EAO Regional Conference on the State of Salesian Historiography
Day 2 | Tuesday | 5 Nov 2013
The Historiography of Religious Congregations in Europe:
Orientations and Proposals
(A summary of a study by Giancarlo Rocca)
The religious congregation, which took form in the 19th century, became widespread first in France, in
the Lower Countries, Italy, Germany and then in all of Europe. Later it also spread in America, Africa,
Asia, and Australia, thanks to the emigration and missionary activities of numerous religious men and
women and later, thanks too, to the foundations of local congregations.
FIRST PART: THE HISTORIOGRAPHY OF THE RELIGIOUS CONGREGATIONS IN EUROPE
1. Available Materials
From 1995 onwards, the studies made on the historiography of religious congregations in Europe can
be classified in three major categories: methodological orientation historiography, national
historiography and historiography by theme.
a) First questions with regards to method
Stanislao da Campagnola in 1977 already saw the risks of religious historiography of his time. First and
foremost, there was an obsession in the search for the origins of religious institutes, as if the
knowledge of which and the going back to the past is a guarantee of fidelity and permanence in time,
all at the expense of the awareness of the factors that would allow for their continuity. Then the fact
that it is the work of religious men and women, members of the institutes whose history is being
written, (think that) they are the only ones who are capable of reconstructing it. Finally, he noted that
there was a tendency to explain the history of religious life, especially when it comes to reforms, by
searching for reasons in external factors like schisms, suppressions, sequestration of religious
houses and goods, etc., (therefore defending itself almost apologetically) without considering the
environments in which the religious institutes were born and in which they forged their
characteristics.
In 1985 Sergio Zaninelli emphasized the fact that the work to be accomplished should not be
hagiographic but definitly historiographic, and the growing awareness that this can only be
accomplished by putting the specific (that of the “catholic”) within the general frame (that of the
society), and vice versa. A new way of addressing the issue is definitely methodical, i.e., not to study
the religious institutes as a separate entity, centered only in itself, because their physiognomy can
only be reconstructed if it is seen within the general history of society.
In 1990 Yvonne Turin noted a change in the French historiography of the congregations of women. The
dawning of sociology has modified their orientation. Therefore, there arose two modes of recounting
their history: first, the hagiographic and apologetic mode which provoked critical and anticlerical
literature. While in the second mode the author writes history no longer with the intent of preaching
nor to edify his readers but to reconstruct an history that is closer to reality.
On the of historiographic question, the Dizionario degli Istituti di Perfezione (DIP), published in 1997,
made a distinction between an history written by the religious, those belonging to religious institutes,
and an history written by lay people, that is, those who do not belong to those institutes. The first
classification was considered to give more attention to the religious aspects of history but which run
the risk of simplifying the historiographical overview with an apologetic slant. The second
classification, instead, was more conscious of the social, economic, environmental circumstances to