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Vincentian Missionaries

"Vincentian Missionaries in Seventeenth-century Europe and Africa: A Digital Edition of Sources from the Vatican Archives" is an annotated collection of primary sources tracing the activities of Vincentian missionaries in Europe and Africa. The documents included here are drawn from the Vatican archives (especially the Propaganda Fide branch) and illustrate the work of the Congregation of the Mission from its establishment by Vincent de Paul in 1625 to the end of the seventeenth century. They underscore a complex relationship with the Roman Curia and highlight the attempts of the papacy to shape early modern religious, cultural and political frontiers in the context of the Catholic Reformation. The sources gathered here were mainly authored by Vincentians and the cardinals of Propaganda Fide, but we also include a significant number of letters written by third parties (French kings and royal officers, papal nuncios, bishops, members of other religious orders, slaves). They offer a myriad of details about the environment in which the missionaries lived and worked—the Protestant enclaves in France; the Scottish highlands; the native population on Madagascar; the Christian and Muslim slaves on the Mediterranean coastline—thus offering a rich and colorful perspective on seventeenth-century interreligious and intercultural encounters. Read more...

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Data visualization (provided by Visual Correspondence: Analysing Letters through Data Visualisation, at letters.nialloleary.ie)

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