Mitteilungen der Gemeinsamen Kommission für die Erforschung der jüngeren Geschichte der deutsch-russischen Beziehungen
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Edited by:
Horst Möller
and Aleksandr O. Cubar'jan
Beiträge von: H. Altrichter, L. Antipow, M. Birthler, A.I. Boroznjak, A.S. Cernjaev, A.O. Cubar'jan, T. Diedrich, B. Faulenbach, A.M. Filitov, D. Fomin-Nilov, H. Graml, K. Hildebrand, M. Korallov, I.N. Kuz'min, W. Link, I.F. Maksimycev;, H. Mehringer, G. Merlio, H. Möller, H. Mommsen, E. Neubert, B.V. Petelin, N.S. Portugalov, A. Subin, H. Weber, J. Zarusky
The time between the Hitler-Stalin pact of 23 August 1939 and Germany’s invasion of the Soviet Union on 22 June 1941 remains a controversial period in European historiography. This volume presents the still multivalent interpretations of this first phase of World War II in German and Russian, as is the practice of the Historical Commission.
The sixth volume of the “Communications” of the German-Russian Historical Commission includes papers presented at the 2012 Hamburg Colloquium. Presented bilingually – as always – the fifteen essays by prominent German and Russian historians and cultural scholars examine a broad range of cultural interactions between Germany and Russia.
The seventh volume of Communications from the German–Russian Historical Committee documents colloquia held in 2013 in Moscow and 2014 in Berlin devoted to the theme, “The First World War: Germany and Russia in a European Context.” In eighteen bilingual essays, renowned historians explore cross-national aspects of this “primal catastrophe of the 20th century.”
This eighth volume of the Communications of the Joint Research Committee on the Contemporary History of German-Russian Relations documents the 2016 colloquium held in Moscow devoted to the theme “Empires, Nations, and Regions: Conceptions of Empire in Germany and Russia at the beginning of the 20th Century.”
This 9th bilingual volume of the Joint Research Committee on the Contemporary History of German-Russian Relations documents the 2016 colloquium “German and Soviet Societies in the First Post-War Decade: Traumas and Hopes.” In the second part, young historians from Russia and Germany present “New Perspectives on German-Russian Relations and Historical Interconnections in the 19th and 20th Centuries in a Global Context.”