About the Conference Proceedings Series
The aim of the Church History Review
The aim of the journal is to provide a publication platform for researchers and church historians working in the field of church history, and to be an open forum for church history research.
Target audience
The target audience of the journal is primarily researchers in the field of church history, academics, university students and anyone who is simply interested in church history.
Types of manuscripts
- paper (Longer scientific research with appropriate citations.)
- communication (Shorter scientific paper or report.)
- document (Publication of documents discovered during research with the context of the research.)
- "from the cathedra" (Textual communication of scientific papers previously given at a university or conference.)
- archival documents (Incidentally found and valuable archival documents. Description of archival sources and materials that do not fit into a larger research, but are published by the author as important, but of minor interest, with explanations.)
- review (Presentation and analytical criticism of volumes on church history published mainly in Hungary or abroad. )
- report (Reports on conferences, book launches, exhibitions, events related to church history)
- debate (Presentation of opposing or polemical ideas within the framework of church history writing. Here we publish even a study arguing a methodological issue, it does not have to be a debate between two researchers)
- editorial (If the editorial staff considers it important to take a stand on certain issues or to publish a tribute to the birthdays or deaths of colleagues, we usually publish it at the beginning of the issue)
Publication date
The Church History Review is published 4 times a year. There is no strict date for publication at present, but we try to adapt to the four seasons.
Only first edition manuscripts are accepted, multiple or redundant publications are not allowed.
Archives
The 2000-2017 issues of the Church History Review are available in scanned form on Hungaricana and in a searchable form from 2000 onwards, broken down into publications, on the OSZK website and on the archive page.
In 2021, we will introduce the use of DOI, making individual articles, studies and reviews available on the website in full text PDF format.