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Mapping early modern centres and peripheries: 'marginality' in an east-central European context

Regina Poertner Orcid Logo

Studia Historia, Volume: 58, Issue: 1, Pages: 1 - 14

Swansea University Author: Regina Poertner Orcid Logo

Abstract

This article critically appraises the heuristic plausibility and usefulness of centre-periphery models for explaining processes of cultural transformation in early modern Europe. The confessional history of 17th and 18th c Hungary is explored with a view to assessing the significance of (supposed) h...

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Published in: Studia Historia
Published: 2014
URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa25652
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last_indexed 2018-02-09T05:06:46Z
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spelling 2016-08-04T14:13:01.9550965 v2 25652 2016-01-14 Mapping early modern centres and peripheries: 'marginality' in an east-central European context f036c15868d8077edf9337d4260817ab 0000-0001-6972-4101 Regina Poertner Regina Poertner true false 2016-01-14 AHIS This article critically appraises the heuristic plausibility and usefulness of centre-periphery models for explaining processes of cultural transformation in early modern Europe. The confessional history of 17th and 18th c Hungary is explored with a view to assessing the significance of (supposed) historical 'marginality' for our understanding of processes of identity formation in a period and region that defies easy classification in terms of its place in the grand narrative of the making of the European nation state. Journal Article Studia Historia 58 1 1 14 centre-periphery, marginality, ethnicity, early modern Hungary, Croatia, Slovenia 31 1 2014 2014-01-31 COLLEGE NANME History COLLEGE CODE AHIS Swansea University 2016-08-04T14:13:01.9550965 2016-01-14T17:50:54.2954479 Regina Poertner 0000-0001-6972-4101 1 0025652-15012016125027.pdf Regina_Poertner.pdf 2016-01-15T12:50:27.6700000 Output 227414 application/pdf Accepted Manuscript true 2016-01-15T00:00:00.0000000 true
title Mapping early modern centres and peripheries: 'marginality' in an east-central European context
spellingShingle Mapping early modern centres and peripheries: 'marginality' in an east-central European context
Regina Poertner
title_short Mapping early modern centres and peripheries: 'marginality' in an east-central European context
title_full Mapping early modern centres and peripheries: 'marginality' in an east-central European context
title_fullStr Mapping early modern centres and peripheries: 'marginality' in an east-central European context
title_full_unstemmed Mapping early modern centres and peripheries: 'marginality' in an east-central European context
title_sort Mapping early modern centres and peripheries: 'marginality' in an east-central European context
author_id_str_mv f036c15868d8077edf9337d4260817ab
author_id_fullname_str_mv f036c15868d8077edf9337d4260817ab_***_Regina Poertner
author Regina Poertner
author2 Regina Poertner
format Journal article
container_title Studia Historia
container_volume 58
container_issue 1
container_start_page 1
publishDate 2014
institution Swansea University
document_store_str 1
active_str 0
description This article critically appraises the heuristic plausibility and usefulness of centre-periphery models for explaining processes of cultural transformation in early modern Europe. The confessional history of 17th and 18th c Hungary is explored with a view to assessing the significance of (supposed) historical 'marginality' for our understanding of processes of identity formation in a period and region that defies easy classification in terms of its place in the grand narrative of the making of the European nation state.
published_date 2014-01-31T03:30:40Z
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score 10.999524