The Eastern European History Review is an international and interdisciplinary peer-reviewed journal that is published annually online and open access. It is focused on Central and Eastern European studies in the Modern Age (XV–XIX). The Journal is also the expression of the Study Center CESPoM (Centro Studi sull’età dei Sobieski e della Polonia Moderna—Center Study on the Age of Sobieski and Modern Poland) of the University of Tuscia, which was founded in 1997.
It publishes articles with significant approaches and original interpretations in all research fields concerning Central and Eastern Europe, specifically focusing on the History Sciences.
The special issue of the Eastern European History Review reexamines the Long Turkish War and 17th-century anti-Ottoman conflicts. It challenges fragmented national histories that offer distorted views of these wars. By focusing on regions like Wallachia and Transylvania, it restores local perspectives within broader imperial narratives. The volume employs modern military transformation concepts to enrich our understanding of early modern warfare. Through interdisciplinary sources, it provides a comprhensive views of conflicts in Central and Eastern Europe.
From the Long Turkish War (1593-1606) to the Liberation of Vienna (1683), edited by Alessandro Boccolini and Ovidiu Cristea, is the result of interdisciplinary historical research interests of the CESPoM Study Center, in collaboration with the Romanian Academy in Rome directed by Prof. Rudolf Dinu, and the Institute of History “Nicolae Iorga” of the Romanian Academy in Bucharest.