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International Conference
Balkan Worlds II:
Balkan Perceptions of War and Revolution
in the Long Nineteenth Century (1789-1918)
Program
Dept. of Balkan, Slavic and Oriental Studies,
University of Macedonia, Thessaloniki, November 27-29, 2014
Thursday, November 27, 2014
Registration: 16.00-17.00
Room A (Conference Hall, first floor)
1st session Towards the Revolution:
the French Revolution and its impact to the Balkan periphery
Chair: Dimitris Stamatopoulos
17.00-17.20 Vasilis Molos, Visiting Assistant Professor in History, NYU Abu Dhabi
“Contextualizing the Writings of Iosipos Moisiodax and Dimitrios Katartzis: A
Reassessment of the Influence of the Orlov Revolt on Greek Political Thought”
17.20-17.40 Dr. Momir Samardžić, Associate Profesor at the Faculty of Philosophy, University of
Novi Sad, Serbia
“Serbs from the Habsburg Monarchy, Serbian Revolution, and the beginning of the
nation-building process”
17.40-18.00 Alexandra Sfoini, Associate Researcher, Institute for Historical Research, The
National Hellenic Research Foundation, (I.H.R/N.H.R.F.)
“Greek perceptions of the French Revolution”
18.00-18.20 Charalampos Minaoglou, PhD in Early Modern and Modern Greek History,
University of Athens
“A Phanariot dragoman’s diary on the French Revolution and the Austro-Russo-
Ottoman War (1791)”
18.20-18.40 Discussion
Room B (Tele-education Hall, first floor)
1st session
Napoleonic Wars and Revolutionary conditions
Chair: Nicole Imming
17.00-17.20 Anastasia Stouraiti, Lecturer in Early Modern History at Goldsmiths, University of
London and
Alexander Kazamias, Senior Lecturer in Politics at, Coventry University
“The Napoleonic Wars and the Hellenic Nomarchy: Redefining republican liberty in
the face of French imperialism”
17.20-17.40 B. Harun Küçük, Assistant Professor, Department of History and Sociology of
Science, University of Pennsylvania
“Between Revolution and War: Science, Social Order and the “Coldness” between
Russia and the Ottoman Empire in the Eighteenth Century”
17.40-18.00 Nicholas C. Pappas, Professor, Department of History, Sam Houston State University
“European Officers and the Greco-Albanian Forces on the Ionian Islands, 1798-1814:
A Comparison of Command and Tactics”
18.00-18.20 Harris Mylonas, Assistant Professor, George Washington University & Elpida Vogli,
Assistant Professor, Department of History and Ethnology at the Democritus University
of Thrace
“A National Revolt or a Nation-Building Revolution?”
18.20-18.40 Discussion
18.40-19.00
Ceremonial Hall (ground level)
Greetings
Prof. A. Zapranis, Rector of the University of Macedonia
Prof. K. Velentzas, Dean of the School of Economic and Regional Studies
Prof. D. Kyrkilis, President of the Department of Balkan, Slavic and Oriental Studies
Prof. T.Kolias, General Secretary of the Greek Commission of Association
Internationale d'Etudes du Sud-Est Europeen
19.00-19.20 Introduction
Dimitris Stamatopoulos, associate professor, University of Macedonia,
Thessaloniki
“War and Revolution: the Eastern Question revisited”
19.20-20.20 Keynote speech
Jonathan Israel, Professor, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton
“The Revolutionary and Napoleonic Era as a decisive Transition for
Europe (1789-1815)”
Friday, November 28, 2014
Room A (Conference Hall, first floor)
1st session
The Greek Revolution of 1821
Chair: Molly Green
9.00-9.20 Konstantina Zanou, Université Paris-Est Créteil , Val de Marne
“Becoming an exile: Mario Pieri and the Greek Revolution from the Italian shores”
9.20-9.40 Panagiotis Savorianakis, Ph.D. at the University of Athens in Modern Greek History
“War Affairs and the political elites: the Greek War for Independence in the work of P.
Rodios”
9.40-10.00 Vicky Karafoulidou, Ph.D. in History at the University of Aegean, Department of
Social Anthropology and History
“Sismonde de Sismondi’s views on the Greek War of Independence”
10.00-10.20 Jacek Raszewski, Assistant professor, Faculty of “Artes Liberales”, University of
Warsaw
“The legacy of 1821. Revolution, uprising and war in the works of Neoklis Kazazis and
Georgios Skliros”
10.20-10.40 Dilek Özkan, Ph.D Candidate, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens
“‘Yunan İhtilali’ bizim söyleyeceğimiz şey değildir” [‘Greek Revolution’ is not
something we would say]: An Ottoman encounter of the Greek Revolution, the
discussions of the first Ottoman-Greek border, 1830-1832.
10.40-11.00 Discussion
Room B (Tele-education Hall, first floor)
1st session
The post-1815 era: Balkan Revolutions
Chair: B. Harun Küçük
9.00-9.20 Lorenzo Santoro, assistant professor, Università della Calabria
“War and revolution in the Balkan environment”
9.20-9.40 Stella Ghervas, CES Harvard University / MSHA Bordeaux
“The Balkans after the Congress of Vienna: From the ‘Orthodox Commonwealth’ to
the Crimean War”
9.40-10.00 Mag. Dennis Dierks, Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena, Lehrstuhl für Osteuropäische
Geschichte, Historisches Institut
“The Piedmont of the Balkans revisited. The French Revolution and the Italian
Risorgimento as role models for 19th century Serb nationalism”
10.00-10.20 Dr. Victor Rizescu, Associate Professor, University of Bucharest, Department of
Political Science
“Gentry politics and revolutionary liberalism: two departures of Romanian ideological
development”
10.20-10.40 Dr. Nikolay Aretov, Professor, Institute for Literature, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences
“Forging and shifting of the notions of revolution and war: Bulgarian case”
10.40-11.00 Discussion
11.00-11.30 Coffee break
Room A (Conference Hall, first floor)
2nd session
The radicalization of the Balkan revolutionaries: 1848
Chair: Konstantina Zanou
11.30-11.50 Dr. Ariadni Moutafidou, Adjunct Professor, Hellenic Open University
“Revolution and Revolutionaries in mid-19th century Greece”
11.50-12.10 Eduard – Nicolae Popa, MA, Faculty of History, University of Bucharest
“An Ottoman view on the 1859 Union between Moldavia and Wallachia”
12.10-12.30 Iouliani Vroutsi, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens
“ War and Revolution in Neohellenic chronografima: From “the spring of Nations” to
the Anglo-French occupation of Piraeus in “Erga kai Hmerai” (“Works and Days”) of
Konstantinos Pop”
12.30-12.50 Elli Lemonidou, Assistant Professor of Modern and Contemporary History, University
of Patras
“Continuities, Ruptures, Innovations: The Versatile Attitudes of Greek Intellectuals,
from the Great Idea to the Great War”
12.50-13.10 Leonidas Rados, Ph.D. "A.D. Xenopol" History Institute, Iasi, Romania
“The 1848 Revolution and the ideological changes in Romania. Reflections on the
development of the anti-Phanariote discourse during the second half of the 19th century”
13.10-13.20 Discussion
Room B (Tele-education Hall, first floor)
2nd session
The Eastern Crisis: from the 1871 Commune to the dismantling of the Ottoman Balkans
Chair: Stella Ghervas
11.30-11.50 Pandeleimon Hionidis, Phd, London School of Economics
“ἐ γένοντο πάντοτε σκληροί πρός τούς Ἕλληνας
[they always were harsh with the Greeks].
Greek readings of British policy on the Eastern Question, 1876 – 1878”
11.50-12.10 Ada Dialla, Assistant Professor, Athens Schools of Fine Arts
“War and Revolution in the Ottoman Balkans: A view from the Russian Empire”
12.10-12.30 Dessislava Lilova, Associate Professor at Sofia University “St. Kliment Ohridski”
“The Russo-Turkish war (1877-1879) and the Formation of the Bulgarian Territorial
Identity”
12.30-12.50 Klara Volarić, external associate of “Istanbul Memories” research project, Orient
Institute in Istanbul
“Balkan perceptions of war and revolution: Austria-Hungarian occupation of Bosnia and
Herzegovina experienced by Croatian intellectual Eugen Kumičić”
12.50-13.10 Elias G. Skoulidas, Assistant Professor in Modern Balkan History, Epirus Institute of
Technology, Greece
“Wars in the Balkans: Concepts and Utopias of Greek Diplomats in the Eastern Crisis
(1875-78/81) Referring to the Montenegrins and the Albanians”
13.10.13.20 Discussion
Room A (Conference Hall, first floor)
13.10-13.50 Keynote Speech
Molly Green, Professor, Princeton University: “War and Revolution in the Balkans: the Premodern Perspective”
14.00-16.00 Lunch
Friday, November 28, 2014
Room A (Conference Hall, first floor)
3rd session
War and Militarization
Chair: Tom Gallant
16.00-16.20 Antoaneta Petkova, PhD candidate, Sofia University “St. Kliment Ohridski”
“Military Reforms as Diplomatic Bargaining Chip. French-Ottoman Relations at the End
of the Eighteenth Century”.
16.20-16.40 Assia Nakova Ph.D. candidate, Princeton University
“A revaluation of Bulgarian military history of the second part of the nineteenth century
in the light of new research: Petko Voivoda”.
16.40-17.00 Evguenia Davidova, Associate Professor, Portland State University
“Military Doctors in Service of the Nation-State: War Experience and Militarization of
Society in the Case of Bulgaria (1870s-1920s)”
17.00-17.20 Svetlana Antova, PhD – Assist. Prof. IEFEM - BAS
“The Role of 15th Infantry Lom Regiment in the Cultural and Social life of
Belogradchik’s Border zone”
17.20-17.40 Discussion
Room B (Tele-education Hall, first floor)
3rd session
Visualization and Media-tion of the Violence
Chair: Rossitsa Gradeva
16.00-16.20 Stefka Hristova, Assistant Professor of Digital Media, Michigan Technological
University
“Bulgaria in Photography of the Crimean War: Military and Militia”.
16.20-16.40 Dobrinka Parusheva, University of Plovdiv / Institute of Balkan Studies (BAS), Sofia)
“Visual Representations of Uprisings, Revolutions and Wars in Bulgarian Illustrated
Press at the End of the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Century”.
16.40-17.00 Nicole Immig, Postdoctoral Researcher, Historical Department, Friedrich-Schiller-
Universität Jena/Germany
“Visualizing the “enemy” in times of war: images, perceptions and stereotypes in Greek
caricatures”
17.00-17.20 Dr. Kisanovici (Ignat) Ioana Elena, Postdoctoral Student, Romanian Academy
“Censorship in the Romanian press of Transylvania during First World War: General
perspective”
17.20-17.40 Discussion
17.40-18.00 Coffee break
Friday, November 28, 2014
Room A (Conference Hall, first floor)
4th Session
War and Revolution:
the Religion perspective
Chair: Spyros Sfetas
18.00-18.20 Professor Margarita Karamihova, Dr. Habill., Department of Early-modern and
Modern Bulgarian History, Faculty of History, St. Cyril and St. Methodius University
of Veliko Turnovo
“The Church has to find it's lost children!” (Forced Conversion During a War)”.
18.20-18.40 Radoslav Spasov, PhD – Sofia University
“The Crimean War (1853-1856), the Bulgarian Church question and formation of the
Bulgarian national identity”
18.40-19.00 Milena B. Methodieva, assistant professor, Department of History, University of
Toronto
“Memories of a War: the Russo-Ottoman War of 1877-78 in Bulgarian and Ottoman
Accounts, and the Memory of Balkan Muslims”
19.00-19.20 Iskra Manolova Dobreva, PhD. Candidate, Sofia University St. Kliment Ohridski
“First Hand Description of the Consequences of the Russian-Turkish War 1877-1878
for Sephardic Community”
19.20-19.40 Discussion
Room B (Tele-education Hall, first floor)
4th Session
War and Revolution:
the Literature perspective
Chair: Evguenia Davidova
18.00-18.20 Ioannis Karachristos, Associate Researcher, Hellenic Folklore Research Centre,
Academy of Athens, Greece
“Commemorating” violence through folk songs: Violence as part of the vernacular
memory of the Greek revolution (1821)”
18.20-18.40 Raymond Detrez, Professor, Ghent University/Catholic University of Leuven
“From religious to nationalist violence in two Greek poems:
O Armatolos and Skenderbeis by Grigor Părličev (Grigorios Stavridhis)”
18.40-19.00 Maro Kalantzopoulou, PhD candidate, Université Paris III - Sorbonne Nouvelle
και Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales (EHESS)
“War and Revolution in Nineteenth-century Balkan Literature. Representation of the
National Resurrection in Dimitrios Vikelas's "Loukis Laras" and Ivan Vazov's "Under
the Yoke"”
19.00-19.20 Madeleine Elfenbein, Ph.D. Candidate, University of Chicago
“For a Liberal Islamic Empire: Teodor Kasap and the Greek Ottoman Response to
Separatism”
19.20-19.40 Discussion
Room A (Conference Hall, first floor)
19.40-20.30 Keynote Speech
Rossitsa Gradeva, Professor, American University, Sofia:
“Rebellion and Secession at a Time of Revolution and War: The Slavic Parts of the
Ottoman Balkans, late 18th-early 19th century”
Saturday, November 29, 2014
Room A (Conference Hall, first floor)
1st session
War and the State
Chair: Hakan Yavuz
9.00-9.20 Dr Emmanouil Chalkiadakis (U.E.A.H.C.) temporary lecturer in History at the
Patriarchal University Ecclesiastical Academy of Crete (P.U.E.A.C.)
“Eleftherios Venizelos’ perceptions of War and Revolution, 1897-1919”
9.20-9.40 Petko St. Petkov, Professor, Department of Early-modern and Modern Bulgarian
History, Faculty of History, St. Cyril and St. Methodius University of Veliko Turnovo
“The wars as border: Landmarks of the Modern Bulgarian History”
9.40-10.00 Georgia Kouta, Graduate Teaching Assistant, Doctoral Researcher in Modern History,
History Department & Centre for Hellenic Studies, King's College London
“The Anglo-Hellenic League and the articulation of Balkan irredentism 1913-1914”
10.00-10.20 Prof. As. Dr. Mark Marku, Department of Journalism and Communication Tirana
University
“The alternatives of war and revolution in the Albanian movement for Independence:
the disruption of the national elite”
10.20-10.40 Discussion
Room B (Tele-education Hall, first floor)
1st session
War and Memory
Chair: A. Warren Dockter
9.00-9.20 Igor Despot, PhD, Independent researcher, Zagreb, Croatia
“Dimitar Vlahov, Bulgarian or Macedonian Nationalist, Revolutionary or just
Progressive Man”
9.20-9.40 Spyridon Sfetas, Associate Professor for Modern and Contemporary Balkan History,
Aristotle University of Thessaloniki
“The impact of the Sarajevo assassination in Greece”
9.40-10.00 Alma Jeftić, Senior Assistant MA, Psychology Program, Faculty of Arts and Social
Sciences, International University of Sarajevo
“The Memory of the War: the assassination of Franz Ferdinand, historical
representations and identity transformation”
10.00-10.20 Milos Vojinovic, MA, Teaching Assistant, University of Belgrade
“Young Bosnia and Sarajevo Assassination in the Context of 19th Century European
Revolutionary Traditions”
10.20-10.40 Discussion
10.40-11.00 Coffee break
Saturday, November 29, 2014
Room A (Conference Hall, first floor)
2nd session
Interwar reconstructions of the memory of War and Revolution
Chair: Dobrinka Parusheva
11.00-11.20 Emilia Salvanou, PhD, University of Athens and Post-doctoral student, University of
Peloponnese
“Revolution, War and teleological narratives of history: Approaches of the Greek
National Revolution during the Interwar”
11.20-11.40 Dr Dimitris P. Sotiropoulos, Assistant Professor of Contemporary History & Politics,
The Higher Technological Institute of Peloponnese
“Three “revolutions”, never taking place in the Greek interwar period: Cultural wars
and the Great Idea, 1890-1916”
11.40-12.00 Vassilios Bogiatzis, PhD in History and Philosophy of Technology and Science from
National Technical University of Athens and National and Kapodistrean University of
Athens
“Future Will Be Determined by the Initiatives Which Will Seize the War Generation”:
Remembrances of the Great War in the Greek Interwar Public Sphere”
12.00-12.20 Dr. K. Giakoumis, Professor, Dr. I. Kalemaj, E. Haxhi, K. Kavaja, University of New
York Tirana
“The Politics & Pragmatics of Representation of War & Revolution In History School
Textbooks of Albania from National Awakening to 1939”
12.20-12.50 Discussion
Room B (Tele-education Hall, first floor)
2nd session
WWI: the death of the Empires
Chair: Basil Gounaris
11.00-11.20 Dr. Warren Dockter, Junior Research Fellow, University of Cambridge
“Competing Romantic Notions: Winston Churchill, Lloyd George and the Death of the
Ottoman Empire”
11.20-11.40 L. A. Gerd, Professor, Russian Academy of Science
“Projects of “Russian Constantinople” in 1915”
11.40-12.00 Mehmet Arısan, assistant professor, Istanbul University
“The Great War and The Manifestation(s) of Loss: The Case of Armenian and Turkish
Nationalisms”
12.00-12.20 Banu Turnaoğlu, Research Assistant, PhD student in Politics and International Studies,
King’s College, Cambridge University, UK
“A new conception of war theorized by public opinion in the prelude of the First
World War”
12.20-12.50 Discussion
Room A (Conference Hall, first floor)
13.00-13.40 Keynote Speech
Tom Gallant, Professor, University of California, San Diego:
“Understanding Revolutionary Violence”
14.00-16.00 Lunch
Room A (Conference Hall, first floor)
3rd session
WWI: Nationalism and Revolution
Chair: Dessislava Lilova
16.00-16.20 Roxana Andrei, PhD. candidate, Dept. of Balkan, Slavic and Oriental Studies,
University of Macedonia and George Martinidis,Independent Researcher
“The role of Serbia and Georgia as intergational nationalist forces in the wake of
the WWI and the Russian Revolution”
16.20-16.40 Giuseppe Cossuto, indepedent researcher
“The different voice: Z. C. Arbore: (1848-1933) a moldavian anarchist point of
view about peoples and territories during and after the First World War”
16.40-17.00 Panagiotis Xirouchakis, University of Aegean, Phd in Geography
“War as Revolution: the anarchist point of view and the role of the anarchists in
WWI”
17.00-17.20 Filip-Lucian Iorga, Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Romanian Academy
“The Impact of First World War on the Descendants of Romanian Nobility.
Family Identity and Social Change”
17.20-17.40 Evgenia Adamopoulou, PhD. Candidate, Department of History and
Archaeology of Crete University
“Demoticists, the World War I and the National Schism: The case of Alexandros
Pallis and Ion Dragoumis”
17.40-18.00 Discussion
Room B (Tele-education Hall, first floor)
3rd session
WWI: Ottoman Empire and Nationalization Chair: Nikolay Aretov
16.00-16.20 Hervé Georgelin, Elected Lecturer at the Department of Turkish and
Contemporary Asian Studies, University of Athens
“Reflexions on World War I as Experienced and Formalized by Segments of the
Civil Population in Istanbul/Constantinople”
16.20-16.40 Ahmet Gencturk, PhD Candidate, Department of History and Political Sciences,
Panteion University
“Why Turkey actually won the First World War: Transformation of Ottoman
Empire into Republic of Turkey”
16.40-17.00 Vemund Aarbakke, Vasileios Koutsoukos and Georgios Niarchos
“Dilemmas and opportunities presented to the Muslims in Greek Thrace as a
result of the Ottoman defeat in World War I”
17.00-17.20 Aleksandra Kolaković, Research Assistant, Institute for Political Studies,
Belgrade, Serbia, PhD Candidate, University of Belgrade, Serbia
“Serbia in the late 19th and early 20th century - the perception of French
intellectuals”
17.20-17.40 Eleonora Naxidou, Assistant Professor of Modern History of Southeastern
Europe, , Department of History and Ethnology, School of Classical Studies and
Humanities, Democritus University of Thrace
“National Revolt, Balkan Uprising or a Liberator Tsar: Bulgarian Perceptions of
War as Revolution”
17.40-18.00 Discussion
18.00-18.30 Coffee break
Room A (Conference Hall, first floor)
18.30-19.10 Keynote Speech
M. Hakan Yavuz, Professor, University of Utah:
“War-Making as Nation-Building ”
19.30-21.30
Launching new volumes
Chair: Ass. Prof. Dimitris Stamatopoulos
1. The Edinburgh History of the Greeks, 1768 to 1913: The Long Nineteenth Century
- Prof. Thomas Gallant (University of California, San Diego)
- Prof. Molly Greene (Princeton University)
Discussant: Prof. Basil Gounaris (Aristotle University of Thessaloniki)
and
2. Dimitris Stamatopoulos (ed.), Balkan Nationalism and the Ottoman Empire, Istanbul: Isis
Press 2014
- Prof. M. Hakan Yavuz (University of Utah)
- Prof. Rossitsa Gradeva (American University of Sofia)
Discussant: Ass. Prof. Spyros Sfetas (Aristotle University of Thessaloniki)
End of the Conference
List of Participants
1. Vemund Aarbakke, Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki
2. Evgenia Adamopoulou, PhD. Candidate, Department of History and Archaeology of Crete University
3. Roxana Andrei, PhD. Candidate, Department of Balkan, Slavic and Oriental Studies, University of Macedonia
4. Svetlana Antova, Assistant Professor, Historical Ethnology Department at the Institute of Ethnology and
Folklore Studies with the Ethnographical Museum (IEFEM) of Bulgarian Academy of Sciences
5. Nikolai Aretov, Professor at the Institute for Literature, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Editor-in-chief of
Literaturna misal journal and lecturer at Sofia University
6. Mehmet Arisan, Assistant Professor, Faculty of Political Sciences, Istanbul University
7. Vassilios Bogiatzis , PhD in History and Philosophy of Technology and Science from National Technical
University of Athens and National and Kapodistrean University
8. Emmanouil Chalkiadakis, Lecturer in History at the University Ecclesiastical Academy of Heraklion Crete,
Research Associate at the Institute for Orthodox Christian Studies (IOCS), Cambridge.
9. Giuseppe Cossuto, PhD, La Sapienza University, Rome
10. Evguenia Davidova, Associate Professor, Portland State University
11. Igor Despot, PhD, University of Zagreb, Croatia
12. Raymond Detrez, Professor, Ghent University, Catholic University of Leuven
13. Ada Dialla, Assistant Professor, Athens Schools of Fine Arts
14. Dennis Dierks, PhD, Friedrich-Schiller-Universitat Jena, Lehrstuhl fur Osteuropaische Geschichte,
Historisches Institut
15. A.Warren Dockter, Junior Research Fellow, University of Cambridge
16. Madeleine Elfenbein, Ph.D. Candidate, University of Chicago
17. Tom Gallant, Professor, History Department, University of California, San Diego
18. Ahmet Gencturk, PhD Candidate, Department of History and Political Sciences, Panteion University
19. Herve Georgelin, Elected Lecturer at the Department of Turkish and Contemporary Asian Studies, University
of Athens
20. Lora A. Gerd, Professor, Russian Academy of Science
21. Stella Ghervas, CES Harvard University / MSHA Bordeaux
22. Konstantinos Giakoumis, Associate Professor of Art History and Western Civilizations, University of New
York in Tirana, Rruga Medar Shtylla, Tirana, Albania
23. Basil Gounaris, Professor, Dept. of History and Archaeology, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki
24. Rossitsa Gradeva, Professor, Institute for Balkan Studies, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences/American
University of Bulgaria
25. Molly Greene, Professor, History Department, Princeton University
26. E. Haxhi, post-doctoral researcher, New York University of Tirana
27. Pandeleimon Hionidis, PhD, University of London: London School of Economics
28. Stefka Hristova, Assistant Professor of Digital Media, Michigan Technological University
29. Filip-Lucian Iorga, Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Romanian Academy
30. Nicole Immig, Postdoctoral Researcher, Historical Department, Friedrich-Schiller-Universitat Jena/Germany
31. Jonathan Israel, Professor, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton
32. Alma Jeftic, Senior Assistant MA, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, International University of Sarajevo
33. Maro Kalantzopoulou, PhD candidate, Universite Paris III – Sorbonne Nouvelle and Ecole des Hautes Etudes
en Sciences Sociales (EHESS)
34. I. Kalemaj, PhD, University of Tirana
35. Ioannis Karachristos, Associate Researcher, Hellenic Folklore Research Centre, Academy of Athens, Greece
36. Margarita Karamihova, Professor Dr. Habill., St. Cyril and St. Methodius University of Veliko Turnovo
37. Vicky Karafoulidou, Ph.D. in History at the University of Aegean
38. K. Kavaja, post-doctoral researcher, New York University of Tirana
39. Alexander Kazamias, Senior Lecturer in Politics at Coventry University
40. Ioana Elena Kisanovici (Ignat), Postdoctoral Student, Romanian Academy
41. Aleksandra Kolakovic, Research Assistant, Institute for Political Studies, Belgrade, Serbia, PhD Candidate,
University of Belgrade, Serbia
42. Georgia Kouta, Graduate Teaching Assistant, Doctoral Researcher in Modern History, History Department &
Centre for Hellenic Studies, King's College London
43. Vassilis Koutsoukos, post-doc research fellow, Aristotle University ofThessaloniki
44. B. Harun Kucuk, Assistant Professor, Department of History and Sociology of Science,, University of
Pennsylvania
45. Elli Lemonidou, Assistant Professor of Modern and Contemporary History, University of Patras
46. Dessislava Lilova, Associate Professor at Sofia University
47. Iskra Manolova-Dobreva, PhD Candidate, Sofia University St. Kliment Ohridski
48. Mark Marku, Associate Professor, Department of Journalism and the Communication, University of Tirana
49. George Martinidis, Independent Researcher
50. Maros Melicharek, Assistant professor at Department of History, Faculty of Arts, University of Pavol Jozef
Safarik, Kosice
51. Milena B. Methodieva, assistant professor, Department of History, University of Toronto
52. Charalampos Minaoglou, PhD in Early Modern and Modern Greek History, University of Athens
53. Vasilis Molos, Visiting Assistant Professor in History, New York University, Abu Dhabi
54. Ariadni Moutafidou, adjunct professor at the Hellenic Open University (European History, Studies in
European Civilization).
55. Harris Mylonas, Assistant Professor, George Washington University
56. Assia Nakova, Ph.D. candidate, Princeton University
57. Eleonora Naxidou, assistant professor, Department of History and Ethnology, School of Classical Studies and
Humanities, Democritus University of Thrace
58. Georgios Niarchos, post-doc research fellow, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki
59. Dilek Ozkan, Ph.D Candidate, Department of History and Archeology, National and Kapodistrian University
of Athens
60. Nicholas C. J. Pappas, Professor, Department of History, Sam Houston State Univerity
61. Dobrinka Parusheva, Associate Professor of Theory and history of culture at the Department of Ethnology,
Faculty of Philosophy and History, University of Plovdiv and Senior Research Fellow at the Institute of
Balkan Studies, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Sofia
62. Petko St. Petkov, Professor, Department of Early-modern and Modern Bulgarian History, Faculty of History,
St. Cyril and St. Methodius University of Veliko Turnovo
63. Antoaneta Petkova, PhD candidate, Sofia University St. Kliment Ohridski
64. Eduard Nicolae Popa, MA, Faculty of History, University of Bucharest
65. Leonidas Rados, Associate Professor, "A.D. Xenopol" History Institute, Iasi
66. Jacek Raszewski, Assistant professor, Faculty of Artes Liberales, University of Warsaw
67. Victor Rizescu, Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Bucharest
68. Emilia Salvanou, PhD, University of Athens and Post-doctoral student, University of Peloponnese
69. Momir Samardzic, Associate Professor at the Faculty of Philosophy, University of Novi Sad
70. Lorenzo Santoro, assistant professor, Universita della Calabria
71. Panagiotis Savorianakis, Ph.D. in Modern Greek History University of Athens
72. Spyridon Sfetas, Associate Professor for Modern and Contemporary Balkan History, Aristotle University of
Thessaloniki
73. Alexandra Sfoini, Associate Researcher , Institute for Historical Research, The National Hellenic Research
Foundation (I.H.R/N.H.R.F.)
74. Elias G. Skoulidas, Assistant Professor in Modern Balkan History, Epirus Institute of Technology, Greece
75. Dimitris P. Sotiropoulos, Assistant Professor of Contemporary History & Politics, The Higher Technological
Institute of Peloponnese
76. Radoslav Spasov, Assistant Professor in Faculty of History at Sofia University "St. Kliment Ohridski"
77. Dimitris Stamatopoulos, Associate Professor, Department of Balkan, Slavic and Oriental Studies, University
of Macedonia
78. Anastasia Stouraiti, Lecturer in Early Modern History at Goldsmiths, University of London
79. Banu Turnaoglu, PhD candidate in Politics and International Studies, Kings College, Cambridge University,
UK
80. Elpida Vogli, assistant professor, Department of History and Ethnology, School of Classical Studies and
Humanities, Democritus University of Thrace
81. Milos Vojinovic, MA, Teaching Assistant, University of Belgrade
82. Klara Volaric, external associate of Istanbul Memories research project, Orient Institute in Istanbul
83. Iouliani Vroutsi, PhD, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens
84. Panagiotis Xirouchakis, Phd in Geography, University of Aegean
85. M. Hakan Yavuz, Professor, History Department, University of Utah
86. Konstantina Zanou, Ph.D. University of Pisa and the Ecole Normale Superieure de Paris, postdoctoral
researcher in the Universite Paris-Est Creteil, Val de Marne
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