Description

Book Synopsis
In Educating the Catholic People, David Salomoni reconstructs the complex educational landscape that arose in sixteenth-century Italy and lasted until the French Revolution. Over three centuries, various religious orders, both male and female, took on the educational needs of cities and states on the Italian peninsula, renewing the traditional humanist pedagogy. Historians, however, have not attempted to produce a synthesis on this topic, focusing mainly on the pedagogical activities of the Jesuits and neglecting the contributions and innovations of other groups. This book addresses this historiographical gap, providing a new chapter in the comparative study of pre-modern education.

Table of Contents
List of Maps Introduction  1 State of Research and Historiographical Problems 1 Educating the Modern Catholics?: Roots of Catholic Schools in Renaissance Italy (15th–16th cc.)  1 The Last Phase of Communal Education in Italy   1.1 Complexity of the Renaissance Communal School System   1.2 Weaknesses of the Renaissance Communal School System  2 The Catholicization of Italian Education 2 Historical Paths: The Definition of Pedagogical Identities (16th–17th cc.)  1 Male Religious Orders   1.1 An Educational Benchmark: The Jesuits   1.2 The Barnabites   1.3 The Somascans   1.4 The Piarists   1.5 The Theatines and the Servites  2 Female Religious Orders   2.1 The Ursulines   2.2 The Angelic Sisters and the Guastalla College   2.3 Rosa Venerini and Lucia Filippini: The Pious Teachers 3 Schools and Colleges: Processes of Settlement in Italy and Contiguous Areas  1 From Lombardy to the Kingdom of France  2 Schools for Northern Italy and Small Towns  3 A Congregation for the Large Cities  4 Between Central, Southern and Eastern Europe  5 The Franciscans between Continuity and Rupture 4 Different Types of Schools Operated by Religious Orders  1 Public Education Entrusted to Religious Orders and Secular Priests   1.1 Udine and the Barnabites: On the Outskirts of the Peninsula   1.2 Jesuits and Piarists in the Duchy of Modena: A Competition between Local Networks   1.3 Guastalla: A Multi-layered Religious Education for the Community  2 Episcopal Requests   2.1 The Somascans Between Schools and Diocesan Seminaries  3 Other Types of Schools Operated by Religious Orders   3.1 Barnabite Schools Established by Notables and Aristocrats   3.2 The Religious as Private Teachers   3.3 Women, Nuns, Teachers: The ‘Educandato’ of Saint Charles 5 The End of an Educational Season: The Schools of Religious Orders between Scientific and Political Revolutions (17th–18th cc.)  1 The Scientific Culture: Religious Orders on the Eve of Modernity   1.1 Famiano Michelini and the Galilean Piarists   1.2 Baranzano Redento  2 School Reforms in the Age of Enlightenment   2.1 The European Situation   2.2 The Situation in Italy: The Italian States and the Religious Orders  3 Conclusion Bibliography Index

Educating the Catholic People: Religious Orders

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A Hardback by David Salomoni

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    View other formats and editions of Educating the Catholic People: Religious Orders by David Salomoni

    Publisher: Brill
    Publication Date: 24/06/2021
    ISBN13: 9789004436466, 978-9004436466
    ISBN10: 9004436464

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    In Educating the Catholic People, David Salomoni reconstructs the complex educational landscape that arose in sixteenth-century Italy and lasted until the French Revolution. Over three centuries, various religious orders, both male and female, took on the educational needs of cities and states on the Italian peninsula, renewing the traditional humanist pedagogy. Historians, however, have not attempted to produce a synthesis on this topic, focusing mainly on the pedagogical activities of the Jesuits and neglecting the contributions and innovations of other groups. This book addresses this historiographical gap, providing a new chapter in the comparative study of pre-modern education.

    Table of Contents
    List of Maps Introduction  1 State of Research and Historiographical Problems 1 Educating the Modern Catholics?: Roots of Catholic Schools in Renaissance Italy (15th–16th cc.)  1 The Last Phase of Communal Education in Italy   1.1 Complexity of the Renaissance Communal School System   1.2 Weaknesses of the Renaissance Communal School System  2 The Catholicization of Italian Education 2 Historical Paths: The Definition of Pedagogical Identities (16th–17th cc.)  1 Male Religious Orders   1.1 An Educational Benchmark: The Jesuits   1.2 The Barnabites   1.3 The Somascans   1.4 The Piarists   1.5 The Theatines and the Servites  2 Female Religious Orders   2.1 The Ursulines   2.2 The Angelic Sisters and the Guastalla College   2.3 Rosa Venerini and Lucia Filippini: The Pious Teachers 3 Schools and Colleges: Processes of Settlement in Italy and Contiguous Areas  1 From Lombardy to the Kingdom of France  2 Schools for Northern Italy and Small Towns  3 A Congregation for the Large Cities  4 Between Central, Southern and Eastern Europe  5 The Franciscans between Continuity and Rupture 4 Different Types of Schools Operated by Religious Orders  1 Public Education Entrusted to Religious Orders and Secular Priests   1.1 Udine and the Barnabites: On the Outskirts of the Peninsula   1.2 Jesuits and Piarists in the Duchy of Modena: A Competition between Local Networks   1.3 Guastalla: A Multi-layered Religious Education for the Community  2 Episcopal Requests   2.1 The Somascans Between Schools and Diocesan Seminaries  3 Other Types of Schools Operated by Religious Orders   3.1 Barnabite Schools Established by Notables and Aristocrats   3.2 The Religious as Private Teachers   3.3 Women, Nuns, Teachers: The ‘Educandato’ of Saint Charles 5 The End of an Educational Season: The Schools of Religious Orders between Scientific and Political Revolutions (17th–18th cc.)  1 The Scientific Culture: Religious Orders on the Eve of Modernity   1.1 Famiano Michelini and the Galilean Piarists   1.2 Baranzano Redento  2 School Reforms in the Age of Enlightenment   2.1 The European Situation   2.2 The Situation in Italy: The Italian States and the Religious Orders  3 Conclusion Bibliography Index

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