URBAN
RENEWAL
AND
RESILIENCE
CITIES IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
ROME – ITALY
29th August – 1st September 2018
Medal of recognition from the
President of the rePublic
to the 14th Conference of the European Association for Urban History
The local Organising Committee of the 14th Conference European Association for Urban
History would like to thank the following institutions and associations for their support
CHUHRS
CULTURAL HERITAGE
URBAN HISTORY
AND REGIONAL STUDIES
2
CONTENTS / SOMMAIRE
Welcome / Bienvenue........................................................................................................................................4-5
Organisers / Organisateurs.........................................................................................................................6-9
Keynote speakers / Conférenciers principaux.....................................................................10-14
Conference venue / Lieu du colloque.............................................................................................15-18
Programme at a glance / Programme en un coup d’œil.......................................................19
Timetable / Horaire.......................................................................................................................................20-21
Sessions...................................................................................................................................................................22-82
Wednesday 29 August / Mercredi 29 août..............................................................................................22
Plenary session / Session plénière
Thursday 30 August / Jeudi 30 août..................................................................................................23-46
Plenary session / Session plénière
Parallel sessions / Sessions parallèles
Friday 31 August / Vendredi 31 août...............................................................................................46-74
Plenary session / Session plénière
Parallel sessions / Sessions parallèles
Saturday 1 September / Samedi 1 Septembre..............................................................................74-82
Plenary session / Session plénière
Parallel sessions / Sessions parallèles
Instruction for speakers / Instruction pour les conférenciers................................84-85
Registration / Enregistrement...........................................................................................................86-87
Other conference information / Autres informations...................................................88-89
Social programme / Programme sociale..................................................................................90-95
General information / Informations générales...................................................................96-99
Index..................................................................................................................................................................................100
3
WELCOME TO THE 14th INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE
ON URBAN HISTORY
Dear Colleagues and Friends,
I am honored to welcome you in Rome, on behalf of the European Association for Urban History and of the Local
Organizing Committee, in the fourteenth International Conference on Urban History.
It is the second time that our Association chooses Italy as a location for this event. Our first Italian conference was
held in Venice 20 years ago (1998). We are glad to see return of the historians in the country of the cities.
The theme of this conference is of particular interest for the scientific communities studying the city and its people from
the historical perspective, as witnessed by so many proposals presented both at the call for sessions and at the call for papers.
The city of Rome is a paramount example of a resilient city, able to prosper and reinvent itself through time.
Over the last ten years Rome has witnessed a period of crisis, which was not only related to global economic conjunctures,
but also to issues of national policy. Nevertheless, Rome has proven capable of resisting and overcoming hard times and in
looking forward to good times.
Global crisis or not, Rome still remains “la grande bellezza”, as we know it from Paolo Sorrentino’s movie.
We wish the Rome conference to be an occasion for addressing some issues that have characterized our meetings:
- the longue durée;
- the multidisciplinarity;
- the presence of not only European cities.
Europe has always been open, intercultural and international: we cannot study the history of European cities if we
leave international dynamics aside. In conjunction to European cities, we will touch upon theme of the Mediterranean,
which deserves more attention, considering that it represents a key political and cultural issue, requiring serious efforts
and commitment in the scientific and cultural domain.
The Conference venue is the University of Roma Tre, which is the third state university in Rome. It was founded in
1992, and this academic year will celebrate its first 25 years.
For logistic reasons and in order to facilitate your access to the sessions, our main conference location will be
the School of Economics and Business Studies, but we will have a plenary session at the Department of Architecture in
Testaccio, an outstanding example of urban regeneration and re-use.
We choose to close our conference in the Capitol Hill, not only because it is the City Hall, but also because here, in
1957, the Roman Treaties were signed, paving the way to a stronger cooperation amongst European countries.
We wish to all of you a fruitful dialogue, inspiring new ideas, and hopefully new projects and enhanced personal
networks. And of course we wish to you a pleasant stay in Rome.
Carlo M. Travaglini, President of EAUH
and the Local Organizing Committee
4
BIENVENUE AU 14ÈME COLLOQUE INTERNATIONALE
D’HISTOIRE URBAINE
Chères et chers collègues et ami(e)s,
j’ai le plaisir et l’honneur de vous accueillir, au nom de l’Association européenne d’histoire urbaine (AEHU) et du Comité
local d’organisation, à l’occasion de la XIVE Conférence internationale d’histoire urbaine.
C’est la deuxième fois que notre association choisit une ville italienne, la première était Venise, il y a 20 ans (1998). Nous
sommes heureux de ce retour des historiens dans le pays des villes.
Le thème général de référence de notre conférence a suscité un très grand intérêt dans la communauté scientifique qui
étudie la ville et ses habitants dans une perspective historique, comme en témoigne le très grand nombre de propositions
présentées à la fois pour convoquer des sessions et pour appeler des communications.
Rome est un exemple de ville résiliente à travers le temps. Au cours des dix dernières années, Rome a connu une période
de crise qui n’est pas seulement liée à la situation économique mondiale, mais également aux politiques nationales.
Néanmoins, Rome a démontré sa capacité de résister et de surmonter la crise et elle reste « la grande bellezza », cité
par le titre du film de Paolo Sorrentino.
Nous souhaitons que la conférence de Rome soit une occasion de consolider certaines questions qui ont caractérisé nos réunions: la longue durée; la pluridisciplinarité ; la présence de villes non seulement européennes. L’Europe a toujours été ouverte, interculturelle et internationale: on ne peut pas étudier l’histoire des villes européennes
en laissant de côté les dynamiques internationales. Et ici émerge le thème de la Méditerranée, qui mérite plus
d’attention, étant donné qu’elle représente une question politique et culturelle cruciale, et qu’elle requiert également
des efforts et un engagement sérieux dans les domaines scientifiques et culturels.
Le lieu de la conférence se trouve à l’Université de Roma Tre, troisième université d’État instituée à Rome. Elle a été
fondée en 1992 et cette année académique vient de célébrer ses premières 25 années.
Pour des raisons logistiques et afin de faciliter la mobilité interne, le lieu principal de la conférence sera l’École des
sciences économiques, mais nous aurons une session plénière au Département d’Architecture à Testaccio, un exemple très
intéressant de régénération urbaine et de réutilisation.
Enfin, nous avons décidé de clore notre conférence sur la colline du Capitole, non seulement parce qu’il s’agit
de la siège de l’hôtel de ville, mais surtout parce que c’est la que, en 1957, les traités fondateurs de l’Europe ont été
signés dans un contexte de grande espoirs pour la paix et la coopération en Europe.
Nous vous souhaitons une occasion fructueuse de dialogue, de réflexion, de discussion, d’inspiration de nouvelles idées,
de projets et de réseaux et un séjour agréable à Rome.
Carlo M. Travaglini, Présidente de l’AEHU
et le Comité local d’organisation
5
ORGANISERS
The European Association for Urban History
The European Association for Urban History (EAUH) was established in 1989 with support from the European Union. Its goal is to provide
a multidisciplinary forum for historians, geographers, sociologists, anthropologists, art and architectural historians, planners and other
scholars working on various aspects of urban history from the middle ages until the present. The Association was officially established
in August 2014. Its domicile is Helsinki, Finland.
Every two years, the EAUH organises a large-scale international conference, at which European and non-European scholars discuss new
directions in the field, conduct and stimulate comparative research, and initiate future collaborative projects and publications.
Membership of the EAUH is free of charge and is confirmed by repeated active participation during the conferences.
Since 1992 the EAUH has organised fourteen international conferences.
1992 Amsterdam
1994 Strasbourg
1996 Budapest
1998 Venice
2000 Berlin
2002 Edinburgh
2004 Athens
2006 Stockholm
2008 Lyon
2010 Ghent
2012 Prague
2014 Lisbon
2016 Helsinki
2018 Rome
The European Association for Urban History has a general website www.eauh.eu, which offers various entries that might be helpful for
your research and for the work of your students:
• Conference directory
The directory enables you to search all past conferences for specific papers, sessions, authors, organisers etc. This can be especially
useful if you organise an international workshop or research application and try to expand the geographic focus of your scientific network.
Searching via keywords is possible by using the search form. You can also directly browse through the raw data.
• Bibliography
This list offers a preliminary overview of collected volumes and the special issues of journals that have resulted from sessions of EAUH
conferences. We are looking forward to your additions!
• Journals
An overview of recommended journals specialised in urban history, offered in seven languages and from nine countries.
• Organisations
A list of recommended institutions and organisations devoted to urban history, including centres for research and teaching, national urban
history societies, and virtual communities.
• Contact
Suggestions?
Mail to mail@eauh.eu
Manon van der Heijden, EAUH Secretary
6
ORGANISATEURS
L’Association Européenne d’Histoire Urbaine
L’Association Européenne d’Histoire Urbaine a été fondée en 1989 avec le concours de l’Union Européenne. Son but est de fournir
un forum multidisciplinaire pour les historiens, les géographes, les sociologues, les anthropologues, les historiens de l’art et de
l’architecture, les planificateurs et autres spécialistes travaillant sur divers aspects de l’histoire urbaine du Moyen-Âge à nos jours.
L’Association a été officiellement enregistrée en aout 2014 et elle est domiciliée à Helsinki, Finlande.
Tous les deux ans, l’EAUH organise une conférence internationale de grande envergure au cours de laquelle des universitaires européens et non européens discutent de nouvelles orientations dans ce domaine, mènent et stimulent des recherches comparatives et
lancent de futurs projets et publications collaboratifs.
L’adhésion à l’EAUH est gratuite et est confirmée par une participation active répétée lors des conférences.
Jusqu’à présent, quatorze colloques ont été organisées.
1992 Amsterdam
1994 Strasbourg
1996 Budapest
1998 Venise
2000 Berlin
2002 Edimbourg
2004 Athènes
2006 Stockholm
2008 Lyon
2010 Gand
2012 Prague
2014 Lisbonne
2016 Helsinki
2018 Rome
L’Association Européenne d´Histoire Urbaine a un site Internet www.eauh.eu qui propose plusieurs entrées pouvant être utiles à votre
travail de recherche et au travail de vos étudiants :
• Conférences
Le répertoire permet de rechercher dans l´ensemble des colloques et conférences réalisés des communications précises, des
sessions, auteurs, organisateurs, etc. Particulièrement utile si vous organisez un workshop international ou une demande de bourse
de recherche et vous essayez d’étendre le rayon géographique de votre réseau scientifique. Le volet de recherche permet de lancer
la recherche par mots clés. Vous pouvez également accéder directement aux données brutes.
• Bibliographie
La liste donne un aperçu préliminaire des volumes d´articles recueillis et des numéros spéciaux de revues académiques ayant résulté
de sessions des conférences précédentes de l´AEHU. Nous attendons avec impatience vos contributions !
• Revues
Cette rubrique propose une vue d’ensemble des revues spécialisées en histoire urbaine, en sept langues et provenant de neuf pays différents.
• Organisations
La rubrique propose la liste des institutions et établissements reconnus qui se consacrent à l’histoire urbaine : aussi bien les centres
de recherche et d’enseignement que les sociétés nationales d’histoire urbaine et les communautés virtuelles.
• Contact
Une suggestion à faire ?
Adresse courriel : mail@eauh.eu
Manon van der Heijden, Secrétaire de L’AEUH
7
INTERNATIONAL COMMITTEE / COMITÉ INTERNATIONAL
Carlo Travaglini (president/président), Rome
Manon van der Heijden (secretary/secrétaire), Leiden
Mats Berglund (treasurer/trésorièr), Stockholm
Marjaana Niemi (former president / présidente sortante), Tampere
Amelia Andrade, Lisbon/Lisbonne
Christoph Bernhardt, Berlin
Vassilios Colonas, Thessaly/Thessalie
Elisabeth Crouzet-Pavan, Paris
Shane Ewen, Leeds
Jan Hein Furnee, (former secretary/ secrétaire sortante), Nijmegen/Nimègue
Simon Gunn, Leicester
Andrea Pokludová, Ostrava
Gábor Sonkoly, Budapest
Peter Stabel, Antwerp/Anvers
Katalin Straner, Southampton
Mikkel Thelle, Aarhus
Isabel del Val Valdivieso, Valladolid
Nicolas Kenny (corr. member/ membre correspondant), Burnaby Canada
Andrew May (corr. member/ membre correspondant), Melbourne
HONORARY MEMBERS / MEMBRES HONORIFIQUES
Maurice Aymard, Paris
Vera Bácskai (president 1996), Budapest
Sören Bitsch Christensen, Aarhus
Marc Boone (president 2010), Ghent/Gand
Donatella Calabi (president 1998), Venice/Venise
Peter Clark (treasurer 1989-2012), Helsinki
Michèle Dagenais (corr. member/ membre correspondant), Montreal
Herman Diederiks (president 1992), Amsterdam
Luda Klusakova (president 2012), Prague
Paul Van De Laar, Rotterdam
Denis Menjot (president 2008), Lyon
Robert Morris (president 2002), Edinburgh/Édinbourg
Lars Nilsson (president 2006), Stockholm
Jean Luc Pinol (president 1994), Strasbourg
Markian Prokopovych, Birmingham
Heinz Reif (president 2000), Berlin
8
Richard Rodger, Edinburgh/Édimbourg
Lydia Sapounakis-Dracaki (president 2004), Athens/Athènes
Dieter Schott, Darmstadt
Roey Sweet, Leicester
Adriaan Verhulst, Ghent/Gand
Clemens Wischermann, Konstanz
LOCAL ORGANISING COMMITTEE / COMITÉ LOCAL D´ORGANISATION
Renata Ago, Sapienza Università di Roma
Claudia Conforti, Università di Tor Vergata
Maria Grazia D’Amelio, Università di Tor Vergata
Marina Formica, Università di Tor Vergata
Harold Hendrix, Unione Internazionale degli Istituti di Archeologia Storia e Storia dell’Arte in Roma
Keti Lelo, Università Roma Tre
Daniele Manacorda, Università Roma Tre
Elisabetta Pallottino, Università Roma Tre
Piero Ostilio Rossi, Sapienza Università di Roma
Giuseppe Stemperini, Università Roma Tre
CONFERENCE SECRETARIAT / SÉCRETARIAT DE LA CONFÉRENCE
Mihaela Ilie, Università Roma Tre, Conference manager
In collaboration with
CCMGS
Symposia s.r.l.
9
KEYNOTE SPEAKERS
Professor Brigitte Marin
Université d’Aix-Marseille
« La forme d’une ville change plus vite, hélas! que le cœur d’un mortel »... De la perception des changements urbains dans les
sociétés européennes (XVIe-XIXe siècles)
Wednesday, 29 August 2018
Opening Cerimony 17:30 – 20:30
Room 1 – Aula Magna
Biography
Brigitte Marin est Professeur d’histoire moderne à l’Université d’Aix-Marseille (laboratoire « Temps, Espaces, Langages. Europe méridionale – Méditerranée », AMU/CNRS), et Directrice d’études à l’Ecole des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales.
Ancienne élève de l’École normale supérieure de Saint-Cloud, puis membre de l’École française de Rome, elle a été maître
de conférences à l’Université de Provence de 1992 à 2000, après une thèse de doctorat sur Réformes et espace urbain à
Naples à l’époque de Lumières. Directrice des Études pour l’histoire moderne et contemporaine à l’École française de Rome
(2000-2006), ses recherches se sont orientées vers les pouvoirs et les pratiques de police à Naples et dans l’espace ibérique
entre XVIIIe et XIXe siècle.
Elle a dirigé la Maison méditerranéenne des sciences de l’homme (Aix-en-Provence) de 2009 à 2017. Elle est responsable
scientifique du Laboratoire d’excellence « Les sciences humaines et sociales au cœur de l’interdisciplinarité pour la Méditerranée (LabexMed) » et du Laboratoire international associé (CNRS) franco-italien « MediterraPolis. Espaces urbains,
mobilités, citadinités. Europe méridionale – Méditerranée (XVe-XXIe siècle) ».
Ses travaux portent sur l’espace et les sociétés, sur les systèmes de gouvernement et les pratiques de gestion dans les
villes de l’Europe méridionale à l’époque moderne.
Brigitte Marin’s publications include:
Gli entroterra delle città di mare. Abitanti, territori, mobilità (XVII-XXI secolo) / Les arrière-pays des villes de mer. Habitants,
territoires, mobilités (XVIIe-XXIe siècle), avec E. Canepari et L. Salmieri (dir.), Turin, Paris, L’Harmattan, 2018.
Polices urbaines recomposées. Les alcaldes de barrio dans les territoires hispaniques, XVIIIe-XIXe siècle, numéro de
Nuevo Mundo Mundos Nuevos, avec A. Exbalin (dir.), 2017.
Entrepôts et trafics annonaires en Méditerranée. Antiquité-Temps modernes, avec C. Virlouvet (dir.), Rome, Collection
de l’École française de Rome, 2016.
L’aventure des mots de la ville à travers le temps, les langues, les sociétés, avec Ch. Topalov, L. Coudroy de Lille, J.-Ch.
Depaule (dir.), Paris, Robert Laffont, 2010.
I luoghi della città. Roma moderna e contemporanea, avec M. Boiteux et M. Caffiero (dir.), Rome, Collection de l’École
française de Rome, 2010. Naples, Paris, Citadelles et Mazenod, Art et Grandes cités, 2010.
10
Professor Richard Rodgers
Edinburgh University
City Limits?
Wednesday, 29 August 2018
Opening Cerimony 17:30 – 20:30
Room 1 – Aula Magna
Biography
Richard Rodger obtained his MA and PhD from Edinburgh, and has held academic posts at Liverpool, Leicester, and Kansas, returning to Edinburgh University as professor of Economic and Social History in 2007. Rodger was Editor of Urban
History for 21 years, co-organiser of the Urban History Group annual conference also for many years, and General Editor
of more than 35 books in the series “Historical Urban Studies” (published by Ashgate 1996-2011), many of which have
thematic and European perspectives. While at Leicester as Director of the Centre for Urban History and Director of the
East Midlands Oral History Archive, Rodger built research capacity by bringing Audio and Visual resources together to
strengthen urban historical research in Central England. He continues this thread of innovative urban historical research
through his current project “Mapping Edinburgh’s Social History” (MESH) which enables urban historians and the general public to develop historical and contemporary maps of the city in a one-stop process from a simple spreadsheet
of data. His prize-winning monograph The Transformation of Edinburgh: Land, Property and Trust is just one of a dozen
books, and he has contributed numerous articles on urban history to European journals including: Storia Urbana (It),
Genèses (Fr), Historia Urbana (Sp), and Ler História: Cidades e Espaços Urbanos (Portugal).
Richard Rodger’s publications include:
The Transformation of Edinburgh: Land, Property and Trust in the Nineteenth Century (Cambridge University Press
2001) (awarded Frank Watson Prize in Scottish History)
Housing in Urban Britain 1780-1914 (Cambridge University Press 1995)
Environmental and Social Justice in the City: Historical Perspectives (White Horse Press, Cambridge 2011), (ed. with
G. Massard-Guilbaud) – contributions to the EAUH conference Lyon (2008)
Insanitary City: Henry Littlejohn and the Condition of Edinburgh (Carnegie Publishing, Lancaster 2013), (with P. Laxton)
Leicester: A Modern History (Carnegie Publishing, Lancaster 2016) (ed. with R. Madgin)
11
Professor Paolo Desideri
Roma Tre University
Creativity VS Extravagance. A tool to solve problems
Thursday, 30 August 2018
Plenary session 18:00 - 20:00
Department of Architecture – Aula Libera
Biography
Paolo Desideri (Rome 1953) graduated in architecture in Rome in 1980.
He is Full Professor since 1985 and since 2000 he is Professor of Architectural Design at the School of Architecture of
the University of Rome “Roma Tre”. He has been Visiting Professor in many Schools of Architecture.
He is chief architect and founding partner of ABDR Architetti Associati, along with Maria Laura Arlotti, Michele Beccu
and Filippo Raimondo. His firm has been in practice since 1982. The work of his architectural practice primarily focuses
on large-scale infrastructural and cultural projects both in the public and private sector as well as on high-density
housing complexes. Some of the ABDR projects have to be mentioned: Italian Pavilion at Expo Astana 2017, the New
High Speed Train Station in Casablanca, the New High Speed Train Station “Roma Tiburtina”, the New Opera House in
Florence, the Refurbishment of the National Archaeological Museum in Reggio Calabria, the New Subway Stations of the
B1 Line in Rome, the “Palazzo delle Esposizioni” Refurbishment and the Renovation of the “ex-serra Piacentini” in Rome.
He has a vast editorial activity and his articles regularly appear on major architecture magazines. He is author of
numerous critical and theoretical texts of architectural and urban design.
Paolo Desideri’s publications include:
with Carlo Olmo, et al., La concezione strutturale. Ingegneria ed Architettura in Italia negli anni cinquanta e sessanta.
Turin: Umberto Alemandi&C., 2013; International style? Rome: Meltemi, 2004; Ex-city. Rome: Meltemi, 2000; with
Massimo Ilardi, Attraversamenti. I nuovi territori dello spazio pubblico. Genoa: Costa and Nolan, 1997; La città di latta.
Genoa: Costa and Nolan, 1995; Moderno senza movimento. Rome: Clear, 1993; Progettare Pescara. Rome: Clear, 1991;
with Carlo Aymonino, et al., Progettare Roma Capitale. Bari-Rome: Laterza, 1990; Esercizi di Composizione. Pescara:
Clua, 1988; Tipo edilizio e normativa dell’architettura. Pescara: Clua, 1988; I luoghi della produzione industriale. Bologna: Luigi Parma, 1983; Pier Luigi Nervi. Bologna: Zanichelli, 1979.
12
Professor Francesc Muñoz
Autonomous University of Barcelona
Ordinary landscapes and ‘smart heritage’ at work: against urbanalization
Thursday, 30 August 2018
Plenary session 18:00 - 20:00
Department of Architecture – Aula Libera
Biography
Francesc Muñoz, is urban geographer and professor at the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, UAB, since 1995. Research covers general topics on urbanism, landscape and heritage. Relevant awards such as the Prize to the best Phd
work attending to Human Values on Urbanism in 2004 (UPC); the IDEA Program National Prize for leading projects on
Sustainability, Innovation and Creativity (2011 and 2012); or the Bonaplata Prize to the best Heritage Communication
Initiative for the exhibition ‘The Light Factory’ in 2014. Member of the Assessment Committee of the ‘Ildefons Cerdà
Year’ (2010). Director and contributor of different exhibitions on urban issues in Barcelona: ‘Local, local! The Forthcoming City’ (2010); ‘The Light Factory’ (2014); or ‘After Landscapes’ (2015). Responsible for the UAB representation
at the UNISCAPE Network of European Universities for the Implementation of the European Landscape Convention.
Current director of the Observatory of Urbanization and the International Master’s Degree in Landscape Intervention
and Heritage Management, UAB-MUHBA.
Most known book published in 2008: Urbanalization: common landscapes, global places.
13
Professor Martin Baumeister
Ludwig-Maximilians Universität München
Stranger in Rome or how to write (urban) history in an eternal city
Saturday, 1 September 2018
Closing Cerimony 15:30 – 18:30
City Hall, Campidoglio, Sala della Protomoteca
Biography
Martin Baumeister since 2012 is director of the German Historical of Rome. After his PhD on contemporary
Spanish history at Ludwig-Maximilians-Universitaet Munich and his Habilitation on the cultural history of
World War I at Humboldt Universitaet Berlin, he hold a chair of contemporary European history at LMU
Munich from 2003 to 2017. Among his current fields of research are urban history, particularly of the Euro
Mediterranean region, and the analysis of Southern Europe and the Mediterranean as historical regions in
the 20th century.
Martin Baumeister’s publications include:
Kriegstheater. Großstadt, Front und Massenkultur 1914 bis 1918 [Theatre of War. Metropolis, Front, and Mass
Culture, 1914-1918] (2005); Rire en ville à l’époque contemporaine = Histoire Urbaine 12,2 (2011), co-ed.
with Olivier Ratouis; Southern Europe? Italy, Spain, Portugal and Greece from the 1950s until the Present Day,
co-ed. with Roberto Sala (2015); 16 ottobre 1943. La deportazione degli ebrei romani tra storia e memoria,
co-ed.with Amedeo Osti Guerrazzi and Claudio Procaccia (2016); Cities Contested. Urban Politics, Heritage
and Social Movements in Italy and West Germany in the 1970s, co-ed. with Bruno Bonomo and Dieter Schott
(2017).
14
CONFERENCE VENUE / LIEU DE LA CONFÉRENCE
Roma Tre University was founded in 1992, it has rapidly grown in terms of enrolments as well as in the number of academic
courses offered. It has gained a very good reputation in the most prominent academic rankings, especially among the most
recently founded institutions.
Roma Tre University is organized in 12 departments offering bachelor’s and master’s degrees, Postgraduate and Advanced
courses, PhDs and Specialisation Schools.
A dynamic, modern and international university that has immediately characterised as the vital lever of the capital’s urban
development, within which it is now deeply rooted, contributing in changing the city’s identity with a persevering process of
restructuring and re-using abandoned industrial buildings, converting them into factories of knowledge and research.
Among its founding values, Roma Tre assumes the promotion and organization of high-quality international research, the
excellence in higher education as well as in the development and dissemination of knowledge, the environmental protection, the
international solidarity, the principles of gender equity and the evaluation and recognition of merit.
Teaching and research, in all disciplinary areas, constantly interact and target a global world, thus promoting the upgrading
and enrichment of knowledge; they combine their action with the third mission, considered both as technology transfer and as a
projection of higher education activities on the territory.
The international dimension is considered a strategic aspect for the University, which adheres, among others, to the inspirational principles of the Magna Charta Universitatum and identifies itself in the principles and tools of the European Research and Higher education Area.
Roma Tre University considers sustainability one of its fundamental values. According to the GreenMetric World Universities
Ranking 2016, Roma Tre University currently represents the only “green” University in Rome and Lazio.
L’Université Roma Tre a été créée en 1992 et s’est rapidement développée en termes d’inscriptions et de nombre de cours
proposés. Il a acquis une très bonne réputation dans les classements universitaires les plus importants, notamment parmi les
institutions les plus récentes.
L’Université Roma Tre est organisée en 12 départements offrant des diplômes de licence et de master, des cours de
troisième cycle et avancés, des doctorats et des écoles de spécialisation.
Une université dynamique, moderne et internationale qui s’est immédiatement caractérisée comme le levier essentiel du développement
urbain de la capitale, au sein duquel elle est désormais profondément ancrée, contribuant à changer l’identité de la ville avec un processus
persistant de restructuration et de réutilisation des bâtiments industriels abandonnés dans des usines de connaissance et de recherche.
Parmi les valeurs fondatrices, Roma Tre assume la promotion et l’organisation de la recherche internationale de haute
qualité, l’excellence dans l’enseignement supérieur, le développement et la diffusion des connaissances, la protection de l’environnement, la solidarité internationale, évaluation et reconnaissance du mérite.
L’enseignement et la recherche, dans tous les domaines disciplinaires, interagissent et ciblent constamment un monde global,
favorisant ainsi la mise à niveau et l’enrichissement des connaissances ; ils combinent leur action avec la troisième mission, considérée à la fois comme un transfert de technologie et comme une projection des activités d’enseignement supérieur sur le territoire.
La dimension internationale est considérée comme un aspect stratégique pour l’Université, qui adhère, entre autres, aux
principes inspirants de la Magna Charta Universitatum et s’identifie aux principes et aux outils de l’espace européen de la
recherche et de l’enseignement supérieur.
L’université Roma Tre considère le développement durable comme l’une de ses valeurs fondamentales. Selon le classement
2016 des universités mondiales GreenMetric, l’université Roma Tre représente actuellement la seule université « verte » de
Rome et du Latium.
15
CONFERENCE FLOOR PLAN / PLAN D´ACCÈS
Ground floor
16
CONFERENCE FLOOR PLAN / PLAN D´ACCÈS
First floor
17
CONFERENCE FLOOR PLAN / PLAN D´ACCÈS
Second floor
18
PROGRAMME AT A GLANCE
PROGRAMME EN UN COUP D’ŒIL
Wednesday 29 August / Mercredi 29 août
13:00 – 18:00 Registration, School of Economics and Business Studies
14:00 - 14:30 Bursaries meeting
14:30 - 16:30 International Committee meeting
14:30 – 17:00 Guided tours
17:30 – 20:30 Opening ceremony, Keynote lectures (prof. B. Marin, prof. R. Rodger)
20:30 - 22:00 Reception
Thursday 30 August / Jeudi 30 août
08:30 – 17:00
09:00 – 10:30
10:30 – 11:00
11:00 – 12:30
12:30 – 13:30
13:30 – 15:00
15:00 – 15:30
15:30 – 17:00
18:00 - 20:00
Registration and Publishers exhibit
Sessions M01, M02, M06, M08, M13, M17, M26, M28, M41, M46, M47, M52, M53, M54, M60
Coffee break
Sessions M01, M02, M06, M08, M13, M17, M26, M28, M41, M46, M47, M52, M53, M54, M60, SS12
Lunch break
Sessions M03, M06, M07, M13, M14, M22, M41, M44, M46, M47, M53, M54, M55, M58, RT01, SS04, SS19, SS24
Coffee break
Sessions M03, M07, M14, M22, M44, M53, M55, M58, RT01, SS05, SS08, SS09, SS14, SS15, SS16, SS18, SS25
Department of Architecture, Keynote lectures (prof. P. Desideri, prof. F. Muñoz)
Friday 31 August / Vendredi 31 août
08:30 – 17:30
09:00 – 10:30
10:30 – 11:00
11:00 – 12:30
12:30 – 14:00
14:00 – 15:30
15:30 – 16:00
16:00 – 17:30
17:30 – 19:00
17:30 – 19:30
20:30 - 24:00
Registration and Publishers exhibit
Sessions M09, M11, M15, M18, M20, M23, M24, M25, M29, M31, M32, M34, M35, M36, M43, M49, M51, M56, RT02, SS02, SS28
Coffee break
Sessions M09, M11, M15, M18, M20, M23, M24, M25, M29, M31, M32, M34, M35, M36, M43, M49, M51, M56, RT02, SS17, SS27
Lunch break
Sessions M09, M12, M15, M21, M24, M25, M31, M34, M35, M37, M38, M39, M42, M43, M57, M59, SS03, SS07, SS13
Coffee break
Sessions M12, M21, M37, M38, M39, M42, M57, M59, RT03, SS01, SS10, SS11, SS20, SS23
Ordinary General Meeting
Guided tours and walks
Conference dinner
09:30 – 12:30
09:30 – 11:00
11:00 – 11:30
11:30 – 13:00
13:00 – 14:30
15:30 – 18:30
Registration and Publishers exhibit
Sessions M04, M05, M10, M19, M27, M30, M40, M45, M48, M50, RT04, SS22
Coffee break
Sessions M04, M05, M10, M19, M27, M30, M40, M45, M48, M50, RT04, SS21
Lunch break
City Hall, Campidoglio, Sala della Protomoteca, Closing ceremony, prof. L. Fioramonti – MIUR, Keynote lecture (prof. M. Baumeister),
XV EAUH Conference Presentation
International Committee meeting
Saturday 1 September / Samedi 1 Septembre
19:15 - 20:30
19
TIMETABLE / HORAIRE
Wednesday 29 August
17.30-20.00
Keynote Lectures by Professor Brigitte Marin and Professor Richard Rodger
Thursday, 30 August
Room
3
4
5
6
8
9
09.00-10.30
M08
M02
M13
M53
M17
M26
M41
11.00-12.30
M08
M02
M13
M53
M17
M26
M41
13:30-15:00
RT01
M03
M13
M53
M07
M58
M55
M41
15:30-17:00
RT01
M03
SS15
M53
M07
M58
M55
SS05
18:00–20:00
1
2
10
11
Keynote Lectures by Professor Paolo Desideri and Professor Francesc Muñoz
Friday 31 August
Room
1
2
3
4
5
6
8
9
10
11
09.00-10.30
M09
M15
M11
M34
M20
M24
M18
M25
M35
M36
11.00-12.30
M09
M15
M11
M34
M20
M24
M18
M25
M35
M36
14.00-15.30
M09
M15
M12
M34
M21
M24
M39
M25
M35
M37
M12
SS23
M21
M39
SS20
3
4
5
6
8
9
10
11
09.30-11.00
M10
M19
M05
M30
M48
M40
M45
M50
11.30-13.00
M10
M19
M05
M30
M48
M40
M45
M50
16.00-17.30
M37
Saturday 1 September
Room
15.30-18.00
20
1
2
Keynote lecture by Professor Martin Baumeister, Closing ceremony
12
14
15
M46
SS12
16
17
18
M47
M52
M46
M47
M52
SS24
M46
M47
SS25
SS14
12
14
15
16
M49
M51
RT02
M49
M51
RT02
SS03
M38
SS01
M38
12
19
20
21
22
SALA LAUREE
M01
M54
M06
M60
M28
M01
M54
M06
M60
M28
SS19
M14
SS04
M54
M06
M22
M44
SS16
M14
SS08
SS18
SS09
M22
M44
17
18
19
20
21
22
SALA LAUREE
M32
M23
SS02
M56
M43
M31
M29
SS28
M32
M23
SS17
M56
M43
M31
M29
SS27
SS13
SS07
M57
M43
M31
M42
M59
RT03
SS11
SS10
M57
M42
M59
14
15
16
18
19
22
SALA LAUREE
M27
M04
SS22
RT04
M27
M04
SS21
RT04
17
20
21
21
SESSIONS*
Wednesday 29 August / Mercredi 29 août
13:00 – 18:00 Registration, School of Economics and Business Studies
14:00 – 14:30 Bursaries meeting
14:30 – 16:30 International Committee meeting
14:30 – 17:00 Guided tours
17:30 – 20:00 Plenary Session: Opening ceremony
Wednesday 29 August
20:00 – 22:00 Reception
Plenary Session / Session Plénière
Time 17:30 – 20:00
Room 1 – Aula Magna
Introduction, Carlo M. Travaglini, president EAUH
Interventions by representatives of academic and scientific institutions
Intervention by Luca Montuori, Councilor for Urban Planning, City of Rome
Keynote Lectures
Brigitte Marin, « La forme d’une ville change plus vite, hélas! que le cœur d’un mortel »... De la perception des changements urbains
dans les sociétés européennes (XVIe-XIXe siècles)
Richard Rodger, City Limits?
* Papers in each session are listed in alphabetic order of the author who submitted the proposal.
The on-line program, to be found under “EAUH Sessions”, reports the full list of authors and, if provided by the session chair, the order of
presentations. This information will be posted on the conference rooms doors.
Les contributions de chaque session sont classés par ordre alphabétique de l’auteur de la proposition.
Le programme en ligne, qui se trouve sur le site Web de la conférence sous « Sessions EAUH», présente la liste complète des auteurs et, s’il est
rendu par les organisateurs de sessions, l’ordre des présentations. Ces informations seront affichées sur les portes des salles de la conférence.
22
Thursday 30 August / Jeudi 30 août
08:30 – 17:30 Registration and Publishers exhibit
09:00 – 10:30 Sessions M01, M02, M06, M08, M13, M17, M26, M28, M41, M46, M47, M52, M53, M54, M60
10:30 – 11:00 Coffee break
11:00 – 12:30 Sessions M01, M02, M06, M08, M13, M17, M26, M28, M41, M46, M47, M52, M53, M54, M60, SS12
12:30 – 13:30 Lunch break
13:30 – 15:00 Sessions M03, M06, M07, M13, M14, M22, M41, M44, M46, M47, M53, M54, M55, M58, RT01, SS04,
SS19, SS24
15:00 – 15:30 Coffee break
15:30 – 17:00 Sessions M03, M07, M14, M22, M44, M53, M55, M58, RT01, SS05, SS08, SS09, SS14, SS15, SS16,
SS18, SS25
18:00 - 20:00 Department of Architecture – Roma Tre University
Largo Giovanni Battista Marzi 10 / Piazza Orazio Giustiniani
Keynote lectures (prof. P. Desideri, prof. F. Muñoz)
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Plenary Session / Session Plénière
Department of Architecture – Roma Tre University, Largo G.B. Marsi 10
Time 18:00 – 20:00 – Aula Libera and Aula Herzoc
Keynote Lectures
Paolo Desideri, Creativity VS Extravagance. A tool to solve problems
Francesc Muñoz, Ordinary landscapes and ‘smart heritage’ at work: against urbanalization
Parallel Sessions / Sessions Parallèles
M01
Cities in Resilience in the Graeco-Roman World (13th cent. B.C. - 4th cent. A.D.
Organisers Jonathan Hall (University of Chicago), Ioannis Xydopoulos (Aristotle University)
Thursday 30 August
Time 09.00-10.30, 11.00-12.30
Room 18
Building Resilience: Social Networks and the Civic Fabric of Classical Cities in Southern Europe, Fifth to Third Centuries bce
Zosia Archibald, University of Liverpool
Roma Restituta. Memory of Disasters, Urban Reconstruction and Roman Identity
Charles Davoine, École française de Rome
A Tale of two Resilient Cities: Regional Interaction of Population, Environment, and Resources in Olynthus and Potidaea
Maria Xanthou, independent researcher; Kleoniki Kyrkopoulou, Aristotle University
Northern Greek Cities and Collective Memory: the Case of Beroia
Katerina Panagopoulou, University of Crete
Urban Time and Rome’s Resilience
Joerg Ruepke, University of Erfurt
“A Witness of Your Labors, the Stone may Remain”: Constructing the Memory of Aphrodisias Through Epigraphical Texts
Georgios Tsolakis, New York University
M02
Urban Citizenship, 1100-1800: Networks, Discourse, and Practice
Organisers Jelle Haemers (Katholieke Universiteit Leuven), Eliza Hartrich (University of Sheffield), Maarten Prak (University of Utrecht), Phil Withington (University of Sheffield)
Time 09.00-10.30, 11.00-12.30
Room 04
‘The Most Insolent Fellows in the World:’ the Politics of the Fellowship of Carmen in Early Modern London’
Claire Benson, University of York
24
Shared Spaces: the Neighbourhood and the Common Good in Netherlandish Cities 1350-1500
Janna Coomans, University of Amsterdam
Barons Rather Than Burgesses: Representation of Communities in the Petitions From the Medieval Cinque Ports
Jiazhu hu, University of St Andrews
Creating Orator as the Most Involved Citizen. the Contribution of the Ciceronian Model to the Discourse on Communal Specificity
Carole Mabboux, École française de Rome
Citizens Transplanted: Urban Citizenship in Seventeenth-Century English America
Paul Musselwhite, Dartmouth College
Mountain’s Networks. the Conditioning of Space in the Creation of Social Networks and the Identity Construction in the North Villages
of the Crown of Castile to the end of the Middle Ages
Diana Pelaz Flores, Universidade de Santiago de Compostela
Townspeople and Rural Nobles in Late Medieval Germany: Networks and Identities (c.1400–1525)
Ben Pope, University of Tübingen
M03
Organisers Amy Singer (Tel Aviv University), Peter Stabel (University of Antwerp), Arie van Steensel (University of Groningen)
Time 13.30-15.00, 15.30-17.00
Room 04
Governance in English Monastic Towns: Resilience of Emerging Urban Communities
Anna Anisimova, Institute of World History
Thursday 30 August
Fragmented Cities: Governance, Citizenship and Urban Renewal in Premodern Eurasia (1200-1700)
An Alliance to Protect - an Alliance to Persecute? About the Consolidation of a Medieval Citizen’S Society in Middle Europe
Joern Roland Christophersen, Goethe University Frankfurt
Elite Entanglement, Economic Growth, Policy and Lobbying During Antwerp’s Golden age (1490-1550)
Janna Everaert, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Did the Mendicants Make Medieval Lübeck Stronger ? Dominicans, Franciscans and the big Dispute Between Town Council and
Clergy (1299-1317)
Frederik Felskau, Freie Universität Berlin
Comments From a Comparative Perspective
Patrick Lantschner, University College London
The City of Macao in the Mid-17th Century: Social and Political Powers in Adjustment
Filipa Roldão, Universidade de Lisboa
How to Keep Fluvial Trade? : Conflicts and Negotiations of the Medieval Italian City-States
Keiko Takada, Kobe University
25
M06
The Engineered City: Engineering Design, Experience and Failure in Urban History, from the Middle
Ages to 21st Century
Organisers Shane Ewen (Leeds Metropolitan University), Genevieve Massard-Guilbaud (Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales)
Time 09.00-10.30, 11.00-12.30, 13.30-15.00
Room 21
Numbers and measurements in the struggle for the Aniene River. Rome 1884-1892
Salvatore Valenti
“Engineers’ Street”: Street-Use Conflicts and Engineer’S Minds for Modernizing “The Oldest Bridge of Lyon”, 1930’S and 1950’S
Louis Baldasseroni, Université de Paris Est Marne-la-vallée
La « gêne et L’Inconfort » des Citadins. Démoustication et Suburbanisation Dans la France des Années Soixante
Renaud Bécot, Université de Lyon
Thursday 30 August
Imagineering Network Models. Resilient Infrastructure Design Between ‘The Ideal’ and ‘The Real’: Belgium, 1830s-1860s
Greet de Block, Antwerp University
The Soviet Model of Urban Engineering: Housing Estate in Czechoslovakia
Agnes Dudych, Pavol Jozef Safarik University
Threshold Values and Property Values : the Mitigation of Legacy Industrial Pollution in Poor Cities of Central new Jersey (1970s Till Present Day)
Pascal Marichalar, CNRS
Water and the Modern Engineered City: the Association of Water Engineers in a British and Transnational Context, 1896-1914
Andrew Mctominey, Leeds Metropolitan University
Satisfying the Need for Heat – Planning Urban District Heating in Switzerland, 1920s-70s
Irene Pallua, University of Innsbruck
This Land Belongs to the Sea: the Case of William Jessop and the River Dodder
Elizabeth Shotton, University College Dublin
Les Transferts Technologiques Vers Lyon aux XVIIe et XVIIIe Siècles
Olivier Zeller, Université de Lyon
M07
Natural Disasters and the Urban: Earthquakes, Floods and Great Fires in Early Modern Cities 1400-1800
Organisers Domenico Cecere (University of Naples “Federico II”), Matthew Davies (Birkbeck University of London), Mina
Ishizu (London School of Economics and Political Science), Koichi Watanabe (National Institute of Japanese Literature)
Time 13.30-15.00, 15.30-17.00
Room 08
FIconography of Earthquake in the Spanish Empire: Different Approaches for Conservation of Architectural Heritage
Massimo Visone, University of Naples “Federico II”; Carla Fernández Martínez, Universidade de Santiago de Compostela
26
Environmental Disasters in a Comparative Perspective: the Great Fires in London and Istanbul
Elina Gugliuzzo, University of Naples, Pegaso
Typhoon Damage in edo in 1853: Integrating Archaeology, Climatology and History
Koichi Watanabe, National Institute of Japanese Literature, National Institute for Humanities; Junpei Hirano, Teikyo
University; Hiroyuki Ishigami, Kyoto University of Art&Design; Masumi Zaiki, independent researcher
Prevent the big Water. Flood Control Measures in Prague (bohemia) Issued by Public Administrative Bodies in Late 18th Century
Ondřej Hudeček, Charles University
Firefighting Awareness of Citizens in Edo: Analyzing Eighteenth-Century Textbooks on Firefighting
Reiji Iwabuchi, Gakushuin Women’s College
“Nothing but Treetops and Roofs Were Visible”: Flood Management in Sixteenth- and Seventeenth-Century Seville
Igor Knezevic, University of Pennsylvania
Cusco, 1650: Terremoto, Renovation and Tradition in the Heart of the Andes
Adriana Scaletti, Pontificia Universidad Católica; Claudio Mazzanti, independent researcher
Facing the Floods. the Regulation of the Tiber Basin During the Little ice age
Renato Sansa, University of Calabria
Les Inondations et Leur Impact Dans les Villes de la Première Modernité : Méthodologie Pour un Répertoire Critique de ces
Phénomènes Entre Adour et Rhin
Marc Suttor, Université d’Artois
Thursday 30 August
“Los Rríos Paresçían Braços de Mar”. Interpretations About the Perception of Natural Disasters Through the Castilian Chronicles
During the XVth Century
Diana Pelaz Flores, Universidade de Santiago de Compostela
M08
Immigrants and refugees in Western European Cities (MA-EM) Immigrants et réfugiés dans les
villes d’Europe Occidentale (MA-EM)
Organisers Marc Boone (Ghent University), Denis Menjot (Université de Lyon)
Time 09.00-10.30, 11.00-12.30
Room 03
Les Catalans a Naples Dans la Seconde Moitie du XVe Siecle : Quand les Immigres Sont les Compatriotes du Prince
Roxane Chilà, Université de Paris 1 Panthéon Sorbonne
Aspects of Migration and Emigration of Jews From Czech Lands During the So-Called Official Antisemitism of the 18th Century
Ivana Ebelová, Charles University
The Lombards’ Strategies Towards Insertion in the Cities of the low Countries
Myriam Greilsammer, Bar Ilan University
27
Les Immigrants et L’espace Urbain de Lyon au XVie Siècle
Keiko Koyama, Kobe University
Les Confréries et L’intégration des Immigrants à Avignon (XIVe et XVe Siècles)
Zhao lv, Tsinghua University, Beijing, China
Public Institutions, Migratory Policy and Social Integration: French Merchants in Catalonia and Aragon (sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries)
Jose Antonio Mateos Royo, Universidad de Zaragoza
Immigrati e Fuoriusciti nel Mezzogiorno Medievale (sec. XIII-XV): Alcuni Casi
Serena Morelli, Università della Campania ‘Luigi Vanvitelli’
A not so Unfriendely Land. Contacts and Reception of Foreigners in the Port Towns of Asturias in the Late Medieval and Early Modern Times
Álvaro Solano Fernández-Sordo, Universidad de Oviedo
M13
Thursday 30 August
Urban Poverty and Poor Relief: Between Vulnerability and Resilience. Europa and Latin America,
16th-XXth centuries
Organisers Montserrat Carbonell Esteller (Universitat de Barcelona), Åsa Karlsson Sjögren (Umeå university), Roey
Sweet (University of Leicester), Ronny j. Viales-Hurtado (University of Costa Rica)
Time 09.00-10.30, 11.00-12.30, 13.30-15.00
Room 05
Income Pooling During old Age: the Case of the Antwerp Elderly Poor, 1780-1781
Anke Verbeke, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Poor Relief, Institutional Change and Urban Transformations 16th-19th Centuries. a Comparative Approach: Havana, Girona, Barcelona
Celine Xicola, Universitat de Girona; Dolores Guerra, independent researcher; Montserrat Carbonell, Universitat de Barcelona
Helping the Poor in the Squatter Settlements. Chile 1947-1957
Emanuel Giannotti, Universidad de Chile; Montserrat Carbonell Esteller, Universitat de Barcelona; Åsa Karlsson Sjögren,
Umeå university; Roey Sweet, University of Leicester; Ronny j. Viales-Hurtado, University of Costa Rica
The Food aid in Lisbon: Charity Soup of the Santa Casa da Misericórdia de Lisboa and the Soup Kitchen Cases, 1888-1918
Ricardo Cordeiro, Instituto Universitário de Lisboa
The Poor in the City: Solutions and Institutions in the North of Portugal of Eight Hundred
Alexandra Esteves, Universidade Catolica Portuguesa
Places for the Poor: the Street and the Asylum. Mexico City, 1880-1930
Dolores Lorenzo, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico
Practicing Poor Relief – Urban Poor Relief in the City of Aarhus and the Development of Social Rights in Denmark (1849 – 1892)
Leonora Lottrup Rasmussen, University of Aarhus
Defending the Family in an Antisocial State: Policing Female Begging in Santiago de Chile Under Pinochet
Leith Passmore, Universidad Andres Bello
28
Welfare and Poor Relief in the Premodern Portuguese Urban Context: the Houses of Mercy
Joana Pinho, Universidade de Lisboa
Food Subsistence Policies and Poor Relief in Eighteenth-Century Barcelona: the «fair Price» and its Effects on Economic Redistribution and Social Welfare
Merce Renom, Universitat de Barcelona
“Socorro Para que Vivan, Ruego Para que no Perezcan”. The Episcopal System of Charity and Poor Relief in the City of Santiago de
Compostela (16th-18th Centuries)
Fernando Suárez Golán, Universidade de Santiago de Compostela; Ana María Sixto Barcia, independent researcher
Poor Relief and Confraternities From 15th to 16th Century in Venice
Jun Takami, National Institute of Japanese Literature
Measuring the Rise of the Parish Welfare State in English Towns and Cities, C.1600-1800
Brodie Waddell, Birkbeck University of London
Spatial Dimensions of Shifting Relief Policies in Antwerp, 16th-19th Centuries
Anne Winter, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Urban texture of Ostia Antica and Other Mediterranean Harbour Cities of the Roman Empire,
400 BCE – 600 CE
Organisers Arja Karivieri (Stockholm University), Katariina Mustakallio (University of Tampere)
Time 13.30-15.00, 15.30-17.00
Room 18
Stranger in Town. Images of Foreigners in the Ostian Cityscape
Ria Berg, University of Tampere
Thursday 30 August
M14
Ostia Antica e le Provincie Africane: Contatti, Scambi, Influenze ed Eredità. Problematiche di Studio e Prospettive di Valorizzazione
Maria Grazia Turco, University of Rome Sapienza; Sonia Gallico, independent researcher
People at Work in Ostia - the Port City of Ancient Rome
Lena Larsson Lovén, Goteborg University
Are Ports a Distinct Form of Roman Urbanism?
Ray Laurence, Australia Macquarie University
Porters in the Urban Texture of Harbor Cities
Katja Varakas, University of Helsinki
29
M17
Challenges or Opportunities? The Social Fabric of Colonial Port Cities, 1500-1850
Organisers Dries Lyna (Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen), Isabel dos Guimarães sá (Universidade do Minho), Maarten van
Dijck (Erasmus University)
Time 09.00-10.30, 11.00-12.30
Room 08
Citizens ‘Superior to the Rest’? Comparative Inequalities in the Port Cities of Charleston, South Carolina and Newcastle Upon Tyne
Sarah Collins, Northumbria University
Slavery and Urban Life: new Orleans and Saint-Louis in the Eighteenth Century Imperial Atlantic
Bronwen Everill, Cambridge University
The Course of Compromise? the Social Function of Colonial Courts in Dutch sri Lanka (1758-1788)
Dries Lyna, Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen
Thursday 30 August
Shrirampur/frederiksnagore: the City of Rama – and the Danish King. Social Interaction in a Colonial Port City in Bengal, 1755-1845
Simon Rastén, University of Aarhus & The National Museum
Creole Elites at the Borders of Empire: Macao in the Early Modern Period
Isabel dos Guimarães sá, Universidade do Minho
Colonial Port Cities in the Early Modern Period: Local Responses to Global Challenges
Maarten van Dijck, Erasmus University
M22
Historical Interpretation of the Regimes of Urban Heritage, 1750 -
Organisers Jacek Purchla (Jagellonian University in Krakow), Gabor Sonkoly (Eötvös Loránd University)
Time 13.30-15.00, 15.30-17.00
Room 22
Analyzing Heritage Urban Regimes From a Blind Spot. Mapping Regeneration Controversies at the Margins of Rome’s Historical Center
Lucia Bordone, Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne
The Lure of Timeless Urban Landscapes: Safeguarding Premodernity in a Hungarian Small Town
Péter Erdősi, Eötvös Loránd University
Restoring Overwritten Places: the German Past of Danzig/gdańsk in Contemporary Polish Prose
Noémi Kertész, University of Miskolc
The Design History of 19th-Century Urban Public Parks; Guidelines for Contemporary Landscape Planning and Design
Kinga Szilagyi, Szent Istvàn University; Ana Kučan, independent researcher; Richard Stiles, independent researcher
30
From the Picturesque to the Present: Australian Heritage Regime Prototypes, 1888–1968
James Lesh, University of Melbourne
The Making of a 21st Century Edinburgh Castle – Fortress, Barracks, Monument and Commodity
Robert John Morris, Edinburgh University
Nordic Harmonization of World Heritage and the Changing Heritage Regimes
Tanja Vahtikari, University of Tampere
Making Sense of a Difficult Past: Commodification and Disneyfication of Memory and Urban Space in Post-Socialist Europe
Jovana Vukcevic, Pavol Jozef Safarik University
The Regimes of art Nouveau Architectural Heritage in the Carpathian Basin Heritagisation of the Hungarian art Nouveau Architecture
Through the Example of Subotica
Lilla Zámbó, Eötvös Loránd University
M26
Organisers Dorothee Brantz (Technische Universität Berlin), Avinash Sharma (Technische Universität Berlin)
Time 09.00-10.30, 11.00-12.30
Room 09
Resilience in Action in Paris: a Historical yet Renewed Roadmap to Resilience. Analysis of a Controversial Object of Planning Discourse and Implementation Framework at a Global Scale
Inès Boubaker, Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales
Thursday 30 August
Imagining Resilient Cities: Comparative Historical Perspectives on “Resilience” from 1800
to the Present
Historicising Resilient Design: the Influence of Biology and Ecology on Landscape Architecture and Urban Design in Brussels (1900-Today)
Koenraad Danneels, University of Antwerp; Bruno Notteboom, independent researcher; Greet de Block, Antwerp University
Resilient Urbanisation in Contexts of Armed Conflict and Other Situations of Violence
Dima Dayoub, Technische Universität Berlin
Social Innovations for Urban Resilience - 100 Years of Social Housing in the City of Vienna
Susanne Giesecke, Austrian Institute of Technology
Promoting Urban Disaster Mitigation in the Pacific Rim: Natural Disasters, International Urban Development Policies, and the Intellectual Origins of Resilience, 1960s to 1980s
Soenke Kunkel, Freie Universität Berlin
Designing and Planning Ideal Arctic Towns: the Reality of Ralph Erskine’s Projects in Kiruna and Svappavaara
Ann Maudsley, ArkDes
The Ordinary Fabric of Urban Resilience
Anke Schwarz, Technische Universität Berlin
31
Ruderal Life: Urban Ecologies Beyond the Resilient City
Bettina Stoetzer, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Resilient Cities and Gardening: the Role of Urban Gardens for Strengthening Resilience Capacity in Times of Crisis
Andreas Wesener, Lincoln University
M28
Spaces of Fear in the 20th Century City
Organisers Mikkel Høghøj (University of Aarhus), Monika Motylinska (Leibniz Institute)
Time 09.00-10.30, 11.00-12.30
Sala Lauree
Imagining the Darkness –sensing Fear in the Blitzed City
Erika Antinkaapo, University of Turku
Thursday 30 August
„the Road is to Blame!“ Spatialisation of Fear and its Exploit in Struggles Over Urban Reconstruction
Carla Aßmann, Leibniz Institute
Fear in the City: Print Media Perspectives on the Politics and Production of Places of Fear
Alice Butler, University of Leeds
Back to the Cellar: Underground Urban Spaces of Fear and the air Warfare in Berlin, 1940-1945
Sabine Kalff, Humboldt University Berlin
Fears and Charms of Mobility and Transience: Warsaw’S Central Station in the 20th Century
Aleksandra Luczak, Universität Viadrina Frankfurt (Oder)
Un-Restful Entertainment: Urban Undulating Temporality at Areas of Violent Clashes (case of Tripoli, Lebanon)
Dina Nashar, Notre Dame University Louaize
Rosengård – a Space of Swedish Alterity in Times of Austerity
Per-Markku Ristilammi, Malmö University
M41
Urban Histories of Heritage: Emotion and Experience in Comparative and Transnational
Perspective, 1750 Organisers James Lesh (University of Melbourne), Rebecca Madgin (University of Glasgow)
Time 09.00-10.30, 11.00-12.30, 13.30-15.00
Room 11
Works in the Fog: Views and Attitudes Towards the Built Heritage in the City of la Plata
Laura de Leao Dornelles, Universidad Nacional de La Plata; William Lopes de Oliveira, Universidade Federal de VIçosa -
32
Communicating Heritage in Urban Environments
Courtney Fleming, Bath Spa University
Caring About Place: the Role of ‘Heritage’ in Place Attachment Processes
Hannah Garrow, Newcastle University
Urban Revitalization With Traditional Tropical Rhythms in the Port of Veracruz, Mexico
Fernando Gutiérrez h., Universidad Iberoamericana Ciudad de México; Ilkka Törmä, Aalto University
Rebuilding and Reclaiming new Orleans After Hurricane Katrina: Race, History and Memory
Leslie Harris, Northwestern University
Skopje’s Transitions and its Struggle to Preserve Collective Memories
Velika Ivkovska, Bahçesehir University; Luca Orlandi, Istanbul Technical University
Saving the Steamship: Brussels’s Maison de la Radio and the Urban Emotions of a Broadcasting Institution
Nicolas Kenny, Simon Fraser University
Discussions of the Architectural Heritage in Cracow and Lviv (1867-1914)
Aleksander Lupienko, Polish Academy of Sciences
Heritage and the Urban Historian: the Challenge of Producing Multi-Vocal Histories of Place
Sarah Milne, University College London
Memories of Cinema-Going as Emotional Attachments to Urban Heritage
Daniela Treveri Gennari, Oxford Brookes University
Thursday 30 August
From Public Space to Existential Space: a Dialogue on the City Between Marshall Berman and Orhan Pamuk
Vladimir Rizov, University of York; Gareth Millington, independent researcher
M44
Global Trends in the Popular Culture and Nighttime Entertainment of European Cities, 1880s-1930s
Organisers Antje Dietze (University of Leipzig), Alexander Vari (Marywood University)
Time 13.30-15.00, 15.30-17.00
Sala Lauree
Trends in the Popular Culture and Nighttime Entertainment of the Circumpolar Norway - Narvik 1900-1930
Steinar aas, Nord University
Madrid Nighttlife, Between the Cosmopolitanism and Leisure Globalization and Social Transgression
Cristina de Pedro Álvarez, Universidad Complutense de Madrid; Rubén Pallol Trigueros, independent researcher
Cabaret and Revue Theatres of the Interwar Period as an Outpost of Popular Culture Phenomena in Poland
Dorota fox, University of Silesia in Katowice; Aneta Głowacka, independent researcher
Prague in Lights: the Pleasures of Interwar Popular Night-Life
Karla Huebner, Wright State University
33
It’S not Always About Politics (is It?): Popular Culture and Entertainment on the Southern Fringes of Austria-Hungary
Duga Mavrinac, Institute for Anthropological Research; Anja Iveković Martinis, Institute for Anthropological Research;
Anita Sujoldžić, independent researcher
„busentempel Statt Musentempel …“: Jews, sex and Mobility in Vaudeville Entertainment Between Budapest and Vienna Circa 1900
Susanne Korbel, University of Graz
Jazz in the Land of ‘o Sole Mio’: Social Impact and Cultural Agents in the 1920s-1940s
Camilla Poesio, Cà Foscari University Venezia
Vienna Cabaret in South American Exile: Hugo Wiener’S Project of Cultural Translation, 1938-1955
Frances Tanzer, Brown University
M46
Alternative Narratives on Capital Cities, from the 19th to the 21st centuries
Thursday 30 August
Organisers Maria Fernanda Derntl (University of Brasilia), Nari Shelekpayev (Université de Montréal)
Time 09.00-10.30, 11.00-12.30, 13.30-15.00
Room 14
Skopje: the “Kitsch“ and “Bastard” Capital of the Statues
Sheyla Moroni, University of Florence; Giorgia Bulli, independent researcher; Erika Cellini, independent researcher; Silvia
Pezzoli, independent researcher; Annick Magnier, independent researcher
Berlin: Burdened Capital?
Clare Copley, University of Central Lancashire
Canberra – Controversies and Counter Discourses
Karl Friedhelm Fischer, University of New South Wales; James Weirick, University of New South Wales
The Survey of London’S Approaches to the History of East London
Peter Guillery, University College London
Dialogue and Disputes About the Urban Territory in Bogotá in 1920: Correspondence Between the Inhabitants and the Municipal Council
Lena Império Hamburger Ribeiro dos Santos, Universidad Nacional de Colombia
Beyond Constantinople and Beyond Istanbul: Telltales for a Capital City
Ayse Hazar Koksal, Ozyegin University
Intertwined Narratives of Progress and Tradition: Tokyo as a Modern Capital City
Beate Loeffler, University of Duisburg-Essen
Imperial new Delhi = ‘Lutyens’ Delhi’? Revising a Modern Myth
Smriti Pant, Brandenburg University of Technology Cottbus
Alternative Narratives on Urban Systematization of Bucharest in Ceausescu’s Romania
Corneliu Pintilescu, George Baritiu History Institute
34
School Buildings in Nicosia in the Post Wwii Period
Emilia Siandou, University of Westminster
Brasilia: Alternative Narratives of the City Through Graffiti
Renata Silva Almendra, University of Brasilia
Emptiness is the “Monument”; Tehran’s Shahyad Square as Monument and Counter-Monument
Zohreh Soltani, State University of New York, Binghamton
Different Nation-States, Different Capitals
Goran Therborn, University of Cambridge
M47
Hybridization of Knowledge and Transnational Urban Planning Expertise, Between and Within Europe, Americas and Colonial Countries (1900-1960)
Organisers Angelo Bertoni (Université d’Aix-Marseille), Josianne Francia Cerasoli (University of Campinas)
Time 09.00-10.30, 11.00-12.30, 13.30-15.00
Room 15
Planning for Worker Housing in Cape Town 1900-1960: Local Adaptations of Transnational Planning Paradigms in the Design of
Formal Housing for the Poor and the Role of the Urban Professional
Melanie Attwell, University of Cape Town
Karl Brunner and the Discourse on Urbanism in Colombia (1934-48). Defining a new Knowledge Amid Dialogues and Conflicts
Giaime Botti, PhD Politecnico di Torino, currently independent scholar
Thursday 30 August
The America(s) in the Press: the Role of the Engineer Verne Leroy Havens and the Journal “Ingeniería International” for the Territorial,
Urban and the Construction Fields in Latin America
Fernando Atique, Federal University of Sao Paulo
The Role of Exhibitions in the Formation of Urban Planning: the Spread of Campinas Improvement Plan Prestes Maia in the 1939 Exhibition
Ivone Salgado, Pontificia Universidade Católica de Campinas; Rodrigo Henrique Busnardo de Souza, independent researcher; Daniela da Silva Santos Krogh, independent researcher
The Circulation of Urbanistic Ideas in Latin America, Buenos Aires Study Case, 1850 to 1930
Carolina Gabriel de Almeida Barbosa, Pontificia Universidade Católica de Campinas; Luiz Augusto Maia Costa, independent researcher
Greater Tallinn Planning Competition (1913) and the Role of Eliel Saarinen as an International Expert
Karin Hallas-Murula, Tallinn University of Technology; EUAS
An Exploratory Exercise on the Hybridization of Knowledge and Transnational Interwoven Trends From Brazil’s Perspective
Maria Stella Martins Bresciani, University of Campinas
Louis-Joseph Lebret; Planification Humaniste et Trames Sociales: France et Amérique Latine
Virgínia Pontual, University Federal of Pernambuco
35
Urban Planning in Romania in the First Half of the 20th Century – Local Hybridisation of International Models
Toader Popescu, Ion Mincu University of Architecture and Urbanism
From Medellin Pilot Plan to Director Plan. a Case of Hybridisation of Modern Urbanism Implementation. 1950-1959
Patricia Schnitter, Universidad Pontificia Bolivariana
Questioning the National Narrative: Transnational Expertise and the Swedish Ciam Group
Erik Sigge, KTH Royal Institute of Technology
Vladimir Antolic – un Town Planning Expert in Burma, Malaysia and Indonesia (1953 – 1965)
Marina Smokvina, Academy of Sciences and arts; Mojca Smode Cvitanovic, independent researcher
Karsten, Thijsse and Tyrwhitt: Planning Agents in Indonesia (1915-1960)
Pauline K.m. van Roosmalen, Delft University of Technology
M52
Re-inventing the Mediterranean Tourist City in the 20th and 21st centuries
Thursday 30 August
Organisers Castro Brunetto Carlos Javier (Spain-Universidad de La Laguna), Katerina Chatzikonstantinou (Aristotle University), David Martín López (Universidad de Granada)
Time 09.00-10.30, 11.00-12.30
Room 17
Journey to Greece: Urban Development, Archaeology, and the Tourist Gaze in the 1930s
Vasiliki Dima, National Technical University of Athens; Emilia Athanassiou, National Technical University of Athens; Konstantinia Karali, National Technical University of Athens; Panayotis Tournikiotis, Greece - National Technical University of Athens
Tourism-Based Urban Conservation Approach: the Rehabilitation of Antalya’s Historic Center
Irem Gencer, Yildiz Technical University
Bijoufication: a Tourist City is Looking for its Inhabitants
Olga Moatsou-Ess, Independent researcher; Lydia Sapounaki-Dracaki, independent researcher; Maria-Louiza Tzoya
Moatsou, University of Thessaly
Vamos a la Playa: the Torremolinos Imaginary, Tourism, and the Construction of “Non-Places” Along the Spanish Coasts
William Nichols, Georgia State University
Capri’s Touristification. a Millennial Cultural Landscape Reinvented by Luxury Tourism
Giovanna Russo Krauss, University of Naples “Federico II”
Coastal Architecture and Seaside Practices Around Mediterranean Metropolises
Myrto Stenou, National Technical University of Athens
Re-Inventing Underground Space in Matera, European Capital of Culture 2019
Roberta Varriale, CNR of Rome
Islands of Memory: Difficult Heritage and Urban Re-Branding of Mediterranean Prison-Camps
Jovana Vukcevic, Pavol Jozef Safarik University
36
M53
Beyond Ruinenlust: Historicising Urban Renewal, Regeneration and Resilience (all periods)
Organisers Marcello Balbo (University of Venice IUAV), Julio d Davila (University College London), Carlos Lopez Galviz (Lancaster University)
Time 09.00-10.30, 11.00-12.30, 13.30-15.00, 15.30-17.00
Room 06
Re-Shaping ‘ the Private for the Public’ Concept in Traditional Courtyards: a Case Study in the Traditional Center of Baghdad
Nawar Sami Mehdi Al-Ali, Philadelphia University; Saba Sami Mehdi Al-Ali, Al Nahrain University
Politics of Heritage in Socialist Transitions: Comparing Yangon and Havana
Catalina Ortiz, University College London; Giovanna Astolfo, independent researcher
‘Rome and her Ruin Past Redemption’s Skill’? Romanticism, Rome, Ruin and the Possibilities of Regeneration
Simon Bainbridge, Lancaster University
Industrial Heritage and Urban Regeneration in two Recent Paris Projects: Paradoxes and Questions
Karen Bowie, Ecole normale superieure Architecture Paris La Villette
Urban Regeneration (ur) and Resentment Seen Through Aleixo Residential Estate
Cidália Ferreira Silva, Universidade do Minho
Historic Paris and the Threat of the Skyscraper: Towards a Nostalgic Hypochondria
Julie Gimbal, Université de Paris Sorbonne
‘Monuments to the Death of the Irish Dream’: Derelict Sites and Urban Modernization in Dublin, c. 1970-1990
Erika Hanna, University of Bristol
Thursday 30 August
Roma Resurgens: Political Motivations for Ancient Rome’s Urban Renewals
Hannah Cornwell, University of Birmingham
Antiquity and Time Perception: Civil Porticoes and Urban Routes in XIII- and XIV-Century Rome
Francesca Lembo Fazio, University of Rome Sapienza
Urban Space as an Independent Element of the Urban Regeneration Process. Using the Example of the City of Dresden in
Germany, Strategies, Methods and Instruments of German Urban Planning Practice Will be Investigated and Assessed in Terms
of Their Transferability Within the Russian City of Irkutsk
Anastasia Malko, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
Urban Scars and Transformations: the Legacy of Fascism in Contemporary Italy
Lucy Maulsby, Northeastern University
Media Strategies and Narratives in Urban Renewal Discourses About Berlin’S Historic Mass Housing Tenements ‘Mietskasernen’ in
the 1970s and 1980s
Kathrin Meißner, Leibniz Institute
Il Valore Della Memoria Nella Rigenerazione di Brani Della Citta’ Storica: Interventi di Restituzione All’Uso di Chiese Dismesse nel
Nucleo Antico di Monopoli
Angelamaria Quartulli, MiBACT - Ministero dei beni e delle attività culturali e del turismo; Valeria Moscardin, independent researcher
37
Urbanization After Labour? John Cockerill and the Industrialization of Seraing (1817-2017)
David Peleman, Ghent University
Impact of Derelict Buildings on the Cityscape – a Study of Roman Legislation on the Prevention of Ruins and Reuse of Materials
Aneta Skalec, Akademii im. Jana Dlugosza w Czestochowie
Building a Typology of Urban Obsolescence: Urban Informality and Renewal in Phnom Penh, Cambodia
Giorgio Talocci, University College London
Bogota’s Plan Piloto (1947-1951): From Proposal to Implementation
Hernando Vargas, Universidad Externado de Colombia
Presence, Erasures, and Façades: Material History and the Afterlife
Tracey eve Winton, University of Waterloo
M54
City Walks as Critical Engagements in Urban History (all periods)
Thursday 30 August
Organisers Ragnhild Claesson (Malmö University), Pia Olsson (University of Helsinki), Per-Markku Ristilammi (Malmö University)
Time 09.00-10.30, 11.00-12.30, 13.30-15.00
Room 20
Walking Through Poverty – Possibilities of Exploring Urban Problems
Angelika Bálint, Eötvös Loránd University
Urban Walking: Approaching Urban Memories Through a Phenomenological Approach
Lucia Bordone, Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne
Rediscover the Urban Space: Permanencies and Transformations in Historical City Districts of Rome and Gdansk
Justyna Borucka, Gdansk University of Technology; Claudia Mattogno, University of Rome Sapienza
Urban Space Through Female Eyes – City Walks as Microhistorical Narrations
Emese Gyimesi, Eötvös Loránd University
Engaging With Leicester Through Time
Sally ann Hartshorne, University of Leicester
Dramaturgies of Witnessing and Walking as Critical Spatial Practice: the Wellington Tower Project
Shauna Janssen, Concordia University
Religious Walks in Ancient Rome. Claiming Urban Space and Creating a new History of the City
Asuman Lätzer-Lasar, University of Erfurt
Walking Sarajevo: Reinforcing History and Identity Through Tourist Itineraries
Emily Makas, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Skip the Beaten Path! Discover Medieval Florence Following in the Footsteps of Brunetto Latini
David Napolitano, Cambridge University
The “Walking Dead”. Bodies (and Corpses) Claiming Their Space in Eighteenth-Century Palermo
Valeria Viola, University of York
38
M55
Infrastructure, culture, and identity in the modern city (19th-21th centuries)
Organisers Filippo de Pieri (Polytechnic of Turin)
Time 13.30-15.00, 15.30-17.00
Room 10
A Tale of two Cities: Engineering Heritage and the Politics of Commemorating the Liverpool and Manchester Railway
Erin Beeston, University of Manchester
La Conception des Grands Ensembles en France (1945-1975) Caractéristiques Environnementales et Résilience D’une Forme
Jugée Obsolète
Raphaël Labrunye, Ecole Nationale Supérieure d’Architecture de Normandie; Gauthier Bolle, Ecole Nationale Supérieure
d’Architecture et de Paysage de Bordeaux
Engineering the Nile Valley: Khartoum North and the First Aswan dam as Products of Anglo-Egyptian Hydropolitics, 1899-1935
Samuel Grinsell, Edinburgh University
Contested Nightscapes: Illuminating Colonial Cities in the British Empire
Ute Hasenöhrl, University of Innsbruck
«for Those who Hold Pleasure at Their Command of Aristocratic Precincts» the Opening of st. Stephen’s Green as a Public Park in
Dublin (1861-1880)
Jorge Ramón ros, University of Valencia
Thursday 30 August
The Railway Stations of Lisbon and Seville: the Technique at the Service of the City Organization and the Consolidation of a new
Urban Aesthetic
Ana Cardoso de Matos, Universidade de évora; Julián Sobrino Simal, independent researcher; Fernanda de Lima
Lourencetti, Universidade de évora
Temps de la Ville, Temps de L’Infrastructure, Retours sur la Figure Américaine du Parkway, 1920›S-1970›S
Nathalie Roseau, Ecole des Ponts ParisTech
Daylighting Place-Identity and Sociological Resilience
Brent Runyon, Historian
M58
Image and Identity of the Capital City in the 20th Century
Organisers Antonello Alici (Polytechnic of Marche), Marco Iuliano (University of Liverpool)
Time 13.30-15.00, 15.30-17.00
Room 09
Ambivalent Nostalgia, Photography, and Memory After Empire - Belgrade and Sofia, 1900-1939
Milos Jovanovic, Max Planck Institute
39
The Municipal Administration of the Capital of Finland After the Independence and Civil War -Democratic Reforms and Reconstruction
Kati Katajisto, University of Helsinki
The Winds of Change. Central European Capital Cities Between Past and Future: Prague, Vienna, and Warsaw 1918–1923
Jiri Pesek, Charles University; Nina Lohmann, Charles University
Statements of Political Will – Republican Visions for Berlin in the 1920s
Sarah m. Schlachetzki, University of Bern
A Tale of two Capitals (kyiv and Kharkiv as the Capitals of Soviet Ukraine)
Svitlana Shlipchenko, National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy
M60
Premodern Public Health: Comparing Cities 1250-1750
Organisers Janna Coomans (University of Amsterdam), Jane Stevens Crawshaw (Oxford Brookes University), Claire
Weeda (Leiden University)
Thursday 30 August
Time 09.00-10.30, 11.00-12.30
Room 22
Minds in the Gutter: Corruption in Late Medieval Valencia
Abigail Agresta, Queen’s University
Premodern Public Health: Comparing Cities and Approaches
Geneviève Dumas, Canada - Université de Sherbrooke; Jane Stevens Crawshaw, Oxford Brookes University
Learning From the Countryside: Field Masters (camparii) and Urban Healthscaping in Later Medieval Piedmont
Guy Geltner, University of Amsterdam
Pre-Industrial Water Management in Flemish Metropoli: Drawing From Archaeological Water Facilities
Roos van Oosten, Leiden University
Health Matters: Defining the Bonum Commune in Conflicts in Late Medieval Italy and the low Countries
Claire Weeda, Leiden University
RT01
Exploring Intersections of Urban History and Global History
Organisers Carl Nightingale (University at Buffalo, State University of New York), Joseph Prestel (Freie Universität Berlin)
Time 13.30-15.00, 15.30-17.00
Room 03
Bronwen Everill, University of Cambridge
Anindita Ghosh, University of Manchester
40
Ayala Levin, Northwestern University
Cyrus Shayegh, Graduate Institute of Geneva
Rosemary Wakeman, Fordham University and CEU Budapest
SS04
Golden Ages around the North Sea. Urban planning, Architecture and the Rise and Fall of
Urban Systems 1100-1800
Organisers Jaap Evert Abrahamse (Cultural Heritage Agency of Netherlands), Heidi Deneweth (Vrije Universiteit Brussel)
Time 13.30-15.00
Room 19
The Visual Representation of Cities Around the North sea in the Early Modern Period
Everhard Korthals Altes, Delft University of Technology
Influence of International Excellence on the Town Planning of Stockholm in the 17th Century
Marianne Råberg, Former city conservation director in Stockholm, now senior researcher (Ph.D)
SS05
Play, Renewal and Resilience in the C20th City
Organisers Lynn Abrams (University of Glasgow), Krista Cowman (University of Lincoln)
Time 15.30-17.00
Room 11
Thursday 30 August
The ‘Cartographic Identity’ of Sixteenth-Century Port Cities in the North sea Area
Bram Vannieuwenhuyze, University of Amsterdam
Playgrounds (1969) by Nelson Leirner
Carolina Lisbão, Instituto Federal de Educação, Ciência e Tecnologia São Paulo; Ana Carolina Carmona, University of Sao
Paulo; Juliano Veraldo da Costa Pita, Federal Institute of São Paulo
Waldemar Cordeiro and the Clube Esperia’s Playground: Landscaping, Experience and Participation
Ana Carolina Carmona Ribeiro, University of Sao Paulo; Vitor Nascimento Oliveira, Federal Institute of São Paulo
Children’s Play and the Renewal of Community in Postwar Australian Cities
Kate Darian-Smith, The University of Tasmania
‘A Playground is Also Included’: Children’S Play, Play Spaces and the Re-Newing of East London
Lucie Glasheen, Queen Mary University of London
The Spielraum: Making Room for Play in Urban Planning and Design
Garyfallia Katsavounidou, University of Ioannina
Saving the City: Child’s Play
Bart Tritsmans, Flanders Architecture institute
41
SS08
Standing Out, Getting in, Staying in. Being foreign in Cities, 13th-18th centuries
Organisers Francesco Guidi Bruscoli (University of Florence), James Nelson Novoa (University of Ottawa)
Time 15.30-17.00
Room 19
Living Together in two Port Cities: Ephesus (ayasuluk) and Miletus (balat) Under the Rule of Turkish Principalities
Cagla Caner Yuksel, Baskent University
Italians and the Latin Consulate in Buda During the Reign of Sigismund of Luxembourg
Katalin Prajda, University of Chicago
Between Frank Street and the Grand Port. Experiencing Urban Pluralism in the Port Cities of Izmir and Valletta (17th-18th Centuries)
Filomena Viviana Tagliaferri, CNR of Rome
Thursday 30 August
The Urban Heritage of Homesickness: Reconstructing Seventeenth-Century Dutch Batavia’S Chinese Ziekenhuis
Sim Hinman wan, University of Illinois Chicago
Urban Planning to Draw Colonists – Johann Peter Willebrand’s “Grundriß Einer Schönen Stadt” (1775/76)
Elke Katharina Wittich, University of Applied Sciences Hochschule Fresenius
SS09
Tourist facilities in the Mediterranean (1945-1975). Coast cities and Resorts between preservation
and resilience
Organisers Vassilios Colonas (University of Thessaly)
Time 15.30-17.00
Room 21
Holiday Villages on the Mediterranean Coast During the Thirty Glorious
Leïla El-Wakil, University of Geneva
The Transformation of Italian Coasts Among Landscape Protection and Tourism Development
Adele Fiadino, University G. D’Annunzio of Chieti-Pescara
Cinematic Representations of Attica’s Tourist Landscape From the Second Half of the 20th Century Until Today
Emmanouil Paravoliasis, University of Athens
‘Familiarizing’ With the Coast: Greek State Planning and the Tourism Agenda (1950-1967)
Angelos Vlachos, Hellenic Open University
42
SS12
Equipping Post-War Europe: Reassessing The Mutual Link Between Public Services And
Urbanization
Organisers Cristina Renzoni (Polytechnic of Milan), Michael Ryckewaert (Vrije Universiteit Brussel)
Time 11.00-12.30
Room 12
The Transformation of Critical Architecture in the 21th Century’s Metropolis
Meltem al, McGill University
The 1960 Italian law on Planning Standards as a Starting Point. The Regional Implementation and the Necessary Reframing
Nicola Vazzoler, University of Rome Roma Tre; Giovanni Caudo, University of Rome Roma Tre; Mauro Baioni, University of Rome Roma Tre
Schooling Post-War Italian Peripheries: Milan and Turin in a Comparative Perspective
Cristina Renzoni, Polytechnic of Milan; Paola Savoldi, independent researcher
Children in Crisis: the Norwegian Welfare State From Below
Guttorm Ruud, Oslo School of Architecture and Design
SS14
The Recirculation of Goods: Thrifty Households, Resilience And Commercial Circuits in the European City, C.1600-1900
Organisers Bruno Blondé (Antwerp University), Jon Stobart (Manchester Metropolitan University)
Thursday 30 August
Architecture for Grassroots Sport and Public Clients: a Comparative Analisys
Sara Giulia Troncone, Polytechnic of Milan
Time 15.30-17.00
Room 14
Aesthetics for a Polite Society? Constructing Product Qualities in an age of Consumer Transition, England and the low Countries
in the 18th Century
Bruno Blondé, Antwerp University; Jon Stobart, Manchester Metropolitan University
Last Wills and Their Role in Recirculation of Goods in Early Modern Transylvanian Towns
Mária Lupescu Makó, Babes-Bolyai University
SS15
Facing the Wrinkles of Time! Urban Agency of the Elderly in Europe and Beyond (16th-19th century)
Organisers Lynn Botelho (Indiana University of Pennsylvania), Gerrit Verhoeven (University of Antwerp), Jaco Zuijderduijn (Lund University)
Time 15.30-17.00
Room 05
43
Growing old in a Newborn Country: Elderly in the Port City of Piraeus (1835-1900)
Maria-Louiza Moatsou, University of Thessaly; Lydia Sapounaki-Dracaki, independent researcher
What did Retirement Cost Back Then? the Evolution of Corrody Prices in the low Countries, c. 1300-1800
Jaco Zuijderduijn, Lund University
SS16
Beyond the Family. Personal and Organisational Networks of Migrant Women Moving to the City,
from 1600 to the Present
Organisers Isabelle Devos (Ghent University), Hilde Greefs (Antwerp University), Thomas Verbruggen (University of Antwerp)
Time 15.30-17.00
Room 16
Thursday 30 August
“It is not Just a Shelter for a Woman’s Head, it is her Home” Homes for Single Women Immigrants in the 1930s and 1940s
Sigal Davidi, Tel Aviv University
Organizing Marginalized Immigrant Women Workers: Work Integration Social Enterprises and Immigrant Networks in Montreal
Quebec
Deborah Leslie, University of Toronto; Norma Rantisi, independent researcher
Pioneiras: Oral Histories of Women Migrants to Brasília
Emily Story, Salisbury University
The Arrival of Foreign Female Domestic Servants in Antwerp and the Role of Compatriots and Relatives as Intermediaries, 1860-1880
Thomas Verbruggen, University of Antwerp
SS18
The Discovery of Urban Living in the Post-Industrial Era (1950-2000)
Organisers Cody Hochstenbach (University of Amsterdam), Tim Verlaan (University of Amsterdam)
Time 15.30-17.00
Room 20
Revitalization Without Gentrification? Social Movements, Housing Cooperatives and Urban Living in Germany, c. 1970 - Present
Tobias Bernet, Freie Universität Berlin
The Nonchalant Obnoxious - Industrial Heritage as Part of the Urban Regeneration
Cornelis Horn Evensen, Norwegian Institute for Cultural Heritage Research (Alumni)
The Enduring Anti-Urban Bias. Status Quaestionis of the Historical Research on Anti-Urbanism
Hugo Lauwers, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven
Was There Gentrification Prior to the Post-Industrial Era? a Historical Comment on the Discovery of Urban Living
Philipp Reick, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
44
SS19
Women Professionals in the Urban Environment: Struggles for Autonomy in Early 20th Century
Organisers Isil Cokugras (Istanbul Bilgi University), Irem Gencer (Yildiz Technical University)
Time 13.30-15.00
Room 16
To be or not to be Registered: Dilemma for Women. the Ordre des Architectes, Ile-De-France Region, 1940-1970 (france)
Stéphanie Bouysse-Mesnage, Université de Strasbourg
Virginia Haret Andreescu: the Professional Trajectory of a Woman Architect in Interwar Romania
Ramona Caramelea, ‘G. Oprescu’ Institute of Art History
The European Trips of Catherine Bauer Wurster. From Domestic Architecture to “Modern Housing”
María Cristina García González, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid; Salvador Guerrero, independent researcher
From Chicago Urban Settlement to the Transnational Expertise: dr. Alice Hamilton, an Emblematic Female Pathway Through the Early
20th c. Social Reform
Judith Rainhorn, Université de Paris 1 Panthéon Sorbonne
The Urban Presence of Justice in the European Cities of the 19th and 20th Century
Organisers Amalia Kotsaki (University of Crete), Panagiotis Tournikiotis (Greece - National Technical University of Athens)
Time 13.30-15.00
Room 12
Thursday 30 August
SS24
The Urban Pressence of Justice in the European Countries - a Case Study on the Alteration of the Building Type of the Palace of
Justice and its Expression in the Urban Tissue
Iasonas Ameranis, Technical University of Crete
Housing Jusitice in Athens 1834-2014 City, Politics, Architecture
Amalia Kotsaki, University of Crete
Justice of the City vs Justice in the City : the Effects of the 1835 English Municipal Reform on the Exercise of Justice
Frederic Moret, Université de Paris Est Marne-la-vallée
The Court of Justice - the Symbol of Power as a new Town Centre (presov, Slovakia, 1943)
Martin Pekar, Pavol Jozef Safarik University
SS25
Confinement in the City: Urban Renewal and Detention Conditions (18th-19th centuries)
Organisers Tommaso Caliò (University of Rome Tor Vergata), Marco Cicchini (University of Geneva), Chiara Lucrezio
Monticelli (University of Rome Tor Vergata)
45
Time 15.30-17.00
Room 12
From Proximity to Promiscuity: Connecting People and Prisons in XVIIIth Century Paris
Sophie Abdela, Université de Sherbrooke
The Castle or the Green Field: Dilemmas and Solutions in English Prison Planning, 1780-1850
Allan Brodie, Historic England
«un’opera Tutta Evangelica». Prison Reform in Papal State in the Context of Nineteenth-Century Europe
Maria Romana Caforio, University of Parma
Detention Space and Urban Space. a Dialogue in Urban Process
Letizia Gorgo, University of Rome Sapienza
Friday 31 August / Vendredi 31 août
08:30 – 17:30 Registration and Publishers exhibit
09:00 – 10:30 Sessions M09, M11, M15, M18, M20, M23, M24, M25, M29, M31, M32, M34, M35, M36, M43, M49, M51,
M56, RT02, SS02, SS28
10:30 – 11:00 Coffee break
11:00 – 12:30 Sessions M09, M11, M15, M18, M20, M23, M24, M25, M29, M31, M32, M34, M35, M36, M43, M49, M51,
M56, RT02, SS17, SS27
12:30 – 14:00 Lunch break
14:00 – 15:30 Sessions M09, M12, M15, M21, M24, M25, M31, M34, M35, M37, M38, M39, M42, M43, M57, M59,
SS03, SS07, SS13
15:30 – 16:00 Coffee break
16:00 – 17:30 Sessions M12, M21, M37, M38, M39, M42, M57, M59, RT03, SS01, SS10, SS11, SS20, SS23
17:30 – 19:00 EAUH Ordinary General Meeting
17:30 – 19:30 Guided tours and walks
20:30 - 24:00 Conference dinner – Palazzo Brancaccio, Via del Monte Oppio 7
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Plenary Session / Session Plénière
Time 17:30 – 19:00
Room 1
EAUH Ordinary General Meeting
Parallel Sessions / Sessions Parallèles
M09
Belonging and Exclusion, Insiders and Outsiders: People and the Resilient City from 1450
Organisers Emma Hart (University of St Andrews), Deborah Simonton (University of Southern Denmark)
Time 09.00-10.30, 11.00-12.30, 14.00-15.30
Room 01
Black Brotherhoods, Urban Development, and the Shaping of Urban Life in Colonial Minas Gerais, Brazil
Mariana Dantas, Ohio University
Towns go Public. Urban Services and the Broadening of Urban Communities in Scandinavia 1850-1920
Mats Hallenberg, Stockholm University; Magnus Linnarsson, Stockholm University
Charleston, South Carolina: Lessons in Resilience From a “Failed City”
Emma Hart, University of St Andrews
Friday 31 August
Memory and Place Making in Satellite Towns of Brasília, Capital City of Brazil
Maria Fernanda Derntl, University of Brasilia
Small-Town Jews in Denmark in the 19th Century
Vibeke Kaiser-Hansen, University of Southern Denmark
The Change of the Urban Space in Inter-War Athens
Georgios Kritikos, Harokopio University
Belonging in the City and the Countryside: Dealing With the Mobile Poor in Eighteenth-Century Flanders
Marjolein Schepers, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Identity and Urban Belonging: Some Thoughts
Deborah Simonton, University of Southern Denmark
“Mr. Lewis Evans, of Philadelphia”: Urban Feuds on the Fringes of Empire
Nora Slonimsky, Iona College and the Institute for Thomas Paine Studies
From Correction to Exclusion: Keeping Order in the City
Blanka Szeghyová, Slovak Academy of Science
Italian-Speaking Catholicism as an Urban Subculture: Contesting and Conflicting Belongings in the Habsburg Port City Trieste (1890-1914)
Peter Techet, Leibniz Institute
47
M11
Beyond City Gates: Spaces of Arrival and Transit for Migrants in European Cities, 1500-2000
Organisers Markian Prokopovych (Durham University), Rosa Salzberg (University of Warwick
Time 09.00-10.30, 11.00-12.30
Room 03
“Gateway to Freedom?”: Airport Infrastructure, Mobility, and Freedom in Mid-Twentieth-Century Berlin
Mark Beirn, Washington University in St. Louis
Out of the City: Urban Spaces for Transmigrants and Refugees in Central Europe and the United States Before and After 1914
Tobias Brinkmann, Penn State University
Early Modern Inns and Taverns as Social Centers Outside the Gates of Castilian Towns
David Gobel, Savannah College of Art and Design
Friday 31 August
The Geography of Arrival. Places of Arrival and Spatial Settlement Patterns of Foreign Newcomers in Antwerp During the Second Half
of the Nineteenth Century
Hilde Greefs, Antwerp University; Anne Winter, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Materializing Departure: Practices of Emigration in Rijeka at the Turn of the 19th Century
Duga Mavrinac, Institute for Anthropological Research; Anja Iveković Martinis, Institute for Anthropological Research;
Olga Orlić, independent researcher; Anita Sujoldžić, independent researcher
Troublesome “Forgotten Recesses” or Places of Integration: Corrales de Vecinos in Early Modern Seville
Igor Knezevic, University of Pennsylvania
From Lazaretto to Disinfection Station: Spaces of Health Control in Lisbon’s Port (1885-1945)
Celia Miralles Buil, Universidade de Lisboa
M12
Immigrants, the Police and the Courts in Urban Europe, 16th-20th Centuries
Organisers Manon van der Heijden (Leiden University), Anne Winter (Vrije Universiteit Brussel)
Time 14.00-15.30, 16.00-17.30
Room 03
Policing Migrants in a Phase of Urban Transition: Brussels and Antwerp, 1880-1910
Margo de Koster, Vrije Universiteit Brussel; Ayfer Erkul, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Hit the Road Jean and Don’t you Come Back no More: Repeat Expulsions From Belgium 1860-1914
Torsten Feys, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Between Tolerance and Discrimination? Migrants, ‘Police’, and Criminal Justice in the Dutch Republic
Jeannette Kamp, Leiden University
48
Immigrants in the 18th Century Polish Cities. Between Legal Restrictions and Economic Necessities
Radosław Poniat, Bialystok University
Foreigners in the City. Moral Panics, Migrants and Politics in Western Germany During the 1960s/70s
Herbert Reinke, Humboldt University Berlin
“Those Rascals Chased From Holland!” Sodomy, Migration and Identity Building in Eighteenth-Century Antwerp
Jonas Roelens, Ghent University
Peasant Immigrants in the City of Cracow in the 16th-17th Centuries in the Light of Criminal Records
Mateusz Wyżga, University of Krakow
M15
Vulnerability and Resilience in the City Landscape: Domes, Bell Towers and ‘Emerging’ Architecture as Visual Poles and Signs of Urban Memory from 15th to 19th Century
Organisers Alfredo Buccaro (University of Naples “Federico II”), Valentina Russo (University of Naples “Federico II”)
Time 09.00-10.30, 11.00-12.30, 14.00-15.30
Room 02
The Kremlin Сolossus - the Ivan the Great Bell Tower in the Urban Landscape and in the Public Perception (19 - Early 20th Century)
Tatiana Atamuratova, the State Museum The Moscow Kremlin
Civic Towers in the Medieval Urban Landscape: Architectures as a Symbol of Resilience?
Silvia Beltramo, Polytechnic of Turin
Friday 31 August
The Restorations of the Beginning of the Twentieth Century of the ‘Sala del Trionfo’ in Castel Nuovo, Naples
Raffaele Amore, University of Naples “Federico II”
Innovative Strategies for the Interpretation of Masonry Domes. a Research Project About 15th and 16th Built Heritage in Naples and Campania
Alfredo Buccaro, University of Naples “Federico II”; Valentina Russo, University of Naples “Federico II”
Ten Neapolitan Churches Behind to Decumano Superior: From Pagan and Christian Acropolis to University-Hospital Region
Francesca Capano, University of Naples “Federico II”
Roman Influences in the Architecture of Neapolitan Domes at the end of the 16th Century
Salvatore di Liello, University of Naples “Federico II”
The Bell Towers of Amatrice Between Memory, Resilience, and Denial
Francesco Gangemi, Kunsthistorisches Institut in Florenz; Rossana Torlontano, University G. D’Annunzio of Chieti-Pescara
A Sign in the Ibleo Landscape: the Facade-Tower of the Church of Santa Maria Delle Stelle in Comiso (ragusa). Historical Events,
Vulnerability and Conservation Strategies
Giovanni Gatto, University of Palermo; Gaspare Massimo Ventimiglia, University of Palermo
The Reintegration of the Urban Landscape: the Bell Tower of Chiesa Matrice in Noci
Emilia Pellegrino, Soprintendenza Archeologia Belle Arti e Paesaggio per la Città Metropolitana di Bari; Piernicola
Cosimo Intini, independent researcher; Pietro Intini, independent researcher
49
Progettazione e struttura nella formazione del paesaggio urbano-storico Val di Noto (1693) e Valle del Belice (1968), due esperienze a confronto
Sara Isgro, Italian ministry for education
Early Tallest Public Building Design Inspired by the Italian Medieval Towers ‘Outside of Italy’ Between the 19th and 20th Century
Ewa Kawamura, University of Tokyo
“Une Statue Gigantesque”. Visibility and Meanings of the Dome of the Parisian Panthéon Between Degradations and Urban Image
Bianca Gioia Marino, University of Naples “Federico II”
La Région du Salnés: les événements Religieux et Laïques Comme Moyen D’organisation Urbaine
Alicia Padin, Universidade de Santiago de Compostela
The Complex of san Giovanni a Carbonara in Naples as Visual and Memorial Core of the Renaissance City: the Case of the Domes of
the Caracciolo del Sole and di Vico Chapels Through Their Origins, Transformations and Conservation
Andrea Pane, University of Naples “Federico II”
Friday 31 August
The Civic Tower of Arquata del Tronto: a Symbol of Rebirth From the Earthquake Ruins
Enrica Petrucci, University of Camerino
Signs of Urban Identity in Terra D’otranto Cities From 15th to 19th Century. a Contribution to Historical Research and Issues About
Conservation Practices
Julia Puretti, University of Salento
Towards the Conservation Of Vulnerable Architectures Along the Amalfi Coast: Majolica-Cladded Domes in Historic Urban Images
Damiana Treccozzi, University of Naples “Federico II”
A Rediscovered Sign of the Chiaramonte Architectural Identity in the old Town of Palermo: the CefalÀ Palace and its Historical Stratifications
Gaspare Massimo Ventimiglia, University of Palermo
M18
Writing the Resilience of Port Cities (1800-2000)
Organisers Carola Hein (Delft University of Technology), Paul van de Laar (Erasmus University)
Time 09.00-10.30, 11.00-12.30
Room 08
Elite and Subaltern Cosmopolitanism: Rethinking the Rise of Capitalist Urbanity Through Scandinavian Port Cities
Pål Brunnström, Malmö University; Johan Pries, Malmö University
Negotiating Modernism and Sanitation in Colonial Macao: the Chinese Bazaar new Avenue (1903/1908)
Regina Campinho, University of Coimbra
Fremantle: ‘Reminders of a Working Port’
Felix Joensson, University of Western Australia; Kate Hislop, independent researcher
Piraeus Waterfront. Traces of (in/de) Industrialisation With the Passage of Time
Aikaterini Karadima, University College London
50
Spatial Resilience of the Port of Belfast: Mapping Opportunities
Jasna Mariotti, Queen’s University Belfast
“You Will Always Cross … via Calais”: Hovercraft and Calais’ Search for Port Domination
Jacob Paskins, University College London
Managing Risk in the ‘Danger Zone’: Civil Defence and Public Safety Discourses on the North East Coast of England, 1914-18
Michael Reeve, University of Hull
Maritime Museums and Historic Ships in Hamburg: Staging the Past of a Port City
Christoph Strupp, Forschungsstelle für Zeitgeschichte in Hamburg
Urbanism and Reform. the Second Life of the Black sea Port Cities, 1700-1920
Athina Vitopoulou, Aristotle University; Alexandra Yerolympos, independent researcher
M20
Feeding the city: comparative histories of urban agriculture
Organisers Clare Griffiths (Cardiff University), Tim Soens (Antwerp University)
The Role of Urban Vegetable Gardening in 18th Century Sweden
Annika Björklund, National Archives Stockholm
Urban Food Production in Portuguese Cities From 16th to 18th Centuries: Viseu as a Study Case
Liliana Castilho, Instituto Politécnico de Viseu/CITCEM
The Milk Supply in the City of Rome During the First Half of the 20th Century. Private Versus Public Management
Rita D’Errico, University of Rome Roma Tre
Friday 31 August
Time 09.00-10.30, 11.00-12.30
Room 05
The Carpi “Orto Agrario” in Mantua: From Private Garden to an Experimental Agricultural Nursery to an Urbanized Area
Laura Giacomini, Polytechnic of Milan
From Root to Rise - Allotments as Sites for Practicing Citizenship in 19th Century Denmark
Leonora Lottrup Rasmussen, University of Aarhus
Urban Agriculture in Early Modern Cities of Central Europe
Ansgar Schanbacher, University of Göttingen
M21
Suburban Creatives: culture, aesthetics and the creative economy in the wider metropolitan
area (c. 1700-c.2010)
Organisers Michiel Dehaene (Ghent University), Ruth Mcmanus (Dublin City University), Ilja van Damme (Antwerp University)
Time 14.00-15.30, 16.00-17.30
Room 05
51
Exhibiting the Future Suburbs. Architectural Interpretations of a Changing Urban Landscape
Michiel Dehaene, Ghent University
Imagining Landscapes on the Urban Fringe in the Twentieth Century: Penurbia and its Characteristics
Joe Goddard, University of Copenhagen
Innovative Industries Beyond the City: the Case of Lieven Gevaert and the Suburbanisation of Antwerp Around 1900
Ilja van Damme, Antwerp University; Laura may, University of Antwerp
Exploring Creativity in Dublin’s Suburbs, 1860-2010
Ruth Mcmanus, Dublin City University
Cultural and Creative Production in the Wider Metropolitan Area, Some Theoretical Questions
Ruth Mcmanus, Dublin City University; Ilja van Damme, Antwerp University
The Sci-Edu District Versus the Ancient Town, Processes of Sub-Urbanization in Suzhou
Paola Pellegrini, Xi’an Jiaotong-Liverpool University
Friday 31 August
Arts and Hvidovre - Art and Artists in a Copenhagen Suburb
Poul Sverrild, Forstadsmuseet
Diy – Customising the Suburban Dream
Mette Tapdrup Mortensen, Kroppedal Museum
Julio Arrieta : Linking Creativities in the Villa 21-24, Buenos Aires (1950-2018)
Marianne Thibault, Université de Paris Denis-Diderot
Cinemas That Never Were. Suburban Film Exhibition in the Rotterdam Metropolitan Area, 1945-1970
Thunnis van Oort, University of Amsterdam
M23
Resisting to urban changes: voluntary associations for protection and enhancement of cultural
heritage in Europe (1880-1940)
Organisers Angelo Bertoni (Université d’Aix-Marseille), Lidia Piccioni (University of Rome Sapienza)
Time 09.00-10.30, 11.00-12.30
Room 17
The Birth of the Policy on Heritage for Paris and its Surroundings, From 1890s to 1940s
Laurence Bassieres, Ecole normale superieure Architecture Paris La Villette
Voluntary Associations, Promotion of Heritage and Tourism in Portugal at the Beginning of the 20th Century. Actions on a Local,
National and International Level
Maria ana Bernardo, Universidade de évora; Ana Cardoso de Matos, Universidade de évora
The age of Disfigurement: Scapa, Urban Heritage and the Control of Advertising
James Greenhalgh, University of Lincoln
52
Kazan University Association for Archeology, History and Ethnography, and Urban Transformations of the City of Kazan in Late Russian
Empire (1880-S – Early XXth Century)
Gulchachak Nugmanova, Research Institute of Theory and History of Architecture and Town Planning
A Voluntary ‘Association’ in Defence of Landscape and Monuments: la Fédération des Sociétés Pour la Protection des Sites et des
Monuments Naturels et Historiques de la Belgique (1914)
Maria Chiara Rapalo, University of Naples “Federico II”
‘Bruce Castle for the People’: Civil Society, Local Government and the Acquisition of Bruce Castle as a Park and Museum for
Tottenham, 1891-1906
Caroline Swan, Birkbeck University of London
M24
Cities, Space and the Sacred: Exploring Urban (Religious) Landscapes in the Modern Era
(c.1800-present)
Organisers Martin Baumeister (Ludwig-Maximilians Universität München), Anthony Steinhoff (Université du Québec à Montréal)
From Hill top Landmarks to Suburban Place Makers: Brisbane’s Post-War Religious Territories and Communities
Lisa Daunt, University of Queensland; Janina Gosseye, University of Queensland
Christian Mission as Spatial Practice: Inscribing Sacrality in Urban South India in the 19th Century
Mary Hancock, University of California
“Urban Sacralities: Modalities of the Sacred in two Jerusalem Communities”
Richard Hecht, University of California
Friday 31 August
Time 09.00-10.30, 11.00-12.30, 14.00-15.30
Room 06
Six Feet Under: When the Sacred Becomes Profane
Myrna Martin, University of Oxford
Retaking the Impero. Historical and Structural Prerequisites and Implementation of Expanded Church Construction in Fascist Rome
Luigi Monzo, University of Innsbruck
Invisible Presence and Visible Absence: the Polysemic Presence of Religions in Contemporary Urban Settings
Martin Radermacher, Ruhr-University Bochum
The Civic and the Sacred: Alvar Aalto’s Churches and Parish Centres in Wolfsburg (1960-1968)
Max Sternberg, Cambridge University; Sofia Singler, Cambridge University
Defining the Postcolonial Sacred: Contested Places of Worship in Delhi After Partition, 1947-48
Clemens Six, University of Groningen
Church Burning: Desecrating and Recreating Sacred Space in Urban Spain, 1909-1939
Mary Vincent, University of Sheffield
53
M25
Cosmopolitanism, Citizenship, and the City (19th to 21st centuries)
Organisers Aliki Economides (Laurentian University), Fuyuki Kurasawa (York University)
Time 09.00-10.30, 11.00-12.30, 14.00-15.30
Room 09
Exposed Seeing: Cosmopolitanism, Modern Spectatorship, and the 1896 Budapest World’s Fair
Dorothy Barenscott, Kwantlen Polytechic University
From Gropius to Libeskind: Transnational Circulation of Urban Commemorative Forms
Jerzy Elzanowski, Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada; Rebecca Dolgoy, independent researcher
Theophil Hansen’S Hellenism as a Vehicle to Modern Citizenship: Contrasting Views in 19th-Century Athens and Vienna
Irene Fatsea, National Technical University of Athens
Friday 31 August
From Queer Spaces to Sexual Citizenship: Medicalization, Surveillance, and Retreat in the bay Area’s Response to Hiv/aids
Stathis Gerostathopoulos, University of California, Berkley
Publishing Cosmopolitanism in Cosmopolitan Spaces? Making of Late Ottoman Pera, and L’avenir – Feuille Cosmopolite Quotidienne
Koca Mehmet Kentel, University of Washington
Urbanity Between Resilience and Tensions: a Micro Anthropology of Space in a Berlin Refugee Camp (2015-2017)
Nora Lafi, Zentrum Moderner Orient
Ikea Islam: the Swedish Cosmos of Mosque Design From 1970 to the Present
Jennifer Mack, KTH Royal Institute of Technology
The Dynamics of National Belonging in Rotterdam and Antwerp (c. 1870–1900)
Christina Reimann, Goteborg University
The World Center of Communication: Cosmopolitanism and World Capitals in the age of Broadcasting
Olga Touloumi, Historian
When Cosmopolitanism Meets Civicism. Merchant Banker van Eeghen as the Driving Force Behind Urban Renewal in 19th-Century
Amsterdam
Laura van Hasselt, University of Amsterdam
Navigating Through Victor Hugo’S Cosmopolitan and Organic Paris
Ben Vandenput, Ghent University
Be Aware of Cosmopolitanism! how Industrial Multicultural City fed Fears of Modernity in 19th-Century Lodz, Poland
Agata Zysiak, University of Warsaw
54
M29
The Impact of War on Urban Landscape: Transformations and Resilience in European Cities (15th18th centuries)
Organisers Rebeca Blanco-Rotea (Universidade de Santiago de Compostela), Margarida Tavares da Conceição (Nova
University of Lisbon)
Time 09.00-10.30, 11.00-12.30
Room 22
Fortifications and Urban Planning in Eary Modern Malta
Armando Antista, University of Palermo
Rethinking the Castellated Façade of the Palazzo Comunale in Montepulciano: a Florentine Military Strategy in Response to the
Battle of Anghiari
Koching Chao, University of York
The Fortress City of Košice – Life and Transformation During and After the war (16th – 18th Centuries)
Peter Fedorčák, Pavol Jozef Safarik University
The Impact of war on Arezzo and the Valdichiana Towns During the Early Years of the Government of Cosimo I
Maria Teresa Pepe, Independent scholar
Transformations in the Shadow of War: Reconstruction of the Fortresses on the Siberian Defensive Lines (18th Century)
Daria Shemelina, Scientific Research Institute of the Theory and History of Architecture and Urban Planning
The Impact of Polish-Swedish Wars in the Mid-17th Century on the Development of the Towns of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth
Katarzyna Wagner, University of Warsaw
Friday 31 August
Genova Sotto le Bombe del re Sole: la Distruzione e la Ricostruzione Nelle Arti e Nell’architettura
Sara Rulli, University of Genova; Valentina Fiore, independent researcher
M31
East Meets West: Urban History and the Cold War
Organisers Laura Kolbe (University of Helsinki), Rosemary Wakeman (Fordham University)
Time 09.00-10.30, 11.00-12.30, 14.00-15.30
Room 21
The I-462 Housing Typology: a Tool for Urban Modernisation in the Soviet World
Nikolay Erofeev, University of Oxford; Mohamad Sedighi, TU Delft
The East-West Mediatization of Urbicide. Representations About Warsaw’S Ruins in Poland and in Switzerland (1945-1950)
Matthieu Gillabert, University of Fribourg
Hidden Appropriation and Neglected Continuity: the Urban Development of Stettin / Szczecin as an Entangled Cold war History
Joerg Hackmann, University of Greifswald
55
Urban Stability Between East and West? Finnish-Soviet City Twinning Program as a Part of Friendship and Neutrality Policies at the
Baltic sea in 1969-1989
Laura Kolbe, University of Helsinki
Park Inside, Outside Nature The Importance of the Swedish Models for the Development of Slovenian Post-War Housing Estates
Martina Malešić, University of Ljubljana
The Ford Foundation’s American-Yugoslav Project
Tracy Neumann, Wayne State University
Opposing Urban Systematization in Ceausescu’s Romania: Counter-Discourses and Networks of Solidarity Across the Iron Curtain
Corneliu Pintilescu, George Baritiu History Institute
Hamburg’s „policy of the Elbe“: Reconnecting to Eastern Europe Across the Iron Curtain
Christoph Strupp, Forschungsstelle für Zeitgeschichte in Hamburg
Urban Morphology of Prosperous Future: Atom Town Sillamäe and its Identical Transformation
Siim Sultson, Tallinn University of Technology; EUAS
Friday 31 August
The Historic City as an Asset: Urban Heritage, Knowledge Transfer, and Tourism Policy Under State Socialism in Budapest
Erika Szívós, Eötvös Loránd University
Cold war Narratives and Not-So-“Hot” Realities: Constantinos a. Doxiadis and the Athens Center of Ekistics
Lefteris Theodosis, Bauhaus-Universität Weimar
Suburban Bungalow and Socialist Block of Flats – Postwar Working-Class Welfare and Housing in Detroit (usa) and Lodz (poland)
Agata Zysiak, University of Warsaw
M32
Culturally-Rooted Forms of Urban Renewal in Europe, Middle-East and Asia (from antiquity
to the present)
Organisers Nicholas Temple (University of Huddersfield), Yue Zhuang (University of Exeter)
Time 09.00-10.30, 11.00-12.30
Room 16
Beyond Bladerunner A Dialogic of the Everyday in Macau’s Fictional Landscape
Robert Brown, Plymouth University; Zoe Latham, Plymouth University
Urban Commons as a Mean of Alter Urban Transformations. the Present Italian Scenario and its Historical Precedents
Ioanni Delsante, University of Huddersfield
Urban Renewal and Housing Transformation in Hanoi, Vietnam – Interaction Between Small Self-Built Projects and Large
Government Supported Project
Ngo Kien Thinh, University of Huddersfield; Yun gao, University of Huddersfield
56
Reviving Urban Life Through Commercial and Festival Practices in Kunming City, China – Cast Study of Renovated old Street and
Temple of Confucius in Kunming
Yun gao, University of Huddersfield; Nicholas Temple, University of Huddersfield
Rooms+cities: the City is Critical Project – a Poetics of Collective Life
Lorens Holm, University of Dundee; Cameron Mcewan, independent researcher
Reformation of Urban Ethics in Athens: the Restless Case of Exarcheia
Leonidas Koutsoumpos, National Technical University of Athens
Beyond Ephemeral: the Architecture of Festivals as a Tool for Change
Louise Pelletier, Université de Montréal
The Development of Renovatio Urbis in Imperial Rome
Christopher Siwicki, University of Exeter
Renovatio Urbis: Giles of Viterbo and the ‘Golden Age’ of Julius II
Nicholas Temple, University of Huddersfield
First Clean the Streets: a Study of Spectacle During the new York City Crisis Years
Theo Temple, University of Liverpool
Victoria Barracks of Disappearance: Contested Post-Military Landscape in High-Density Urba Hong Kong
Jing Xiao, Shenzhen University; Charlie Q.l. Xue, independent researcher
M34
Friday 31 August
Urbe Communita : Building the Borgo pio Between the Vatican and Castel s. Angelo (1561-1565)
Roger Vella Bonavita, University of Western Australia
When Local Wishes to Become Global: Heritagization Strategies of Small Towns and Little Places
in Remote Regions (20th and 21st centuries)
Organisers Blanca del Espino Hidalgo (Universidad de Sevilla), Luda Klusakova (Charles University)
Time 09.00-10.30, 11.00-12.30, 14.00-15.30
Room 04
Ruin and Time, Abandoned Settlements, the Village of Granadilla
Francisco Javier Ostos Prieto, Universidad de Sevilla; José Manuel Aladro Prieto, Universidad de Sevilla
Railway: From Global Infrastructure to Local Heritage. The Case of the Historic Railroad Avellino-Rocchetta in Southern Italy
Consuelo Isabel Astrella, University of Naples “Federico II”
Heritagization and Networking in Some Extra-Small North Italian Places
Paola Pellegrini, Xi’an Jiaotong-Liverpool University
Beyond the Postcard: Patrimonial Speeches and Aesthetic References on Santo Stefano di Sessanio Landscape, Italy
William Lopes de Oliveira, Universidade Federal de VIçosa - ; Leonardo Civale, independent researcher
57
Entry Into the Unesco Club: the Experience of Ulyanovsk Region
Elena Elts, Saint Petersburg State University
Does the Developmental History Have Influence on Small Town’s Thinking?
Réka Horeczki, Institute for Regional Studies CERS HAS
Touristification of Historic Urban Centres in Southern Italian Salento Region
Katja Maaria Huovinen, Aalto University
Building Community Resilience Through Heritage in Small Towns : Case Study of Vysoké nad Jizerou in the 1990s
Jira Janáč, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic
Balancing Between Local and Global: Heritage Presentations of Central European Small Towns (case of Telč and Bardejov)
Jan Krajíček, Charles University
The White Coal Town. the Emergence and Decline of Textile Industry in Naoussa
Nikolaos Leonidakis, University of Crete
Friday 31 August
Tourism and Territorial Development: Dynamization Strategies for an Agrarian Cultural Landscape. Guadalhorce Valley in Málaga
Royo Naranjo Lourdes, Universidad de Sevilla
A new Phoenix From the Ashes?
Marta Marçal Gonçalves, Universidade do Algarve; María Teresa Pérez Cano, independent researcher; Stefan Rosendahl,
independent researcher
Viterbo_heritage and Future
Manuela Raitano, University of Rome Sapienza; Paolo Marcoaldi, independent researcher
Can Small Towns Survive in a Global World?
Lars Nilsson, Stockholm University
Building a Common Cultural Identity. the Case of the Eastern Etna Small Towns, Between XX and XXI Century
Melania Nucifora, University of Catania
Nithraid and the Salty Coo: Interrogating Rural Heritage and Place-Identity Through Co-Production, Contemporary Myth-Making and ‘The Festive’
Venda Louise Pollock, Newcastle University
Corredor Bio-Comechingones, an Innovative Regional Scale Agreement Among Smalls Towns
Monica Jimena Rame, Universidad Nacional de Córdoba
M35
Micro-Geographies of the City, c.1600-1900: Spaces and Places, Practices and Representations
Organisers Alida Clemente (University of Foggia), Dag Lindström (Uppsala University), Jon Stobart (Manchester Metropolitan University)
Time 09.00-10.30, 11.00-12.30, 14.00-15.30
Room 10
58
Political Meeting Places in Manchester and Sheffield C.1780-1860: the Built Environment as a Quotidian Source of Political Agency
Sam Griffiths, University College London; Katrina Navickas, University of Hertfordshire; Blerta Dino, independent researcher
Agency of Space in the Nineteenth-Century Streetscape in Antwerp and Dublin
Susan Galavan, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven
Houses, Streets, and Conflicts of Immorality and Respectability in Copenhagen c. 1900
Peter Wessel Hansen, Copenhagen City Archives
Mapping Early Modern London
Vanessa Harding, Birkbeck University of London
Home Shopping: the Micro-History of Commercial and Domestic Space in Eighteenth-Century York
Matthew Jenkins, University of York
Representing a Disreputable House
Ulrik Langen, University of Copenhagen
The Struggle for Urban Space: Policed Places in Stockholm 1776–1850
Tobias Larsson, Uppsala University
Sidewalks and Alignment of the Streets: the gap Between Large-Scale Planning and the Building-Scale in the 18th and 19th
Centuries (brussels-Paris)
Christophe Loir, Université Libre de Bruxelles; Thomas Schlesser, independent researcher
Architectural Graphics and the Terraced House in Dublin and Edinburgh, 1790–1810
Conor Lucey, University College Dublin
Friday 31 August
A Microhistory of the Making of a Popular Neighborhood in Paris Between 1848 and 1930
Paul Lecat, Université de Paris Est Marne-la-vallée
Representing a Changing City: Walter Osborne and the Transformation of Patrick Street and its Environs, 1887 – 1900
Kathryn Milligan, University College Dublin
Neighborhood Society : a Micro Historical Serial Study of a Parisian Street
Preston Perluss, Université Grenoble Alpes
A Modest Revolution: the Nineteenth-Century Berlin Tenement and the German Hausfrau
Isabel Rousset, University of Western Australia
The Brilliant Idea of the Bookkeeper Johan Peter Frisk and the Coming of an Urban Wooden Housing Culture in Linköping, Sweden
Göran Tagesson, Sweden National Historical Museums
Uses, Conflicts and Regulations in Micro-Places : the Case of Early Modern Lyon
Olivier Zeller, Université de Lyon
59
M36
Digitizing the Urban Archive: Towards a New Digital Urban History
Organisers Søren Bitsch Christensen (Aarhus City Archives), Jonathan Soffer (New York University)
Time 09.00-10.30, 11.00-12.30
Room 11
History and the Moving Image: Cinema, Databases and the Representation of the City
Stavros Alifragkis, Aristotle University; George Papakonstantinou, independent researcher
Between the Historical Information Systems and Virtual Reality: Some Pros and Cons of Digital Urban History Through the Internet
Jose Maria Cardesin Diaz, University of Coruna
Opening the City Council Archives - Digitization, Crowdsourcing and Machine Learning
Søren Bitsch Christensen, Aarhus City Archives
Friday 31 August
Crossing Methodologies in History and Computer Science Around the 18th Century City Models (plans-Reliefs)
Catherine Denys, université de Lille; Nathalie Dereymaeker, independent researcher; Laurent Grisoni, independent researcher
Urban History 4d - Urban History Research Through Digitized Historical Photographs
Kristina Friedrichs, Technische Universität Dresden; Heike Messemer, Julius-Maximilians-Universitaet Wuerzburg, Germany
Two Steps Forward: Pounding the Pavement in the Digital City
Andrew may, University of Melbourne; Helen Morgan, independent researcher; Mitchell Harrop, independent researcher;
James Lesh, University of Melbourne
Users or Readers? Mobility and Multimedia in the Archives of the Future
Mark Sawyer, University of Western Australia; Daniel jan Martin, University of Western Australia
Bretez ii : le Virtuel Pour une Lecture Sensible et Sensorielle de la Ville ?
Mylene Pardoen, CNRS-MSH Lyon Saint Etienne
Death in new York City: Environmental and Infrastructure History and Regulation in the City Record
Jonathan Soffer, New York University
Digital Archives From Below: Reclaiming Identity and Building Community in Post-Industrial City of Lodz, Poland
Agata Zysiak, University of Warsaw
M37
New Technologies and Methods for Historical Cadastral Studies (1500-1950)
Organisers Isabella di Lenardo (Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne), Frederic Kaplan (Ecole Polytechnique
Fédérale de Lausanne)
Time 14.00-15.30, 16.00-17.30
Room 11
60
For a Digital Atlas of the City of Florence: Digitizing the Tuscan General Cadastre for a Geographic Information System on the Historic City
Gianluca Belli, University of Florence; Fabio Lucchesi, independent researcher; Paola Raggi, independent researcher
Imitation and Emulation in Rembrandt’s Neighborhood– Deciphering Transmission of Ideas Among Artists Living Around the Corner
Weixuan li, University of Amsterdam; Marten jan bok, independent researcher; Menno den Engelse, independent researcher; Ivan Kisjes, independent researcher
Digitisation of Cadastre, Images and Models for Better Understanding the Past of the City
Catherine Denys, université de Lille; Nathalie Dereymaeker, independent researcher; Laurent Grisoni, independent researcher
The Digital Cadastre of Venice in 1808
Bastien Tourenc, Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne; Isabella di Lenardo, Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne
Exploring Mechanisms of the Resilience of Urban Fabric : Contributions of Cadastral Studies to the Understanding of the Stability of
Parisian Roads Network Between the XVth and the XIXth Century
Léa Hermenault, Université de Paris 1 Panthéon Sorbonne
Mapping Elite Utopia’s: Integrating Cadastral and Pre-Cadastral Sources in Historical gis for the Socio-Spatial Analysis of Upper-Class
Residences in Antwerp´s Broader Metropolitan Area (16th-19th Centuries)
Rogier van Kooten, Antwerp University; Iason Jongepier, University of Antwerp; Tim Soens, Antwerp University; Ilja van
Damme, Antwerp University
Modelling the Internal Micro Structure of Grid Patterned Cities: Vienna’s Gründerzeit Structure and Barcelona’s pla Cerdá
Angelika Psenner, Vienna University of Technology - TU Wien
Roads, Waterways and Spatial Equity in Sixteenth-Century Leiden
Arie van Steensel, University of Groningen
Friday 31 August
The Spanish Cadastre of Ensenada and its Usefulness for the Study of Landscape History: new Results Through old Data
Estefanía López Salas, University of Coruna
M38
City Museums as Agents of Change in XXI C.
Organisers Jari Harju (Helsinki City Museum), Joan Roca (Museu d’Història de Barcelona)
Time 14.00-15.30, 16.00-17.30
Room 14
A Diverse Heritage at Your Service: City Museum Staff Making Sense of Cultural Diversity Policies
Ragnhild Claesson, Malmö University
How to do a City Museum Together With 750.000 Inhabitants
Susanne Gesser, Historical Museum Frankfurt
How to get Locals Involved in the Preserving of Archaeological Heritage in Helsinki?
Heini Hämäläinen, Helsinki City Museum
61
Engaging a Community; Towards a City Museum of Venice
Hesperia Iliadou- Suppiej, University of Leicester
Unrealised Projects and Future Perspectives of the City Museum of Rome
Mihaela Ilie, University of Rome Roma Tre; Giuseppe Stemperini, University of Rome Roma Tre
City Museums and the City in Europe. a View From Barcelona
Joan Roca, Museu d’Història de Barcelona
The City and the World
Paul Spies, Stadtmuseum Berlin
A new Future for the City Museum?
Paul van de Laar, Erasmus University
M39
Sailors and Citizens: the Culture of Everyday Life in European Port Cities from the 18th the
20th century
Friday 31 August
Organisers Yiannis Kokkinakis (University of Crete), Kirill Nazarenko (Saint Petersburg State University)
Time 14.00-15.30, 16.00-17.30
Room 08
“Like a Groom in his Wedding Day” - the Gulf of Finland in the Economy, Culture and Identity of st. Petersburg, 18th - 19th cc.
Alexei Kraikovski, Higher School of Economics; Julia Lajus, independent researcher
Public Infrastructure Projects and Trade During the Interwar Period in Crete. Constructing the new Harbor in Heraklion (1920-1930)
Dimitris Kypriotakis, University of Crete
From Sail to Steam: Labour Composition and Wage Distribution on Belgian Merchant Vessels, 1850-1900
Kristof Loockx, Antwerp University
Employment and Politics in the Port of Marseilles: the Conflict of the ‘Société des Portefaix de Marseille’ With the ‘Compagnie des Docks’
Anna Mahera, University of Ioannina
War, Innovation and Regression. Greek Shipbuilding and the Region of Piraeus During the Occupation (1941-44)
Vasilis Manousakis, University of Crete
Sailors in Petrograd in the World war i and the Civil War. 1914-1921
Kirill Nazarenko, Saint Petersburg State University
Tenant by the sea - Tenants´ Associations in the Industrialized Port City of Gothenburg 1900-1950
Hannes Rolf, Ersta Sköndal Bräcke University College
The st. Petersburg Marine Necropolis on the Territory of Alexander Nevsky Lavra
Karina Valegina, Saint Petersburg State University
62
M42
Spectacle, Entertainment, and Recreation in the Modernizing Ottoman Empire ( from18th until early
20th century)
Organisers Seda Kula say (Gebze Technical University), Nilay Ozlu (Bogazici University)
Time 14.00-15.30, 16.00-17.30
Room 22
The Role of the Bourgeoisie in the Cultural Transformation of the Cities: The Case of an Industrialist in Istanbul in the First Half of
the 20th Century, Süreyya Pasha
Neslisah Leman Basaran Lotz, Maltepe University
Spectacle in Motion: Celebrating the Sultan Abdulaziz’s Visit to Izmir Along the Railway
Elvan Cobb, Cornell University
Wild Turkey: the Tavern as Site and Spectacle in Late Ottoman Urban Life
Emine Evered, Michigan State University; Kyle Evered, independent researcher
From a Fringe Activity to a Social Obsession: the Rise of Opera in the Eastern Mediterranean in the Nineteenth Century
Malte Fuhrmann, Istanbul Bilgi University
Film Spectacles and Cinema Halls in Late Ottoman Cities
Seda Kula Say, Gebze Technical University
A Modern Park in the old Town: Gulhane Park in the Late-Ottoman Istanbul
Nilay Ozlu, Bogazici University
Friday 31 August
Public Gardens of İstanbul in the Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Century
Mustafa Emir Küçük, Bogazici University
A Capital That was not a Place for Rest: Entertainment, Propriety, and Transgression in Late Ottoman Istanbul
Sada Payir, University of Oxford
Women and the World of Entertainment in the Late Ottoman Istanbul
Nalan Turna, Yildiz Technical University
M43
Architectural Heritage and National Discourse. Appropriating the Historic Monuments into the National Narratives in the ‘Long’ 19th Century (ca. 1789-1914)
Organisers Dragan Damjanovic (University of Zagreb), Aleksander Lupienko (Polish Academy of Sciences)
Time 09.00-10.30, 11.00-12.30, 14.00-15.30
Room 20
Continuity, Transformation or Disappearance? Architectural Heritage of Silesia Entangled Into the National Narratives and History of
Prussia and Germany in the “Long” 19th Century
Monika Adamska, Opole University of Technology
63
History, National Identity, Architecture and Urban Role in the Last Royal Palaces in Europe
Paolo Cornaglia, Polytechnic of Turin
The Cathedral as the Nation’s Cooking Pot. Races and People in Eugène Viollet-le-Duc’s work ans discourse
Berenice Gaussuin, Ecole Nationale Supérieure d’Architecture Paris-Malaquais
Architecture as Nation-Building: Prussian Role Models for Russian Cases?
Kristina Jõekalda, Estonian Academy of Arts
The Discovery of Christian Built Heritage. Representing National Continuity in 19th Century Athens
Georgios Karatzas, Hellenic Ministry of Culture and Sports
Creating a Monument to Kaiser Wilhelm i in Berlin: Tensions Between National, Prussian and Dynastic Identities
Douglas Klahr, University of Texas at Arlington
Hungarian Nation-Building and the use of Medieval Archaeology
Andrea Kocsis, Cambridge University
Kazan Antiquities and Their Role in the Formation of Nineteenth Century Russian Historical Self-Consciousness
Gulchachak Nugmanova, Research Institute of Theory and History of Architecture and Town Planning
Renaissance Architecture as the Embodiment of the Hungarian National Character Or how Some 17th-Century Architectural Monuments From the Northern Part of the Kingdom of Hungary Came to Express National Identity
Gábor György Papp, Hungarian Academy of Sciences
Arguments Against Destruction: Preserving National Symbols and Building a new State
Virginia Price, Historian
Before and After Emile-André Lecomte du Nouÿ or the Birth of National Style in Romanian Architecture
Anda-Lucia Spânu, Institute for Social Sciences and Humanities Sibiu
Madonna del Pascolo: Ruthenian Heritage in the Baroque Rome and the Development of the National Church of the Ukrainians
Anatole Upart, University of Chicago
M49
On the Margins of Memory. Comparing Memory Cultures in European Border Cities in the
Twentieth Century
Organisers Borut Klabjan (European University Institute), Brigitte le Normand (University of British Columbia)
Time 09.00-10.30, 11.00-12.30
Room 12
The Bulwark Mission as a Securitizing Myth: the Case of Lwów (lviv) in the First Decades of the 20th Century
Heidi Hein-Kircher, Institute for Historical Research on East Central Europe
Memory Palimpsest on the Example of the Freedom Square in Wrocław
Karolina Jara, Wroclaw University
64
Opava - the City Memory Changes Under Different Countries and Regimes
Ondřej Jirásek, Pavol Jozef Safarik University
Nationalism, Nostalgia, and Postmemory: Telling the History of the Lost City of Vyborg in Finland
Chloe Wells, University of Eastern Finland
Politics of Memory and Resymbolization of Vukovar From 1980 to 2015
Mateo Žanić, Institut drustvenih znanosti Ivo Pilar
M51
Anticipation, Temporality, and Change in the Urban Periphery from 1960 to Present Day
Organisers Denis Bocquet (Ecole normale superieure Architecture Strasbourg), Marius Grønning (Norwegian University
of Life Sciences)
Time 09.00-10.30, 11.00-12.30
Room 14
The Paradox of Centralisation in Urban Planning Implementation in the gdr and Čssr From 1970s to 1980s
Azmah Arzmi, Bauhaus-Universität Weimar
Blurred Visions and Multiple Realities of the Urban Periphery of Thessaloniki (greece): Planning Vicissitudes and Socio-Spatial
Uncertainties Since the 1960s
Charis Christodoulou, Aristotle University
Friday 31 August
Contemporary Urbanization of Complexo Paraisópolis e Heliópolis: Post Occupation Study of a, b, c, d, e and g Condominium and
Gleba g
Mayara Barbosa, Federal Institute of Education, Science and Technology of S?o Paulo (IFSP); Sandra Regina Casagrande
de Moraes, Federal Institute of Education, Science and Technology of São Paulo (IFSP)
A Historical Perspective on Socio-Spatial Resilience in Lørenskog Municipality
Andreas Fossnes, Lørenskog kommune
The Resilience of the Neorealistic Image of the Falchera Neighborhood in Turin
Giorgia Sala, IUAV University of Venice; Nicolas Moucheront, independent researcher
”home” and ”community” in Peri-Urban Conditions, the Case of Norwegian Asylum Reception Centres
Marianne Skjulhaug, Oslo School of Architecture and Design; Anne Hege Simonsen, independent researcher
Institutions in Urban Space: Land, Infrastructure, and Governance in the Production of Urban Property
Andre Sorensen, Geography Department, University of Toronto
Universitary Development Against Social Projets in the South Suburbs of Paris (1930-2010)
Loic Vadelorge, Université de Paris Est Marne-la-vallée
65
M56
Conflicting Heritage in the Timeline. Representations, Misrepresentations and Ways forward
Organisers Maria Beatrice Andreucci (University of Rome Sapienza), Anna Laura Palazzo (University of Rome Roma Tre)
Time 09.00-10.30, 11.00-12.30
Room 19
A City of Webs, Borders and Arenas: Tension, Conflict and Ambivalence in an Exclusive Neighborhood of são Paulo (1890-1920)
Pedro Beresin Schleder Ferreira, FAU-USP
Looking for Resilience in Socialist Urban Planning: Three Multifaceted Cases From Czechoslovakia (1966-1990)
Jan Dostalík, Masaryk university
Urban Renewal in Finland: Case of the Workers District Kallio
Mika Mäkelä, University of Helsinki
Friday 31 August
Recent Experiences of Urban Ritual Performances Inspired by Dimitris Pikionis’s 1960s Renewal Area Adjacent to the Acropolis of
Athens
Eleni Tracada, University of Derby
Invisible Cities in Mediterrannean: Urban Architecture and National Debate in Crete, 19th-Early 20th Century
Eleftheria Zei, University of Crete
M57
Planning cities, making places (from 19th to 21st century)
Organisers Marjaana Niemi (University of Tampere)
Time 14.00-15.30, 16.00-17.30
Room 19
Amidst Urbanisation and Community Assertion: the Making of ‘Nizamuddin’ as a Modern Sacred Space
Samran Ahmad, Delhi University
Historical Collective Shelters in Mezarlikbasi, Izmir, Turkey
Mine Hamamcioglu-Turan, Izmir Institute of Technology; Figen Akpinar, independent researcher; Ozge Deniz Tokoz,
independent researcher
Congo Housing is for ‘Well-To-Do’ - Debates About the Application of the Elisabethville Housing Scheme in Northern Rhodesia as a
Symptom of Colonial Uncertainty
Carl-Philipp Bodenstein, University of Wien
“le Schema Directeur de Kolwezi,” the Planned but Unrealised Removal of a Company Town
Kristien Geenen, Université de LIège
Media Strategies and Narratives in Urban Planning Discourses About Berlin’S Mass Housing Tenements ‘Mietskasernen’ in the 1970s and 1980s
Kathrin Meißner, Leibniz Institute
66
M59
Cities facing crises
Organisers Giuseppe Restifo (University of Messina)
Time 14.00-15.30, 16.00-17.30
Sala Lauree
The Multidimensionality of Water Systems in Islamic Urban Structures; Lessons From Traditional Water Systems in Iranian Plateau
Ayda Alehashemi, University of Tehran
The Role of Water in the Transformation of Palermo Between the Islamic and the Norman Age. the Case of Maredolce-La Favara
Giovanni Asmundo, IUAV University of Venice
How to Assess Resilience in Urban and Environmental History ? a Comparative Analysis of Four European and Asian Cities’ Water Crises
Jean-François Coulais, Ecole Nationale Supérieure d’Architecture Paris-Malaquais
La Santé Publique Anti-Peste Marseillaise en Méditerranée : 17e-18e Siècle
Jamel el Hadj, Université d’Aix-Marseille
Le Gouvernement Espagnol de Naples et le Tremblements de Terre de 1688 et 1694
Piero Ventura, University of Naples «Federico II»
RT02
Friday 31 August
Earthquake, Locusts and Lightnings: the Unsteady Resilience of Giojosa Guardia
Giuseppe Restifo, University of Messina
Urban trajectories and path-dependencies: concepts, narratives and empirical cases
Organisers Christoph Bernhardt (Leibniz Institute), Michèle Dagenais (Université de Montréal), Bert de Munck (University
of Antwerp)
Time 09.00-10.30, 11.00-12.30
Room 15
Urban Socio-Ecological Trajectories – Conceptual Framework, use and Limits
Sabine Barles, Université de Paris 1 Panthéon Sorbonne
Introduction: Trajectories and Path-Dependencies in Urban History: Challenges of Theory and Empirical Research”
Christoph Bernhardt, Leibniz Institute
A Path-Dependent Ugliness? two Centuries of Designing the ‘Ugliest Country in the World’
Greet de Block, Antwerp University
Path Dependence With Power and Historical Contingency: a Plea for ant
Bert de Munck, University of Antwerp
67
Pathways and External Shocks: the Case of Darmstadt and the Great war
Dieter Schott, Technical University of Darmstadt
Institutions in Urban Space: Land, Infrastructure, and Governance in the Production of Urban Property
Andre Sorensen, Geography Department, University of Toronto
RT03
EAUH 2018 Student Prize Round Table
Organisers: Ewen Shane, Leeds Metropolitan University; Peter Stabel, University of Antwerp; Andrea Pokludová, University of Ostrava
Time 16.00-17.30
Room 15
Friday 31 August
«For those who hold pleasure at their command of aristocratic precincts» The Opening of St. Stephen’s Green as a Public Park in
Dublin (1861-1880)
Jorge Ramón Ros, University of Valencia
Corredor Bio-Comechingones: an innovative regional scale agreement among small towns
Monica Jimena Rame Universidad Nacional de Córdoba
Managing risk in the ‘danger zone’: civil defence and public safety discourses on the north-east coast of England, 1914-18
Michael Reeve, University of Hull
From queer spaces to sexual publics: medicalization, surveillance, and retreat in the Bay Area’s response to HIV/AIDS
SG Yeros University of California, Berkley
SS01
Beyond the Camp: The Unbounded Architecture and Urbanism of Refugees (20th-21st century)
Organisers Eliana Abu-Hamdi (Massachusetts Institute of Technology ), Yael Allweil (Technion - Israel Institute of Technology)
Time 16.00-17.30
Room 12
Refugee ‘Camp-Cities’: Health, Society, and Temporary Housing
Kivanc Kilinc, Yasar University; Mohammad Gharipour, independent researcher
Carrying on the ‘Rural Home’ in the Midst of the ‘Urban Jungle’: Refugee Colonies in the Post-Partitioned Calcutta
Urvi Mukhopadhyay, West Bengal State University; Anindita Ghoshal, Diamond Harbour Women’s University
Trans-Territorial Homes: Spaces of Refuge From the Camp to the City
Huda Tayob, University College London
68
SS02
The Public and Private Domus in the Social Topography of Ancient Rome (100 BCE-500 CE)
Organisers Juhana Heikonen (Aalto University), Kaius Tuori (University of Helsinki)
Time 09.00-10.30
Room 18
The “Horti Spei Veteris” Between Public and Private Space
Maria Grazia Cinti, PhD student, University of Rome Tor Vergata
Omnes, qui Sunt Eius Ordinis, a Pompeio Evocantur: the Quasi-Senate in the House of the Proconsul Pompeius in 49 bc?
Roman Frolov, University of Bremen
Atria Publica at Rome. Private Typologies With Public Functions
Manuel Moreno Alcaide, Cambridge University
Domestic Spaces of Roman Domus
Joanna Mundy, Emory University
SS03
Demolishing Mass Housing in Contemporary European Cities (20th-21st centuries)
Organisers Bruno Bonomo (University of Rome Sapienza), Alice Sotgia (Université d’Aix-Marseille)
Time 14.00-15.30
Room 12
Friday 31 August
From the Pompeian House to the Roman House: the Differences and Similarities of the Domestic Architecture
Samuli Simelius, University of Helsinki
Le Prince Charmant Contre les Méchants Modernistes. les Années 1980 et la Polémique de Charles D’Angleterre Contre L’Architecture
de L’etat-Providence
Federico Ferrari, Ecole Nationale Supérieure d’Architecture Paris-Malaquais
Luník ix: a Socialist Experiment Which Failed
Ondrej Ficeri, Slovak Academy of Science
Démolitions Controversée, Entre Revendication et Droit D’auteur. le Complexe Iacp à Bollate
Chiara Merlini, Polytechnic of Milan
Countering Demolition: the Making of Mass Housing Into Architecture
Sandra Parvu, Université de Paris Denis-Diderot
69
SS07
Norms and Behaviour: Developing Princely Officers’ Praxis and Regulations in European
Towns (13th-18th c.)
Organisers Martín Romera María Ángeles (Ludwig-Maximilians Universität München), Pierluigi Terenzi (University of
Padua), Hannes Ziegler (German Historical Institute London)
Time 14.00-15.30
Room 18
Venetian Rectors and Government Instructions for Subject Communities (13th-16th Centuries)
Alessandra Rizzi, Cà Foscari University Venezia
Between the King and the People: Sergeants and the Co-Construction of Order in Early Modern Paris (16-17th Centuries)
Diane Roussel, Université de Paris Est Marne-la-vallée
Politics, Institutions and Governance of the Townports of Atlantic Spain in the Later Middle Ages
Jesus a. Solorzano-Telechea, Universidad de Cantabria
Friday 31 August
SS10
Legal Culture in the late medieval and early modern town
Organisers Andrew Simpson (Aberdeen University), Justyna Wubs-Mrozewicz (University of Amsterdam)
Time 16.00-17.30
Room 18
Cultures of law in Urban Northern Europe
Edda Frankot, University of Aberdeen; Jackson Armstrong, University of Aberdeen
Law Courts and Contested Legal Culture in the Towns of Late Medieval Europe
Frans Camphuijsen, University of Amsterdam
Urban law in Market Towns. Legal Cultural Encounters in 14th and 15th Century Scandinavia
Miriam Tveit, Nord University
The Gatekeepers of Urban Justice. the Pivotal Role of Lower Legal Professionals in Legal Culture in the Eighteenth-Century
Habsburg low Countries
Griet Vermeesch, Vrije Universiteit Brussel; Ans Annemie Vervaeke, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
SS11
Une Histoire Comparée de la Marginalisation Sociale et Spatiale des Minorités en Europe et
en Méditerranée (15e - 19e S.)
Organisers Luca Andreoni (Independent scholar - Professor at I.C. C.G. Cesare Osimo (AN)), Michael Gasperoni (Centre
National de la Recherche Scientifique ), Lucia Masotti (University of Verona)
70
Time 16.00-17.30
Room 16
Persistance des Modalites de Marginalisation a L’epoque Moderne : L’apport de la Geographie Culturelle
Lucia Masotti, University of Verona
Espace Urbain et Transformations Sociales : les Communautés Juives de Tunis et Alexandrie Entre XIXe et XXe Siècles
Martino Oppizzi, IHTP - Institut d’Histoire du Temps Présent
Évolution, Transformations et Déplacement des Quartiers Juifs Dans la Couronne D’aragon au XVe s, les Hésitations des Pouvoirs
Dans L’attitude à L’égard des Minoritaires
Claire Soussen, Université de Cergy-Pontoise
Coexistence et Partage de L’espace Urbain : le cas des Minorités Juives Dans les Villes du Maghreb au IXe/XVe Siècle
Jennifer Vanz, Université de Paris Est Marne-la-vallée
SS13
A parallel story? Urban Renewal in East and West
Organisers Petr Roubal (Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic), Max Welch Guerra (Bauhaus-Universität Weimar)
The two Faces of Belgrade Waterfront. The Contradictory Creation of the new Urban Identity
Ksenija Krsmanovic, Universidad de Valladolid; Mario Paris, independent researcher; Juan Luis de las Rivas, independent
researcher
Form Follows Ideology. the Communist Albania - an Almost Unknown Story
Denada Veizaj, Polytechnic University of Tirana; Gjergji Islami, independent researcher; Andrea Maliqari, independent
researcher
Friday 31 August
Time 14.00-15.30
Room 16
Historical Analysis on Housing Development as a Mean for Control in the Development of Capitalism During the 20th Century
Marcelo Sagot Better, Bauhaus-Universität Weimar
University and Urban Conservation – the Historical City Centres of Salamanca (spain) and Ferrara (italy)
Piero Sassi, Bauhaus-Universität Weimar
European Urban Renewal After the Second World war in Russian Sources: the Cases of Warsaw, Berlin, le Havre and Coventry
Aliaksandr Shuba, Bauhaus-Universität Weimar
Sofia’s Shift From Radical Transformation to Urban Renewal: Urbanist Critique in the 1970s and 1980s
Elitza Stanoeva, European University Institute
71
SS17
Border Towns and the Resilience of Frontiers (16th - 18th centuries)
Organisers Mathieu Grenet (France - Institut National Universitaire Champollion, Albi), Hanna Sonkajärvi (Federal
University of Rio de Janeiro)
Time 11.00-12.30
Room 18
‘...te Erhaldinge van Alle Goede Frunttschap en Naaburschap’: Citizens’ Resilience and Changing Borders in Guelders in the
Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries
Raingard Esser, University of Groningen
Fortresses of the Hungarian, Transylvanian and Ottoman Borderland and its Impact on the Urban Topography. the Cases of
the Towns of Szatmár and Németi (kingdom of Hungary) During the 16th and 17th Century
Péter Levente Szocs, Babes-Bolyai University
Friday 31 August
SS20
Cinema in/and the City: Cinema as Space and Social Experience in Europe (1895-2018)
Organisers Åsa Jernudd (Örebro University), Daniela Treveri Gennari (Oxford Brookes University), Thunnis van
Oort (University of Amsterdam)
Time 16.00-17.30
Room 09
The “te Awamutu” Ledgers - a 24-Year Journey Into the Workings of an Small Cinema
Brian Hannan, University of Strathclyde
Bringing the Multiplex to Antwerp: a Battle of two Giants
Kathleen Lotze, Antwerp University
The Legendary “Apollo”: a Case Study of the Cinema Culture in the Multi-Ethnic Metropolis of Warsaw Between 1910 and
1939
Karina Pryt, Goethe University Frankfurt
The Last People’s Picture Palaces: Spanish Cities and the Role of Cinema Architecture in the Everyday Life of a Non-Democratic Country (1950s-1970s)
Jesús Ángel Sánchez-García, Universidade de Santiago de Compostela
SS23
Cities in Colonial Africa and Europe (19th-20th C.): A History of Separateness and Entanglement
Organisers Geert Castryck (University of Leipzig), Johan Lagae (Universiteit Gent)
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Time 16.00-17.30
Room 04
Towards Understanding Forms of Entanglement Amid Separation: Ideas and Examples From South African Cities in the 19th and
20th Centuries
Vivian Bickford-Smith, University of Stellenbosch and University of Cape Town
Infrastructures of Connection and Separation in Kigoma, Tanzania: Colonial Heritage as Sites for Cooperation and Contestation
Between Africa and Europe
Geert Castryck, University of Leipzig
Imperial Places in Urban Contexts: Architecture as Carrier of an Imperial Culture in Europe, 1850-1950
Miel Groten, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
“Good Grief, is Antwerp City Centre Where the Jungle Begins Now?” Urban Traces and Congolese Memories of Exclusion in the
Port Cities of Antwerp and Matadi (congo), 1920-1960
Johan Lagae, Universiteit Gent; Jacob Sabakinu Kivilu, independent researcher
Separations and Entanglements in Cape Town During the First World War: Exploring Identities in South Africa’s Oldest Colonial City
Sarah-Jane Walton, University of Cape Town
The Resilience and Conflict-Solving Abilities of Urban Elites in Early Modern Central-Europe
(1500-1800)
Organisers Iwona Barwicka-Tylek (Jagellonian University in Krakow), Ferenc Hörcher (Institute of Philosophy)
Time 11.00-12.30
Sala Lauree
Friday 31 August
SS27
Vicissitudes of a Urban Republic in an Anti-Urban State. Gdańsk in the Early Modern Period
Iwona Barwicka-Tylek, Jagellonian University in Krakow
The Resolution of Urban Conflicts in 16th Century Central Europe: the Case of Cluj/kolozsvár
Ferenc Hörcher, Institute of Philosophy
Virtues as Political Arguments: the Case of Komárom in 18th-Century Hungary
Gábor Vaderna, Hungarian Academy of Sciences
SS28
Idealised past and (re)constructed heritage
Organisers Giuseppe Stemperini (University of Rome Roma Tre), Carlo M. Travaglini (University of Rome Roma Tre)
Time 09.00-10.30
Sala Lauree
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Recomposing Fragments: the Case of the Reinvention of Al-Khulaffaa Mosque in Baghdad
Saba Sami Mehdi al ali, Al Nahrain University; Nawar Sami Mehdi al ali, Philadelphia University
The Hybrid Sacred at the Heart of a Modern Capital: the Temple of Augustus and the Hacı Bayram Veli Mosque in Ankara
Cagla Caner Yuksel, Baskent University; Pelin Yoncaci Arslan, independent researcher
The Sagrada Familia, Montserrat and the Construction of Modern Barcelona. Architecture, Landscape, Ideology and the City
Josep-Maria Garcia-Fuentes, Newcastle University
Absorbing Floods : Opportunistic Landscapes of the Oslo Territory
Peter Hemmersam, The Oslo School of Architecture and Design; Marianne Skjulhaug, Oslo School of Architecture and
Design; Elisabeth Sjödahl, independent researcher
Raymond m. Lemaire, the Great Beguinage of Leuven and the Reinvention of the Traditional City
Claudine Houbart, Université de LIège
The Portuguese Village of Óbidos: a Delicate Balance of a Sustained Management Between the Historical Past and Current
Challenges
Clara Moura Soares, Universidade de Lisboa; Maria João Neto, independent researcher
Saturday 1 September / Samedi 1 Septembre
09:30 – 12:30 Registration and Publishers exhibit
09:30 – 11:00 Sessions M04, M05, M10, M19, M27, M30, M40, M45, M48, M50, RT04, SS22
11:00 – 11:30 Coffee break
11:30 – 13:00 Sessions M04, M05, M10, M19, M27, M30, M40, M45, M48, M50, RT04, SS21
13:00 – 14:30 Lunch break
15:30 – 18:30 Closing Ceremony, City Hall, Campidoglio, Sala della Protomoteca,
19:00 - 20:30 International Committee meeting
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Plenary Session / Session Plénière
Time 15.30-18.30 - City Hall, Campidoglio, Sala della Protomoteca
Closing Ceremony
Intervention by Lorenzo Fioramonti, Ministry of Education University and Research
Keynote lecture by Martin Baumeister, Stranger in Rome or how to write (urban) history in an eternal city
EAUH 2018 Student Award
XV EAUH Conference Presentation
Parallel Sessions / Sessions Parallèles
M04
Gambling and the City: From Rome’s Chariot Races to the Baccarat Tables of Macau (1st 21st centuries)
Organisers Jean-Dominique Delle Luche (Université Toulouse 2 - Jean Jaurès), John Hunt (Utah State University), Jeroen
Puttevils (Antwerp University)
“Pour la Recreation du Peuple”? Comparing the Dynamics of Lotteries in the low Countries and the Holy Roman Empire (15th-16th Centuries)
Jeroen Puttevils, Antwerp University; Jean-Dominique Delle Luche, Université Toulouse 2 - Jean Jaurès
“Tiretta’S Baazar and Lottery”: a Venetian Gambling Architect in Early 19th Century Calcutta
Gianni Dubbini, Cà Foscari University Venezia
Gambling With Dutch Identity. Hazard Games at the Seaside Resort of Scheveningen as Win-Lose Situation, 1850-1940
Jan Hein Furnee, Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen
Saturday 1 September
Time 09.30-11.00, 11.30-13.00
Room 15
All Male Club?: Illegal Gambling in Helsinki in the 1950s-1990s
Riitta Matilainen, University of Helsinki
From Rejection to Embrace: the Tortuous History of Budapest’s Gambling Casino Business in the 20th Century
Alexander Vari, Marywood University
Moscow Hippodrome: a Resilient Survivor as an Urban Reference Point
Olga Zinovieva, Lomonosov Moscow State University
M05
Transforming Cities, Negotiating Spaces and Powers: Markets and Civic Buildings in Europe, the
Middle-East and North-Africa (XIIIth c. / XIXth c. )
Organisers Colin Arnaud (University of Münster), Alessandra Ferrighi (IUAV University of Venice), Nora Lafi (Zentrum Moderner Orient)
Time 09.30-11.00, 11.30-13.00
Room 05
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Transforming and Interpreting the Casbah : Heritage and the Negotiation of Public Space in Tunis Between the Ottoman Era, Colonization and Independence
Beya Abidi-Belhadj, Manouba
The French Quarter of Thessaloniki (1890-1940). Continuities and Discontinuities in the Iconography of Negotiating Spaces of a City in Transition
Vassilios Colonas, University of Thessaly
An Invisible King: Political Power and Urban Space in Spanish Milan
Stefano D’Amico, Texas Tech University
Rebuilding the Public Space in Fifteenth-Century English Towns
James Davis, Queen’s University Belfast
Cores of Commerce, Power and Social Interaction: Flemish Cloth-Halls in Late 13th – 14th Century
Anna Mayzlish, Institute of World History
Saturday 1 September
“Per Servitio di Questi Populi…”: the Development of Valletta’s Market Place; a Study of the Evolution of the Socio-Spatial Dialectic
Between the Xvith and the Xixth Centuries
Christian Mifsud, International Institute for Baroque Studies
Transforming Urban Spaces in the 19th Century Ottoman Geography: Bursa on the Focus of Tanzimat Modernization Reforms
Sinem Turkoglu Onge, Ankara University; Mustafa Onge, Turkey-Cankaya University
Annual Fairs and Town Spaces – the Influence of Trade on the Development of Markets and Town Halls in Greater Poland
Anna Paulina Orłowska, Polish Academy of Sciences; Patrycja Szwedo, Polish Academy of Sciences
From Boundary to new Centrality. the Transformation of the Santa Cruz Monastery to Accommodate the new Facilities of the Liberal
State During the 19th Century
Margarida Relvão Calmeiro, University of Coimbra
Town Hall Thresholds and Civic Agency in the Late Medieval low Countries
Nathan van Kleij, University of Amsterdam
M10
Another City: Émigré Intellectuals and Transnational Intellectual Communities in Early Modern and
Modern Cities (1500-1950)
Organisers Nicholas Mithen (European University Institute), Katalin Straner (University of Southampton)
Time 09.30-11.00, 11.30-13.00
Room 03
Gathering in Paris, 1830-1848: Three Venues of Exile Sociability Compared
Camille Creyghton, University of Amsterdam
Papal Politics, Pasquinades and Patronage: Nicolò Franco Between Venice, Mantua and Rome, 1536-1570
Thomas Goodwin, University of Oxford
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Medical Appropriation of Urban Space: Ludwig Kleinwächter’s Professional and Social Networks Throughout the Habsburg Monarchy
(1839-1906)
Marina Hilber, University of Innsbruck
Just the Highpoints: Berthold Lubetkin and London, c. 1938
Deborah Lewittes, City University of New York
“Berlin Does not Titillate or Tempt Like Paris”: Hungarian émigrés in Wilhelmine and Weimar Berlin, 1890-1933
Michael Miller, Central European University
From Movement to Networks. the Romanian Iron Guard in Exile in Rome, 1945-1950
Francesco Zavatti, Södertörn University
M19
Cities – Regions – Hinterlands
Organisers Sabine Barles (Université de Paris 1 Panthéon Sorbonne), Martin Knoll (University of Salzburg), Dieter
Schott (Technical University of Darmstadt)
Wheat for Vienna, c. 1800-1848: how new Soils Created new Bread
Jonas Albrecht, Johannes Kepler Universitaet Linz
Brazilian Hinterlands in the Global Coffee Industry
Júlia Ribeiro, University of Campinas; Frederico Costa, UNIFEOB
The City as Landowner: Košice and its Villages Before the Emancipation of Serfs
Gábor Czoch, Eötvös Loránd University
Saturday 1 September
Time 09.30-11.00, 11.30-13.00
Room 04
Four Danish Cities and Their Catchment Areas
Jørgen Mikkelsen, The Danish National Archives
Hinterland(s) of the Greater Poland Towns
Patrycja Szwedo, Polish Academy of Sciences; Anna Paulina Orłowska, Polish Academy of Sciences
“Don’T Want Them eny More”: Tensions in new York City’s Recreational Hinterland, 1868-1910
Marika Plater, Rutgers University
‘The Poor Should Return to Their Birthplace’: Rural-Urban Relations in Migration Regulation in the Border Regions of EighteenthCentury Flanders and France
Marjolein Schepers, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Urban Digestive Apparatus: Berlin’S Infrastructural Countryside
Laila Seewang, ETH Zurich
Natural Beauties, a Valid Bastion Against “Ravenous” Urban Metabolism? Rome and Tivoli 1884-1892
Salvatore Valenti, University of Leicester
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M27
Longing & Belonging: Historicising the Emotional Topographies of Urban Life in the 20th Century
Organisers Joachim Häberlen (University of Warwick), Christiane Reinecke (University of Leipzig)
Time 09.30-11.00, 11.30-13.00
Room 14
The Moody Metropolis. Emotional Repertoires in Early-Twentieth-Century Amsterdam
Anneleen Arnout, Netherlands Radboud University Nijmegen
Fighting for Home Outside Home: Exploring Emotionality of Belonging in a (post)socialist City
Petr Gibas, Czech Academy of Sciences
Over the Fence: Affective Sociability and Neighbourly Relations
Andrew may, University of Melbourne
Saturday 1 September
Racial Injustice and Urban Space in Harlem During World War II
Sebastian Schmidt, Rice University
The Discipline of Urban Movement and Emotion. Lifestyle Parkour
Javier Toscano, Technische Universität Chemnitz
M30
The mobility of urban terminology: 20th-century exchanges across the Atlantic and beyond
Organisers Gaia Caramellino (Polytechnic of Milan), Susanne Schindler (ETH Zurich)
Time 09.30-11.00, 11.30-13.00
Room 06
The Superblock Decontextualized. the Failure of Victor Gruen and I.m. pei at la Défense
André Bideau, Accademia di Architettura di Mendrisio
Self-Construction, Decentralization, and the Urban Subject in Latin Crossings
Marta Caldeira, Columbia University
Habitat: Incremental and Global-Scaled Construction of a Notion. 1945-1975
Giovanni Comoglio, independent researcher
Semantic Changes in Urban-Related Terminology: a Linguistic Inquiry
Matteo di Cristofaro, Swansea University; Silvia Tagliazucchi, University of Ferrara
De-Scripting the Crosstown Expressway: tel Aviv’S Ayalon Project
Neta Feniger, Tel Aviv University
Self-Help Housing in Chile, 1952-1970
Emanuel Giannotti, Universidad de Chile
78
Planning for an Uncertain Present: Action Planning, and Third World Urbanization
Ayala Levin, Northwestern University
«the Image of the City» Transfer of Ideas and Terminology Between usa and gdr
Kathrin Siebert, ETH Zurich
Making and Managing the Pedestrian, 1950-1980
David Smiley, Columbia University
M40
Urban Gardening: a Historical Perspective, c. 1700 - 2000
Organisers Tim Kirk (Newcastle University), Ivaylo Nachev (Bulgaria - Bulgarian Academy of Sciences - Institute of
Balkan Studies), Jill Steward (Newcastle University)
Time 09.30-11.00, 11.30-13.00
Room 09
Urban Food Production in Irish Cities During World war 1
Mary Forrest, independent scholar
A Garden of One’s own – a Swedish Example of the Beneficial Value of the Urban Garden in the Early 20th Century
Elin g. Håkansson, Stockholm University
‘We had Five Chickens in the Corner ..’ - on Food-Production in Danish Single-Family Housing Around wwi
Poul Sverrild, Forstadsmuseet; Lisbeth Hollensen, Forstadsmuseet
Saturday 1 September
Urban Agriculture in Bulgaria: Legacies and Current Development
Mariana Draganova, Institute for the Study of Societies and Knowledge, BAS; Dona Pickard, independent researcher;
Galina Koleva, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences
Pride and Produce – Agro-Industrial Landscapes on the Urban Fringe
Åsa Klintborg Ahlklo, Lund University
Productive Gardens, Reproductive Landscapes: Gender and Urban Gardening During the Long 18th Century
Antonia Weiss, University of Amsterdam
M45
Reinventing the old. The historicist Revival Between XIXth and XXth Centuries and the Image of
Cities: Reconstructions, Renovations, Reinventions
Organisers Paola Lanaro (Cà Foscari University Venezia)
Time 09.30-11.00, 11.30-13.00
Room 10
79
The Reconstruction of the Minoan Heritage, the Tourism Industry and the Modernization of the Island of Crete in the Beginnings
of the 20th Century
Maria Nodaraki, National Technical University of Athens
Restoring the Tombs of Glossatori, Reinventing Medieval Bologna
Thomas Renard, University of Nantes
Gothic Revival in Edinburgh: “a Pathway to Romance, Through the Pointed Arch of Medieval Mysticism”
Giovanni Spizuoco, University of Naples “Federico II”
Reconstructing, Renovating and Reinventing the House of Savoy: Charles Felix and the Abbey of Hautecombe
Tommaso Zerbi, Edinburgh University
Bringing the Architectural Past of Moscow Into the Realm of Today: new Gains and new Losses
Olga Zinovieva, Lomonosov Moscow State University
M48
Saturday 1 September
The Winds of Change: Cities in the Aftermath of Empires 1918-1923
Organisers Tullia Catalan (University of Trieste), Catherine Horel (CNRS)
Time 09.30-11.00, 11.30-13.00
Room 08
Inventing a Political Centre: how Pressburg Became a Slovak Capital City at the eve of the 1920s?
Etienne Boisserie, Institut national des langues et civilisations orientales (INALCO), Paris
Continuities Under Discontinuous Conditions: Polish Local Government in Lwów and its Strategies for Integration Within the Polish State
Heidi Hein-Kircher, Institute for Historical Research on East Central Europe
Continuity, Change, and Sense of Place in Prague After 1918
Claire Morelon, University of Padua
Imperial Collapse in a Garrison Town on the Borderlands - the Russo-Finnish Case
Tuomas Teuho, University of Tampere
M50
Building Cities and Architectures in the Aftermath of the Second World War: the Role of the American Programs in Shaping the Discipline and the Built Environment
Organisers Patrizia Bonifazio (Polytechnic of Milan), Filippo de Dominicis (Independent scholar), Nicole de Togni (Polytechnic of Milan)
Time 09.30-11.00, 11.30-13.00
Room 11
Americanism and Post-War Greece: Building the Hilton Hotel and the us Embassy in Athens
Emilia Athanassiou, National Technical University of Athens
80
Architecture as a Medium of American Cultural Diplomacy in Germany: the Special Projects Program
Johanna Blokker, University of Bamberg
The Capital of the ‘Small America’: İstanbul in the 1950s
Pelin Bolca, Polytechnic of Turin; Mesut Dinler, independent researcher
Situating Spatial Politics in the History of Greek Reconstruction
Petros Phokaides, Greece - National Technical University of Athens (NTUA); Konstantina Kalfa, independent researcher;
Loukas Triantis, independent researcher
“Ekistic” Traces of the Marshall American Program in Crete. the Contribution of Constantinos Doxiadis
Evangelina Tzanaki, Technical University of Crete; Maria Triamataki, Technical University of Crete; Amalia Kotsaki, University of Crete
Postwar America Came to Spain: the Military Bases in the Ninety Fifties
Jose Vela Castillo, IE School of Architecture and Design
Reconstructing Rimini and Ravenna. The American Economic and Cultural Contribution
Alessia Zampini, University of Bologna
RT04
Organisers Keti Lelo (University of Rome Roma Tre)
Time 09.30-11.00, 11.30-13.00
Room 19
Youth Riots as Unruly Politics
Andrés Brink Pinto, Lund University
Zagreb After Austria-Hungary – Architecture and Urban Development in 1918-1924
Dragan Damjanovic, University of Zagreb
Saturday 1 September
Inspired by diversity: assorted views of urban space
Margaret Finlayson - Entrepreneur’s Wife or an Independent Actor
Mervi Kaarninen, University of Tampere
Antiquarianism, Memory, and the Urban / Peri-Urban Displacement: Eighteenth-Century Variations on the Mausoleum of Halicarnassus
Desmond Kraege, University of Lausanne
Guangzhou Municipal Reform in the Early 1920s: the Perspective of Shenbao《申报》
Weifang lu, Shanghai Normal Universtiy; Zhiqiao Yu, independent researcher
Early Modernist Spatial Ideals, Renewal Objectives and Their Physiological Effects in Karabuk
Meltem Özkan Altınöz, Karabük üniversity
Anti-Base Protest in Athens, Greece: Fusing the Politics of the Particular and the Universal
Georgios Papakis, Zayed University
The Transformation of a Nowhere Into Nowhere: a Story About Köpi Wasteland
Belen Zevallos, SRH University Heidelberg ; Cidália Silva, Universidade do Minho
81
Spaces of Interaction: the German-Language Press From Czernowitz, Bukovina as Site of Central-European Memory
Cristina Spinei, Romania - University of Iasi
To Whom Does the City Belong? Gender-Sensitive Urban Planning and Design in Vienna
Dalia Zein, Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies
SS21
Old and New Industrial Cities: Rise, Fall and Resurgence in a Global Perspective
Organisers Martin Pekar (Pavol Jozef Safarik University), Andrea Pokludova (University of Ostrava)
Time 11.30-13.00
Room 16
Saturday 1 September
Between Theory and Practice. From the Industrial Cities of Czecoslovakia to the Postindustrial Space. Boom - Crisis - Industrial
Heritage
Tereza Čapandová, University of Ostrava; Andrea Pokludová, University of Ostrava
A Research on the Working-Class Neighborhoods of the 19th Century Montreal
Meltem al, McGill University
From ‘Productive Industries’ to ‘Productive Services’: the Treatment of Inherited Industrial Areas in the Process of Transformation of
the City of Bilbao
Federico Camerin, Universidad de Valladolid; Alfonso Álvarez Mora, independent researcher
Kitan Dimona a Story of a Factory With a City, or a City With a Factory
Tamar de la Zerda, Technion - Israel Institute of Technology; Rachel Katoshevski, independent researcher
SS22
Living in the Projects: Company Towns Imagined, Planned and Lived. (from 19th to 21st century.)
Organisers Lucie Galčanová (Masaryk university), Barbora Vacková (Masaryk university), Agata Zysiak (University of Warsaw)
Time 09.30-11.00
Room 16
How big Corporate Campuses are Shaping Cities? the Case of Saint-Denis, a Suburban Parisian Municipality, in the 21st Century
Marine Duros, Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales
Fordlândia, Serra do Navio and Caraíba: a Ghost, a Modernist and a Vernacular Brazilian Company Towns From 20th Century
Ricardo Trevisan, University of Brasilia; Sylvia Ficher, independent researcher; Ariele Tavares dos Santos, independent researcher
Egalitarian Modernity in Nineteenth-Century Ireland: the Quaker Company Towns of Bessbrook and Portlaw
Livia Hurley, independent scholar
Spatialized Ideologies - Company Towns in the Amazon and Their Inherent Challenges
Marysol Rivas Brito, Harvard University
82
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INSTRUCTION FOR SPEAKERS
All speakers are requested to keep within the time limits of their presentation. The time slot for each presentation is 10 minutes,
followed by time for discussion, unless you have different instructions from the session organisers. Please, be in the room of your
session at least 15 minutes before the session starts, so that you can submit your presentation to be uploaded onto the computer
provided for presentation and meet your session chairpersons and the other speakers in advance.
Conference official languages
The official languages are French and English. Speakers can choose either of them to present their work.
However, the language generally used is English. If necessary and according to the composition of the panel, we suggest presenters
who choose French to distribute a summary in English and prepare the eventual slides in English in order to facilitate the discussion.
No translation will be provided during the sessions.
Table Tent card
Personal table tend card will be supplied at the time of registration. Speakers are requested to carry it with them and set it up on
the table during their presentation.
Standard equipment in the room
Rooms are equipped with a PC with internet access and a projector. It is not possible to run any presentations from your own laptop.
Powerpoint instructions
Bring your presentation on a flash drive in Microsoft Power point or Adobe PDF format. We recommend that you save your Power Point
presentation using the PPT format instead of in PPS.
84
INSTRUCTION POUR LES CONFÉRENCIERS
Tous les conférenciers sont priés de respecter la durée de leur présentation. Le temps de parole pour chaque présentation est de 10
minutes, suivies d´une période de discussion, sauf instructions contraires émanant de l´organisateur de la session. Veuillez-vous
présenter dans la salle de la session au moins 15 minutes avant le début, afin de pouvoir soumettre votre présentation et rencontrer
à l´avance les présidents de session ainsi que les autres orateurs.
Les langues officielles de la conférence
Les langues officielles sont l’anglais et le français. Les présentateurs peuvent choisir l’un ou l’autre pour présenter leur travail.
Cependant, la langue généralement utilisée est l’anglais. Si nécessaire et selon la composition du panel, nous suggérons aux
présentateurs en langue français de distribuer un résumé en anglais et de préparer les éventuelles diapositives en anglais afin de
faciliter la discussion. Aucune interprétation simultanée ne sera pas fournie.
Le tente de table
La Tente de table personnelle sera fournie au moment de l’enregistrement. Les orateurs sont priés de le porter avec eux et de le
mettre sur la table lors de leur présentation.
L’équipement standard dans la salle
L’équipement standard disponible dans chaque salle est composé d’un ordinateur avec accès internet et d’un projecteur. L’utilisation
des ordinateurs portables personnels n’est prévue.
Instructions pour les Powerpoint
Apportez votre présentation sur un clé USB au format Microsoft Power Point ou Adobe PDF. Nous vous recommandons de sauvegarder
votre présentation PowerPoint en utilisant le format PPT au lieu de PPS.
85
REGISTRATION
The registration and information desk is located in the university hall at the ground floor and will be open at the following times:
Opening hours
Wednesday, 29 August 2018, 13:00–18:00
Thursday, 30 August 2018, 08:30–17:30
Friday, 31 August 2018, 08:30–17:30
Saturday, 1 September 2018, 08:30–12:30
If you have questions during the conference, please stop by the registration desk and speak to any of the staff there. Alternatively,
you can contact us by emailing eauh.2018@uniroma3.it
The participant registration fee includes:
• Admission to all conference sessions
• Conference material including the programme booklet and web access to the conference papers
• Conference lunches and coffees
• Admission to the Opening Ceremony and Welcome Cocktail on Wednesday, 29 August
• Conference dinner (at a subsidised rate of 25 euros)
• Guided walks and tours
• Membership in the EAUH for two years (if you registered as member)
• Certificate of Attendance (available for download on the website)
• Event services at the venue
The accompanying person’s registration fee includes:
• Admission to the Opening Ceremony and Reception on Wednesday, 29 August
• Coffee breaks
• Conference dinner (at a subsidised rate of 25 euros)
• Thematic guided walks
Onsite registration fees
Member: 380€
Non-member: 400€
Accompanying person: 80€
Delegate and Accompanying person dinner: 45
86
ENREGISTRAMENT
Le bureau d’enregistrement et d’information se trouve dans le hall d’entrée du bâtiment au rez-de-chaussée et sera ouvert aux
horaires suivants :
Horaires D’ouvertures
Mercredi, 29 août 2018 13.00–18.00
Jeudi, 30 août 2018 08.30–17.30
Vendredi, 31 août 2018 08.30–17.30
Samedi, 1 septembre 2018 08.30–12.30
Si vous avez des questions au cours de la conférence, passez au bureau d’enregistrement et adressez-vous à l’un des membres du
personnel. Vous pouvez également nous contacter par courriel à l’adresse eauh.2018@uniroma3.it
Les frais d´inscription des participants comprennent :
• L’admission à toutes les sessions de la conférence
• Le matériel de conférence, notamment la brochure du programme et l’accès Internet aux documents de la conférence.
• Le déjeuners et cafés de la conférence
• L’admission à la cérémonie d’ouverture et à la réception de bienvenue le mercredi 29 août
• Le dîner de la conférence (à un tarif préférentiel de 25 euros)
• Les promenades et les visites guidées
• L’adhésion à l’AEHU pendant deux ans (si vous vous êtes enregistré en tant que membre)
• L’attestation de participation (disponible en téléchargement sur le site)
• Les service événementiels sur le site
Les frais d´inscription pour les personnes accompagnantes comprennent:
• L’admission à la cérémonie d’ouverture et à la réception de bienvenue le mercredi 29 août
• Les cafés de la conférence
• Le dîner de la conférence (à un tarif préférentiel de 25 euros)
• Les promenades et les visites guidées
Frais d’inscription sur place
Membre : 380€
Non-membre : 400€
Personne accompagnatrice : 80€
Le dîner (participants et personne accompagnatrice) : 45€
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OTHER CONFERENCE INFORMATION
Assistants
Conference assistants will be available for the duration of the event and will be your first point of contact should you experience any
difficulties or problems. They will assist presenters with technical set up during the conference.
Badge
All participants will receive a delegate badge upon registration. Delegates are required to wear their badge at all times within the
venue. Only participants wearing their badge will be admitted to the conference sessions, coffee breaks, lunches and social events.
If you lose your badge please contact the registration desk.
Final papers
The papers will be made available to all participants of the conference in their personal page on the conference web site after logging
in as of Aug 20. The papers, accessible on “EAUH2018Sessions” menu, are sorted by single session and will be available until the
end of the year 2018.
Lunches and Coffee breaks
Lunches and coffee breaks will be served in the venue in via Silvio D’Amico 77 in three areas: the Cafeteria, the ground floor hall and
the second-floor balcony. To be admitted to the lunches and coffee breaks it is enough simply to show your badge. “Accompanying
person” badges will provide access only to the coffee breaks.
Certificate of attendance
Attendance certificates will be available for downloading on the participants’ personal page on the conference web site at the end
of the conference.
Smoking policy
Smoking is prohibited in all indoor public spaces, bars, restaurants and stores.
Wi-Fi and internet connection
Roma Tre University has internet throughout all the Departments and attendees only need to select Rm3Wi-Fi from their wi-fi
connections list using the credentials that you will find in the delegate bag.
Programme changes
The conference organisers reserve the right to modify the programme. No refunds can be granted in case of cancellation of speakers, lack of spaces in
the lecture rooms or any other incidents during the conference which are beyond the control of the conference organisers.
Liabilities
When registering for the conference participants agree that neither the Organizing Committee nor the conference Secretariat assume
any liability. The conference organisers are not responsible for any loss and/or damage to personal belongings during the conference
period. Please do not leave your personal items in the conference rooms.
Cancellation of the conference
In the event that the conference cannot be held or it is postponed due to events beyond the control of the conference organisers
(force majeure) or due to events which are not attributable to wrongful intent or gross negligence of the conference organisers, the
conference organisers cannot be held liable by attendees for any damages, costs, or losses incurred, such as transportation costs ,
accommodation costs, costs for additional orders, or financial losses.
Under these circumstances, the conference organisers reserve the right to either retain the entire registration fee and to use it
for a future conference, or to reimburse the attendee after deducting costs already incurred with regard to the organisation of the
conference and which could not be recovered from third parties.
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AUTRES INFORMATIONS
Assistants
Les assistants du colloque seront disponibles pendant toute la durée de l’événement et seront votre premier point de contact si
vous rencontrez des difficultés ou des problèmes. Ils aideront également les conférenciers avec la configuration technique pendant
les sessions.
Badge
Tous les participants recevront un badge de délégué lors de l’enregistrement. Les délégués sont tenus de porter leur badge pendant tout le temps
sur le lieu de la conférence. Seuls les participants portant leur badge seront admis aux sessions, aux cafés, aux déjeuners et aux événements
sociaux du colloque. En cas de perte de votre badge, veuillez contacter le bureau d’enregistrement.
Articles définitifs
Les exposées seront mis à la disposition de tous les participants du colloque sur leur page personnelle sur le site web de la conférence après la connexion à partir d’août. Les exposées, accessibles dans le menu “EAUH2018Sessions”, seront organisé par session,
seront accessibles jusqu’ la fin de l’année 2018.
Déjeuners et cafés
Les déjeuners et les cafés seront servis dans les locaux de l’université en rue Silvio D’Amico 77 dans trois zones : la Cafeteria, la salle du
rez-de-chaussée et la galerie du deuxième étage. Pour être admis aux déjeuners et au café, il suffit simplement de montrer son propre
badge. Le badge de la personne accompagnante donne accès exclusivement aux cafés.
L’attestation de participation
Les certificats de présence seront disponibles pour téléchargement sur la page personnelle des participants sur le site web de la
conférence depuis la fin du colloque.
Interdiction de fumer
Il est interdit de fumer dans tous les espaces publics, les bars, les restaurants et les magasins.
Connexion Wi-Fi et internet
L’université Roma Tre dispose de réseau Wi-Fi dans tous les départements. Il suffit de sélectionner le Rm3Wi-Fi dans la liste de
connexions Wi-Fi en se connectez avec l’identification et le mot de passe se trouvant dans votre sac de délégué.
Modifications de programme
Les organisateurs du colloque se réservent le droit de modifier le programme. Aucun remboursement ne saurait être accordé en cas
d’annulation de conférenciers, de manque d’espaces dans les salles de conférence ou de tout autres incidents au cours du colloque
qui échappe au contrôle des organisateurs.
Responsabilités
Lorsqu’ils s’inscrivent au colloque, les participants conviennent que ni le comité d’organisation ni le secrétariat de la conférence n’assument aucune
responsabilité. Les organisateurs de la conférence ne sont pas responsables des pertes et / ou des dommages aux effets personnels pendant la
période de la conférence. Veuillez ne pas laisser vos objets personnels dans les salles de conférence.
Annulation du colloque
Dans le cas où le colloque ne pourrait se dérouler or serait reportée en raison d’événements indépendants de la volonté des
organisateurs de la conférence (force majeure) ou en raison d’événements qui ne sont pas imputables à une intention fautive ou à
une négligence grave des organisateurs, ceux-ci ne sauraient être tenus responsables de tous dommages, coûts ou pertes subis,
tels que les frais de transport, les frais d’hébergement, les frais pour des commandes supplémentaires ou les pertes financières.
Dans le cas où le colloque ne pourrait se dérouler, les organisateurs de la conférence se réservent le droit soit de conserver
l’intégralité des frais d’enregistrement et de les utiliser pour un colloque à venir, soit de rembourser les participants après déduction
des coûts déjà engagés pour l’organisation du colloque et qui ne pourraient être non récupérées auprès de tierces parties.
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SOCIAL PROGRAMME
Opening Ceremony and Reception
Venue: School of Economics and Business Studies (via Silvio d’Amico 77)
Date: Wednesday, 29 August 2018,
After the Opening Ceremony, Roma Tre University invites EAUH 2018 participants to a reception at the ground floor of the venue.
Conference dinner
Venue: Palazzo Brancaccio, Viale del Monte Oppio, 7
Date: Friday, 31 August 2018, 20:30
The conference dinner was pre-booked during the registration. If you wish to join the dinner but have not registered in advance,
please contact the conference registration desk.
Tours
Tours have been pre-booked on line. If you wish to participate in one of the two guided walks but have not booked in advance, please
check for availability at the conference registration desk. Each tour is subject to a minimum and a maximum number of participants.
Centrale Montemartini
Date: Wednesday, 29 August, 14:30 – 17:00
Meeting Point: Roma Tre University – Via Silvio D’Amico 77 (demarked as “meeting point”)
How to get there: the tour will be led by a guide who will accompany participants to destination (9 min + Metro line B + 2 min)
Tour through the most harmonic combination of Industry and Archaeology: The Previous Power Plant of 1912 with its outstanding
spaces displays in an atmospheric game of contrasts part of the Capitoline Museums collection. Masterpieces of 2000 years old
Roman sculptures, frescoes and mosaics from excavations of the 19th and 20th century.
Basilica of St. Paul
Date: Wednesday, 29 August, 14:30 – 17:00
Meeting Point: Roma Tre University – Via Silvio D’Amico 77 (demarked as “meeting point”)
How to get there: the tour will be led by a guide who will accompany participants to destination (12 min)
Rules and Tips: ->religious site, shoulders and knees need to be covered ->comfortable shoes
One of the Four Papal Basilicas and one of the oldest churches of Rome built in the 4th century on the tomb of the Apostle Paul.
Rebuilt after the fire in 1823 and famous for the papal portraits. Our tour will cross centuries of its art pieces and history and religion.
Catacombs of Domitilla
Date: Wednesday, 29 August, 14:30 – 17:00
Meeting Point: Roma Tre University – Via Silvio D’Amico 77 (demarked as “meeting point”)
How to get there: the tour will be led by a guide who will accompany participants to destination (private bus)
Rules and Tips: ->religious site, shoulders and knees need to be covered ->comfortable shoes ->sweater
Tour through one of the largest catacombs of Rome, with its 17km of tunnels and corridors, serving as underground burial. Magnificient frescoes, decorations and stone fragments give a glimpse into the life aspects of the early Christian communities.
Ancient Via Appia
Date: Wednesday, 29 August, 14:30 – 17:00
How to get there: the tour will be led by a guide who will accompany participants to destination (private bus)
Meeting Point: Roma Tre University – Via Silvio D’Amico 77 (demarked as “meeting point”)
Tips: ->comfortable shoes
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Walking Tour on the Oldest and most important of the ancient Roman Road of the 3rd century BC in order to explore 2000 years old
cobble stones, monumental tombs like Cecilia Metella, the Circus of Maxentius or the remains of Villa Capo di Bove.
The Churches on the Aventine Hill
Date: Wednesday, 29 August, 14:30 – 17:00
Meeting Point: Roma Tre University – Via Silvio D’Amico 77 (demarked as “meeting point”)
How to get there: the tour will be led by a guide who will accompany participants to destination (private bus)
Rules and Tips: ->religious site, shoulders and knees need to be covered
A stroll on this legendary hill of Rome to discover ancient churches like Santa Sabina, headquarters of the Domenican Order, with one
of the oldest Crucifix illustrations, the famous keyhole in front of the Orange Garden of the Knights of Malta.
The Crypta Balbi Museum
Date: Wednesday, 29 August, 14:30 – 17:00
Meeting Point: Roma Tre University – Via Silvio D’Amico 77 (demarked as “meeting point”)
How to get there: the tour will be led by a guide who will accompany participants to destination (private bus)
This museum represents a “time machine”, showing the development of the City from Ancient Rome to the Middle Ages thanks to
the archaeological remains in the underground and the materials found and showcased in the museum. The archaeological site has
been excavated over the last decades and shows amazing ruins of Roman everyday life.
Walking tour 1: Piazza Venezia, Trevi Fountain, Spanish Steps
Date: Friday, 31 August 2018, 17:30 – 19:30
Meeting Point: Piazza Venezia in front of “Monumento a Vittorio Emanuele II”, the tour guide holds a sign with the words EAUH “Spanish Steps Tour”
How to get there: buses 8, 51, 60, 63, 80, 83, 85, 118, 160, 170
Tips: ->comfortable shoes
Walking tour from Piazza Venezia with its palaces, the ancient church of St. Mark and the imposing monument dedicated to King
Vittorio Emanuele II, reaching the most famous Trevi Fountain and its history. Through narrow streets and characteristic squares, we
will reach most scenic spot of the Spanish Steps.
Walking tour 2: Piazza Venezia, Largo Argentina, Pantheon, Piazza Navona
Date: Friday, 31 August 2018, 17:30 – 19:30
Meeting Point: Piazza Venezia in front of “Monumento a Vittorio Emanuele II”, the tour guide holds a sign with the words “EAUH
-Piazza Navona Tour”
How to get there: buses 8, 51, 60, 63, 80, 83, 85, 118, 160, 170
Tips: ->comfortable shoes
Walking tour from Piazza Venezia to Largo Argentina showing ruins of 4 ancient roman temples, moving to best preserved ancient
Roman building: the Pantheon and its outstanding architecture to reach Piazza Navona, the ancient stadium of Domitian transformed
into a beautiful square with its spectacular fountains and scenery.
Walking tour 3: Colosseum and Arch of Constantine, Roman Forum, Imperial Fora (Nerva, Augustus, Trajan, Forums of Ceasar,)
Capitoline Hill
Date: Friday, 31 August 2018, 18:00 – 19:30
Meeting Point: Metro B Stop “Colosseo” ground floor exit in front of the newsstand, the tour guide holds a sign with the words
“EAUH - Colosseum Capitoline Hill”
How to get there: Metro B
Tips: ->comfortable shoes
From the most famous monument of Rome, the Colosseum, we will cross the centuries of Rome from the 4th century Arch of
Constantine and pass by the remains of the Forum of Augustus and Nerva, the imposing Column and Markets of Trajan to reach the
Forum of Cesar and the Republican Forum
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Walking tour 4: Circus Maximus, Forum Boarium (Temples of Portunus, Hercules, Church of Santa Maria in Cosmedin) Area of
Sant’Omobono, Jewish Ghetto and Tiber Island.
Date: Friday, 31 August 2018, 18:00 – 19:30
Meeting Point: Metro B Stop “Circo Massimo”, exit Viale Circo Massimo in front of the newsstand, the tour guide holds a sign with
the words “EAUH - Circus Maximus Tiber Island”
How to get there: Metro B
Tips: ->comfortable shoes
Considered to be the cradle of Rome, the area of the Forum Boarium was the Cattle and Food Market where we can still admire the
temple of Hercules and of Portunus, passing by the famous mouth of truth in the Porticus of St. Maria in Cosmedin. From the area
of S.Ombono (7th Century BC.) We move to the characteristic Jewish Ghetto and the Tiber Island, always associated with medicine,
once seat of the temple of Asclepius, nowadays seat of the Hospital Fatebenefratelli.
Post Tour
The cost of the post tour is 75*€ which must be paid in full at the registration desk, and includes bus travel, entry to the site and
lunch.
Tivoli, Villa Gregoriana with Lunch
Date: Sunday, 2 September 2018 (09:00 – 17:30)
Meeting Point: Metro B Stop “Piramide” exit “Piazzale Ostiense”, the tour guide holds a sign with the words “EAUH - Villa Gregoriana”
How to get there: the tour will be led by a guide who will accompany participants to destination (private bus)
Tips: ->comfortable shoes
A Journey to Tivoli – summer residence of the Romans since Antiquity and part of the famous Grand Tour in the 19th century, we will
visit Villa Gregoriana, suggestive natural park, a beautiful landscape with the remains of an ancient Roman Villa, the Great Waterfall,
Grottoes formed by the River Aniene and the rests of two Roman Temples. The tour will end with a lunch in a typical local restaurant.
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PROGRAMME SOCIAL
Toutes les activités ont été pré-réservées en ligne lors du processus d’inscription. Veuillez présenter le bon reçu dans votre dossier
d’inscription sur chaque site et portez votre badge de conférence de manière visible à tout moment. Pour les bons disponibles,
veuillez vous adresser au bureau des inscriptions.
Cérémonie d’ouverture et réception
Lieu: Ecole d’Economie et d’Etudes Commerciales (via Silvio D’Amico 77)
Date: mercredi 29 août 2018,
Après la cérémonie d’ouverture, l’université Roma Tre invite les participants à l’EAUH 2018 à une réception au rez-de-chaussée du
lieu.
Dîner de conférence
Lieu: Palais Brancaccio, Viale del Monte Oppio, 7
Date: vendredi 31 août 2018, 20h30
Un dîner de conférence a été pré-réservé lors de l’inscription. Si vous souhaitez participer au dîner sans vous être inscrit à l’avance,
veuillez contacter le bureau d’enregistrement de la conférence.
Visites guidées
Toutes les visites guidées ont été pré-réservées en ligne. Si vous souhaitez participer à l’une des deux promenades guidées mais
que vous n’avez pas réservé à l’avance, veuillez vérifier la disponibilité au bureau d’enregistrement de la conférence. Chaque visite est
souje à un minimum et à un nombre maximum de participants.
Centrale Montemartini
Date: mercredi 29 août, de 14h30 à 17h00
Point de rencontre: Université Roma Tre - Via Silvio d’Amico 77 (désignée comme “meeting point”)
Comment s’y rendre: le tour sera dirigé par un guide qui accompagnera les participants à destination (9 min + ligne de métro B + 2 min )
Voyagez à travers la combinaison la plus harmonieuse de l’industrie et de l’archéologie: La centrale électrique précédente de 1912, avec
ses espaces exceptionnels, est exposée à un jeu de contrastes dans la collection des musées du Capitole. Chefs-d’œuvre de 2000 ans,
sculptures romaines, fresques et mosaïques provenant des fouilles du XIXe et du XXe siècle.
Basilique Saint Paul
Date: mercredi 29 août, de 14h30 à 17h00
Point de rencontre: Université Roma Tre - Via Silvio d’Amico 77 (désignée comme “meeting point”)
Comment s’y rendre: le tour sera dirigé par un guide qui accompagnera les participants à destination (12 min )
Règles et conseils: ->site religieux, épaules et genoux doivent être couverts ->chaussures confortables
L’une des quatre basiliques papales et l’une des plus anciennes églises de Rome construites au IVe siècle sur la tombe de l’apôtre
Paul. Reconstruit après l’incendie de 1823 et célèbre pour les portraits papaux. Notre tournée traversera des siècles de ses œuvres
d’art, de son histoire et de sa religion.
Catacombes de Domitilla
Date: mercredi 29 août, de 14h30 à 17h00
Comment s’y rendre: le tour sera dirigé par un guide qui accompagnera les participants à destination (bus privé)
Point de rencontre: Université Roma Tre - Via Silvio d’Amico 77 (désignée comme “meeting point”)
Règles et conseils: ->site religieux, épaules et genoux doivent être couverts ->chaussures confortables ->pull
Visitez l’une des plus grandes catacombes de Rome, avec ses 17 km de tunnels et de couloirs, servant d’enterrement souterrain.
De magnifiques fresques, décorations et fragments de pierre donnent un aperçu des aspects de la vie des premières communautés
chrétiennes.
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Ancienne Via Appia
Date: mercredi 29 août, de 14h30 à 17h00
Point de rencontre: Université Roma Tre - Via Silvio d’Amico 77 (désignée comme “meeting point”)
Comment s’y rendre: le tour sera dirigé par un guide qui accompagnera les participants à destination (bus privé)
Conseils: ->chaussures confortables
Promenade à pied sur la plus ancienne et la plus importante des anciennes voies romaines du IIIe siècle avant J.-C. pour explorer
2000 ans de pavés, des tombeaux monumentaux comme Cecilia Metella, le cirque de Maxenti ou les vestiges de la Villa Capo
di Bove.
Les églises de la colline de l’Aventin
Date: mercredi 29 août, de 14h30 à 17h00
Point de rencontre: Université Roma Tre - Via Silvio d’Amico 77 (désignée comme “meeting point”)
Comment s’y rendre: le tour sera dirigé par un guide qui accompagnera les participants à destination (bus privé)
Règles et conseils: ->site religieux, les épaules et les genoux doivent être couverts
Une promenade sur cette colline légendaire de Rome pour découvrir des églises anciennes comme Santa Sabina, siège de
l’Ordre Dominicain, avec l’une des plus anciennes illustrations de Crucifix, le fameux trou de serrure devant le Jardin Orange
des Chevaliers de Malte.
Le Crypta Balbi Museum
Date: mercredi 29 août, de 14h30 à 17h00
Point de rencontre: Université Roma Tre - Via Silvio d’Amico 77 (désignée comme “meeting point”)
Comment s’y rendre: le tour sera dirigé par un guide qui accompagnera les participants à destination (bus privé)
Ce musée représente une “machine à remonter le temps”, montrant le développement de la ville de la Rome antique au moyen
âge grâce aux vestiges archéologiques souterrains et aux matériaux trouvés et exposés dans le musée. Le site archéologique a
été fouillé au cours des dernières décennies et montre des ruines étonnantes de la vie quotidienne romaine.
Visite à pied 1: Piazza Venezia, Fontaine de Trevi, Escalier Trinità de Monti
Date: vendredi 31 août 2018, 17h30 - 19h30
Point de rencontre: Piazza Venezia devant “Monumento a Vittorio Emanuele II”, le guide tient une pancarte avec les mots EAUH
- “Spanish Steps Tour”
Comment s’y rendre: bus 8, 51, 60, 63, 80, 83, 85, 118, 160, 170
Conseils: ->chaussures confortables
Visite à pied de la Piazza Venezia avec ses palais, l’ancienne église de Saint-Marc et l’imposant monument dédié au roi Victor-Emmanuel II, atteignant la plus célèbre fontaine de Trevi et son histoire. À travers des rues étroites et des places caractéristiques, nous atteindrons la plupart des sites pittoresques de la Place d’Espagne.
Visite à pied 2: Piazza Venezia, Largo Argentina, Panthéon, Piazza Navona (point de rencontre: Piazza Venezia):
Date: vendredi 31 août 2018, 17h30 - 19h30
Point de rencontre: Piazza Venezia devant “Monumento a Vittorio Emanuele II”, le guide tient une pancarte avec les mots “EAUH
-Piazza Navona Tour”
Comment s’y rendre: bus 8, 51, 60, 63, 80, 83, 85, 118, 160, 170
Conseils: ->chaussures confortables
Visite à pied de la Piazza Venezia à Largo Argentina montrant les ruines de 4 anciens temples romains, se déplaçant vers l’ancien
bâtiment romain le mieux préservé: le Panthéon et son architecture exceptionnelle pour atteindre la Piazza Navona, l’ancien
stade de Domitian transformé en paysage.
Visite à pied 3: Colisée et arc de Constantin, Forum romain, Forums impériaux (Nerva, Augustus, Trajan, Forums de César), colline
du Capitole
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Date: vendredi 31 août 2018, 18h00 - 19h30
Point de rencontre: Métro B arrêt “Colosseo” sortie du rez-de-chaussée devant le kiosque à journaux, le guide tient une pancarte
avec les mots “ EAUH - Colosseum Capitoline Hill “
Comment s’y rendre: Métro B
Conseils: ->chaussures confortables
Du plus célèbre monument de Rome, le Colisée, nous traverserons les siècles de Rome à partir de l’Arc de Constantin du IVe siècle
et passerons par les vestiges du Forum d’Auguste et de Nerva, l’imposante Colonne et les Marchés de Trajan pour atteindre le Forum
de César et le Forum républicain
Visite à pied 4: Circus Maximus, Forum Boarium, (temples de Portunus, Hercules, église Santa Maria in Cosmedin), Zone de
Sant’Omobono, ghetto juif et île du Tibre.
Date: vendredi 31 août 2018, 18h00 - 19h30
Point de rencontre: Métro B arrêt “Circo Massimo”, sortie Viale Circo Massimo devant le kiosque à journaux, le guide tient une
pancarte avec les mots “EAUH - Circus Maximus Tiber Island”
Comment s’y rendre: Métro B
Conseils: ->chaussures confortables
Considéré comme le berceau de Rome, la zone du Forum Boarium était le marché des bovins et de l’alimentation où l’on peut encore
admirer le temple d’Hercule et de Portunus, en passant par la célèbre bouche de la vérité dans le Porticus de Sainte-Marie de
Cosmedin. De la région de S.Ombono (7ème siècle avant JC.) Nous nous dirigeons vers le ghetto juif caractéristique et l’île du Tibre,
toujours associée à la médecine, autrefois siège du temple d’Asclepius, aujourd’hui siège de l’hôpital Fatebenefratelli.
POST TOUR
Le coût du post-tour est de 75 € *, qui doit être payé en totalité au bureau d’enregistrement de la conférence et comprend le voyage
en bus, l’entrée sur le site et le déjeuner.
Tivoli, Villa Gregoriana avec déjeuner
Date: dimanche 2 septembre 2018 (de 9h00 à 17h30)
Point de rencontre: Métro B Arrêt “Piramide” sortie “Piazzale Ostiense”, le guide tient une pancarte avec les mots “EAUH - Villa
Gregoriana”
Comment s’y rendre: le tour sera dirigé par un guide qui accompagnera les participants à destination (bus privé)
Conseils: ->chaussures confortables
Un voyage à Tivoli - résidence d’été des Romains depuis l’Antiquité et une partie du célèbre Grand Tour au 19ème siècle, nous visiterons la Villa Gregoriana, parc naturel suggestif, un magnifique paysage avec les vestiges d’une ancienne villa romaine, la Grande
Cascade, Grottes formées par la rivière Aniene et les restes de deux temples romains. La visite se terminera par un déjeuner dans
un restaurant local typique.
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GENERAL INFORMATION
Connections with Fiumicino Airport
Fiumicino Airport (FCO) is the main airport hub of Rome, situated about 30 km (19 miles) southwest. The fastest way to reach the
city centre is by Leonardo Express train, which takes 32 minutes non-stop to Termini Station. There is also a slower train to Tiburtina
Station (48 minutes), which stops at Trastevere and Ostiense stations, the closest to the Conference venue. Train tickets can be
bought at the train station or online. Several bus companies, including Terravision, Sit Bus Shuttle, and TAM run services to Termini
station in about one hour. Taxis charge flat fares: €48 from Fiumicino Airport to the city centre (centro storico); €45 from Fiumicino
Airport to Ostiense Railway Station; €55 from Fiumicino Airport to Tiburtina Railway Station. Tickets can be booked online for no
extra cost. Minibus taxis, such as Airport Shuttle, charge per person.
Connections with Ciampino Airport
Ciampino Airport (CIA) is about 15 km (9 miles) southeast of Rome. The fastest way to the city centre is by bus to Termini (40
minutes). There are several bus companies available, including Terravision, Sit Bus shuttle, Rome Airport Bus (Schiaffini). The tickets
can be bought at the train station or online.
Public transportation inside Rome: bus, tram and metro
Rome’s transportation system is co-ordinated by ATAC. Tickets are valid for all city buses, tram and metro lines. Tickets must be
bought before boarding at the ATAC automatic ticket machines and info desks inside the metro stations, in some bars and newsstands, and in all tabacchi stores.
One-trip tickets (BIT) are valid for 100 minutes and cost €1.50. There are also daily tickets (BIG) €7.00, 3-day tickets (BTI) €18.00,
and weekly Passes (CIS) €24.00. Tickets need to be validated on board the first time they are used.
Rome Metro has 3 lines: A, B and C. Trains run every 4 to 10 minutes from 5:30am to 11:30pm daily, until 1:30am on Friday and
Saturday. Bus routes and arrival times are listed on the bus stops. Moovit app works fairly well in Rome. A good night bus service
is available after 11.30 pm.
Taxi services
Taxi ranks are numerous throughout the city center. The biggest are at Termini Station, Piazza Venezia, Piazza di Spagna, Piazza del
Popolo, Piazza Barberini and Piazzale Ostiense. You can also order a taxi online or by phone, dialing the taxi numbers 065551; 063570;
066645; 060609. Official taxi are white and display inside the trip fares, according to the Municipal regulation. An additional charge
is applied for each piece of luggage over the specified size. There is a night surcharge but, when booking through 3570, there is a
special night fare for women (-10%)
Passport, ID- card, visa
Visitors from countries other than the European Economic Area, (EEA), European Union (EU), and Switzerland need a valid passport to
enter in Italy. EEA, EU and Swiss nationals can use identity cards.
Insurance
EU citizens are entitled to free emergency treatment under Italy’s public healthcare system if they have a valid European Health
Insurance Card (EHIC). Participants from other countries should inform themselves about specific health agreements with Italy.
Opening hours for services
Major museums and sights as well as most of the supermarkets and international chain stores remain open the whole day. Opening
hours for shops, churches and other businesses are 8.00/9.00 am - 12:30/1.00 pm, and 3.00/4.00 pm – 6.00/8.00 pm.
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Banks and currency
Italy’s currency is the euro (€). The easiest way of getting cash is with debit cards from ATM machines, known in Italy as Bancomat.
Banks opening hours are 8.30 am – 1.30 pm and 2.30 - 4.00 pm, Monday to Friday.
Tipping
Tipping in Italy is voluntary.
Touristic information points
There are different Touristic information points throughout the city centre, as well as a telephonic information service available in
English by dialling 060608.
Electricity
Type F 230V/ 50Hz and Type L 220V/50Hz
Emergency
Emergency number is 112 (Ambulance, Fireman and Police)
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INFORMATIONS GÉNÉRALES
Connexions vers l’aéroport de Fiumicino
L’aéroport de Fiumicino (FCO) est le hub principal, situé à 30 km au sud-ouest de la ville. Le moyen le plus rapide de se rendre à
Rome est le Leonardo Express, géré par Trenitalia, qui prend 32 minutes non-stop à la Gare de Termini. Il y a aussi un train plus
lent, destination Gare de Tiburtina (48 minutes), qui s’arrêt aux stations de Trastevere et Ostiense. Les billets de train peuvent
être achetés à la gare ou en ligne. Plusieurs compagnies de bus, y compris Terravision et Sit Bus Shuttle, offrent des services
à Termini, ce qui prend environ une heure.
Le prix de la course en taxi est de 48€ pour la destination du centre-ville, 45€ pour la Gare d’Ostiense, 55€ pour la Gare de
Tiburtina. Courses peuvent être réservés en ligne sans frais supplémentaires. Les minibus, comme AirportShuttle, facture par
personne.
Connexions vers l’aéroport de Ciampino
L’aéroport de Ciampino (CIA) est situé à 15 km au sud-est de la ville. Le moyen le plus rapide d’arriver à Rome est le bus pour
Termini (40 minutes). Il y a plusieurs compagnies de bus disponibles, y compris Terravision, Sit bus shuttle, Rome Airport Bus
(Schiaffini).
Trasport en commun à Rome: Métro, tramway et bus
Le système de transport de Rome est coordonné par l’ATAC. Les mêmes billets sont valables sur toutes les lignes de bus,
de tramway et de métro de la ville, qu’elles soient exploitées par Trambus ou Metro. Les billets doivent être achetés avant
l’embarquement, et sont disponibles auprès des distributeurs automatiques de billets de l’ATAC, des centres d’information, de
certains bars et kiosques à journaux, et de tous les tabacchi.
Il existe des billets réguliers valables 100 minutes (BIT) 1,50 €, des billets journaliers (BIG) 7,00 €, des billets 3 jours (BTI) 18,00
€ et des Passes hebdomadaires (CIS) 24,00 €. Les tickets doivent être validés à bord des bus la première fois qu’ils sont utilisés.
Les bus et les tramways sont bon marché, fiables et complets, mais les progrès peuvent être lents dans le centre-ville. Les
itinéraires sont répertoriés sur les arrêts. Après 23h30 il y a un bon service de bus de nuit.
Le métro de Rome, a 3 lignes, A, B et C. Les trains circulent toutes les 4 à 10 minutes de 5h30 à 23h30, tous les jours, et jusqu’à
1h30 le vendredi et le samedi.
Services de taxi
Les taxis officiels sont blancs et il y a des stations de taxis dans tout le centre-ville. Les plus utilisées sont Termini, Piazza
Venezia, Piazza di Spagna, Piazza del Popolo, Piazza Barberini et Piazzale Ostiense. Vous pouvez également commander un taxi en
ligne ou par téléphone au 065551, 063570, 066645 ou 060609. Les tarifs de la réglementation municipale doivent être affichés
dans le taxi. Une charge est faite pour chaque bagage au-dessus de la taille spécifiée.
Carte d’identité, passeport, visa
Les visiteurs de l’extérieur de l’Espace économique européen (EEE), de l’Union européenne (UE) et de la Suisse ont besoin d’un passeport valide pour entrer en Italie. Les ressortissants de l’EEE, de l’UE et de la Suisse peuvent utiliser des cartes d’identité à la place.
Assurance
Les citoyens de l’UE ont droit au traitement d’urgence gratuit dans le cadre du système de santé publique italien s’ils disposent
d’une carte européenne d’assurance maladie (CEAM) valide. Les participants d’autres pays devraient être informés des accords
de santé spécifiques conclus avec l’Italie.
98
Heures ouvrables et shopping
La plupart des grands musées et sites touristiques restent ouverts toute la journée, tout comme les grands supermarchés et
les chaînes de magasins internationaux. Les magasins, églises et autres commerces qui suivent encore la tradition ouvriront
généralement à 8h ou 9h, fermeront à 12h30 ou 13h, rouvriront à 15h ou 16h et fermeront entre 18h et 20h.
Banque et monnaie
L’Italie est un des pays européens utilisant l’euro (€). Le moyen le plus simple d’obtenir de l’argent est avec une carte de débit
d’un ATM (Bancomat). Les banques sont ouvertes de 8h30 à 13h30 du lundi au vendredi et généralement de nouveau pendant
une heure entre 14h30 et 16h00.
Pourboires
Le pourboire est facultatif
Informations touristiques
Il existe différents points d’information touristique dans le centre-ville, ainsi qu’un service d’information téléphonique disponible
en anglais en composant le 060608.
Électricité
Type F 230V / 50Hz et Type L 220V / 50Hz
Urgence
Le numéro d’urgence est le 112 (ambulance, pompier et police)
99
INDEX
A
Aas Steinar, M44
Abdela Sophie, SS25
Abidi-Belhadj Beya, M05
Abrams Lynn, SS05
Abu-Hamdi Eliana, SS01
Adamska Monika, M43
Ago Renata, p.14
Agresta Abigail, M60
Ahmad Samran, M57
Al Meltem, SS21, SS12
Al ali Saba Sami Mehdi, SS28
Al-Ali Nawar Sami Mehdi, M53
Albrecht Jonas, M19
Alehashemi Ayda, M59
Alici Antonello, M58
Alifragkis Stavros, M36
Allweil Yael, SS01
Ameranis Iasonas, SS24
Amore Raffaele, M15
Andreoni Luca, SS11
Anisimova Anna, M03
Antinkaapo Erika, M28
Antista Armando, M29
Archibald Zosia, M01
Arnaud Colin, M05
Arnout Anneleen, M27
Arzmi Azmah, M51
Aßmann Carla, M28
Asmundo Giovanni, M59
Astrella Consuelo Isabel, M34
Atamuratova Tatiana, M15
Athanassiou Emilia, M50
Atique Fernando, M47
Attwell Melanie, M47
B
Bainbridge Simon, M53
Balbo Marcello, M53
Baldasseroni Louis, M06
Bálint Angelika, M54
Barbosa Mayara, M51
Barenscott Dorothy, M25
Barles Sabine, RT02, M19
Barwicka-Tylek Iwona, SS27, SS27
Basaran Lotz Neslisah Leman, M42
Bassieres Laurence, M23
Baumeister Martin, p. 12, M24
Bécot Renaud, M06
100
Beeston Erin, M55
Beirn Mark, M11
Belli Gianluca, M37
Beltramo Silvia, M15
Benson Claire, M02
Beresin Schleder Ferreira Pedro, M56
Berg Ria, M14
Bernardo Maria ana, M23
Bernet Tobias, SS18
Bernhardt Christoph, p.13, RT02, RT02
Bertoni Angelo, M47, M23
Bickford-Smith Vivian, SS23
Bideau André, M30
Björklund Annika, M20
Blanco-Rotea Rebeca, M29
Blokker Johanna, M50
Blondé Bruno, SS14, SS14
Bocquet Denis, M51
Bodenstein Carl-Philipp, M57
Boisserie Etienne, M48
Bonifazio Patrizia, M50
Bonomo Bruno, SS03
Boone Marc, M08
Bordone Lucia, M54, M22
Borucka Justyna, M54
Botti Giaime, M47
Boubaker Inès, M26
Bouysse-Mesnage Stéphanie, SS19
Bowie Karen, M53
Brantz Dorothee, M26
Brink Pinto Andrés, RT04
Brinkmann Tobias, M11
Brodie Allan, SS25
Brown Robert, M32
Brunnström Pål, M18
Buccaro Alfredo, M15, M15
Butler Alice, M28
C
Caforio Maria Romana, SS25
Caldeira Marta, M30
Camerin Federico, SS21
Camphuijsen Frans, SS10
Campinho Regina, M18
Caner Yuksel Cagla, SS08, SS28
Capano Francesca, M15
Caramelea Ramona, SS19
Caramellino Gaia, M30
Carbonell Esteller Montserrat, M13
Cardesin Diaz Jose Maria, M36
Cardoso de Matos Ana, M23, M55
Carmona Ribeiro Ana Carolina, SS05
Castilho Liliana, M20
Castryck Geert, SS23, SS23
Cecere Domenico, M07
Chao Koching, M29
Chatzikonstantinou Katerina, M52
Chilà Roxane, M08
Christensen Søren Bitsch, M36, M36
Christodoulou Charis, M51
Christophersen Joern Roland, M03
Cinti Maria Grazia, SS02
Claesson Ragnhild, M38, M54
Clemente Alida, M35
Cobb Elvan, M42
Cokugras Isil, SS19
Collins Sarah, M17
Colonas Vassilios, p. 13, SS09, M05
Comoglio Giovanni, M30
Conforti Claudia , p.14
Coomans Janna, M02, M60
Copley Clare, M46
Cordeiro Ricardo, M13
Cornaglia Paolo, M43
Cornwell Hannah, M53
Coulais Jean-François, M59
Cowman Krista, SS05
Creyghton Camille, M10
Czoch Gábor, M19
D
D’Amelio Maria Grazia , p.14
D’Amico Stefano, M05
D’Errico Rita, M20
Damjanovic Dragan, RT04, M43
Danneels Koenraad, M26
Dantas Mariana, M09
Darian-Smith Kate, SS05
Daunt Lisa, M24
Davidi Sigal, SS16
Davies Matthew, M07
Davila Julio d, M53
Davis James, M05
Davoine Charles, M01
Dayoub Dima, M26
De Block Greet, M06, RT02
De Koster Margo, M12
De la Zerda Tamar, SS21
De Leao Dornelles Laura, M41
De Munck Bert, RT02, RT02
De Pedro Álvarez Cristina, M44
De Pieri Filippo, M55
De Togni Nicole, M50
Dehaene Michiel, M21, M21
Del Espino Hidalgo Blanca, M34
Delle Luche Jean-Dominique, M04
Delsante Ioanni, M32
Del Val Valdivieso Isabel , p.13
Denys Catherine, M36, M37
Derntl Maria Fernanda, M46, M09
Desideri Paolo, p. 10
Devos Isabelle, SS16
Di Cristofaro Matteo, M30
Di Lenardo Isabella, M37, M37
Di Liello Salvatore, M15
Dietze Antje, M44
Dima Vasiliki, M52
Dostalík Jan, M56
Draganova Mariana, M40
Dubbini Gianni, M04
Dudych Agnes, M06
Duros Marine, SS22
E
Ebelová Ivana, M08
Economides Aliki, M25
El Hadj Jamel, M59
El-Wakil Leïla, SS09
Elts Elena, M34
Elzanowski Jerzy, M25
Erdősi Péter, M22
Erofeev Nikolay, M31
Esser Raingard, SS17
Esteves Alexandra, M13
Evensen Cornelis Horn, SS18
Everaert Janna, M03
Everill Bronwen, M17
Ewen Shane, p.13, M06, RT03
F
Fatsea Irene, M25
Fedorčák Peter, M29
Felskau Frederik, M03
Feniger Neta, M30
Fernández Martínez Carla , M07
Ferrari Federico, SS03
Ferreira Silva Cidália, M53
Feys Torsten, M12
Fiadino Adele, SS09
Ficeri Ondrej, SS03
Fischer Karl Friedhelm, M46
Fleming Courtney, M41
Forrest Mary, M40
Fossnes Andreas, M51
Formica Marina , p.14
Fox Dorota, M44
Francia Cerasoli Josianne, M47
Frankot Edda, SS10
Frolov Roman, SS02
Fuhrmann Malte, M42
Furnee Jan Hein, p.13, M04
G
G. Håkansson Elin, M40
Galavan Susan, M35
Gangemi Francesco, M15
Gao Yun, M32
García González María Cristina, SS19
Garcia-Fuentes Josep-Maria, SS28
Garrow Hannah, M41
Gasperoni Michael, SS11
Gatto Giovanni, M15
Gaussuin Berenice, M43
Geenen Kristien, M57
Geltner Guy, M60
Gencer Irem, M52, SS19
Gesser Susanne, M38
Giacomini Laura, M20
Giannotti Emanuel, M13, M30
Gibas Petr, M27
Giesecke Susanne, M26
Gillabert Matthieu, M31
Gimbal Julie, M53
Glasheen Lucie, SS05
Gobel David, M11
Goddard Joe, M21
Goodwin Thomas, M10
Gorgo Letizia, SS25
Greefs Hilde, SS16, M11
Greenhalgh James, M23
Greilsammer Myriam, M08
Griffiths Clare, M20
Griffiths Sam, M35
Grinsell Samuel, M55
Groten Miel, SS23
Grønning Marius, M51
Gugliuzzo Elina, M07
Guidi Bruscoli Francesco, SS08
Guillery Peter, M46
Gunn Simon, p.13
Gutiérrez H. Fernando, M41
Gyimesi Emese, M54
H
Häberlen Joachim, M27
Hackmann Joerg, M31
Haemers Jelle, M02
Hall Jonathan, M01
Hallas-Murula Karin, M47
Hallenberg Mats, M09
Hämäläinen Heini, M38
Hamamcioglu-Turan Mine, M57
Hancock Mary, M24
Hanna Erika, M53
Hannan Brian, SS20
Hansen Peter Wessel, M35
Harding Vanessa, M35
Harju Jari, M38
Harris Leslie, M41
Hart Emma, M09, M09
Hartrich Eliza, M02
Hartshorne Sally ann, M54
Hasenöhrl Ute, M55
Hecht Richard, M24
Heikonen Juhana, SS02
Hein-Kircher Heidi, M48, M49
Hendrix Harold , p.14
Hermenault Léa, M37
Hilber Marina, M10
Hirano Junpei, M07
Hollensen Lisbeth, M40
Holm Lorens, M32
Hörcher Ferenc, SS27, SS27
Horeczki Réka, M34
Horel Catherine, M48
Houbart Claudine, SS28
Hu Jiazhu, M02
Hudeček Ondřej, M07
Huebner Karla, M44
Hunt John, M04
Huovinen Katja Maaria, M34
Hurley Livia, SS22
Høghøj Mikkel, M28
I
Iliadou- Suppiej Hesperia, M38
Ilie Mihaela, p.14, M38
Império Hamburger Ribeiro dos Santos
Lena, M46
Isgro Sara, M15
Ishizu Mina, M07
Ivekovic Martinis Anja, M44
Ivkovska Velika, M41
Iwabuchi Reiji, M07
101
J
Janáč Jira, M34
Janssen Shauna, M54
Jara Karolina, M49
Jenkins Matthew, M35
Jernudd Åsa, SS20
Jirásek Ondřej, M49
Jõekalda Kristina, M43
Joensson Felix, M18
Jongepier Iason, M37
Jovanovic Milos, M58
K
Kaarninen Mervi, RT04
Kaiser-Hansen Vibeke, M09
Kalff Sabine, M28
Kamp Jeannette, M12
Kaplan Frederic, M37
Karadima Aikaterini, M18
Karatzas Georgios, M43
Karivieri Arja, M14
Karlsson Sjögren Åsa, M13
Katajisto Kati, M58
Katsavounidou Garyfallia, SS05
Kawamura Ewa, M15
Kenny Nicolas, p.13, M41
Kentel Koca Mehmet, M25
Kertész Noémi, M22
Kien Thinh Ngo, M32
Kilinc Kivanc, SS01
Kirk Tim, M40
Klahr Douglas, M43
Klintborg Ahlklo Åsa, M40
Klusakova Luda, M34
Knezevic Igor, M11, M07
Knoll Martin, M19
Kocsis Andrea, M43
Kokkinakis Yiannis, M39
Koksal Ayse Hazar, M46
Kolbe Laura, M31, M31
Korbel Susanne, M44
Korthals Altes Everhard, SS04
Kotsaki Amalia, SS24, SS24
Koutsoumpos Leonidas, M32
Koyama Keiko, M08
Kraege Desmond, RT04
Kraikovski Alexei, M39
Krajíček Jan, M34
Kritikos Georgios, M09
Krsmanovic Ksenija, SS13
Küçük Mustafa Emir, M42
102
Kula Say Seda, M42, M42
Kunkel Soenke, M26
Kypriotakis Dimitris, M39
L
Labrunye Raphaël, M55
Lafi Nora, M05, M25
Lagae Johan, SS23, SS23
Langen Ulrik, M35
Lantschner Patrick, M03
Larsson Tobias, M35
Larsson Lovén Lena, M14
Lätzer-Lasar Asuman, M54
Laurence Ray, M14
Lauwers Hugo, SS18
Le Normand Brigitte, M49
Lecat Paul, M35
Lelo Keti, p.14, RT04
Lembo Fazio Francesca, M53
Leonidakis Nikolaos, M34
Lesh James, M36, M41, M22
Leslie Deborah, SS16
Levin Ayala, M30
Lewittes Deborah, M10
Li Weixuan, M37
Lindström Dag, M35
Loeffler Beate, M46
Lohmann Nina, M58
Loir Christophe, M35
Loockx Kristof, M39
Lopez Galviz Carlos, M53
López Salas Estefanía, M37
Lorenzo Dolores, M13
Lottrup Rasmussen Leonora, M20, M13
Lotze Kathleen, SS20
Lourdes Royo Naranjo, M34
Lourencetti Fernanda, M55
Lu Weifang, RT04
Lucey Conor, M35
Lucrezio Monticelli Chiara, SS25
Luczak Aleksandra, M28
Lupescu Mária, SS14
Lupienko Aleksander, M43, M41
Lv Zhao, M08
Lyna Dries, M17, M17
M
Mabboux Carole, M02
Mack Jennifer, M25
Madgin Rebecca, M41
Mahera Anna, M39
Makas Emily, M54
Mäkelä Mika, M56
Malešič Martina, M31
Malko Anastasia, M53
Manacorda Daniele, p.14
Manousakis Vasilis, M39
Marçal Gonçalves Marta, M34
María Ángeles Martín Romera, SS07
Marichalar Pascal, M06
Marin Brigitte, p.8
Marino Bianca Gioia, M15
Mariotti Jasna, M18
Martin Daniel jan, M36
Martin Myrna, M24
Martín López David, M52
Martins Bresciani Maria Stella, M47
Masotti Lucia, SS11, SS11
Massard-Guilbaud Genevieve, M06
Mateos Royo Jose Antonio, M08
Matilainen Riitta, M04
Maudsley Ann, M26
Maulsby Lucy, M53
Mavrinac Duga, M44, M11
May Andrew, p.13, M36, M27
May Laura, M21
Mayzlish Anna, M05
Mcmanus Ruth, M21, M21
Mctominey Andrew, M06
Meißner Kathrin, M53, M57
Menjot Denis, M08
Merlini Chiara, SS03
Mifsud Christian, M05
Mikkelsen Jørgen, M19
Miller Michael, M10
Milligan Kathryn, M35
Milne Sarah, M41
Miralles Buil Celia, M11
Mithen Nicholas, M10
Moatsou-Ess Olga, M52
Monzo Luigi, M24
Morelli Serena, M08
Morelon Claire, M48
Moreno Alcaide Manuel, SS02
Moret Frederic, SS24
Moroni Sheyla, M46
Morris Robert John, M22
Motylinska Monika, M28
Moura Soares Clara, SS28
Mukhopadhyay Urvi, SS01
Mundy Joanna, SS02
Muñoz Francesc, p. 11
Musselwhite Paul, M02
N
Napolitano David, M54
Nashar Dina, M28
Nazarenko Kirill, M39, M39
Nelson Novoa James, SS08
Neumann Tracy, M31
Nichols William, M52
Niemi Marjaana, p.13, M57
Nightingale Carl, RT01
Nilsson Lars, M34
Nodaraki Maria, M45
Nucifora Melania, M34
Nugmanova Gulchachak, M23, M43
O
Oliveira Vitor, SS05
Olsson Pia, M54
Oppizzi Martino, SS11
Orłowska Anna Paulina, M05, M19
Ortiz Catalina, M53
Ostos Prieto Francisco Javier, M34
Ozkan Altinoz Meltem, RT04
Ozlu Nilay, M42, M42
P
Padin Buceta Alicia, M15
Palazzo Anna Laura, M56
Pallottino Elisabetta , p.14
Pallua Irene, M06
Panagopoulou Katerina, M01
Pane Andrea, M15
Pant Smriti, M46
Papakis Georgios, RT04
Papp Gábor György, M43
Paravoliasis Emmanouil, SS09
Pardoen Mylene, M36
Parvu Sandra, SS03
Paskins Jacob, M18
Passmore Leith, M13
Payir Sada, M42
Pekar Martin, SS24, SS21
Pelaz Flores Diana, M07, M02
Peleman David, M53
Pellegrini Paola, M34, M21
Pelletier Louise, M32
Pepe Maria Teresa, M29
Perluss Preston, M35
Pesek Jiri, M58
Petrucci Enrica, M15
Piccioni Lidia, M23
Pinho Joana, M13
Pintilescu Corneliu, M46, M31
Plater Marika, M19
Poesio Camilla, M44
Pokludova Andrea, p.13, SS21, SS21, RT03
Pollock Venda Louise, M34
Poniat Radosław, M12
Pontual Virgínia, M47
Pope Ben, M02
Popescu Toader, M47
Prajda Katalin, SS08
Prak Maarten, M02
Prestel Joseph, RT01
Price Virginia, M43
Prokopovych Markian, M11
Pryt Karina, SS20
Psenner Angelika, M37
Purchla Jacek, M22
Puretti Julia, M15
Puttevils Jeroen, M04, M04
R
Råberg Marianne, SS04
Radermacher Martin, M24
Rainhorn Judith, SS19
Raitano Manuela, M34
Rame Monica Jimena, M34
Ramón Ros Jorge, M55
Rapalo Maria Chiara, M23
Rastén Simon, M17
Reeve Michael, M18
Reick Philipp, SS18
Reimann Christina, M25
Reinecke Christiane, M27
Reinke Herbert, M12
Relvão Calmeiro Margarida, M05
Renard Thomas, M45
Renom Merce, M13
Renzoni Cristina, SS12, SS12
Restifo Giuseppe, M59, M59
Ribeiro Júlia, M19
Ristilammi Per-Markku, M54, M28
Rivas Brito Marysol, SS22
Rizov Vladimir, M41
Rizzi Alessandra, SS07
Roca Joan, M38, M38
Rodger Richard, p.9
Roelens Jonas, M12
Roldão Filipa, M03
Rolf Hannes, M39
Roseau Nathalie, M55
Rossi Piero Ostilio, p.14
Roubal Petr, SS13
Roussel Diane, SS07
Rousset Isabel, M35
Ruepke Joerg, M01
Rulli Sara, M29
Runyon Brent, M55
Russo Krauss Giovanna, M52
Ruud Guttorm, SS12
Ryckewaert Michael, SS12
S
Sá Isabel dos Guimarães, M17, M17
Sagot Better Marcelo, SS13
Sala Giorgia, M51
Salgado Ivone, M47
Sánchez-García Jesús Ángel, SS20
Sansa Renato, M07
Sassi Piero, SS13
Scaletti Adriana, M07
Schanbacher Ansgar, M20
Schepers Marjolein, M09, M19
Schlachetzki Sarah m., M58
Schmidt Sebastian, M27
Schnitter Patricia, M47
Schott Dieter, M19, RT02
Schwarz Anke, M26
Seewang Laila, M19
Sharma Avinash, M26
Shemelina Daria, M29
Shlipchenko Svitlana, M58
Shotton Elizabeth, M06
Shuba Aliaksandr, SS13
Siandou Emilia, M46
Siebert Kathrin, M30
Sigge Erik, M47
Silva Almendra Renata, M46
Simelius Samuli, SS02
Simonton Deborah, M09, M09
Singler Sofia Anja, M24
Siwicki Christopher, M32
Six Clemens, M24
Skalec Aneta, M53
Skjulhaug Marianne, M51, SS28
Slonimsky Nora, M09
Smiley David, M30
Smokvina Marina, M47
Soens Tim, M20
Soffer Jonathan, M36, M36
Solano Fernández-Sordo Álvaro, M08
Solorzano-Telechea Jesus a., SS07
Sonkajärvi Hanna, SS17
Sonkoly Gabor, p.13, M22
Sorensen Andre, RT02, M51
Sotgia Alice, SS03
103
Soussen Claire, SS11
Spânu Anda-Lucia, M43
Spies Paul, M38
Spinei Cristina, RT04
Spizuoco Giovanni, M45
Stabel Peter, p.13, M03, RT03
Stanoeva Elitza, SS13
Steinhoff Anthony, M24
Stemperini Giuseppe, p.14, M38, SS28
Stenou Myrto, M52
Stevens Crawshaw Jane, M60, M60
Steward Jill, M40
Stobart Jon, SS14, M35
Stoetzer Bettina, M26
Story Emily, SS16
Straner Katalin, p.13, M10
Strupp Christoph, M31, M18
Suárez Golán Fernando, M13
Sultson Siim, M31
Suttor Marc, M07
Sverrild Poul, M21, M40
Swan Caroline, M23
Sweet Roey, M13
Szeghyová Blanka, M09
Szilagyi Kinga, M22
Szívós Erika, M31
Szocs Péter Levente, SS17
Szwedo Patrycja, M19, M05
T
Tagesson Göran, M35
Tagliaferri Filomena Viviana, SS08
Tagliazucchi Silvia, M30
Takada Keiko, M03
Takami Jun, M13
Talocci Giorgio, M53
Tanzer Frances, M44
Tapdrup Mortensen Mette, M21
Tavares da Conceição Margarida, M29
Tayob Huda, SS01
Techet Peter, M09
Telle Mikkel, p.13
Temple Nicholas, M32, M32
Temple Theo, M32
Terenzi Pierluigi, SS07
Teuho Tuomas, M48
Theodosis Lefteris, M31
Therborn Goran, M46
Thibault Marianne, M21
Törmä Ilkka, M41
Toscano Javier, M27
Touloumi Olga, M25
104
Tourenc Bastien, M37
Tracada Eleni, M56
Travaglini Carlo, p.13, SS28
Treccozzi Damiana, M15
Treveri Gennari Daniela, SS20, M41
Trevisan Ricardo, SS22
Tritsmans Bart, SS05
Troncone Sara Giulia, SS12
Tsolakis Georgios, M01
Tuori Kaius, SS02
Turco Maria Grazia, M14
Turkoglu Onge Sinem, M05
Turna Nalan, M42
Tveit Miriam, SS10
Tzanaki Evangelina, M50
U
Upart Anatole, M43
V
Vacková Barbora, SS22
Vadelorge Loic, M51
Vaderna Gábor, SS27
Vahtikari Tanja, M22
Valegina Karina, M39
Valenti Salvatore, M19, M06
Van Damme Ilja, M21, M21
Van de Laar Paul, M18, M38
Van der Heijden Manon, p.13, M12
Van Dijck Maarten, M17, M17
Van Hasselt Laura, M25
Van Kleij Nathan, M05
Van Kooten Rogier, M37
Van Oort Thunnis, SS20, M21
Van Oosten Roos, M60
Van Roosmalen Pauline K.m., M47
Van Steensel Arie, M03, M37
Vandenput Ben, M25
Vannieuwenhuyze Bram, SS04
Vanz Jennifer, SS11
Varakas Katja, M14
Vargas Hernando, M53
Vari Alexander, M44, M04
Varriale Roberta, M52
Vazzoler Nicola, SS12
Veizaj Denada, SS13
Vela Castillo Jose, M50
Vella Bonavita Roger, M32
Ventimiglia Gaspare Massimo, M15
Ventura Piero, M59
Verbeke Anke, SS15
Verbruggen Thomas, SS16, SS16
Verlaan Tim, SS18
Vervaeke Ans, SS10
Vincent Mary, M24
Viola Valeria, M54
Visone Massimo, M07
Vitopoulou Athina, M18
Vlachos Angelos, SS09
Vukcevic Jovana, M22, M52
W
Waddell Brodie, M13
Wagner Katarzyna, M29
Wakeman Rosemary, M31
Walton Sarah-Jane, SS23
Wan Sim Hinman, SS08
Watanabe Koichi, M07, M07
Weeda Claire, M60, M60
Weiss Antonia, M40
Welch Guerra Max, SS13
Wells Chloe, M49
Wesener Andreas, M26
Winter Anne, M12, M13
Winton Tracey eve, M53
Withington Phil, M02
Wittich Elke Katharina, SS08
Wubs-Mrozewicz Justyna, SS10
Wyżga, Mateusz, M12
X
Xanthou Maria, M01
Xiao Jing, M32
Xicola Celine, M13
Xydopoulos Ioannis, M01
Y
Yeros Sg, M25
Z
Zámbó Lilla, M22
Zampini Alessia, M50
Žanić Mateo, M49
Zavatti Francesco, M10
Zei Eleftheria, M56
Zein Dalia, RT04
Zeller Olivier, M06, M35
Zerbi Tommaso, M45
Zevallos Belen, RT04
Zhuang Yue, M32
Zinovieva Olga, M04, M45
Zuijderduijn Jaco, SS15, SS15
Zysiak Agata, M25, M31, SS22, M36
BOOK EXHIBIT
BREPOLS PUBLISHER
BRILL
CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS
CROMA – Università Roma Tre
MIT PRESS
PETER LANG
VIELLA EDITRICE
105
NOTES
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Graphic design: Alessio Agresta
Programme booklet layout: Anna Rosa Angiò
Printing: A&C advertising and communication
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