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Carl von Ossietzky Universität
Fakultät IV
Institut für Geschichte
Postfach 5634
D-26046 Oldenburg

 

Building A 11 Room 1-117
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Carl von Ossietzky Universität Oldenburg
Fakultät IV, Institut für Geschichte
Ammerländer Heerstr. 114-118
Postfach 5634
D-26046 Oldenburg

Gebäude A 11 Raum 1-117

 +49 (0)441 798-4647

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Articles in anthologies

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2017

  • The eternal Persian. Persianism in Ammianus Marcellinus. In: Rolf Strootman/Miguel John Versluys (eds.), Persianism in antiquity. Stuttgart: Franz Steiner Verlag. S. 345-354.
  • "Demos, I am your friend..." Populisms in Antiquity and the Present. In: Dirk Jörke/Oliver Nachtwey (eds.): The people against (liberal) democracy. Leviathan Special Volume 34, Baden-Baden: Nomos. S. 8-38.

2016

  • Hermann the German. Nineteenth century monuments and histories. In: Thorsten Fögen (ed.), Graeco-Roman antiquity and the idea of nationalism in the 19th century. Case studies. Berlin: De Gruyter. S. 219-233.
  • The Venice of the Sands. Palmyrene trade revisited. In: Jørgen Christian Meyer/Eivind Heldaas Seland/Nils Anfinset (eds.), Palmyrena. City, hinterland and caravan trade between Orient and Occident. Oxford: Archaeopress. S. 11-17.
  • The magic formula for legal certainty. In: German University Association (ed.), Glanzlichter der Wissenschaft. Heidelberg: Winter. S. 167-170.

2015

  • "A vast scene of confusion". The crisis of the 3rd century in research. In: Ulrike Babusiaux/Anne Kolb (eds.), The Law of the "Soldier Emperors". Legal stability in times of political upheaval. Berlin: De Gruyter. S. 15-30.
  • Les notables de Palmyre. Local elites in the Syrian Desert in the 2nd and 3rd centuries AD. In: Piotr Briks (ed.), Elites in the ancient world. Szczecin: Minerwa. S. 173-182.
  • OIKOYMENH. Longue durée perspectives on ancient Mediterranean 'globality'. In: Martin Pitts/Miguel John Versluys (eds.), Globalisation and the Roman world. World history, connectivity and material culture. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. S. 175-197.
  • The Phoenicians in the Mediterranean. Diasporic identities and commercial networks. In: Richard Faber/Achim Lichtenberger (eds.), A Pluriverse Universe. Civilisations and Religions in the Ancient Mediterranean. Paderborn: Wilhelm Fink. S. 191-207.
  • Through the looking glass. Zenobia and 'Orientalism'. In: Dietrich Boschung/Alexandra W. Busch/Miguel John Versluys (eds.), Reinventing 'the invention of tradition'? Indigenous pasts and the Roman present. Paderborn: Wilhelm Fink. S. 113-125.
  • On the future of the past. History as science. In: Dieter Lamping (ed.), Geisteswissenschaft heute. The view of the subjects. Stuttgart: Alfred Kröner Verlag. S. 1-21.

2014

  • Elissa's long journey. Migration, interculturality and the founding of Carthage as reflected in myth. In: Almut-Barbara Renger/Isabel Toral-Niehoff (eds.), Genealogy and Migration Myths in the Ancient Mediterranean and on the Arabian Peninsula. Berlin: Edition Topoi. S. 155-173.
  • Ex oriente lux? The Indian Ocean for Greeks and Romans. In: Rudolf Holbach/Dietmar von Reeken (eds.), "Das ungeheure Wellen-Reich". Bedeutungen, Wahrnehmungen und Projektionen des Meeres in der Geschichte (Oldenburger Schriften zur Geschichtswissenschaft, vol. 15). Oldenburg: BIS-Verlag. S. 33-44.
  • Contact zone and receptivity under imperial auspices - the example of Rome. A footnote to the "complex world of cultural contacts". In: Robert Rollinger/Kordula Schnegg (eds.), Kulturkontakte in antiken Welten. From thought model to case study. Proceedings of the international colloquium on the occasion of Christoph Ulf's 60th birthday, Innsbruck, 26 to 30 January 2009. Leuven: Peeters. S. 203-214.
  • Palmyra. In: Reallexikon für Antike und Christentum 26. pp. 846-782.
  • Pax Augusta - Rome's imperial imperative and the axiom of world domination. In: Marietta Horster/Florian Schuller (eds.), Augustus. Herrscher an der Zeitenwende. Regensburg: Friedrich Pustet Publishers. S. 144-155.
  • Rome is where the emperor is. Constantine and his new residence. In: At that time (ed.), Byzantium. Darmstadt: Theiss Verlag. S. 7-20.

2013

  • Creating civic space through religious innovation? The case of the post-Seleucid Beqaa Valley. In: Ted Kaizer/Anna Leone/Edmund Thomas/Robert Witcher (eds.), Cities and gods. Religious space in transition. Leuven: Peeters. S. 69-79.
  • In the twilight. Hatra between Rome and Iran. In: Lucinda Dirven (ed.), Hatra. Politics, culture and religion between Parthia and Rome. Stuttgart: Franz Steiner Verlag. S. 33-44.
  • Glocalising an empire. Rome in the 3rd century AD. In: Franco De Angelis (ed.), Regionalism and globalism in antiquity. Exploring their limits. Leuven: Peeters. S. 342-352.
  • Scipio Aemilianus, Polybius, and the quest for friendship in second-century Rome. In: Bruce Gibson/Thomas Harrison (eds.), Polybius and his world. Essays in memory of F. W. Walbank. Oxford: Oxford University Press. S. 307-318.
  • Zenobia's children. How Roman was the Roman Orient? In: Alexander Rubel (ed.), Imperium und Romanisierung. New Research Approaches from East and West on the Exercise, Transformation and Acceptance of Rule in the Roman Empire. Constance: Hartung-Gorre-Verlag. S. 103-110.

2012

  • In big shoes. The Diadochi and the Gordian knot of succession. In: Hans-Ulrich Cain et al, Hellenism. Eine Welt im Umbruch, ed. in co-operation with DAMALS - Das Magazin für Geschichte. Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft. S. 25-40.
  • The modern age of antiquity. How to write Hellenistic history? In: Hans-Ulrich Cain et al, Hellenism. Eine Welt im Umbruch, ed. in co-operation with DAMALS - Das Magazin für Geschichte. Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft. S. 115-123.

2011

  • Copiii Zenobiei. Cât de roman era Orientul roman. In: A. Rubel (ed.), Romanizarea. Impunere şi adeziune în Imperiul Roman. Iaşi: Editura universităţii "Al. I. Cuza". S. 170-178.
  • Trans-Saharan long-distance trade and the Helleno-Punic Mediterranean. New perspectives on old texts. In: A. Dowler (ed.), North Africa and the Mediterranean in antiquity. London: British Museum Press. S. 61-64.

2010

  • Historical border crossings. A plea for an interdisciplinary study of history. In: P. Aerni and F. Oser (eds.), Forschung verändert Schule. New findings from the empirical sciences for didactics, education and politics. Zurich: Seismo Verlag. S. 139-151.
  • Homo Mercator. Trading peoples and intercultural networks between Orient and Occident. In: R. Rollinger et al. (eds.), Interculturality in the Ancient World. Near East, Hellas, Egypt and the multiple levels of contact. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz. S. 1-12.
  • Imperial flops and anti-imperialist narratives. Marathon - Varus - Vietnam. In: K. Buraselis and K. Meidani (eds.), Marathon. The battle and the ancient deme. Athens: Institoutou tou Bibliou - A. Kardamitsa. S. 297-308.
  • Modelling Rome's eastern frontier. The case of Osrhoene. In: T. Kaizer and M. Facella (eds.), Kingdoms and principalities in the Roman Near East. Stuttgart: Franz Steiner. S. 217-226.
  • Le ragioni della guerra. Roma, i Parti e l'ultimo imperativo di Cesare. In: G. Urso (ed.), Cesare. Precursorio o visionario? Pisa: ETS. S. 107-124.

2009

  • Imperial power and local identity. Universal-historical variations on a regional-historical theme. In: M. Blömer, M. Facella and E. Winter (eds.), Local Identity in the Roman Near East. Stuttgart: Franz Steiner. S. 235-248.
  • Shaping Mediterranean economy and trade. Phoenician cultural identities in the Iron Age. In: S. Hales and T. Hodos (eds.), Material Culture and Social Identities in the Ancient World. Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press. S. 114-137.

2008

  • Building on the border. Reflections on the monumentalisation of cultural identities. In: F. Pirson and U. Wulf-Rheidt (eds.), Exchange and Inspiration. Cultural contact as an impulse for architectural innovation. Mainz: Philipp von Zabern. S. 202-213.

2007

  • "The Oriental is like a very old child". The Oriental traveller Gertrude Bell. In: S. Winckelmann-Gesellschaft (ed.), Travels in the Orient from the 13th to the 19th century. Stendal: Winckelmann Society. S. 233-241.

2005

  • Aldo Moro. 9 May 1978. In: M. Sommer (ed.), Political Murders. From Antiquity to the Present. Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft. S. 231-238.
  • Introduction. In: M. Sommer (ed.), Politische Morde. From antiquity to the present. Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft. S. 9-20.
  • The emperor speaks. The adlocutio as a motif of communication between emperor and army from Caligula to Constantine. In: B. Meissner, O. Schmitt and M. Sommer (eds.), Krieg - Gesellschaft - Institutionen. Contributions to a comparative history of war. S. 335-354.
  • Martin Luther King, Memphis, 4 April 1968, in: M. Sommer (ed.), Politische Morde. From Antiquity to the Present. Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft. S. 215-222.
  • Palmyra and Hatra. "Civic" and "tribal" institutions at the Near Eastern steppe frontier. In: E. S. Gruen (ed.), Cultural borrowings and ethnic appropriations in antiquity. Stuttgart: Franz Steiner. S. 285-296.

2004

  • The periphery as centre. The Phoenicians and intercontinental long-distance trade in the Iron Age world system. In: R. Rollinger and C. Ulf (eds.), Commerce and monetary systems in the ancient world. Means of transmission and cultural interaction. Stuttgart: Franz Steiner. S. 233-244.
  • Sacred architecture and local identity. In: A. Schmidt-Colinet (ed.), Lokale Identitäten in Randgebieten des Römischen Reiches. Proceedings of the international symposium in Wiener Neustadt, 24-26 April 2003, Vienna: Phoibos. S. 199-208.

2002

  • Art as a commodity. Image production and long-distance trade between the Levant and Greece. In: M. Heinz and D. Bonatz (eds.), Image - Power - History. Visual Communication in the Ancient Orient. Berlin: Reimer. S. 207-224.

2001

  • The Levant in the Iron Age. Ethnicity and acculturation between town and country. In: M. Sommer (ed.), The Levant. Contributions to the Historicisation of the Middle East Conflict. Freiburg: Arnold Bergstraesser Institute. S. 71-82.
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