開催日 2012年10月20日

International Symposium:
“Religious Conflict, Religious Concord in Europe and the Mediterranean World”

Dates and place:
Saturday, 20th and Sunday, 21st of October 2012, 09:00-18:30
The University of Tokyo (Komaba Campus), Bldg 18, Grand Hall
3-8-1 Komaba, Meguro-ku, 153-8902 Tokyo

Programme:
Saturday, 20th of October: “Catholics and Protestants in early modern Europe”.
08:40-09:00 Registration
09:00-09:20 Introduction by Katsumi Fukasawa (University of Tokyo)
09:20-10:20 Miriam Eliav-Feldon (Tel Aviv University)
  “Between Protestants and Catholics:
    the roots of religious toleration during the Reformation”.
  Commented by Taihei Yamamoto (Waseda University, Tokyo)
10:30-11:30 Benjamin J. Kaplan (University College London, UCL)
  “Religious encounters in the borderlands of early modern Europe:
    the case of Vaals, a village in Dutch Limburg”.
  Commented by Tomoji Odori (Musashi University, Tokyo)
11:40-12:40 Robert Matthew Armstrong (Trinity College Dublin)
  “Peace-making and the problems of religion:
    peace talks in Ireland and England during the civil wars of the 1640s”.
  Commented by Shunsuke Katsuta (University of Tokyo)
12:40-14:00 Lunch
14:00-15:00 Sugiko Nishikawa (University of Tokyo)
  “‘When in Rome…’:
    religious practice by Anglicans on the Continent in the 17th and early
    18th centuries”.
  Commented by Kei Nasu (International Christian University, Tokyo)
15:10-16:10 Graeme Murdock (Trinity College Dublin)
  “Do good fences make good neighbours? Living with heretics in early modern
    Savoy”.
  Commented by Tomoji Odori (Musashi University)
16:20-17:20 Masanori Sakano (Musashi University)
  “Port-Royalists as a catalyst for the inter-confessional dialogues in
    seventeenth-century France”.
  Commented by Katsumi Fukasawa (University of Tokyo)
17:30-18:30 Pierre-Yves Beaurepaire (Université de Nice Sophia-Antipolis/
  Institut Universitaire de France)
  “Can erudite friendship lower inter-confessional barriers and promote
    ecumenical dialogue? The case of the correspondence of cardinal Querini,
    Bishop of Brescia, with the pastors of the French reformed churches of
    Prussia in the 18th century”.
  Commented by Katsumi Fukasawa (University of Tokyo)
19:00-21:00 Dinner

Sunday, 21st of October: “Religious pluralism from the Mediterranean to Western Asia”
09:00-10:00 Makoto Kato (Japan Women’s University, Tokyo)
  “Jews in late medieval Navarre”.
  Commented by Shiro Miyatake (Tokyo Friends School)
10:10-11:10 Toshiyuki Chiba (Tokyo University of Foreign Studies)
  “Conversion in form of reductio. The church union at the Council of Ferrara-
    Florence (1438-39)”.
  Commented by Mamoru Fujisaki (University of Tokyo)
11:20-12:20 Asuka Tsuji (Waseda University)
  “Wearing the blue turban again:
    the re-conversion of the Christians in Mamluk Egypt”.
  Commented by Hidemitu Kuroki (Tokyo University of Foreign Studies)
12:20-13:30 Lunch
13:30-14:30 Yutaka Horii (Doshisha University, Kyoto)
  “Religious minorities and foreigners in Ottoman Cairo”.
  Commented by Shiro Miyatake (Tokyo Friends School)
14:40-15:40 Hiromi Saito (Shinshu University, Nagano)
  “Religious policy in early modern Venice”.
  Commented by (pending)
15:50-16:50 Inessa Magilina (Volgograd)
  “The religious commitment of Shāh ‘Abbās the Great, Safavid king of Persia,
    upon the evidence of European contemporaries”.
  Commented by Yutaka Miyano (Gifu Shotoku Gakuen Unversity)
17:00-18:00 Ray Jabre Mouawad (Lebanese American University)
  “Druzes and Christians in Mount-Lebanon: a rare case of religious symbiosis”.
  Commented by Hidemitu Kuroki (Tokyo University of Foreign Studies)
18:00-18:30 General discussion and conclusion

 

URL: http://www.l.u-tokyo.ac.jp/sokokuyuwa/?page_id=26