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Victorian Historians and the Royal Historical Society (The Prothero Lecture)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 February 2009

Extract

SUPERFICIALLY regarded, the foundation of the Royal Historical Society a hundred and twenty years ago belongs to that spate of foundations of academic societies and specialised disciplinary journals, on the continent and in the United States as well as in Britain, which occurred in the concluding decades of the last century and around the beginning of this. Indeed if mere date of foundation were all that counted the Society is considerably more venerable than, for example, the Royal Economic Society, which, even under its earlier title as the British Economic Association, will not celebrate its centenary until 1900, and the British Academy which will not do so for two years beyond that. The Royal Anthropological Institute is three years younger than ourselves, though admittedly it represented an amalgamation of two earlier societies, the Anthropological Society of London which enjoyed a somewhat notorious existence through the eighteen sixties and the still older Ethnological Society. Our Transactions had been published, albeit intermittently, for fifteen years before the first issue of the English Historical Review in 1886. They had not, it has to be admitted, been fifteen glorious years. Although by the mid-'eighties matters were beginning to improve and the names of some notable historians, Acton, Creighton, Seeley, appear on the membership rolls, the productions of the Society and much of its membership were far from distinguished and it still had some way to go to establish itself as a respected institution.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Historical Society 1989

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References

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39 Levine, , The Amateur and the Professional, 2Google Scholar. The recruitment of Hubert Hall and H. E. Maiden were important steps in the Society's advance to respectability. Maiden first published in the Transactions in 1880 and Hall in 1886. Hall was to be the Society's Literary Director from 1891 to 1938, and its Hon. Secretary from 1894–1903. Maiden followed him as Secretary and held the post for twenty-eight years.

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43 James Bass Mullinger (1834–1917), a Fellow of St John's, was a teacher in the History of Education (a link with Browning) from 1885 to 1895 and Lecturer in History, 1894–1909. A man of legendary irascibility, he was sent to prison as a young man for an attack on his sister-in-law with a carving knife (J. A. Venn, A Alumnae Cantabridgienses). It seems possible that he is the only member of Council to have served a prison sentence.

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