Difference between revisions of "Monumenta Kircheri"

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The [http://www.archiviopug.org Historical Archives of the Pontifical Gregorian University] (henceforth  APUG) preserve 14 volumes of letters sent by and to Athanasius Kircher and five manuscripts, mostly unpublished. Years ago, Stanford University digitized all the letters and made them available through the LunaImaging software, enriching them with detailed metadata. To complete this work, here we started transcribing the letters. Moreover, we shall proceed to the transcription of a selection of Kircher's published works. <br />
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The [http://www.archiviopug.org Historical Archives of the Pontifical Gregorian University] (henceforth  APUG) preserve 14 volumes of letters sent by and to Athanasius Kircher and other five manuscripts, mostly unpublished. Years ago, Stanford University digitized all the letters and made them available through the LunaImaging software, enriching them with detailed metadata. Today, metadata of the letters are also available at Early Modern Letters Online (EMLO). To continue and complete this work, within ''Monumenta Kircheri'' we started transcribing the letters and a selection of Kircher's published works. In addition, we have set up the ''Bibliographia Kircheriana'', a useful tool for Kircher scholars that today records {{PAGESINCATEGORY:AKC Bibliography}} bibliographic entries.<br />
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! Correspondence !! Works !! ''Bibliographia Kircheriana''
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| [[File:AKC 1666 s.d. 555-115.pdf|80px|link=Athanasius_Kircher_Correspondence_(AKC)]]|| [[File:Obelisci_Aegyptiaci_1666_Engraved_tp.pdf|80px|link=Monumenta_Kircheri_Works]] ||
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[[File:Monumenta Kircheri Image.jpg|thumb|<small>Illustration from Kircher's ''Polygraphia nova et universalis ex combinatoria arte detecta'' title-page (Romæ, ex typographia Varesii, 1663).</small>]]
 
[[File:Monumenta Kircheri Image.jpg|thumb|<small>Illustration from Kircher's ''Polygraphia nova et universalis ex combinatoria arte detecta'' title-page (Romæ, ex typographia Varesii, 1663).</small>]]
 
== The observation on modernity: Athanasius Kircher, a case study ==
 
== The observation on modernity: Athanasius Kircher, a case study ==

Revision as of 13:43, 22 May 2018

The Historical Archives of the Pontifical Gregorian University (henceforth APUG) preserve 14 volumes of letters sent by and to Athanasius Kircher and other five manuscripts, mostly unpublished. Years ago, Stanford University digitized all the letters and made them available through the LunaImaging software, enriching them with detailed metadata. Today, metadata of the letters are also available at Early Modern Letters Online (EMLO). To continue and complete this work, within Monumenta Kircheri we started transcribing the letters and a selection of Kircher's published works. In addition, we have set up the Bibliographia Kircheriana, a useful tool for Kircher scholars that today records 676 bibliographic entries.

Illustration from Kircher's Polygraphia nova et universalis ex combinatoria arte detecta title-page (Romæ, ex typographia Varesii, 1663).

The observation on modernity: Athanasius Kircher, a case study

Umberto Eco famously defined the Jesuit Athanasius Kircher (1602-1680) as ‘the most contemporary among our ancestors, and the most outdated among our contemporaries’. We propose to focus on Kircher's Correspondence and on his works. Athanasius Kircher is as a case study to explore the complexities and paradoxes of a ‘long’ modernity, starting from the seventeenth century up to our own world. In fact, the fundamental aim of this project is to articulate more clearly what is often hidden in every historical research: what matters to us is not in the past, but in the present. From a methodological point of view, we want this project to be not simply inter-disciplinary, but indeed trans-disciplinary. We start from Kircher’s crucial role in the early modern Republic of Letters and we insert Kircher’s case within a larger context involving the question of the nature of knowledge as both a kind of savoir faire and a kind of savoir vivre. From this perspective, we propose to reconsider Kircher’s vast bibliographical production and the methods of its dissemination, highlighting how Kircher grappled with, and contributed to develop, the concept of novitas or curiositas. Our project is also concerned with the material aspect of culture, and more specifically with the early modern changes in the modes and methods of communicating and disseminating knowledge. The way in which Kircher managed, reproduced, and created knowledge is a lens through which we can understand several fundamental aspects of both the early modern and the modern world, which have been the object of a recent surge of scholarly interest, such as the exponential growth of information and consequently the development of new and more effective techniques to digest, store, and select this new amount of knowledge.

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Thanks to last years’ activities, which have been carried out with high schools students[1], APUG decided to involve about 70 boys and girls in working on this project. In addition to transcription tasks, they also have to annotate the texts, finding entities such as Names, Works, Places, Terms and Objects.

This project is supported by Fondazione Sorgente Group.

Athanasius Kircher Correspondence

The publication of Kircher's Correspondence is the primary goal of the project. Our first aim is transcribing all the letters within the 14 codices preserved in the Historical Archives of the Pontifical Gregorian University; letters kept in other institutions will be added too. Each letter will be available in two versions: a diplomatic transcription and a reviewed transcription. The latter will be used to perform the actual edition - with comments, notes etc. - as well as the semantic annotation. Semantic annotation allows to univocally identify entities cited within the texts, such as names, places, works and so on; entities will have a dedicated page where users can acquire information about them.

Works

In this section we will provide full descriptions and transcriptions from Kircher's published works and from his manuscripts preserved by the Historical Archives of the Pontifical Gregorian University. Furthermore, several works about Kircher and by his closer collaborators will be made available too.

Bibliographia Kircheriana

This section of the Monumenta Kircheri aims at setting up a comprehensive database of publications about Kircher. This bibliography is based on two main sources:

  1. László Polgár, Bibliographie sur l'histoire de la Compagnie de Jésus, 1901-1980, Roma, Institutum Historicum S.I., 1981-1990;
  2. the annual bibliography published in Archivum Historicum Societatis Iesu, that since 1981 continues the Polgár's work.

More bibliographic entries are constantly being added and updated. Today, Bibliographia Kircheriana records 676 bibliographic entries.

If you should notice any lack or mistake, please contact us by using this form or, if you already have a GATE account, write a message to ArchivesPUG.

Copyrights

Unless otherwise indicated, all files and contributions (transcriptions, pages, comments) uploaded and submitted to GATE by administrators and users are considered to be released under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License. All the rights on the images of the manuscripts or other documentation are property of the Historical Archives of the Pontifical Gregorian University (User:ArchivesPUG). If you need high resolution images for your publications or for other usages, please contact us using this form.

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Your contributions to GATE must be original or, at most, copied from public domain or similar free sources. Remember to always cite your sources and, more important, do not submit copyrighted work without permission.

Report any abuses to the project administrators, using this form.

Acknowledgements

We would like to thank:

  • Fiammetta Iovine for her valuable and unique contribution to this project
  • prof. Hans-Joachim Vollrath (Julius-Maximilians-Universität Würzburg, Mathematisches Institut) and dr. Thomas Conlon for their kindness in sharing transcriptions and translations of the Athanasius Kircher correspondence
  • prof. Sven Knebel (Freie Universität Berlin, Institut für Philosophie Department) for the transcription of several letters from the Athanasius Kircher correspondence

References