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Leonhard Harding

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German historian
Leonhard Harding
Harding in 2010
Born(1936-09-14)14 September 1936
NationalityGerman
Academic background
Alma mater
Academic work
Discipline
Institutions

Leonhard Harding (born September 14, 1936, in Paderborn) is a German historian and scholar in African studies.

Biography

Leonhard Harding attended elementary school in Paderborn for four years. From 1948 to 1956 he attended high schools in Rietberg and Großkrotzenburg. In 1956 the matriculation examination followed. He studied philosophy for four semesters at the philosophical college of the White Fathers in Trier. From 1959 to 1963 he studied Catholic theology and history of missions in Leuven. In 1963 he began studying history at the Saarland University. In 1965 he passed the secondary school teacher examination for history. Then he went to Cologne. From 1969 he was a student at the Free University of Berlin. Under the direction of de:Franz Ansprenger (1927–2020), he dealt with problems in Africa's colonial history. In 1972 he received his doctorate from Ansprenger at the Free University of Berlin with a thesis on French religious policy in West Africa. In it he examined the French religious policy in the colony "Soudan Français", the area of today's states Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger. Harding worked at the African Politics Office at the Free University of Berlin. From 1981 to 2001, Harding taught as a professor of African history at the Historical Seminar of the University of Hamburg.

Harding established intensive cooperation with African universities and research institutions. From 1980 to 1982 he organized an international research project on Commerce and Traders in West Africa: Senegal and Ivory Coast (19th and 20th Century). African professors and doctoral students were regularly in Hamburg. Hamburg students and postgraduates travelled to various African countries for study and research purposes under his supervision. Through his long tenure, Harding helped Hamburg develop into a leading centre for teaching and research on the history of Africa in Germany. In 1998, Harding, together with three other Hamburg historians, successfully opposed the discriminatory treatment of foreign, especially African, guest professors by the immigration authorities, which endangered the international reputation of Hamburg as a science location. From 2008 to 2014, Harding was lecturer in African history at the University of Cologne. Harding's research focus is the History of Africa, in particular the economic and social history of West Africa, the intellectual and cultural history of West Africa, the Kingdom of Benin and conflicts in Central Africa. He authored a well-known introduction to the study of African history, which was published in 1992. In 1999 he published an event- and problem-oriented overview for a first introduction to the history of Africa in the 19th and 20th centuries. One of Harding's most important academic students is de:Andreas Eckert. After Harding retired in 2002, Eckert became his successor as Professor of African History at the University of Hamburg (2002–2007) before the latter moved in 2007 teaching on the history of Africa at the Humboldt University of Berlin.

Publications (selection)

References

  1. Barbara Vogel: Geschichtswissenschaft in Hamburg seit 1970. In: de:Rainer Nicolaysen, de:Axel Schildt (eds.): 100 Jahre Geschichtswissenschaft in Hamburg. Berlin, 2011, pp. 295–330, here: p. 315.
  2. de:Jürgen Zimmerer: Afrikanische Geschichte in Hamburg. In: Jahrbuch der historischen Forschung in der Bundesrepublik Deutschland. Reporting year 2010, 2011, pp. 25-31, here: p. 26 .
  3. Jens Meyer-Wellmann: "Uni-Professoren: Ausländerbehörde behindert den internationalen Ruf des Wissenschaftsstandorts Hamburg". Hamburger Abendblatt, 9 February 1998
  4. Abschlussbericht der Evaluation des Instituts für Afrikanistik (Final report on the evaluation of the Institute for African Studies. Philosophical faculty of the University of Cologne, summer semester 2007. Office for quality management of the philosophical faculty of the University of Cologne, 2007
  5. See the review by Ralph Erbar in: Historische Zeitschrift, vol. 271, 2000, pp. 494–495.

External links

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