Period | 2024-2026 |
Principal Investigators | 1. Lavinia Costea and Adinel Dincă, 2. Gudmundur Halfdanarson, 3. Emilie Iacono, 4. Maria Amélia Campos, 5. Tuomas Heikkilä, 6. Anti Selart, 7. Andrea Fara, 8. Paul McCusker, 9. Antoniy Moysey, 10. Iwona Markuszewska, 11. Simona Scalas, 12. Zsolt-Levente Buna, 13. Paula Beudean, 14. Paolo Montemmuro, 15. Carmen Chindris, 16. Sébastien de Valeriola, 17. Claire-Marie Vandermensbrugghe, 18. Manos Andreadis, 19. Rares Abraham, 20. Nicolae Tescula (numbers refer to the institutions listed below) |
Funding | European Commission, Horizon |
Collaborators (QuaDiHum side) | Nicolas Ruffini-Ronzani, Guillaume Quintin |
The Quadihum center is involved in a Horizon Europe project, following the call HORIZON-CL2-2023-HERITAGE-01-04: Cultural heritage in transformation – facing change with confidence. The core of the project consists of a series of case studies inspired by the historical experience of the Transylvanian Saxons, who built prosperous settlements in the Middle Ages on the territory.
It brings together 20 partners – universities, public institutions, companies, and NGOs – from 12 European countries:
1 : Universitatea Babes−Bolyai ; 2 : Haskoli Islands ; 3 : Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique CNRS ; 4 : Universidade de Coimbra ; 5 : Helsingin Yliopisto ; 6 : Tartu Ulikool ; 7 : Universita Degli Studi Di Roma La Sapienza ; 8 : Atlantic Technological University ; 9 : Bukovinian State Medical University ; 10 : Uniwersytet IM. Adama Mickiewicza W Poznaniu ; 11 : Universita Degli Studi Di Cagliari ; 12 : Universitatea Tehnica Cluj−Napoca ; 13 : C.School for Creative Acts ; 14 : Consorzio MATERAHUB Industrie Culturali e Creative ; 15 : Civitas Foundation for Civil Society ; 16 : Université libre de Bruxelles ; 17 : Maison du Patrimoine Médiéval Mosan ; 18 : Asset Technology EPE ; 19 : 23 Film Studio & Media srl ; 20 : Sighisoara City Hall
QuaDiHum’s main role in the project is to organize training courses in network analysis for the consortium’s researchers and for the staff of Transylvania’s GLAMs (Galleries, Libraries, Archives & Museums).
A first event was organized in June 2024, which took the form of a network analysis workshop.
A second such event, coupled with a more traditional conference, is scheduled to take place in Brussels in early 2026.