Sandra Dahlke

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Sandra Dahlke (* 1968 in Kassel ) is a German historian .

Life

Dahlke studied history and Slavic studies in Paris , Cologne and Hamburg from 1990–1998 .

In 1998 Dahlke became a research assistant at the University of the Federal Armed Forces in Hamburg . In 2005 she was at the University of Hamburg with her dissertation on Yemelyan Yaroslavsky graduated . In 2006 she began the research project on spectacular criminal trials in the Russian empire of the immediate post-reform period (1860s and 1870s). 2007–2008 and 2011 she was a scholarship holder of the Maison des Sciences de l'Homme (MSH) and the DAAD visiting scholar at the Center d'études des mondes russe, caucasien et center-européen (CERCEC) at the École des hautes études en sciences sociales(EHESS) in Paris. In 2011 she was a visiting scholar in the Emmy-Noether research group “Paths to Finding Law in Ethnically and Religiously Mixed Societies” at the Institute for Slavic Studies at the University of Leipzig .

In 2012 Dahlke went to the German Historical Institute Moscow (DHI Moscow) as an annual scholarship holder. In 2013 she became deputy director there, and since October 1, 2018 she has been director of the DHI Moscow as successor to Nikolaus Katzers . Her main research interests are the history of Russia in the second half of the 19th century and the history of the Soviet Union . She examined life under Stalinism and analyzed the anti-religious campaigns . She carried out corresponding investigations into society in Tsarist Russia.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d German Historical Institute Moscow: Dr. Sandra Dahlke (accessed May 11, 2020).
  2. ^ S. Dahlke: Individual and rule in Stalinism: Emel'jan Jaroslavskij (1878-1943) . Munich 2010.
  3. Max Weber Foundation : Sandra Dahlke is the new director of the DHI Moscow (accessed on May 11, 2020).
  4. ^ S. Dahlke: The anti-religious campaigns of the young Soviet state and the wicked movement . In: Religion and Society in East and West (Topic Dossier: 100 Years of the Russian Revolution) . No. 4-5 , 2017.
  5. S. Dahlke: Abbesses, ladies-in-waiting and entrepreneurs: the religious and the secular in autobiographical texts by noble women in Russia in the 19th and early 20th centuries . In: Research Colloquium on Eastern European History - Prof. Dr. Frank Grüner, Bielefeld University . July 2, 2019 ( [1] [accessed May 11, 2020]).