We are pleased to announce that the minutes of the recent Annual General Meeting covering 2022 have been published. The meeting was held on May 3rd 2023 via Zoom.
Summer 2023 issue of Chemical Intelligence
The summer 2023 issue of Chemical Intelligence, edited by Karoliina Pukkinen, is now available online for members to enjoy:
Summer 2023 is a bumper issue, including reports on the International Conference on the History of Chemistry in Vilnius and the Oxford Seminars in the History of Alchemy and Chemistry. There is information about recent and forthcoming Ambix issues, details of the next webinar and various news items and features on the history of alchemy and chemistry. We hope you will enjoy the issue and also think about joining us at our next in-person meeting in November. Details below. Many thanks to Karoliina for bringing together so much material on what is happening in our field!
SHAC Autumn Meeting – Saturday 25 November 2023 in London
SHAC’s autumn meeting will explore the theme “Alchemy and Chemistry in the Long Eighteenth Century”. It will take place in London on 25 November 2023, most likely at UCL. Please send offers of papers to Frank James, frank.james@ucl.ac.uk by 15 September 2023.
Best wishes,
Carolyn
Dr Carolyn Cobbold
SHAC Membership Secretary
New Royal Society Publishing history of science platform
Royal Society Publishing recently launched a new history of science platform.
Science in the making that allows free access to digitised versions of over 30,000 archival items related to the publication of our journals from the past 400+ years.
This is an extremely important and ambitious digitisation programme that presents the complex material that lies behind the published articles including reviews by Darwin, doodles by Newton, astronomical observations, electrical experiments, anatomical illustrations and more, drawing from every branch of science.
Call for papers & online access to Sources of Alchemy and Chemistry
As a SAHC member you may be interested in the following symposium organised by La Société Française d’Histoire de la Chimie (SFHC) www.sfhc.fr/ and partner institutions
Symposium “Heritage of Chemistry / Patrimoine de la Chimie” – To be held in Rennes (France) on 23-24 November 2023. Theme: The Laboratory: its buildings, its instruments, and its chemists
In this symposium, we want to direct attention to chemical laboratories, with special reference to the following aspects:
– buildings specially designed for the training of chemists;
– laboratories for both teaching and research;
– the facilities that allowed laboratories to carry out their research;
– the instruments they used, including those that have since become common but were innovative in their time; also instruments specific to a given research activity;
– publications used in laboratories, such as textbooks, guides, dictionaries, directories, or wall charts;
– and, of course, the chemists who were behind the creation of the laboratories, including their archives and laboratory notebooks.
Call for papers
If you are interested in the theme of the symposium, please send an abstract of your contribution in English or in French (2500 characters, spaces included, or 350 words maximum) before July 10, 2023 to: PatrimoineChimie.2023@gmail.com
In response, the symposium’s organizing committee will propose either an oral presentation or the possibility of participation in a poster session.
Circulated on behalf of the members of the organizing Committee:
Danielle FAUQUE (SFHC); Julie PRISER (ASEISTE); Jacques ROLLAND (Rennes en Sciences)
NB. French is the main language of the symposium. Power point presentations and posters must be in French, although talks may be delivered in English.
Sources of Alchemy and Chemistry
Matteo Martelli’s The Four Books of Pseudo-Democritus, previously only available in hard copy, is now available digitally: https://doi.org/10.1080/00026980.2013.12288743
The four alchemical books ascribed to the Greek atomist Democritus rank among the most ancient examples of Western alchemical writing. They cover a range of technical questions and recipes, similar to those handled in the earliest surviving chemical manuscripts. The Books also played a central role in the development of alchemy as a discipline. Members can access The Four Books of Pseudo-Democritus, by logging in to the member area to access Ambix, where it is listed as a supplement to vol. 60, 2013.
Best regards
Carolyn Cobbold Members Secretary SHAC
End of May 2023 Newsletter (John Perkins, Edited Collections, Conversations on Chemistry)
John Perkins
We were very saddened to learn that John Perkins, SHAC Treasurer from 2007 to 2013, has passed away recently. John helped transform the Society’s activities during his tenure as Treasurer, introducing our grants scheme, co-founding the Oxford History of Alchemy and Chemistry Seminar Series and bringing together the series of conferences on Sites of Chemistry, 1600-2000. This conference series investigated the wide and diverse range of physical spaces and places where chemistry has been practised and led to several special issues of Ambix. John will be greatly missed by all who knew him. An appreciation of John’s life and work will appear in Ambix at a later date.
Ambix Edited Collection
A new Edited Collection is available open access through July, in conjunction with the 13th International Conference on the History of Chemistry held in Vilnius, Lithuania: https://www.tandfonline.com/journals/yamb20/collections/Centres-and-Peripheries-of-Chymical-Knowledge
Centres and Peripheries of Chymical Knowledge: Tracing Traditions of Alchemy and Chemistry in Eastern Europe
From the patronage networks of Rudolph II to the military campaigns of World Wars I and II, chymical knowledge was highly sought after in Eastern Europe, especially as a means to exert political power. The articles featured in this collection trace historical evidence of Eastern European chymical traditions, from a fourteenth-century Bohemian alchemical manuscript to twentieth-century global approaches to chemistry, to illustrate the mutual influence of Western and Eastern European chymical knowledge exchange. The insularity of Eastern European science before the establishment of the port of Archangel was not intentional but forced by feuding neighbouring lands. Ivan the Terrible attempted to create a Moscow medical school, but the Western European instructors he tried to bring in were blocked by the Danes and Swedes. The establishment of the port of Archangel in 1553 expedited cross-cultural chymical exchange between Eastern and Western Europe. As a result, the Russo-English trading organization Muscovy Company formed in 1555. By the 1620s, Tsar Mikhail Romanov had succeeded in forming the Apothecary Chancery at his court in Moscow. While there has been a history of Eastern European monarchs importing courtly alchemists from the West, including both John Dee (1527-1608) and his son Arthur Dee (1579-1651), many influential chymical practitioners were born and worked in Eastern Europe—such as Polish alchemist Michael Sendivogius (1566-1636), Hungarian Janos Banfihunyadi (1576-1646), Mikhail Vasil’evich Lomonosov (1711-1765) of St. Petersburg, Russian born chemists Nikolai Nikolaevich Zinin (1812-1880) and Dmitrii Ivanovich Mendeleeve (1834-1907), as well as many notable Soviet chemists of the twentieth century.
Conversations on Chemistry
Through its Conversations on the History of Chemistry, the CHCMS aims to start a discussion around the future of the history of chemistry and the molecular sciences. How do historians of chemistry select their objects of inquiry and what are the tools and methods they use to study the past? How have they seen their specific methods and fields evolve among other examinations of scientific endeavours and how do they view the future of the field? Details of the next conversations are below.
The first few roundtables will take place on Zoom in the coming two months. Please register here to receive the links and attend. For any other questions, feel free to contact the CHCMS secretary Sarah Hijmans at sarahnhijmans@gmail.com.
Conversation 2. The history of chemistry and its audiences
1 June 2023, 1-2 pm UTC (6-7 am PT/9-10 am EST/3-4 pm CEST/10-11 pm JST)
· Philip Ball (Freelance science writer)
· Jesse Smith (Director of Curatorial Affairs, Science History Institute)
· Annette Lykknes (Historian of Chemistry and Professor of Chemistry Education, Norwegian University of Science and Technology)
Conversation 3. Food, toxicity and the life sciences
15 June 2023, 1-2 pm UTC (6-7 am PT/9-10 am EST/3-4 pm CEST/10-11 pm JST) (TBC)
· José Ramón Bertomeu Sánchez (Professor, López Piñero Institute for the History of Medicine and Science, University of Valencia)
· Paulina Sophie Gennermann (Postdoc, Institute for History and Ethics of Medicine, Heidelberg University)
· Victoria Lee (Associate Professor, Ohio University)
Conversation 4. Resources, energy and environment
29 June 2023, 1-2 pm UTC (6-7 am PT/9-10 am EST/3-4 pm CEST/10-11 pm JST)
· Marcin Krasnodębski (Assistant Professor, Institute for the History of Science, Polish Academy of Sciences)
· Cyrus Mody (Professor in the History of Science, Technology, Innovation, Maastricht University)
· Tristan Revells (Postdoc, Tsinghua University)
Best regards
Various Officers of SHAC!
Last chance to apply for the 2023 Award Scheme!
Society for the History of Alchemy and Chemistry Award Scheme 2023 – Deadline 31 May 2023
Here’s a reminder to you that Grants of up to £1000 are available for research into the history of chemistry or the history of alchemy by both new and independent scholars and also support for Subject Development of either history of chemistry or history of alchemy. If you know of anyone who you think may qualify for one of these grants please encourage them to apply.
Applicants must be members of the Society in good standing at the time of making an application, and, if successful, throughout the period of an award. For more information and application forms, please contact grants@ambix.org. Membership enquiries should be made to newjoiner@ambix.org.
If you want to apply, please make contact soon to obtain the forms and ensure your application is submitted by 31 May 2023 deadline.
Rob Johnstone
Hon Treasurer, SHAC
Upcoming History of Alchemy Events in Oxford
Dear colleagues,
Please find below two announcements related to the history of alchemy:
- Talk by Prof Jennifer M. Rampling at the Oxford Seminars in the History of Science, Medicine, and Technology
Monday 24 April 2023, 4pm-5:15pm,
Maison Française d’Oxford, 2-10 Norham Road, Oxford OX2 6SE
(walk-in, no registration required)
Fantasy or experiment? Reading alchemical imagery in early modern England
Alchemy is famous for its spectacular, allegorical images, in which chemical substances and processes are frequently depicted as human and animal figures, from battling dragons to the famous “chemical wedding.” But can this imagery tell us anything about how chemical processes were actually practiced and understood – and how can we tell the difference between experimental information and fantastical speculation? This talk will trace how practitioners in medieval and early modern Europe – especially in England – manipulated visual imagery in order to signal their place within ancient genealogies of knowledge, while also advertising new practical developments. Drawing on my own attempts to reconstruct historical experiments in a modern laboratory, I ask how these practitioners used images to promote alchemical projects to readers and patrons, even as they struggled with the dual challenge of reproducing accurate images on the page, and authentic chemical effects in the laboratory.
- Oxford Seminars in the History of Alchemy and Chemistry (Oxford Trinity Term 2023)
The Oxford Seminar in the History of Alchemy and Chemistry, which has been organised at the Maison Française d’Oxford (2-10 Norham Road, Oxford OX2 6SE) for more than a decade, is now back to in person meetings during Oxford’s Trinity term (May-June 2023). The event is co-organised by Jo Hedesan and John Christie, and can be attended by anyone who wishes to without prior registration. The meetings are scheduled between 3 and 5pm on the following Wednesdays:
3 May – Medieval Islamic Alchemy and its Influence
- Chair: Jennifer M. Rampling (Princeton)
- Salam Rassi (Edinburgh) – ‘Alchemy and Religious Authority in the Islamic World: The Case of Ibn Umayl (fl. c. 912)’
- Tom Fischer (EPHE Paris) – ‘New Perspectives on the Transmission and Influence of Senior Zadith’s Tabula chemica’
17 May – Vintage Analogies in Medieval and Early Modern Medical Alchemy
- Chair: Rob Iliffe (Oxford)
- Mark Thakkar (St Andrews): ‘Scraping the Bottom of the Barrel? Medieval Sermons as a Source for the History of Fermentation’
- Carmen Schmechel (FU Berlin): ‘The “Wine Stone”: Tartar as a Cause of Disease in Paracelsus and Joseph Duchesne’
24 May – Religion and Medicine in Early Modern Alchemy
- Chair: Jo Hedesan (Oxford)
- Zoe Screti (Oxford): ‘“This Parallisme Shews”: Comparing Alchemy and Religion in a Sixteenth-Century Alchemical Treatise’
- Elisabeth Moreau (Cambridge): ‘Galenic and Paracelsian Methods of Healing in Daniel Sennert’s Chymical Medicine (1619)’
31 May – Chemical Careers in New Contexts, 1760-1860
- Chair: John Christie (Oxford)
- Robert Fox (Oxford): ‘Thomas Garnett. Science, medicine, mobility in eighteenth-century England’
- Frank James and Anna Simmons (UCL): ‘The Disappearing Act of William Thomas Brande: How History of Science Marginalises Some but not Others’
14 June – What’s in a Substance? Making Identity and Purity in Modern Chemistry
- Chair: John Christie (Oxford)
- Catherine Jackson (Oxford): ‘Solving the Synthesis Paradox: Making Purity and Identity’
- Marabel Riesmeier (Cambridge): ‘Individuating Chemicals: Substantial Shifts in the 20th Century’
On behalf of the organizer,
Georgiana Hedesan