Posthumus Conference 2026 - registration now open! |
| The registration for the Posthumus Conference 2026 is now open! This year's edition will be held at the International Institute of Social History in Amsterdam. The keynote lecture on the conference theme 'Global Capitalism' will be delivered by Professor Sven Beckert, Laird Bell Professor of History at Harvard University. The programme further offers presentations by both Posthumus PhDs and Posthumus fellows as well as a poster presentation by the Posthumus PhDs of cohort 2025. The conference is open to anyone interested, but prior registration is requested. |
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Posthumus Summer School 'Crises and History' (Utrecht, 6-10 July 2026) - deadline registration 1 June 2026 |
After two successful previous editions, the N.W. Posthumus Institute will once more offer the Posthumus Summer School on ‘Crises and History’ on 6-10 July 2026. Dr Jessica Dijkman, associate professor at Utrecht University and Scientific Director of the N.W. Posthumus Institute, will deliver this Summer School, which aims to help students acquire the knowledge and skills to develop their own research ideas on this theme and select and use the methods and sources to carry out the research. Participation is free of charge, participants should register ultimately by 1 June 2026.
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ESTER RDC 2026 to be held at KU Leuven (26-28 October 2026) - deadline abstracts 15 June 2026 |
On 26 to 28 October 2026 the 2026 edition of the ESTER Research Design Course (RDC) will be held. This year’s edition will be hosted by the KU Leuven under the guidance of Maïka De Keyzer. The N.W. Posthumus Institute (as secretariat of the ESTER Network) and the local organisers of KU Leuven Seville welcome abstracts for this RDC. The RDC assists candidates in setting up a high quality and well-designed plan for their dissertation under the guidance of a team of senior researchers and research design specialists whose task it is to provide comments and feedback. Candidates wishing to participate are requested to send in their application and abstract no later than 15 June 2026.
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Posthumus Writing Retreat 2026 (Berne Abbey, 22-27 June 2026) – sign up deadline 10 April 2026 |
| The N.W. Posthumus Institute offers PhDs enrolled in its PhD Training Programme the opportunity to enjoy a Writing Retreat in the peaceful setting of Berne Abbey in Heeswijk-Dinther from 22 tot 27 June 2026. Working on a project from home or in a busy university environment may meet difficulties, such as lack of working space, household obligations or many other distractions. Therefore, the N.W. Posthumus Institute wishes to support its PhD candidates by organizing a Writing Retreat. During this 5-day retreat a group of 8-10 PhDs will get the opportunity to work on a dissertation or paper in progress in a quiet place, away from all the hustle and bustle of everyday life. For this year’s edition, a contribution of 250 euros applies; as this will not be fully cost covering, the N.W. Posthumus Institute will cover the additional amount. Applications should be submitted ultimately by 10 April 2026. |
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Posthumus Book workshop (Leiden, 4 June 2026) - deadline applications 1 May 2026 |
| On 4 June 2026, the N.W. Posthumus Institute offers a book workshop in Leiden. Under the guidance of Viola Müller, postdoc researcher and lecturer at Wageningen UR, the aim of this workshop is to bring together a community of researcher struggling with the same issues in the writing process, like: how to publish for a broader audience, the development of a 'writing style', and how to write a convincing book proposal. The setting will be informal and mainly focus on exchanging thoughts and experiences. Confirmed guest speakers are Janna Coomans (winner Libris Geschiedenis Prijs 2025), Maarten Prak (emeritus Professor and author of several historical books), and Wendy Wauters, art historian and author of several historical books. Participation is free, but limited, and prior application (ultimately by 1 May 2026) is required. |
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Valedictory lecture Professor Marlou Schrover |
| On 6 March 2026, Professor Marlou Schrover, who has been a member of the N.W. Posthumus Institute from the very start, delivered her valedictory lecture at Leiden University, titled 'Verleden, heden en toekomst: hoe we het verleden kunnen gebruiken om het hedendaagse migratiedebat en -beleid te begrijpen, en bij te sturen'. With her retirement, Marlou also ended her board membership with the N.W. Posthumus Institute. The N.W. Posthumus Institute is very grateful to all the efforts Marlou made over the year for the N.W. Posthumus Institute. |
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Posthumus board member Elise van Nederveen Meerkerk appointed as KHMW member |
Recently, the Koninklijke Hollandsche Maatschappij der Wetenschappen (KHMW; The Royal Holland Society of Sciences and Humanities) has appointed its new members, among whom Elise van Nederveen Meerkerk, Professor of Economic and Social History at Utrecht University and member of the General Board and Executive Committee of the N.W. Posthumus Institute. New members to the KHMW are selected annually and are based on nominations by fellow-scientists. The N.W. Posthumus Institute congratulates Elise with this appointment!
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Project ‘Chains of the Past’ receives Open Science Infrastructure Grant from Open Science NL; several Posthumus fellows involved |
| Open Science NL recently awarded the project ‘Chains of the Past: Open Infrastructure for the Global History of Dutch Slavery and Slave Trade’ with an Open Science Infrastructure Grant of 1.5 million euros. In this project, jointly organised by Radboud University, the International Institute of Social History (IISG) and the Royal Netherlands Institute of Southeast Asian and Caribbean Studies (KITLV) in collaboration with a large number of genealogical and heritage organisations, the construction of an online infrastructure that will make archives on the history of Dutch Atlantic and Asian slavery searchable has started. This is achieved by identifying and linking information about the lives of enslaved people from colonial archives. Most of the applicants (Matthias Rosenbaum-Feldbrügge (project leader), Coen van Galen (both Radboud University), Matthias van Rossum, Richard Zijdeman, Rick Mourits, and Filipa Ribeiro da Silva (all IISG), and Esther Captain (KITLV)) are Posthumus fellows. The N.W. Posthumus Institute congratulates all with obtaining this grant. |
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Posthumus alumni and fellows awarded Open eScience Call 2025 funding for Rags2Riches project |
In the most recent funding round, the netherlands eScience center awarded an in-kind contribution worth up to 500,000 euros to the project ‘From rags to riches: A pipeline for processing semi-structured handwritten texts’ (Rags2Riches) as a result of the Open eScience Call 2025. The team involved in this project consists of Dr Auke Rijpma, Dr Bas Machielsen, and Dr Bram van Besouw (all Utrecht University), Dr Michail Moatsos (Maastricht University), Dr Ruben Peeters (University of Antwerp), and Dr Amaury de Vicq (University of Groningen), all Posthumus alumni and/or fellows. Rags2Riches will make it possible to analyse handwritten inheritance tax records (the so-called Memories van Successie), at a very large scale: the goal is to cover everyone in the Netherlands who died between roughly the 1880s and the late 1920s, with a clear motivation to extend this to the post-WWII period. The N.W. Posthumus Institute congratulates the research team for receiving this award!
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Introducing: Vigyan Ratnoo new Research Network Coordinator ‘Societies in Context: Interactions between humans and rural-urban environments’ |
| The N.W. Posthumus Institute is happy to introduce Vigyan Ratnoo as new Coordinator for the Research Network ‘Societies in Context: Interactions between humans and rural-urban environments’. Vigyan will be coordinating this network in close cooperation with fellow-coordinator Kate Frederick. Dr Vigyan Ratnoo is Assistant Professor at Utrecht University and is an economic historian with broad interests in long run development, globalization and colonialism. Vigyan's research focuses on the role and interplay of geography and institutions in the long run development of India, using historical data from the colonial period and GIS mapping to analyse patterns of development across the subcontinent. The N.W. Posthumus Institute welcomes Vigyan as new coordinator! |
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Change in General Board representatives VUB |
| Recently, there have been some changes in the General Board of the N.W. Posthumus Institute. Because of her retirement, Professor Marlou Schrover also retired from the General Board as well as from the Executive Committee of the N.W. Posthumus Institute. Her place as representative of Leiden University in the General Board has now been taken by Professor Manon van der Heijden, her position as member of the Executive Committee has now been taken by Professor Elise van Nederveen Meerkerk. After serving several years as member of the Executive Committee, Professor Thijs Lambrecht decided to step down; he has found Professor Wouter Ryckbosch willing to become member of the Executive Committee, which appointment was approved by the General Board in its most recent meeting. The N.W. Posthumus Institute thanks Marlou and Thijs for all their efforts on behalf of the N.W. Posthumus Institute and welcomes their successors. |
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Book Launch 'Lives, Land, and Labour' by Luc Bulten (Utrecht, 15 April 2026) – registration requested |
| On 15 April 2026, the publication 'Lives, Land, and Labour: A Social History of Eigtheenth-Century Sri Lanka', authored by Posthumus alumnus and fellow Luc Bulten will be launched at the Utrecht University Hall (Academiegebouw) in Utrecht. This event is supported by both the Stichting Nederland-Sri Lanka and the N.W. Posthumus Institute. This book forms part of the book series 'European Expansion and Indigenous Response' of Brill Editors and focuses on the 'thombos', a rather unique collection of eighteenth-century land and population registers detailing the lives lived, lands held, and labour provided by tens of thousands of people inhabiting the coastal regions of Sri Lanka that were colonised by the Dutch East India Company. By using this source, Luc demonstrates how both European expansionism and local agency reciprocally affected the ways such social realities were shaped. Next to a presentation by the author, Posthumus fellows will comment on this publication. Prior registration requested. |
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Seminar and Workshop ‘Trust, institutions and capitalism in early modern Europe’ (Nijmegen, 23-24 April 2026) – keynote by Professor Craig Muldrew – deadline abstracts 6 March 2026 |
| On Thursday 23 April and Friday 24 April 2026, the section Economic, Social and Demographic History of Radboud University, supported by the N.W. Posthumus Institute, will host the international seminar and workshop on 'Trust, institutions, and capitalism in early modern Europe'. The keynote lecture at this event will be delivered by Professor Craig Muldrew (University of Cambridge), where he will present his new book 'The Capitalist Self: the Social Origins of Financial Capitalism in Early Modern Britain'. Registration for the keynote lecture on 23 April is still open, the deadline for applying for the workshop on 24 April however has passed, |
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RIAS-Posthumus PhD Workshop 'From Research to Publication' (Middelburg, 8 May 2026) – deadline 1 May 2026 |
The Roosevelt Institute for American Studies (RIAS) and the research network ‘Societies in Context’ of the Posthumus Institute (research network) invite PhD candidates to an afternoon workshop focused on a core question of doctoral life: how to build and use scholarly networks to strengthen your research and translate it into publishable work. This seminar is designed for researchers working on (or adjacent to) social, labor, and environmental history, and it will combine practical discussion, methodological reflection, and concrete publishing guidance. Featured speaker will be Professor Marc Rodriguez (Portland State University), editor of the Pacific Historical Review and a leading scholar of Mexican American/Chicanx history, social movements, migration, and US legal history. Applicants are asked to submit their application ultimately 1 May 2026.
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Call for papers Graduate Seminar ‘Early modern Caribbean and Atlantic slavery and emancipation’ (Leiden, 22 October 2026 – deadline 30 March 2026 |
| Posthumus fellows Dr Ramona Négron and Dr Karwan Fatah-Black welcome graduate students working on topics related to early modern Caribbean and Atlantic slavery and emancipation to participate in a one-day graduate seminar on 22 October 2026 at the KITLV/Royal Netherlands Institute of Southeast Asian and Caribbean Studies in Leiden, The Netherlands. The graduate workshop offers the opportunity for PhD candidates at different stages of their projects to present a chapter, an article draft, or research paper in a small and specialized setting. Participants can expect to receive constructive feedback from peers and invited senior scholars in the field. Graduate students wanting to participate should send their 1-page abstract ultimately 30 March 2026 by e-mail to Ramona Négron. This seminar is organized in tandem with the workshop Reinterpreting the Caribbean age of revolutions: Slave revolts, their non-slave participants and proto-citizenship, to be held at the KITLV the next day, 23 October 2026. |
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Call for papers Workshop ‘Reinterpreting the Caribbean age of revolutions’ (Leiden, 23 October 2026) – deadline 30 March 2026 |
| Posthumus fellows Dr Ramona Négron and Dr Karwan Fatah-Black invite research paper proposals for the workshop ‘Reinterpreting the Caribbean age of revolutions: Slave revolts, their non-slave participants and proto-citizenship’, to be held on 23 October 2026 at the KITLV/Royal Netherlands Institute of Southeast Asian and Caribbean Studies in Leiden. This workshop aims to explore why so many of the leaders and participants in so-called slave revolts were not enslaved themselves. Those who would like to present should send a 1-page abstract ultimately 30 March 2026. This workshop will be in tandem with the Graduate Seminar ‘Early modern Caribbean and Atlantic slavery and emancipation’ on the preceding day, 22 October 2026. |
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Lecture Professor Geertje Mak 'A colonialism of good intentions' (Nijmegen, 1 April 2026) – registration requested |
| On 1 April 2026, Geertje Mak, History Pofessor at the University of Amsterdam and senior researcher at KNAW-NL-Lab, will talk about the open access-book Geertje authored on Dutch missionary couples in Papua New Guinea, late 19th and early 20th centuries ('Huishouden in Nieuw-Guinea. Zending en het kolonialisme van goede bedoelingen' Walburg Pers 2024). The lecture will take place in room EOS 01.150 of the Elinor Ostrom Building of the Radboud University in Nijmegen. The talk will be in English. Attendance is free of charge, prior registration is however requested. |
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Open-access book publication by Posthumus fellow Gijs Dreijer |
Palgrave Macmillan recently published a new open-access publication, authored by Posthumus fellow Dr Gijs Dreijers, 'Private Entrepreneurship and European Imperialism: Dutch Entrepreneurs in the Scramble for Africa, 1830s-1910s' in the Palgrave Studies in Economic History book series. In this book, Gijs Dreijer investigates why and how nineteenth-century Dutch entrepreneurs from the port city of Rotterdam invested significant resources in West and West Central Africa between the 1830s and the 1910s. It demonstrates the trans-national nature of colonial investments in the Scramble for Africa, highlighting the crucial role Dutch entrepreneurs played in trade, production and investment in empires across West and West Central Africa (the Congo Free State, French Congo and Portuguese Angola). The book aims to rethink the Dutch role in European imperialism more broadly and its repercussions in the present day.
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Call for Proposals to organise 2026 ESEH Summer School in Environmental History – EXTENDED deadline 31 March 2026 |
The European Society for Environmental History (ESEH) welcomes proposals for organising the 2026 ESEH Summer School in Environmental History. The ESEH Summer School is an annual gathering of post-graduate and early-career researchers, led by academics in the field of environmental history. Proposals for 2026 may focus on any theme in environmental history, including but not limited to energy histories, water histories, forest and land-use histories, environmental knowledge and expertise, climate histories, or multispecies histories. Applicants for organising the 2026 ESEH Summer School in Environmental History should apply ultimately by 31 March 2026 (extended deadline).
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Workshop and Conference ‘Sowing the Seeds VIII’ (London, UK, 5-6 November 2026) – deadline 31 March 2026 |
| On 5 and 6 November, the Department of Economic History of the London School of Economics (LSE) and the Centre for Late Antique and Medieval Studies will jointly organise the workshop ‘Swoing the Seeds VIII’; this workshop will also act as the 13th Annual Conference of the Research Group for Late Medieval Economic History. The first day will be hosted at the premises of LSE, the second day will take place at King’s College in London. The organisers aim to bridge generalist history departments and specialised economic history programs, to foster interdisciplinary conversation and support innovative (and collaborative) scholarship. Proposals (300 words max.) for attending this conference should be submitted ultimately by 31 March 2026. |
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Call for paper and session proposals ESSHC 2027 Conference (Lyon, France, 21-24 April 2027) – deadline 15 April 2026 |
The International Institute of Social History (IISH), in cooperation with the École normale supérieure de Lyon (ENS Lyon), welcomes paper and session proposals for the 16th edition of the European Social Science History Conference (ESSHC 2027), to be held at ENS Lyon on 21-24 April 2027. The aim of the ESSHC is bringing together scholars interested in explaining historical phenomena using the methods of the social sciences. The conference welcomes papers and sessions on any historical topic and any historical period and is organised in 28 thematic networks. Proposals should be submitted ultimately 15 April 2026 via the dedicated platform of the IISH.
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Call for abstracts Conference 'Households as Coercive Labour Regimes' (Bonn, Germany, 15-17 January 2027) – deadline abstracts 15 April 2026 |
| On 15 and 16 January 2027, the international conference ‘Households as Coercive Labour Regimes II’ will be jointly organised by the Bonn Center for Dependency and Slavery Studies (BCDSS) of the University of Bonn and the International Institute of Social History (IISH). The organisers aim to cross the usual historiographical divides between modern and pre-modern and would like to inquire into the various forms, functions, developments, justifications and changes of the different types of coerced labour can be identified in households. Participants who want to participate, should submit an abstract ultimately by 15 April 2026. |
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Workshop ‘From Matrimonial Ads to Dating Apps: Unraveling the Partnering Market’ (Barcelona, Spain, 4-6 June 2026) – deadline abstracts 15 April 2026 |
| The organisers of the Workshop ‘From Matrimonial Ads to Dating Apps: Unraveling the Partnering Market’ call for paper abstracts for this workshop, to be held on 4 and 5 June at the Center for Demographic Studies in Barcelona, Spain. This call for papers invites scholars from all disciplines to explore how partnering markets operate across diverse contexts and the far-reaching consequences of these dynamics, including their impact on relationship stability, social mobility, health, and family structures. Participants should submit a paper proposal abstract (300-350 words max.) aligned with the workshop’s objectives ultimately by 15 April 2026. |
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KNAW Trailblazers Fund for early-career first-generation academics - deadline 29 April 2026 |
| The Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences (KNAW) has launched a call for applications for the KNAW Trailblazers Fund. The purpose of the Fund is to support early-career first-generation academics (PhD candidates in the final 2 years, assistant professors without a permanent position, and postdoc researchers within the first three years after their promotion) in the Kingdom of the Netherlands and retain them for academia. Researchers are considered to be first-generation academics if neither of the parents of the academic hold a university degree or the researcher has a refugee background and has to rebuild their scientific/scholarly career in the Netherlands from scratch. The grants form part of the Adriana Hoogerbrugge legacy and consist of a sum of 3,000-5,000 euros (for PhDs) or 5,000-10,000 euros (assistant professors and postdocs). Applications for either of these grants should be submitted ultimately 29 April 2026. |
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Call for papers Conference ‘Bridging Boundaries: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on the Environmental History of the Low Countries' (Ghent, 3-4 December 2026) – deadline 30 April 2026 |
On 3 and 4 December 2026, Ghent University will host the conference, ‘Bridging Boundaries: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on the Environmental History of the Low Countries’. The conference is a collaboration between researchers on the medieval and (early) modern Low Countries and the Roman Society Research Center. The conference wants to encourage the exchange of recent research, ongoing projects, and current debates between scholars working in different disciplines, including environmental history, environmental archaeology, historical ecology, and historical geography. It invites contributions that study environmental change in the Low Countries from Antiquity to modern times. Deadline for abstracts is 30 April 2026.
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Call for papers 5th Doctoral School in Medieval Economic History (Valencia, Spain, 29 June-1 July 2026) – deadline 30 April 2026 |
| The research group Cultures i Societats de l’Edat Mitjana (CiSEM) at the University of Valencia is organizing the 5th Doctoral School in Medieval Economic History, to be held from 29 June to 1 July 2026. In this fifth edition, the School will focus on ‘Taxation and State Building in the Middle Ages’. The Doctoral School will address the most recent research on public finances, taxation, and state building, with particular attention to the theoretical and methodological training of doctoral candidates and early career researchers. Keynote lectures will be delivered by Wim Blockmans (Emeritus Professor at Leiden University), Leonor Freire Costa (Professor at the Universidade de Lisboa) and Armand Jamme (Professor at the Centre national de la recherche scientifique). PhD students and early-career researchers interested in the topic are invited to submit their proposals ultimately by 30 April 2026. |
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Bijeenkomsten Werkgroep Stadsgeschiedenis (Leiden, 4 juni & Roermond, 12 juni 2026) |
| ~ because of scope in Dutch only ~ De Werkgroep Stadsgeschiedenis organiseert in juni twee bijeenkomsten. Op donderdag 4 juni 2026 is er van 9:30 tot 12:30 uur in Leiden een bijeenkomst over ‘Nieuw onderzoek naar stadswording in de middeleeuwen en vroegmoderne tijd’. Op vrijdag 12 juni 2026 vindt er vanaf 10:30 uur een stadswandeling plaats in Roermond, om 13:00 uur gevplgd door voordrachten over het thema ‘Stadswording in Limburg en het Overkwartier van Gelre: 1000 jaar steden- en huizenbouw’. |
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PhD Defence Posthumus alumna Alessandra De Mulder (University of Antwerp, 27 March 2026) |
| On 27 March 2026, Posthumus alumna Alessandra De Mulder will defend the thesis ‘Embedding a consumer revolution. Shifting value constructions and mental frameworks in auction advertisements in the United Kingdom, c.1730-1830’ at the University of Antwerp. Supervisors are Professor Bruno Blondé and Professor Bert De Munck (both University of Antwerp). The N.W. Posthumus Institute wishes Alessandra a successful defence! |
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Congratulations to our PhDs recently promoted! |
Dr Yannis Skalli-Housseini (Vrije Universiteit Brussel) on the thesis ‘Fiscal policy and fairness in the 18th-century Austrian Netherlands’. Supervisors: Professor Wouter Ryckbosch (Ghent University) and Dr Klaas Van Gelder (VUB). (11 March).
Dr Rosa Kösters (Leiden University/IISH) on the thesis ‘How to Self-Organise? Insight from Workers at Albert Heijn (Ahold) and Unox (Unilever) in the Netherlands, 1960–2020’ at Leiden University. Supervisors: Professor Leo Lucassen (Leiden University & IISH) and Professor Matthias van Rossum (Radboud University). (26 March). |
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Posthumus Conference 2026 (Amsterdam, 21-22 May 2026) – registration open now
Call for papers Graduate Seminar ‘Early modern Caribbean and Atlantic slavery and emancipation’ (Leiden, 22 October 2026) – deadline abstracts 30 March 2026
Call for papers Workshop ‘Reinterpreting the Caribbean age of revolutions’ (Leiden, 23 October 2026) – deadline abstracts 30 March 2026
Call for abstracts Workshop and Conference ‘Sowing the Seeds VIII’ (London, UK, 5-6 Nov 2026) – deadline 31 March 2026
Call for Papers and Panels 2026 NNI Conference ‘New Netherland and the World’ (Albany, USA, 7-8 November 2026) – deadline 1 April 2026
Call for abstracts Conference 'Households as Coercive Labour Regimes' (Bonn, Germany, 15-17 January 2027) – deadline abstracts 15 April 2026
Call for abstracts Workshop ‘From Matrimonial Ads to Dating Apps: Unraveling the Partnering Market’ – deadline 15 April 2026
Call for applications KNAW Trailblazers Fund for early-career first-generation academics – deadline 29 April 2026
Call for papers Conference ‘Bridging Boundaries: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on the Environmental History of the Low Countries’ (Ghent, Belgium, 3-4 December 2026) – deadline 30 April 2026
Call for papers 5th Doctoral School in Medieval Economic History (Valencia, Spain, 29 June-1 July 2026) – deadline 30 April 2026
Call for applications RIAS-Posthumus PhD Workshop 'From Research to Publication' (Middelburg, 8 May 2026) – deadline 1 May 2026
Posthumus Summer School 2026 ‘Crises and History’ – deadline registration 1 June 2026
Call for abstracts ESTER RDC 2026 (KU Leuven, Belgium, 24-28 October 2026) – deadline abstracts 15 June 2026
Jubilee competition Royal Frisian Society for History and Culture (KFG) 2027 – deadline 31 December 2026 |
Already following us on Mastodon? |
As of 1 March 2024, the N.W. Posthumus Institute has started using Mastodon as social medium, following the decision to stop using X, formerly known as Twitter, actively for new announcements, as a result of the current developments surrounding the X platform. Do sign up with Mastodon and follow our account to keep updated frequently with new items and developments. Join us on Mastodon!
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Credits images: Picture Posthumus Conference item: The Bosses of the Senate, cartoon by Joseph Keppler, first published in the magazine Puck on 23 January 1889. Public Domain. Image Posthumus book workshop: The passion of creation, painting by Leonid Pasternak. Public Domain. Photo Geertje Mak: made by Dick Gilissen. |
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