Research Project:
Republican Secrets: Silence, Memory, and Collective Rule in the Early Modern Period

crisfund.leadorganizationsUniversity of Bern
crispj.coinvestigator.affiliationInstitute of History, Old Swiss History
crispj.coinvestigatorsHeim, Debora Elisabeth
crispj.investigatorWeber, Nadir Fabian
crispj.investigator.affiliationInstitute of History, Old Swiss History
datacite.rightsmetadata.only
dc.date.accessioned2024-12-16T08:06:32Z
dc.date.available2024-12-16T08:06:32Z
dc.description.abstractHow did early modern republics deal with secrets? Focusing on the discourses and practices of political secrecy in territories under collective rule, this project challenges the still popular dichotomy between premodern arcane absolutism and modern public democracy. In the seventeenth century, the European republics followed the contemporary arcana imperii-model of rulership in many respects. Like the princely states, the governing elites established secret councils, negotiated secretly with foreign powers, and limited the access to their archives. Yet at the same time, they were also keen to limit the concentration of knowledge and power. This led to the development of specifically republican regimes of secrecy through which 'public secrets' were to be produced, protected, and stored in a controlled manner. Based on these observations, the project argues that political secrecy did not necessarily enforce oligarchization. Secrecy rather consisted of a modifiable set of practices that structured communication and could serve several aims - including increased political participation. They were constantly modified in correlation with a changing media system and shifting norms of collective decision-making. By analysing variable practices of secrecy in the Swiss Confederacy within a European comparative perspective, this project offers a key for better understanding the political culture of early modern republics, transformations in the political public sphere, and the origins of institutions of secrecy in modern constitutional democracies. With its focus on practices of concealment and the mnemonic aspects of secrecy, the project also promises methodological innovation within the field of political history.
dc.description.sponsorshipInstitute of History, Old Swiss History
dc.description.sponsorshipInstitute of History, Swiss History
dc.identifier.urihttps://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/194047
dc.relation.funding203416
dc.subject.ddc900 - History::940 - History of Europe
dc.subject.keywordsEuropean Comparative History
dc.subject.keywordsRepublicanism
dc.subject.keywordsPublic Sphere
dc.subject.keywordsTransparency
dc.subject.keywordsSwiss History
dc.subject.keywordsEarly Modern Republics
dc.subject.keywordsPolitical Secrecy
dc.titleRepublican Secrets: Silence, Memory, and Collective Rule in the Early Modern Period
dspace.entity.typeProject
local.fakeitemtrue
local.submitter
oairecerif.amount1564789
oairecerif.amount.currencyCHF
oairecerif.funderSwiss National Science Foundation
oairecerif.funding.endDate2027-08-31
oairecerif.funding.startDate2022-09-01
oairecerif.fundingParentSNSF Eccellenza
oairecerif.identifier.urlhttps://data.snf.ch/grants/grant/203416
oairecerif.project.startDate2022-09-01
unibe.funding.accesstypePublic
unibe.funding.creditholderWeber, Nadir Fabian
unibe.funding.fundertypePublic
unibe.funding.typePublic Grant
unibe.primaryconductorInstitute of History, Swiss History
unibe.primarycontact.affiliationInstitute of History, Old Swiss History
unibe.project.expectedcompletionDate2027-08-31
unibe.project.primarycontactWeber, Nadir Fabian

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