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Michael L. Miller is head of the Nationalism Studies program at Central European University in Vienna, and co-founder of its Jewish Studies program. He received his B.A. from Brown University, where he specialized in European History and Old World Archaeology and Art.
- Department of History
Department of History - Michael Laurence Miller | CEU People
- Nationalism Studies Program
Nationalism Studies Program - Michael Laurence Miller | CEU...
- Center for Religious Studies
Center for Religious Studies - Michael Laurence Miller | CEU...
- Jewish Studies Program
Michael Miller is Head of the Nationalism Studies program at...
- Department of History
Michael L. Miller is head of the Nationalism Studies program at Central European University in Vienna, and co-founder of its Jewish Studies program. He received his B.A. from Brown University, where he specialized in European History and Old World Archaeology and Art.
Michael L. Miller is head of the Nationalism Studies program at Central European University in Vienna, and co-founder of its Jewish Studies program. He received his B.A. from Brown University, where he specialized in European History and Old World Archaeology and Art.
Michael L. Miller is head of the Nationalism Studies program at Central European University in Vienna, and co-founder of its Jewish Studies program. He received his B.A. from Brown University, where he specialized in European History and Old World Archaeology and Art.
Michael Miller is Head of the Nationalism Studies program at Central European University in Budapest, Hungary, where he also helped establish the Jewish Studies Program. He received his Ph.D. in History from Columbia University and his B.A. in History, Archaeology and Judaic Studies from Brown University.
Courses taught by Michael Laurence Miller. Paths to Jewish Emancipation: 2014/2015 : Developing Research Proposals and Projects I. - II. 2014/2015
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Miller explains how a series of legislative acts, both rabbinic and imperial, and stretching from the late medieval period through the mid-eighteenth century, gave rise to the unusually organized, indeed regimented, character of Moravian Jewish life.