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EN
The article is a personal reflection by a student of Le Goff on the research legacy of the great medievalist, who from the time of his studies at Charles University also showed a deep interest in the history of the Bohemian lands. The article stresses the importance of the foundation of the École des hautes études en sciences sociales and the creation of a doctoral seminary as a milestone on Le Goff‘s pathway towards historical anthropology and the education of his own doctoral students. Jacques Le Goff remains an inspiration, in particular for his interdisciplinary approaches, his interest in literary and iconographic sources and medieval imagination as well as for his sophisticated popularising efforts and for the tearing down of useless walls between university specialisations. The reflections are in part based on original assessments of the different aspects of Le Goff’s legacy by Bruno Dumézil, Stéphane Durand, Oliver Chaline, Christine Ferlampin-Acher, Olivier Marin, Jean-Marie Moeglin and Jean-Claude Schmitt.
EN
Ego-documents rank among the most important alternative sources that enable understanding of events and the motivations for people’s actions in the past. The study herein submitted draws attention to the existence of heretofore unknown diary of the distinguished Slavist Jules Legras. Legras’ fate and works are not well known to the Czech public, and therefore his career, professional publishing activities and also the place he occupied among his generational cohorts are also sketched out. Legras “entered” Czech history in several different ways. First of all, he took part as a representative of the French military mission in the Russian Civil War in Siberia. Content analysis of his diary also yields undisclosed and considerably critical testimony on the Czechoslovak legions and M. R. Štefánik. On the basis of study of this source we can begin to disclose the difficulties encountered in the development of a French Slavist who was positioned in this period between scholarship and politics. Legras, however, also taught in Dijon, which was one of the cities with a significant Czech presence in France (secondary school, university), which is another reason his testimony is of interest. Finally, the last subject treated is one which stems from LeKniha STUDIE 248 gras‘recurrent stays in Czechoslovakia is an analysis of his again frequently critical view of Czech-French relations during the “golden age” of Czech Francophilia.
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