Moore, Judith. “The Duchess of Newcastle as Seventeenth-Century Writer and Twentieth-Century Feminist”. British Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies (BSECS) Conference, Oxford.
Royal Society
Connections
Connections | Author name Sort descending | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Family and Intimate relationships | Anna Atkins | Anna's father, John George Children
, was an amateur scientist during his years as a gentleman of leisure, and made a living from scientific work when that became necessary. He was twice Secretary of the... |
Occupation | Anna Atkins | AA
enjoyed unusual acceptance into traditionally masculine circles including learned societies, as a result of her father's involvement in (especially) the British Museum
and the Royal Society
. She became a pioneer in the field... |
Textual Features | Margaret Cavendish | This has only a single prefatory piece. Cavendish here makes use of empirical science: the Royal Society
's experiments with blood transfusion, recently reported. |
Friends, Associates | Margaret Cavendish | John Evelyn
, as a member of the Royal Society
, several times visited the Duke
and Duchess of Newcastle
(sometimes with his wife
) to arrange their visit to the Society. Cavendish, Margaret. Paper Bodies: A Margaret Cavendish Reader. Editors Bowerbank, Sylvia and Sara Heller Mendelson, Broadview. 91 |
Other Life Event | Margaret Cavendish | Margaret Cavendish, Duchess of Newcastle
, on a rare visit to London with her husband
, was entertained by the Royal Society
as a distinguished visitor. Jones, Kathleen. A Glorious Fame: The Life of Margaret Cavendish, Duchess of Newcastle, 1623-1673. Bloomsbury. 162 |
Family and Intimate relationships | Selina Davenport | Her father, Captain Charles Granville Wheler
, was a great-nephew of Sir George Wheler
, a traveller, clergyman, scholar, and early member of the Royal Society
, who had a family estate in Kent. (... |
Family and Intimate relationships | E. A. Dillwyn | Lewis Weston Dillwyn
, EAD
's paternal grandfather and the Quaker son of a famous abolitionist, owned the Cambrian
pottery in Swansea. In 1804 he became a fellow of the Royal Society
on the... |
Family and Intimate relationships | Judith Drake | Judith was married to James Drake
: Fellow of the Royal Society
, physician and writer on medicine and politics, and they had at least two children, one of each sex. Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/. under Judith Drake |
Occupation | John Dryden | By this time Dryden's two careers as writer and dramatist were well launched. The first depended on his ability to please the Stuart court, and the second on his ability to please a theatre audience... |
Textual Features | Eva Figes | A strangely static book, this novel is in form a stream of reminiscence by an aged female protagonist, who mixes past and present, without consecutive narrative. (This is actually a slightly more conventional version than... |
Anthologization | Maggie Gee | Her recent chapters in books include Beyond Ending in Bill Bryson
's Seeing Further: The Story of Science and the Royal Society, 2010 (whose other contributors include Margaret Atwood
and David Attenborough
), Living... |
Textual Production | Caroline Herschel | CH
's An Account of a New Comet (her recent discovery) was read for her at a meeting of the Royal Society
. The account was printed by John Nichols
as a pamphlet the following year. University of Alberta Libraries On-line Catalogue. http://www.library.ualberta.ca/. |
Textual Production | Caroline Herschel | The Royal Society
issued, with her name, CH
's Catalogue of Stars, an updating and radical expansion of Flamsteed
's canonical but by now inadequate catalogue of fixed stars (published in 1725). English Short Title Catalogue. http://estc.bl.uk/. Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/. |
Family and Intimate relationships | Elizabeth Isham | Their brother, later Sir Justinian Isham
(1611-75), became a royalist during the Civil War and a founder member of the Royal Society
. He married in 1634, and his wife, Jane, had five babies (all... |
Family and Intimate relationships | Anna Margaretta Larpent | AML
's father, Sir James Porter
, who as a young man had gone into business after a comparatively scanty education, later became a distinguished diplomat (he was British Ambassador at Constantinople when Anna Margaretta... |
Timeline
18 May 1661: The group which later became the Royal Society...
Building item
18 May 1661
The group which later became the Royal Society
received its first gift of a rarity for its Repository.
15 July 1662: The Royal Society was chartered by the king...
Building item
15 July 1662
The Royal Society
was chartered by the king
from the existing philosophic society centred on Gresham's College
.
15 October 1662: John Evelyn made a presentation to the Royal...
Building item
15 October 1662
John Evelyn
made a presentation to the Royal Society
on the deforestation of England and the need to plant trees; this was the germ of his Sylva, Or A Discourse Of Forest Trees, which...
1665: The Royal Society, founded the previous year,...
Building item
1665
The Royal Society
, founded the previous year, published its first number of Philosophical Transactions, the earliest scientific journal.
1668: Martha Taylor attracted attention for fasting:...
Building item
1668
Martha Taylor
attracted attention for fasting: the first published account, largely in her own words, presented her abstinence as holy; an account for the Royal Society
attacked both this text and Taylor herself.
28 January 1684: The Dublin Philosophical Society, recently...
Building item
28 January 1684
The DublinPhilosophical Society
, recently founded on the model of the Royal Society
of London, met to formulate rules and draw up its first list of members.
5 July 1687: Sir Isaac Newton published Philosophiæ naturalis...
Writing climate item
5 July 1687
Sir Isaac Newton
published Philosophiæ naturalis principia mathematica; it was the first work on the movements of the planets to back its statements with detailed mathematical calculations.
1707: Hans Sloane, later President of the Royal...
Building item
1707
Hans Sloane
, later President of the Royal Society
, published the first volume of the work generally called Natural History of Jamaica, with its short, casual account of slavery, detailing but defending the...
1723: James Jurin, Secretary of the Royal Society,...
Building item
1723
James Jurin
, Secretary of the Royal Society
, published a pioneering work of statistical analysis, A Letter to the Learned Caleb Cotesworth
. . . Containing A Comparison Between the Morality of the Natural...
20 November 1753: The Royal Society conferred its gold medal...
Building item
20 November 1753
The Royal Society
conferred its gold medal on Benjamin Franklin
for his experiments with electricity.
1777: The Royal Society received another account...
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1777
The Royal Society
received another account of a young woman refusing food, that of Janet Macleod
of the county of Ross in Scotland, who had what was called an epileptic fit at fifteen...
22 October 1786: The Royal Society heard a paper on the practice...
Building item
22 October 1786
The Royal Society
heard a paper on the practice of measuring babies' birthweights: for the first time in Britain, at a Dublin Lying-in Hospital.
1825-1839: Catherine Gilbert, daughter of Davies Gilbert...
Writing climate item
1825-1839
Catherine Gilbert
, daughter of Davies Gilbert
(President of the Royal Society
from 1828-1831), conducted most of the work of the small private printing press established by her father in their home at Eastbourne.
1830: Charles Babbage published Reflections on...
Writing climate item
1830
Charles Babbage
published Reflections on the Decline of Science in England, an excoriating attack on the Royal Society
and a call for science to be given a leadership role in British society, with proper...
1831: The Royal Society, considered the leading...
National or international item
1831
The Royal Society
, considered the leading institution of natural science in Britain, started the publication of Proceedings of the Royal Society, which featured abstracts of members' papers.
Texts
Herschel, Caroline. Catalogue of Stars. Royal Society, 1798.