Studiengänge
Abschluss |
Studiengang |
LP |
Semester |
Bachelor of Arts
|
Geschichte
Beifach
(
POVersion:
2004
)
|
|
- |
Bachelor of Arts
|
Geschichte
Kernfach
(
POVersion:
2004
)
|
|
- |
Bachelor of Arts
|
Geschichte
Zweitfach
(
POVersion:
2004
)
|
|
- |
Bachelor of Arts
|
Geschichte
Beifach
(
POVersion:
2007
)
|
|
- |
Bachelor of Arts
|
Geschichte
Kernfach
(
POVersion:
2007
)
|
|
- |
Bachelor of Arts
|
Geschichte
Zweitfach
(
POVersion:
2007
)
|
|
- |
Bachelor of Arts
|
Geschichte
Beifach
(
POVersion:
2011
)
|
|
- |
Bachelor of Arts
|
Geschichte
Kernfach
(
POVersion:
2011
)
|
|
- |
Bachelor of Arts
|
Geschichte
Zweitfach
(
POVersion:
2011
)
|
|
- |
Bachelor of Science
|
Geschichte
Beifach
(
POVersion:
2004
)
|
|
- |
Bachelor of Science
|
Geschichte
Zweitfach
(
POVersion:
2004
)
|
|
- |
Bachelor of Science
|
Geschichte
Beifach
(
POVersion:
2007
)
|
|
- |
Bachelor of Science
|
Geschichte
Zweitfach
(
POVersion:
2007
)
|
|
- |
Bachelor of Science
|
Geschichte
Beifach
(
POVersion:
2011
)
|
|
- |
Bachelor of Science
|
Geschichte
Zweitfach
(
POVersion:
2011
)
|
|
- |
Keine Abschlussprüfung
|
Geschichte
Zweitfach
(
POVersion:
2009
)
|
|
- |
Master of Arts
|
European History
Hauptfach
(
POVersion:
2012
)
|
|
- |
Master of Arts
|
Geschichte
Hauptfach
(
POVersion:
2005
)
|
|
- |
Master of Arts
|
Geschichte
Hauptfach
(
POVersion:
2007
)
|
|
- |
Master of Arts
|
Geschichte
Hauptfach
(
POVersion:
2011
)
|
|
- |
Master of Arts
|
Geschichtswissenschaften
Hauptfach
(
POVersion:
2011
)
|
|
- |
Master of Arts
|
Mod. Europ. Geschichte
Hauptfach
(
POVersion:
2012
)
|
|
- |
Programmstudium-o.Abschl.
|
Geschichte
Programm
(
POVersion:
1999
)
|
|
- |
Inhalt
Kommentar |
The ethnic division of labor is a peculiar way of economic organization: In largely homogenous and static peasant societies, ethno-religious minorities fulfill specific economic functions that the majority of the population is barred from performing. In Eastern Europe, the Black Sea region, and the Mediterranean world, Armenians, Germans, Greeks, Jews, and Persians occupied vital economic niches as mobile traders, moneylenders, and town dwellers. With a focus on the economic history of the Russian and Ottoman empires in the period between the seventeenth and the twentieth century, the seminar asks how ethnic economies develop, thrive, and decline. The course scrutinizes the social roots of ethnic economies, its functions, and internal mechanisms; traces the role of ethno-religious minorities in the spread of capitalism; and explores ethnic economies in relation to nationalist policies, modern state building, and genocide. |
Literatur |
Andreas Kappeler, Russia. A Multiethnic History, London 2001; Erik Amburger, Deutsche in Staat, Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft Russlands, Wiesbaden 1986; Nachum Gross, Economic History of the Jews, New York 1975; Huri Islamoglu-Inan (ed.), The Ottoman Empire and the World-Economy, Cambridge 2004; Christine Woodhead (ed.), The Ottoman World, London 2012; Sebouh David Aslanian, From the Indian Ocean to the Mediterranean. The Global Trade Networks of Armenian Merchants from New Julfa, Berkeley 2011. |