Peter Wiesflecker

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Peter Wiesflecker (* 1965 ) is an Austrian archivist and regional historian .

At the University of Vienna in 1989 he wrote his diploma thesis Studies on Habsburg Marriage and Family Policy in the Age of Emperor Franz Joseph I Resigning from the Imperial House and Marriage with Commoners and in 1992 the dissertation The Nobilitations of Emperor Charles I of Austria. Studies on the Austrian nobility at the end of the Danube Monarchy . In 1998, at the Institute for Austrian Historical Research , he presented the state examination work "Hie ist verschribn der Adl in Karnndtn ..." Studies on the list of nobility in Jakob Unrest's Carinthian Chronicle with a commentary on property and family history on the families of the lower nobility . In 2009 he completed the university course in Canon Law for lawyers as an LL.M. from. He works in the Styrian Provincial Archives as the head of special collections, reprography and has been a lecturer in archives at the University of Graz since 2009 , where he wrote his habilitation thesis Alter und neue Adel. Structure and change of aristocratic society in Austria from the 16th to the 20th century . He is also a member of the State Historical Commission for Styria .

Fonts (selection)

  • Wernberg. From the history of a Carinthian community . Heyn, Klagenfurt 2001, ISBN 3-85366-967-0 .
  • Feistritz on the Gail. A village at the intersection of three cultures . Community of Feistritz an der Gail, Feistritz an der Gail 2003, ISBN 3-85391-223-0 .
  • Hohenthurn. History of a living space and its people . Heyn, Klagenfurt 2009, ISBN 978-3-7084-0338-0 .
  • "We have a strict exam ...". Canon law and canon law historical aspects of the papal enclosure using the example of the Benedictine Abbey of St. Gabriel / Bertholdstein (= General Scientific Series. Volume 15). Leykam, Graz 2010, ISBN 978-3-7011-0179-5 (also master's thesis, Vienna 2009).
  • "... you are not expected to be saints ...". Structure and transformation of spiritual women's communities in the 19th and 20th centuries using the example of the Graz Carmelite Sisters, the Benedictine Sisters of St. Gabriel and the Vorau Sisters of Mary (= General Scientific Series. Volume 39) (= Research on the historical regional studies of Styria. Volume 72). Leykam, Graz 2015, ISBN 978-3-7011-0333-1 (also dissertation, Graz 2014).

Web links