9 - From Mount Lebanon to the Little Mount in Madras: Mobility and Catholic-Armenian Alms-Collecting Networks During the Eighteenth Century
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 June 2023
Summary
Abstract
Relying on heretofore untapped archival documentation stored in multiple archives, this chapter provides a “global micro-history” of a remarkably mobile Catholic Armenian alms collector named Father Andreas Ouzounean from Mount Lebanon to ask larger questions about the very nature of early modern mobility in general and about eighteenth-century religious fundraising networks in particular. The chapter follows Father Andreas’s fundraising voyages from Lebanon to Moscow, Lvov, Vienna, Trieste, Rome, Malta, Istanbul, Isfahan, Baghdad, Basra, and especially to Madras and Calcutta and argues that the mobility of such itinerant men and their success as alms collectors were very much predicated on early modern “infrastructural public works projects” and the effective use of special certificates and credit instruments such as bills of exchange and respondentia loans.
Keywords: Eastern Christianity; alms collecting; bills of exchange; communication; Transport
Recounting an Armenian fund-raising voyage to Madras in India in 1784–1785, Father Poghos Mēhērean wrote the following description of an alms collector who met a watery end in the Indian Ocean:
At that time, a Lebanese friar named Father T‘umas, who was away from his congregation, resided there [i.e., in Madras]. After leaving his congregation, this [monk] had received a kondak [a kind of certificate or bull issued by a recognized church authority] from bishop Petros in Merdin [today’s Mardin in eastern Turkey] to go to India for begging and having begged for eight years in the Indies had left for other parts to do the same. When he had collected 15,000 rupees from begging, he went back to Merdin, and from there to Amid [Diyarbakir] and thence to Lebanon, and from there to Basra where he boarded the ship again for India and threw himself into the sea and perished.
The hapless Lebanese monk father T‘umas, or Thomas, was a member of a little-studied Catholic Armenian religious order known as the Antonean [Անտոնեան] or Antonine Congregation founded in Aleppo in 1707 and later transferred to the Keserwan region in Mount Lebanon. The person describing Father Thomas’s peripatetic life, Poghos Mēhērean, belonged to a parallel Armenian Catholic order known as the Mkhit‘arist Congregation, founded in Istanbul in 1701 but transplanted to Venice in 1715.
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- Connected Mobilities in the Early Modern WorldThe Practice and Experience of Movement, pp. 237 - 276Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2022