Sustained Concerns: Administration of Mineral Resources in Central Europe, 1550-1850
This project analyzes Central European mining's administrative history to reveal its impact on capitalist development, technoscientific innovation, and sustainability practices.
Projectdetails
Introduction
Early modern mining often played out as a drama in three acts: I. Ores are Discovered, II. Communities Flourish, III. The Mines Collapse. Across Central Europe, however, this drama took an unusual turn: emerging territorial states stepped in to reorganise the sector and suspended the collapse of mining for years, decades, and centuries.
Research Significance
Understanding why and how state-employed administrators prolonged the lifespan of mines has great potential to advance debates in economic history, history of science and technology, and environmental history. The principal aim of this project is to open up the history of resource management as a field of study whose questions and results are equally well integrated in these three fields.
Objectives
It will use Central European mining as a high-stakes case to prove the viability of such a history. By doing so, it will provide:
- A new account of capitalist development by showing how an industry in seemingly underdeveloped Central Europe shaped two important building blocks of modern economies: the rationalisation of labour, and the accumulation of capital.
- A new understanding of technoscientific innovation in proto-industrial settings by showing how administrative procedures (accounting, reporting) shaped scientists/technicians’ understanding of natural processes.
- A new genealogy for modern sustainability by focusing attention on the contradictions that shaped the extraction of non-renewable resources.
Methodology
To achieve these aims, four researchers (1 PI, 1 Postdoc, 2 PhD) will analyse thousands of administrative reports from across Central Europe, using a new method, history of bureaucratic knowledge, based on recent advances in the history of science.
Focus Areas
They will work on four processes through which administrators made mining a long-term enterprise:
a. Rationalising labour
b. Managing health and pollution
c. Sustaining investment
d. Long-term planning
Financiële details & Tijdlijn
Financiële details
Subsidiebedrag | € 1.403.898 |
Totale projectbegroting | € 1.403.898 |
Tijdlijn
Startdatum | 1-11-2023 |
Einddatum | 31-10-2028 |
Subsidiejaar | 2023 |
Partners & Locaties
Projectpartners
- UNIVERSITAT WIENpenvoerder
Land(en)
Vergelijkbare projecten binnen European Research Council
Project | Regeling | Bedrag | Jaar | Actie |
---|---|---|---|---|
Material Authority: Managing Mineral Abundance in Early Modern JapanMaterial Authority investigates how mines influenced governance and foreign relations in early modern Japan (1520-1720), aiming to redefine the role of mineral politics in historical transformations. | ERC Starting... | € 1.499.465 | 2024 | Details |
Environmental metal pollution revealed in archaeological human remainsPollutedPast aims to assess the impact of historical metal pollution on preindustrial populations by analyzing skeletal remains alongside natural archives from Spain and Sweden. | ERC Consolid... | € 1.999.966 | 2023 | Details |
A Century of Care: Invisible Work and Early Childcare in central and eastern EuropeThis project investigates the evolution of early childcare practices in central and eastern Europe from 1905 to 2004, analyzing the impact of political, social, and economic changes on caretaking regimes. | ERC Starting... | € 1.500.000 | 2025 | Details |
ARCHITECTURES OF COAL AND MODERN EUROPEACME explores the overlooked architectural legacies of coalmining in Europe, revealing their impact on social innovation and modernity while rethinking energy sources and cultural connections in the Anthropocene. | ERC Advanced... | € 2.496.951 | 2025 | Details |
Artisanal Mines, Economic Development and Social ImpactThe ArtiMinDev project aims to map artisanal and small-scale mining in sub-Saharan Africa using machine learning and satellite data to assess its economic, social, and environmental impacts. | ERC Consolid... | € 1.522.748 | 2024 | Details |
Material Authority: Managing Mineral Abundance in Early Modern Japan
Material Authority investigates how mines influenced governance and foreign relations in early modern Japan (1520-1720), aiming to redefine the role of mineral politics in historical transformations.
Environmental metal pollution revealed in archaeological human remains
PollutedPast aims to assess the impact of historical metal pollution on preindustrial populations by analyzing skeletal remains alongside natural archives from Spain and Sweden.
A Century of Care: Invisible Work and Early Childcare in central and eastern Europe
This project investigates the evolution of early childcare practices in central and eastern Europe from 1905 to 2004, analyzing the impact of political, social, and economic changes on caretaking regimes.
ARCHITECTURES OF COAL AND MODERN EUROPE
ACME explores the overlooked architectural legacies of coalmining in Europe, revealing their impact on social innovation and modernity while rethinking energy sources and cultural connections in the Anthropocene.
Artisanal Mines, Economic Development and Social Impact
The ArtiMinDev project aims to map artisanal and small-scale mining in sub-Saharan Africa using machine learning and satellite data to assess its economic, social, and environmental impacts.
Vergelijkbare projecten uit andere regelingen
Project | Regeling | Bedrag | Jaar | Actie |
---|---|---|---|---|
Urban MineUrban Mine ontwikkelt een innovatief systeem voor het recyclen van betonpuin tot duurzame bouwmaterialen, met als doel 3,8 miljoen ton puin te verwerken en 136.000 ton CO2 te besparen in vijf jaar. | Demonstratie... | € 3.401.760 | 2022 | Details |
Towards Mine 1Alucha ontwikkelt een proces voor het terugwinnen van calciumcarbonaat uit papierslib om de circulaire economie te bevorderen en CO2-uitstoot te verminderen, met als doel opschaling naar commerciële productie. | Demonstratie... | € 181.128 | 2020 | Details |
Urban Mine
Urban Mine ontwikkelt een innovatief systeem voor het recyclen van betonpuin tot duurzame bouwmaterialen, met als doel 3,8 miljoen ton puin te verwerken en 136.000 ton CO2 te besparen in vijf jaar.
Towards Mine 1
Alucha ontwikkelt een proces voor het terugwinnen van calciumcarbonaat uit papierslib om de circulaire economie te bevorderen en CO2-uitstoot te verminderen, met als doel opschaling naar commerciële productie.