Reuniones científicas

Jue, 16-01-2014; 01:00
Sede CCHS
Conferencia "Islamic Cities, Chinese Paper, and Jewish Readerships in the Ninth-Century Near East"
Por Fred Astren (San Francisco State University)
 
Sala Julián Ribera 1C
 
Organiza: G.I.
Jue, 09-01-2014; 01:00
Sede CCHS
Seminario 'Cuneiform Archives and Archival Traditions': "The Sumerian Talent: Its way from the 'load' to the standardized unit of weight"
Por Vitali Bartash (Goethe-University, Frankfurt/Main)
 
Sala Gili Gaya 1E
 
Organiza: G. I. "Próximo Oriente Antiguo" (ILC, CCHS-CSIC)
Mar, 17-12-2013; 01:00
Sede CCHS
Seminario del proyecto CORPI: "1391. Massacre or Miracle"

Por David Nirenberg (University of Chicago)

Sala Julián Ribera 1C

Organiza: Proyecto CORPI (Conversion, Overlapping, Religiosities, Polemics and Interaction)

 

Vie, 29-11-2013; 01:00 hasta Sáb, 30-11-2013; 01:00
Otras sedes
Congreso "Bartolomeo e Giuseppe Lagumina e gli studi storici e orientali in Sicilia fra Otto e Novecento"
Lugar: Sala della Congregazione delle Missioni. Biblioteca centrale della Regione Siciliana ‘Alberto Bombace’.
Mar, 26-11-2013; 01:00
Sede CCHS
Conferencia-seminario sobre el proyecto "El paisaje Sagrado de Dra Abu el-Naga"

Por María de los Ángeles Jiménez Higueras (Universidad de Liverpool) y otros miembros de su equipo

Sala Menéndez Pidal 0E18

Organiza: José Manuel Galán (ILC, CCHS-CSIC)

Mar, 26-11-2013; 01:00
Sede CCHS
Seminario del proyecto CORPI: "Neo-Platonic Elements in Ottoman Imperial Ideology in the Sixteenth Century"

Por Sinem Eryilmaz 

Sala Gómez Moreno 2C

Organiza: Proyecto CORPI (Conversion, Overlapping, Religiosities, Polemics and Interaction)
 
Lun, 07-10-2013; 02:00
Sede CCHS

Por Menachem Lorberbaum (Tel-Aviv University & Shalom Hartman Institute, Jerusalem)

Sala Julián Ribera 1C

Mié, 24-04-2013; 02:00
Sede CCHS
Ciclo de conferencias 'Seminario de Estudios Judíos': "To Spain and Back: The Arabic Origins of Ashkenazi Pilpul"
Por Daniel Boyarin (University of California, Berkeley)
 
Sala Julián Ribera 1C
 
The seminar will trace the Talmud in (some) of its wanderings around the diaspora from the 10th to the 19th centuries showing how it both constituted the Jewish diaspora and was ever renewed precisely because of that diaspora.