The history of mobility in the Atlantic and the Pacific: People, goods, ships, ideas, and routes between the continents and islands
La historia de la movilidad en el Atlántico y el Pacífico:Personas, mercancías, barcos, ideas y rutas entre los continentes e islas
A história da mobilidade no Atlântico e no Pacífico: Pessoas, mercancías e rotas para as Américas
L'histoire de la mobilité dans l'Atlantique et le Pacifique : les personnes, les marchandises et les routes vers les Amériques
The Association of Latin American and Caribbean Historians (ADHILAC) celebrates its 15th International Meeting for the first time in the beautiful British city of Gibraltar. Founded in 1160 by the Almohad caliph Abd al-Mumin, at the confluence of the Mediterranean and the Atlantic, just about 15 km from the North African coast and south of Spain. Although it was first conquered in 1309 by Alonso de Guzmán for Castile-León, Muslim commanders managed to reconquer it until it finally fell into Castilian Christian hands in 1462. In 1474, Isabella of Castile elevated the so-called Campo de Gibraltar to the rank of marquisate under the dominion of the Dukes of Medina Sidonia. It remained under Medina Sidonia control until Queen Isabella abolished the marquisate title in 1501, reincorporating the territory into the royal domains of the Crown of Castile.
Gonzalo Piña Ludueña, whose history is closely linked to that of Venezuela in the second half of the 16th century, was originally from Gibraltar... During the War of Spanish Succession, Gibraltar fell into the hands of the House of Austria...
In the second half of the 19th century and early 20th century, tens of thousands of European emigrants sailed from Gibraltar to Latin America... After Spain ended its blockade policy against Gibraltar in 1985, the city by the Rock regained its status as an international meeting place...
a) GENERAL TOPICS
b) SPECIFIC TOPICS
c) SPECIAL TOPICS: LOCAL HISTORY OF GIBRALTAR IN ITS ATLANTIC CONNECTIONS
d) PROPOSAL FOR THEMATIC PANELS
We welcome proposals for closed panels composed of 3 or 4 speakers. These should be submitted indicating the panel title, the coordinator, the speakers, as well as the title of each presentation and its corresponding abstract of between 200 and 250 words.
SUBMISSION OF PROPOSALS
Email for proposal submission: secejecutivo@adhilac.org
| GROUPS | CUT-OFF 1: 31 MAR. | CUT-OFF 2: 31 MAY | CUT-OFF 3: 31 JUL. | FINAL CUT-OFF: AT VENUE |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| GROUP A Speakers from institutions in North America, Europe, and Asia. |
160 GBP | 200 GBP | 220 GBP | 250 GBP |
| GROUP B Speakers from institutions in Latin America and Africa. |
130 GBP | 170 GBP | 190 GBP | 220 GBP |
| GROUP C Speakers who are members of ADHILAC and ICAH |
120 GBP | 150 GBP | 170 GBP | 200 GBP |
| GROUP D Students from institutions in North America, Europe, and Asia. |
80 GBP | 100 GBP | 120 GBP | 150 GBP |
| GROUP E Students from institutions in Latin America and Africa. |
50 GBP | 70 GBP | 90 GBP | 120 GBP |
| GROUP F Attendee Participants |
50 GBP | 70 GBP | 80 GBP | 100 GBP |
Further information about the program, logistics, and event registration will be provided in a Second Circular.
Academic: secejecutivo@adhilac.org
Logistics: info@icahgibraltar.org
Payment Details:
IBAN: AT491400002010019314
SWIFT/BIC: BAWAATWW
(Name: KonaK Wien)
PAYPAL: secejecutivo@adhilac.org