Following the set-up of the full project team and website (www.civil-wars.eu) in 2022, the team conducted primary research on the comparative and entangled history of European civil wars in the first half of the twentieth century. Primary research on the key themes of the project have been carried out by the core team members in archives across Europ and further afield, notably in the US (Library of Congress, the archives of Russian emigration at the Hoover Institution, in Stanford, California, and the Bakmheteff Library at Columbia University).
Some of the key conceptual issues regarding the question of how one can write such an entangled history of civil wars were addressed in a first special journal issue, co-edited by Robert Gerwarth and Martin Conway, was published by the Journal of Modern European History in late 2022. In addition, seven international workshops have been held in the context of the CivilWars Project to date, each of them focused on themes that affected all of the key case studies – the civil wars that occurred in Russia, Finland, Ireland, Spain, and Greece: these themes ranged from Humanitarianism in civil wars, to the Spanish Civil War as a connector between events in Russia and those in Greece, the role of Political Commissars in each of these conflicts and the connections that existed between European civil wars and some of the civil wars that occurred outside Europe, namely in Mexico and China. Some of these workshops solely organized by the PI and his team, others in close cooperation with partner institutions in Barcelona, Belfast, and Athens, and Thessaloniki. The selected proceedings of each workshop will be published as a special journal issue.
The main objective of the CivilWars project is to explore the interconnectedness of civil wars in Europe in the first half of the twentieth century, notably through the circulation of ideas, people, concepts and practices.
We set out to explore, from a comparative perspective, the types and patterns of violence that characterized Europe’s civil wars in this period and whether there are patterns that go beyond individual national cases. This is a running theme for all our workshops in which we bring together experts from all over Europe and further afield in an attempt to bring different national historiographies into conversation with each other. We also strive to explore this objective through primary research in archives across Europe. We also explore comparatively how civil wars begin and end, with particular reference to the case studies of Russia, Finland, Ireland, Spain and Greece.
Apart from our publications, the core team members have given a significant number of talks at conferences, many of them public-facing.