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  1. Rebekka Habermas (3 July 1959 – 21 December 2023) was a German historian and professor of modern history at the University of Göttingen. Habermas made substantial contributions to German social and cultural history of the 19th century. She held visiting positions at universities in Paris, Oxford, Montreal and New York City, among ...

  2. Rebekka Habermas (* 3. Juli 1959 in Frankfurt am Main; † 21. Dezember 2023 in Göttingen) war eine deutsche Historikerin . Inhaltsverzeichnis. 1 Leben und Wirken. 2 Schriften (Auswahl) 3 Literatur. 4 Weblinks. 5 Einzelnachweise. Leben und Wirken. Rebekka Habermas war die Tochter des Philosophen und Soziologen Jürgen Habermas.

  3. Prof. Dr. Rebekka Habermas †. Im Wintersemester 2023/24 und Sommersemester 2024 vertritt Frau PD Dr. Carolin Kosuch den Lehrstuhl von Frau Prof. Dr. Rebekka Habermas. Bitte wenden Sie sich bezüglich aller Angelegenheiten die Lehre betreffend an Frau PD Dr. Carolin Kosuch (via E-Mail: carolin.kosuch@uni-goettingen.de ).

  4. www.uni-goettingen.de. Prof. Rebekka Habermas is Professor for Modern History at the University of Göttingen. Her main fields of research are colonial history, history of knowledge, and religious history. In the field of colonial history she studies German colonialism as entangled history.

  5. 21 de dic. de 2023 · Dezember 2023, 16:29 Uhr Quelle: ZEIT ONLINE, ale. Die Historikerin Rebekka Habermas ist tot. Sie verstarb am heutigen Donnerstag, wie die Georg-August-Universität Göttingen mitteilte. "Wir...

  6. Rebekka Habermas wrote four books, each a milestone in very different fields of research. She wrote about Catholic “pilgrimage and rebellion” in early modern Upper Bavaria, about the “women and men of the middle class” in Nuremberg, and about “thieves on trial” in nineteenth-century Hesse.

  7. Rebekka Habermas. https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199237395.013.0020. Pages. 453–480. Published: 18 September 2012. Split View. Annotate. Cite. Permissions. Share. Abstract. An examination of eligion and religious groups that prevailed in Germany during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries form the essence of this article.