Hostname: page-component-7c8c6479df-995ml Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-03-27T12:25:02.749Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

‘Particular Thanks and Obligations’: The Communications Made by Women to the Society of Antiquaries between 1776 and 1837, and their Significance

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 November 2008

Anna Catalani
Affiliation:
Department of Museum Studies, University of Leicester, 105 Princess Road East, Leicester LE1 7LG, UK. E-mail: .
Susan Pearce
Affiliation:
Department of Museum Studies, University of Leicester, 105 Princess Road East, Leicester LE1 7LG, UK. E-mail: .

Abstract

This paper brings together the evidence bearing on the relationship between the Society of Antiquaries and the women who contributed to it during a significant period when archaeology, through the work of such men as Samuel Lysons and Richard Colt Hoare, was beginning to emerge as a distinct field with its own conceptual and technical systems. It takes its departure from the first substantial appearance by a woman in the Society's publications in 1776, and continues until the accession of a female monarch, Victoria, in 1837, a period of just over sixty years. It explores what women did and what reception they received and assesses the significance of this within the wider processes of the development of an understanding of the past and the shaping of gender relationships through the medium of material culture, in a period that saw fundamental changes in many areas of intellectual and social life, including levels of material consumption and the sentiments surrounding consumerism.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 2006

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Acton, F S 1847. ‘Description of Roman villa discovered at Acton Scott, near Church Stretton, in Shropshire, in 1817; with an account of further researches in July, 1844’, Archaeologia, 31, 339–45CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bennett, J 1789. Letters to a Young Lady on a Variety of Useful and Interesting Subjects. Calculated to Improve the Heart, to Form the Manners and Enlighten the Understanding, WarringtonGoogle Scholar
Berkhout, C T and Gatch, M M 1982. Anglo-Saxon Scholarship. The First Three Centuries, Boston, Mass.Google Scholar
Bosworth, J 1823. The Elements of Anglo-Saxon Grammar, LondonGoogle Scholar
Burke's Peerage and Baronetage 1896. LondonGoogle Scholar
Carlyle, Miss 1832. ‘Roman altar discovered at Caervoran’, Archaeologia, 24, 352Google Scholar
Cleevely, R 2004. ‘Miss Etheldred Bennett (1775–1845): a preliminary note on her correspondence’, Wiltshire Archaeol Natur Hist Mag, 97, 2534Google Scholar
Collingwood, R and Wright, R 1965. The Roman Inscriptions of Britain, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Collins, S H 1982. ‘The Elstobs and the end of the Saxon Revival’, in Berkhout and Gatch 1982, 107–18Google Scholar
SirColt Hoare, R 1819. The Ancient History of Wiltshire, 2 vols, LondonGoogle Scholar
Daniell, J 1879. The History of Warminster, WarminsterGoogle Scholar
Donovan, E 1830. ‘On the clothing of the Ancient Britons’, Gentleman's Magazine, C, pt 2, 291–5Google Scholar
Evans, J 1956. History of the Society of Antiquaries of London, LondonGoogle Scholar
Fryer, H and Squires, A 1996. ‘The Gothic taste: Humphrey Repton at Donington Park’, Trans Leicestershire Archaeol Hist Soc, 70, 91105Google Scholar
Gentleman's Magazine 1786. Gentleman's Magazine, LVI, pt 2 (11 1786), 990Google Scholar
Goodman, D 1994. The Republic of Letters. A Cultural History of the French Enlightenment, Ithaca, NYGoogle Scholar
Harding, A 2003. The Countess of Huntingdon's Connection, OxfordCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haycock, L 2004. ‘“In the newest manner”: social life in late Georgian Devizes’, Wiltshire Archaeol Natur Hist Mag, 97, 114Google Scholar
Haydock, D 2002. William Stukeley: Science, Religion and Archaeology in Eighteenth-Century England, WoodbridgeGoogle Scholar
Hughes, S F 1982. ‘The Anglo-Saxon grammars of George Hicks and Elizabeth Elstob’, in Berkhout and Gatch 1982, 119–48Google Scholar
Hunter, J 1830. The Diary of Ralph Thoresby, 1677–1724, LondonGoogle Scholar
Kenyon, Sir F 1936. ‘Anniversary address’, Antiq J, 16, 249–59CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Keppie, L 2001. ‘Roman Britain in 2000’, Britannia, 32, 311–85CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Levine, J M 1987. ‘The Stonesfield pavement: archaeology in Augustan England’, in Humanism and History. Origins of Modern English Historiography (ed Levine, J M), 107–22, Ithaca, NYGoogle Scholar
Levine, P 1986. The Amateur and the Professional: Antiquarians, Historians and Archaeologists in Victorian England, 1838–1886, CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Mantell, A 1834. ‘Lady Mantell, 22 November 1832’, Archaeologia, 25, 604Google Scholar
Marsden, B 1974. The Early Barrow Diggers, Princes RisboroughGoogle Scholar
Marsden, B 1984. Pioneers of Prehistory, OrmskirkGoogle Scholar
Moira, Lady E 1785. ‘Particulars relative to a Human Skeleton, and the Garments that were found thereon, when dug out of a Bog at the Foot of Drumkeragh, a Mountain in the County of Down, and Barony of Kinalearty on Lord Moira's estate, in the Autumn of 1780’, Archaeologia, 7, 90110CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Morrison, F 1768. History of Ireland, II, DublinGoogle Scholar
O'Halloran, C 2004. Golden Ages and Barbarous Nations. Antiquarian Debate and Cultural Politics in Ireland, c.1750–1800, CorkGoogle Scholar
Pearce, S 1995. On Collecting: An Investigation into Collecting in the European Tradition, LondonGoogle Scholar
Pearce, S 1998a. Collecting in Contemporary Practice, LondonGoogle Scholar
Pearce, S 1998b. ‘Objects in the contemporary construction of personal culture: perspectives relating to gender and socio-economic class’, Museum Management and Curatorship, 17/3, 223–41CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pearce, S 2002. ‘Bodies in exile: Egyptian mummies in the early nineteenth century and their cultural implications’, in Displaced Persons: Conditions of Exile in European Culture (ed Oudit, S), 5471, AldershotGoogle Scholar
Pegge, S 1789. ‘Observations on some brass celts, and other weapons, discovered in Ireland’, Archaeologia, 9, 8495CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Philips, M S 2000. Society and Sentiment. Genres of Historical Writing in Britain 1740–1820, PrincetonCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Piggott, S 1976. ‘The origins of the English county archaeological societies’, in Ruins in a Landscape. Essays in Antiquarianism (ed Piggott, S), 171–95, EdinburghGoogle Scholar
Pointon, M 1997. Strategies for Showing. Women, Possession, and Representation in English Visual Culture 1665–1800, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Pringle, Sir J 1785. ‘Account of discoveries at Allington in Kent’, Archaeologia, 7, 408–9Google Scholar
Reid, A 18951896. ‘Note as to the recovery of three volumes of the MS collections of Scottish antiquities of the late Robert Riddell Esq., of Friars Carse and Glenriddell’, Proc Soc Antiq Scotl, 30, 222–4Google Scholar
Richey, R 2004. ‘Rawdon, Elizabeth, 1731–1808’, in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography: Online Edition (eds H C G Matthew and B Harrison), <http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/71627> (24 06 2006)+(24+06+2006)>Google Scholar
Riddell Lady, S 1785. ‘Lady S Riddell to Mr Felton’, Archaeologia, 7, 414–16Google Scholar
Riddell of Glenriddell, R 1789. ‘An account of the ancient lordship of Galloway from the earliest period to the year 1455, when it was annexed to the crown of Scotland’, Archaeologia, 9, 4960CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Riddell of Glenriddell, R 1792a. ‘Account of the ancient modes of fortification in Scotland’, Archaeologia, 10, 99104Google Scholar
Riddell of Glenriddell, R 1792b. ‘Observations on vitrified fortifications in Galloway’, Archaeologia, 10, 147–50Google Scholar
Scott, J R 1876. Memorials of the family of Scott, of Scot's-hall in the county of Kent. With an appendix of illustrative documents, LondonGoogle Scholar
Sweet, R 2004. Antiquaries. The Discovery of the Past in Eighteenth-Century Britain, Hambledon and LondonGoogle Scholar
Tweddle, D, Biddle, M and Kjølbye-Biddle, B 1995. Corpus of Anglo-Saxon Stone Sculpture, Vol IV: South-East England, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Vetusta Monumenta 1789. Vetusta Monumenta, II, Society of Antiquaries of LondonGoogle Scholar
Walker, P 1997. ‘The political career of Theophilus Hastings (1650–1701), 7th Earl of Huntingdon’, Trans Leicestershire Archaeol Hist Soc, 71, 6578Google Scholar
Wetherall, D 1998. ‘The growth of archaeological societies’, in The Study of the Past in the Victorian Age (ed Brand, V), 2134, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Woolf, D 1997. ‘A feminine past? Gender, genre and historical knowledge in England, 1500–1800’, American Hist Rev, 102, 645–78CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Woolf, D 2003. The Social Circulation of the Past, OxfordCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wroth, W W 2004. ‘Mantell, Sir Thomas (1751–1831)’, rev J A Marchand, in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography: Online Edition (eds H C G Matthew and B Harrison), <http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/18006> (24 06 2006)+(24+06+2006)>Google Scholar