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333Disruption
of Old Structures
In this time of hardship, I was left only with two choices: either to bid
farewell to my chair as imperial and royal astronomer, if I wished to finish
my vast, three-volume work Expeditio litteraria as promised, or to sup-
press this work, if I decided to continue in my chair as an astronomer, a
chair in which I, for as long as the Society of Jesus existed, was helped by
assistants in my work.62
In other words, while the routine activities of the observatory—those pre-
scribed to Hell in the instructions of 1755—were indeed unaffected, the logis-
tics had to be revised. What emerges from these lines is that, before 1773, the
imperial and royal astronomer was able to delegate such basic tasks to person-
nel put at his disposal not by the maintainer (the state), but via the established
practices of apprenticeship in the Society of Jesus, so that he could dedicate a
good part of his own time and energies to other scientific projects. Hell also
seems to have staked the execution of his ambitious plan of publishing a
comprehensive, multi-volume account of the Arctic expedition on the con-
tinuation of such arrangements, and he blamed the failure of completing the
magnum opus on the frustration of these expectations by the suppression of
his order, as a result of which he was forced to deal with much of the daily
chore himself.
To be sure, this was still far better than the fate of the Jesuit Observatory of
Vienna, just two-hundred meters away, which was closed shortly after the sup-
pression of the Society. The director Liesganig was appointed professor at the
former Jesuit college of Lviv in Galicia, which had come under Austrian rule in
the aftermath of the first partition of Poland in 1772.63 As mentioned above,
from his base in Lviv Liesganig conducted extensive surveys of the new
Habsburg province of Galicia and served as the director of an observatory that
had been founded by the Jesuits around 1771.64 As Liesganig passed away in
62 Maximilian Hell, “Observationes astronomicae latitudinum, & longitudinum locorum
borealium Daniae, Sueciae, Norwegiae, & Finnmarchiae Lapponicae per iter arcticum an-
nis 1768, 1769, & 1770 factae,” Ephemerides 1791 (1790), 301–2.
63 The Jesuit college of Lviv was founded in 1661 and received papal approbation as a univer-
sity as late as 1759, a status it lost in 1773. For the next decade, it was known as the There-
sianum, or academy for noblemen, until Joseph ii renewed its university status in 1784.
64 In some of the literature, this observatory is missing entirely, cf. Derek Howse, “The
Greenwich List of Observatories: A World List of Astronomical Observatories, Instru-
ments, and Clocks, 1670–1850,” Journal for the History of Astronomy 17, no. 4 (1986). Else-
where, it is conjectured that it was founded by Liesganig, who came to Galicia in 1774, cf.
Udías, Searching the Heavens, 31. However, an engraving of “the observatory of the Jesuit
college, 1771” is included in Brosche, Der Astronom der Herzogin, 25. Von Zach, in an article
in his Monatliche Correspondenz 4 (November 1801): 547–57, here 550, claims that a Jesuit
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