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Ewald Frie | |
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![]() Frie (2023) | |
Born | |
Alma mater | University of Münster |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Modern history |
Institutions | University of Duisburg-Essen, University of Trier, University of Tübingen |
Thesis | (1992) |
Doctoral advisor | Hans-Ulrich Thamer |
Website |
www |
Ewald Frie (born 10 October 1962) is a German historian and biographer at the University of Tübingen. [1] His research interests include German history of the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries, European nobility, poverty and the welfare state, and Australian history.
Frie was born on 10 October 1962 to a farmer and his wife two kilometres from the village of Nottuln in the Münster region of Germany. He is the third youngest of 11 children. [2] [3]
Frie studied modern history, medieval history, and Catholic theology at the University of Münster. He worked as an academic trainee at the Institute for Westphalian Regional History in Münster between 1989 and 1991 before earning his PhD in 1992. He was an assistant professor at the Science Center North Rhine-Westphalia in Düsseldorf 1993-1995, then in the University of Duisburg-Essen's modern history faculty (1995-2007). He finished his second doctorate in 2001. He joined University of Trier in 2007 before accepting a position as a full professor of modern history at the University of Tübingen. [4]
Between July 2011 and August 2016, Frie was a spokesperson for the Collaborative Research Center 923, a research institute at the University of Tübingen that focuses on threatened social orders. [5] He is a member of the Prussian Historical Commission, the Working Group for Prussian History, the Lamprecht-Gesellschaft in Leipzig, the Working Group for Non-European History, and the board of the Sigurd-Greven-Stiftung in Cologne. He is the university liaison for the Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung and has been a review editor for H-SOZ-KULT. He has also been involved with the University of Tübingen's journals Bedrohte Ordnungen, Adelswelten, and Contubernium. Tübinger Beiträge zur Universitäts- und Wissenschaftsgeschichte.