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43The
Making of a Jesuit Astronomer in the Habsburg Provinces
gifts and ambitious construction works, and the inventories list pieces of im-
movable property, from houses and mansions through mills, arable lands, and
vineyards to shops and inns; the convents had the means of employing their
own surgeons, apothecaries, masons, carpenters, tailors, shoemakers, butch-
ers, bakers, black- and coppersmiths, and so forth. Municipal councils and
mining chambers sometimes provided for the payment of Jesuit schoolmas-
ters.15 All of this was far from being politically innocent, nor free of severe con-
flicts. In Banská Štiavnica, for instance, the Jesuit and Catholic revival was
largely thanks to the influence of the superior Raimund Decker (dates un-
known), formerly the confessor of Emperor and King Leopold i (1640–1705,
r.1657–1705), under whom the town’s largest church, hospital, and other facili-
ties were transferred by royal gift to the Jesuits. When the town council refused
to comply, three hundred Catholics occupied the church, and the presence of
seven hundred imperial mercenaries ensured an atmosphere in which, for the
first time in a hundred years, Catholics returned to the municipal assembly.16
The variegated sources of patronage enabled the Society of Jesus to strike
strong roots in the region, and they also demonstrate that, besides the un-
doubtedly powerful leverage it received from the imperial and the Catholic
hierarchy, this was also thanks to the recognition of the value of the services
they provided among the local communities. As a result, the number of Jesuits
active in Hungary grew—from 149 in 1650 to three times as many by the begin-
ning and six times as many by the middle of the eighteenth century—and so
did the number of their students: the Trnava college alone had 440 students in
the year of its foundation, but within just a few years this figure had risen to
700.17 As well as the standard curriculum prescribed in the Ratio studiorum, the
boarders had the opportunity to receive training in a wide array of other sub-
jects and skills, in response to specific local or social needs. These may have
15 The Acta Jesuitica in the Hungarian National Archives (OL Kam. Lt. Acta Jes.) holds a
wealth of relevant material. This brief and impressionistic glance is based on coll. Trench.
no. 2151, fasc. 1, fol. 1–8; coll. Leucsov., no. 683, fasc. 7, pp. 185–90. No. 1; coll. Neosol., no.
808, fasc. 7, fol. 343–44. No. 27, fasc. 7, fol. 382–87. Nos. 44–45.
16 Vendelín Jankovič, Dejiny jezuitov v Banskej Štiavnici: Príspevok k náboženským dejinám
mesta od xvi. storočia do konca xviii. storočia (Bratislava: Vydava Filozofická Fakulta,
1941), 82–87; Ede Richter and Ernő Király, “Selmeczbánya,” in Magyarország vármegyéi
és városai: Hont vármegye és Selmecbánya sz. kir. város, ed. Samu Borovszky (Budapest:
Apolló, 1984), 85–127, here 112; http://www.mek.oszk.hu/09500/09536/html/0011/8.html
(accessed April 10, 2019). On the re-Catholicization of towns in general, see István H. Né-
meth, “Unterdrückung oder Reform? Die Rekatholisierung in der ungarischen königli-
chen Freistädten,” in Město v převratech konfesionalizace v 15. až 18. stoleti, ed. Václav
Ledvinka et al. (Prague: Scriptorium, 2014), 435–50.
17 Gyenis, A jezsuita rend, 10.
Maximilian Hell (1720–92)
And the Ends of Jesuit Science in Enlightenment Europe
- Titel
- Maximilian Hell (1720–92)
- Untertitel
- And the Ends of Jesuit Science in Enlightenment Europe
- Autoren
- Per Pippin Aspaas
- László Kontler
- Verlag
- Brill
- Ort
- Leiden
- Datum
- 2020
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-90-04-41683-3
- Abmessungen
- 15.5 x 24.1 cm
- Seiten
- 492
- Kategorien
- Naturwissenschaften Physik
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- Acknowledgments VII
- List of Illustrations IX
- Bibliographic Abbreviations X
- Introduction 1
- 1 Shafts and Stars, Crafts and Sciences: The Making of a Jesuit Astronomer in the Habsburg Provinces 37
- 2 Metropolitan Lures: Enlightened and Jesuit Networks, and a New Node of Science 91
- 3 A New Node of Science in Action: The 1761 Transit of Venus and Hell’s Transition to Fame 134
- 4 The North Beckons: “A desperate voyage by desperate persons” 172
- 5 He Came, He Saw, He Conquered? The Expeditio litteraria ad Polum Arcticum 209
- 6 “Tahiti and Vardø will be the two columns […]”: Observing Venus andDebating the Parallax 258
- 7 Disruption of Old Structures 305
- 8 Coping with Enlightenments 344
- Appendix 1 Map of the Austrian Province of the Society of Jesus (with Glossary of Geographic Names) 394
- Appendix 2 Instruction for the Imperial and Royal Astronomer Maximilian Hell, S.J 398
- Bibliography 400
- Index 459