A number of conferences, workshops, and seminars were attended. Among them were the German History Research Group in Cambridge, the annual meeting of the American Academy of Religion, and the congress of the International Organization for the Study of the Old Testament. Participation in a two-week summer school for early-career researchers enhanced the research empirically and methodologically. Individual meetings were also held with colleagues across Europe to continue or begin collaboration.
A website was created to announce presentations, publications, and events. It also shared its collection of digitized sources to support research by others. During the life of the grant, it had 684 sessions, 353 users, and 2,110 pageviews. The host institution has kept the website active beyond the funding period.
The project also organized a successful workshop. The event explored how understandings of biblical law impacted discussions of legal structures, models, and institutions amidst the consolidation of German states in the 19th century and how that modern discourse affected understandings of ancient law.
Findings were disseminated through oral presentations at a variety of seminars, workshops, and conferences. Academic presentations were delivered in Basel, Boston, Cambridge, Coimbra, Ghent, Leiden, and Oxford. A public talk was given at the Woolf Institute, a center devoted to outreach on relations between Christians, Jews, and Muslims. The project also organized its international and interdisciplinary workshop with support from the Cambridge Inter-faith Programme, a platform for religious literacy and public education.
Throughout the 24 months of research, the project produced publications to disseminate its results across a range of disciplinary constellations. A total of 5 articles and 1 book are now published, forthcoming, under peer-review, or in final preparation.