By Joan Williams (Library volunteer)
Since I retired from my library job last summer, I have been doing voluntary work one day a week in the Library of the Great North Museum: Hancock.
Over the last few months I have been involved in checking the holdings of the journals in the Society of Antiquaries Library, which has been absorbing and challenging work. The Society has been collecting journals in the fields of history and archaeology, by purchase or exchange, from its earliest days, and the breadth and depth of the resulting collection is awesome. I have worked with local history collections before, so the volumes from British antiquarian societies were not unfamiliar except in their geographical and chronological comprehensiveness. Many of the British periodicals have continued in an unbroken sequence from the early 19th century to the present day. The prize for the most venerable goes to the History of Berwickshire Naturalists Club, founded in 1831 and still going strong under its 19th century name; although the Numismatic Chronicle (founded 1836) can boast the most volumes: 169 to date.
But the Society’s scope covers all of Europe, and it has been a revelation to me to find how much work has been carried out and published in almost every corner and language of the continent. There are 30 publications from Germany alone, both national and local.
There are three separate serial publications emanating from the Société d’Émulation d’Abbeville, the earliest starting in 1844; the Sociétés d’Émulation in France were the local antiquarian societies, so called to distinguish them from the national aspirations of the Academies. Abbeville, near the mouth of the Somme, was the source of the first stone tools of early man to be identified as such, by the pioneer archaeologist Jacques Boucher de Perthes; and the journals in the Society’s collection include the earliest publication of most of the significant archaeological discoveries throughout Europe.
With Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, Hungarian, Dutch and all the Scandinavian languages represented – as well as Latin – identifying the holdings of these journals has been a challenge to our linguistic skills. But solving the puzzles presented is correspondingly rewarding.
The records we have assembled will shortly be added to Newcastle University’s online catalogue, so that these matchless historical and linguistic treasures can be made better known and more available. It has been a privilege to be involved in this stimulating enterprise.
Many thanks to Joan and all the library volunteers who were involved in this task. As Joan mentions, records for the Society of Antiquaries’ journals will soon appear on Newcastle University Library’s online catalogue and all the journals are available to look at in the Great North Museum: Hancock library. Nicky.
For library opening times please visit the Museum’s website or phone 0191 2223555 for more details.
New books in the library
The thousand and one churches / by W.M. Ramsay and Gertrude L. Bell, 2008 (originally published 1909).
The dynamics of ancient empires : state power from Assyria to Byzantium / edited by Ian Morris and Walter Scheidel, 2009.
Ambrose and John Chrysostom : clerics between desert and empire / J.H.W.G. Liebeschuetz, 2011.
The Church of England and the Durham coalfield, 1810-1926 : clergymen, capitalists and colliers / Robert Lee, 2007.
The keelmen of Tyneside: labour organisation and conflict in the North-East coal industry, 1600-1830 / Joseph M. Fewster, 2011.
Thomas Bewick: the complete illustrative work / Nigel Tattersfield, 2011.
The complete guide to fossils and fossil-collecting / Steve Parker, 2009.
The post Great North Museum: Hancock Library – The journals of the Society of Antiquaries of Newcastle upon Tyne first appeared on Tyne & Wear Archives & Museums Blog.