Submit your proposal by Monday!
@dissinet
The Dissident Networks Project (DISSINET), an ERC-funded inititative at Masaryk University’s Centre for the Digital Research of Religion, applies SNA, GIS, and computational text analysis to explore dissident and inquisitorial cultures in medieval Europe.
Submit your proposal by Monday!
Only 3 days left to apply!
📖 New publication announcement! 📖
Our study published in Digital Scholarship in the Humanities uses network and temporal data from Peter Zwicker's inquisition in Stettin (1393–94) to examine how information gathered from deponent testimonies affected subsequent interrogations.
🎓 Funded Postdoc! 🎓
DISSINET is offering support for MSCA postdoc applications to work on our digital humanities project using large‑scale computational methods to study medieval hate speech and anti‑heretical discourse.
🗓️ Preliminary proposals are due 16 March 2026!
🔁 Please repost and share.
🧑🎓 Funded Ph.D. Opportunity! 🧑🎓
M.A. graduates are invited to apply for fully funded Ph.D. studies within our digital humanities project using large‑scale computational methods to study medieval hate speech and anti‑heretical discourse.
🗓️ Proposals are due 16 March 2026!
🔁 Please repost and share.
📖 New publication announcement! 📖
Our study in Historical Research applies computational semantic modeling to systematically analyse hundreds of crime summaries from Peter Seila’s 1241–42 inquisition register, revealing how the voices of inquisitor, notary and suspects were interwoven.
Our DISSICON dataset (which stands for DISSINET Conceptual Network) is available on Zenodo, offering an ontology for analysing medieval inquisition records and other trial documents. It formalizes actions, concepts, and their relationships to support computational analyses of historical material.
📖 New publication announcement! 📖
Our new study in Reti Medievali Rivista challenges old ideas about the roots of religious dissent in medieval Bologna. Rather than being related to economic status or craft affiliation, heresy clustered in specific neighborhoods due to social and spatial networks.
Large Language Models (LLMs) have invaded various aspects of our lives 🤖 🧠
Despite understandable skepticism, LLMs can serve as valuable tools for research-oriented information extraction from historical texts 📜
Read our methodological reflections on working with LLMs: dissinet.cz/news/article...
DISSINET is offering support to M.A. graduates applying for fully funded Ph.D. studies on medieval anti-heretical hate speech using digital and quantitative methods. Go to dissinet.cz/news/article... to find out more. Proposals are due 31 July 2025! Please share with anyone who might be interested.
How did medieval inquisitors weigh the extent of heretics' guilt? ⚖️
Have a look at our interactive visualisation of the relationship between heretical crimes and sentencing in the register of Peter Seila (1241-2). dissinet.cz/data-snapsho...
How can historians benefit from digital methods without sacrificing the rigours of close reading and source criticism?
Read our recently published article in Acta Historica Tallinnensia to find out!
dissinet.cz/news/article...
Reminder: join us tomorrow at 🕓 4 pm CET!
The popular online publication Aktuálně.cz has used our comprehensive dataset of witchcraft trials in Czech lands to create a new map! Their article also features several other helpful visualisations and findings based on our data. Click here to read more: dissinet.cz/news/article...
If you are interested in the study of generative network models, join us next week on 29 May for a talk by Daniel Gotthardt of the University of Hamburg, who will present on "Analyzing non-local influence processes in dynamic networks". Click here for the Zoom link: dissinet.cz/news/events-...
Did the people investigated by the inquisition in Bologna form a few cohesive communities, or are they better understood as many small groups or individuals who drew the attention of the inquisitors separately?
To find out, take a look at our most recent data snapshot! dissinet.cz/data-snapsho...
Only one more day left to apply!
The deadline is tomorrow!
One of the most common ways inquisitors determined whom to investigate was by asking deponents to incriminate others. Interestingly, men and women exhibited different patterns when providing incriminations.
Find out more in our recent study published in PLOS One: journals.plos.org/plosone/arti...
DISSINET is offering support for MSCA postdoc applications on medieval anti-heretical hate speech using digital and quantitative methods. Go to dissinet.cz/news/article... to find out more.
Preliminary proposals are due 15 April 2025!
Please share with anyone who might be interested.
DISSINET is offering support to M.A. graduates applying for fully funded Ph.D. studies on medieval anti-heretical hate speech using digital and quantitative methods. Go to dissinet.cz/news/article... to find out more. Proposals are due 15 April 2025! Please share with anyone who might be interested.
Our principal investigator @davidzbiral.bsky.social and research fellow K. Suba recently investigated the Cathar practice of endura. The results are available as a pre-print on Zenodo: zenodo.org/records/1373....