Dr. Anna-Marie Pípalová ****************************************************************************************** * ****************************************************************************************** https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0907-5730 [ URL "https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0907-5730"] ****************************************************************************************** * Education ****************************************************************************************** 2025 PhD in History, University of Cambridge 2020 MPhil in Early Modern History, University of Cambridge 2018 BA Hons in History, University of Cambridge ****************************************************************************************** * Fellowships ****************************************************************************************** ongoing Fond Junior Postdoctoral Researcher, Charles University 2023 Doctoral Fellow, Leibniz-Institut für Europäische Geschichte (6 months) ****************************************************************************************** * Research ****************************************************************************************** Anna-Marie Pípalová is a historian of early modern Central Europe. Her interests include t scholarship, early modern historiography, identity formation, the memory of the Thirty Yea interplay of gender and violence. Her current research project examines how the violence of the Thirty Years’ War was memori seventeenth century and the role of gender in the memory of wartime violence. Her work has by the AHRC, the Cambridge Trust, and the Leibniz-Institut für Europäische Geschichte. ****************************************************************************************** * Publications ****************************************************************************************** ‘Mary on the Move: Transcultural Marian Veneration in Seventeenth-Century Central-Eastern in Early Modern East Central Europe from Transcultural Perspectives, ed. V. Čapská (forthc ‘Bohuslav Balbín and the Patriotic Reconceptualisation of Bohemia, c.1650-1675’, journal a Historical Journal 65:4 (2022), 992-1014.