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Ellen Widder (born 8 September 1955) is a German historian.
Ellen Widder studied history, geography, education and art history at the Universität Münster from 1975 to 1982. There she passed her first state examination in 1982. With Heinz Stoob she received her doctorate at the University of Münster in 1986 with a thesis on the rule of travel Karls IV. south of the Alps. [1] From 1986 to 1989 she was a research assistant at the Collaborative Research Centre 231 "Carriers, Fields, Forms of Pragmatic Writing in the Middle Ages" at the University of Münster. From 1989 to 1995 Widder was scientific assistant at the University of Münster. In 1996, she also completed her habilitation there with the work Kanzler und Kanzleien. Eine Beitrag zur Strukturgeschichte der spätmittelalterlichen Landesherrschaft, which is now augmented and published as Kanzler und Kanzleien im Spätmittelalter. Eine Histoire croisée fürstlicher Administration im Südwesten des Reiches. She was a university lecturer in Münster from 1996 to 1997. This was followed in 1996/97 by deputies professorships at the University of Regensburg, the Humboldt University of Berlin and the Eberhard Karls University of Tübingen. Since October 1997 she has taught as Professor of Medieval History at the University of Tübingen. Widder has been a corresponding member of the Historical Commission for Westphalia since 1997 and a member of the Commission for Historical Regional Studies in Baden-Württemberg since July 2012.
Her research focuses on the imperial and constitutional history of the late Middle Ages, the urban history of the Middle Ages, the history of the late medieval courts and court orders, the history of Italy in the late Middle Ages, the late medieval administrative history, the Westphalian, Lower Saxon and southwestern German regional history, the nobility in the High Middle Ages and the history of the Electoral Palatinate.
Blaubeuren Abbey was a Benedictine monastery until the Reformation, located in Blaubeuren, Baden-Württemberg, Germany. It is now a Protestant seminary.
Heinz Schilling is a German historian.
Wolfram Hoepfner is a German classicist, archaeologist, architectural historian, and Professor of Ancient Architectural History, at the Free University of Berlin.
Michael Matheus is a German historian.
The Swabian League of Cities was a political and military alliance formed in 1376, initially of 14 Swabian imperial cities under the leadership of Ulm that lasted until 1389. Through alliances with the Rhenish League of Cities and Swiss imperial cities and the admission of other Swabian and Franconian imperial cities, the league grew to 40 members. The purpose of the alliance was primarily to secure imperial city rights.
Klaus Zechiel-Eckes was a German historian and medievalist.
Ewald Frie is a German historian and biographer at the University of Tübingen. His research interests include German history of the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries, European nobility, poverty and the welfare state, and Australian history.
Mark Mersiowsky is a German historian and diplomatist. He is professor of History of the Middle Ages at the University of Stuttgart.
Tamara Scheer is an Austrian historian and adjunct professor
Johannes Kunisch was a German historian. He held chairs of early modern history at the Goethe University Frankfurt. (1972-1976) and the University of Cologne (1976–2002). Through his publications Kunisch became one of the leading German early modern historians. His biography Frederick the Great, published in 2004 and widely acclaimed, gave lasting impulses to Prussian research.
The album amicorum was an early form of the poetry book, the autograph book and the modern friendship book. It emerged during the Reformation period, during which it was popular to collect autographs from noted reformers. In the 1700s, the trend of the friendship book was still mainly limited to the Protestant people, as opposed to the Catholics. These books were particularly popular with university students into the early decades of the 19th century. Noteworthy are the pre-printed pages of a friendship book from 1770 onwards, published as a loose-leaf collection by the bookbinder and pressman Johannes Carl Wiederhold (1743-1826) from Göttingen.
Ludwig Schmugge is a German historian.
Sabine Holtz is a German historian who holds the position of Chair of Regional History at the University of Stuttgart. Since 2015, she has also been the head of the Commission for Regional Historical Studies in Baden-Württemberg.
Peter Baumgart is a German historian.
Peter Herde is a German historian. His research activities range from fundamental work on papal diplomatics of the Middle Ages to the history of the country up to the Second World War.
Rudolf Kötzschke was a German historian who founded the Seminar for Regional History and Settlement Studies in Leipzig, the first regional history institution at a German university.
Matthias Untermann is a German art historian and medieval archaeologist.
Georg Ulrich Großmann is a German art historian. He was general director of the Germanisches Nationalmuseum in Nuremberg.
The Institute of Bavarian History at the Ludwig Maximilian University (Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität) in Munich is a centre of research and teaching of Bavarian history in a European context. It is located in the building complex of the Bavarian State Archives and in the immediate vicinity of the Bavarian State Library.
Peter Moraw was a German historian.