Being an engineer in the European Periphery: three case studies on Portuguese engineering

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Bloomsbury Academic

Abstract

In Portugal, although the process of assimilating the concept of progress and technical development can be discerned in different movements and areas, the training and practice of Portuguese engineers during the 18th and 19th centuries is undoubtly one of the main arenas for asserting modernity. For this article, we have selected three figures we believe to be of particular significance in this context. The first, from the 18th century, is Manuel de Azevedo Fortes, engineering considered the father of Portuguese a military engineer who brought to Portugal the new trends of European engineering, mainly concerning the definition of the training and the practice of engineers. The second, from the 19th century, is João Crisóstomo de Abreu e Sousa, the father of engineering in Portugal one of the most representative engineers of the second half of the 19th century Portuguese engineering, for whom public works were synonymous of progress; and the third, another 19th-century figure, is José Vitorino Damásio, who was active in public administration as well as in business and in technical education.

Description

Citation

Ana Cardoso de Matos e Maria Paula Diogo, “Being an engineer in the European Periphery: three case studies on Portuguese engineering”, History of Technology, 2006, pp. 125-146 [ISBN: 0-8264-9599-0 (HB) 9780826495990 (HB)]

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By