scholarly journals Presidential Address

1912 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
pp. 1-17
Author(s):  
Ven. Archdeacon W. Cunningham

So far as historical studies are concerned the most interesting event of the past year has been the magnificent Historical Exhibition which was held in Glasgow. The promoters had in view, as their ultimate object, the establishment of a Chair of Scottish History in the University of Glasgow; and they have been successful in securing the nucleus of a sufficient endowment for this purpose. But the Exhibition itself was so admirably planned, and so successfully carried out, that it must have had an enormous effect in diffusing an interest in the records and the relics of the past. The large amount of space which was rightly devoted to ecclesiastical history was in itself a reminder of the importance of religion in the seventeenth century as a factor in the growth of Scottish nationality. Even more significant was the extraordinary collection of treasures that had been preserved in Scottish mansions, and of portraits which were now generously lent and carefully arranged for display to the public. It helps to bring out the importance of family history for a proper understanding of Scottish affairs. Just because the consolidation of Scottish nationality was so long in being attained, the struggles of the great families continued to furnish the leading motives and incidents in the drama of Scottish history.

Criminologie ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 33-52
Author(s):  
Denis Szabo

The author describes the relationship that has been established over the past 25 years between university centres doing research in criminology and the Federal Government, pointing out both areas of agreement and as an expert and participant in the field, advocates a pluralistic type of collaboration between the University and the public authorities.


Impact ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 (8) ◽  
pp. 82-84
Author(s):  
Hiroki Kikuchi ◽  
Asei Sato

The preservation of historical artefacts is an important means of understanding more about the past. Japan is home to thousands of stone inscriptions, many of which are not stored in research institutions of museums, but rather, are scattered across the country in places like roadsides or graveyards in rural locations. While these inscriptions might well be of interest to local residents, there is a need to increase awareness of their cultural importance. A team led by Hiroki Kikuchi, who is based at The Historiographical Institute within The University of Tokyo in Japan, is working to create a database which will digitise 2,700 inscription rubbings. The database will be open to the public and will provide a fascinating historical narrative as well as an important research resource.


1880 ◽  
Vol 26 (115) ◽  
pp. 327-342
Author(s):  
George W. Mould

A question that has been prominently before the public for the past few years, and which has not always been discussed with the cool reason so weighty a subject demands, is the control, custody, and treatment of the insane community known as private patients; and for the purpose of present argument I class those patients as private patients whose cost is defrayed without aid from the State—either in the matter of board, lodging, or attendance; for though private patients who reside in hospitals for the insane receive this aid, the building in which they reside is provided from special funds (and most hospitals have a small income from invested funds or annual subscriptions), it amounts to very little, and is absorbed in the free cost, or mitigation in the cost of maintenance, of a few patients. In speaking of lunatic hospitals, I leave out of the question the great Hospital of Bethlem, where the maintenance of the patients is entirely defrayed from the funds of the charity.


2013 ◽  
Vol 2013 ◽  
pp. 1-7 ◽  
Author(s):  
Filippo Stanco ◽  
Davide Tanasi

In the past decade, computer graphics have become strategic for the development of projects aimed at the interpretation of archaeological evidence and the dissemination of scientific results to the public. Among all the solutions available, the use of 3D models is particularly relevant for the reconstruction of poorly preserved sites and monuments destroyed by natural causes or human actions. These digital replicas are, at the same time, a virtual environment that can be used as a tool for the interpretative hypotheses of archaeologists and as an effective medium for a visual description of the cultural heritage. In this paper, the innovative methodology and aims and outcomes of a virtual reconstruction of the Borg in-Nadur megalithic temple, carried out by Archeomatica Project of the University of Catania, are offered as a case study for a virtual archaeology of prehistoric Malta.


1936 ◽  
Vol 29 (5) ◽  
pp. 209-219
Author(s):  
Raymond Clare Archibald

In a vice-presidential address before Section A of the American Association for the Advancement of Science just six years ago, I made a somewhat detailed survey1 of our knowledge of Egyptian and Babylonian Mathematics before the Greeks. This survey set forth considerable material not then found in any general history of mathematics. During the six years since that time announcements of new discoveries in connection with Egyptian mathematics have been comparatively insignificant, and all known documents have probably been more or less definitively studied and interpreted. But the case of Babylonian mathematics is entirely different; most extraordinary discoveries have been made concerning their knowledge and use of algebra four thousand years ago. So far as anything in print is concerned, nothing of the kind was suspected even as late as 1928. Most of these recent discoveries have been due to the brilliant and able young Austrian scholar Otto Neugebauer who now at the age of 36 has a truly remarkable record of achievement during the past decade. It was only in 1926 that he received his doctor's degree in mathematics at Göttingen, for an interesting piece of research in Egyptian mathematics; but very soon he had taken up the study of Babylonian cuneiform writing. He acquired a mastery of book and periodical literature of the past fifty years, dealing with Sumerian, Akkadian, Babylonian, and Assyrian grammar, literature, metrology, and inscriptions; he discovered mathematical terminology, and translations the accuracy of which he thoroughly proved. He scoured museums of Europe and America for all possible mathematical texts, and translated and interpreted them. By 1929 he bad founded periodicals called Quellen und Studien zur Geschichte der mathematik2 and from the first, the latter contained remarkable new information concerning Babylonian mathematics. A trip to Russia resulted in securing for the Quellen section, Struve's edition of the first complete publication of the Golenishchev mathematical papyrus of about 1850 B.C. The third and latest volume of the Quellen, appearing only about three months ago, is a monumental work by Neugebauer himself, the first part containing over five hundred pages of text, and the second part in large quarto format, with over 60 pages of text and about 70 plates. This work was designed to discuss most known texts in mathematics and mathematical astronomy in cuneiform writing. And thus we find that by far the largest number of such tablets is in the Museum of Antiquities at Istanbul, that the State Museum in Berlin made the next larger contribution, Yale University next, then the British Museum, and the University of Jena, followed by the University of Pennsylvania, where Hilprecht, some thirty years ago, published a work containing some mathematical tables. In the Museum of the Louvre are 16 tablets; and then there are less than 8 in each of the following: the Strasbourg University and Library, the Musec Royaux du Cinquantenaire in Brussels, the J. Pierpont Morgan Library Collection (temporarily deposited at Yale) the Royal On tario Museum of Archaeology at Toronto, the Ashmolean Museum at Oxford, and the Böhl collection at Leyden. Most of the tablets thus referred to date from the period 2000 to 1200 B.C. It is a satisfaction to us to know that the composition of this wonderful reference work was in part made possible by The Rockefeller Foundation. Some two years ago it cooperated in enabling Neugebauer to transfer his work to the Mathematical Institute of the University of Copenhagen, after Nazi intolerance had rendered it impossible to preserve his self respect while pursuing the in tellectual life. This new position offered the opportunity for lecturing on the History of Ancient Mathematical Science. The first volume of these lectures3 on “Mathematics before the Greeks,” was published last year, and in it are many references to results, the exact setting of which are only found in his great source work referred to a moment ago. In these two works, then, we find not only a summing up of Neugebauer's wholly original work, but also a critical summary of the work of other scholars such as Frank, Gadd, Genouillac, Hilprecht, Lenormant, Rawlinson, Thureau-Dangin, Weidner, Zimmern, and many others.4 Hence my selection of material to be presented to you to-night will be mainly from these two works. Before turning to this it may not be wholly inappropriatp to interpolateoneremarkregarding Neugebauer's service to mathematics in general. Since 1931 his notable organizing ability has been partially occupied in editing and directing two other periodicals, (1) Zentralblatt fur Mathematik (of which 11 volumes have already appeared), and (2) Zentralblatt fur Mechanik, (3 volumes) a job which of itself would keep many a person fully employed. Mais, revenons à nos moutons!


2011 ◽  
Vol 33 (1) ◽  
pp. 9-32 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ivor Noël Hume ◽  
Henry M. Miller

Abstract Ivor Noël Hume is one of the founders of historical archaeology in North America and has long championed the integration of documentary and archaeological evidence for understanding the past. As the chief archaeologist at Colonial Williamsburg for three decades, he directed numerous excavations and literally wrote the book on colonial artifacts. Committed to sharing research findings with the public, he led the way through varied publications and films and developed the first major exhibits about colonial archaeology in the United States. His most well-known project is the exploration and exhibition of the early seventeenth-century Virginia settlement of Martin's Hundred.


1966 ◽  
Vol 16 ◽  
pp. 65-79 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Donaldson

Some illustrations of the existence of a conservative north are at once apparent on even the most superficial examination of Scottish history in the seventeenth century. No historian has failed to notice, for instance, the fact that the strongest opposition to the National Covenant was concentrated in and around Aberdeen. It was in Aberdeen that the ‘doctors’, or theological professors of the university, denounced the Covenant and challenged its spokesmen to a debate in July 1638, and it was in Aberdeenshire that the Marquis of Huntly remained an unrepentant royalist during the years of the Covenanters' ascendancy.


1914 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
pp. 1-16
Author(s):  
C. H. Firth

Last May, I had the honour of reading a paper before the Society on the subject of the development of the study of seventeenth-century history hi the past: to-day, I wish to say something about the development of the study in the future. I am not going to prophesy: not even to try my skill in what politicians term ‘intelligent anticipation of the future.’ My aim is a much humbler one: I mean to make a brief survey of the field of seventeenth-century history, and point out some of the things which in my opinion need doing, in order to complete our knowledge of the subject.


2017 ◽  
Vol 4 ◽  
pp. 155-168
Author(s):  
Eugeniusz Janas

Zasadniczą częścią artykułu jest edycja krótkiego dziełka pamiętnikarskiego z drugiej połowy XVII w., należącego niewątpliwie do gatunku rodzinnych raptularzy, popularnych zwłaszcza w piśmiennictwie szlacheckim XVII–XVIII w. Tekst pióra Jana Andrzeja Sierakowskiego (zm. 1698 r.) jest rzeczowym i lapidarnym zapisem wydarzeń z lat 1664–1697, przede wszystkim prywatnych i rodzinnych, dotyczących także działalności publicznej autora, również jego rozlicznych transakcji, głównie natury majątkowej. Raptularz wydaje się interesującym świadectwem szlacheckiego żywota i codzienności. Edycję poprzedza krótki wywód historii rodu Sierakowskich, w głównej mierze zaś autora owego tekstu. Jan Andrzej Sierakowski and His Private Diaries The main part of this article is the edition of a short diary from the second part of seventeenth century which undoubtedly belongs to the genre of family memoirs so popular in the nobility writings of the seventeenth and eighteenth century. The text, written by Jan Andrzej Sierakowski (died in 1698), is a factual and concise history of events from 1664–1697; first of all it concerns private and family history but also pertains to the public activity of the author and his numerous mainly property) transactions. The diary seems an interesting item of evidence of the nobility’s everyday life. The edition is preceded by a short history of Sierakowski family, especially regarding the author of the text.


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