{"title":"Alonso de la Vera Cruz’s Manuals and the University of Mexico in 16th Century: Teaching Theology and Arts from a Missionary Perspective","authors":"José Luis Egío García","doi":"10.14195/1645-2259_22-1_3","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The creation of the University of Mexico (1553) favoured the intensification of the processes of translation of normative knowledge between Europe and America, which had already begun with the arrival of the first Spanish conquistadores and missionaries to the New World. This article offers a synthesis of the recent historiography on the University of colonial Mexico, to be profiled as a missionary Studium, clearly differentiated from the European models with which it has tended to be compared (in particular, Salamanca). Focusing on the printed works of the Augustinian friar Alonso de la Vera Cruz (1507-84), one of the first teachers at the University of Mexico, we find representative examples of the type of propaedeutic teaching of the Arts (Logic, Natural Philosophy) which was common in the particular academic context of 16th-century New Spain. On the other hand, the theological production of Vera Cruz illustrates well the strategies of flexibilization and localization that were put into practice in order to successfully translate the preexisting Christian normativity to unforeseen and challenging contexts.","PeriodicalId":40420,"journal":{"name":"Revista de Historia da Sociedade e da Cultura","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.2000,"publicationDate":"2022-06-28","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Revista de Historia da Sociedade e da Cultura","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.14195/1645-2259_22-1_3","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"历史学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"HISTORY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
The creation of the University of Mexico (1553) favoured the intensification of the processes of translation of normative knowledge between Europe and America, which had already begun with the arrival of the first Spanish conquistadores and missionaries to the New World. This article offers a synthesis of the recent historiography on the University of colonial Mexico, to be profiled as a missionary Studium, clearly differentiated from the European models with which it has tended to be compared (in particular, Salamanca). Focusing on the printed works of the Augustinian friar Alonso de la Vera Cruz (1507-84), one of the first teachers at the University of Mexico, we find representative examples of the type of propaedeutic teaching of the Arts (Logic, Natural Philosophy) which was common in the particular academic context of 16th-century New Spain. On the other hand, the theological production of Vera Cruz illustrates well the strategies of flexibilization and localization that were put into practice in order to successfully translate the preexisting Christian normativity to unforeseen and challenging contexts.
墨西哥大学(1553年)的成立有利于加强欧洲和美国之间规范性知识的翻译过程,这一过程始于第一批西班牙征服者和传教士来到新大陆。这篇文章综合了殖民地墨西哥大学最近的史学,将其描述为一个传教士学院,与欧洲模式(尤其是萨拉曼卡)明显不同。以墨西哥大学首批教师之一奥古斯丁修士阿隆索·德拉·维拉·克鲁兹(Alonso de la Vera Cruz,1507-84)的印刷作品为中心,我们发现了在16世纪新西班牙的特殊学术背景下常见的艺术(逻辑学、自然哲学)的典型教学。另一方面,维拉·克鲁兹的神学作品很好地说明了灵活化和本地化的策略,这些策略被付诸实践,以成功地将先前存在的基督教规范性转化为不可预见和具有挑战性的背景。
期刊介绍:
The Journal of the Center for the History of Society and Culture is an annual scientific journal written in Portuguese. Its articles are subjected to a preliminary assessment carried out by an external arbitration committee. This journal was founded in 2001 with the main goal of publicizing the historical studies developed within the scope of the Center for the History of Society and Culture, an R&D unit registered with the Foundation for Science and Technology. The journal’s contents include unpublished historical texts (from the Middle Ages to the Contemporary Age), a news section on scientific activities and critical reviews of books in the field of History. The journal accepts articles from full researchers and collaborators of the Center for the History of Society and Culture, as well as from any other historians from outside this institution. Special encouragement is made to the participation of all those who, in one way or another, cooperate or develop networking activities with this Research Center.