Hybrid Public Servants or Religious Teacher-Priests?

Joseph II’s Concept of the Teaching Career and Its Impact on the Hungarian Piarist Province

Authors

  • János Balla Ludovika University of Public Service image/svg+xml Author https://orcid.org/0009-0005-0149-6313
    • Writing – Original Draft Preparation
    Competing Interests

    The author declares that there is no conflict of interest regarding the writing of this study, and that no financial or other conflicts of interest have influenced the research results or the content of the manuscript.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.54231/ETSZEMLE.27.2026.2.2

Keywords:

absolutism, state, Church, Enlightenment, public service, Joseph II, Piarist order, religious life, reform projects

Abstract

This study explores how the ecclesiastical reforms of Joseph II (r. 1780–1790) reshaped the lives of Hungarian Piarist priest-teachers: their vocation, their daily practice, and their position within the realm of public service. Both Maria Theresa (r. 1740–1780) and her son sought to redraw the boundaries between Church and State. In doing so, they unleashed a torrent of social, economic, cultural, legal, and educational reforms. At the heart of these reforms stood the Church and its teaching orders, which functioned as both pillars of state administration and supranational instruments of control. Without this union of throne and altar, the new centralized system would have collapsed at once.
To interpret this reform process merely as “church policy” is to miss the point: it was, above all, the modernization and statist reorientation of the Habsburg Monarchy. The Piarists proved among its most enthusiastic collaborators. As a teaching order, they welcomed state initiatives with open arms; some of their members even anticipated reform. Their works bear witness to this: uniform curricula, textbooks, treatises on political theory and history—all bearing the imprint of Enlightenment principles and of the latest scientific discoveries. Maria Theresa and Joseph II rewarded their zeal, entrusting them with the founding of new schools across the realm.
Yet this embrace of the state proved almost a death grip. During Joseph II’s reign, the emperor, exploiting both the competence and loyalty of the Piarists, envisioned nothing less than the transformation of the order into a corps of state employees. The plan failed for lack of funds, but the fear of suppression and the loosening of communal bonds drove many Piarists to leave the order. Some became diocesan clergy; others pursued careers as secular teachers.

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Author Biography

  • János Balla, Ludovika University of Public Service

    Doctoral School of Public Administration, NKE / ÁNTK KTDI [2016–] No.: 2021-
    Institute for the Study of Religion and Society, NKE / EJKK VTKI [2021–] No.: 2021-

References

Abbreviations / Rövidítések

KFL = Kalocsai Főegyházmegyei Levéltár (Archdiocesan Archives of Kalocsa)

PMKL = Piarista Rend Magyar Tartománya Központi Levéltára (Central Archives of the Hungarian Piarist Province, Budapest)

PMKK = Piarista Központi Könyvtár (Central Library of the Piarist Order, Budapest)

Familia Domus = House Register (annual register of members of each Piarist house)

Intimata Regia = Royal Intimations (official government instructions addressed to the Piarist provincial)

Acta Provinciam Hungaricam concernentia = Acts Concerning the Hungarian Province

Regulae Nostrorum = Regulations of Our Order

Fassiones collegiorum = Reports of the Colleges

Protocollum domus = House Protocol (local register and minutes of a Piarist residence)

Archivum Provinciae Hungariae Vetus (APHV) = Old Archives of the Hungarian Province

Sources

KFL = Archdiocesan Archives of Kalocsa (Kalocsai Főegyházmegyei Levéltár, Kalocsa)

I.1.a = Ecclesiastical Governance Documents (Egyházkormányzati iratok)

– School Records (Iskolai)

Piarists = Commissio data Aeppo Ladislao Kollonitz super restauranda in Ordine Scholar. Piar. disciplina religiosa et subsidio eidem ordini praestando, 1802–1815

PMKK = Central Library of the Piarist Order (Piarista Központi Könyvtár, Budapest)

– Familia Domus 1782

– Familia Domus 1790

PMKL = Central Archives of the Hungarian Piarist Province (Piarista Rend Magyar Tartománya Központi Levéltára, Budapest)

I.1.a APHV = Archivum Provinciae Hungariae Vetus

– [1] Foruli (1637) 1658–1848 (1862)

– Acta Provinciam Hungaricam concernentia 1741–1788

– For 40. Provincia Fasc. 40–5.

– Acta Provinciam Hungaricam concernentia 1810–1822

– 5/A-J. Acta synodum nationalem concernentia (1819–1822)

– For. 44. Fassiones collegiorum 1783–1788

– For. 58/E. Encyclicae provincialium

[2] Divisiones

– III. Status domorum 1727–1848

– IV. Regulae nostrorum 1791–1847

[5] Intimata Regia

– Intimata regia Provinciali missa. II. 1778–1783

– Intimata regia Provinciali missa. III. 1784–1785

– Intimata regia Provinciali missa. IV. 1786–1787

– Intimata regia Provinciali missa. V. 1787–1788

– Intimata regia Provinciali missa. VI. 1789–1790

II. Domus / Rendházak (Monasteries / Local Houses)

– II.8. Kecskemét Piarist House Archives (Kecskeméti rendház levéltára)

a. Old Period (before 1950) (Régi korszak, 1950 előtt)

Libri

Protocollum domus 1758–1804

IV. Religiosi (Religious Members)

– IV.22. Katona Dénes (1782–1874) bequest (hagyaték)

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Published

2026-06-14

Conference Proceedings Volume

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Studies

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How to Cite

Balla, János. 2026. “Hybrid Public Servants or Religious Teacher-Priests? Joseph II’s Concept of the Teaching Career and Its Impact on the Hungarian Piarist Province”. Church History Review 27 (2): 19-34. https://doi.org/10.54231/ETSZEMLE.27.2026.2.2.

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