De keizersweg, een sociale geschiedenis (2024)

Abstract

The inaugural lecture of the current SHCL Director, Nico Randeraad, delivered on 10 September 2021 in the Aula of Maastricht University, deals with a new focus of the Centre on the ‘social history of landscape’. In his lecture Randeraad zooms in on the ‘Imperial Route’ between Paris and Hamburg, in particular the stretch through the small town of Rekem in Belgium, ten kilometers north of Maastricht. He proposes to regard the road as an entity with agency within a network of people, materials, and natural phenomena. Research along these lines into the past of roads, rivers, canals, pipelines and the like easily interconnects with broader (cross-)regional social histories of infrastructure, economic development, life stories and migration.

Original languageDutch
Pages (from-to)12-31
Number of pages20
JournalJaarboek van het Sociaal Historisch Centrum voor Limburg
Volume67
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15 Dec 2022

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Randeraad, N. (2022). De keizersweg, een sociale geschiedenis. Jaarboek van het Sociaal Historisch Centrum voor Limburg, 67, 12-31. https://doi.org/10.58484/ssegl.v67i13520

Randeraad, Nico. / De keizersweg, een sociale geschiedenis. In: Jaarboek van het Sociaal Historisch Centrum voor Limburg. 2022 ; Vol. 67. pp. 12-31.

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title = "De keizersweg, een sociale geschiedenis",

abstract = "The inaugural lecture of the current SHCL Director, Nico Randeraad, delivered on 10 September 2021 in the Aula of Maastricht University, deals with a new focus of the Centre on the {\textquoteleft}social history of landscape{\textquoteright}. In his lecture Randeraad zooms in on the {\textquoteleft}Imperial Route{\textquoteright} between Paris and Hamburg, in particular the stretch through the small town of Rekem in Belgium, ten kilometers north of Maastricht. He proposes to regard the road as an entity with agency within a network of people, materials, and natural phenomena. Research along these lines into the past of roads, rivers, canals, pipelines and the like easily interconnects with broader (cross-)regional social histories of infrastructure, economic development, life stories and migration.",

author = "Nico Randeraad",

year = "2022",

month = dec,

day = "15",

doi = "10.58484/ssegl.v67i13520",

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Randeraad, N 2022, 'De keizersweg, een sociale geschiedenis', Jaarboek van het Sociaal Historisch Centrum voor Limburg, vol. 67, pp. 12-31. https://doi.org/10.58484/ssegl.v67i13520

De keizersweg, een sociale geschiedenis. / Randeraad, Nico.
In: Jaarboek van het Sociaal Historisch Centrum voor Limburg, Vol. 67, 15.12.2022, p. 12-31.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

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AU - Randeraad, Nico

PY - 2022/12/15

Y1 - 2022/12/15

N2 - The inaugural lecture of the current SHCL Director, Nico Randeraad, delivered on 10 September 2021 in the Aula of Maastricht University, deals with a new focus of the Centre on the ‘social history of landscape’. In his lecture Randeraad zooms in on the ‘Imperial Route’ between Paris and Hamburg, in particular the stretch through the small town of Rekem in Belgium, ten kilometers north of Maastricht. He proposes to regard the road as an entity with agency within a network of people, materials, and natural phenomena. Research along these lines into the past of roads, rivers, canals, pipelines and the like easily interconnects with broader (cross-)regional social histories of infrastructure, economic development, life stories and migration.

AB - The inaugural lecture of the current SHCL Director, Nico Randeraad, delivered on 10 September 2021 in the Aula of Maastricht University, deals with a new focus of the Centre on the ‘social history of landscape’. In his lecture Randeraad zooms in on the ‘Imperial Route’ between Paris and Hamburg, in particular the stretch through the small town of Rekem in Belgium, ten kilometers north of Maastricht. He proposes to regard the road as an entity with agency within a network of people, materials, and natural phenomena. Research along these lines into the past of roads, rivers, canals, pipelines and the like easily interconnects with broader (cross-)regional social histories of infrastructure, economic development, life stories and migration.

U2 - 10.58484/ssegl.v67i13520

DO - 10.58484/ssegl.v67i13520

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Randeraad N. De keizersweg, een sociale geschiedenis. Jaarboek van het Sociaal Historisch Centrum voor Limburg. 2022 Dec 15;67:12-31. doi: 10.58484/ssegl.v67i13520

De keizersweg, een sociale geschiedenis (2024)

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