(Source: The School of Salamanca)
Over the past few months, the “The School of Salamanca – A
Digital Collection of Sources and a Dictionary of its Juridical-Political
Language” has posted various new digital editions of works by key thinkers
from the Salamanca School (e.g. Melchor Cano, Domingo Banez, etc.).
Project Description
The (re-)discovery of the
fundamental importance of the School of Salamanca for the early modern
discourse about law, politics, religion and ethics is widespread among of
philosophers and legal historians. During the 16th and 17th centuries, the
intellectual sparks emitted by this academic force field reached not only the
most far-flung cities of the Spanish monarchy, be it Mexico, Madrid or Manila:
they also spread to universities in the protestant territories of the Ancien
Régime. Europe's intellectual history, history of political thought, and legal
history can not be understood adequately without being aware of the School of
Salamanca as an almost universal intellectual reference point. Nevertheless,
the assessment of the School and its intellectual influence remains a much
discussed topic until the present day.
The School of Salamanca's
significance and influence on more than one continent as well as in different
academic fields have given rise to an impressive multitude of research efforts
in various disciplines: philosophers, historians, jurists, legal historians,
and theologians pursue the reconstruction of complex subareas of the
Salamantine intellectual edifice. The sheer number of these research projects
wordwide has caused a notable fragmentation of the scientific landscape.
Notably the connections between persons, texts, and disciplines threaten to
become lost, but also an understanding of comprehensive questions and methods.
These are the problems our
project aims to adress by creating an easy access to primary sources, their
concepts and contexts. As a foundation of our work we will build a digital text
corpus including 116 works of the Salmantine jurists and theologians in
selected prints from the 16th and 17th centuries. The high-resolution scans
will be complemented by the full text of the featured works, supporting all
online researches with comfortable search functionalities. Based on these
resources, we will also compose a historic dictionary of circa 300 essential
terms of the Salmantine School's juridic-politic language, bringing together
international and interdisciplinary research perspectives. In the electronic
version, the dictionary articles will be linked to the source texts, enabling
easy access to information about concepts, contexts, and authors. At the final
stage, a print-version of the dictionary will be published.
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