Table of contents
Maria Cieśla, Communities and Their Temples: Orthodox, Jewish, Protestant, and Catholic: Religious Delimitations in the Historical Topography of Słuck
Mihai D. Grigore, The Space of Power. State Consolidation by Means of Religious Policy in the Danube Principalities in the Fourteenth to Sixteenth Centuries
Eleni Gara, Conceptualizing Inter-religious Relations in the Ottoman Empire: The Early Modern Centuries
Kristina Friedrichs, Court Chapels in Saxony between 1697 and 1733: Augustus II the Strong between Catholicism and Protestantism
Adam Kaźmierczyk, Auto-da-fe in Lwów in 1728: The Jan Filipowicz Trial and Jewish Re-Conversion to Judaism in the Early Modern Poland
Thomas Richter, Coping with Religious Diversity in Everyday Life in the Borderlands of Western Europe: Catholics, Protestants and Jews in Vaals
Aleksandr Osipian, Between Mercantilism, Oriental Luxury and the Ottoman Threat: Discourses on the Armenian Diaspora in the Early Modern Kingdom of Poland
Jacek Kordel, The Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth in Eighteen-century Alliance Treaties of the Neighbouring Countries, 1720–72
Piotr Guzowski and Radosław Poniat, The Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth as a Laboratory for Analysing Connections between Confessions, the Demographic Regime, and Human Capital
Lukas Becht, From Euphoria to Frustration: Institutionalizing Prognostic Research in the Polish People’s Republic, 1969–76
Cristina Álvarez González, Loss, Fatalism and Choice: The Moral Component in the Narratives of Polish Dissident Historians in the 1980s. The Cases of Krystyna Kersten and Jerzy Holzer
Stanisław Bylina (4 April 1936 – 4 September 2017) – Martin Nodl
Piotr Stefan Wandycz (20 September 1923 – 29 July 2017) – Piotr Wróbel