Dějepisectví jako výzva
Sociální dějiny – paměť – medievistika
Dějepisectví jako výzva is the result of research published over the past six years, a period profoundly shaped by the COVID-19 pandemic. The essays and studies collected in this volume address issues grouped into three thematic areas: social history, historical memory and memory politics, and major figures of Central European historiography from the 1950s to the 1980s.
In addition to analytical studies examining the origins of such influential concepts as Táborite communism, the bourgeois revolution, and the categories of the rich and the poor, the author critically assesses the contribution of several prominent Czech historians—Jaroslav Mezník, František Šmahel, Josef Válka, and Robert Kalivoda—to European historical scholarship. The volume also includes programmatic reflections on the contemporary challenges of social history, as well as on the various forms of memory politics and the deliberate misuse of memory politics in the Czech Republic.
Dějepisectví jako výzva follows two of the author’s earlier works devoted to the history and theory of nineteenth- and twentieth-century historiography: Dějepisectví mezi vědou a politikou: Úvahy o historiografii 19. a 20. století (2007) and Na vlnách dějin: minulost, přítomnost a budoucnost českého dějepisectví (2020).
Author:
Martin Nodl
Publisher: Argo
Language: Czech
Place: Prague
Year: 2026
Pages: 304
ISBN: 978-80-257-4971-5
Buy: 458 CZK
Víra a společnost v českých zemích pozdního středověku
K dějinám společenských proměn a náboženského konfliktu 14.–16. století
The collective monograph in honour of Blanka Zilynská offers a multifaceted perspective on the transformations of Bohemian society in the late Middle Ages. The contributors examine the tensions between royal and ecclesiastical power, questions of political legitimacy, and the politico-religious conflicts within the lands of the Bohemian Crown. Attention is also devoted to noble families and their personal, economic, and memorial strategies, as well as to the urban milieu.
The volume further addresses the development of the parish network and pastoral administration, as well as intellectual horizons—university learning, theological and legal thought, manuscript and print culture, and religious pluralism and the conflicts arising from it.
Editors:
Kajetán Holeček – David Trojan
Publisher: Karolinum
Language: Czech
Place: Praha
Year: 2026
Pages: 454
ISBN: 978-80-246-6333-3
Buy: 560 CZK
Martin Lupáč z Újezda: Osobitý myslitel husitské éry
The monograph focuses on the prominent writer and cleric Martin Lupáč of Újezd († 1468), who played a key role in the history of Czech Utraquism. The book analyzes his literary work, ideological positions, and historical reflections, particularly in relation to the Basel Compacts, which he helped to negotiate and to which he returned throughout the rest of his life.
Images of the European Middle Ages today are shaped by a wide range of mutually interacting disciplines: history, archaeology, art history, philology, theology, and philosophy. The encounter of different fields and evolving methodological approaches invites a reappraisal of traditional and seemingly closed topics. It is precisely in this direction that the series Středověk (The Middle Ages) proceeds, offering both scholarly monographs and thematic volumes, as well as original sources and their translations. Particular emphasis is placed on making medieval texts accessible, providing commentary on them, and presenting the various ways in which their meanings may be understood.
Author: Adam Pálka
Publisher: Nakladatelství Lidové noviny
Language: Czech
Place of publication: Prague
Year of publication: 2026
Number of pages: 332
ISBN: 978-80-7422-882-7
Buy: 299 Kč
Christians, Pagans, Dissidents: Christianisation in Late Medieval Bohemia and Poland
This collective monograph has three objectives: to clarify the form of paganism‘s survival in the Christian society of the Czech and Polish kingdoms in the Middle Ages; to examine the coexistence of paganism and Christianity in Bohemia and Poland between the 11th and 15th centuries; to shed new light on the processes of external and internal Christianization, which significantly shaped late medieval piety. It seems clear that significant and in many ways unique religious processes took place in medieval Central Europe, conditioned by the need to cope with paganism and the delayed adoption of Western European models of church administration and religious life. In the 15th century, however, Christianized society in the Bohemian and Polish kingdoms began to ask questions that went beyond the intellectual horizons of Western Europe. In the Czech milieu, this process resulted in the Hussite Reformation, a reformation before the Reformation, while in the Polish milieu it gave rise to the concept of unlimited religious tolerance towards pagans derived from natural law and embodied om the, doctrine of ius gentium, as well as to the development of ideas about the uniqueness of Polish Christianity as a bulwark against heresy (Hussite) and Islam.
Editors:
Martin Nodl – Krzystof Bracha
Publisher: Sandstein kultur
Language: angličtina
Place: Dresden
Year: 2026
Pages: 272
ISBN: 978-3-95498-913-3
Buy: 38 €