Fr. 235.00

Technical and Scientific Training in the Construction of Empires - On the Quest of Learning Places

English · Hardback

Will be released 24.07.2025

Description

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This book proposes a comparative reading between formal, or non-formal, structures of learning and individual agency abilities, highlighting influences and entanglements in different geographies from multiple spheres of knowledge and practices.


List of contents










Introduction Part 1: On learning and teaching 1. "Militarising" dominions and "globalising" knowledge: architects and military engineers in the Mediterranean during the early modern age 2. "Servants of Mathesis": early modern education in fortification and the authority of mathematics in the Dutch language 3. Classes or lessons, and the learning of architecture before the Portuguese Restoration (1640) 4. Learning places: building expertise in the early modern Portuguese Empire 5. Scenes from the war to come: the development of mock sieges in French military schools from the sixteenth to the nineteenth centuries 6. The professional training in the fields of architecture and engineering in nineteenth-century Mexico City and Rio de Janeiro: institutions, temporalities, and exchanges 7. The Portuguese higher studies of colonial agriculture (1878-1910): agronomy, empire, and colonial rule 8. On building empires: colonial companies, spatial planning, and the circulation of knowledge Part 2: On theories and practices 9. Engineers for the empire: from the academies of mathematics in Spain to the practice of fortification in Cartagena de Indias from the sixteenth to the eighteenth century 10. Academic vs colonial fortification: cultural dialogue on building techniques in the Spanish Caribbean and the Philippines 11. From theory to practice: military engineering in the Gulf of Mexico during the second half of the eighteenth century 12. (In)formal learning: military engineer education in African territories of the Portuguese empire 13. Between readings, writings, and the building site: Diogo da Silveira Veloso, an eighteenth-century Portuguese engineer in northeastern Brazil 14. Drawing the territory: cartographic expeditions as learning places, the case of southern Brazil in the middle of the eighteenth century 15. Cartography and mining in Acaraú hinterlands: engineers and practitioners trying to know Ceará, Brazil (1797-1861) 16. The idea of a "new world" in the General Captaincy of the Azores: the territory and its protagonists


About the author










Alice Santiago Faria is an auxiliary researcher at the CHAM - Centre for the Humanities, FCSH, Universidade NOVA de Lisboa and Universidade dos Açores, Portugal. She was PI of the research project "TechNetEMPIRE - Technoscientific Networks in the construction of the built environment in the Portuguese Empire (1647-1871)" with Renata Araujo (Co-PI). Her research focuses on colonial public works across the Portuguese Empire during the long nineteenth century.
Renata Malcher de Araujo is a professor at the Faculty of Human and Social Sciences at the University of the Algarve and an integrated researcher at CHAM - Center for the Humanities, FCSH, Universidade Nova de Lisboa and Universidade dos Açores, Portugal. She develops research mainly in the areas of the history of urbanism, especially in the scope of Portuguese expansion, history of cartography and heritage studies.
Margarida Tavares da Conceição is an assistant professor at the Department of Art History, FCSH, Universidade NOVA de Lisboa, Portugal, and full researcher at the Institute of Art History / IN2PAST - Associate Laboratory for Research and Innovation in Heritage, Arts, Sustainability and Territory, in the same university. Her research is focused on urban and fortification history, and architectural knowledge transmission in the early modern period.


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