ABSTRACT
This is a book about some of the unexpected people and places involved in cultivating knowledge of the natural world and mastery of scientific apparatus around 1800, taking readers across continental Europe from the Enlightenment to the onset of academic professionalisation. The authors widen the horizon of inquiry by looking beyond the scientific elite of academies and prestigious science sponsored by princely courts, the focus of previous major studies of this time period. They consider people of diverse professions and occupations who advanced scientific knowledge through practical means by devoting their spare time and personal resources, thereby crossing geographic, linguistic and societal barriers. The case studies together demonstrate that such individuals contributed substantially to the spread of new knowledge and found ways to contribute technical innovations to society. The present volume is devoted to these people: the devotees of science.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part |56 pages
Cultivators of Knowledge
chapter 3|32 pages
Eise Eisinga's World: The Profile of a Devotee to Astronomy between Enlightenment and Romanticism
part |131 pages
Brokering Knowledge
chapter 5|41 pages
The ‘Paysans’ Christian Gärtner and Johann Georg Palitzsch: Astronomical Pursuits of the ‘Common Man’ and the Public Image of Science
chapter 6|24 pages
In Service to Know the World: Alexandre Moreau de Jonnès and a Soldier's Devotion to Studying the Colonies (1818–1839)
chapter 7|25 pages
Putting Knowledge to Use: Clergy and Science in Denmark and the Netherlands around 1800
part |79 pages
Mediation of Knowledge
