Lunch with the Libraries & Museums | From Heidelberg to Baltimore: What Johns Hopkins University Owes the Oldest German University

Description
Mackenzie "Mack" Zalin, librarian at Sheridan Libraries, will give a fascinating lecture tracing the deep historical connections between Johns Hopkins University and Heidelberg University as part of the Lunch with the Libraries and Museums series.
Please attend the event by using the Hopkins at Home link.
Discover how Johns Hopkins drew inspiration from the oldest university in Germany from its founding in 1876—a relationship that helped define modern American higher education over that last 150 years. Zalin will delve into archival stories of international scholarly exchange, the influence of German educational ideals, and the ways in which key figures shaped research, teaching, and knowledge production on both sides of the Atlantic. Attendees will learn how the legacy of Heidelberg and other German research universities laid the foundation for innovation at Johns Hopkins, impacting fields from humanities to medicine and beyond.
Zalin is the librarian for Classics, Comparative Thought and Literature, Jewish Studies, and Modern Languages and Literatures in the Sheridan Libraries at Johns Hopkins University. This event is presented by Hopkins at Home, Sheridan Libraries, and Friends of the Johns Hopkins University Libraries.
This lecture is a reprise of one given during one of Office of Alumni Relations' Hopkins Journeys travel programs. Learn more about the travel programs on offer, which often feature insightful lectures by Hopkins experts.
Who can attend?
- General public
- Faculty
- Staff
- Students