Rethinking Europe: War and Peace in the Early Modern German Lands
The Eighth International Conference
Sponsored by
Frühe Neuzeit Interdisziplinär
Rethinking Europe: War and Peace in the Early Modern German Lands
Click Here for the Program for the FNI 2018
8th Frühe Neuzeit Interdisziplinär Conference
8-10 March 2018
Washington University; St Louis, Missouri
Executive Committee
Jill Bepler
Herzog August Bibliothek Wolfenbüttel
Amy Burnett
University of Nebraska, Department of History
Mary Frandsen
University of Notre Dame, Department of Music
Joel Harrington
Vanderbilt University, Department of History
University of California, Riverside, Department of History
Sigrun Haude, Co-Chair
University of Cincinnati, Department of History
Craig Koslofsky
University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana, Department of History
Mary Lindemann
University of Miami, Department of History
Helmut Puff
University of Michigan, Department of Germanic Languages & Literatures
Thomas Robisheaux
(Vice-President and Treasurer), Duke University, Department of History
Christian Schneider, Co-Organizer
Washington University in St. Louis, German Department
Gerd Schwerhoff
TU Dresden, Department of History
Jeffrey Chipps Smith
University of Texas Department of Art and Art History
Lynne Tatlock
Washington University, St. Louis, Department of Germanic Languages & Literature
Elisabeth Waghall
Stockholm University, Department of Slavic and Baltic languages, Finnish, Dutch, and German
Gerhild Scholz Williams, President
Washington University in St. Louis, German Department
Sponsors
Friends of the Herzog August Bibliothek Wolfenbüttel
Dean of the College of Arts & Science, Vanderbilt University
Max Kade Center for European and German Studies
Invisible Text to hold place--- I. Omnes homines dignitate et iure liberi et pares nascuntur, rationis et conscientiae participes sunt, quibus inter se concordiae studio est agendum. II. Omnium hominum propria sunt quae iura et libertates in hac DECLARATIONE enuntiantur: generis,vultus, sexus, linguae, religionis, opinionis civilis, nullo discrimine atque sine natione divitiis loco discretis. Praeterea nullum discrimen statuetur civitatis forma et iuris aut gentium, regionis aut territorii cuius quidam est, sive ea regio aut territorium sui iuris est vel in administrationis fiduciariae dicione vel non liberum vel in cuiuslibet imperii modi potestate. III. Suae quisque ipsius vitae, libertatis, incolumitatis potestatem habet. IV. Homo nemo iugo et servitute oppressus teneri poterit; nullo pacto, servitus et mancipiorum commercium. V. Homo nemo in cruciatum poterit dari, suppliciis atrocibus adhibendis. VI. Suae quisque ipsius probationis potestatem habet, ubicumque gentium, personae rationalis et civilis. VII. Omnes homines ea lege, qua aequo modo defendantur, sunt pares, sine ullo discrimine. Omnes homines lege aequa suae ipsorum defensionis ius habent ab omni discrimine quod eam DECLARATIONEM violet, atque ab omni incitamento ad id discrimen efficiendum. VIII. Suae quisque ipsius appellationis ad idonea tribunalia patria de facinoribus quae maxima et iusta iura violent ei relata a rei publicae institutis vel legibus, potestatem habet. IX. Homo nemo sine causa prehendi, custodia teneri, vel exilio poterit affici. X. Sui quisque, pari iure, iudices aeque ac coram omnibus adeundi potestatem habet, qui non opinioni obnoxii sint sed integri, ut iura officiaque sua constituantur atque criminis contra se iustae causae.