Cooperations 2019:Austrian Hospice Jerusalem, Central Archives for the History of the Jewish People, Jerusalem, Chafetz Chaim, Neve Shalom/Wahat al-Salām, German Association of the Hol
Trang 1Status Quo, Compromise and Parity in Politics, Law and Society
11th Summer Academy on the History of the Jews in the Holy Roman Empire and its Successor States
Jerusalem & Tel Aviv
28 July – 9 August 2019
Contents a) Information
1) Special Topic of the Summer Academy 2019
2) Costs
3) Application
4) Scholarships
5) Cooperations
6) Faculty
b) Programme
General Information
The summer academy on the history of the Jews in the Holy Roman Empire and its successor states was established in 2009 as spin-off product of an application for a research grant from the German Science Foundation (DFG) Although the application failed, the summer academy continued thanks to the support of the universities and cooperating institutions involved Since then it has taken place in Eisenstadt, Fürth, Fulda, Freiburg/Fribourg, Innsbruck, Jerusalem, Leer, Jever, Rauischholzhausen, Schwabach and Vienna From its inception the main objective of the summer academy has been to acquaint students and early career scholars with an intensive, critical, interdisciplinary, research-oriented and source-based training in the history of the Jews and their relations with the non-Jewish environment in Central Europe from the late 15th century to the present The programme of the summer academy is focused on, but not limited to the Jewish experience in the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation
It comprises altogether five components, each of which consists of at least twelve teaching units of 90 minutes each:
A) Background knowledge and discussion
B) In-depth teaching units concerning the annually changing special topic
C) Excursions
D)Paleography courses
E) Finals of the Ius Commune Moot Court – The Imperial Aulic Council and the Historical Jewish Law Moot Court – The Rabbinic Tribunal of Prague
Palaeography courses are offered in different variants and on different levels In the preceding years participants had the opportunity to acquire or enhance reading skills in original German, Hebrew, Yiddish and Judaeo-German This year courses in Czech and Latin will be taught for the first time
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Trang 21) Special Topic of the Summer Academy 2019: Status Quo, Compromise and Parity
in Politics, Law and Society
With the status quo agreement between the Jewish Agency and the Agudath Israel (19 June 1947), the status quo arrangements governing the Church of the Holy Sepulchre and other shared religious sites in Jerusalem and Bethlehem (1757, 1852, 1929) [and the status quo regime of the Temple Mount Israel is a place where the challenges, merits and dilemmas of status quo agreements enshrined in positive and customary law are difficult
to miss for any observer
Contradicting the principles of absolute individual equality and majority rule status quo arrangements do not sit well with classical liberal ideas of governance and law and carry with them the connotation of emergency measures, irregularity and/or substandard political and legal practices Being often situated at the intersection of international and domestic law seems to have added to their obscurity Although some status quo and compromise regimes have lasted for considerable stretches of time and were of pivotal importance for maintaining external and internal peace, they are not treated as regular institutes of law and have failed to attract the attention of mainstream modern political and legal thought
The summer academy 2019 will start with a discussion of status quo agreements, parity and compromise between Catholics and Protestants in the Holy Roman Empire The Westphalian Peace Settlement of 1648 is arguably the most prominent example for a status quo agreement What makes the experience of the Holy Roman Empire
particularly interesting is the design of a set of legal institutes and pocedures to make it
work on a permanent basis The Normaljahr of 1624 (restrospective standard year
determining the status quo), religious parties (corpus Catholicorum and corpus
Evangelicorum) as permanent, but situational institutes in constitutional and international
law, paritas (parity) itio in partes (temporary divsion of the members of the Imperial Diet according to religious affiliation), compositio amicabilis (amicable settlement) were
meant to freeze the political and theological conflict between Catholics and Protestants in the Empire
From the answers to the Catholic-Protestant divide in the Holy Roman Empire this year’s summer academy will move on to more recent attempts to cope with religious and national divisions Particular emphasis will be given to the national compromises in the Habsburg Empire and the social and cultural practices aligned to them In addition the summer academy will ask to what extent the legal regimes of public ecclesiastical law, developed in central Europe and of nationality rights designed in the Habsburg Empire may serve as points of reference for the current debates concerning the religious-secular divide in Israel, the different religious traditions in Judaism and Arab-Jewish coexistence beyond the two state-solution
Overall costs for participation include:
a) Participation fee covering reading material, excursions and entrance fees
For the entire duration of the summer academy:
€ 340,00 for students & affiliates of cooperating universities and institutions/ € 680,00 for external students and other applicants Short-time participation for three consecutive days:
€ 120,00 / € 240,00
Trang 3b) Board and accommodation, covering accommodation in double rooms
throughout the summer academy and all lunch and coffee breaks and
approximately three quarters of the evening meals on working days:
€ 850,00 For those taking care of accommodation themselves: Lunch, coffee breaks and approximately three quarters of the evening meals on working days:
€ 100,00
c) Travel expenses
Participants need to take care of their own travel arrangements to and from the summer academy and cover the corresponding costs themselves (all costs for travel during the summer academy, such as transfer from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem or excursions are covered by the participation fee)
3) Application
There are three rounds of applications Applications for the first round are to be
submitted by 5 December 2018, applications for the second round by 20 February 2019 and applications for the third round by 30 June 2019
Applications are to be directed to Elazar Weiss, Assistant to the Research Group
“Rethinking Early Modern Jewish Legal Culture: New Sources, Methodologies and
Paradigms“ at the Israel Institute for Advanced Studies at the Hebrew University of
Jerusalem at elazarweiss@gmail.com
4) Scholarships
Scholarships provided by a grant from the Gerda Henkel Foundation and other sources worth € 1000,00, € 500,00 or € 300,00 are available to a restricted number of
applicants Applications for scholarships need to be submitted together with the
applications, either by 5 December 2018, 20 February 2019 or 25 June 2019
5) Cooperations
Long-term Cooperations with Universities and Research Institutes:
Friedrich-Alexander-University Erlangen-Nuremberg, Faculty of Humanities, Social
Sciences and Theology (Prof Dr Georg Seiderer)
Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Faculty of Humanities (Dr Ofer Ashkenazi), Faculty
of Law (Prof Dr Hanina Ben Menachem)
Institute for the History of the German Jews Hamburg (Dr Miriam Rürup)
Justus-Liebig-University of Gießen, Department of History (Dr Stephan Wendehorst) Leopold-Franzens-University of Innsbruck, Department of History and European
Ethnology (Prof Dr Stefan Ehrenpreis)
Tel Aviv University, The Buchmann Faculty of Law (Prof Dr Arye Edrei)
University of Vienna, Faculty of Law (Dr Stephan Wendehorst)
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Trang 4Cooperations 2019:
Austrian Hospice Jerusalem, Central Archives for the History of the Jewish
People, Jerusalem, Chafetz Chaim, Neve Shalom/Wahat al-Salām, German
Association of the Holy Land, Cologne, Cooperative Café Fulda at the Paulus House, Jerusalem, Gush Etzion, Paulus House, Jerusalem, Supreme Court of the State of Israel, Jerusalem, Yad be-Yad Max Rayne Bilingual School, Jerusalem, Yad Yaari, Archive and Documentation Centre of Hashomer Hatzair, Givat Haviva 6) Faculty
Lydia Aisenberg,Givat Haviva
Inka Arroyo, Central Archives for the History of the Jewish People, Jerusalem
Daphne Barak-Erez, Supreme Court of the State of Israel, Jerusalem
Yochai Ben-Ghedalia, Director of the Central Archives for the History of the Jewish
People, Jerusalem
Prof Dr Hanina Ben Menachem, Montesquieu Chair in Comparative Law, Hebrew
University of Jerusalem
Rita Boulos, Neve Shalom/Wahat al-Salām
Nathanael von Boxberg, Gush Etzion
Prof Dr Tomer Broude, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Prof Dr Marcus Bugnyar, Rector of the Austrian Hospice
Markus Debertol, M.A., Leopold-Franzens-University Innsbruck
Prof Dr Arye Edrei, Tel Aviv University/Israel Institute for Advanced Studies at the
He-brew University of Jerusalem
Prof Dr Stefan Ehrenpreis, Leopold-Franzens-University Innsbruck
Orly Erez-Likhovski, Jerusalem
Ifat Finkelman, Architect, Tel Aviv & Lecturer, Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design
Prof Dr Edward Fram, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev/University of Vienna
Prof Dr Jonathan Gribetz, Princeton University
Dr André Griemert, Hohe Schule Hanau
Evi Guggenheim Shbeta, Neve Shalom/Wahat al-Salām
Prof Dr Ron Harris, Buchmann Faculty of Law, Tel Aviv University
Ulrich Hausmann, M.A., University of Mainz/University of Vienna
Neal Hendel, Supreme Court of the State of Israel, Jerusalem
Dr Maoz Kahane, Tel Aviv University
Trang 5Prof Dr Aaron Katchen, Jerusalem
Prof Dr Eugene Kontorovich, Antonin Scalia Law School, George Mason University
Prof Dr Rachel Manekin, University of Maryland
Dr Georg Röwekamp, Director of the Jerusalem Office of the German Association of the Holy Land, Jerusalem
Prof Dr Dimitry Shumsky, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Keren Seliger, Chafetz Chaim
Dr Oded Steinberg, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Dr Stephan Wendehorst, Justus-Liebig-University of Gießen/University of Vienna
Pnina Younger, M.A., Central Archives for the History of the Jewish People, Jerusalem Mordechai Zucker, Jerusalem
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Trang 6b) Programme
Status Quo, Compromise and Parity in Politics, Law and Society
11th Summer Academy on the History of the Jews in the Holy Roman Empire and its Successor States Jerusalem & Tel Aviv, 28 July – 9 August 2019
Sunday, 28 July 2019
Austrian Hospice, Jerusalem
3.00 p.m – 3.15 p.m (Austrian Hospice, Salon)
Get Together & Registration
3.15 - 4.00 p.m (Austrian Hospice, Salon)
Welcome Address
Marcus Bugnyar, Rector of the Austrian Hospice, Arye Edrei, Professor of Law, Buchmann Faculty of Law, Tel Aviv University
Status Quo, Compromise and Parity in Politics, Law and Society: Introduction to the 11th Summer Academy on the History of the Jews in the Holy Roman Empire and its Successor States (B I)
Stephan Wendehorst, Gießen/Vienna
Coffee
4.30 – 6.00 p.m (Schmidt Girls’ College, Görres Seminar Room)
German Palaeography, Beginners’ Level (D b I)
Markus Debertol, Innsbruck
4.30 – 6.00 p.m (Paulus House, Club Room, Annex)
German Palaeography, Advanced Level (D c I)
André Griemert, Hanau
4.30 – 6.00 p.m (Austrian Hospice, Salon)
Hebrew, German-Jewish and Yiddish Palaeography, Beginners’ Level (D d I)
Mordechai Zucker, Jerusalem
4.30 – 6.00 p.m (Austrian Hospice, Garden)
Hebrew, German-Jewish and Yiddish Palaeography, Advanced Level (D e I)
Edward Fram, Beer Sheva/Vienna
4.30 – 6.00 p.m (Austrian Hospice, Cafeteria)
Latin (D f I)
Ulrich Hausmann Mainz/Vienna
Dinner
Trang 7Monday, 29 July 2019
Austrian Hospice Jerusalem
9.30 – 11.00 a.m (TAU, Buchmann Faculty of Law, Trobowicz Bldg, Seminar Room 202)
Czech Palaeography (D a I)
Pnina Younger, Jerusalem
9.00 – 10.30 a.m (Schmidt Girls’ College, Görres Seminar Room)
German Palaeography, Beginners’ Level (D b II)
Markus Debertol, Innsbruck
9.00 – 10.30 a.m (Paulus House, Club Room, Annex)
German Palaeography, Advanced Level (D c II)
André Griemert, Hanau
9.00 – 10.30 a.m (Austrian Hospice, Salon)
Hebrew, German-Jewish and Yiddish Palaeography, Beginners’ Level (D d II)
Mordechai Zucker, Jerusalem
9.00 – 10.30 a.m (Austrian Hospice, Garden)
Hebrew, German-Jewish and Yiddish Palaeography, Advanced Level (D e II)
Edward Fram, Beer Sheva/Vienna
9.00 – 10.30 a.m (Austrian Hospice, Cafeteria)
Latin (D f II)
Ulrich Hausmann Mainz/Vienna
Coffee
11.00 a.m – 1.00 p.m (Belz Great Synagogue)
Belz Great Synagogue (C I)
Lunch
4.30 – 6.00 p.m (Paulus House, Museum)
Conrad Schick’s Models of Jerusalem (C II)
Georg Röwekamp, Jerusalem
6.00 – 7.30 p.m (Paulus House, Club Room)
The exhibitiion of „In Statu Quo“
(B II)
Ifat Finkelman, Tel Aviv/Jerusalem, Co-Curator of the Exhibition „In Statu Quo“ at the Tel Aviv Museum of Modern Art
Reception (Cooperative Café Fulda at the Paulus House)
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Trang 8Tuesday, 30 July 2019
Tel Aviv University, Buchmann Faculty of Law
9.00 – 10.30 a.m (Buchmann Faculty of Law, Trobowicz Bldg, Seminar Room 202)
Czech Palaeography (D a III)
Pnina Younger, Jerusalem
9.00 – 10.30 a.m (TAU, Buchmann Faculty of Law, Trobowicz Bldg, Seminar Room 203)
German Palaeography, Beginners’ Level (D b III)
Markus Debertol, Innsbruck
9.00 – 10.30 a.m (TAU, Buchmann Faculty of Law, Trobowicz Bldg, Seminar Room 204)
German Palaeography, Advanced Level (D c III)
André Griemert, Hanau
9.00 – 10.30 a.m (TAU, Buchmann Faculty of Law, Trobowicz Bldg, Seminar Room 205)
Hebrew, German-Jewish and Yiddish Palaeography, Beginners’ Level (D d III)
Mordechai Zucker, Jerusalem
9.00 – 10.30 a.m (TAU, Buchmann Faculty of Law, Trobowicz Bldg, Seminar Room 206)
Hebrew, German-Jewish and Yiddish Palaeography, Advanced Level (D e III)
Edward Fram, Beer Sheva/Vienna
9.00 – 10.30 a.m (207)
Latin (D f III)
Ulrich Hausmann Mainz/Vienna
Coffee
10.45 a.m – 12.15 (TAU, Buchmann Faculty of Law, Trobowicz Bldg, Seminar Room 207)
Jewish Cases before the Prague Court of Appeal (A aa I)
Pnina Marketa Younger, Jerusalem
Lunch
1.00 – 2.30 p.m (TAU, Buchmann Faculty of Law, Trobowicz Bldg, Seminar Room 207)
Court Factors and Peddlers: Jewish History as Demographic, Economic and Social History (A ba II)
Edward Fram, Beer Sheva/Vienna
3.00 - 4.30 p.m.
Beit Hatfutsot – Nahum Goldmann Diaspora Museum (C III)
Dinner
Trang 9Wednesday, 31 July 2019
Austrian Hospice Jerusalem – Givat Haviva
8.00 – 9.30 a.m (Schmidt Girls’ College, Görres Seminar Room)
German Palaeography, Beginners’ Level (D b IV)
Markus Debertol, Innsbruck
8.00 – 9.30 a.m (Paulus House, Club Room, Annex)
German Palaeography, Advanced Level (D c IV)
André Griemert, Hanau
8.00 – 9.30 a.m (Austrian Hospice, Salon)
Hebrew, German-Jewish and Yiddish Palaeography, Beginners’ Level (D d IV)
Mordechai Zucker, Jerusalem
8.00 – 9.30 a.m (Austrian Hospice, Garden)
Hebrew, German-Jewish and Yiddish Palaeography, Advanced Level (D e IV)
Edward Fram, Beer Sheva/Vienna
8.00 – 9.30 a.m (Austrian Hospice, Cafeteria)
Latin (D f IV)
Ulrich Hausmann, Mainz/Vienna
Train and Bus Transfer to Givat Haviva
Givat Haviva
1.00 – 2.00 p.m.
Introduction to Givat Haviva & the Vision of a Shared Society (B III)
Lydia Aisenberg,Givat Haviva
2:15-3.30 p.m.
Meeting Young Arabs from the Wadi Ara (C IV)
3.30 p.m.
Prague and the Birth of the Bi-National Idea in Zionist Thought (B IV)
Dimitry Shumsky, Jerusalem, tbc
4.15- 6.30
Tour of the Green Line - Split village of Barta'a, partly under Israeli and partly under Palestinian control (C V)
Dinner at Givat Haviva
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Trang 10Thursday, 1 August 2019
Austrian Hospice – Central Archive for the History of the Jewish People
9.00 – 10.30 a.m (Schmidt Girls’ College, Görres Seminar Room)
German Palaeography, Beginners’ Level (D b V)
Markus Debertol, Innsbruck
9.00 – 10.30 a.m (Paulus House, Club Room, Annex)
German Palaeography, Advanced Level (D c V)
André Griemert, Hanau
9.00 – 10.30 a.m (Austrian Hospice, Salon)
Hebrew, German-Jewish and Yiddish Palaeography, Beginners’ Level (D d V)
Mordechai Zucker, Jerusalem
9.00 – 10.30 a.m (Austrian Hospice, Garden)
Hebrew, German-Jewish and Yiddish Palaeography, Advanced Level (D e V)
Edward Fram, Beer Sheva/Vienna
9.00 – 10.30 a.m (Austrian Hospice, Cafeteria)
Latin (D f V)
Ulrich Hausmann, Mainz/Vienna
Coffee
11.15 – 12.00 a.m (Austrian Hospice, Salon)
Museum for Islamic Art (C VI)
Lunch (AH)
3.00 – 5.45 p.m (Central Archives for the History of the Jewish People, Reading Room)
History and Holdings of the Central Archives for the History of the Jewish Peo-ple (CAHJP) (A bb III)
Yochai Ben-Ghedalia, Jerualem
Sources from Fürth at the CAHJP
Ulrich Hausmann, Mainz/Vienna
Sources from Hanau at the CAHJP
André Griemert, Hanau
Dinner