Religious Transformations in Central and Eastern Europe, c. 800-1800
Series editors

Mihai Dragnea, University of South-Eastern Norway and President of the Balkan History Association

Geographical Scope
East Central Europe (Poland,Czechia,Slovakia,Hungary); Southeastern Europe (Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria,Cyprus,Greece, Montenegro,Moldova,North Macedonia,Romania,Serbia,Turkey); Eastern Europe (Ukraine,Belarus,Russia,Lithuania,Latvia,Estonia)
Chronological Scope
AD 800-1800
Keywords
Religious studies, cultural, political and social transformations, Christianity, secularism, illuminism, Reformation
Serie

Religious Transformations in Central and Eastern Europe, c. 800-1800

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This peer-reviewed series provides an opportunity for scholars to publish high-quality studies on the religious transformations in central and eastern Europe, contextualised within a comprehensive understanding of the culture, society, and economy of this vast region. The series welcomes monographs and edited volumes on subjects related to: Christian and pagan identity, Christian kingship, cultural encounters, otherness, barbarians, missionary strategy, narratives, gesta episcoporum, hagiography, canon law, canonical aspects of missionary work, forced conversion, clerical involvement in warfare, military orders, Holy War, martyrdom, sacralisation of a landscape, pilgrimage, shrines, saints’ cults, relics of saints, icons, war banners, pagan war rituals, burial practices, settlement, mobility, colonization, mental geographies, trade, exploration, mappae mundi, portolan charts, urban and rural studies, intragroup and intergroup relations, political relations, dynastic marital alliances, diet and fashion, Reformation, Counter-Reformation, religious communities in the Ottoman Empire, secularism.

Cross, Ravenna, 6th century