Abstract
This article examines a series of proposals for improving silver refining methods presented to the municipal council of Potosi (in current-day Bolivia) in the late sixteenth century as a means of nuancing current understandings of the Iberian state’s pursuit of “useful” knowledge. Historians have argued that the sixteenth century saw the fostering of an empirical culture, one based on experiential and collaborative practices, in the Iberian world. They have stressed that as artisanal experts and royal officials developed a mutually beneficial relationship, this empirical culture became institutionalized in administrative bodies for the pursuit of useful knowledge. This article focuses on the textual production that resulted from the relationship between artisanal experts and royal officials. It probes the motivations of local officials in generating a textual record of artisanal knowledge. Historians have tended to interpret and actors at the time often stated an interest in inscribing, artisanal knowledge as expertise and experience. However, this article demonstrates that what often motivated municipal officials’ inscription of such knowledge was an emphasis on administrative knowledge as rule-following, in particular, a desire to demonstrate one’s competency as an administrator. This conclusion suggests historians should expand their conception of “useful” to better reflect how early modern actors in the Iberian world viewed their pursuit of scientific and technical knowledge. It also indicates the importance of paying attention to the process of bureaucratic knowledge production when interpreting the written traces of the scientific and technical culture of the early modern Iberian world. This article is part of a special issue entitled “Histories of Bureaucratic Knowledge,” edited by Sebastian Felten and Christine von Oertzen.
Highlights
This article is part of a special issue entitled “Histories of Bureaucratic Knowledge,” edited by Sebastian Felten and Christine von Oertzen
According to the treasury official, all refining of Potosí’s cerro rico, the immense silver deposits discovered by the Spanish in 1545, had ceased in anticipation of a new refining method held by one of the town’s citizens, Garçi Sánchez
The surviving records of these proposals reflect an administrative response that was similar in form and content to that found across the geographical reach of Iberia’s early modern empire
Summary
This article examines a series of proposals for improving silver refining methods presented to the municipal council of Potosí (in current-day Bolivia) in the late sixteenth century as a means of nuancing current understandings of the Iberian state’s pursuit of “useful” knowledge. I build on the insights of Arndt Brendecke, who has argued that the process of generating “more knowledge” for the Spanish Crown often furthered political and administrative ends that were unrelated to the content of the knowledge itself.[12] This article shares a preoccupation with the relationship between individuals and local contexts to imperial power found in scholarship on arbitrismo, a term often used to describe the activities of reformist writers of the late sixteenth and seventeenth centuries who offered recommendations to buttress what they perceived as weaknesses in Spain’s royal government.[13] It differs, in its In this and subsequent entries BNE Ms 3040 contains 494 numbered folios with 97 different individual records related to Potosí, cf Paz, Catálogo, 509–16, where printed transcriptions exist, references will be to the printed version with transcriptions omitted. A final section questions whether “useful” is the most appropriate designation for historical actors’ conceptions of their motivations in collecting technical information
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