Das Kolloquium versteht die Renaissance als doppelgesichtigen Projektionsraum: Als Epochenkonzept sowie als Reflexionskategorie, als Zeitraum, in dem wir den Beginn der Moderne lokalisieren und zugleich seine ständig wachsende Fremdheit konstatieren, aber auch als Chance, die für die historischen Wissenschaften zentrale Epochengrenze zwischen Mittelalter und Neuzeit weiter zu dynamisieren. Aus materiellen wie wissenschaftsgeschichtlichen Gründen liegt dabei der Fokus auf dem 14. bis 17. Jahrhundert.

Das Basler Renaissancekolloquium bietet mit thematisch ausgerichteten Veranstaltungen Gelegenheit zum interdisziplinären Gespräch zwischen allen Fächern, die an historischen Transformationsprozessen, Fragen der Traditionsbildung und an der Konstruktion historischer Typologien interessiert sind. Als interdisziplinär ausgerichtete Veranstaltung wird das Basler Renaissancekolloquium vom Departement Geschichte (Lucas Burkart) und dem Kunsthistorischen Seminar (Aden Kumler) getragen; es ist Teil des Angebots der Basel Graduate School of History.

Begründet wurde das Basler Kolloquium im Wintersemester 2005/06 als überregional ausgerichtetes Diskussionsforum und auf Initiative von Prof. em. Dr. Susanna Burghartz, Prof. em. Dr. Achatz von Müller und Prof. Dr. Andreas Beyer.

Basler Renaissancekolloquium
Departement Geschichte
Hirschgässlein 21
CH-4051 Basel
Tel: +41 61 207 46 66
renaissance@unibas.ch


55. Basler Renaissance Kolloquium - "Renaissance of Diplomacy"

13. Dezember 2024, 14h15 - 18h30

Departement Geschichte, Seminarraum 1 - Hirschgässlein 21, 4051 Basel

 

Outline

The European Renaissance is often thought of as a crucial stepping stone in the long genesis of diplomatic practices, but (how) can we understand their complex comprisal of formal and informal elements in terms of a general historical framework? Is it possible to combine various established perspectives – e.g. on institutions, actors and networks, or underlying socio-cultural currents – in an explanatorily meaningful way, and, if so, to what purpose and effect? And, most crucially, can Renaissance diplomacy be thought of as a transregional phenomenon, spurred by outside influences and connectivities as much as by domestic struggles and upheavals?

Looking beyond old and new diplomatic histories, the 55th Basel Renaissance Colloquium aims to explore how a multi-layered kaleidoscope of interests, objects, channels, flows, and contexts enabled diplomatic exchange to transpire and flourish. Thus seeking to complement and extend prior conceptualizations, we propose to examine diplomacy – broadly understood as the intent of projecting power by non-violent means in pursuit of political goals – as an arena of encounters: a spectacle of discourses and intentions, successes and failures, (mis-)understandings and contingencies that gradually (and discontinuously) carved new inter-relational avenues for (self-)assertion, negotiation, and compromise. The broad array of Renaissance historiography may thus also serve as a conceptual starting point from which to venture beyond its traditional chronological and spatial boundaries.

Renaissance of Diplomacy thus invites to revisit the social, material, and intellectual conditions for emerging powers and hierarchies to develop into customized forms of interaction. The meeting is intended as an interdisciplinary forum open to (and seeking to combine) methods from e.g. social, political, intellectual, and art history, and/or perspectives that engage with non-European/global contexts. We are particularly interested in comparative, connected and/or gendered approaches as well as in thematic contributions relating to narratives and imaginaries of belonging, the politization of ideas and artistic practices, and the construction, representation, and differentiation of collective identities, among others.

The colloquium will allow for individual presentations of about 30 minutes in length, followed by questions and a final roundtable discussion.

 

Faraway Lands, Local Imperatives: Medieval Ethiopian Diplomacy Reconsidered

Verena Krebs (Bochum)

This talk reconsiders the motivations behind a dozen diplomatic missions sent by the Christian kings of Solomonic Ethiopia to Renaissance Europe in the fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries. Recent research has highlighted the rulers' pursuit of religious relics and skilled artisans, but how crucial were these efforts in securing and legitimising local political authority within the Ethiopian-Eritrean highlands? By viewing these missions as part of a broader attempt by the ruling house to align itself with the ideological framework of the Kebra Negast, a foreign text adopted as the Solomonic dynasty’s foundational myth, this talk examines the relationship between long-distance diplomacy, local power dynamics, royal legitimacy, and cultural production in the fifteenth- and early sixteenth-century Horn of Africa.

Ephemeral Diplomacy in Renaissance France and The Netherlands: Public Engagement with International Relations at Celebratory Festivals

Bram van Leuveren (Utrecht University, Department of Art History)

This paper examines how in the late sixteenth- to seventeenth centuries French and Netherlandish authorities made conscious use of pageantry to advance their diplomatic interests in a war-torn Europe. Of particular concern are the diplomatic stakeholders from across the continent, including ambassadors and spies, but also university students and ordinary citizens, who participated and responded to the theatrical and ceremonial events that featured at French and Netherlandish festivals celebrating events of diplomatic importance, such as weddings, betrothals, and visits of befriended rulers. Analyzing a large body of multilingual eyewitness and commemorative accounts, as well as visual and material objects, the paper argues that French and Netherlandish pageantry operated as contested sites where diplomatic concerns of stakeholders from various regional, national, religious, and social backgrounds competed for recognition.

Renaissance Diplomacy? Evaluating a Research Concept from the Perspective of Current Trends in the History of Diplomacy

Harriet Rudolph (Regensburg)

The first part of the lecture is dedicated to the case study of a diplomatic actor around 1600, for whom there is an exceptionally dense tradition regarding Ego-documents. As a result we can approach the individual behind the diplomatic function and shed light on the relationship between emerging diplomatic offices and office-holders in a phase in which European diplomacy was considerably intensified and institutionalised. By analysing different genres of sources - including those that have not been the focus of diplomatic history studies for a long time - it is possible to establish variable practices of generating knowledge, networking and the self-staging of diplomatic actors, which are documented in the present example, for example, in linguistic, ethnographic and historical studies, the creation of art chambers or the keeping of alba amicorum. Based on the results of this case study, the second part of evaluates virulent concepts of Renaissance diplomacy and relates them to current approaches in the history of diplomacy in early modern times.


Veranstaltungsarchiv

BRK54«Secret Renaissance»14. Mai 2024ProgrammAbstracts
BRK53«meta-renaissance(s)»3. November 2023ProgrammAbstracts
BRK52«Renaissance Properties»5. Mai 2023ProgrammAbstracts
BRK51«Dark Renaissance»2. Dezember 2022ProgrammAbstracts
BRK50«Renaissance Patterns – Muster der Renaissance»20. Mai 2022Programm 
BRK49«Geologie der Renaissance»23. April 2021Programm 
BRK48«Die Renaissance – eine Begriffsdiskussion»11. Dezember 2020ProgrammBericht
BRK47«African Renaissance»2. Oktober 2020Programm 
BRK46«Gerüstete Renaissance»13. Dezember 2019ProgrammBericht
BRK45«Renaissance Underground»18. Oktober 2019ProgrammBericht
BRK44«Travel, Maps and Ethnography»24. Mai 2019ProgrammBericht
BRK43«Verschleierte Renaissance»14. Dezemer 2018ProgrammBericht
BRK42«Tiere»19. Oktober 2018ProgrammBericht
BRK41«Fashionable Renaissance»10. November 2017ProgrammBericht
BRK40«Reformation und Renaissance»21. April 2017ProgrammBericht
BRK39«Athletische Renaissance – Sport und Jagd in der frühen Neuzeit»28. Oktober 2016ProgrammBericht
BRK38«Renaissance Books - A Mediology»11. März 2016ProgrammBericht
BRK37«Globalizing the Renaissance - New Perspectives»4. Dezember 2015ProgrammBericht
BRK36«Autorenschaft und Person»8. Mai 2015ProgrammBericht
BRK35«Ungleichheiten»6. März 2015ProgrammBericht
BRK34«Körper und Herrschaft»14. November 2014ProgrammBericht
BRK33«Schiffbruch: Erfolgsgeschichten des Scheiterns»3. Oktober 2014ProgrammBericht
BRK32«Fundamente der Moderne»16. Mai 2014ProgrammBericht
BRK31«Talking about Desire - Writing the Renaissance»7. März 2014ProgrammBericht
BRK30«Schauplatz Buch: Vernetzung und Zirkulation»13. Dezember 2013ProgrammBericht
BRK29«Invidia – ein Affekt zwischen Ökonomie und Moral»18. Oktober 2013ProgrammBericht
BRK28«Vermessungen»17. Mai 2013ProgrammBericht
BRK27«Briefgefühle»15. März 2013ProgrammBericht
BRK26«Schöne Gesellschaften? Asymmetrie und Vollkommenheit»14. Dezember 2012ProgrammBericht
BRK25«trading zones – contact zones – entanglement.
Theorien und Konzepte auf dem Prüfstand»
12. Dezember 2012ProgrammBericht
BRK24«Wissensordnungen»25. Mai 2012ProgrammBericht
BRK23«Verzeitlichung»27. April 2012ProgrammBericht
BRK22«Das Wissen der Sammler»2. Dezember 2011ProgrammBericht
BRK21«Renaissance décentrée - dezentrierte Renaissance»7. Oktober 2011ProgrammBericht
BRK20«Epoche - Mythos - Konzept»3. Juni 2011ProgrammBericht
BRK19«Luxuroius Renaissance»1. April 2011ProgrammBericht
BRK18«Konsum und Geschäft - Consumer‘s Renaissance»3. Dezember 2010ProgrammBericht
BRK17«Buchgeld - Die Versprechungen der Hypnerotomachia Poliphili»29. Oktober 2010ProgrammBericht
BRK16«Gelehrtenkultur und Wissenspraxis»28. Mai 2010Programm 
BRK15«Fragile Männlichkeit»10. März 2010ProgrammBericht
BRK14«Räume der Renaissance»13. November 2009ProgrammBericht
BRK13«Renaissance und Religion»25. September 2009ProgrammBericht
BRK12«Körper - Natur - Wissenschaft»12. Dezember 2008ProgrammBericht
BRK11«Renaissancismus»17. Oktober 2008Programm 
BRK10«Das Mittelmeer: Kontakt- oder Konfliktraum?»23. Mai 2008ProgrammBericht
BRK9«Konzil und kulturelle Kommunikation»4. April 2008ProgrammBericht
BRK8«Kulturelle Austauschprozesse in der Renaissance»14. Dezember 2007 ProgrammBericht
BRK7«Renaissance als internationaler Modernisierungsprozess»19. Oktober 2007   ProgrammBericht
BRK6«Die Renaissance der Anderen?»19. April 2007ProgrammBericht
BRK5«Paradigma Antika»8. Dezember 2006Programm 
BRK4«Kunstpatronage: Neue Forschungsperspektiven»22. Juni 2006Programm 
BRK3«Identität und Differenz: Kostüm und Nacktheit»28. April 2006Programm 
BRK2«Die Renaissance und der Norden»27. Januar 2006  
BRK1«Renaissance heute – eine wissenschaftskritische Terrainerkundung»9. Dezember 2005Programm