Nangeroni Meetings

From 4 Enoch: : The Online Encyclopedia of Second Temple Judaism, and Christian and Islamic Origins
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Alessandro Nangeroni (1940-1999)
1st & 4th Nangeroni Meetings, at Villa Cagnola, Gazzada, Milan, Italy (2012, 2015)
2nd Nangeroni Meeting, at Dor, near Caesarea Israel (2014)
Gabriele Boccaccini, founding director of the Nangeroni Meetings
3rd & 7th Nangeroni Meetings, at the Waldensian Faculty of Theology, Rome, Italy (2014, 2016)
File:2016 Boccaccini Segovia.jpg
3rd Nangeroni Meeting proceedings (2016)
5th Nangeroni Meeting, at Naples, Italy (2015)
6th Nangeroni Meeting, at Camaldoli, Italy (2016)
File:2016 Grabbe Boccaccini.jpg
1st Nangeroni Meeting proceedings (2016)
8th Nangeroni Meetings, at the Demidoff Country Resort, Pratolino, near Florence, Italy (2017)

The Nangeroni Meetings (2012-) are a series of small-size international seminars promoted by the Enoch Seminar, in collaboration with the Department of Near Eastern Studies of the University of Michigan, the Alessandro Nangeroni International Endowment and the Michigan Center for Early Christian Studies

< 1st (Milan 2012) -- 2nd (Israel 2014) -- 3rd (Rome 2014) -- 4th (Milan 2015) -- 5th (Naples 2015) -- 6th (Camaldoli 2016) -- 7th (Rome 2016) -- 8th (Florence 2017) -- 9th (Milan 2018) -- 10th (Rome,2018) -- 11th (Milan 2019), 12th (Berlin 2020) >

Overview

Thanks to the contribution of the Alessandro Nangeroni International Endowment, a series of seminars on Jewish, Christian and Muslim origins was launched by the Enoch Seminar, starting from the year 2012.

List of Nangeroni Meetings

Guidelines for Organizing a Nangeroni Meeting

The Nangeroni Meeting is meant to be a meeting of around 30 scholars (as compared to the Enoch Seminars which are designed to have 50-80 participants). It includes:

  • 6-7 major paper authors
  • 6-7 major paper respondents
  • 12-16 short paper authors
  • Up to 4 reading sessions chairs

Organizing a Nangeroni Meeting is a 4-step process

  • First Step: An Enoch Seminar Member(s) proposes a topic, which then must be approved by the Enoch Seminar Board of Directors.
    • Timeframe: 2 years prior to date of proposed Nangeroni Meeting
  • Second Step: The appointed chair(s) of the Nangeroni Meeting should gather a group of at least 5-10 colleagues, who are committed to participate in the Meeting and collaborate on its organization. At this point, an email will be sent to the Enoch Seminar members, announcing the proposal and asking those who are particularly interested in the topic to join the organization of the Meeting.
    • Timeframe: 1.5 years prior to the date of the Nangeroni Meeting
  • Third Step: The appointed chair(s) must present the final schedule, including the major authors and paper topics to the Enoch Seminar Board of Directors for final approval.
    • Timeframe: 1 year prior to the date of the Nangeroni Meeting
  • Fourth Step: The Enoch Seminar Board of Directors will announce and advertise the program and registration for the Nangeroni Meeting until the maximum number of participants (~35) is reached.
    • Timeframe: 8-6 months prior to the date of the Nangeroni Meeting

External links