15.05.2025 - 17.05.2025

En ligne et sur place: Genesis of Professions and Language Learning

16th–early 19th century

  • Journée d’étude Époque moderne
  • 17h00 (15.05.) - 13h00 (17.05.)
  • univ. Helsinki

The early modern period saw the emergence of a number of professional groups in Europe that both shared characteristics with modern professions and showed distinct early-modern features. A key aspect of this process was the introduction of specialized education, which often included language learning. This was particularly true for occupations where proficiency in specific languages was essential, such as diplomats, diplomatic translators, secretaries, scribes, scholars, and clerics. Moreover, due to the intensification of transnational contacts and geographical mobility among specialists as well as the circulation of printed books, language proficiency became an integral part of the education for many other professional groups, such as military officers, engineers, and artists.

Although language proficiency was highly valued among many professionals, the acquisition of foreign language skills varied significantly across different professional milieus. For some groups, such as the learned professions, language learning was part of their formal educational path. For others such as nobility, family strategies and personal experiences, such as educational travel, played a more significant role. For example, the linguistic training of aspiring diplomats remained, for a long time, dependent on the latter rather than on targeted professional training. However, signs of change emerged with the establishment of schools for future foreign affairs personnel and practices such as attaching young men to diplomatic missions as chevaliers d’ambassade or embassy secretaries.

One question concerns the importance of linguae francae, particularly the role of French compared to other languages (both European and non-European) in the curriculum of early modern ‘professions’. Over the course of the early modern period, French became the main diplomatic lingua franca whose role increased particularly in the second half of the seventeenth and in the eighteenth centuries. However, the importance of French grew as well for many other specialists, such as military officers, engineers, scholars, and more. Social criteria played an important role: while for many diplomats from noble families French was part of their upbringing, for young men from other social strata it was a valuable addition and, in some cases, the central component of their professional knowledge and expertise.

Another question concerns the relationship between the existing linguistic training and the personnel policy of early modern state administrations. To what extent did the latter influence the choice of languages and the forms of their acquisition within the institutions they supported financially, compared to the influence of other actors, such as school directors and teachers, who often pursued their own agenda?

The objective of the workshop is to contribute to our understanding of the roles played by both state and private actors in the development of linguistic training for early modern professional groups and to assess differences in the emerging professionalisation policies across Europe.

Événement en coopération avec le Max Weber Network Eastern Europe et la Société internationale pour l’histoire du français langue étrangère ou seconde.
Avec le soutien de la Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG).

Où: univ. Helsinki, Hauptgebäude

Pour une participation sur place aucune inscription n’est nécessaire.
Inscription pour une participation en ligne:
Zoom

(Meeting-ID: 667 3206 1286
Mot de passe: 084610)

Événement en anglais, vous pouvez poser des questions en français.

Crédit image: Jacques Savary, Le Parfait Negociant frontiscipe, 1675, Wikimedia Commons.