January 2005

Conferences and CFPs in early modern history

CFPs:

Local, Regional, and Global Constructions of Christianity: Religious Communication Networks, 1680-1830, University of Trier, Germany, March 2006. Deadline for proposals: 25 February 2005.

Diasporas, Migration and Identities (early modern Atlantic world), Cambridge University, England, September 2005. Deadline for proposals: 30 March 2005.

The Eighteenth-Century Everyday: Remembrance and Representation, University of New Brunswick, Canada, September 2005. Deadline for proposals: 15 April 2005.

Children of Abraham: Christians, Jews and Muslims in the Middle Ages and Early Modern Era, Siena College, Loudonville, NY, USA, October 2005. Deadline for proposals: 1 June 2005.

Icons and Iconoclasts 1603-1714, University of Aberdeen, Scotland, July 2006. Deadline for proposals: 28 February 2006.

Upcoming Conferences, etc

Scotland in the Seventeenth Century, University of Edinburgh, Scotland. 12 February 2005.

The Nature of Knowledge: Eighteenth-century Engagements with the Natural World, University of South Florida, USA. 17-19 February 2005.

Navigating the Eighteenth Century, St Simon’s Island, Georgia, USA. 23-26 February 2005.

Discipline and Its Discontents: T. Dwight Bozeman and the Rethinking of Transatlantic Puritanism, University of Iowa, USA. 25 February 2005.

Voices and Identities in the Archival Record, University of East Anglia, Norwich, UK. 30 March 2005.

Society of Early Americanists Conference, Alexandria, Virginia, USA. 31 March-2 April 2005.

British Political Thought in History, Literature, and Theory. Folger Shakespeare Library, Washington DC, USA. 31 March-2 April 2005.

‘The greatest mere village in England’:
Networks, Religion and Politics in early modern Manchester
, Manchester, England. 2 April 2005.

Slavery from Within: Legacies and Comparative Perspectives in the Atlantic World, Middelburg, The Netherlands. 22-24 June 2005.

Also: Call for Contributions

Journal of Women’s History Special Issue: Women, Material Culture and Consumption. Deadline for submissions: 1 April 2005.


Bad History

This is just a splendid idea:

The Carnival of Bad History

They’re looking for entries on the following themes:

* Bad presentations of history – This is the easy one. Review bad historical movies, books and teevee. How anachronistic are those uniforms? How improbable is that alternate history novel? Did kindly frontier doctors really talk like that?

* Bad uses of history – When pundits, politicians, and talking heads get hold of history they often twist it beyond all recognition or justification. Tell us about the mangaled metaphors, unjustified parallels, or outright lies you find in the public sphere.

* Historians behaving badly – Historians manage their share of embarassing talking head appearances, plagiarism scandals, and corporate sell-outs. We don’t want mere unpleasant gossip. Contributions in this category should be of historians behaving badly in their professional capacity as historians.

The first issue will be at archy, 1 March.

………..

Which reminds me that History Carnival #2 is due in the next week or so: send submissions to Ralph Luker, the host (ralphluker AT mindspring DOT com).


British History

Key facts for the survival of our great nation.


And a bit more blog community

1. Go visit Mark Grimley’s fine blog, War Historian. Do not be put off by that ‘military historian’ tag. This guy is cool. Take these examples: why he blogs; comparing Abe Lincoln to Bismarck; and some thoughts about relationships between war and society.

2. Mark has also persuaded Laura not only to join him from time to time at War Historian, but also to start her own shiny new blog, Classical Archaeologist. And he’s rounded up some of his graduate students to set up a group blog on the American civil war, Civil Warriors.

Anybody know of any more new history blogs that ought to be on my blogroll?

UPDATE: Suggestions will be added below….

From Claire: The Young Hegelian.


This is specially for the New Kid

… Although others may find it interesting too.

NK commented on the look of the Latin addition to one of the petitions I posted earlier. Well, this is an image from what are known as the Chester Crown Books, which list the people who were brought before the Cheshire Great Sessions (prisoners from the gaol, those bound over to appear, presented by juries, etc). This will be early 17th century (I could check the date but want to get this posted), and it’s from the section listing prisoners being tried for felony. The list would have been drawn up at the beginning of the session of the court, and then as they went through the session the notes in the left-hand margins were added to record the prisoners’ fates.*

list of prisoners, in Latin

If you look again at the English language documents I linked in the earlier post you’ll see that the hand being used here is quite different – and I’d think of it, I suppose, as more ‘medieval’. (The entries in the Crown Books aren’t all entirely in Latin, but they do tend to use this hand even when writing in English.)

…………

* If you look next to the first prisoner’s entry you can see ‘Judm’ (I’ve forgotten the exact Latin, but it means ‘judgement’) and a strange looking-symbol starting with a squiqqle (which is actually – trust me – ‘Sur’). What those mean is that the prisoner was sentenced to death (squiggly-’Sur’ is a contracted form of ‘Suspendatur’: ‘to be hanged’).


Get paid for surfing the web…

Seriously: Humbul Humanities Hub is recruiting web cataloguers.

They’re looking for “freelance Subject Reviewers and up to two Metadata Editors for work up until July 2005 initially.”

* Subject Reviewers are responsible for evaluating and describing in detail Internet resources which are suitable for inclusion within the current Humbul catalogue. To do this work, you must be able to identify new, relevant resources for your broad subject area(s).

* Metadata Editors are responsible for completing existing Humbul records of Internet resources by adding additional information, such as the resource’s author and publisher, and the type of resource.

Deadline for applications: 11 February 2005.

Interviews will be held in Oxford at the end of February. Apart from initial training, subject reviewers can do the work “in your own time and from any location” (although you need to be eligible to work in the UK). The Metadata Editors may need to be based in Oxford. They look ideal for PhD students in the process of writing up (well, it’s got to be better than stacking shelves).

Here are what they outline as their ‘priority subject areas’:

* Due to Humbul’s current collection development priorities, preference will be given to applicants with expertise, as a result of postgraduate study or library experience, in one or more of the following subject areas:

Comparative Literature
Celtic Studies
Italian Studies
Middle Eastern Studies
Japanese Studies
Chinese Studies
Slavonic and East European Studies (including Hungarian, Bulgarian, Romanian, Croatian, Czech, Serbian, Slovak, Slovene, Ukranian, as well as other East European and Baltic languages).

* The following subject areas form the next priority level for collection development. Individuals with expertise in one or more of these areas, as a result of postgraduate study or library experience, are also encouraged to apply:

History
Australasian Studies
South Asian Studies
Russian Studies
Scandinavian Studies
African Studies
Classics


A cautionary tale

You don’t want your Blogspot blog any more? Moving on? Trying to quit your habit?

However keen you are to escape, it may not be a good idea to close down the account and thus make the name available to others. At least, I’m pretty sure that Claire of early modern material culture hasn’t gone into a new business. And if you have a link to http://chlgeorge.blogspot.com anywhere on your blogroll, you might want to remove it sharpish.


To the honourable judges

I’ve put up a couple more documents (photos and transcripts), a pair of petitions, which I’m thinking of using at some point during the introductory class of the course I’m teaching. (There’ll be more to come over the next few days.)

They probably seem quite enigmatic as they stand, without any proper context (I do have some more documents related to the first one that should be worth transcribing). They are only, I should stress, intended as a starting point for discussion; I’m hoping that there’s just enough there to get students curious about what might be going on. Anybody here want to make guesses?

Anyway, they’re only one set of archival documents that we’ll look at in the first session. We might not even get to them, since the main thing I’ll want to do is something that worked quite well with some other students a few years ago, using a series of documents to illustrate the progress of a prosecution from its beginnings (taking examinations before a JP, or a coroner, binding people by recognizance to appear in court; oh yes, I should also look for some arrest and gaol committal warrants); then the formal indictments; and finally documents that give information about verdicts, sentences and pardons. Then, if we have time, I’d like to use petitions (and perhaps similar documents addressed to judges) and jury presentments as examples of less formal methods of prosecution than the indictment (plus, petitions also being used to appeal against legal decisions); and to point to some of the potential diversity of court business. It wasn’t all just about trying and hanging felons (not in Cheshire and Wales anyway).

With pretty pictures as far as possible, like these. I won’t be expecting these students to read early modern handwriting, so we’ll mostly be working with documents that are already transcribed or with print materials, but I’m very grateful to the PRO to allowing us to use cameras so that (quite apart from my research stuff…) I’ll be able to start by showing them – and, of course, you lot too – some examples of what the original documents actually look like. Not that I expect anyone else to find it nearly as exciting as I do.

……..

PS: Anyone else out there who does read documents from this period fancy taking a look at the word, in the middle of the first of the two petitions, that I’ve transcribed in brackets with a question mark? I think it either says ‘minitryate’ or ‘minioryate’ (‘to miniature’ is given as a verb in the OED, one of its meanings being ‘to reduce’; ‘to minorate’ is also an obsolete word meaning to diminish, reduce). The general meaning is quite clear, but I can’t quite decide what those middle letters are. Any opinions?


Benevolent dictatorship

Making Light was one of the very first blogs I found last year. Not everyone will agree with the politics of course, but I think we’d all envy the level and class of conversations that go on there. So, when Teresa gives us a run-down of what she knows about moderating conversations in virtual space, you’d do well to read both the post and what her readers have to say.

I was particularly tickled by a commenter’s characterisation of blogs as ‘benevolent dictatorships’. (Sounds like an opening for a bloggers’ quiz to me…)

I wonder, though, why there’s any doubt that blogging ‘communities’ exist? Perhaps because I’ve been familiar with the idea of imagined community for so long. (Googling the phrase also turned up this introduction to the imagined community of instant publishing; there’s probably a lot more.) As Teresa herself says, you need to define ‘community’, and you can only exclude blogging communities if you use a particularly narrow definition.

(Sometimes there are also these arguments about whether blogging is ‘democratic’. Well, if you bear in mind that what democracy in practice means is that we’re offered a fairly limited choice of party platforms, and few of us have any direct (I stress ‘direct’) say in how the parties are run and what their policies are or to change them… then blogging looks pretty like democracy to me. Except that it’s not a bloody competition. And although blogging may sometimes threaten to take over your life (!), it doesn’t have quite the same consequences as the choices we make at the polls.)

And Teresa also has this to say: “Admitting to what you yourself like is a much more reliable guide to what others will like than trying to figure out what you and they ought to like.” I was recently asked a question that went ‘what advice would you give to a novice blogger?’ And that’s the answer I should have given: admit what you yourself like and then damn well blog it. Part of what makes good blogs good is that their hosts do what THEY like to do, and they’re honest about it. And the technology makes it possible for anyone to do it, to give it a go and find a new way to express their thoughts. It doesn’t matter that there are (probably) millions of blogs out there that seem ‘good’ only to their owners and a handful of other people. After all, any given individual would (probably) find about 90% of the blogosphere utter crap, another 9% pretty dire, about 1% readable (and maybe 0.1% ‘great’).*

OK. All I meant to do was point out Teresa’s post and look at me. At this rate, I’ll be getting all introspective, and Tim Burke just did that a lot better than I could. And he has a lovely beard.

…………….

*You might protest at this point that you have a much better hit rate with newly discovered blogs than that. But you don’t discover them at random, do you? You follow links from other blogs you like. You look for blogs on subjects that interest you. And yet there’ll still be a lot that you only ever visit once because you didn’t like them, found them objectionable, or just dull, just didn’t hit the spot. Here might be an interesting experiment: try going to any Blogspot blog and hitting the ‘Next Blog’ button repeatedly. How many of the blogs would you actually like enough even to revisit once?


Some back to Shakespeare basics

The Shakespeare Company 1594-1642
“Surely this is a bit poofy?”
Shakespeare’s canon
The first folio and early quartos
Shakespeare in quarto
Internet Shakespeare editions
Shakespearean prompt-books of the 17th century
Shakespeare’s Globe
Shakespeare’s sources
What did Shakespeare look like?
Shakespeare’s early reputation
The Shakespeare paper trail


Read this today

Musings on the 60th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz.

.
The Holocaust History project

Nizkor Holocaust Educational resource

Yad Vashem

The Last Expression: Art and Auschwitz

Remember.org

Holocaust denial on trial

Witness to the Holocaust

Telling their stories: oral histories of the Holocaust

To save a life: stories of Holocaust rescue

Women and the Holocaust

Zachor: faith during the Holocaust

The Holocaust Chronicle

Holocaust survivors

Learning about the Holocaust through Art


Wicipedia

No, that’s not a typo: here is Wicipedia yn Gymraeg. (Link spotted at Digital Medievalist.)

What with that and blogs like Bachgen o Bontllanfraith, I really have no excuse not to be practising fy Nghymraeg.

Ond mae’n anodd. A, dwi’n ofnadwy. Ble’r geiriadur?


NEH summer seminar

Early American Microhistories, Connecticut, June 2005.

The seminar invites participation by 15 humanists in several fields. It seeks to enlarge and enrich their understanding and use of microhistory in research and teaching. By reading and discussing a variety of studies, participants will assess the advantages of different approaches to narrative. Richard Brown and the visiting faculty will lead the seminar in considering how to select and conceptualize a subject, the choice of appropriate research techniques, and the creation of a narrative strategy. …

Deadline for applications: 1 March 2005


Print culture

More treasure from scribblingwoman: From the bottom up, an online exhibition of early American ‘popular’ reading.

I also came across this the other day: The word on the street, from the National Library of Scotland’s ‘broadsides’ collection.

And if you like those, you might also like these…

Restoration print culture
Early 18th-century newspaper reports
Early newspapers
News and the media in 18th-century Paris
Glasgow broadside ballads website


The neck bone’s connected to the shoulder-bone

Yee-ow. I woke up suddenly this morning, made to sit up a bit too fast and my neck went crr-nch. It hasn’t happened for several years. All I can do now is take a lot of ibuprofen, move slowly and wait for it to sort itself out. (Past episodes have been worse than this one, anyway. I just hope it’s a one-off this time.)

And prop myself up on my cushions to watch Anatomy for beginners.

Update: Oh my god. Ick. Wow.

Special ick factor: bright yellow slimy sub-cutaneous fat.

Special wow factor: the Dr Tulp moment.

The meat slicer was… put to interesting use.

PS: the neck is (no pun intended) holding up. Haven’t had to ratchet up the ibuprofen dose too much yet.


Like she said…

scribblingwoman notes that the BBC has just spotted the existence of academic blogging.

At least it’s a nice plug for Esther MacCallum-Stewart’s lovely Break of day in the trenches. And this may be the shape of the future – after all, free web accounts are now pretty much standard, I think – in British universities.*

Update: Esther reports on continuing negative attitudes towards the use of the web for academic study:

I was despondant to hear another member of the department where I work had advised students not to use the web as a research tool the other day. From what I heard, this stemmed from the assumption that all academic students use the web to look up essays to plagarise. Whislt of course, this is sometimes the case, what this tutor had effectively done was disenfranchise the students told this from being able to tap the genuine wealth of information readily available in a research context. This includes, amongst other things, this weblog, but it also includes things such as OLIS, LEXISNEXIS…, OCLC, Spartacus, the British Library online, Bible Gateway, Bartleby, and all the other genuine resources out there.

And after all, there’s also a wealth of “poor scholarship and unstable theories” in print (and printed works can equally be used by plagiarists). We’re supposed to be teaching students to exercise their critical faculties, and that shouldn’t just mean traditional scholarly books and articles.

* Though I’d forgotten about the controversy at Birmingham university


Athanasius Kircher

Expand your mind with the exhalations of the barking soul over at Barista.

You might also want to take a look at this: Jesuits in the sciences 1540-1995


Wallography

In 1682, a satirical little book about the Welsh was published: Wallography, or the Britton described, by “WR”, an English clergyman named William Richards.* It purported to describe, first, a journey from London to the Welsh borders and then the “State and Condition, the Nature, Humours, Manners, customs, and mighty Actions” of Wales and its inhabitants. It’s not an altogether popular book in Wales; laughing at Wallography is a slightly guilty pleasure… though some might say that that’s the best kind. (Although it doesn’t just take aim at the Welsh and ‘Taphydome’. Much of the book, in fact, is an equally gleeful send-up of English country-dwelling caricatures.)

As for the Inhabitants [of Wales], they are a pretty Sort of Creatures, which, when we saw, we were so far from stroaking them with the Palms of Love, that we were almost ready to buffet them with the Fist of Indignation. They are a rude People, and want much Instruction…

We were much surprized at the Thoughts of their Rank, and did not suspect so much Gentility among such a Peopl; when we saw so many Coats without Arms, we could not imaging they had any with them, but fancy’d they had more Need of a Taylor than of Clarentius, and of a Prick-louse to stitch up and compose their Breeches, rather than an Herald to blazen their Families.

Ahem. (That mockery of the combined poverty and ‘pretensions’ to gentility of the early modern Welsh is a common theme amongst the English, who did not quite comprehend that for the Welsh status had long been rather more about lineage than wealth and display.)

Richards also had great fun with another stereotype of the Welsh, that of their hot temper and inclination towards both quarrelling and litigation. (Combined with comments on the behaviour of ‘pettifogging’ lawyers that was by no means exclusive to the Welsh. Or, of course, the early modern period.)

They do not always observe the Rules of Justice in their Punishments; oftentimes chastising one Body for another, and so misplace their rigour on the undeserving; as will be very evident from this following Instance: A certain Taylor ferrying over a River in their Country with a diminutive Nag; the Steed never using to travel by Water, and wondering that he stood still and mov’d, was possess’d with Fear, and made some Disturbance on the Boat, to the great endangering of the Passengers; The Welshman, being in Jeopardy, was fir’d with Anger, and without any Wings he flew on the Taylor, and revenged the Injury of the Palfry on poor Prick-Louse. The Stitcher swaddled the Scrupling Horse, and Taphy beat the Stitcher, to the great Diversion and Grief of the Spectators. …

Most of their Indictments are generally the tragical Effects of some dismal Counterscuffle, where a bloody Nose and a broken Shin is ample Matter for the Commencement of a Suit; for, they being of a fiery Temper, sometimes Choler is kindled by an Antiperistasis with a Pot of Ale; and then they fall to biting and scratching as hard as they can drive, and the Wounds of this Caterwauling and Bickering afford Stuff for an Action the next Day; which, being once got into the Pounces of a Welsh Attorney, is dandled into a Business of no small Aggravation. Oh! how these Pettifoggers will hug a Buffeting, and improve a Squobble! They are the very Bellows of Contention, and will soon blow a Spark into a great Combustion. They are a Kind of Tinkers in the Law, who usually make Holes on Purpose that they may mend them; nay, sometimes they will play at Loggerhead themselves to set others together by the Ears, and so (as if Fighting was contagious) will infect the Taphies into Quarrels and Blows. …

Yet it is tremendously funny, sometimes perceptive and frequently “deliciously ambiguous”.** You can easily find nastier and cruder examples of this sort of Welsh-baiting from the late 17th and early 18th centuries; indeed the book draws on a well-established tradition of abuse of the Welsh by the English (this is long before Wales became a Romantic holiday destination). And it’s regularly quoted by early modern Welsh historians. Who could deny the truth of this?

The Country is mountainous, and yields pretty handsome Clambering for Goats, and hath Variety of Precipice to break one’s Neck; which a Man may sooner do than fill his Belly, the Soil being barren, and an excellent Place to breed a Famine in.

The most regularly quoted passage from the book is about the fate of the Welsh language (that it was “being English’d out of Wales”). But the quote is usually wrenched out of its fuller context, which is much more subtle and ironic in tone. (English learners of Welsh everywhere will appreciate the problems you experience when you get some of those Welsh polysyllables stuck in your throat.) And what are we supposed to make of the author’s attitude to the language? On the one hand, to be much admired as a language of ‘sincerity’ and ‘purity’, with English a ‘barbarous’ intruder; on the other, ‘native gibberish’; yet again, those in the towns who ‘despise it’ are ‘puffed up’ snobs. Does the author approve of the ‘glimmering hopes’ that it may become extinct, or is that to be taken as the view of those puffed up townsfolk and gentry who are turning their backs on it? (This is probably exaggerating for effect the extent to which Welsh was being ejected from gentry households at that time, but it is true that English was the language of high status, politics, law, learning, necessary in order to ‘get on’.)

That, which we admir’d most of all amongst them, was the Virginity of their Language, not deflower’d by the Mixture of any other Dialect: The Purity of Latin was debauch’d by the Vandals, and was Hun’d into Corruption by that barbarous People; but the Sincerity of the British remains inviolable. ‘Tis a Tongue (it seems) not made for every Mouth; as appears by an Instance of one in our Company, who, having got a Welsh Polysyllable into his Throat, was almost choak’d with Consonants, had we not, by clapping him on the Back, made him dis-gorge a Guttural or two, and so sav’d him. They usually liquefy the most rugged Mutes, and soften ‘em by Pronunciation… Whether the Welsh tongue be a Splinter of that universal one that was shatter’d at Babel, we have some reason to doubt, in regard ‘tis unlike the Dialects that were crumbled there; however, whether it be kin or no to other country Speeches, it matters not; but this we are assured of, it is near and dear to the Folk that utter it, who are so passionately fond of it, that they will scarce admit another into the Embraces of their Lips, which sputter forth a Kind of loathing of our English Language; wherein, if a Question be ask’d them, they will, with somewhat of Disdain and Choler, make Answer, Dim Aiffonick,*** i.e. no English. Their native Gibberish is usually prattled throughout the whole Taphydome, except in their Market-Towns, whose Inhabitants being a little rais’d and (as it were) puffed up into Bubbles above the ordinary Scum, do begin to despise it. Some of these being elevated above the common Level, and perhaps refin’d into the Quality of having two Suits, are apt to fancy themselves above their Tongue, and when in their t’other Cloaths, are quite asham’d on’t. ‘Tis usually cashier’d out of Gentlemen’s Houses, there being scarcely to be heard even one single Welsh Tone in many Families; their Children are instructed in the Anglican Idiom, and their Schools are paedagogu’d with Professors of the same; so that (if the Stars prove lucky) there may be some glimmering Hopes that the British Lingua may be quite extinct, and may be English’d out of Wales, as Latin was barbarously Goth’d out of Italy.

…………….

* If you’re looking it up in a library’s rare books collection (there’s no modern edition), it was republished in subsequent decades under a variety of titles, often in compiled collections, eg John Torbuck, A collection of Welsh travels, and memoirs of Wales (1738 and later editions); Dean Swift’s ghost (1753). For those with access, it’s available at EEBO.

** I’m borrowing that phrase, and some the arguments, from Michael Roberts, ‘ “A Witty Book, but mostly Feigned”: William Richards’ Wallography and perceptions of Wales in later seventeenth-century England’, in Archipelagic identities (eds. Philip Schwyzer and Simon Mealor). Declaration of interest: Michael was my PhD supervisor.

*** This phrase is curious. ‘No English’ in Welsh as far as I know should be ‘Dim Saesneg’, and I can’t fathom at the moment what this word ‘Aiffonick’ might be; I can’t see anything like it in my dictionary at home. (I may have to go look in the multi-volume dictionary in the university library. If I can work out the modern spelling.)


New discoveries

Some interesting people have been finding their way here recently (mostly because of the History Carnival, I think. Love those spikes in my stats).

Tony is an Aussie (and possibly barmy, but that’s fine by me). Simon reads a lot up in the darkness in Norway. I finally visited that Barista fella people keep linking to (and it took so long why exactly? Why does that happen sometimes?). And, look, another Aussie (who links, among others, to this one). Dale seeks the light. As, no doubt, do the Avuncular Undergrad and Science and Politics in their different ways.

At Respectful Insolence, he knows his Blake’s Seven references, so a special mention is in order. There are also fine posts on scepticism, cancer, the Holocaust, amongst other things.

Update: The inaugural Carnival of the Carnivals. And War Historian pointed me to chez Nadezhda.


Bustling around

After all the underwear, you might want to read this from Mirabilis.ca… (If you were wondering, yes it is work-safe.)


Dear readers

What a splendid bunch you are. From underwear-related naughtiness to obscure historical personages, you make my blogging life a bit special.

I know the History Carnival has brought some new readers and linkages (I’ll probably be doing some blogroll updating in the next few days). Welcome to you all, and thanks to everyone who spread the word, offered to host and/or left all the appreciative comments.

On the biographies front, I suspect some of your suggestions are so obscure that it’ll be difficult to dig up very much about them, in languages I can read anyway. (But I will try.) At the moment, the first efforts are likely to be from among the following:

Gebhard Truchsess von Waldburg (sounds an interesting story!)
Margaret Cavendish (mmm, yes!)
Christiaan Huygens/Giovanni Cassini (might try to do that for the next Titan ‘fly-by’, which is due in mid-February, apparently)

Keep sending your suggestions here. No promises about when these things will happen (keeping you in suspense…), but I’m not ignoring you, I promise.


Common-place

The latest issue of Common-place is online, a special issue on ‘Pacific Routes’. There’s so much that it’s hard to know where to begin… but you could simply take a mystery tour around the stars on the map.


17th century science, mathematics and astronomy links

PZ Myers comments that Huygens and Cassini make for a pretty hot topic right now. So you may be getting biographies soon, but for now, just some links.

Christiaan Huygens
Giovanni Cassini
The Galileo Project
The scientific revolution
The Plurality of Worlds
Mathematicians of the 17th and 18th centuries
Early modern women in Science
Women philosophers of the 17th and 18th centuries
History of mathematics
The MacTutor history of mathematics archive
Seventeenth-century astronomy

Update: you might also want to read this review of a new book about Robert Hooke, which just turned up in my mail. (And this slightly older one.)


Tilting at windmills this year

Cronaca has a reminder that it’s the 400th anniversary of Don Quixote’s publication this year.

So…

The Don Quixote Exhibit
Wikipedia entry
The Cervantes Project
Cervantes in CyberSpain
The knight in the mirror
A windmill I won’t tilt at
That Francis Bacon, he got everywhere…

Online texts:
Project Gutenberg
The Literature Network
Adelaide e-books


Biography requests taken

Well, I thought the special Christmas links requests worked well – might do that again too – so lets try something more ambitious.

Is there an individual from the early modern period (the usual, 1500-1800ish) you’d like to know more about? I will endeavour to write short biographies, depending on how many requests you send in and how soon I get bored of it, based on whatever secondary sources (online or traditional) I can easily get hold of; and, at the very least, I’ll try to provide some links.

And please don’t suggest people like Elizabeth I or Napoleon Bonaparte for whom there are squillions of biographies already out there. (Though we don’t have to be talking totally obscure; well-known people are fine.)