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167The
1761 Transit of Venus and Hell’s Transition to Fame
Copenhagen. These included announcements, and then a review of the book-
let on magnets in 1762;93 a report on attempts made by Hell and others at heal-
ing patients suffering from toothache by magnetism in 1766;94 exchanges be-
tween Hell and Weiss about a comet Weiss observed in 1766, and about
meteorological measurements in 1767.95 The journal and the authorities be-
hind it clearly regarded it important to keep the public abreast of develop-
ments in the observatory and the activities of its director.
To be sure, Hell’s own judgment of his own stature dovetailed nicely with
the opinion of the journalist about his “renown.” The manner of address and
tone of the treatise on the moon of Venus is worth recalling here. An initial
name-dropping is undoubtedly intended to locate the author in the august
company of colleagues such as the “famous” (Wargentin and the French “com-
et hunter,” Messier) and the “brilliant” (the geophysicist and astronomer
Jean-Jacques Dortous de Mairan [1678–1771]), some of them identified as his
“intimate friends” (Lacaille) or simply as “our father” (Joseph Louis Lagrange
[Giuseppe Luigi Lagrangia (1736–1813)]—actually sixteen years Hell’s junior,
but already recognized as one of the greatest mathematicians of the age; “fa-
ther” here refers to his status as a Jesuit), with all of whom he maintains a
mutually inspiring correspondence and who have proved themselves to be a
captive audience for his corrections of their research results.96 This might well
create an aura of presumptuousness, were it not for the tone of elegant, subtle
irony in Hell’s addressing the celebrities who are his putative interlocutors: a
tone not of upstart self-assertion, but one of dignified self-confidence on the
part of a scholar who is firmly aware of his status on the map of contemporary
learning.
For a final apparently self-congratulatory assessment, one might turn to the
balance struck by Hell about the impact of the Ephemerides in the preface to
its twentieth volume (1776). While this was published several years after the
purview of the present chapter, the achievements Hell boasted about there
were more or less in hand by the late 1760s:
The present, 1776 year of these Ephemerides, is the twentieth in an unin-
terrupted series published since 1757 for the use of the public by the
Imperial and Royal Observatory of the University of Vienna. But what are
93 WD, no. 75 (September 18, 1762): 7; no. 79 (October 2, 1762): 9–10.
94 WD, no. 26 (March 29, 1766): 10–12. Cf. the discussion on Hell’s engagement with Franz
Anton Mesmer below in Chapter 7, 357–61.
95 WD, no. 31 (April 16, 1766): 9–11; no. 4 (January 14, 1767): 7–8; no. 6 (January 21, 1767): 7–8.
96 Hell, De satellite Veneris, 13.
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