Science in the service of politics. The cartographic representation of a local territorial context of the Kingdom of Naples in the early nineteenth century

Michele Sisto

Article ID: 4493
Vol 7, Issue 1, 2024

VIEWS - 169 (Abstract) 23 (PDF)

Abstract


The erudite priest Marciano Di Leo (1751–1819), a prominent personality in the historical and geographical panorama of his time, not only in his home territory, authored a vast literary and poetic production but also tried his hand at producing some maps, referring to a province of the Kingdom of Naples. At a time when the principles of geodetic cartography had become increasingly known, even locally, hand in hand with improvements in technology and accuracy of measurements, the author reflected on the historical narratives of the progress of the European (and Neapolitan) Enlightenment and translated them into an unpublished manuscript of statistical, historical, and geographical nature, accompanied by numerous maps of various scales. The rediscovery of a largely unknown—and therefore not very thorough—minor cartographic production underscores the spread, even in more marginal contexts, of the most innovative ideas and increasingly precise scientific foundations in the cartographic-mathematical representation of the territory. It also illustrates the role of a number of intellectuals in the service of the political choices of their time, in an attempt—often unrealized—to bring about a decisive change of course in public administration, in accordance with Enlightenment ideals and in the spirit of reform that spread throughout Europe thanks to the French Revolution.


Keywords


Marciano Di Leo; historical cartography; Kingdom of Naples; Principato Ultra

Full Text:

PDF


References


1. Stommel H, Stommel E. The Year without a Summer. Scientific American. 1979; 240(6): 176-186. doi: 10.1038/scientificamerican0679-176

2. Sisto M. The habitation of men is the Earth (Italian). Le Memorie Storiche Topografiche e la cartografia del Principato Ultra in un manoscritto inedito di Marciano Di Leo, 1st ed. Il Terebinto Edizioni; 2024; in press.

3. Valerio V. “Disegnare et ponere in pianta qualsivoglia sito del regno”. The survey of the Kingdom of Naples between military defense and civil administration (Italian). In: Progettare la difesa, rappresentare il territorio: Il codice Romano Carratelli e la fortificazione nel Mediterraneo Secoli XVI–XVII, Edizioni Centro Stampa d’Ateneo; 2015. pp. 125–157.

4. La Greca F. Atlas of Aragon Maps (Italian). In: Antichi paesaggi cartografici del Mezzogiorno, 1st ed. Edizione Magna Grecia; 2023.

5. Valerio V. Cartography in the Kingdom of Naples during the Early Modern Period. Hist. Cartogr. 2007; III.

6. Biggs M. Putting the State on the Map: Cartography, Territory, and European State Formation. Comparative Studies in Society and History. 1999; 41(02). doi: 10.1017/s0010417599002121

7. Genovesi A. Elements of experimental physics: for the use of young beginners (Italian). Appresso Francesco di Niccolò Pezzana; 1783.

8. Sisto M, Di Lisio A. Three centuries of geological observations by local and foreign intellectuals. The case of Central Irpinia in the Travels of Grand Tour (Southern Italy). Rendiconti Online della Società Geologica Italiana. 2022; 56: 11-20. doi: 10.3301/rol.2022.02

9. Rossi L. Still on the representation of relief (Italian). La centralità francese e un precoce caso italiano (secolo XIX). Storia della Cartografia e Cartografia storica. 2018; 58: 70-79.

10. Grimaldi D. Reform plan for the public economy of the provinces of the kingdom of Naples: and for the agriculture of the two Sicilies (Italian). Giuseppe Maria Porcelli; 1780.

11. Galasso G. Science, institutions and scientific equipment in eighteenth-century Naples (Italian). In: L’età dei Lumi studi storici sul Settecento europeo in onore di Franco Venturi. Jovene; 1985. pp. 191-228.

12. Valerio V. Military cartography and induced technologies in the Kingdom of Naples between the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries (Italian). Leo S. Olschki; 1996.

13. Cerreti C., Taberini A. The Cartography of Minor Italian Authors, Memoirs of the Italian Geographical Society (Italian). CISGE; 2001.

14. Aversano V, Siniscalchi S. The visible and invisible landscape drawn from manuscript plans of religious bodies and toponyms of printed regional maps (Italian). In: Cartografia di Paesaggi. Paesaggi nella Cartografia. Pàtron Editore; 2010. pp. 99-148.

15. Galluccio F, De Lorenzo F, Scarpa L. Cartography and the Napoleonic Cadastre. A Study of the Province of Naples (Italian). In: Atti del I Seminario di Studi, Dalla mappa ai GIS, Roma 5-6 marzo 2007. Brigati; 2008. pp. 273-302.

16. Siniscalchi S. The orientations of historical-cartographic and cartographic-historical research in Italy. An annotated bibliographical review of the last thirty years through the indexes of the main Italian geographical journals (1987–2017) (Italian). In: Storia della Cartografia e Cartografia storica 2018. Geotema. pp. 8-16.

17. Owens JB. Toward a Geographically‐Integrated, Connected World History: Employing Geographic Information Systems (GIS). History Compass. 2007; 5(6): 2014-2040. doi: 10.1111/j.1478-0542.2007.00476.x

18. Somaini F. Historical cartography: considerations in premise of a possible geomatic project on the geographies (including fiscal) of the kingdom of Naples between the Angevin and Aragonese ages (Italian). In: Cartografia Storica Considerazioni Premessa Un Possibile Progetto Geomatico sulle Geografie anche fiscali del Regno Napoli tra l’età Angioina e Aragonese. 2018, pp. 387-430.




DOI: https://doi.org/10.24294/jgc.v7i1.4493

Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.


License URL: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

This site is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.