Brauner, Christina (Hrsg.); Dürr, Renate (Hrsg.); Hahn, Philip (Hrsg.); Overkamp, Anne Sophie (Hrsg.)
Encountering the Global in Early Modern Germany Microhistories of Mobility, Materiality, and Belonging
Edited by Christina Brauner, Renate Dürr, Philip Hahn and Anne Sophie Overkamp
- Oxford Berghahn Books 2025
- 386 Seiten
- Studies in German History 30 .
E-Book / Open Access
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List of IllustrationsAcknowledgementsIntroduction: Globalizing Early Modern GermanyChristina Brauner, Renate Dürr, Philip Hahn, Anne Sophie Overkamp, and Simon SiemianowskiPart I: Mobility: Moving and BelongingChapter 1. Their Last Days in Europe. Germans on the Amsterdam VOC Fleet of 1775Jelle van Lottum and Lodewijk PetramChapter 2. Between Beutelsbach and Batavia: A Coopers Career and His Involvement in Colonial ViolencePhilip HahnChapter 3. Encountering Opportunities: Inheritances, Knowledge Gaps, and Invented Global Connections in the German Hinterland Lukas WisselChapter 4. Between Slavery and Exoticism: People of Color at the Dresden CourtRebekka von MallinckrodtPart II: Globality: The World of the HometownChapter 5. Bringing the World to German Home Towns? Lutheran Baptisms in the Context of Abduction and SlaveryRenate DürrChapter 6. Two Inventories - Two Braunschweigs: Hometown Germans and the Eighteenth-Century Slave EconomyEve RosenhaftChapter 7. Encountering the Middle East in Early Modern Germany: A Prince of Palestine in Nuremberg, 1778-1779Tobias P. GrafChapter 8. A Small Town in Germany and Its Global Dis:connectionsAnne Sophie OverkampChapter 9. Putting the Hanse on the Map: The Civitates Orbs Terrarum (1572-1617) as a Mediated Global EncounterSuzie HermánPart III: Materiality: Local Tastes for the GlobalChapter 10. Global Goods, Familiar Strangers, and Some Local Knowledge of the World: A View from the German-Dutch Borderlands, ca. 1700Christina BraunerChapter 11. Global Food in Southwestern Germany around 1770Daniel MenningChapter 12. Reading Materials: Gift Exchanges between Sonora, Spain, and LucerneSimon SiemianowskiChapter 13. Global Itineraries, Curative Effects, and Sacred Scents: Eaglewood Rosaries in Early Modern German Material CultureAnne MarissChapter 14. Colonial Objects in the Cabinet of Curiosities? Christoph Weickmanns Outlandish Things in UlmKim SiebenhünerPart IV: Going Beyond: Perspectives and AgendasConclusion: German Global Microhistory, or: The How and The WhyUlrike StrasserAppendix 6.1Appendix 6.2Index