Research

We invite scholars of religious life and history (including, but not limited to, Christianities) to reflect with us on the polycentric organisation of religious forms and entanglements around the world, as well as the striking pluralities and tensions found even within the self-styled monoliths of the faith (e.g. the Catholic Church). Working at the crossroads of global and local history, we are hoping to develop new methods and approaches that will radically decentralise scholarship on Christian communities and beliefs from the early medieval period through the nineteenth century.

 

We are particularly excited about innovative approaches that focus on behaviours, practices, and objects in order to trigger new ways of seeing the plural and dynamic histories of premodern Christianities. During the first stage of this project (2020–2024), we are chiefly interested in accumulating knowledge, identifying approaches, and evaluating relevant methods. Our work will be organized across a grid of main research areas (structures, resources, practices, spaces) and a number of themes and promising approaches (symbolic communication, speech and register, decision making, entanglement). Our progress will be jointly monitored by the Directors of the research group and the Frankfurt fellows.

 

Our Frankfurt-based research group will facilitate the intellectual collaboration necessary for this project by hosting events such as workshops and conferences. We will also establish a fellowship programme designed to bring junior and senior scholars to Frankfurt for stays of varying lengths. The fellowship funds may include lodging, teaching replacement support, and/or stipends. Further, the Frankfurt Centre will host and support joint research projects conducted by the directors and staff. These projects may range from traditional book projects to the assembly and publication of new online datasets or work with the digital humanities. We look forward to including you in our research community–virtually or physically, as possible–and pursuing this work together!

Projects

Global Governance, Local Dynamics

Global Governance, Local Dynamics

How do abstract claims of religious universalism work on the ground? What made early modern global administrators of the faith tick?
Lead Investigator
Dr Bruno Boute
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Heavenly Brokers, Earthly Clients

Heavenly Brokers, Earthly Clients

This project uses the production and diffusion of the cult of saints as a case study for understanding the polycentric, layered, and tangled nature of premodern Christianities.
Lead Investigator
Prof Dr Birgit Emich
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Topography of Eastern Christianities

Topography of Eastern Christianities

This project investigates the diversity, multiplicity, and cohabitation of different Christian religious groups within the jurisdiction of the four Eastern patriarchates.
Lead Investigator
Dr Bernd Andreas Vest
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Latin and Eastern Christianities – Comparisons and Networks

Latin and Eastern Christianities – Comparisons and Networks

This project aims to integrate and systematise research on relations and comparisons between the Latin and Eastern Churches from the seventh to fifteenth centuries.
Lead Investigator
Prof Dr Dorothea Weltecke
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