Abstract

To what extend the circulation of scientific knowledge was shaped by the European imperial geopolitics in the late-eighteenth century? Recruited to fulfill tasks increasingly considered essential to the very workings of imperial administrations, scientific practitioners of the time paradoxically seem to make use precisely of this encroachment in state apparatuses to secure some degree of autonomy for their nascent field. Thus, every material form of circulation of scientific information must be ultimately understood as an act of political consequences. Here we present these ideas through the analysis of two concrete scientific artifacts, which can exemplify the circulation of scientific information inside and across empires: two atlases, one terrestrial and one celestial (the latter being a version of Flamsteed’s famous atlas of 1729, by way of intermediate French editions), produced in Portugal at the turn of the nineteenth century. Discarding the simple assumption that such cartographic artifacts might have a “utilitarian” use to Portuguese imperial administration, we aim to insist on their political and communicative nature, grounded on their modes of participation in trans-imperial pathways of circulation of knowledge, people, practices, and models of scientific authority (entangling Britain, France, and the Americas in multiple time scales). We also highlight how the atlases contribute to the affirmation of new patriotic science in Portugal, and explore the markedly didactic vocation of both objects, which also stress the question of the recruitment and reproduction of a new kind of imperial elite.

Highlights

  • Issues of scientific communication have been attracting interest from historians

  • Recruited to fulfill tasks increasingly considered essential to the imperial administration, scientific men, paradoxically they seem to make use precisely of this dependency on the State to secure their own autonomy within the field (Bourdieu, 1976)

  • For the specific case of late-Enlightenment Portugal, we aim to explore this idea following two concrete scientific artifacts, which can testify to the extension and density of the circulation of scientific information, and how it entails a large-scale network of communication inside and across empires: two atlases, one terrestrial and one celestial, produced in Portugal against the backdrop of decades-long efforts to reform the economic and administrative bases of the empire in the era of Napoleonic Wars and constitutional projects

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Summary

Introduction

From seventeenth-century courtly patronage systems, with an ideal cursus honorum based on the accumulation of prestige before competing factions and patrons, late-Enlightenment Portuguese men of science do not depend exclusively on traditional loyalties to mediate new kinds of relationships with the state itself. For the specific case of late-Enlightenment Portugal, we aim to explore this idea following two concrete scientific artifacts, which can testify to the extension and density of the circulation of scientific information, and how it entails a large-scale network of communication inside and across empires: two atlases, one terrestrial and one celestial, produced in Portugal against the backdrop of decades-long efforts to reform the economic and administrative bases of the empire in the era of Napoleonic Wars and constitutional projects

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