The current Fellow of the Max Weber
Center for Cultural and Social Studies of the University of Erfurt, Prof. Dr.
Cornel Zwierlein, has received a Heisenberg scholarship for his research
project "Close Distance. A knowledge history of European merchant colonies
in the Levant, 17.-19. Century". The Heisenberg program is granted to
scientists who already fulfill all the prerequisites to be appointed to a
permanent professorship, in order to carry out their top-class projects.
Merchant colonies of pre-modern
trading empires were not only the central network nodal points for economic
import and export flows of goods and values, they were also cultural and
epistemic units of their own kind. In the last decades the research concerning
large parts of the Levant trade and local (west) European actors has been
neglected. This includes their characteristic,
epistemic and cultural functions, communication and representative performance.
Based on this observation the project seeks, from a historical perspective, to
contribute to fundamental research for the actors, especially English, French,
and the comparative outlook for the Italian and Dutch merchant colonies in the
Levant from the 17th to the early 19th century in this respect.
The project, which Zwierlein is working
on at the Max Weber Kolleg, closely follows this project. He works on early
forms of religious studies, which were embedded in the exchange of the network
of Mediterranean consuls and merchant colonies of France, England and the
missionaries and societies of Europe such as the Royal Society and the
Académie des sciences. In particular, for the preparatory smaller case study,
he focuses on an important Greek orthodoxy and Eastern Church researcher in
France around 1700, Eusèbe Renaudot, who also supported English Catholics as a
spy and, succeeding his grandfather, publisher of France's oldest national
newspaper, the Gazette de France was.
"We are happy about the success of Prof. Dr. Zwierlein in the recruitment of this
prestigious scholarship of the German Research Foundation (DFG), which will enable him to profile for his further scientific career.
We wish him all the best for his work following his research stay at the Max
Weber Kollege, which fortunately will continue until March 2018, "said
Professor Hartmut Rosa, the director of the Max Weber Kolleg.
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