Dr. Hannah-Lena Hagemann
Photo: © UHH/ Naue
former Research Associate
Islamic Studies
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Office
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Key aspects of activity
- Jazira; Historiography; Project Library;
Hannah-Lena Hagemann is now the Junior Research Group Leader of "Social Contexts of Rebellion in the Early Islamic Period (SCORE)" at the Universität Hamburg. For further information, please refer to her UHH website.
Profile
I read Islamic Studies, Political Science and Religious Studies at Hamburg University, specializing in early Islamic history, heresiography and thought. While pursuing my first degree, I spent a year at Oxford University as a Visiting Student, focusing on the study of Arabic, Hebrew, and Arabic literature. I graduated from Hamburg University with an M.A. in 2010. In January 2011, I began my doctoral studies at the University of Edinburgh under the supervision of Dr Andrew Marsham and Dr Andreas Görke. In my PhD project, I analyzed the narrative function of Khārijites in the early Islamic historical tradition from the Battle of Ṣiffīn until the end of ʿAbd al-Malik’s caliphate in 705 CE. I successfully defended my thesis in February 2015 and am now working on its publication as a monograph. In May 2014, I commenced my position as a research associate with the “Early Islamic Empire” project led by Prof. Dr. Heidemann; I work on the province of the Jazīra and am responsible for all matters historiographic.
My research focuses on questions of early Islamic history and historiography; it is based on the conviction that historiography is just another genre of literature and thus needs to be analyzed accordingly. I am particularly interested in the portrayal of rebellion as well as the formation and development of the early Islamic literary tradition. On my ventures into positivist realms, I am primarily invested in the study of two connected subjects: the socio-political workings of empires, and the relationship between figures or institutions of authority and so-called rebels and revolutionaries. My geographical area of specialization encompasses early Islamic Iraq and Upper Mesopotamia.
CV
2015 |
Award of PhD for thesis entitled “History and Memory: Khārijism in Early Islamic Historiography” |
Since 2014 |
Research Associate, ERC Project “The Early Islamic Empire at Work”, Universität Hamburg; Guest Lecturer, Universität Hamburg |
2011-2014 |
PhD Candidate in Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies, University of Edinburgh; PhD funded by CASAW (Centre for the Advanced Study of the Arab World) Tutor for “Islamic History” and “Introduction to Islam”, University of Edinburgh |
2010 |
M.A. in Islamic Studies, Political Science and Religious Studies, Universität Hamburg |
2006-2007 |
Visiting Student at St. John’s College, University of Oxford |
2004-2010 |
Read Islamic Studies, Political Science and Religious Studies at Universität Hamburg |
1983 |
Born in Hamburg, Germany |
Publications
Hannah-Lena Hagemann & Stefan Heidemann (eds.). Transregional and Regional Elites: Connecting the Early Islamic Empire. The Early Islamic Empire at Work Vol. 1. Studies in the History and Culture of the Middle East, 36. Berlin: De Gruyter, 2020. Transregional and Regional Elites – Connecting the Early Islamic Empire
Hannah-Lena Hagemann. “Muslim Elites in the Early Islamic Jazīra: The qāḍīs of Ḥarrān, al-Raqqa, and al-Mawṣil”. Transregional and Regional Elites: Connecting the Early Islamic Empire. Hg. Hannah-Lena Hagemann & Stefan Heidemann. Studies in the History and Culture of the Middle East, Berlin: de Gruyter, 2020
Hannah-Lena Hagemann, Katharina Mewes & Peter Verkinderen. “Studying Elites in Early Islamic History”. Transregional and Regional Elites: Connecting the Early Islamic Empire. Hg. Hannah-Lena Hagemann & Stefan Heidemann. Studies in the History and Culture of the Middle East, Berlin: de Gruyter, 2020
Hannah-Lena Hagemann. “Review of Alison Vacca, Non-Muslim Provinces under Early Islam: Islamic Rule and Iranian Legitimacy in Armenia and Caucasian Albania, (CUP, 2017)”. BSOAS 81.2. (2018)
Hannah-Lena Hagemann. “Review of Shurāt Legends, Ibāḍī Identities: Martyrdom, Asceticism, and the Making of an Early Islamic Community, by Adam R. Gaiser, Columbia, SC: The University of South Carolina Press, 2016”. Islam and Christian-Muslim Relations 29:4. (2018): S. 534-536.