Splendid Encounters is a series of international and interdisciplinary conferences that aims to bring together scholars from different fields of study to consider diplomacy and diplomatic activities in the early modern period within the broadest possible framework. After eleven successful meetings in, among others, Vienna, Florence, Bath, Budapest, Prague, and Lisbon, we invite you to join us for another event, this time hosted by the University of Warsaw, Faculty of History and Institute of History of Polish Academy of Sciences.

Splendid Encounters XII Organisers: dr Anna Kalinowska, dr Rafał Waszczuk, Klaudia Kuchno

Venue: All conference panels, coffee breaks and lunches will be held at the Columned Hall (Sala Kolumnowa) of the Faculty of History, University of Warsaw. The building is located at Krakowskie Przedmieście 26/28, within the University’s main campus in the heart of the Old Town.

Getting There: The campus is easily accessible on foot from most central locations. The nearest metro stop is Nowy Świat – Uniwersytet (M2 line), just a short walk away. Several tram and bus lines also serve the area—look for stops near Krakowskie Przedmieście or Uniwersytet. The main gate to the university is clearly marked, and the Columned Hall is located on the ground floor of the Faculty of History building.

PROGRAMME

Monday, 22 September 2025

09:30–10:00 Registration

10:00–11:00 Keynote Address

Giancarlo Casale, First Fake it, Then Make it: Marquis de Bonnac, Yirmisekiz Mehmed, and the first Ottoman Sefaretname

11:00–11:30 Coffee Break

11:30–13:00 Panel 1. Gifts, Bribes, and Corruption
Chair: Rafał Waszczuk

Konstantinos Poulios, More and Less Innocent ‘Gifts’: The Multiple Cases and Faces of Douceur During the Peace Congress of Carlowitz (1698/99)

Piotr Chmiel, Bribery: Theoretical Remarks and Best Practices Shared by Venetian Diplomats

Magdalena Jakubowska, Gift, Present, or Bribe? Corruption in the Diplomatic Service According to Polish-Lithuanian Experiences at the Turn of the 16th and 17th Centuries

13:00–14:00 Lunch

14:00–16:00 Panel 2. Diplomacy by Deception
Chair: Mariusz Kaczka

Chris Kostov, Stolen Secrets: French Espionage and the Venetian Deception over Murano Glass

Maxime Morel, How to Fabricate a Diplomatic Incident: Early Modern Naval Salutes as Tools of Deception and Uncertainty

Kolja Lichy, “Arnaud”, “Matthieu” and the Sly Side of Habsburg Peacemaking: Espionage at the Congress of Soissons

Ela Bozok, The Negotiations for Rhodes: Deceits, Threats, and Surrender

16:00–16:30 Coffee Break

16:30–18:00 Panel 3. English Intrigues
Chair: Giancarlo Casale

Paulina Kewes, Mary Queen of Scots’ Ultimate Subterfuge

Anna Kalinowska, “A man with the changing nature of a chameleon, the soul of a Cretan, a jester…” Christopher Parkins and English diplomacy

Hanna Mazheika, Rumours Spread by ‘Malicious People’: Conspiracy, Reconciliation, and Unofficial Diplomacy between King James VI/I and Janusz I Radziwiłł

Tuesday, 23 September 2025

10:00–11:00 Panel 4. Multilateral Tensions and Multiple Culprits
Chair: Paulina Kewes

Dorota Gregorowicz, Habsburg Dependences of the Post-Tridentine Apostolic Nuncios (1562–1605)

Kryštof Halamek, Imperial Residents in the Holy Roman Empire (1648–1740). An Overview and Analysis

11:00–11:30 Coffee Break

11:30–13:00 Panel 5. Diplomatic Personnel and Misconduct
Chair: Jan Błoński

Gleb Kazakov, Theft, Drunkenness and Debauchery: Deviant Behaviour of Muscovite Envoys at European Courts

Mariusz Kaczka, Translator–Traitor in Early Modern Mediterranean Diplomacy Aneliya Stoyanova, European Diplomatic Intrigues at the Ottoman Court: Тhe Spanish Treaty (1620s)

13:00–14:00 Lunch

14:00–15:00 Panel 6. Conflict within the Ranks
Chair: Klaudia Kuchno

Maciej Polak, Unwanted Collaborator: Conflict Among Sigismund Augustus’s Diplomatic Agents in Naples

Marius Sirutavičius, Ambitions at Odds: Conflicts Among Polish-Lithuanian Diplomatic Representatives in the Early Seventeenth Century

15:00–15.30 Coffee Break

15:30 Final Remarks