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annual report 2013
Ludwig Boltzmann InstituteNeo-Latin Studies
Table of Contents
1. Survey of the Institute ................................................................................................... 2 1.1. Goals ............................................................................................................................................... 2 1.2. Budget figures ................................................................................................................................. 2 1.3. Partners ........................................................................................................................................... 2 1.4. Boards ............................................................................................................................................. 2 1.5. Staff and staff development ........................................................................................................... 3 1.6. Infrastructure .................................................................................................................................. 8 1.7. Highlights of the year ...................................................................................................................... 8 1.8. Public relations ................................................................................................................................ 8
2. Research: contents and results ..................................................................................... 10 2.1. Projects ......................................................................................................................................... 10 2.2. Publications (summary) ................................................................................................................ 12 2.3. Inventions and patents ................................................................................................................. 13 2.4. Participation in conferences ......................................................................................................... 13 2.5. Conference papers and talks ......................................................................................................... 13
3. Further activities .......................................................................................................... 17 3.1. Scholarly cooperation and funding bids ........................................................................................ 17 3.2. Hosting of conferences, workshops, and invited talks .................................................................. 18 3.3. Teaching ........................................................................................................................................ 19 3.4. Scholarships – Fellowships – Prizes ............................................................................................... 20
4. Plans for 2014 .............................................................................................................. 21
5. Publications ................................................................................................................. 23 5.1. Monographs .................................................................................................................................. 23 5.2. Edited volumes .............................................................................................................................. 23 5.3 Contributions in edited volumes .................................................................................................... 23 5.4. Contributions in journals ............................................................................................................... 24 5.5. Reviews ......................................................................................................................................... 25
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1. Survey of the Institute
1.1. Goals
The overarching goal of the Ludwig Boltzmann Institute for Neo-‐Latin Studies (LBI) is to elaborate a guiding thesis which can be put like this: ‘Neo-‐Latin literature significantly contributed to the emergence of modern Europe; it helped to shape society and mind-‐sets and sometimes even anticipated new directions of thinking in various fields.’ This dynamic and progressive significance of Neo-‐Latin literature is still undervalued and underresearched in today’s academia. The LBI’s mission is to focus on that significance and raise awareness of it beyond the relatively small field of Neo-‐Latinists. Apart from scholarly goals strictly speaking, the LBI also aims at a wider acceptance and recognition of Neo-‐Latin as discipline in today’s research structures.
Our goal for 2013, the third year of the LBI, was to achieve steady progress in writing our planned monographs and editions (due end of 2014) and smaller publications (which appear as we go). Moreover, we wished to continue to involve the early modern research community by organizing a number of international conferences (see below 3.2). We also worked towards passing the review of the LBI scheduled for 6 February 2014.
1.2. Budget figures
The total funding of the LBI for years 1–4 is about € 2,662,000 euros, with c. € 1,688,000 coming from the LBG and € 973,000 from the partners (mostly Innsbruck University). The projected expenses for 2013 were € 820,803; the actual expenses € 767,626.
In addition to our regular funding, we had two successful bids for external funding in 2013 (see 3.1 below). The LBI’s share of a Crossing Borders Grant of the Republic of Croatia is € 47,000, to be used for a 50% position. The Tyrolean Science Fund (TWF) has granted € 10,570 for the project Latini Textus Tyrolenses – Digital Library of Latin Texts from Tyrol, which feeds into Croatica et Tirolensia.
1.3. Partners
The partners of the LBI have remained the same as in 2011 and 2012: the Leopold-‐Franzens-‐Universität Innsbruck (LFU; http://www.uibk.ac.at/); the Albert-‐Ludwig Universität Freiburg (ALU; http://www.uni-‐freiburg.de/); the Österreichische Nationalbibliothek in Vienna (ÖNB; http://www.onb.ac.at/); and the Pontificio Comitato di Scienze Storiche in Rome / the Vatican (PCSS; http://www.vatican.va/roman_curia/pont_committees/scienstor/it/default.htm).
1.4. Boards
The statutes of the LBG specify the constitution of two boards overseeing the activities of the LBI: the Board of Partners and the Scientific Advisory Board.
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The Board of Partners consists of five members, one nominated by each partner organization and one nominated by the LBG. The current representatives are Mag. Claudia Lingner (Ludwig Boltzmann Gesellschaft), Prof. Manfred Kienpointner (University of Innsbruck), Prof. Bernhard Zimmermann (University of Freiburg), Dr. Andreas Fingernagel (Austrian National Library), and Prof. Werner Maleczek (Pontificio Comitato di Scienze Storiche). The Board of Partners makes the most fundamental decisions about the LBI (e.g. concerning the integration of new partner institutions after the set-‐up of the LBI). It meets twice a year (2013: 24 June and 25 November). It discusses the progress reports by the director and evaluates any reports of the Scientific Advisory Board.
The Scientific Advisory Board consists of five expert members, two nominated by the LBG and two nominated jointly by the partner institutions, while the fifth member is elected by the four others. The current representatives are Prof. Peter Marx (University of Cologne), Prof. Henk Nellen (Huygens Institute, The Hague), Prof. Dirk Sacré (University of Leuven), Prof. Robert Seidel (University of Frankfurt), and Prof. Hermann Wiegand (University of Heidelberg). The Advisory Board advises the director and the researchers in their strategies, widens the scholarly network of the LBI, and monitors its scholarly activity. The board meets once a year, starting with a constitutional meeting in which the LBI, its research programme and personnel are presented in detail. The third meeting of the advisory board was held in Innsbruck, on 6/2 February 2014.
1.5. Staff and staff development
Compared to the end of 2012, the line-‐up of the LBI has seen only one change: we hired MMag. Simon Wirthensohn for two years (2013–14) to work in the programme line Religion. In addition, the fellowship programme of the LBI was thriving: all in all we had seven fellows at the LBI in the course of 2013 (for their names and projects see below). A number of staff members have received awards, fellowships, and posts: F. Schaffenrath is still on leave with his Alexander-‐von-‐Humboldt-‐Stipendium für erfahrene Wissenschaftler (from 1/11/12–30/4/14). W. Barton stayed at the Collegium for Advanced Studies of the University of Helsinki, Finland, from 1/2–30/4/13. O. Margolis was appointed 50% Lecturer at the History Faculty of Oxford University (where he will be based as of now). Accordingly, he reduced his employment at the LBI from 100% to 50%. S. Tilg was offered a full professorship for Latin literature in Freiburg im Breisgau. He accepted and will leave the LBI in September 2014.
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The tables and lists presented below give a more detailed survey of our staff. They include titles, names, positions, degree of employment, kind of employment (‘in kind’ means they are not directly paid by the LBG, but ‘on loan’ from the LFU or, in the case of A. Novokhatko, from the ALU), start date and end date (in case of contracts ending before 2017). These details are followed by a brief description of main research activities.
PL 1: Politics (3.1 FTE) 2011 2012 2013 2014
Šubarić Senior researcher Key researcher S.r.
Schaffenrath Key researcher (Scholarship) Key r.
Kiss Senior researcher
Walser Junior researcher
Margolis PostDoc
Almási PostDoc
Tilg Senior researcher
• Dr. L. Šubarić (Senior Researcher, Key-‐Researcher from 1/11/12 – 30/4/14, 75% in kind, of which 50% in this PL; 1/1/11): directs the PL and is in charge of our research on the issue of Latin and the vernaculars in 18th/19th century Central and Eastern Europe
• Dr. F. Schaffenrath (Key-‐Researcher, 50% in kind, 1/1/11; on leave from 1/11/12–30/4/14): directs the PL and is particularly involved in the research on political fiction in the Habsburg monarchy
• Dr. F. Kiss (Senior Researcher, 50% in kind, from 1/11/12–30/4/14): takes up Schaffenrath’s agenda and is particularly interested in epic and drama in the Habsburg monarchy; is close to submitting a funding bid to the Austrian Science Fund (FWF; see end of section 4.3), which will hopefully enable us to extend his employment beyond April 2014
• Mag. I. Walser (Junior Researcher, 100%, 1/5/11): edits a major novel (W. A. Ertl’s Austriana Regina Arabiae, 1687) for her PhD and is interested in the political role of epic and novel in the Habsburg monarchy; is based at our partner institution, the ALU in Freiburg
• O. Margolis, DPhil (PostDoc, 100% from 1/9/11–30/11/13; 50% from 1/12/13–31/1/15): pursues a monograph on the emblematic role of Latin in Renaissance politics as ‘cultural capital’; was based in Vienna until the end of November 2013; now in Oxford, where he has a 50% position as Lecturer at the History Faculty
• G. Almási, PhD (PostDoc, employed with ‘Werkvertrag’, ~ c. 50 %, 1/8/11–31/12/14): edits English digests of Hungarian scholarship concerning our research and (with L. Šubarić) an anthology of texts concerning language and identity in 18th/19th century Hungary; he also edits (with L. Šubarić) a volume on this issue; based in Budapest
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• PD Dr. S. Tilg (Senior Researcher, 100%, of which 10% in this PL; 1/1/11): contributes to the field of prose fiction in the Habsburg Empire
PL 2: Religion (3.1 FTE) 2011 2012 2013 2014
Tilg Key researcher
Tjoelker PostDoc
La Barbera PD
Sanzotta PostDoc
Wirthens. Junior researcher
• PD Dr. S. Tilg (Key-‐Researcher, 100%, of which 35% in this PL; 1/1/11): directs the PL and contributes articles and conference papers
• N. Tjoelker, PhD (PostDoc, 100%, 14/6/11): writes a monograph on the significance of 18th century Latin drama (esp. Catholic school drama) and edits a little known poetics by the Jesuit playwright Andreas Friz (1711–90)
• V. Sanzotta, PhD (PostDoc, 100%, 1/6/12): edits a play by Giuseppe Carpani SJ (1683–1762); works on a book length study about Carpani in the context of the Roman Academy of Arcadia
• MMag. S. Wirthensohn (Junior Researcher, 50% from 1/1/13–31/5/13, 100% from 1/6/13–30/11/13, 75% from 1/12/13–30/4/15): digitizes material for the PL and works on a book-‐length study (including the edition of some plays) of the Jesuit playwright Anton Claus (1691–1754)
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PL 3: History of Mentalities (2.75 FTE) 2011 2012 2013 2014
Korenjak Key researcher
Barton Junior researcher
Luggin Junior researcher
Novokhatko PostDoc
Schretter Junior researcher
Kompatsch. Senior researcher
• Prof. M. Korenjak (Key-‐Researcher, 50% in kind until 30/9/12, 80% regular employment from 1/10/12, of which 55% in this PL): directs the PL and contributes articles and papers
• W. Barton, MA (Junior Researcher, 100%, 14/6/11): writes a monograph on the aesthetic perception of mountains in early modern Latin texts
• MMag. J. Luggin (Junior Researcher, 100%, 1/1/12–31/12/14): edits Thomas Hobbes’ De mirabilibus Pecci carmen (1636), a major text concerning the perception of mountains in the early modern period
• Dr. A. Novokhatko (PostDoc, 20% in kind, 1/1/11): contributes translations and papers; based in Freiburg
PL 4: Neo-‐Latin Tools (1.1 FTE) 2011 2012 2013 2014
Šubarić Key researcher
Tilg Senior researcher
Korenjak Senior researcher
Schretter Junior researcher
Kompatsch. Senior researcher
• Dr. L. Šubarić (Key-‐Researcher, otherwise as above; 25% in this PL): directs the PL and is in charge of its digital initiatives
• Prof. M. Korenjak (as above, 25% in this PL): writes a monographic survey on the functions of Neo-‐Latin in the early modern period
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• PD Dr. S. Tilg (as above, 25% in this PL): co-‐edits the Oxford Handbook of Neo-‐Latin
• MMag. C. Schretter (Junior Researcher, 25% in kind, 1/4/2011, from 1/10/2013 in this PL): studies the history of local libraries
• Prof. G. Kompatscher-‐Gufler (Senior Researcher, 10% in kind, 1/1/2012, from 1/10/2013 in this PL): helps with her expertise in mediaeval Latin and co-‐edits the Codex Fuxmagen, a corpus of poetry from the court of the emperor Maximilian I
Administration (0.8 FTE) 2011 2012 2013 2014
Tilg Director
Kirchler Administrative assistant
• PD Dr. S. Tilg (Director, otherwise as above; 30% in administration): directs the Institute
Mag. U. Kirchler (Administrative Assistant, 50%, 1.2.2011): informally also contributes to PL 3; as a student at Innsbruck University, he completed an MA thesis on J. H. Hottinger’s Descriptio Montium Glacialium Helveticorum (1706) and may expand this topic for a PhD project
Fellows The following list of fellows in 2013 includes name, title, nationality, research institution prior to the LBI, duration of stay, and project title.
• Patrick Hadley, M.A. (USA; University of Toronto, Canada), 6 months (09/12–02/13): Nicodemus Frischlin’s Approach to the Byzantine Triad of Aristophanes
• Gianpaolo Caputo, M.A. (Italy; University of Leiden, Netherlands), 2 months (12/12–01/13): Amando Maria, lodando Leopoldo: religione, potere e poetica nei Piscatoria di N. P. Giannettasio
• Robert Forgács, PhD (Australia; University of Sidney, Australia), 2 months (04/13–07/13): The Music of the Benedictine and Jesuit Schuldramen in 18th Century Austria and Germany: Mozart, His Predecessors and Contemporaries
• Michael Dormandy, BA (UK; Wycliffe Hall, Oxford, UK), 2 months (07/13–09/13): Words of Encouragement: Bartholomaeus Holzhauser’s Epistola Fundamentalis Considered and Compared to Contemporary British, Protestant Exhortatory Literature
• Maiko Favaro, PhD (Italy; Scuola Normae Superiore, Pisa, Italy), 4 months (08/13–11/13): On Ovid’s Reception in the Renaissance: The Metamorphoses by Federico Frangipane
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• Sheldon Brammall, PhD (Canada; Trinity College, Cambridge, UK), 6 months (10/13–03/14): A Study of Lawrence Humphrey’s Theory of Translation in the Interpretatio linguarum (Basel, 1559)
• Jonathan Meyer, BA, MAR (USA; American School of Classical Studies in Athens, Greece), 6 months (10/13–03/14): The Last Latin Novels from the Habsburg Empire: Texts and Contexts
1.6. Infrastructure
The LBI is housed in the ‘Zentrum für alte Kulturen’ of Innsbruck University (Langer Weg 11, 6020 Innsbruck, Austria). It occupies a quarter of the fourth floor and is clearly visible as an institute of its own. The LBI has reached agreements with Innsbruck University which allows it to share the normal technical facilities and administrative processes established at the University (IT, telephone, post, printing/scanning). In December 2013 the LBI also signed contracts with the university library, which stipulate the integration of the LBI library into the university library (with our collection kept in close distance and in a single room) and give LBI members access to the university library even outside the opening hours.
1.7. Highlights of the year
In 2013 the LBI published its first conference volume:
S. Tilg and I. Walser (eds), Der neulateinische Roman als Medium seiner Zeit – The Neo-‐Latin Novel in Its Time, Tübingen: Narr 2013 (NeoLatina 21).
This book collects written elaborations of the papers presented at a conference organized by the LBI and its partner ALU in June 2012. Although being ‘just’ a conference volume, this publication breaks new ground in that it is the first book ever (apart from the odd edition of single texts) dealing with the unduly neglected genre of the Neo-‐Latin novel. This fascinating genre has enjoyed not only great popularity in its own time, but proved even influential for the further development of the novel in European vernacular literatures. The volume (which contains contributions in German, English and French) aims to reach an international and interdisciplinary audience across the field of early modern studies.
Another highlight were the four conferences organized by the LBI in 2013 (see 3.2) of which Latinity in the Post-‐Classical World (10–13 April) clearly had the most picturesque setting (the Campo Santo Teutonico in the Vatican) and the most prominent line-‐up of speakers (including such luminaries as Prof. Anthony Grafton from Princeton University). This conference was co-‐organized, with the support of the PCSS, by our own O. Margolis and by G. Barrett from St John’s College, Oxford.
1.8. Public relations
The LBI designed and printed leaflets, which introduce the institute and its approach to a larger audience. The leaflets are available in German and in English, and they are distributed at all LBI related events.
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Three of our fellows (M. Favaro, S. Brammall, J. Meyer) were portrayed in the section ‘Zwischenstopp in Innsbruck’ of the biannual Zukunft Forschung: Magazin für Wissenschaft und Forschung der Universität Innsbruck (no. 2, 2013, p. 48).
A meeting with Robert Renzler, the general secretary of the Austrian Alpenverein, resulted in a cooperation of PL 3 with the Austrian Alpenverein (with its ca. 450,000 members, the Alpenverein is one of the largest Associations in Austria). The LBI now has a presence on the website of the Alpenverein (http://www.alpenverein.at/portal/museum-‐kultur/alpenverein-‐und-‐kultur/index.php). Plans for further joint projects include the publication of an anthology of mountain-‐related texts (with many Neo-‐Latin examples) and a contribution to the Alpenverein’s members magazine.
Episodes of the Neo-‐Latin Podcast are published at varying intervals on the LBI website and on iTunes (http://neolatin.lbg.ac.at/news/podcast).
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2. Research: contents and results
2.1. Projects
Guided by its overall thesis (see above, 1.1), the LBI pursues its research in broad ‘programme lines’ (PLs): three thematic PLs dedicated to politics, religion, and the ‘history of mentality’ (indebted to the French ‘histoire des mentalités’); plus a more general, fourth PL dedicated to the development of basic Neo-‐Latin tools such as editions and literary histories. The broadness of the thematic categories allows for a certain flexibility in accommodating new results and perhaps unexpected avenues of research. Smaller and concrete ‘projects’ within these programme lines were designed for the specific and manageable day-‐by-‐day research with limited time and personnel. The choice of these projects (two per programme line, with the first pursued in years 1–4, the second in years 5–7) was made on the basis of their innovatory potential and preliminary studies and interests. The current outline of PLs and projects is as follows:
PL 1: Neo-‐Latin and Politics (Key-‐concept: Political identity) With the rise of nations, nation states, and national languages in the early modern period, Latin, the traditional international language of Europe, found itself caught up in complex negotiations of political identity. Both in the search for a common European identity and the development of modern national identities, Latin was not only a significant medium of discussion but also a topic of considerable emotional weight in its own right. This PL aims to unravel the role of Latin in this process on a number of levels.
The Habsburg empire Given the precarious cohesion of the multinational Habsburg Empire, Latin was from the 16th to the 19th centuries not only a highly useful lingua franca but also a privileged means of expressing imperial identity on the one hand, and national (and partly also regional) identities on the other. For this project we analyse its role in this context in two particularly rewarding yet hitherto largely neglected groups of texts, one from the belles-‐lettres, another mainly from administration, political theory and journalism. In the first group we examine the construction of political identities in novels and epics, in the second we trace the discussion over the ‘correct’ language in the nationalist movements esp. in the Kingdom of Hungary at the end of the 18th century.
European Identities This project will study the construction of political identities no longer primarily in the Habsburg Empire, but in the whole of Europe: it will directly and generally confront the issue of a supranational European identity by tracing the concept of Europe as a (geographical, political, cultural, religious) unity in a large variety of Neo-‐Latin texts, from historiography to travelogues to treatises; it will take a closer look at the connections between language and political identity by investigating the European-‐wide emergence of grammars of national languages (often written in Latin); and it aims to continue our focus on the Kingdom of Hungary and examine, as a European case study, the symbolic value of Latin in education and identity-‐constructions of that complex and unstable region from the 18th to the early 20th century.
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PL 2: Neo-‐Latin and Religion (Key-‐Concept: Religious PR) Although Latin remains the official language of the Catholic church today, in the early modern period it had an even greater and more varied importance for religious experience and practice, especially within Christianity. Latin’s reach extended from theology and liturgy to Christian education and the types of personal devotion that found expression, for instance, in calendars of saints and hymn books. In terms of communication, Latin could be used on a more theoretical and intellectual (as e.g. in theological treatises) or on a more emotional and entertaining level (as e.g. in theatre or novels). The former use is aimed at a small group of specialists; the latter at a potentially large audience. The research of the LBI in this PL focuses on that latter use of Latin as a medium of religious ‘public relations’ ante litteram. Christian institutions and individuals were on the forefront of developing such PR in Latin. They combined a general inclination towards Latin (as time-‐honoured language of Christianity) with an intended emotional impact to further religious disciplination, edification, and exhortation during the times of the Protestant and Catholic Reforms. Religious literature, therefore, seems a very suitable field to study the phenomenon of Latin PR in the early modern period. An emphasis is on original and innovative genres/media/bodies of texts/individual works which either influenced actual debates or enriched the range of literary and cultural expression (e.g. by re-‐interpreting traditional genres, by creating new ones, or by providing models for vernacular literature).
Catholic school drama in the 18th century Catholic school drama, for which Jesuit drama was the model and the most flourishing manifestation, was one of the most successful and wide-‐reaching forms of religious PR in the early modern period. While it is comparatively well studied for the 16th and 17th centuries, however, its late manifestations in the 18th century are barely known, let alone properly understood. Our research investigates how Jesuit drama and related forms continued into the 18th century, engaged with ideas of the Enlightenment, and adapted trends of contemporary vernacular dramaturgy.
Religious entertainment Expanding on the key-‐concept of religious PR, we will widen our scope in 2015–17 and deal with three larger groups of texts: contemplative drama, religious fiction, and accessible forms of ‘popular’ Latin poetry.
PL 3: Neo-‐Latin and ‘history of mentalities’ (Key-‐Concept: Perception of Nature) Mentalities can be defined as basic attitudes towards fundamental aspects of human existence such as time, the body or death. These attitudes are usually experienced as the natural and even the only possible way of seeing things by the people who hold them. In reality, however, they are highly culturally determined and can change radically over time. The early modern age was an age of such dramatic mentality changes. One important strand within this complex process concerned the perception of nature: While in earlier times nature tended to be seen as something potentially dangerous and hostile, to be either domesticated or avoided, modernity experiences it as a necessary complement to human culture and as a source of joy and satisfaction. Neo-‐Latin literature played an essential role in the transition between these mentalities. This role is, however, largely neglected in previous research on the topic, which results in a distorted picture of the whole process; among other things, changes whose roots actually lie in the time around 1500 are often post-‐dated to the 18th century.
The discovery of Mountains The history of mountain perception is usually constructed as a fairly linear evolution from ‘mountain gloom’ to ‘mountain glory’ – to cite a classic in the field – and the turning point is usually put in the 18th century. Our
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focus on Neo-‐Latin, instead of vernacular, texts not only allows us to push this date back by some 250 years, but also shows that the whole process is in fact less linear and much more complex than has been suspected so far. The sources of a new interest in, and finally a new appreciation of mountains include a diverse range of ideas, discourses and practices: from ethnological theory to royal self-‐representation, from patriotism to theology (and even demonology), from dietetics to the rise of the Sublime, from the flowering of the sciences such as botany, geology, volcanology and glaciology to the beginnings of tourism. In addition, these strands also transect and interact in many different ways, resulting in an even more variegated picture. Our project gives special prominence to the issues of aesthetics, but covers also a broad range of other aspects.
The invention of landscape This project is an extension of its predecessor of years 1–4, ‘The Discovery of Mountains’. Its primary focus will not be on further concrete forms of landscape (bogs, woods, deserts, the polar regions, the sea etc.), but rather on the concept of landscape and landscape in general. It wants to show that Neo-‐Latin literature contributes in a fundamental way to the emergence of the modern concept and to the development of the modern perception of landscape.
PL 4: Neo-‐Latin Tools This PL subsumes all activities of the LBI which aim to provide basic tools and reference works for the study of Neo-‐Latin and which are not part of PL 1–3, e.g. catalogues and databases, editions, translations, dictionaries, commentaries, literary histories and surveys. The lack of such basic tools in the young discipline of Neo-‐Latin studies is often regretted and the mission statement of the LBI calls for some remedy here. Moreover, PL 4 also serves as a platform for cooperation with similar initiatives and for external funding not easily assignable to any of our more specific PLs. This PL has no key-‐concept and no division into projects. To avoid confusion, it is not normally talked about as PL alongside our thematic PLs. Rather, it serves as an internal and administrative unit.
2.2. Publications (summary)
This year brought the publication of our first conference volume: S. Tilg and I. Walser (eds), Der neulateinische Roman als Medium seiner Zeit – The Neo-‐Latin Novel in Its Time, Tübingen: Narr 2013 (NeoLatina 21). On its significance see above 1.7. Moreover, I. Walser published a revised version of her MA thesis with the title Im theresianischen Zeitalter der Vernunft – Giovanni Battista Graser: De praestantia logicae (Innsbruck: Wagner 2013). This is a regional case study of the Latin Enlightenment, a progressive strain of Latin literature of the 18th century which received little attention until the recent studies by Y. Haskell and others. Important smaller publications include two papers by M. Korenjak, which show the relevance of our research for the fields of early modern science and cartography (‘Pulcherrimus foecundissimusque Naturae hortus: Berichte über botanisch motivierte Bergbesteigungen im 16. Jahrhundert’, Neulateinisches Jahrbuch 15, 2013, 197–218; ‘Der Text von Thomas Schoepfs Inclitae Bernatum urbis delineatio chorographica’, Cartographica Helvetica 47, 2013, 27–36) as well as a paper by O. Margolis, tracing the practical political consequences of humanism through a case study: ‘Cipriano de’ Mari’s Lucianic Speech for René of Anjou (St-‐Dié, MS 37): Humanism and Diplomacy in Genoa and Beyond’, Renaissance Studies 27 (2013), 219–35.
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2.3. Inventions and patents
not applicable
2.4. Participation in conferences
NB: only participations without papers and without organizational role are listed here. For conference papers see 2.5; for the organization of conferences see 3.2.
W. Barton, The Poetry of George Buchanan 1973–2023, Society for Neo-‐Latin Studies (UK) Annual Lecture, King’s College, London, 8 November 2013.
J. Luggin, CH-‐AT Allianz, Gebirgstage 2013, Mittersill, 11–13 June 2013.
–––, 15th Freiburg Neo-‐Latin Symposium: Humanismus in Unterfranken – Humanism in Würzburg and Lower Franconia, Würzburg, 11–13 July 2013.
F. Schaffenrath, The Tradition of Dedication in the Neo-‐Latin World, Freiburg, 5–6 December 2013.
C. Schretter, Tagung kirchlicher BibliothekarInnen 2013 (Referat für die Kulturgüter der Orden), Innsbruck, 28 May 2013.
–––, XVIIe Colloque international de Paléographie Latine (Comité International de Paléographie Latine), St. Gallen, 10–14 September 2013
L. Šubarić, Augustinus Moravus Olomucensis 500, 13 November 2013, Budapest.
S. Tilg, Metageitnia XXXIV, Mulhouse, 18–19 January 2013.
–––, The Tradition of Dedication in the Neo-‐Latin World, Freiburg, 5–6 December 2013.
S. Wirthensohn, L’humanisme entre manuscrit et imprimé, Institut de recherche et d’histoire, Rome 6–8 August 2013.
2.5. Conference papers and talks
G. Almási, ‘Why Tycho Brahe needed the Emperor and vice versa? A study of scientific patronage • Scientiae: Disciplines of Knowing in the Early Modern World, Warwick, 17–20 April 2013.
–––, ‘The most secret learning dedicated to Frederic V Elector Palatine: About an anonymous pamphlet’ • Gábor Bethlen and Europe, Cluj (Romania), 24–26 October 2013.
W. Barton, ‘A Changing Mountain Mentality: Gaeographia, prospectus, pictura • Cambridge Society for Neo-‐Latin Studies, Trinity College, Cambridge, 31 January 2013 (invited).
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–––, ‘16th Century Humanism in Zurich and Enjoyment of the Mountains’ • Conference of the Classical Association (UK) 2013, Reading, 3–6 April 2013.
–––, ‘Landscape and Prospectus in Neo-‐Latin: Views of the Mountain’ • King’s College, London Classics Departmental Seminar, 8 October 2013 (invited).
U. Kirchler, ‘Establishing Glaciology: Johann Heinrich Hottinger’s Montium Glacialium Helveticorum Descriptio (1703)’ • Conference of the Classical Association (UK) 2013, Reading, 3–6 April 2013.
F. Kiss, ‘Experiencing the Senses: The dynamism of performative tools in meditation and preaching’ • International Workshop: Religious Acculturation III, Vienna, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, 17–18 January 2013 (invited).
–––, ‘Verbatim repetere: Rote memorization versus rephrasing of canonical texts in the vernacular in Hungary,’ • Internationales Symposion: Anfangsgeschichten / Origins Stories – The Rise of Vernacular Literacy in a Comparative Perspective, Vienna, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, 5–8 February 2013 (invited).
–––, ‘Lapsus protoparentum: The role of Latin translations in the reception of European literature in the Habsburg monarchy of the eighteenth century’ • Latinity in the Post-‐Classical World, Vatican, 12 April 2013.
–––, ‘Handschriftliches zu Celtis’ • 15th Freiburg Neo-‐Latin Symposium: Humanismus in Unterfranken – Humanism in Würzburg and Lower Franconia, Würzburg, 12 July 2013.
–––, ‘Les paratextes entre manuscrit et imprimé’ • Entre manuscrit et imprimé – atelier doctoral à l’École française de Rome, Rome, 8 August 2013.
–––, ‘Augustinus Moravus in defence of poetry (1494)’ • Augustinus Moravus Olomucensis 500: International Symposium to mark the 500th anniversary of the death of Augustinus Moravus Olomucensis (1467–1513), Budapest, Hungarian National Library, 13 November 2013.
–––, ‘Vitus Amerbachus (1503–1557), commentateur du De officiis entre les mots et les choses’ • Lectures et commentaires du De officiis de Cicéron, Paris, Institut de recherche et d’histoire des textes, 6 December 2013 (invited).
M. Korenjak, ‘Ad fontes! Der wilde Ursprung des Rheins’ • Latein am Rhein (1400–1800): Zur Kulturtopographie und Literaturgeographie eines europäischen Stromes (5. Arbeitsgespräch der Deutschen Neulateinischen Gesellschaft), Zurich, 21–23 February 2013.
–––, ‘Bergwahrnehmung – gestern und heute’ • Key Contact Workshop at the CH-‐AT Mountain Days in Mittersill, 12 June 2013 (in cooperation with E. Frohmann).
–––, ‘Latein und die europäischen Volkssprachen’, • Sprachsituation und Sprachpolitik – Mehrsprachigkeit im Altertum, Innsbruck, 3 July 2013 (invited).
–––, ‘Deutschland als Landschaft: Die Germania generalis des Conrad Celtis’ • 15th Freiburg Neo-‐Latin Symposium: Humanismus in Unterfranken – Humanism in Würzburg and Lower Franconia, Würzburg, 12 July 2013.
J. Luggin, ‘Discovering the Peak: A Philological Approach to Thomas Hobbes’s De mirabilibus Pecci’ • 144th Annual Meeting of the American Philological Association, Seattle, 3–6 January 2013.
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–––, ‘Praising the English Alps – Thomas Hobbes’ Neo-‐Latin poem De mirabilibus Pecci carmen (1627) • Intercultural Transfers: Workshop Helsinki – Innsbruck – Kiel – Padova, Innsbruck, 28–29 January 2013.
–––, ‘The Seven Wonders of the Peak’ • 59th Annual Meeting of the Renaissance Society of America, San Diego, 4–6 April 2013.
–––, ‘Maximilian I. bezwingt das Gebirge: Der Magnanimus des Richardus Sbrulius’ • Gebirgsüberschreitung und Gipfelsturm als Großtat, Schruns, 9 October 2013.
O. Margolis, ‘Oratores ad Ytalos: Italian Humanism and the Origins of European Diplomatic Culture’ • Europe in the Later Middle Ages Seminar: Approaches to Diplomacy, Corpus Christi College, Oxford, 29 January 2013 (invited).
–––, ‘Oratores ad Ytalos: Italian Humanism and the mid-‐Quattrocento Origins of European Diplomatic Culture’ • 59th Annual Meeting of the Renaissance Society of America, San Diego, 4–6 April 2013.
–––, ‘Italicum in moribus: Italian humanism, Latin language, and the Oltramontani of the Quattrocento’ • Latinity in the Post-‐Classical World, Vatican, 12 April 2013.
–––, ‘The Quattrocento Charlemagne: Franco-‐Florentine Relations and the Politics of an Icon’ • International Medieval Congress, Leeds, 1–4 July 2013.
A. Novokhatko (with W. Kofler), ‘Ein Krieg im Gebirge: Bernhard Freiherr von Hornsteins Algoica rupicaprarum venatio (1749)’ • Gebirgsüberschreitung und Gipfelsturm als Großtat, Schruns, 8 October 2013.
V. Sanzotta, ‘Marsilio Ficino and the Early Argumenta to Plato’ • 59th Annual Meeting of the Renaissance Society of America, San Diego, 4–6 April 2013.
–––, ‘Marsilio Ficino and his sources: Some remarks on an unpublished epitome of Plato’s Parmenides’ • University of Groningen, 13 June 2013.
–––, ‘Respiciens ad pauca facile pronuntiat: Michele Giuseppe Morei’s preface to the fourth edition of Carpani’s tragedies’ • Theatrum Mundi: Latin Drama in Renaissance Europe, Magdalen College, University of Oxford, 12–14 September 2013.
–––, ‘Some Remarks on Proclus Manuscripts in Fifteenth-‐Century Florence: Ficino’s Notes on the Timaeus Commentary (Florence, Biblioteca Riccardiana, MS 24)’ • London, The Warburg Institute, 7 November 2013 (invited).
C. Schretter, ‘Handschriftenbestände im Tiroler Raum und ihre Erschließung • Tagung kirchlicher BibliothekarInnen 2013 – Referat für die Kulturgüter der Orden, Innsbruck, 28 May 2013.
–––, ‘Mittelalterliche Büchersammlungen im Tiroler Raum als Spiegel der Kultur-‐ und Geistesgeschichte, Universität München • Historisches Seminar – Mittelalterliche Geschichte, München, 12 October 2013 (invited).
L. Šubarić, ‘The emotional value of Latin as spoken language in nineteenth-‐century nationalism and language conflicts’ • Conference of the Classical Association (UK) 2013, Reading, 3–6 April 2013.
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–––, ‘Latin and national identity: The changing attitudes towards the lingua patria in the Kingdom of Hungary’ • Latinity in the Post-‐Classical World, Vatican, 11 April 2013.
S. Tilg, ‘Die Milesiaka: Der Ursprung der griechisch-‐römischen Romanliteratur?’ • Colloquium Classicum, Institut für Klassische Philologie der Universität Frankfurt a.M., 28 January 2013 (invited).
–––, ‘Rheinromantik und Vater Rhein: Zwei Erfindungen des deutschen Humanismus’ • Latein am Rhein (1400–1800): Zur Kulturtopographie und Literaturgeographie eines europäischen Stromes (5. Arbeitsgespräch der Deutschen Neulateinischen Gesellschaft), Zurich, 21–23 February 2013.
–––, ‘Forms and Functions of Jesuit Comedy’ • 66th Annual KFLC: The Languages, Literatures, and Cultures Conference, University of Kentucky (Lexington, Kentucky), 18–20 April 2013 (invited).
–––, ‘Early Modern Latin Comedy’ • Theatrum Mundi: Latin Drama in Renaissance Europe, Magdalen College, University of Oxford, 12–14 September 2013 (invited).
N. Tjoelker, ‘Römische Helden auf der Jesuitenbühne: Drama, Politik und die Gesellschaft im 18. Jahrhundert’ • Theater des Spätmittelalters und der Frühen Neuzeit: Kulturelle Verhandlungen in einer Zeit des Wandels, Goethe Institute and University Library UvA, Amsterdam, 6–8 February 2013.
–––, ‘Japanese martyrs on the Jesuit Stage’ • 59th Annual Meeting of the Renaissance Society of America, San Diego, 4–6 April 2013.
–––, ‘Johannes Butzbach’s Odeporicon (1506): Early modern education through the eyes of a 15th century student’ • 15th Freiburg Neo-‐Latin Symposium: Humanismus in Unterfranken – Humanism in Würzburg and Lower Franconia, Würzburg, 12 July 2013.
–––, ‘Clemency, Patriotism and the Roman Republic: The Significance of Jesuit Theatre in the Eighteenth Century’ • Theatrum Mundi: Latin Drama in Renaissance Europe, Magdalen College, University of Oxford, 12–14 September 2013.
I. Walser, ‘Auf dem sinkenden Schifflein Petri: Aegidius von Viterbos Mahnschrift De deprecato statu rei ecclesiae (1522) an Papst Adrian VI.’, Metageitnia XXXIV, Mulhouse, 18–19 January 2013.
–––, ‘Als der Apfel der Eris vor den Doppeladler rollte: Nationalismus und Identitätskrise im neulateinischen Habsburgroman und Habsburgepos’, Volturnia: Erstes Treffen der Klassischen Philologen aus Bayern, Innsbruck und Salzburg, Eichstätt, 19–20 July 2013.
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3. Further activities
3.1. Scholarly cooperation and funding bids
The LBI has established formal cooperation with a number of institutions. In 2013, cooperation was particularly strong with:
• Institut für Byzanzforschung (http://www.oeaw.ac.at/byzanz/) of the Austrian Academy of Sciences: we participated in a volume on book culture in the 17th and 18th centuries and prepared a joint funding bid for a project aiming at a dictionary of Austrian and Eastern European humanists.
• Institut für Kulturwissenschaften und Theatergeschichte (http://www.oeaw.ac.at/ikt/kooperationen/) of the Austrian Academy of Sciences: we digitized the IKT’s large collection of printed playbills (‘periochae’) from the historical Habsburg territories and are now looking into ways of presenting the material online.
• Society for Neo-‐Latin Studies http://www2.warwick.ac.uk/fac/arts/ren/snls/): we share information on Neo-‐Latin activities with the SNLS and were invited to send a strong delegation to its conference Theatrum Mundi: Latin Drama in Renaissance Europe, Magdalen College, University of Oxford, 12–14 September 2013.
• Cf. also our co-‐organization of conferences with scholarly partners under 3.2.
We had two successful bids in 2013. Work on the related projects will, however, start only in 2014:
• Crossing Borders Grant under the Research Cooperability Program of the Republic of Croatia. We launched this bid together with the Institute for Classical Philology of the University of Zagreb, Croatia. The successful project is called Croatica et Tirolensia and combines the Croatian model of CroALa, a digital collection of Croatian Neo-‐Latin texts, with the LBI database and Tyrolean Neo-‐Latin texts known from Tyrolis Latina. At the end we should have a larger corpus of texts and more sophisticated tools to research and compare them. The project is based in Zagreb, but € 47,000 will be used for a 50% position at the LBI. We plan to fill this position with J. Luggin, currently a 100% Junior Researcher in PL 3, on a contract ending in 2014. We shall reduce her working load in this PL 3 by 50%. The money saved this way can be used to employ her well beyond 2014 at the LBI.
• The Tyrolean Science Fund (TWF) has granted € 10,570 for the project Latini Textus Tyrolenses – Digital Library of Latin Texts from Tyrol, which feeds into Croatica et Tirolensia. Under the supervision of an LBI member, students should get paid from this money to prepare Tyrolean Neo-‐Latin texts for online editions.
A larger funding bid for an ERC Synergy Grant was also launched in 2013, but failed in the second round. The project’s title was Neo-‐Latin Epic Poetry: A Comprehensive Analysis of the Early Modern Heroic Poem in Its Socio-‐Political and Intellectual Contexts. F. Schaffenrath here cooperated with Professors Philip Ford, Keith Sidwell, and Hans Helander. The unexpected and untimely death of the principal investigator, Philip Ford, however, was a setback emphasized in all reports.
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3.2. Hosting of conferences, workshops, and invited talks
Conferences and workshops Latinity in the Post-‐Classical World (O. Margolis, LBI, and G. Barrett, St John’s College, Oxford) – Campo Santo Teutonico, Vatican, 10–13/4/13
15th Freiburg Neo-‐Latin Symposium: Humanismus in Unterfranken – Humanism in Würzburg and Lower Franconia (Thomas Baier, Würzburg University, and S. Tilg, LBI) – Würzburg, 11–13/7/13
Gebirgsüberschreitung und Gipfelsturm als Großtat (M. Korenjak, LBI; R. Rollinger, LFU; M. Kasper, Montafoner Museen; and A. Rudigier, vorarlberg museum) / Schruns, Austria, 7–11/10/13
The Tradition of Dedication in the Neo-‐Latin World (all Junior Researchers) – Freiburg, 5–6/12/13
Invited talks 24/1/13 Mag. Michael Eichhammer (Regensburg University): Ohne Maß und Ziel? Das Amazonen-‐Bild im Penthesilea-‐Drama des Simon Simonides
29/1/13 Prof. Martin Wagendorfer (Munich University): Universitätsbibliotheken im Spätmittelalter und in der frühen Neuzeit
7/3/13 Dr. Magdaléna Jacková (Acadamy of Sciences, Prague): Das Schuldrama der Jesuiten in den böhmischen Ländern
18/3/13 Dr. Jan Waszink (Erasmus Center, Rotterdam): Towards a New History of Tacitism
24/4/13 Prof. Bernd Roling (FU Berlin): Die Paracelsische Rose: Debatten über die übernatürliche und natürliche Auferstehung zwischen Mittelalter und Neuzeit
25/6/13 Prof. Siegmar Döpp (Göttingen University): Die Lehninsche Weissagung
8/10/13 Dr. Françoise Waquet (Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Paris): No Latin for the People: The Social Risks of a Classical Education (France 18th–20th Centuries)
28/10/13 Prof. Sebastiano Gentile (Cassino University): Pubblicare Ficino: Problemi e questioni di metodo
29/10/13 Dr. Maurizio Campanelli (Sapienza University, Rome): A Controversial Genre: Latin vs. Vernacular in 18th-‐Century Italian Satire
5/11/13 PD Dr. Christian Gastgeber (Institut für Byzanzforschung, Austrian Academy of Sciences): Schloss Ambras verliert seinen Bücherschatz: Der Netzwerker, kaiserliche Bibliothekar und Philologe Peter Lambeck (Hamburg, 1628 – Wien, 1680) und sein Lebenswerk
7/11/13 Prof. Dag Nikolaus Hasse (Würzburg University): Das arabische Erbe in Europa
19/11/13 Dr. Nigel Griffin (Oxford University): Jesuit Drama 1900–2013: And Towards 2020?
29/11/13 Dr. Sarah Knight (Leicester University): How the Young Man Should Study Latin Poetry
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3/12/13 Prof. Peter Dinzelbacher (Vienna University): Der hochmittelalterliche Mentalitätswandel im Spiegel lateinischer Texte und bildender Kunst
3.3. Teaching NB: this list does not include teaching of in kind-‐staff which does not relate to Neo-‐Latin and the LBI.
J. Luggin, SS 2013: Lateinische Lektüre Johannes Secundus (Innsbruck University)
F. Kiss, WS 2012/13: Rezeption (Innsbruck University)
M. Korenjak: supervision of a number of MA and PhD theses
V. Sanzotta, WS 2013/14: Neulatein Dal latino all'italiano: il dibattito linguistico in Italia tra Quattro e Cinquecento (Innsbruck University)
C. Schretter, SS 2013: Medientheorie III: ‘Altes Buch’, Universitätslehrgang Library and Information Studies MSc. (Innsbruck University)
–––, supervision of MA thesis in Library and Information Studies: E. Bacher, A. Riedmann, F. Schatzer, Erschließung der Einbände der Innsbrucker Wappenturmbibliothek in der Einbandsammlung der ULB Tirol in Innsbruck (Innsbruck University)
L. Šubarić, WS 2012/13: Mittellateinische Literatur Einführung in die lateinische Literatur des Mittelalters (with some Neo-‐Latin material) (Innsbruck University)
S. Tilg, FS 2013 Vorlesung Der Argonautenstoff von der Antike bis zur Gegenwart (Zurich University)
–––, HS 2013 Seminar Cicero, Philippische Reden (Zurich University)
N. Tjoelker, WS 2012/13: Neulateinische Drama-‐Poetik (Innsbruck University)
I. Walser, WS 2012/13: Grundübung Lateinische Texteinführung (Freiburg University)
–––, SS 2013: Lateinische Lektüreübung Ovid und Vergil (Freiburg University)
–––, WS 2013/14: Proseminar Apuleius, Metamorphosen (Freiburg University)
Graduate and teacher training events J. Luggin, ‘Neulateinische Texte als Vergleichsmedium’ • Schlierbach, 16–17 January 2013.
F. Schaffenrath, ‘Neulateinische Texte im Lateinunterricht’ • Arbeitsgemeinschaft Latein (Tirol), Innsbruck 27 February 2013.
C. Schretter, a number of workshops on codicology and palaeography at the Abteilung für Sondersammlungen of the University Library of Innsbruck.
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L. Šubarić, ‘Standards of manuscript description in Austria and Germany’ • Erasmus intensive programme ‘ELIM’ (Early European Literatures in Manuscripts), Vienna and Lower Austria, 25 August–7 September 2013.
I. Walser, ‘Die Lehre im Gewand der Erzählung: Der neulateinische Roman im Latein-‐Unterricht’ • Arbeitsgemeinschaft Latein (Tirol), Innsbruck 27 February 2013.
S. Wirthensohn, ‘Die De miseriis studiosorum declamatio des Tiroler Humanisten Lucas Geizkofler’ • Herbsttagung Arbeitsgemeinschaft Latein und Griechisch Niederöstereich, Bad Vöslau, 19–20 November 2013.
3.4. Scholarships – Fellowships – Prizes F. Schaffenrath: Alexander-‐von-‐Humboldt-‐Stipendium für erfahrene Wissenschaftler, Freiburg University, November 2012 – April 2014.
W. Barton: Invitation to Collegium for Advanced Studies of the University of Helsinki, Finland, February–April 2013.
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4. Plans for 2014
Our first aim for 2014 is, of course, to pass the review scheduled for 6 February 2014. Only upon a successful outcome the LBI will be able to go ahead with its research programme as planned. Our next goal is to complete the first projects (2011–14) in each PL with its corresponding load of larger publications: the monographs of W. Barton and N. Tjoelker; the editions of I. Walser, V. Sanzotta, S. Wirthensohn, and J. Luggin; the anthology of G. Almási and L. Šubarić. Most of these works, however, will be contracted only at the end of the year and will not be published before 2015, considering that the book production process may take up to a year. O. Margolis’ monograph will take a little longer, not least because he works only 50% for the LBI from December 2013 onwards. U. Kirchler’s revision of his MA thesis and G. Kompatscher-‐Gufler’s edition of the Codex Fuxmagen, neither foreseen in our research programme, will also take longer. F. Schaffenrath, upon his return to the LBI in May 2014, will start editing a Handbook of Latin Habsburg Epic, based on (but not identical to) the conference Neo-‐Latin Epic Poetry and the Habsburg Empire, organized by the LBI and its partner ÖNB in February 2012. A number of further larger publications which were not foreseen in our original research programme have already been contracted and may appear in 2014 (or 2015):
• G. Almási, ‘Latin and the Language Question in Hungary: A Survey of Hungarian Secondary Literature’, forthcoming in Jahrbuch der österreichischen Gesellschaft zur Erforschung des 18. Jahrhunderts 2013 and 2014 [book-‐length survey of Hungarian scholarship on the issue, appears in two parts].
• G. Almási and F. Kiss (eds), Humanistes du bassin des Carpates II: Johannes Sambucus, Turnhout: Brepols (Europa Humanistica) [commented edition of the prefaces and paratexts of the editions published by Johannes Sambucus].
• N. Tjoelker, Andreas Friz’s Epistula de tragoediis (Graz, ca. 1741–44): Edition, Translation, and Commentary, Leiden: Brill (Drama and Theatre in the Early Modern Period) [edition of a virtually unknown but important Jesuit poetics of the 18th century].
• G. Almási and L. Šubarić (eds), Latin at the Crossroads of Identity: The Evolution of Linguistic Nationalism in Enlightenment Hungary, Leiden: Brill [based on, but not identical to the proceedings of the conference Latin, National Identity and the Language Question in Central Europe held at the LBI in December 2012].
• O. Margolis and G. Barrett (eds), Latinity in the Post-‐Classical World, Oxford: Oxford University Press [proceedings of an LBI conference organized with the support of its partner PCSS in April 2013].
• O. Margolis, The Politics of Culture in the World of René of Anjou, Oxford: Oxford University Press [rev. PhD thesis].
We also plan to (co-‐)organize a number of conferences:
• Changing Hearts: Performing Jesuit Emotions Between Europe, Asia and The Americas, Cambridge, Trinity College, 7–8 March 2014 [hosted by the ARC Centre of Excellence for the History of Emotions’ History of Jesuit Emotions project, with the support of Trinity College, Cambridge and the Ludwig Boltzmann Institute of Neo-‐Latin Studies, Innsbruck]
• Bundeskongress of the Deutscher Altphilologenverband, Innsbruck, 22–26 April 2014 [the largest congress of Latinists in the German speaking countries, with ca. 1000 participants; the LBI will take part with several talks and organize a ‘clubbing’ on the evening of 24th April]
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• 16. Neulateinisches Symposium NeoLatina “Angelo Poliziano: Dichter und Gelehrter”, 3–5 July 2014 [co-‐organized by the LBI and Prof. Thomas Baier, Würzburg University]
• Pontes VIII: Supplemente antiker Literatur, Innsbruck, 25–27 September 2014 [co-‐organized by the LBI and the Institut für Sprachen und Literaturen of Innsbruck University]
In addition, our Junior researchers will autonomously organize another international workshop or conference in the autumn.
A number of funding bids are in planning. The most concrete concerns a multivolume dictionary of humanists in Central and Eastern Europe. The model is the well-‐known Verfasserlexikon, published by De Gruyter in 1978–2008 for the German mediaeval period and from 2009 onwards for German humanism (excluding Austria). The first volumes of the new dictionary should cover Austria and the Kingdom of Hungary. Here, we seek funding from the Austrian Science Fund (FWF). A proposal, involving mainly F. Kiss, will be submitted in early 2014. Further volumes are supposed to cover the Czech Republic, Poland, and the Baltics. Here, funding will be sought from the EU and/or the respective national Science Funds. De Gruyter has declared interest in publishing the volumes.
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5. Publications
5.1. Monographs I. Walser, Im theresianischen Zeitalter der Vernunft – Giovanni Battista Graser: De praestantia logicae, Innsbruck: Wagner 2013 (Tirolensia Latina 8).
5.2. Edited volumes S. Tilg and I. Walser (eds), Der neulateinische Roman als Medium seiner Zeit – The Neo-‐Latin Novel in Its Time, Tübingen: Narr 2013 (NeoLatina 21).
5.3 Contributions in edited volumes G. Almási, ‘Bethlen és a törökösség kérdése a korabeli propagandában és politikában [Gábor Bethlen and the problem of the Turkish association in contemporary propaganda and politics]’, in G. Kármán and K. Teszeleszky (eds), Bethlen Gábor és Európa, Budapest: ELTE 2013, 311–366.
–––, ‘The Humanist Dog’, in M. Israëls and Louis A. Waldman (eds), Renaissance Studies in Honor of Joseph Connors, Florence 2013, II, 392–398.
F. Kiss, ‘Political Rhetoric in Anti-‐Ottoman Literature: Martinus Thyrnavinus, To the Dignitaries of the Hungarian Kingdom’, in N. Spannenberger (ed.), Ein Raum im Wandel: Die Osmanisch-‐Habsburgische Grenzregion vom 16. bis zum 18. Jahrhundert, Stuttgart: Franz Steiner 2013, 143–159.
–––, ‘Beszélő könyvek. Dialogikus olvasás, paratextusok és reklám 1500 körül’, in G. Bednanics (ed.), Az olvasás labirintusában: Tanulmányok Eisemann György 60. születésnapjára, Budapest: Ráció Kiadó 2013, 15–35.
M. Korenjak, ‘Jesuitische Poetik im Zeichen der Bildungsdebatte: Die Metamorphosis Poesis Elegiacae’, in B. Hintzen and R. Simons (eds), Norm und Poesie: Zur expliziten und impliziten Poetik in der lateinischen Literatur der Frühen Neuzeit, Berlin: De Gruyter 2013 (Frühe Neuzeit 178), 183–197.
–––, ‘Einladung zu einem Schulausflug in die Hohe Tatra: Johannes Bocatius an Adam Kunisch’, in H. Wiegand and R. Düchting (eds), Aridus frugifer: Michael von Albrecht zum achtzigsten Geburtstag, Heidelberg: Mattes 2013, 69–77.
O. Margolis, ‘Le Strabon du roi René: Biographie politique du livre’, in C. Connochie-‐Bourgne and V. Gontero-‐Lauze (eds), Les arts et les lettres en Provence au temps du roi René, Aix-‐en-‐Provence: Publications de l’Université de Provence 2013, 77–86.
V. Sanzotta, ‘Preumanesimo malatestiano nella Pandetta di Ramo Ramedelli, in M. Palma and C. Vismara (eds), Per Gabriella: studi in ricordo di Gabriella Braga, Cassino: Università degli Studi di Cassino 2013, 1589–1608.
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–––, ‘Cristoforo Landino (Firenze, 1425 -‐ Borgo alla collina [Arezzo] 1498)’, in F. Bausi, M. Campanelli, S. Gentile, and J. Hankins (eds), Autografi dei letterati italiani: Il Quattrocento, Rome: Salerno Editrice 2013, I, 221–235.
–––, ‘Lorenzo Valla (Roma 1407–1457)’, in F. Bausi, M. Campanelli, S. Gentile, and J. Hankins (eds), Autografi dei letterati italiani: Il Quattrocento, Rome: Salerno Editrice 2013, I, 411–428.
F. Schaffenrath, ‘Aeneas Habspurgus vor dem Hintergrund der zeitgenössischen Romantheorie’, in S. Tilg and I. Walser (eds), Der neulateinische Roman als Medium seiner Zeit – The Neo-‐Latin Novel in Its Time, Tübingen: Narr 2013 (NeoLatina 21), 145–160.
L. Šubarić, ‘Praxis der regionalen Literaturgeschichtsschreibung aus latinistischer Sicht’, in M. Cescutti, J. Holzner, R. Vorderegger (eds), Raum – Region – Kultur: Literaturgeschichtsschreibung im Kontext aktueller Diskurse, Innsbruck: Wagner 2013 (Schlern-‐Schriften 360), 171–174.
S. Tilg, ‘The Neo-‐Latin Novel’s Last Stand: András Dugonics’ Argonautica (1778)’, in S. Tilg and I. Walser (eds), Der neulateinische Roman als Medium seiner Zeit – The Neo-‐Latin Novel in Its Time, Tübingen: Narr 2013 (NeoLatina 21), 161–171.
I. Walser, ‘Im Namen des Fürsten und des Volkes Die politische Dimension des neulateinischen Romans’, in S. Tilg and I. Walser (eds), Der neulateinische Roman als Medium seiner Zeit – The Neo-‐Latin Novel in Its Time, Tübingen: Narr 2013 (NeoLatina 21), 211–227.
5.4. Contributions in journals G. Almási, ‘Tycho Brahe and the separation of astronomy from astrology: The making of a new scientific discourse’, Science in Context 26 (2013), 3–30.
G. Almási and F. Kiss, ‘Szöveggondozás és kapcsolatápolás: Zsámboky János életműve a reneszánsz filológia tükrében’, Irodalomtörténeti Közlemények 117 (2013), 627–691.
W. Barton, ‘The Third Elegy of Laurent Le Brun’s (S.J.) Franciad: Difficultas Itinerum in Silvis Canadensibus, The Difficulties of Expression in the Canadian Forest’, Mittellateinisches Jahrbuch 49 (2013), 439–446.
F. Kiss, ‘Des livres qui parlent: Paratexte et publicité au début du 16e siècle’, Acta Musei Nationalis Pragae, Series C: Historia Litterarum (2012/13), 61–68.
–––, ‘Johannes Jacobus de Castelbarco: Regimen contra pestem – Életvezetési és orvosi tanácsok Vitéz János számára’, Lymbus 10 (2012/13), 7–22.
–––, ‘Franciscus Pescennius Niger Báthory Miklós váci püspök udvarában és a Scholasticum Orosianae iuventutis dramma [Franciscus Pescennius Niger in the court of Nicolaus Báthory, bishop of Vác, and the Scholasticum Orosianae Iuventutis Dramma]’, Magyar Könyvszemle 129 (2013), 265–281.
–––, (with E. Poleg, L. Dolezalova, and R. Wójcik), ‘Old Light on New Media: Medieval Practices in the Digital Age’, Digital Philology 2 (2013), 16–34.
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Ludwig Boltzmann InstituteNeo-Latin Studies
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M. Korenjak, ‘Pulcherrimus foecundissimusque Naturae hortus: Berichte über botanisch motivierte Bergbesteigungen im 16. Jahrhundert’, Neulateinisches Jahrbuch 15 (2013), 197–218.
–––, ‘Der Text von Thomas Schoepfs Inclitae Bernatum urbis delineatio chorographica’, Cartographica Helvetica 47 (2013), 27–36.
O. Margolis, ‘Cipriano de’ Mari’s Lucianic Speech for René of Anjou (St-‐Dié, MS 37): Humanism and Diplomacy in Genoa and Beyond’, Renaissance Studies 27 (2013), 219–235.
S. Tilg, ‘Das “missing link” in der Geschichte des lateinischen Romans: Die Milesiaka’, Gymnasium 120 (2013), 325–342.
5.5. Reviews W. Barton, ‘Hagit Amirav and Hans-‐Martin Kirn (eds.) Theodore Bibliander. De ratione communi omnium linguarum et literarum commentarius, Geneva 2011’, Neo-‐Latin News 61 (2013), 170–172.
F. Kiss, ‘Pál Ács and Júlia Székely, Identitás és kultúra a török hódoltság korában [Identity and Culture in the Age of Ottoman Rule in Hungary], Budapest 2012’, Hungarian Historical Review 2 (2013), 189–194.
O. Margolis, ‘Jane Black, Absolutism in Renaissance Milan: Plenitude of Power under the Visconti and the Sforza 1329–1535, Oxford 2009’, English Historical Review 128 (2013), 667–668.
N. Tjoelker, ‘Alexander Loose (ed.), Johannes Dubravius, Theriobulia, Berlin 2011’, Neo-‐Latin News 61 (2013), 56–58.
I. Walser, ‘Bernd Schneider and Christina Meckelnborg (eds), Odyssea Homeri a Francisco Griffolino Aretino in Latinum translata: Die lateinische Odyssee-‐Übersetzung des Francesco Griffolini, Leiden 2011’, Neo-‐Latin News 61 (2013), 162–164.
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