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2022-06-30-accounts

Trustees’ Annual Report for the period

From 01/07/2021 Period start date To 30/06/2022

Charity name: The German History Society

Charity registration number: 1182341

Objectives and Activities

SORP
reference
Summary of the purposes of
the charity as set out in its
governing document
Para 1.17 The German History Society (“the Society”)
1.
Objects
The Objects of the Society are, for the public benefit
in the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland:
1.1
To advance education in, and promote the
study of, German history, including the
history
of
German-speaking
lands,
in
particular but not exclusively by:
1.1.1
Organising
public
conferences,
lectures and events on topics relating
to German history;
1.1.2
Creating and fostering links between
academics,
students,
scholarly
bodies and other individuals and
organisations
engaged
with
or
interested in German history;
1.1.3
Producing
and
disseminating
publications, online resources and
other media to provide information
relating to the subject and study of
German history; and
1.1.4
Providing grants and bursaries for
study or research into German
history, and awarding prizes for
exceptional academic work relating
to German history, in particular but
not exclusively to students and early
career scholars.
1.2
Nothing in this Constitution shall authorise an
application of the property of the Society for
purposes which are not charitable in
accordance with section 7 of the Charities
and Trustee Investment (Scotland) Act 2005
and section 2 of the Charities Act (Northern
Ireland) 2008.
Summary of the main
activities in relation to those
purposes for the public
benefit, in particular, the
activities, projects or
services identified in the
accounts.
Para 1.17
and 1.19
The Society promotes learning in the history of
Germany and the German-speaking world. It does
this, broadly, through events,
publication/dissemination of print and online
information, awarding grants for study/research and
fostering a network of academics, students and other
individuals and organisations interested in the
discipline.
The Society exists to benefit the public at large and
many benefits are accessible to all. However, the
Society encourages those with an interest in German
history to become members and membership
confers additional benefits. Membership is easy to
obtain and affordable: the cost is £27/year for
general membership and £8/year for student
membership, which is a lower fee than that charged
by many other membership organisations.
Members of the Society can access various benefits,
which are designed to promote their learning,
including automatic subscription to the Society's own
journal, eligibility to apply for bursaries/grants and
free attendance at the Society’s annual conference
and various other events.
The Society’s journal,German History, includes
articles/research and other information relevant the
field and represents an excellent educational
resource. In addition, the Society’s website includes
a comprehensive list of links to relevant study and
research resources, to assist students, scholars and
other interested parties to develop their learning in
the area.
The Society’s annual conference and other events
provide a platform for leading speakers in German
history to showcase their work and educate
attendees. These events also facilitate networking
between those working, studying or interested in the
discipline, thereby providing opportunities to
advance education through the sharing of knowledge
and ideas.
Bursaries and grants allow students and early career
scholars to fund items that otherwise may have been
unaffordable to them, including study fees, research
trips, attending or putting on conferences/events,
amongst other things. These awards therefore
broaden access to the field and promote learning.
The Society also awards various prizes for
outstanding work in the field of German history,
including a postgraduate essay prize, EDI prize and
undergraduate dissertation prize, which are open to
students at UK and Irish universities, and a prize for
the best article published each year in_German_
_History_journal.
The Society exists to advance education in the history
of Germany and the German-speaking world and is
committed to activities that enable the public at large
to become engaged in this discipline.
Non-members can subscribe to the German History
journal and attend the Society’s annual conference
and other events, subject to payment of a fee.
Therefore, many of the benefits enjoyed by members
are available more widely at cost, and therefore
contribute to the Society’s aims of advancing
education in German history for the benefit of the
public at large.
Furthermore, membership of the Society is open to
any person who is studying, teaching or researching
German history, or who supports the aims of the
Society or is simply interested in the topic. There is no
limit on membership numbers. Therefore although
members gain benefits by virtue of their membership,
anyone with an interest in the area can become a
member and therefore enjoy these benefits.
Statement confirming
whether the trustees have
had regard to the guidance
issued by the Charity
Commission on public
benefit
Para 1.18 The trustees, in making decisions, have had due
regard to the commission's public benefit guidance
when exercising any powers or duties to which the
guidance is relevant.

Additional information (optional) You may choose to include further statements where relevant about:

SORP reference Para 1.38 Policy on grant making Para 1.38 Policy on social investment including program related investment Para 1.38 Contribution made by volunteers

Other

Achievements and Performance

SORP
reference
Summary of the main
achievements of the charity,
identifying the difference the
charity’s work has made to
the circumstances of its
beneficiaries and any wider
benefits to society as a
whole.
Para 1.20 Annual Conference
In 2021, the Society’s annual conference was held at
the University of Roehampton (with the potential for
additional online participation) from 2-4 September.
The conference included around 70 participants
(speakers, chairs, discussants) from across the globe,
representing researchers at all levels from
postgraduates and early career researchers to
established senior scholars. Plenary lectures were
held by Doris Bergen (Toronto), Yair Mintzker
(Princeton) and Hedwig Röckelein (Göttingen).
Members and non-members alike were able to attend
the conference and broaden their knowledge of
German history and culture.
Other Events
GHS members were invited to collaborate with the
German Historical Institute London on a workshop on
medieval Germany, held on 6 May 2022.
An exhibition part-funded by the GHS entitled ‘Behind
the Wire: Internment during the First World War’ was
held at the Old Library Galleries, Leicester, during
April-May 2022, and inaugurated by the City Mayor.
GHS Ukraine Fellowship
In June 2022, Dr Natalia Gromakova joined the
University of Aberdeen’s Centre for Polish-Lithuanian
Studies as part of the ‘Scholars at Risk’ Fellowship
programme for Ukraine, sponsored by the German
History Society in collaboration with the Royal
Historical Society.
Dr Gromakova specialises in the social and
associational life of minorities, including Polish and
German speakers in the nineteenth-century Ukrainian
lands occupied by Austria and Russia after the Third
Partition of Poland in 1795 up to the First World War.
Shefledher homein Bucha, around20km north-west

of Kyiv, with her daughter on March 11. Dr Gromakova had been working at the National Pedagogical University in Kyiv as a postdoctoral researcher. She and daughter Olena were able to evacuate the town, which had been under relentless shelling since the outbreak of war, but her husband remained behind to support those defending the country. The GHS contributed £5,000 to fund Dr. Gromakova’s Fellowship. Since then, Dr Gromakova has delivered several papers, including one at Cambridge, and the University of Aberdeen has matched the GHS/RHS funding to enable her to stay on the fellowship for a whole year, until the end of May 2023. Membership In May 2022, the Society had 202 members (135 waged, 65 unwaged). The Society’s expanded use of social media had an appreciable impact in this regard. Members of the Society are able to attend the annual conference without paying a fee, and are eligible for the Society’s prizes, grants, and bursaries. Membership of the Society also includes a subscription at significantly discounted rates to the internationally-acclaimed journal German History , which is published four times a year on behalf of the Society by Oxford University Press. Grants The Society received a smaller number of applications than usual for its grants and bursary schemes, given the disruption to research and travel due to COVID. However, there have been significant increases from last year in applications for in-person language-course grants, and applications to the new hardship fund. The Society has taken care to be flexible in what the awards can be allocated towards – for instance, if research travel were not possible, to consider applications for cost of book purchases and digitising. For a full financial breakdown of expenditure on grants and bursaries, see the Financial Review section below. GHS Postgraduate awards 2021-22 GHS/DAAD language course awards (850 Euro each, paid half by GHS, half by DAAD): There was continuing disruption from Covid but two new awards were made and three students asked to roll over awards to 21/22 year with permission from the DAAD. Small research grants (of up to £1250 each):

5 applications were received in August 2021 and 5 awarded 2 applications were received in January 2022 and awarded 3 applications were received in April and awarded Hardship grants (of up to £500 each) 2 applications were received in January 2022 and awarded 2 applications were received in April 2022 and awarded Major Bursaries (£2500 each) We had 5 applications and made 2 awards, and offered 1 an award of a small grant equivalent. Conference funding scheme We had 1 application and award (up to £2700) Exhibition Funding Scheme – a team of researchers led by Edward Wouk (Manchester) preparing an exhibition entitled ‘Albrecht Dürer’s Material World’ (to be held at The Whitworth, Manchester, 2023–24) was awarded £2,000. Prizes RHS/GHS Postgraduate Essay prize The German History Society awards a prize of £500 to the winner of this annual essay competition. In addition, the essays are considered for publication in German History journal. Winners of the 2022 Postgraduate Essay Prize: Carmel Heeley (QMUL) for ‘Jewish Innovations to Conceptions of ‘German Belonging’: The Case of Munich Jewish Businesses’. Antonia Anstatt (Oxford) for ‘Empress and Virgin: Female Sainthood in the Early Thirteenth Century’. Joint runners up were Ingrid Schreiber (Oxford): “Solitude and Sociability in Christian Jakob Kraus (1753-1807)” and Frederick Crofts (Cambridge): ‘Calvinist Heidelberg and the East: Marcus zum Lamm Collects Turcica, c. 1600’. GHS Undergraduate Essay Prize The German History Society offers an annual prize of £300 for the best undergraduate dissertation on German History written by a student of history (single

or joint honours, or in a cognate discipline) at a UK or Irish university. Runner-up prizes of £100 each may also be offered at the judges’ discretion. The prizes were awarded to: Charlotte Dos Remedios (University of Warwick), 'Women’s Bodies in Auschwitz: An Exploration of the Psychological Implications of Malnourishment on Female Prisoners’ (first prize); Anastasia RaschMurphy (University of Warwick), ‘Remembering the Marginalised: Epilepsy and Epileptics in Nazi Germany, 1933-1945' (runner-up prize) and Charlotte Rayner (University of Exeter), ‘Visions of Nationalism: The Role of the Imperator-Class Liners in Imperial Germany’s Nation Building, 1910-1914’ (runner-up prize). Equality and Inclusion Prize For the first time, the Society initiated an award for critical interventions in debates on gender, minorities, migration, ethnicity and equality, including research on critical race studies, LGBTQ+ and queer studies, and disability studies, related to any aspect of the history of Germany and the German-speaking world in its broadest global context. The prize was awarded for the first time in September 2022. German History Article Prize Each year German History 's editorial board awards a prize on the behalf of The German History Society for the best article published in the journal. The prize is intended to showcase outstanding work from scholars of German history whatever their career stage, and the winner is invited to receive their award at the annual meeting of the German History Society in September. The prize is worth £500, with an additional £250 of books provided by OUP. Oxford Journals makes the prize-winning articles freely available online. The winner of the prize in 2021 was Holly Fletcher, whose article ‘Belly-Worshippers and GreedPaunches’: Fatness and the Belly in the Lutheran Reformation’, was published in German History 39(2), June 2021, pp. 173-200. Journal The journal continues to experience a good flow of submissions, largely from early-career scholars based in the UK, US and Germany, although the regular submission of articles from further afield attests to the journal’s global reach. Two special issues were in development, both seeking to span early modern,

modern and contemporary history. Publication slots are currently filled until summer 2024. The majority of articles submitted are by early-career scholars but there is also a regular flow of submissions by more senior scholars. In terms of subjects, the articles submitted cover the full range of German history from the early Middle Ages to the present. The journal thus continues to fulfil its mission to be the pre-eminent English-language journal for German history and to command respect throughout the world, including the German-speaking lands. Book Series The German History Society has established its own book series, Studies in German History, in collaboration with its long-standing publishing partner Oxford University Press. The series reflects the German History Society’s longstanding mission to promote the best scholarship in the broad field of German history, and seeks to build on the innovative directions established by the Society’s journal in recent years. Taking an open, expansive view of what German History is and where that history has been played out, it envisions a broad chronological and geographic scope that encompasses topics from the medieval period to the present day; it seeks to go beyond the traditional confines of German history by adopting a comparative approach or exploring themes that entwine the history of the German-speaking lands with that of other parts of the world; it aims to solicit titles that are intellectually ambitious, whether in their engagement with novel paradigms or their use of concepts and methods from other disciplines; and it seeks to publish work that reaches a readership beyond immediate specialists in a particular field. Above all, it seeks to publish work that engages with historical questions of wider relevance across German and other histories. The series has now published a total of eleven books. Two appeared during the reporting period: � Marjorie Elizabeth Plummer, ‘Stripping the Veil: Convent Reform, Protestant Nuns, and Female Devotional Life in Sixteenth-Century Germany’ (March 2022) � Sarah Greer, ‘Commemorating Power in Early Medieval Saxony’ (October 2021) Two more have appeared since: � Patrick Milton, ‘Intervention and State Sovereignty in Central Europe, 1500-1780’ (November 2022)

� Marcus Colla, ‘Prussia in the Historical Culture of the German Democratic Republic’ (October 2022) Martin Christ’s ‘Biographies of a Reformation’ (2021) won the REFORC book award and the Ecclesiastical History Society book award and Craig Griffiths’ ‘The Ambivalence of Gay Liberation’ (2021) was shortlisted for the RHS’s Gladstone Prize. Our contract with OUP is to publish 2-4 books per year, so we are well on target, and we currently have two completed manuscripts and a number of very strong proposals in hand. Outreach

In April 2022 – April 2023 Jeff Bowersox and his committee worked on four outreach projects, all of which are ongoing. The first, which is ongoing, was the production of a series of videos on objects in German history featuring members of the German History Society. These brief videos use an unusual or otherwise unremarkable historical artifact to tell a broader story, for example about eating habits in the eighteenth century, about the experience of the First World War or the Holocaust or about the course of the Cold War. These videos will be provided free of charge on the GHS website and are intended to be of value not just for the general public but specifically for schoolteachers and sixth-form students in the UK and Ireland. The second is a collaboration with the Wiener Library to produce a CPD event for teachers around Jewish history and the Holocaust. Jeff Bowersox also developed links with centres like the National Holocaust Centre and Museum in Nottingham and the Weidenfeld Institute of Jewish Studies in Brighton in order to facilitate future projects. The third is a collaboration with partner organizations like the Association of German Studies (UK) and the German Studies Association (USA) to produce and distribute resources to support the teaching of German language and German history in the UK and Ireland. This year, Jeff Bowersox renewed contacts that were disrupted by the pandemic and together laid out common priorities that will be used in the coming year to lay out a plan of action. The fourth, and related, activity, is the development of an essay competition to encourage the study of German history among pre-university students. Jeff Bowersox and the committee met with the coordinators of existing essay competitions (e.g. Katrin Kohl of the Oxford German Network) to get guidance on best practices and how to support

students from varying types of schools and have laid the groundwork to get the essay competition started in the next year.

Additional information (optional) You may choose to include further statements where relevant about:

Achievements against
objectives set
Para 1.41
Performance of fundraising
activities against objectives
set
Para 1.41
Investment performance
against objectives
Para 1.41
Other

Financial Review

Financial Review
Review of the charity’s
financial position at the end
of the period
Para 1.21 Please find the detailed end of year financial
statement on the following pages.
Statement explaining the
policy for holding reserves
stating why they are held
Para 1.22 We continue to experience the longer impact
of the pandemic. Some projects,
conferences, postgraduate research plans
involving travel, as well as the language
courses that we support had been
postponed, cancelled, or took place online,
and we continued to support these projects if
applicants wished to see the money
transferred into a new financial cycle. We had
earmarked the difference from the spendings
of two years ago for projects carried into the
future, as well as for applications during the
last year. Already last year, we spent £8,126
more than in the previous year which shows
that the impact of the pandemic was getting
smaller. We are proud to announce the
income and spending was in balance this
financial year (see attached report). We
continue to financially support projects
carried on due to the impact of the pandemic,
as well as future applications.
Amount of reserves held Para 1.22 See attached report.
Reasons for holding zero
reserves
Para 1.22 N/A
Details of fund materially in
deficit
Para 1.24 N/A
Explanation of any
uncertainties about the
charity continuing as a going
concern
Para 1.23 N/A

Additional information (optional) You may choose to include further statements where relevant about:

The charity’s principal
sources of funds (including
any fundraising)
Para 1.47
Investment policy and
objectives including any
social investment policy
adopted
Para 1.46
A description of the principal
risks facing the charity
Para 1.46
Other

Structure, Governance and Management

Description of charity’s
trusts:
Type of governing
document
(trust deed, royal charter)
Para 1.25 Constitution
How is the charity
constituted?
(e.g unincorporated
association, CIO)
Para 1.25 Learned Society
Trustee selection methods
including details of any
constitutional provisions e.g.
election to post or name of
any person or body entitled
to appoint one or more
trustees
Para 1.25 2.
Appointment of Trustees
2.1
For the purposes of this clause, a
“year” shall mean a complete period
of service between two AGMs.
2.2
The Trustees in office on the date of
adoption of this Constitution shall
remain in post until the expiry of their
term of office as determined under
the previous constitution (adopted on
1 September 2017), after which the
provisions of this Constitution shall
apply.
2.3
Officerships
2.3.1 The Members at AGM shall
elect individuals to the Fixed
Officerships
and
Further
Officerships
described
in
clausesError! Reference
source
not
found.
and
Error! Reference source not
found.of the Constitution
each for a non-renewable
term of three years.
2.3.2 After expiry of this three-year
term, the Fixed Officerships
and Further Officerships shall
retire from these positions
and shall not be eligible for re-
election to them, provided
that they shall be eligible for
election to other Officerships
or otherwise as Trustees,
subject to the time limits on
Trustee service under sub-
clause 2.6.
2.3.3 The terms of office of the
Chairperson
and
the
Secretary shall not normally
be co-terminous.
2.4 Ex-officio trustees
2.4.1 The Editors of the GHS
Journal
and
the
Series
Editors of Studies in German
History for the time being
(“the Ex-Officio Trustees”)
shall automatically, by virtue
of holding those offices, be
trustees.
2.4.2 If unwilling to act as a trustee,
an Ex-Officio Trustee may:
(a)
before
accepting
appointment
as
a
Trustee, give notice in
writing to the Trustees
of
his
or
her
unwillingness to act in
that capacity; or
(b)
after
accepting
appointment
as
a
Trustee, resign under
the
provisions
contained
in
Constitution
sub-
clause
Error!
Reference
source
not found..
2.4.3 The office of that Ex-Officio
Trustee
will
then
remain
vacant until the office holder
ceases to hold office.
2.5 If
there
are
more
applications/nominations for the role
of Trustee than there are vacant
Trustee positions, the Secretary shall
prepare ballot papers for secret
elections at the AGM and shall act as
returning officer for the elections.
Each Member returning a ballot
paper at the AGM shall have as many
votes as there are vacancies.
2.6 Except for the Ex-Officio Trustees, no
Trustee shall serve for a period of
more than nine years except where
the
Trustees
determine
that
exceptional
circumstances
apply.
Service accrued prior to the adoption
of this Constitution shall not count for
the purposes of this sub-clause 2.6.
2.7 The Trustees and the Members shall
have regard to maintaining broad
representation
of
the
various
chronological periods of German
history in electing Trustees to the
Committee.
2.8 Every Trustee after appointment or
reappointment
must
sign
a
declaration of willingness to act as a
charity trustee of the Society before
he or she may act as a Trustee.
2.9 A technical defect in the appointment
of a Trustee of which the Trustees are
unaware at the time does not
invalidate decisions taken at a
meeting.

Additional information (optional) You may choose to include further statements where relevant about:

----- Start of picture text -----
Policies and procedures
adopted for the induction
and training of trustees Para 1.51
The charity’s organisational
structure and any wider
network with which the Para 1.51
charity works
Relationship with any related
parties Para 1.51
----- End of picture text -----

Other

Reference and Administrative details

Charity name The German History Society
Other name the charity uses N/A
Registered charity number 1182341
Charity’s principal address c/o Dr. Helen Roche (GHS Secretary)
Department of History
Durham University
43 North Bailey
Durham DH1 3EX

Names of the charity trustees who manage the charity

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
Trustee name Office (if any) Dates acted
if not for
whole year
Name of person (or body) entitled
to appoint trustee (if any)
Karin Friedrich Chair
Helen Roche Secretary
Stefan Hanss Treasurer
Sina Steglich German Historical Institute
Representative
Kat Hill Postgraduate Officer
Anna Ross Journal Editor
Joachim Whaley Journal Editor
Neil Gregor Book Series Editor
Bridget Heal Book Series Editor
Jeff Bowersox Schools and Outreach Officer
Mark Jones
Laura Kounine

– Corporate trustees names of the directors at the date the report was approved

Director name

Name of trustees holding title to property belonging to the charity

Trustee name Dates acted if not for whole year

Funds held as custodian trustees on behalf of others

Description of the assets held in this capacity Name and objects of the charity on whose behalf the assets are held and how this falls within the custodian charity’s objects Details of arrangements for safe custody and segregation of such assets from the charity’s own assets

Additional information (optional)

Names and addresses of advisers (Optional information)

Names and addresses of advisers (Optional information) Names and addresses of advisers (Optional information) Names and addresses of advisers (Optional information)
Type of
adviser
Name
Address
Name of chief executive or names of senior staff members (Optional information)

Exemptions from disclosure

Reason for non-disclosure of key personnel details

Other optional information

GERMAN HISTORY SOCIETY

FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 30TH JUNE 2022

PEACOCK ACCOUNTANCY INTERNATIONAL HOUSE KINGSFIELD COURT CHESTER BUSINESS PARK CHESTER CH4 9RF

GERMAN HISTORY SOCIETY

INCOME AND EXPENDITURE ACCOUNT FOR THE YEAR ENDED 30TH JUNE 2022

INCOME
Main funding subscriptions & royalties
Oxford University Press
German History Journal grants
Oxford University Press
GHS/DAAD language grants
Miscellaneous receipt
Bank interest
EXPENDITURE
Annual conference & AGM
Graduate Assistance Scheme
Post graduate bursaries - Major
Post graduate bursaries - Small
Hardship Grant
Ukranian Scholars at Risk
GHIL lecture
GHS/DAAD language stipends
Essay Dissertation and Article prizes
Workshop
Exhibition funding
Journal costs
Admininstration
Committee travelling expenses
Website & domain costs
Professional fees
Accountancy fee
Bank charges
Misc expenses
(DEFICIT/SURPLUS FOR THE YEAR
202 2
923
8,744
-
540
60
GENERAL
FUNDS
£
44,589
-
-
2,147
16
GERMAN
HISTORY
JNL
£
10,239
46,752
3,723
-
18,707
7,959
2,000
5,000
-
1,971
1,600
287
963
-
10,267
-
10,239
3,776
52,477 3,776
5,725
-
6,463

GERMAN HISTORY SOCIETY

BALANCE SHEET AS AT 30TH JUNE 2022

CURRENT ASSETS
Bank balances - Deposit account
- Current account
- German History Journal acc
CURENT LIABILITIES
Journal grant received in advance
Creditors
REPRESENTED BY
REVENUE ACCOUNTS
General Funds
AT 30 JUNE 2021
SURLPUS/DEFICIT FOR THE YEAR
German History Journal Fund
AT 30 JUNE 2021
SURPLUS/DEFICIT FOR THE YEAR
£
166,736
1,285
7,539
2
£
175,560
540
175,020
153,451
21,569
175,020
022
£
165,544
1,593
10,768
2
£
177,905
3,622
021
540 3,083
539
159,176
-
5,725
-
127,691
-
31,485
174,283
159,176
15,106
15,106
6,463
14,208
899
174,283

We have prepared, without audit, the foregoing accounts from the books and records of the Society and from the information and explanations given to us. In our opinion they give a true and fair view of the Societys affairs at 30th June 2022

Peacock Accountancy

Declarations

The trustees declare that they have approved the trustees’ report above.

Signed on behalf of the charity’s trustees

Signature(s)
Full name(s)
Position (eg Secretary,
Chair, etc)
Date
Helen Barbara Elizabeth Roche Karin Friedrich

Secretary
Chair
14th February 2023
14th February 2023