Project Details
The Gotha – A study of the most important genealogical reference work in modern Europe.
Applicant
Professor Dr. Markus Friedrich
Subject Area
Early Modern History
Modern and Contemporary History
Modern and Contemporary History
Term
since 2023
Project identifier
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 519132233
This project is part of a four-project- “World Genealogy. Presenting, documenting, and instrumentalizing lineages in early modern Asia, Europe, and the Middle East”. The four projects— submitted independently, yet simultaneously—discuss genealogical practices of • Middle Eastern politics • Japanese Buddhism • European aristocracies and state governments. • China’s rural elites The projects together attempt to establish a conceptual roadmap towards a future cross-culturally comparative investigation of genealogical practices. All projects share a common research agenda and working schedule, focusing on genealogical media (year 1 – Research Pathway A), routines of genealogical knowledge management (year 2 – Research Pathway B), and the role of genealogical arguments in creating social, political, and cultural legitimacy (year 3 – Research Pathway C). For a more extensive description of our research agenda, please see the attached pdf-file “Framework Document”. In this context, this project on early modern and modern Europe focuses on the Gothaischer (genealogischer) Hof-Calender, the most important regular genealogical publication of the 19th and (early) 20th century. The study of “the Gotha” covers a number of systematic points relevant for the broader project: concerning the analysis of genealogical media, it brings examples of text-only print publication and serialized media into the conversation; in terms of research practices, it highlights the challenges of contemporary genealogy and provides opportunities to investigate the continuously changing nature of kinship knowledge; regarding the production of legitimacy, the Gotha invites in-depth analysis of the changing relations between dynasty and state as well as the status of genealogy in broader notions of entertaining or curious, conversational texts.
DFG Programme
Research Grants