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Ulrike Krampl
@ulkrampl.bsky.social
Historienne moderniste, XVIIe-XVIIIe s., université de Tours, CeTHiS, histoire sociale et culturelle, histoire du genre, plurilinguisme, histoire urbaine cethis.hypotheses.org/
127 followers132 following8 posts
Reposted by Ulrike Krampl

And if you simply can't wait, a frankly craven reminder that you can read the first article based on this research right now in Transactions of the Royal Historical Society -- it's open access here: www.cambridge.org/core/journal...

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Reposted by Ulrike Krampl
JGjuliengossa.cpesr.fr

Cette circulaire est très inquiétante car elle confond la laïcité et l'obligation de neutralité des agents envers les usagers, avec l'interdiction pour les étudiants de manifester une opinion à propos d'un conflit armé de nature éventuellement religieuse.

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Reposted by Ulrike Krampl
Eenccre.bsky.social

Et approfondissez votre visite avec la lecture du dossier proposé par Anthony Saudrais sur l'ENCCRE en juin dernier : enccre.academie-sciences.fr/encyclopedie...

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Reposted by Ulrike Krampl
AMassomnemosyne.bsky.social

Ce livre est le petit frère de "L'Europe des femmes, XVIIIe-XXIe siècle" paru en 2017 sous la direction de Julie Le Gall et Fabrice Virgili ⤵️

Première de couverture
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Reposted by Ulrike Krampl
AMassomnemosyne.bsky.social

Et voici les sujets abordés 😊 ⤵️ Politiques, combattantes, voyageuses, matrimoine, travail, éducation, créatrices, divin, violences, sociabilités, sexualité, mariage, misogynie. Tous les thèmes traités à travers une sélection de documents, 150 notices, 120 auteurs et autrices.

Table des matières
Table des matières
Table des matières
Table des matières
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Reposted by Ulrike Krampl
RArichardjansell.bsky.social

They are Thomas Addison's journal of France and Italy (1765), Edmund Dewes's for the same countries and Germany (1776), James Thoburn's travels in western Europe and in the Ottoman Empire (1787–98) and Ann Scafe's journey to Brussels and Paris (1790)

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Reposted by Ulrike Krampl
RArichardjansell.bsky.social

Thank you for saying so, and for your encouragement with it! I’m really excited to see what people will do with the texts

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Reposted by Ulrike Krampl
KHkateheartfield.com

Here are a few more examples of Black fencers, one from Mair (1550s), and two from Talhoffer (1450s), all from wiktenauer.com. There might be others; these are just a few I happened across.

An illustration of two swordsmen using rapiers, the one on the left a white man with a fancy curling beard, the one on the right a Black man with earrings.
An illustration of two fighters, one white (I think) and one Black, with poleaxes.
Two fighters, one white and one Black, using poleaxes and wearing some armour.
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UKulkrampl.bsky.social

You could find some information in Aline Steinbrecher's work (Zurich), I guess. There are loads of dogs in the presse d'annonces from its beginnings in the 18th c. Enjoy!

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Ulrike Krampl
@ulkrampl.bsky.social
Historienne moderniste, XVIIe-XVIIIe s., université de Tours, CeTHiS, histoire sociale et culturelle, histoire du genre, plurilinguisme, histoire urbaine cethis.hypotheses.org/
127 followers132 following8 posts