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197The
North Beckons
Caribbean.80 Jesuits traversing the northern wilderness under Protestant con-
trol needed to be more circumspect about revealing their true character.
It is also noteworthy how vaguely Hell described the duration and expanse
of his expedition. The extraordinary invitation may have stirred up the imagi-
nation of the otherwise sober and even-tempered servant of God. He may even
have been tempted to envision himself in the persona of the scientific field-
worker-celebrity steadily emerging as the eighteenth-century European public
was exposed to reports about men of learning who heroically defied hostile
climates in order to expand the stock of knowledge and share new discoveries.
Hell’s letter to the pope reveals a desire to obtain license for temporarily aban-
doning his character as an ordinary member of the Society of Jesus, with the
goal of carrying out research “for several years” and then disseminating its re-
sults throughout virtually the whole of Western Europe. The detour on the re-
turn journey “through Holland, Belgium, England, France, and the entire [Holy
Roman] Empire” could have had no other envisaged purpose than further con-
solidating his already considerable fame and expanding the network built via
the Ephemerides. Hell must have been dreaming of lecture halls packed with
members of the learned and the curious part of the public; reports in the local
press for the information of those who missed the presentations; audiences
with royalty; intimate personal conversations with correspondents in the
Republic of Letters. The publicity earned for Catholic knowledge by resort-
ing to such means of advertisement—stock-in-trade for eighteenth-century
savants—seemed to be well worth the compromises on externalities solicited
from the supreme pontiff.81
Answer from the Holy See reached Father Hell when he was already in Dan-
ish-ruled Traventhal (not far from Lübeck) on May 31, 1768. The reply itself is
not known to have survived. However, Hell’s assistant noted the following sar-
casm in the travel diary:
[The secretary of the foreign minister] Mr. Temler delivered to us letters,
which he had brought with him from Vienna to Denmark, from Denmark
to Holstein, and then hither [to Traventhal]. One letter was from Father
Antonius Pilgram, another from the Roman court. Our Holiness Clement
xiii bestowed upon us the right to minister at a portable table, provided
80 Klemun and Hühnel, Nikolaus Joseph Jacquin, 83–87.
81 One would assume that a European grand tour such as this would also have required the
assent of Hell’s employer, the empress, but there is no surviving document in which he
voiced such a request.
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