User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
Usage notes
The term (referring to antiquity) has a connotation of favoring "curious" details over the historically important. See, for example, Roy Rosenzweig (June 2006). "Can History be Open Source? Wikipedia and the Future of the Past". The Journal of American History (Center for History and New Media) 93 (1): 117–146. Retrieved on August 11, 2006: "Professional historians might find an account accurate and fair but trivial; that is what some see as the difference between history and antiquarianism."For a use in the sense of archaism see, for
example, Jeffrey Jullich,
Review of Bed Hangings by Susan Howe, Electronic Poetry Review
#2. Retrieved on October 30, 2006: "We cannot tell if we're facing
"nonsense" words that she's coining afresh or obsolete, Old English
antiquarianisms from before the standardization of spelling."
Extensive Definition
An antiquarian or antiquary is one concerned with
antiquities or
things of the past. Also, and most often in modern usage, an
antiquarian is a person who deals with or collects rare and ancient
"antiquarian
books". More narrowly, the term is often used for those who
studied history with
special attention to "antiques", meaning ancient
objects of art or science as physical traces of the past.
Antiquarianism is usually considered to have emerged in the
16th
century; by the 19th century
it had become transformed and bifurcated into the academic
disciplines of archaeology and philology.
Antiquarian societies
The Society of Antiquaries of London was formed in the 18th century to promote the study of antiquities. As early as 1572 a society had been founded by Bishop Matthew Parker, Sir Robert Cotton, William Camden and others for the preservation of national antiquities. This body existed till 1604, when it fell under suspicion of being political in its aims, and was abolished by King James I. Papers read at their meetings are preserved in the Cottonian library and were printed by Thomas Hearne in 1720 under the title A Collection of Curious Discourses, a second edition appearing in 1771.In 1707 a number of
English antiquaries began to hold regular meetings for the
discussion of their hobby and in 1717 the Society of
Antiquaries was formally reconstituted, finally receiving a charter
from King
George II in 1751. In 1780 King
George III granted the society apartments in Somerset
House in The
Strand. The society was governed by a council of twenty and a
president who is ex officio a trustee of the British
Museum.
The
Society of Antiquaries of Scotland was founded in 1780 and had
the management of a large national antiquarian museum in Edinburgh. In
Ireland a
society was founded in 1849 called the
Kilkenny Archaeological Society, holding its meetings at Kilkenny. In
1869 its name
was changed to the Royal Historical and Archaeological Association
of Ireland, and in 1890 to the
Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland, its office being
transferred to Dublin. In France La Société
Nationale des Antiquaires de France was formed in 1814 by the
reconstruction of the Acadêmie Celtique, which had existed since
1805. The
American Antiquarian Society was founded in 1812, with its
headquarters at Worcester,
Massachusetts.
It had a library of upwards of 100,000 volumes and its transactions
have been published bi-annually since 1820. In Germany the
Gesamtverein der Deutschen Geschichts und Altertumsvereine was
founded in 1852. La Société
Royale des Antiquaires du Nord at Copenhagen was
among the best known of European antiquarian societies.
In his essay
Untimely Meditations, philosopher Friedrich
Nietzsche examines three forms of history. One of these is
Antiquarian
History, a form of history aimed at creating a feeling of
connection to one's history. Nietzsche's philosophy
of history had a significant impact on critical
history in the 20th
century.
Some antiquarians
- Patrick Abercromby
- Pasquale Amati
- John Aubrey
- Sir James Balfour
- Thomas Baker
- John Bale
- John Battely
- Thomas Browne
- George Buck
- William Camden
- Robert Crowley
- Abraham de la Pryme
- Rev. Dr. Henry Duncan
- John Foxe
- Richard Grafton
- Anthony Charles Harris
- Robert Stephen Hawker
- Montague Rhodes James
- Maurice Johnson
- John Leland – appointed Royal Antiquarian to King Henry VIII
- Edward Lhuyd in 1533
- H. P. Lovecraft
- William Collings Lukis
- Herman H. J. Lynge
- Dubhaltach MacFhirbhisigh
- Philip Norman
- Peregrine O'Duignan
- Ruaidhri O Flaithbheartaigh
- Dorning Rasbotham
- Fred Rosenstock
- William Forbes Skene
- John Stow
- George Vertue
- Olaus Wormius
- Thomas Wright
See also
References
External links
antiquarianism in Danish: Antikvar
antiquarianism in German: Antiquar
antiquarianism in French: Antiquaire
antiquarianism in Italian: Antiquario
antiquarianism in Dutch: Antiquaar
antiquarianism in Norwegian: Antikvar
antiquarianism in Polish: Antykwariat
antiquarianism in Portuguese: Antiquário
antiquarianism in Sicilian: Antiquariu
antiquarianism in Swedish:
Antikvarie