Klaus Koschorke

Klaus Koschorke
Fields Church History
Institutions LMU Munich

Klaus Koschorke (born 13 April 1948) is a Professor of Early and Global History of Christianity at the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich (Germany)

Life and academic background

After studying Protestant theology in Berlin, Heidelberg, Edinburgh, Tübingen and Heidelberg from 1967–1973, Klaus Koschorke completed his doctoral degree in Heidelberg in 1976 with a dissertation on the newly discovered Coptic-Gnostic texts from Nag Hammadi. He was a research assistant in Bielefeld-Bethel and Heidelberg and assistant professor in Bern, where he qualified as a university lecturer in 1991 with his habilitation thesis on 4th century Greek ecclesiology (Basil of Caesarea). Also during this time he held guest professorships and teaching positions in Switzerland and in Asia (foremost in Sri Lanka, 1982/3).[1]

Since 1993, succeeding Georg Kretschmar, he has held the Chair of Church History at the University of Munich (LMU) . He developed it – in addition to the treatment of patristic themes – into the only Chair of Church History at a Faculty of Protestant Theology in German-speaking central Europe that specializes in the history of non-western and global Christianity. Its many projects have been aimed at an ecumenical-oriented church history that is concerned not only with the denominational, but also with the geographical and cultural-contextual plurality of World Christianity. Koschorke was dean of the Faculty for Protestant Theology at the University Munich from 2003-2005 and has been Visiting Research Fellow at Liverpool Hope University since 2010. Regular research stays in Asia, Africa and Latin America and guest professorships at European and various Asian institutions (e.g. in 2012 as guest professor at Shanghai University, China) serve the further development of the new historical subdiscipline “History of World Christianity” and networking between scholars engaged in this area of research.[1]

Editor of the following book series

Works (Selection)

External links

References

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