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Transylvanian Saxons' migration from Romania to Germany: the formation of a 'return' diaspora?
(2013)
Processes and patterns of migration on a global scale have changed in profound ways during the last two decades (Smith and King, 2012). In the European context, this is exemplified by transformations to the traditional mobility patterns from East to West Europe (Koser and Lutz, 1998), with migrants more likely to be involved in temporary circular and transnational mobility (Favell, 2008). Since the end of the Second World War, historical and political events in Europe have facilitated the mobility of ethnic Germans from Eastern Europe to Germany. Subsequently, the fall of the Iron Curtain has permitted unrestrained East-West movements, which resulted in mass migrations towards the West and diaspora fragments in the East. However, after settlement in the West, ethnic Germans have also been absorbed within wider temporary and transnational movements (Koser, 2007). Within this context, this thesis examines the post-migratory lives of three generations of Transylvanian Saxons in Germany by exploring the cultural, social, economic and political dimensions of this community. This thesis aims to contribute to on-going academic debates about diasporas by explicitly responding to Hoerder s (2002) call for more studies on ethnic German diasporas. It shows that Transylvanian Saxons, who relocated to the ancestral homeland, do not disrupt identities and lives forged in diaspora, but rather, they negotiate complex identities and belongings in relation to both home and homeland . It reveals a double diaspora and the necessity to perceive identity and diaspora as dynamic processes and constantly evolving in relation to time, space and place. This double diasporic allegiance in the case of the Transylvanian Saxons suggests interrogating the formation of a return diaspora and its importance for processes of international migration.
Der Beitrag erwägt aus bibelhermeneutischer Perspektive, wie es zu unterschiedlichen Idealisierungen des alttestamentlichen Gemeinwesens im politischen Denken der Frühen Neuzeit kam. Dabei werden zunächst allgemeine Faktoren berücksichtigt, die eine biblische Orientierung im politischen Denken ausgehend von der Reformationszeit im 16. Jahrhundert erklärbar machen. Ein Überblick über betreffende Quellentitel des 16. und 17. Jahrhunderts zeigt, dass hierbei in allen größeren Konfessionen, wenn auch in unterschiedlicher Dichte, das Ideal des alttestamentlich-jüdischen Gemeinwesens eine Rolle spielte. Entlang zweier Fallbeispiele (François Ragueau, Petrus Cunaeus) werden dann konfessionelle und transkonfessionelle Aspekte unterschieden, um neue Perspektiven auf das Konfessionalisierungsparadigma und andere Modernisierungstheorien zu eröffnen.
Wanderschaft war ein Grundzug des Mittelalters. Könige, Kaufleute, Bettler und Ganoven, die Wanderarbeiter der Bauhütten, die Söldner der großen Armeen, in ihrem Gefolge die Dirnen, dann die Studenten und nicht wenige Professoren: Sie alle hatten lange Jahre der Wanderschaft und der Fremde zu überstehen, bevor sie sich – wenn überhaupt – irgendwo dauerhaft niederlassen konnten. Seit dem 10. und frühen 11. Jahrhundert beklagten die Grundherren die Flucht ihrer Hintersassen, die in die Städte zogen oder sonst wohin, um dort ihr Glück zu machen. Mobilität war ein Wesenselement der ganzen Epoche.
Wenn eine historische Epoche mit dem Prädikat "mobil" ausgezeichnet werden kann, dann doch wohl die unsrige. Mit diesem weitverbreiteten Irrtum macht der Mediävist Schluss: In der Auseinandersetzung mit dem Mittelalter können wir selbst überprüfen, ob unsere Vorstellungen von der Mobilität in Vergangenheit und Gegenwart noch haltbar sind.
Das Arbeitspapier zeigt Perspektiven eines Promotionsprojektes auf, das sich mit der Reform der englischen Common Law- und Equity-Gerichtsbarkeit im Viktorianischen Zeitalter befasst. Nach einem Einblick in relevante Quellen und Literatur wird inhaltlich auf Mitglieder und Aufgaben der im Jahr 1867 eingesetzten Judicature Commission eingegangen. Anschließend werden Neuerungen aufgezeigt, die für das englische Gerichtswesen aus den in den 1870er Jahren verabschiedeten Judicature Acts folgten.
During the height of the Second World War pressure from Great Britain resulted in the transfer of thousands of German prisoners of war (PoWs) from British to Canadian control. To house them, Canada built a system of PoW camps, including Riding Mountain Camp in southwestern Manitoba. The PoWs sent there soon realized their good fortune: they lived in warm barracks, ate abundant food, and were able to purchase goods from a mail order catalog. But while the PoWs were well treated, they were at the same time subjected to a concerted reeducation campaign organized by the Allies. This reveals that these Canadian camps were not merely warehouses for the PoWs, but in fact, classic reforming institutions.
Initially subjected to ideological training under Nazism, the PoWs were next subjected to another kind of education under the Canadians. Evidence collected from oral history interviewing, archival research, and three seasons of field archaeology combine to reveal that material culture was a key nexus in this competition for the minds of the PoWs. In addition to providing books and teaching courses on history and political science, the Canadians introduced the PoWs to a democratic, capitalistic way of life by familiarizing them with North American consumer goods and by allowing them to fraternize with Canadian civilians. The Nazi bureaucracy, in turn, used material things to try to keep the PoWs from turning to the other side. For example, by sending them crisp new Wehrmacht uniforms from Germany, heartening Christmas cards, and packages filled with German goods adorned with Nazi symbolism.
This paper examines a practice that is nearly imperceptible to historians because the bulk of evidence for it is to be found in the interstices of the beaten paths of legal and social history and because it mixes economic and religious matters in a strikingly unfamiliar manner. From the thirteenth to the sixteenth century, excommunication for debt offered ordinary people an economical, efficacious enforcement mechanism for small-scale, daily, unwritten credit. At the same time, the practice offered holders of ecclesiastical jurisdiction an important opportunity to round out their incomes, particularly in the difficult fifteenth century. This transitional practice reveals a level of credit below that of the letters of change, annuities secured on real property, or written obligations beloved of economic historians and historians of banking. Studying the practice casts light on the transition from the face-to-face, local economies of the high Middle Ages to the regional economies of the early modern period, on how the Reformation shaped early modern regimes of credit, and on how the disappearance of ecclesiastical civil justice facilitated the emergence of early modern juridically sovereign territories.