819 search results for “el cid world” in the Student website
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Karen SmithFaculty of Humanities
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Krista A. MilneFaculty of Humanities
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Marie KolbenstetterFaculty of Archaeology
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Jacqueline VelFaculty of Law
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Gavin RobinsonFaculty of Law
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Henning LahmannFaculty of Law
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Simone van der HofFaculty of Law
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Andrew SorensenFaculty of Archaeology
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Vincent NiochetFaculty of Archaeology
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Jelle BruningFaculty of Humanities
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Nina van CapelleveenFaculty of Law
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Herman SiemensFaculty of Humanities
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Thomas FossenFaculty of Humanities
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Philippe van GruisenFaculty of Law
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Edmund HayesFaculty of Humanities
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Gabrielle van den BergFaculty of Humanities
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Kate BellamyFaculty of Humanities
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Song TanFaculty of Humanities
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Bruno VerbeekFaculty of Humanities
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Susanna de BeerFaculty of Humanities
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Paula HarveyFaculty of Humanities
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Edmund AmannFaculty of Humanities
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Jos SchaekenFaculty of Humanities
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Gert Jan GeertjesFaculty of Law
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Sayeh MohammadiFaculty of Law
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Kees WaaldijkFaculty of Law
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Wil RoebroeksFaculty of Archaeology
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Jos GommansFaculty of Humanities
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Rutger HoekstraFaculty of Science
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Tessa van BuchemFaculty of Law
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Exploring Our Roots
Terra Symposium
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Spinoza Lecture 2023
Lecture
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Lecture by Professor Tahera Qutbuddin: Between This World and the Next: Moving Reflections on Mortality and Morality in the Orations of Ali ibn
Lecture | Leiden Lectures on Arabic Language & Culture
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Dr Graça Machel in Leiden: human rights, the crucial role of academia and the importance of intergenerational dialogue
Almost three years after receiving her honorary doctorate, Dr Graça Machel returned to Leiden University. Over the course of two days she spoke with students, researchers, and other interested persons, about human rights – particularly those of women and children – in a world in which these are continually…
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Teaching Prize winner Ayo Adedokun: teaching is a calling
‘Teaching is not merely a profession; it’s a calling.’ These were the words of Ayo Adedokun on winning the LUS Teaching Prize at the opening of the academic year on 6 September. The prize is for the best lecturer of the year.
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Seven projects receive funding from JEDI Fund
More focus on diversity in Antiquity, workshops for students with disabilities, and a card game to share stories about diversity: these and other projects will receive funding from the JEDI Fund in 2023.
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Leiden was buzzing on the Evening of Languages
What does it sound like when you create your own words in Chichewa? Can you decipher hieroglyphs after just one workshop? Visitors found answers to these and many other questions during the first edition of the Evening of Languages, held in the brand-new Herta Mohr Building. With a sold-out programme,…
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Remco Breuker makes documentary series about South Korea: 'The Netherlands and Korea are structurally related'
Professor Remco Breuker plays the leading role in the new documentary ‘Big in Korea’. Over three Sunday evenings, viewers can follow his journey through South Korea. How has the country developed over the past decades? And what is the impact of last December's failed coup?
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AI and emotion recognition: ‘It could disrupt social interactions’
Just imagine new AI technology is able to read human emotions flawlessly. How would that affect us as humans? That is the question PhD candidate Alexandra Prégent is exploring.
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The Power of Social Media Networks: Scientific research on the entanglement of online and offline networks in times of conflict in Africa
Conference, 2-day Workshop
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From Dialectology to Dialectometry 2025
Weekly Workshop
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ASCL Seminar: The State in Relief: civil servants navigating duties, dependencies and disasters in Malawi
Lecture
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Cleveringa professor Gert Oostindie: ‘We stood up for our own freedom but ignored that of others’
Now that war is once again raging in Europe, the question of when you need to stand up against injustice has become more relevant than ever. In his Cleveringa lecture on 24 November historian Gert Oostindie will discuss why colonial domination was not regarded as an issue in Leiden for a long time.
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Patchwork of police checks across Schengen area
The Schengen countries officially abolished border controls, but checks actually still exist. Maartje van der Woude has written a book about these veiled border controls: ‘The danger is that Schengen will have lots of borders, just not visible ones.’
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Tracing Expertise in Politics: A Digital History of Technocracy in the Dutch House of Representatives, 1917-1994
Lecture
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The use of GenAI as a teaching tool
Lecture, CMGI Brown Bag Seminar
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How did Proto-Indo-European reach Asia?
Five thousand years before the common era (BCE), Proto-Indo-European, the mother of many languages that are spoken today in Europe, Central Asia and South Asia, originated in eastern Europe. PhD candidate Axel Palmér has combined a 175-year-old hypothesis with new techniques to demonstrate how descendants…
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Veni for Verena Meyer: 'Not every religious manuscript is meant to be digitised'
Now that it is becoming increasingly easy to digitise texts, it seems almost obvious to do that with everything that has ever been written. University lecturer Verena Meyer thinks that is too simplistic. ‘We need to look more closely at the political and cultural effects of digitisation.’
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Mermru: Building a Dynamic and Integrated Linguistic Engine for Ethio-Semitic Languages
Lecture
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Cleveringa lecture
Inaugural lecture
