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Informationen zum Autor Klaas van Berkel recently retired as Rudolf Agricola professor of history at the University of Groningen. In his research he focuses on cultural history and the history of science, especially the history of scientific institutions (academies, universities). In 2021 he published, with Guus Termeer, The University of Groningen in the World. A Concise History (Amsterdam: Pallas Publications). Albert Clement is Professor of Musicology (University of Utrecht), Professor of Theology and Music (Theological University of Apeldoorn), organist and theologian. He was deeply involved in setting up Utrecht University's International Honours College in Middelburg in the years 2003-2004, and introduced Performing Arts in the Dutch university system. He published widely on the history of music from the fifteenth to the twentieth centuries, notably on Johann Sebastian Bach and Felix Mendelssohn Bartoldy, and supervises a large international circle of PhD students. Arjan van Dixhoorn is Hurgronje Professor by special appointment for the History of Zeeland in the World at Utrecht University and teaches history at its international honours college, University College Roosevelt, in Middelburg. He was FWO-research fellow at the universities of Antwerp and Ghent from 2005 until 2014. His publications investigate the early modern history of public opinion and the social history of knowledge, with a focus on the role of vernacular literary cultures in Europe. John A. Schuster is Honorary Reader, School of History and Philosophy of Science, University of Sidney, and Honorary Research Fellow, Campion College, Sydney. He has published extensively on Descartes, the Scientific Revolution, the myth of the scientific method, and historiographical issues. He is a Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities. H. Floris Cohen is Emeritus Professor in Comparative History of Science at Utrecht University, and is affiliated with the Descartes Centre at that university. From mid-2014 to mid-2019 he served as the Society Editor of the History of Science Society. His opus magnum is How Modern Science Came into the World: Four Civilizations, One 17th-Century Breakthrough(Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2010). Tiemen Cocquyt is curator in early modern science at the Rijksmuseum Boerhaave, Leiden. He specializes in the history of optical instrumentation, combining historical research with modern measurement techniques. The research for the article in this volume was made possible through the support of NWO-Humanities, Museumbeurzen, grant no. 333.54.004. Édouard Mehl is Full Professor of Philosophy and Science in the Early Modern Period at the University of Strasbourg (France). He recently publi_x0002_shed a work on Descartes' cosmology: Descarteset la fabrique du Monde. Le Problème cosmologique de Copernic à Descartes (Paris: Presses universitaires de France, 2019). The book was distinguished with the Moron Prize of the Académie Française (2020). Elisabeth Moreau is an FNRS Postdoctoral Fellow at the ULB - Université Libre de Bruxelles (Brussels, Belgium). Trained in the history and philoso_x0002_phy of science, she works on medicine, alchemy, and matter theory in late Renaissance Europe Dániel Moerman is a PhD candidate in the NWO-sponsored project 'Coping with Drought: An Environmental History of Drinking Water and Climate Adaptation in the Netherlands, 1550-1850' at the Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam. He specializes in the sociocultural approaches to crisis and resilience in the early modern period, both on a personal and on a societal level. His most recent publication is a co-authored chapter on the experiences of cross-border nobleman and chronicler Sweder Schele during the Eighty Years' War and the Thirty Years' War in R. Fagel et al., eds., Early Modern War Narratives and the Revolt in the Low Countries (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2020). Samuel Le Gendre is a PhD student under the supervision of Sop...