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Comparative Study at Stockholm
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 June 2009
Extract
If historians, as some non-historians imagine, were occupied only with the detail of national past politics, they would have nothing to say to each other at an international conference. Yet leading historians have labored to create a permanent organization, the International Congress of Historical Sciences, which now holds regular quinquennial meetings with increasingly worldwide representation. At least twenty countries besides all European countries and the Soviet Union were represented at its eleventh meeting, held at Stockholm in August 1960.
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- Copyright © Society for the Comparative Study of Society and History 1961
References
1 Contained in five volumes of Rapports, International Committee of Historical Sciences (Stockholm, 1960). A digest of the shorter papers is contained in a further volume of Resumés des Communications.
2 Now published in Annales: Economies, Sociétés, Civilizations, an. 16, no. 1 (janvierfévrier 1961).Google Scholar
3 First International Conference of Economic History (The Hague, 1960). The comments of Berri11 and Lütge are unfortunately not included in that volume.Google Scholar
4 See Venturi's paper, “L'illuminismo nel settecento Europo”, in vol. IV of the Rapports (Histoire Moderne).
5 Sestan, Ernesto, “La cittá comunale italiana dei secoli XI-XIII nelle sue note caratteristiche rispetto al movimento comunale europeo”, in Rapports, III (Moyen Age).Google Scholar
6 “Estructura administrativa estatal en los siglos XVI y XVII”, in Rapports, IV. The death of Professor Vives shortly before the Congress met was a grave loss, as was that of the elected President of the Congress, Federico Chabod.
7 Contained in Vol. V of the Rapports (Histoire contemporaine).
8 Contained in Vol. I of the Rapports (Methodologie, Histoire des Universités, Histoire des prix avant 1750).