GIS für Geisteswissenschaften. Geodaten erstellen - bearbeiten - visualisieren | Block (B) | SS 2023 |
by: Philipp Vogler
Supervisor: Prof. Dr. Kurt Möser
Abstract (as of January 2018)
The surviving aerial photographs from the time of the two world wars still impressively demonstrate the destructive power of man-made war machinery today. Hardly any publication or television documentary on aerial warfare seems to be without them. Surprisingly, the findings are disproportionate to this dissemination. While much has been published in the English-speaking world on the history of Allied aerial reconnaissance, there is a research gap here in the case of its German counterpart.
What technical considerations and development steps led up to its first major wartime use in World War I? What was the relationship between inventors, scientists, companies and the military? How are aerial photographs from this period accessible today?
This study explores continuities and discontinuities in terms of technical development, people, organizational structures and actual military deployment by not only comparing several time periods from the earliest developments to the end of World War II, but also by looking at a transnational dimension. Developments in Germany are compared with those in Great Britain and the United States. Where do conceptual and real differences emerge here? What significance can be attributed to military aerial photography in each case?
In conclusion, the aim is to arouse the interest of experts in the source "historical aerial photograph", which still offers extensive possibilities for historical research.
September 2009 - March 2015 | Studies of teaching profession for grammar schools (in-depth) subject combination (German language and literature studies / history) Julius Maximilians-University Würzburg |
Since May 2015 | Employee of the aerial photo database Dr. Carls GmbH, Estenfeld Areas: File acquisition and GIS-supported evaluation for explosive ordnance pre-explorations, archive research, database management, project management. |
Since January 2016 | PhD student at the Institute of History of the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology |
Since January 2016 | Member of the Working Group Military History |
Since May 2016 | Member of the International Intelligence History Association |
Lecture: German military aerial reconnaissance until 1945. Backgrounds and perspectives for research. | 08.01.2018 |
|
Lecture: A new perspective on warfare: German military aerial photography in the First World War | Philipp Vogler, M.A. |
17.-18.November 2017 |
Lecture: From Above: Aerial Reconnaissance and Photography at the Eastern Front during World War II | 15.-16.April 2016 |
|
Lecture: Port Arthur as a symbol of modern siege warfare | Philipp Vogler, M.A. |
11.-12.12.2015 |