Accounting Practices and Religious Orders in Missionary Territories
UniversitĂ Roma Tre H09:30-18:30
Istituto Svizzero H09:30-13:15
UniversitĂ Roma Tre H09:30-18:30
Istituto Svizzero H09:30-13:15
Accounting Practices and Religious Orders in Missionary Territories
Catholic overseas missions developed in a context of European territorial and commercial expansion. Recent studies have highlighted the significance of missionary involvement in commercial activities both at the global and local levels. The contributions to this conference build on this novel historiography by focusing on a specific type of sources, namely missionary account books. How specific were the missionary accounting practices which were mostly in the hands of regular clerics who were supposed to be devoted to a life in poverty? How did they differ from the practices of other economic agents such as merchants? More broadly, by asking these questions, the purpose is to contribute to the discussion about how to conceive the relation between religious confession and economy and, in particular, the growth and development of capitalism.
Scientific and organizing committee:
Felicita Tramontana, HĂ©lĂšne Vu Thanh, Christian Windler, Rebecca Carnevali, Manuel Capomaccio.
The conference is organized within the ERC Horizon 2020 project âHOLYLAB â A global economic organization in the early modern period: The Custody of the Holy Land through its account books (1600â1800)â. In collaboration with Istituto Svizzero and the Department of Early Modern History of the Historical Institute, University of Bern.
The project has received funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Unionâs Horizon 2020 research and innovation program (Grant Agreement ID 101001857)
PROGRAMME:
WEDNESDAY, 24.01.2024
Political Sciences Department of UniversitĂ degli Studi di Roma Tre – IV floor
Via Gabriello Chiabrera 199, Roma
Free entrance, register here
H09:30-10.00 â Felicita Tramontana (Rome), HĂ©lĂšne Vu Thanh (Lorient/Paris), Christian Windler (Bern), Welcome and Introduction
H10:00-10:45 â Alexander Schunka (Berlin), Money Matters: Fundraising Journeys among European Protestants in the Early Modern EraÂ
H10:45-11:15 â Coffee break
H11:15-12:00 â Christian Windler (Bern), Missionary Economy, Accounting Practices and âGlocalâ Entanglements in a Cosmopolitan Port City: The Discalced Carmelites in Basra (Eighteenth Century)
H12:00-12:30 â Bernard Heyberger (Paris), Comment
H12:30-14:30 â Break
H14:30-15:15 â Frederik Vermote (Monterey Bay), The Accounting of Jesuit Missions in China: Fighting over French Financial Assets in Beijing, 1773â1782
15:15-16:00 â Juan JosĂ© Rivas Moreno (London), Profit in Piety: The Co-optation of Manilaâs Transpacific Trade into Missionary Efforts in Asia, 1733â1797
H16:00-16:30 â Coffee break
H16:30-17:15 â Eugenio Menegon (Boston), Center and Periphery: Propaganda Fideâs Accounting Practices in the Eighteenth-Century China Mission (online)
H17:15-18:00 â HĂ©lĂšne Vu Thanh (Lorient/Paris), Managing Finances at a Global Scale: Examining the Jesuit Japan Mission through its Accounting Documents
H18:00-18:30 â Gaetano Sabatini (Rome), Comment
THURSDAY, 25.01.2024
Istituto Svizzero
Via Liguria 20, Roma
Free entrance
Registration in presence here
Registration online here
H09:30-10:15 â Andrew Dial (Jefferson City), Accounting for Failure: Investigating the Lavalette Affair
H10:15-10:45 â Coffee break
H10:45-11:30 â Felicita Tramontana (Rome), No Global? The Global Expansion of Catholicism and the Custody of the Holy Land through Franciscan Account Books (Seventeenth Century)
H11:30-12:15 âNicolas Rogger (Bern), âSpiritual Fathersâ as Secular Bookkeepers: Capuchin Accounting Practices in Europe and the Missions (1600â1800)
H12:15-12:45 â Simon Ditchfield (York), Comment
H12:45-13:15 â Final discussion