN 978-3-89534-885-3
  • Volume 56/1 - 56/4: Josef Dolle with the collaboration of Dennis Kniehauer (Ed.), Lower Saxony monastery book. Directory of the monasteries, monasteries, comedians and beguinages in Lower Saxony and Bremen from the beginnings to 1810, 4 volumes, 2296 pages, 4 color illus. 16 bw. Maps, 3 bw. Folding tables, 1 colored folding map, 2012, ISBN 978-3 -89534-956-0

Göttingen research on state history

  • Volume 1: Aufgebauer, Peter , Uwe Ohainski and Ernst Schubert (eds.), Festgabe for Dieter Neitzert on the occasion of his 65th birthday, 432 pages, 35 illustrations, 1998, ISBN 3-89534-224-6
  • Volume 2: Driever, Rainer, Authoritative Standardization of Social Reality. The municipal statutes of the 14th and 15th centuries in southern Lower Saxony and northern Hesse, 280 p., 2000, ISBN 3-89534-254-8
  • Volume 3: Mindermann, Arend, the most famous doctor in the world. Bishop Johann Hake, named von Gottingen (around 1280-1349), 136 p., 3 fig., 2000, ISBN 3-89534-324-2
  • Volume 4: Wolf-Nikolaus Schmidt-Salzen, The estates in the Principality of Lüneburg between 1430 and 1546, 269 pages, 2001, ISBN 3-89534-394-3
  • Volume 5: Axel Janowitz, Die Lüneburger Saline in the 18th and 19th centuries, 415 pages, 2003, ISBN 3-89534-435-4
  • Volume 6: Stephan Kelichhaus, Goslar around 1600, 252 pages, 2003, ISBN 3-89534-436-2
  • Volume 7: Maik Lehmberg (ed.), Words and names. Festgabe for Ulrich Scheuermann on the occasion of his 65th birthday, 97 pages, 2003, ISBN 3-89534-487-7
  • Volume 8: Park, Heung-Sik, shopkeepers and Hökergenossenschaften in the Middle Ages: trading conditions and ways of life in Lüneburg, Goslar and Hildesheim, 310 S., 2005, ISBN 3-89534-528-8
  • Volume 9: Stellmacher, Dieter (Ed.), The Lower Saxon Dictionary in Ammerland: Reports and communications from the workplace, 113 S., 2004, ISBN 3-89534-559-8
  • Volume 10: Stellmacher, Dieter (Ed.), The Lower Saxony Dictionary in the Oldenburger Münsterland: Reports and communications from the job, 118 p., 2006, ISBN 3-89534-620-9
  • Volume 11: Herges, Catherine, Enlightenment through competitions? The economic price questions of the Royal Society of Sciences in Göttingen, 272 S., 2007, ISBN 978-3-89534-681-1
  • Volume 12: Nück, Wolfgang-Dietrich, Graf Sigebodo von Scharzfeld: On the history of the Counts of Scharzfeld and Lauterberg (1131 / 1132-1399 / 1400) and on the beginnings of the city of Münden, 388 pages, 2008, ISBN 978-3- 89534-692-7
  • Volume 13: Ohainski, Uwe (ed.), The Lehnregister der Herrschaften Everstein and Homburg, 184 S., 2008, ISBN 978-3-89534-713-9
  • Volume 14: Stellmacher, Dieter (Ed.), The Lower Saxony Dictionary in the Peiner Raum: Reports and communications from the workplace, 116 pages, 2008, ISBN 978-3-89534-724-5
  • Volume 15: Martens, Matthias, Invented Traditions? The establishment of the Institute for Historical Research at the University of Göttingen, 160 p., 2008, ISBN 978-3-89534-745-0
  • Volume 16: Matzke, Ulrike, England and the Empire of the Ottonians in the 10th century. Relationship and perception of Anglo-Saxons and Saxons between independence and togetherness, 184 pp., 2009, ISBN 978-3-89534-756-6
  • Volume 17: Schröder, Henning, Slavs and Germans in the Hanoverian Wendland. Aspects of the history of perception in the early modern period, 2010, ISBN 978-3-89534-767-2
  • Volume 18: Schütte, Leopold, Schulte, Weichbild, Farmers. Selected fonts for his 70th birthday. Published by Claudia Maria Korsmeier, approx. 300 pages, 2010, ISBN 978-3-89534-858-7
  • Volume 19: Stellmacher, Dieter (Ed.), The Lower Saxony Dictionary in Bad Fallingbostel. Reports and communications from the workplace, 116 pages, 2011, ISBN 978-3-89534-879-2
  • Volume 20: Scheuermann, Ulrich, Field Name Collection and Field Name Research in Lower Saxony, 504 S., 2011, ISBN 978-3-89534-890-7

literature

  • Matthias Martens, Invented Traditions? The establishment of the Institute for Historical Research at the University of Göttingen (Göttingen Research on Regional History 15), Göttingen 2008, ISBN 978-3-89534-745-0 .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Martin Dröge: Spaces, Borders, Identities - Westphalia as an object of state and regional historical research
  2. Matthias Martens, Invented Traditions? The establishment of the Institute for Historical State Research at the University of Göttingen (Göttingen Research on State History 15), Göttingen 2008, p. 98.
  3. Martens, Invented Traditions? , P. 78. See Georg Schnath, Heimat und Staat. Considerations of a Lower Saxony , Hanover 1958.
  4. Martens, Invented Traditions? , P. 96.
  5. Martens, Invented Traditions? , P. 107f.
  6. Martens, Invented Traditions? , Pp. 135f.
  7. ^ New building of the cultural studies center