Jesuit Astrology

Jesuit Astrology
Title Jesuit Astrology PDF eBook
Author Luís Campos Ribeiro
Publisher
Total Pages 0
Release 2023
Genre Astrology
ISBN 9789004548954

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This book addresses the role of astrology in the Society of Jesus, offering a new perspective into early modern Jesuit culture, science, and education by highlighting an element that has been long overlooked: astrology.

Jesuit Astrology

Jesuit Astrology
Title Jesuit Astrology PDF eBook
Author Luís Campos Ribeiro
Publisher BRILL
Total Pages 704
Release 2023-06-12
Genre History
ISBN 9004548971

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Connections between the Society of Jesus and astrology used to appear as unexpected at best. Astrology was never viewed favourably by the Church, especially in early modern times, and since Jesuits were strong defenders of Catholic orthodoxy, most historians assumed that their religious fervour would be matched by an equally strong rejection of astrology. This groundbreaking and compelling study brings to light new Jesuit scientific texts revealing a much more positive, practical, and nuanced attitude. What emerges forcefully is a totally new perspective into early modern Jesuit culture, science, and education, highlighting the element that has been long overlooked: astrology.

The Jesuits II

The Jesuits II
Title The Jesuits II PDF eBook
Author John W. O'Malley
Publisher University of Toronto Press
Total Pages 945
Release 2006-01-01
Genre Religion
ISBN 0802038611

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Accompanying DVD includes the opera Patientis Christi memoria by Johann Bernhard Staudt, performed in the chapel of St. Mary's Hall, Boston College.

Jesuits and the Book of Nature

Jesuits and the Book of Nature
Title Jesuits and the Book of Nature PDF eBook
Author Francisco Malta Romeiras
Publisher BRILL
Total Pages 299
Release 2019-09-16
Genre Science
ISBN 9004382364

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Jesuits and the Book of Nature: Science and Education in Modern Portugal offers an account of the Jesuits’ contributions to science and education after the restoration of the Society of Jesus in Portugal in 1858.

The University of Mantua, the Gonzaga, and the Jesuits, 1584–1630

The University of Mantua, the Gonzaga, and the Jesuits, 1584–1630
Title The University of Mantua, the Gonzaga, and the Jesuits, 1584–1630 PDF eBook
Author Paul F. Grendler
Publisher JHU Press
Total Pages 312
Release 2009-07-27
Genre History
ISBN 0801897831

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Universities were driving forces of change in late Renaissance Italy. The Gonzaga, the ruling family of Mantua, had long supported scholarship and dreamed of founding an institution of higher learning within the city. In the early seventeenth century they joined forces with the Jesuits, a powerful intellectual and religious force, to found one of the most innovative universities of the time. Paul F. Grendler provides the first book in any language about the Peaceful University of Mantua, its official name. He traces the efforts of Duke Ferdinando Gonzaga, a prince savant who debated Galileo, as he made his family’s dream a reality. Ferdinando negotiated with the Jesuits, recruited professors, and financed the school. Grendler examines the motivations of the Gonzaga and the Jesuits in the establishment of a joint civic and Jesuit university. The University of Mantua lasted only six years, lost during the brutal sack of the city by German troops in 1630. Despite its short life, the university offered original scholarship and teaching. It had the first professorship of chemistry more than 100 years before any other Italian university. The leading professor of medicine identified the symptoms of angina pectoris 140 years before an English scholar named the disease. The star law professor advanced new legal theories while secretly spying for James I of England. The Jesuits taught humanities, philosophy, and theology in ways both similar to and different from lay professors. A superlative study of education, politics, and culture in seventeenth-century Italy, this book reconsiders a period in Italy’s history often characterized as one of feckless rulers and stagnant learning. Thanks to extensive archival research and a thorough examination of the published works of the university's professors, Grendler's history tells a new story.

Astrology and Reformation

Astrology and Reformation
Title Astrology and Reformation PDF eBook
Author Robin Bruce Barnes
Publisher Oxford University Press, USA
Total Pages 409
Release 2016
Genre History
ISBN 0199736057

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Winner of the 2016 Roland H. Bainton Book Prize of the Sixteenth Century Society and Conference During the sixteenth century, no part of the Christian West saw the development of a more powerful and pervasive astrological culture than the very home of the Reformation movement--the Protestant towns of the Holy Roman Empire. While most modern approaches to the religious and social reforms of that age give scant attention to cosmological preoccupations, Robin Barnes argues that astrological concepts and imagery played a key role in preparing the ground for the evangelical movement sparked by Martin Luther in the 1520s, as well as in shaping the distinctive characteristics of German evangelical culture over the following century. Spreading above all through cheap printed almanacs and prognostications, popular astrology functioned in paradoxical ways. It contributed to an enlarged and abstracted sense of the divine that led away from clericalism, sacramentalism, and the cult of the saints; at the same time, it sought to ground people more squarely in practical matters of daily life. The art gained unprecedented sanction from Luther's closest associate, Philipp Melanchthon, whose teachings influenced generations of preachers, physicians, schoolmasters, and literate layfolk. But the apocalyptic astrology that came to prevail among evangelicals involved a perpetuation, even a strengthening, of ties between faith and cosmology, which played out in beliefs about nature and natural signs that would later appear as rank superstitions. Not until the early seventeenth century did Luther's heirs experience a "crisis of piety" that forced preachers and stargazers to part ways. Astrology and Reformation illuminates an early modern outlook that was both practical and prophetic; a world that was neither traditionally enchanted nor rationally disenchanted, but quite different from the medieval world of perception it had displaced.

Jesuits and Fortifications

Jesuits and Fortifications
Title Jesuits and Fortifications PDF eBook
Author Denis De Lucca
Publisher BRILL
Total Pages 415
Release 2012-02-17
Genre History
ISBN 9004216510

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This book sheds light on the role of Jesuit mathematicians in the widespread dissemination of ideas about military architecture in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, by means of teaching, writings and consultancy activities aimed at assisting Catholic leaders in their wars against protestants and infidels.