Tamara Scheer Explained

Honorific Prefix:Priv.-Doz. Dr.
Tamara Scheer
Citizenship:Austrian
Occupation:Historian
Website:https://iog.univie.ac.at/ueber-uns/personal/gastprofessorinnen-und-teaching-mobility/tamara-scheer/

(Privatdozentin) at the Institute for East European History at University of Vienna.[1]

Education

Scheer studied history and law at the University of Vienna and achieved her history doctorate in 2006 at the same university. In November 2020 she habilitated, received the venia docendi for Modern and Contemporary History, at University of Vienna. Her habilitation thesis dealt with: "Language Diversity and Loyalty in the Habsburg Army, 1867-1918."[2]

Academic Career

From January 2025 she is principal investigator of an FWF funded research project entitled "Language Diversity: Habsburg Austria and the Roman Catholic Church"https://www.fwf.ac.at/forschungsradar/10.55776/PAT1679824 at the Department of Biblical Studies and Historical Theology at University of Innsbruck.https://www.uibk.ac.at/de/newsroom/2024/fwf-fordert-13-projekte/

In Winter Term 2024-25 she is a visiting professor at the Institute for History at University of

Academic Year 2023/24 Universitätsprofessur (gemäß UG 2002, §99) for the non-German Dimension of Austrian history, 18th-21st century at the Institute for East European History, University of Vienna.[3]

since November 2019: head of a research project at Pontifical Institute Santa Maria dell' Anima in Rome.[4] about the identification of Habsburg POWs in Italy.[5]

From 2017 to 2023: FWF-Elise-Richter-Fellow at the Institute for East European History/University of Vienna.[6]

From 2013 to 2017: FWF-Hertha-Firnberg-Fellow at Ludwig Boltzmann Institute for Historical Social Science.[7]

From 2010 to 2012: Post-Doc-Head of the Doctoral School and ÖAD-Fellow at Andrássy University Budapest

(Competitive) Short-Term Fellowships brought her to Trinity College Dublin (2014), Czech Academy of Sciences (2016) European University Institut Florence (2017/18), the University of Oslo (2018), Masaryk Institute at the Czech Academy of Sciences (2016), and the Institute for Contemporary History in Ljubljana.[8]

Publications

Monographs

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Institut für Osteuropäische Geschichte . Universität Wien.
  2. Web site: Scheer. Tamara. 2021-01-20. Language Diversity and Loyalty in the Habsburg Army, 1868-1918. othes.univie.ac.at .
  3. Web site: Universität Wien . Universität Wien.
  4. https://univie.academia.edu/TamaraScheer/CurriculumVitae Curriculum Vitae Tamara Scheer, University of Vienna
  5. Web site: Scheer . Tamara . Project Description .
  6. FWF. Forschungsradar . FWF. 2017 . 10.55776/V555 .
  7. FWF Forschungsradar . FWF. 2013 . 10.55776/T602 .
  8. Web site: Visiting Fellows . INZ.
  9. Moll . Martin . Scheer, Tamara, Zwischen Front und Heimat. Österreich-Ungarns Militärverwaltungen im Ersten Weltkrieg . Zeitschrift der Savigny-Stiftung für Rechtsgeschichte: Germanistische Abteilung . 1 August 2010 . 127 . 1 . 853–855 . 10.7767/zrgga.2010.127.1.853.
  10. Deak . John . Zwischen Front und Heimat. Österreich-Ungarns Militärverwaltungen im Ersten Weltkrieg [Neue Forschungen zur ostmittel- und südosteuropäische Geschichte, 2.] . First World War Studies . March 2013 . 4 . 1 . 125–126 . 10.1080/19475020.2012.762191.
  11. Rezension zu: T. Scheer: "Minimale Kosten, absolut kein Blut" . H-Soz-Kult. Kommunikation und Fachinformation für die Geschichtswissenschaften . 2013 . 978-3-631-64214-6 . de.
  12. Brendel . Heiko . Tamara Scheer. "Minimale Kosten, absolut kein Blut": Österreich-Ungarns Präsenz im Sandžak von Novipazar (1879–1908). Neue Forschungen zur ostmittel- und südosteuropäischen Geschichte, Vol. 5. Frankfurt: Peter Lang, 2013. Pp. 282, illus. . Austrian History Yearbook . 22 April 2015 . 46 . 418–419 . 10.1017/S0067237814000447.
  13. Kożuchowski . Adam . Tamara Scheer. Von Friedensfurien und dalmatinischen Küstenrehen. Vergessene Worte aus der Habsburgermonarchie. Vienna: Amalthea Signum, 2019. Pp. 222. . Austrian History Yearbook . 23 April 2020 . 51 . 350–351 . 10.1017/S0067237820000387.
  14. Maxwell. Alexander. Review. Hungarian Historical Review. 9. https://hunghist.org/issue-current/82-book-reviews/679-2020-4-reviews.