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Welcome to the Website of the Society for the History of Alchemy and Chemistry (SHAC), publisher of the scholarly journal Ambix.


Founded in 1935, SHAC has consistently maintained the highest standards of scholarship in all aspects of the history of alchemy and chemistry from early times to the present. The Society has a wide international membership from over thirty countries.

We hold meetings and webinars, offer scholarly prizes and grants, and publish the journal Ambix. The Society’s newsletter, Chemical Intelligence, is published twice a year. We have also established the Graduate Network to bring together postgraduate students in the field.

Keep up to date with the news and events of SHAC by following us on Facebook and Twitter.

You can watch our SHAC Online Seminars on YouTube here.

 

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Please note that changes are processed manually and you will receive a confirmation email when our records have been updated. For any queries please find relevant contact information on https://www.ambix.org/contact-us/

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Davy Notebooks Launch

The Davy Notebooks Project is glad to announce that we have fully transcribed all 120 of Humphry Davy’s notebooks and sets of lecture notes, the vast majority of which are held at the Royal Institution in London, the rest in Kresen Kernow in Redruth. In total, including our pilot project that took place in 2019, our volunteers transcribed 13,121 pages. We are so very grateful for the 3,841 volunteers who have us in this work and who have also, helped us to write notes on the people, places, chemical elements and compounds and many other interesting things. You can now see the results of this work on Lancaster Digital Collections at https://digitalcollections.lancaster.ac.uk/

The notebooks can be explored and searched, but we encourage you to let us know if you find anything amiss (e.g. a transcription or annotation error) and let us know using the feedback back form, which looks like two speech bubbles at the top right-hand side of the page. 

We’d also like to invite you to the official launch of the Davy Notebooks Project, which will take place in-person and simultaneously online at Lancaster LitFest on Saturday 19th October, 6-7pm BST. Tickets (for both in-person and online) cost £5 and can be bought here. At this event, Prof Sharon Ruston will discuss some of the highlights of the project’s findings and it will be an opportunity for her to thank everyone who has been involved in the project since it began in 2019. Thank you to all who have been involved in this project since 2019!


 The Davy Notebooks Project Team, September 2024

Registration for the Autumn one-day meeting at the Allard Pierson on 11 October 2024

The Society for the History of Alchemy and Chemistry (SHAC), in collaboration with the Allard Pierson of the University of Amsterdam and the Centre for History of Hermetic Philosophy and Related Currents (HHP), will hold its Annual Autumn Meeting at the Allard Pierson, Amsterdam, on 11 October 2024, starting at 9:30 am and ending at 16:30 pm. The meeting will be hybrid, although we strongly encourage in-person attendance.

You can register here: https://allardpierson.nl/en/events/en-autumn-meeting-shac/

The emphasis will be on the Bibliotheca Philosophica Hermetica State collection, one of the extensive collections housed at the Allard Pierson. This library holds approximately 4,400 rare manuscripts and printed works related to the hermetic tradition, assembled by the Dutch entrepreneur Joost Ritman.

The keynote of the day is Professor Stephen Clucas (Birkbeck, University of London):
‘Thomas Harriot and the alchemy of the Northumberland Circle’

Speakers and topics will include:
Sergei Zotov: ‘An image series in the Traumgedichte der siebe Säulen’
Tjalling Janssen: ‘Elemental beings, discourses of nature, and Paracelsian reception in Georg von Welling’s Opus mago-cabbalisticum et theosophicum’
Corey Andrews: ‘Alchemy in the Geheime Figuren der Rosenkreuzer (Secret Symbols of the Rosicrucians), with reference to an ‘extended’ 20th-century manuscript’
Kyra Gerber: “Es komt alles und allein” – Marginalia in a rare early edition of Kunrath’s work
Amber Richter: ‘The Fruit that Blossoms from the Daughter: The Hidden Dryads in Michael Maier’s Atalanta Fugiens’
Peter Forshaw: ‘Abraham Le Juif’s Livre des figures hiéroglyphiques’
Jennifer Rampling: ‘George Ripley’

Next SHAC on-line seminar, Thursday, 19 September 2024, 5pm BST

The next on-line seminar of the Society for the History of Alchemy and Chemistry will be given by Joshua Werrett (University of Oxford) who will present:

Imitatio Christi and the Aesthetics of Martyrdom in The Visions of Zosimos of Panopolis


This will be live on Thursday, 19 September 2024, beginning at 5.00pm BST (6.00pm CEST, 12 noon EST, 9.00am PDT). The format will be a talk of 20-30 minutes, followed by a moderated discussion of half an hour.


As with recent seminars the Zoom link can be freely accessed by anyone, member of SHAC or not, by booking through the following Ticket Source link:

https://www.ticketsource.co.uk/society-for-the-history-of-alchemy-and-chemistry/t-dvqkvvg

The seminar will be also accessible live on YouTube at https://www.youtube.com/live/CELBazvrfeQ

Most previous on-line seminars can be found on the SHAC YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/SocietyforHistoryofAlchemyandChemistry

Imitatio Christi and the Aesthetics of Martyrdom in The Visions of Zosimos of Panopolis

Joshua Werrett

The alchemical practice of Zosimos of Panopolis is not just about the transformation of metals; it is about the transformation of the self. This double meaning is found throughout Zosimos’ works, but is perhaps most noticeable in his Visions. In this text, Zosimos uses alchemy as a theurgic practice to understand salvation, a practice which is allegorised as having four major stages: baptism; violent punishment; the separation of body and soul in death; and rebirth as a spiritual entity. These steps, taken by several characters throughout the text, clearly mimic major points in the life and death of Christ. In this talk, I present the argument that the imitation of Christ and the imitation of early Christian martyrs, themselves imitating Christ, are key motifs in the violent, redemptive, sacrificial aesthetics of Zosimos’ text. Analysing the main ideas, images, and phrases in The Visions, I conclude that themes from the New Testament and martyrological literature are pervasive. Overall, I hope to demonstrate that those being reborn as spirits throughout Zosimos’ text are not being reborn in a vacuum; rather, Zosimos suggests that, in being reborn, they follow in the footsteps of alchemists and Christian martyrs before them, in a long imitative line of suffering and transformation, which ultimately starts with Christ.

The Summer 2024 Issue of Chemical Intelligence is online!

Please find SHAC’s latest edition of Chemical Intelligence where you will find information of upcoming conferences and details of the latest research funded by SHAC grants among other information of interest to members here:

Also please note the Society’s AGM minutes are now online https://www.ambix.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/SHAC-Final-AGM-Minutes-1190304-May-2024.pdf

SHAC Postgraduate and Early Career Workshop, 14th January 2025, Online / St John’s College, University of Oxford

The Society for the History of Alchemy and Chemistry (SHAC) invites proposals for the 2025 iteration of its annual postgraduate and early career workshop, ‘Alchemy and Chemistry as Vessels for Cultural Discourse’. This conference seeks to explore the interface between (al)chemical work and various facets of culture outside of the laboratory. For as long as the disciplines have been studied, alchemy and chemistry have not only been integral to scientific discourse, but have also served as mirrors reflecting the social, political, and religious currents of their times.

Papers might explore, for example, the ways in which alchemical iconography reflects the political tensions of the climate in which they were produced, as well as the role of chemistry in the Industrial Revolution or the discipline of astrochemistry reflecting a Zeitgeist of interest in worlds beyond our own.

Selected papers from the conference will be considered for publication in a special edition (or special series) of Ambix: Journal for the History of Alchemy and Chemistry.

We welcome proposals for 20 minute talks by graduate students, postdoctoral researchers, and early career scholars who have received their doctorate no more than three years ago. If you are interested in presenting your work, please send an abstract of approximately 300 words and a short bio to SHAC Student Representative Josh Werrett, at studentrep@ambix.org. The deadline for submissions is 30th September 2024.

If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact Josh Werrett at the above email address.

SHAC Autumn 2024 Meeting CfP

The Society for the History of Alchemy and Chemistry (SHAC), in collaboration with the Allard Pierson of the University of Amsterdam and the Centre for History of Hermetic Philosophy and Related Currents (HHP), invites abstract submissions for its Annual Autumn Meeting on  ‘Alchemy, Freemasonry, Hermeticism and Rosicrucianism’, to be held at the Allard Pierson on 11 October 2024. The meeting will be hybrid, although we strongly encourage in-person attendance. In its extensive collections, the Allard Pierson holds the Bibliotheca Philosophica Hermetica State collection of around 4,400 rare manuscripts and printed works relating to the hermetic tradition, assembled by Dutch businessman Joost Ritman.

For this meeting, we invite proposals for papers related to the alchemical material in the collection. The keynote speaker will be Prof. Stephen Clucas (Birkbeck, University of London). There will be an exhibition of some of the highlights of the collection.   

Submissions can be individual presentations, panels with 3 speakers, or roundtable proposals. Presentations should not exceed 20 minutes in length. Please submit your abstract of 250-300 words, together with a CV or a paragraph detailing your background, to Peter Forshaw: p.j.forshaw@uva.nl by 22 July 2024. 

Preliminary Timetable:
45-minute Keynote + 12 20-minute papers 
9:00 registration and coffee
9:30 Welcome
Keynote 10:00-11:00
Coffee 11:00-11:15
Session 1 11:15-12:30 
Lunch 12:30-13:30
Session 2 13:30-14:45
Session 3 14:45-16:00
Coffee 16:00-16:15
Session 4 16:15-17:30
Roundtable: 17:30-18:00 

Titles of works in the collection can be found via the University of Amsterdam Library Catalogue (using the search terms Bibliotheca Philosophica Hermetica and selecting ‘Allard Pierson Depot’ in the Library filter on the right of the screen): Approximately 100 manuscripts from the collection have been digitized: The Allard Pierson can provide an Excel file of all the books and manuscripts in the Bibliotheca Philosophica Hermetica State collection. 

Allard Pierson on Google Maps