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Tagber: In between violence, sexualization and intimacy. Genderperspektiven auf Nationalsozialismus und Holocaust
By:
on
Münster, 21.03.2024-22.03.2024, Geschichtsort Villa ten Hompel (Münster); in Kooperation mit dem LWL-Institut für westfälische Regionalgeschichte und dem Program in Jewish Studies an der University of Colorado Boulder
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Zs: Journal of Medieval History 50 (2024), 1
By:
on
C.M. Woolgar: Journal of Medieval History (JMH)
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Konf: Der Prozess der Wiedergutmachung von NS-Unrecht und die Folgen
By:
on
Berlin, 27.05.2024-27.05.2024, Gedenkstätte in der JVA Wolfenbüttel/Stiftung niedersächsische Gedenkstätten, Bewerbungsschluss: 21.05.2024
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CFP: 10. Interdisziplinärer Workshop Kritische Sexarbeitsforschung
By:
on
Graz, 15.11.2024-16.11.2024, Gesellschaft für Sexarbeits- und Prostitutionsforschung (GSPF)
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Konf: Arbeitskreis geistliche Frauen im europäischen Mittelalter (AGFEM): Aktuelle Forschungsdiskurse und -projekte
By:
on
Ellwangen, 24.10.2024-26.10.2024, AGFEM (Arbeitskreis Geistliche Frauen im europäischen Mittelalter), Bewerbungsschluss: 01.06.2024
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Konf: Sources (Un)Recognised. New Research on Urbanism and Architecture of the 'Third Reich‘ in Occupied Poland
By:
on
Turek, 09.05.2024-10.04.2024, University of Kalisz (Dr. Makary Górzyński), Nordost-Institute, Lüneburg (Dr. Katja Bernhardt), University of the Arts, Poznań (Dr. Aleksandra Paradowska)
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CFP: Nazi Persecution – Person Data and Data Standards
By:
on
München, 29.10.2024-31.10.2024, Leibniz Institute for Contemporary History / Dachau Concentration Camp Memorial Site, Bewerbungsschluss: 31.07.2024
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Job: 1 Wiss. Referent:in (m/w/d) "Sammlungsschwerpunkte Kunststoffe / Alltagskultur" (Landschaftsverband Rheinland, Oberhausen)
By:
on
Oberhausen, , Landschaftsverband Rheinland (LVR), Bewerbungsschluss: 26.05.2024
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Job: 8 x 0,75 Dissertationsstellen "Alte Geschichte, Altorientalistik, Klassischer Archäologie und Neuerer Deutscher Literatur" (Univ. Innsbruck)
By:
on
Innsbruck, 01.10.2024-30.09.2027, Universität Innsbruck, Bewerbungsschluss: 31.05.2024
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Job: 0,5 Wiss. Mitarb. (w/m/d) "Nordamerikanische Geschichte" (Univ. Erfurt)
By:
on
Erfurt, 01.09.2024, Philosophischen Fakultät, Professur für Nordamerikanische Geschichte der Universität Erfurt, Bewerbungsschluss: 30.05.2024
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Weitere Beiträge
SEP
27
Changing Courses for Archaeology in Louisiana’s Bayous
By:
Nicole Grinnan
on
SEP
27
By Steven J. Filoromo, RPA, TerraXplorations, Inc., Baton Rouge, Louisiana Bayous are subject to constant change over the long course of history. The rate of change today is unprecedented. As a result, many archaeologists working in southern Louisiana are developing unique approaches to understand the changing environments and their heritage at risk. Mentions of Louisiana’s... The post Changing Courses for Archaeology in Louisiana’s Bayous appeared first on Society for Historical Archaeology.
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DEC
04
Threats to Our Underwater Cultural Heritage
By:
Nicole Grinnan
on
DEC
04
By Charlotte Jarvis and Ole Varmer Bottom Trawling Ecologists and fishery scientists have been concerned about bottom trawling for centuries. The first known reference to the activity is in a 1375 English Parliamentary document and that initial mention highlights the destructive nature of the practice (Petition by the Commons to King Edward III, 1376 seen... The post Threats to Our Underwater Cultural Heritage appeared first on Society for Historical Archaeology.
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JUL
05
Historic Shipwrecks of The Red Sea
By:
Nicole Grinnan
on
JUL
05
By Alicia Johnson, Graduate Researcher, Alexandria Centre For Maritime Archaeology & Underwater Cultural Heritage While scouring the depths of the Red Sea in 1955, Jacques Cousteau, a famed explorer, discovered the famous Thistlegorm, a British merchant vessel submerged off the Southern tip of the Sinai. The extensive documentation and international media coverage of Cousteau’s discovery... The post Historic Shipwrecks of The Red Sea appeared first on Society for Historical Archaeology.
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JUN
14
Climate Stories!! How HARC has adapted Storytelling Methods to Share Archaeological Sites at Risk from Changing Climates
By:
Nicole Grinnan
on
JUN
14
By Allyson Ropp, Ph.D. Candidate, East Carolina University Think back to your favorite story. What made it so exciting? Was it the characters? Was it the conflict or problem that the main characters needed to solve? Or was it how the characters ended up solving the problem? Maybe it was all three! What all good... The post Climate Stories!! How HARC has adapted Storytelling Methods to Share Archaeological Sites at Risk from Changing Climates appeared first on Society for Historical Archaeology.
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MAY
16
Shipworms and Gribbles and Pill Bugs, Oh My!
By:
Nicole Grinnan
on
MAY
16
By Susan B.M. Langley, Maryland State Underwater Archaeologist 2023 celebrates the 35th anniversary of the Maryland Maritime Archaeology Program In Maryland, April is Archaeology Month and May is Preservation Month, so this is an appropriate time to consider these tiny creatures that pose a large threat to the preservation of submerged archaeological resources. While these... The post Shipworms and Gribbles and Pill Bugs, Oh My! appeared first on Society for Historical Archaeology.
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MAR
30
Using Machine Learning and Spatial Statistics to Measure the Geometric Structure of Archaeological Spaces
By:
Nicole Grinnan
on
MAR
30
By Lindsey Cochran, Assistant Professor, East Tennessee State University; Grant Snitker, Director of the Cultural Resource Sciences and Fire Lab, New Mexico Consortium An urgent question for archaeologists as we race to react to the climate crisis is: what are we losing? The biased nature of the collective archaeological dataset presents an unequal assessment of... The post Using Machine Learning and Spatial Statistics to Measure the Geometric Structure of Archaeological Spaces appeared first on Society for Historical Archaeology.
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FEB
27
Drowning in the Drink: Climate Change and the Threat to Coastal Moonshine Still Sites
By:
Nicole Grinnan
on
FEB
27
By Katherine G. Parker, Doctoral candidate, Department of Anthropology, University of Tennessee, Knoxville When first I met with Bob Morgan, then the Heritage Program Manager for Francis Marion National Forest (FMNF) in South Carolina, in 2019 to discuss my interest in researching families involved in moonshining on land that the Forest Service now owned, he... The post Drowning in the Drink: Climate Change and the Threat to Coastal Moonshine Still Sites appeared first on Society for Historical Archaeology.
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FEB
13
Historical Archaeology and the New Political Landscape in 2023
By:
Nicole Grinnan
on
FEB
13
By Terry Klein, Executive Director, SRI Foundation The new year brings a news political reality to Washington, D.C. The most significant political change from last year is the Republican takeover of the U.S. House of Representatives. While the Republican majority is narrow, it gives Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) the authority to decide which bills receive... The post Historical Archaeology and the New Political Landscape in 2023 appeared first on Society for Historical Archaeology.
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FEB
01
“Tech Appeal” in Coastal Archaeological Site Monitoring: Experiences with Terrestrial Laser Scanning and Photogrammetry in Northwest Florida
By:
Nicole Grinnan
on
FEB
01
Nicole Grinnan, Research Associate, Florida Public Archaeology Network; PhD Candidate, University of St Andrews; with contributions from Jeffery Robinson, Master’s Student, University of West Florida This blog post has been adapted from a presentation given at The Society for Historical Archaeology’s 2023 Conference on Historical and Underwater Archaeology in Lisbon, Portugal. Though archaeology is sometimes accused... The post “Tech Appeal” in Coastal Archaeological Site Monitoring: Experiences with Terrestrial Laser Scanning and Photogrammetry in Northwest Florida appeared first on Society for Historical Archaeology.
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NOV
02
North Carolina Archaeological Sites – Approaches to Handling Climate Threats
By:
Mark Freeman
on
NOV
02
Allyson Ropp, Historic Preservation Archaeological Specialist, NC Office of State Archaeology; Ph.D. Student, Integrated Coastal Studies, East Carolina University As I wrote about this time last year, North Carolina’s coastal archaeological sites are in a constant state of change. We are currently working to identify, document, and mitigate the effects of climatic change on these... The post North Carolina Archaeological Sites – Approaches to Handling Climate Threats appeared first on Society for Historical Archaeology.
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