CENTRE FOR METROPOLITAN
HISTORY
EMAIL NEWSLETTER
____________________________________________________________________
Issue No. 3 September 2003
___________________________________________________
Email: ihrcmh@sas.ac.uk
ABOUT THE NEWSLETTER
Welcome to the third issue of the Centre for Metropolitan Historys periodic
electronic newsletter. Our intention is to keep you informed about the latest
news from the Centre for Metropolitan History, other research centres and local
history societies, record offices and libraries which may be of interest. Each
item of news is brief but links are provided to sources where fuller information
is available.
The newsletter will only be sent to people who have asked to receive it. To
unsubscribe, to notify change of address, or to send items of news for the next
issue, please email ihrcmh@sas.ac.uk.
Back issues will be available at www.history.ac.uk/cmh/newsletter.html
1. NEWS FROM THE CMH
- Our new AHRB-funded project, People in Place: families, households and
housing in early modern London, begins on 1 October. We are looking forward
to welcoming to the CMH Dr Mark Merry, the project's Research Officer, and
Philip Baker as part-time Clerical Officer. Mark joins us from the History
Data Service based at the University of Essex, and Philip was formerly a Research
Editor on the New Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press.
'People in Place' will examine the crucial role of family and household in
the social and economic transformations that took place in London in the sixteenth
and seventeenth centuries. Population growth, immigration, urbanisation, and
commercialisation produced new patterns of sociability, gender relations,
employment, and domestic lifestyle. The project will combine the established
methodologies of family reconstitution and associated nominative linkage with
the reconstruction of London property-histories to reconstruct and analyse
the dense matrix of families, households, properties, and buildings in three
contrasting areas of London (Cheapside, Aldgate, Clerkenwell) in the period
c.1540-1710. Led by Dr Vanessa Harding of Birkbeck, University of London,
the project will also be co-supervised by Dr Richard Smith, of the Cambridge
Group for the History of Population and Social Structure, University of Cambridge
and the CMH's Director, Dr Matthew Davies.
- The programme and booking information for the 'Guilds: London...England...Europe'
conference (Senate House, 31 October-1 November) is now online at www.history.ac.uk/cmh/guilds2.html.
The conference will explore the history of Europe's guilds and livery companies
from 1000 to 1900. Keynote speakers are: Derek Keene (CMH), Carlo Poni (Bologna)
and S.R. Epstein (LSE). The conference reception will be held in the splendid
surroundings of Merchant Taylors' Hall.
- The CMH's Leverhulme Fellow, Stefan Goebel, is organising a conference
on 'Metropolitan Catastrophes: Scenarios, Experiences and Commemorations in
the Era of Total War'. This two-day conference, to be held at the Institute
of Historical Research 12-13 July 2004, will explore the cultural imprint
of military conflict on metropolises (understood as cities of international
stature, but not necessarily capital cities) worldwide over a long time-span.
- Another conference for your diaries is 'Metropolitan Folklore',
co-organised by the CMH and the Folklore Society, which will take place on
19 May 2004 at the Institute of Historical Research. The programme for this
is currently being arranged.
- New Humbul Topic: English Local History - Centre staff have brought
together some useful internet resources tackling different aspects of English
local history into a Humbul Topic: www.humbul.ac.uk/topics/localhistory.html.
Humbul Topics gather together Internet resources that share a particular relevance
found in the Humbul internet resource catalogue. Explore them all at www.humbul.ac.uk/topics/.
The Humbul Humanities Hub is a service of the Resource Discovery Network funded
by the Joint Information Systems Committee and the Arts and Humanities Research
Board, and is hosted by the University of Oxford.
- The Metropolitan History Seminar programme for 2003-4 is available
at www.history.ac.uk/cmh/sem03.html
- A Leverhulme Postgraduate Studentship, based in the CMH, is being
offered for research in any aspect of comparative metropolitan history from
the early medieval period onwards and with one element of the comparison situated
in Europe.
2. NEWS FROM THE IHR
- Papers given at the 'Examining the impact of digitisation upon scholarship
in the humanities' conference on 7 July at the IHR are available on the
IHR website: www.history.ac.uk/conferences/digitisation2003/
- The IHR's new website British History Online is now live (www.british-history.ac.uk).
British History Online, currently in its pilot stage, is a digital library
of British historical sources for historians of Britain located worldwide
seeking access to, and cross-searching of, an interconnected range of historical
sources including text and information about people, places and businesses
from the 12th century to the present day. Access is free of charge.
- A new edition of Grants for History: A Guide to Funding, compiled
by John R Davies with Jane Winters, will be published at the end of October.
Containing information on dozens of new grants, the volume will be available
from the Institute Bookshop for £15. Catalogue and ordering information
available at: www.history.ac.uk/bookshop/
3. NEWS FROM OTHER CENTRES
- Birkbeck, Faculty of Continuing Education, is again running a large
number of London history courses and events in 2003-4, some of which are organised
jointly with other educational partners, London museums and the National Trust.
Courses include: London: Roman Times to the Great Fire; The Making of Modern
London c.1660-2000; Tudor and Stuart London; The Port of London and Docklands
1700-1945; Eighteenth-century London: Culture and Society through Literature;
Life and Leisure in Victorian London; Exploring London's Past; London's Politics
and Government 1830-2003; Hospitals and Healing in London, 1815-1948. For
further information go to www.bbk.ac.uk/fce;
email history@fce.bbk.ac.uk.
- The Corporation of London Education Service's annual 'Global Walk'
will be held on Saturday 11 October at 11 am. This year it will focus on the
City Livery Companies. The walk is free and lasts around 90 minutes.
- The Education Service is also organising a conference on 'City Merchants
and the Arts: the arts in the "First City in the world" 1780 to
1820' in the Livery Hall, Guildhall, London EC2P 2EJ on Friday 14 November
2003. This is the second conference in the series 'City Merchants and the
Arts'. The previous conference, set immediately after the Great Fire during
the reconstruction of a destroyed City, showed mercantile resilience and determination
in the face of terrible odds. This conference will contrast sharply with its
predecessor - by the early 19th century, London was regarded as 'the first
commercial city in the world'. The day will set out to investigate merchants'
relationships to the arts and discover that already a large percentage of
London's cultural heritage was financed by the City.
- The London & Middlesex Archaeological Society's 38th Local History
Conference will be held at the Museum of London Lecture Theatre (150 London
Wall, London EC2Y 5HN) on Saturday 15 November, 10 am - 5 pm. Papers to be
given at 'Lunatick London' include: Christopher Thomas (MoLAS) on 'Medieval
London Hospitals', Sara Pennell (IHR) on 'Care of the mentally ill in the
17th & 18th centuries', Lionel Lambourne (formerly V&A Museum) on
'Charles & Mary Lamb: a brother's dilemma', Jeremy Taylor (formerly University
of York) on 'Architects & the design of large asylums in the Victorian
period', Michael Neve and Trevor Turner (Wellcome Institute) on 'Psychiatry
& War', Robert Leon (Camden Local History Society) on 'St Luke's: a forgotten
hospital' and Oliver Natelson (Friern Barnet & District Local History
Society) on 'Friern Hospital'. There will also be displays of recent work
and publications by Local History Societies.
4. MUSEUMS AND LOCAL STUDIES LIBRARIES
- Joint Archive Service for the Corporation of London: On 1 August
the Corporation of London combined the administration of its two archive services
- the Corporation of London Records Office at Guildhall and the London Metropolitan
Archives in Clerkenwell. The two services will continue to operate from their
current premises and current opening hours will be maintained. Changes include:
a streamlined administration for CLRO-LMA with Dr Deborah Jenkins, LMA Head
Archivist, assuming responsibility for both archive services following the
retirement of Jim Sewell OBE after 33 years of Corporation service; and the
creation of a centre of excellence in archive conservation, based at LMA.
This opportunity to share knowledge and technical expertise will enable CLRO-LMA
to be a UK-leader in the preservation of historic archive material.
- London's Museums Archives and Libraries (LMAL) have collated an events
list to advertise and promote the wide range of Black History Month
events and activities taking place in the London region from October. A searchable
database of events is available at: www.londonlibraries.org.uk/blackhistory.
The Greater London Authority's site has a Black History Month guide: http://www.london.gov.uk/mayor/bhm/index.jsp
and The National Archives website also contains a list of special events:
www.pro.gov.uk/events/specialevents/black-history-month2.htm
- The conference 'London: Art and Society in the mid Eighteenth Century'
will be held on 24 October at the British Museum. This is being held in conjunction
with the London 1753 exhibition, which continues until 23 November. Information
on both the conference and exhibition at: www.thebritishmuseum.ac.uk/london/
- A reminder that the local history fair 'The London Maze' will be
held on Saturday 11 October at Guildhall Art Gallery between 10.00 am - 4.00
pm. Entry is free. There will be 40 stands from London's local studies libraries,
museums, archives and local history groups, with displays, knowledgeable staff
on hand to offer advice and publications for sale. Expert guest speakers will
be giving talks throughout the day and City of London guides will be offering
a selection of scheduled guided walks of the local area on historical themes
such as Roman London and Samuel Pepys' London.
- The National Monuments Record Search Room at Blandford Street will
close before the end of the financial year. English Heritage will contact
users when the timescale for closure is known.
4. NEW ONLINE RESOURCES
- The BBC has launched a new history website: www.bbc.co.uk/legacies.
Legacies' aims to scrutinise the same UK history that you can
find in any book or website, but to show how this history unfolds across every
locality of the UK. The site is hoping to produce a new themed feature every
two months. The first is on 'Architectural Heritage' and will be followed
in October by 'Immigration and Emigration', 'Myths and Legends' in December,
and 'Work' in February.
- WILL - "What's in London's Libraries" has just been launched.
This is a new service for users and librarians of London libraries. It will
bring together all 33 London library catalogues into a single, searchable
database. It also includes a variety of information such as activities programmes
and special collections. The URL is: www.londonlibraries.org.uk/will
- The PortCitiesUK website (www.portcities.org.uk),
supported by the New Opportunities Fund, explores the impact of the maritime
world on UK culture. Its constituent sites - PortCities London, PortCities
Bristol, PortCities Southampton, PortCities Hartlepool and PortCities Liverpool
- tell the stories of the people who lived and worked in the port communities,
the key events that shaped their lives, and the trades, industries and leisure
activities that grew up around these busy commercial centres. The site contains
previously unseen digitised source material and personal stories from the
maritime collections of museums, libraries and archives.
- Several London museums, archives and local study libraries are collaborating
with the National Archives and other organisations around the country to produce
'Moving Here' (www.movinghere.org.uk),
an interactive online resource which explores the last 200 years of Jewish,
Irish, Caribbean and South-Asian migrations to England. The web site offers
free access, for personal and educational use, to online versions of original
material related to migration, including photographs, personal papers, government
documents, maps and art objects, as well as a collection of sound recordings
and video clips.
-
The website of the Artists' Papers Register (www.hmc.gov.uk/artists/default.htm)
has been updated with locations for artists' papers held in repositories in
the Greater London region up to the end of August 2003.
5. NEW PUBLICATIONS
- Although the Centre's Gazetteer of Markets and Fairs in England and Wales
to 1516 has been available online for some time (www.history.ac.uk/cmh/gaz/gazweb2.html),
the printed version has just been published by the List and Index Society
as vols. 32 and 33 of the Society's Special Series. Price for the 2-volume
set: £24 (members of List and Index Society); £36 (non members).
Order form and further details from the Assistant Secretary, List and Index
Society, National Archives, Kew, Richmond, Surrrey TW9 4DU (listandindexsociety@nationalarchives.gov.uk)
*******************************************************************************
FEEDBACK
If you have any comments about this newsletter, please email:
ihrcmh@sas.ac.uk
DISCLAIMER
The information in this newsletter is provided in good faith, however the Centre
for Metropolitan History cannot guarantee
the accuracy of the information and accepts no responsibility for any error
or misrepresentation.
********************************************************************************
Centre for Metropolitan History
Institute of Historical Research
(School of Advanced Study, University of London)
Senate House
Malet Street
London WC1E 7HU
website: http://www.history.ac.uk/cmh