Evidence on Paper
(Re)Producing and Transmitting Historical Evidence in the Eighteenth Century
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.26512/rhh.v10i19.47159Keywords:
história moderna, hist´ória do livro, História do ConhecimentoAbstract
What was at stake when handwritten artifacts were examined through reproductions in the Eighteenth Century? What were the functions and limits of these reproductions? In this paper, I explore these questions by analyzing four different engravings from a gravestone discovered in 1770. Such a discovery sparked a public dispute, which was arbitrated by the director of the Royal Institute of Historical Sciences at the University of Göttingen, Johann Christoph Gatterer (1727-1799). Here I show that Early Modern printed artifacts are eloquent evidence of how knowledge was then (re)produced and transmitted.
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