Project Details
FOR 5663: Ashkenaz in New Environments: Actors, Practices and Spaces in Central European Jewish History during the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries
Subject Area
Humanities
Social and Behavioural Sciences
Social and Behavioural Sciences
Term
since 2025
Project identifier
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 517713369
The Research Group aims at a deeper understanding of the life-worlds of Ashkenazi Jews in the transition period between what is commonly called 'the Middle Ages' and 'the Early Modern era'. The roughly 200 years since the onset of widespread expulsion events around 1390 and down to the demographic stabilization of Jewish communities under the repressive conditions of confessional statehood saw fundamental social changes. They brought about massive challenges for the continuity of Jewish life in Central Europe. This chapter in Jewish history is not yet well understood. Ist phenomenology is marked, first, by disruption, dislocation, and migration, but then also by the emergence of new life-worlds: more often than previously, Jews settled in places outside the medieval core regions of Jewish life in the German-speaking area (Hebr., ashkenaz); those who stayed more often lived outside the main towns and cities. The Jewish map of Central Europe as a whole underwent significant changes. These shifts of settlement structure and cultural environments went hand in hand with changes in the political, legal, economic, linguistic, and religious conditions but also in religious, cultural, and daily practice. The changes occurred in social spaces of varying extent and structure and were strongly influenced by local and regional mobility as well as by long-distance migration. Understanding them requires more than a survey of the framework conditions; rather, it is indispensable to pay more attention to the Jewish agents involved, to their geographical movements over the course of time, to their personal relations and forms of self-organization. An adequate account of these processes therefore requires new methods of managing and combining the sources. The Research Group will address this task in a combination of Judaic Studies approaches with those of other historical disciplines (Medieval History, Early Modern History, Comparative Regional History) and the Digital Humanities. The six individual projects of the first funding period will investigate, on the one hand, the Jewish settlement conditions in the German Empire and, on the other hand, the new settlements that emerged beyond, in Italy and Poland. Prosopographic research will highlight the ties between Jews in these Regions as well as their migration and communication. At the center of the scientific work program is a joint data management, which will result in the creation and development of the Index fontium historiae Judicae, an online resource for future researchers.
DFG Programme
Research Units
Projects
- Ashkenazi Jews in new urban life-worlds of Eastern Europe: the example of Greater Poland (1386–1434) (Applicant Müller, Jörg )
- Books, their Makers and Owners in an Age of Migration (Fifteenth to Sixteenth Centuries) (Applicant Kogman-Appel, Katrin )
- Continuity and Change in the Regional Organization of Jewish Life in the German Lands between the Middle Ages and the Early Modern Period (Applicant Raspe, Lucia )
- Coordination Funds (Applicant Laux, Stephan )
- Data on Jewish individuals in the 15th and 16th centuries: computational modelling and analysis (Applicants Cluse, Christoph ; Schöch, Christof )
- Extra muros, intra muros – Access regulations towards Jews in the imperial and autonomous cities of the early modern period between norm and practice (Applicant Laux, Stephan )
- Interaction and Organization: Ashkenazi Jews in Northern Italy During the 15th and Early 16th Centuries (Applicant Clemens, Lukas )
Spokesperson
Professor Dr. Stephan Laux