Society elects 243 new Fellows, Associate Fellows, Members and Postgraduate Members

At its latest meeting on 15 September 2023, the RHS Council elected 69 Fellows, 45 Associate Fellows, 58 Members and 71 Postgraduate Members, a total of 243 people newly associated with the Society, from today.

The majority of the new Fellows hold academic appointments at universities, specialising in a very wide range of fields; but also include museum curators, archivists, heritage consultants, and independent researchers and writers. The Society is an international community of historians and our latest intake includes Fellows from eleven countries: Australia, China, Finland, Germany, Greece, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Portugal, Spain, the United Kingdom, and United States.

The new Associate Fellows include not only early career historians in higher education but also historians with professional and private research interests drawn from heritage, libraries and archives, teaching, and public and community history.

The new Members have a similarly wide range of historical interests, and include individuals working in universities, culture and heritage, education, the civil service and medicine – together with independent and community historians and genealogists.

Our new Postgraduate Members are studying for higher degrees in History, or related subjects, at 47 different universities in the UK, Canada, Greece, India, the Netherlands, and the United States.

All those newly elected to the Fellowship and Membership bring a valuable range of expertise and experience to the Society.

New Fellows and Members are elected at regular intervals through the year. The current application round is open and runs to 23 October 2023, with the future closing dates in 2024 to be announced shortly. Further details on RHS Fellowship and Membership categories (Fellow, Associate Fellow, Member and Postgraduate Member); benefits of membership; deadlines for applications throughout 2023; and how to apply, are available here.

 

New Fellows, elected September 2023

  • Padma Anagol
  • Agnes Arnold-Forster
  • Karen Averby
  • Victoria Barnes
  • Heike Bauer
  • Sarah Bendall
  • Waitman Beorn
  • Somak Biswas
  • Rosalind, Bonte
  • Lise Butler
  • Alexandra Churchill
  • Sarah Churchwell
  • Kieran Connell
  • Karoline  Cook
  • Maria-José de la Torre-Molina
  • Lorena De Vita
  • Rebecca Donner
  • Rachael Durkin
  • Sian Edwards
  • Freddy Foks
  • Mary Fraser
  • Eurico Gomes Dias
  • Steven Gregory
  • Phillip Grimberg
  • Diya Gupta
  • Earle Havens
  • Jane Henderson
  • Guy Hodgson
  • Sara Honarmand Ebrahimi
  • Lloyd Meadhbh Houston
  • Stacey Hynd
  • Graciela Iglesias-Rogers
  • Christopher Joby
  • Miranda Johnson
  • Sean Kelley
  • Charlie Lynch
  • Ellie Mackin Roberts
  • Toby Matthiesen
  • Sven Meeder
  • Jeff Meek
  • Andrew Miller
  • Ghassan Moazzin
  • Hana Navratilova
  • Andrew Newby
  • Nil Palabiyik
  • Elisabeth Piller
  • Joy Porter
  • Daniel Reed
  • Charlotte Riley
  • Alexander Ross
  • Michael Sauter
  • Katherine Butler Schofield
  • Katrin Schreiter
  • Joseph Smith
  • Michail Sotiropoulos
  • Alex Spencer
  • Patrick Spero
  • Jodie Yuzhou Sun
  • Oliver Taylor
  • Steven Thompson
  • Claire Thomson
  • James Titterton
  • Jesse Tumblin
  • Garritt Van Dyk
  • Peter Whitewood
  • Benjamin Wiggins
  • Callie Wilkinson
  • Philippa Woodcock
  • Edward Zychowicz-Coghill

 

New Associate Fellows, elected September 2023:

  • Christopher Anderson
  • Ruth Atherton
  • Desmond Atkinson
  • Nick Baker
  • Braulia Barbosa-Ribeiro
  • Breeze Barrington
  • Agata Blaszczyk-Sawyer
  • Thomas Burnham
  • Patrick Carter
  • Calum Cunningham
  • Benjamin Dewar
  • Aisha Djelid
  • Kristina Francescutti
  • Robert Gawlowski
  • Lucy Golding
  • Suha Hasan
  • Michala Hulme
  • Benjamin Jackson
  • Emma Kavanagh
  • Claire Kennan
  • Amy King
  • Emily Leigh-Pemberton
  • Ming Liu
  • Aaron Lumpkin
  • Robert Mason
  • Velma McClymont
  • Louisa McKenzie
  • Vincent Miles
  • Edward Mills
  • Robert Naylor
  • Alice Purkiss
  • Pilar Requejo de Lamo
  • Alexandra Sapoznik
  • Tatiana Shingurova
  • Dave Steele
  • Emily Stevenson
  • Fleur Stolker
  • Claudia Tomlinson
  • Tim Wade
  • John Watson
  • June-Elizabeth White-Smith-Gulley
  • Brendan Whyte
  • Jason Wickham
  • Megan Yates
  • Aleksandar Zlatanov

 

New Members, elected September 2023

  • Rasheed Amzart
  • Aleksa Andrejevic
  • Morarji  Bangalore
  • Steve Bannes
  • Louise Barton
  • James Bass
  • Liam Bayford
  • Lisa Bevan
  • Selena Carty
  • Kelly Claman
  • James Clay
  • Vincent Courtney
  • Ashlyn Cumberland Reed
  • Charlie Dandridge
  • Ellen Debney
  • Roy Dempsey
  • Tallulah Di Tomaso
  • Katherine Dimancescu
  • Ryan John Ellis
  • David Fawcett
  • Amanda Field
  • Nicola Filosi
  • Joseph Finn-Chapman
  • Rob Flattery
  • Edward Frostick Blois
  • Liza Giffen
  • Lydia Gray
  • Christian Green
  • Kyle Hargreaves
  • Krzysztof Jankowski
  • Michael Jennings
  • Sumedh Kaushik GR
  • Carolin Letterer
  • James Lively
  • Iain Macleod
  • Natasha Minhas
  • Rebecca Nelmes
  • Teoni Passereau
  • Alexander Pocklington
  • Ulrich Poehlmann
  • Geoffrey Prutton
  • Eric Rijnders
  • Ruth Robinson
  • Euan Ross
  • Olasupo Shasore
  • Chander Shekhar
  • Paul Smallwood
  • Georgina Spriddell
  • Luke Stevenson
  • Megan Taylor-Buckley
  • Christopher Thurling
  • Michael Topple
  • Robert Tringham
  • Jennifer Tritschler
  • Jamal Uddin
  • Andrew White
  • Chun Hei Wong
  • Gary Pui-fung Wong

 

New Postgraduate Members, elected September 2023

  • Akhil A R
  • Roqibat Adebimpe
  • Kerry Apps
  • Aaron Austin Locke
  • Allegra Ayida
  • Andreas Bassett
  • Antonia Belli
  • Muhammad Suhail Bin Mohamed Yazid
  • Basil Bowdler
  • Lena Breda
  • Daniel Breeze
  • Charlotte Brunt
  • Abhilash Chetia Wanniang
  • Clare Church
  • Nicola Ashley Clarke
  • Ryan Clarke
  • Jane Davidson
  • Terence Davies
  • Devin De Silva
  • Pratika Rizki Dewi
  • Matthew Dickinson
  • Bogdan-Gabriel  Draghici
  • Adeola Eze
  • Haoqi Gao
  • William Garbett
  • Owain Gardner
  • Harsha Gautam
  • Henry Gillson-Gant
  • Benjamin Gladstone
  • Uziel Gonzalez Aliaga
  • Niall Gray
  • Emily Grenon
  • Chengwei Han
  • Jane Harrison
  • Athanasios Ignatis
  • Boryana Ivanova
  • Fiona Jackson
  • James Kendrick
  • Zara Kesterton
  • Nawajesh Khan
  • Xinuo Liang
  • Yangyang Liu
  • Heather Lucas
  • Yinwen  Mai
  • John Marshall
  • Natalie  Martz
  • Marielle Masolo
  • Sarah Mason
  • James Mckitrick
  • Charles  Miller
  • Ian Mooney
  • Thomas Morgan
  • Helena Neimann Erikstrup
  • Stefano Nicastro
  • Emerson Norteman
  • Folusho Oladipo
  • Victoria Anne Pearson
  • William Perry
  • William Poulter
  • Partha Pramanik
  • Ryan Shelton
  • Robert Snazell
  • Thomas Sojka
  • Morag Thomas
  • Corrina  Thomson
  • Camilo Uribe Botta
  • Jorge Varela
  • Katherine Watson
  • Clare Whitton
  • John Williamson
  • Charlotte Willis

 

HEADER IMAGE: ‘Francesco I d’Este Invites Foreign Scholars to Court, from L’Idea di un Principe ed Eroe Cristiano in Francesco I d’Este, di Modena e Reggio Duca VIII, Bartolomeo Fenice (1659, detail), Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, public domain.

 

RHS Events Programme 2024

New events will be added to this programme as the year progresses; please check back for updates which will also be announced via social media


Tuesday 23 January 2024 at 5.30 pm

Clare Anderson (Leicester)
‘Convicts, Creolization and Cosmopolitanism: Aftermaths of Penal Transportation in the British Empire’
Joint RHS-GHIL Lecture, at the German Historical Institute London and Online


Thursday 1 February 2024 at 6.00 pm

Levi Roach (Exeter)
‘Charting Authority after Empire: Documentary Culture and Political Legitimacy in Post-Carolingian Europe’
RHS Lecture, Mary Ward House, London, and Online


Tuesday 20 February 2024 at 6.00 pm

In Conversation with Greg Jenner: ‘Finding the Funny in Public History’
RHS Event, Mary Ward House, London, and Online


Wednesday 6 March 2024, 10.00 am – 5.00 pm

‘Historical Legacies: collecting history, historical collections and community voices’
History and Archives in Practice, 2024
Annual event in association with The National Archives and the Institute of Historical Research. This year in partnership with Cardiff University
Day Conference, at Cardiff University


Wednesday 13 March 2024 at 5.00 pm

Fay Bound Alberti (King’s College London)
‘Why History Matters to Medicine: The Case of Face Transplants’ 
RHS Sponsored Lecture, at the University of York. Part of the Society’s Visit to historians at the universities of York and York St John.


Thursday 25 April 2024 at 2.00 pm

‘History Podcasting: An Introduction and Guide’
with Bob Nicholson (Edge Hill) and Dave Musgrove (BBC History Magazine)
Online Training Event


Tuesday 30 April 2024 at 2.00 pm

‘Doing History in Public 1: Galleries, Libraries, Archives & Museums’
with Andrew Smith (QMUL), Olwen Purdue (Queen’s University Belfast) and Caitriona Beaumont (London South Bank)
Online Conversation Series


Friday 3 May 2024 at 6.00 pm

Julia Laite (Birkbeck)
‘Possible Maps: Ways of Knowing and Unknowing at the Edge of Empire (Newfoundland c. 1763-1829)’
RHS Lecture, Mary Ward House, London, and Online


Thursday 23 May 2024

Corinne Fowler (Leicester)
‘Our Island Stories: Country Walks through Colonial Britain’
RHS Sponsored Lecture, at Brunel University London. Part of the Society’s Visit to historians at Brunel University.


Friday 14 June 2024 at 2.00 pm

‘Getting Published: a Guide to Monograph Publishing for Early Career Historians’
with Meredith Carroll (Manchester University Press), Elizabeth Hurren (New Historical Perspectives), Miri Rubin (Queen Mary University of London) and Jane Winters (V-P for Publications, Royal Historical Society)
Online Training  Event for Early Career Historians


Thursday 20 June 2024 at 10.00 am

‘Doing History in Public 2: Print’
with Andrew Smith (QMUL) and Caitriona Beaumont (London South Bank)
Online Conversation Series


Wednesday 3 July 2024 at 6.00 pm

The RHS Prothero Lecture: Peter Frankopan (Oxford)
‘On the Challenges and Purposes of Global History’
At Mary Ward House, London, and Online

followed by the Society’s Summer Party, 2024


Wednesday 17 July 2024 at 2.00 pm

‘AI, History and Historians’
with Helen Hastie (Edinburgh), Matthew L. Jones (Princeton), Anna-Maria Sichani (School of Advanced Study, University of London) and Jane Winters (V-P for Publications, Royal Historical Society)
Online Panel Discussion


Friday 13 September 2024 at 6.00 pm

Caroline Pennock (Sheffield)
‘Catholics or Cannibals? Indigenous Brazilians at the Court of Louis XIII’
RHS Lecture, at Mary Ward House, London, and Online


Wednesday 18 September 2024 at 6.00 pm

‘Doing History in Public 3: Broadcast’
with Andrew Smith (QMUL), Olwen Purdue (Queen’s University Belfast) and Caitriona Beaumont (London South Bank)
Online Conversation Series


Tuesday 5 November 2024 at 6.00 pm

The RHS Public History Lecture: Janina Ramirez (Oxford)
‘Writing Women into History
In association with Gresham College, London


Friday 22 November 2024 at 6.00pm

RHS Presidential Address
Preceded by the Society’s Anniversary Meeting (AGM)
Mary Ward House, London, and Online

 

Early Career Fellowship Grants

 

The Society’s Early Career Fellowship Grant scheme provides grants of £2,000, maximum, for discrete research projects lasting no more than six months.

About Early Career Fellowship Grants

The focus is on supporting career-building research or activities, and the aim is to provide support to enable researchers to produce a discrete outcome (such as an article or book proposal) with the grant. Applicants must be early career historians in non-tenured positions within five years of submitting their PhD in a historical subject. (The five years does not include periods of parental leave, or leave due to illness or other caring responsibilities.)

Applications will be assessed on the quality of the proposal, whilst also taking the applicant’s financial circumstances into account. These grants are designed to be as supportive and there is a great deal of flexibility in how awards may be used and what can be considered reasonable maintenance and research costs. Proposals must provide clear evidence of the historical significance of their project as a whole and specify in detail how the requested funds will advance and enrich the project outcome.

The Society is very grateful to David Crowther of the History of England Podcast for his generous funding of two Early Career Fellowship Grants per round, given ‘with thanks to historians everywhere without whose work the podcast could not exist.’

How to apply

  • All applicants must be members of the Society when applying for a grant; those applying for an Early Career Fellowship Grant are most likely to qualify for the Associate Fellowship category.
  • Applicants must outline a tangible, discrete research goal (write a research article; submit a book proposal; enhance skills etc) clearly explaining the rationale behind the amount requested.
  • Applicants will be asked to provide a PDF copy of a CV, a reference letter, a 500-word project proposal and a 300-word funding request.
  • To make an application please complete the online application form for RHS Early Career Fellowships which can be accessed through the Research/Conference Grants program within the RHS applications portal.
  • Applications will only be considered with a supporting academic reference. You are reminded to submit your application in sufficient time to allow your referee to provide their reference before the closing date.

Next closing dates for applications, 2024

Closing dates for applications and supporting references in 2024 are:

Applications for the Early Career Fellowship Grants are invited via the Society’s applications portal.


What expenses can be covered by the scheme?

There is a great deal of flexibility in how awards may be used. Awards may be used to cover living expenses/childcare or research expenses (copyright or copying fees, conference attendance, trips to libraries and archives (UK only), subscriptions to online resources, skills training). This list is not intended to be exhaustive, please get in touch if you have any questions.

Eligibility criteria

For this scheme, applicants will be considered eligible who are:

  • Within five years of submitting their corrected doctoral thesis in a historical subject to a UK institution. Please note the five years does not include any periods of maternity or paternity leave, or leave due to illness or other caring responsibilities. Please detail this in the ‘any other information’ section of your application form; 
  • Normally resident in the UK;
  • Not in full-time academic employment;
  • Please note that current doctoral students are not eligible for this scheme, and should consider other RHS schemes of financial support which are running as normal.

How and when are decisions made?

  • All applications for the Early Career Fellowship grant scheme are reviewed by the RHS Research Support Committee, formed of members of the Society’s Council. Review of applications will not take place until the deadline for submission has passed. An average timeline for review, ratification and notification of the outcome of an application is around six weeks after the deadline. Please note that all applications, successful or otherwise, will be directly notified of their outcome.
  • Applicants that are not selected are welcome to re-apply to the next round with additional information, particularly if circumstances change. Applicants should note that this is a re-application in such cases.

Criteria for assessment

In making its funding decisions, the Research Support Committee uses the following criteria:

  • A well-written proposal will enhance both the likelihood and the value of RHS funding. Applications will be assessed on the quality of the proposal, whilst also taking the applicant’s financial circumstances into account.
  • Priority will be given to applicants who provide clear evidence of the historical significance of their project as a whole and specify in detail how the requested funds will advance and enrich that project.
  • Applicants should indicate the project’s key research questions and (if research is already at an advanced stage) their conclusions thereon.

Current holders of Early Career Research Fellowship Grants, 2023-24

  • Matthew White – awarded November 2023  [generously funded by David Crowther of the History of England Podcast]
  • Katie Snow – awarded November 2023  [generously funded by David Crowther of the History of England Podcast]
  • Lisa Berry-Waite – awarded November 2023
  • Janet Morrison – awarded November 2023
  • Sandip Kana – awarded November 2023
  • Callum Smith – awarded November 2023

All enquiries about Research Funding should be sent to the Society’s Membership and Administration Officer at: membership@royalhistsoc.org.


HEADER IMAGE: Young Woman Reading, 1896, Alexandre-Louis-Marie Charpentier, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, public domain.

 

RHS Panel discussion — ‘Writing and Publishing Trade History’

 

‘Writing and Publishing Trade History’, with Yale University Press – 10 October 2023

 

 

Listen to this panel discussion

 

‘Writing and Publishing Trade History’ (10 October 2023) was jointly hosted by Yale University Press and the Royal Historical Society. It brought together publishers, editors, authors and literary agents to discuss trade publishing in History. At this event, panellists discussed their experience of writing for and publishing trade history and provided guidance for those considering working with a trade publisher for their next book.

Topics covered included: What is trade publishing; how does it differ from an academic monograph? Why publish a trade book? How do you propose and pitch to a publisher of trade History? What does an editor wish to see? What are authors’ experience of writing a trade book? Who are your readers? What’s the future for History trade books, and how do publishers seek to ensure diversity and inclusion in History trade publishing?

 

Speakers at this event
  • Rebecca Clifford, Professor of Transnational and European History at Durham University. Rebecca’s publications include her 2020 book Survivors: Children’s Lives After the Holocaust (Yale University Press).
  • Robert Gildea, Professor of History at Oxford University. Robert’s most recent book is Backbone of the Nation. Mining Communities and the Great Strike of 1984-85 (2023, Yale University Press)
  • Heather McCallum, Managing Director of Yale University Press London with responsibility for commissioning medieval, early modern and modern history
  • James Pullen, literary agent at the Wylie Agency
  • Simon Winder, Publishing Director at Penguin Books

‘Writing and Publishing Trade History’ was introduced by Emma Griffin, President of the Royal Historical Society and Professor of Modern British History at Queen Mary, University of London.

The event was held to mark ‘Yale 50’, celebrating 50 years of Yale University Press publishing in London.

 

ECH – Publishing a Book (II)

 

If an editor has agreed to review a proposal on its own, you may get a response in a month or so, as a short proposal does not receive a lot of scrutiny from reviewers. If you have submitted a complete manuscript, six months is not unusual. It takes a long time for a peer-reviewer to find the space to give a full book manuscript the attention it deserves. If you have waited that long, however, you ought to get some decent feedback – several pages from each of 1-3 referees.

Unlike journal submissions, a book manuscript won’t typically be reviewed double-blind; you won’t know the reviewers’ identities, but they will, inevitably, know yours. Like a journal submission, the editor will then either decline your manuscript, accept it outright (while encouraging you to address the referees’ comments in developing your final version), or give you the equivalent of ‘revise and resubmit’ – encourage you to go away and re- think the manuscript in light of the referees’ comments. This latter verdict is not as common as in journal submissions – it is asking a lot to get an author to rewrite a whole book.

As with a journal submission, once accepted your manuscript will go through copy-editing and proofreading. A good publisher will proofread your book themselves and expect you to do it too. As with journal submissions, you have to confine your major changes to the copy-editing stage. And there’s an additional stage as well – indexing. Most first authors do their own index, at the same time as they are proofreading. There are good software packages that make this easy. Some journal articles have illustrations, and it’s the author’s job to source (and pay for permissions for) illustrations. All the publisher does is provide the technical specifications (nowadays, what kind of image file is required). This task is more onerous for books, which often have a lot of illustrations.

Only the wealthier publishers will even offer to help with sourcing and paying for illustrations. There are charitable trusts that you can apply to for subsidy – ask your publisher for advice. Most books will require at least a cover illustration – again, probably your responsibility. You’ll also be asked to supply jacket copy – including the ‘blurb’ describing and touting the book – although normally publishers themselves secure endorsement blurbs from senior scholars (often by asking those who refereed your manuscript or even excerpting the report).

 

 

RHS COVID-19 Hardship Grants for UK Early Career (ECR) Historians

The Royal Historical Society (RHS) has launched (7 May 2020) an emergency funding scheme in the specific context of the COVID-19 pandemic. This global crisis confronts us all with a series of unprecedented challenges. For History ECRs, these may include any or all of acute financial hardship, mandatory physical relocation, family and community disruptions, new demands on carers, mental and/or physical health concerns and loss of access to research support and resources.

The Society’s ECR Hardship Grants are intended to help mitigate these damaging circumstances. We recognise that the resources we are able to offer are very modest given the scale of the current crisis and that it is highly likely that demand will outstrip supply. We encourage PhD students confronting these challenges to apply, where possible, to their institution’s hardship funding scheme prior to any application to the RHS 2020 Hardship Scheme.

This scheme is not designed to provide a ‘top-up’ grant for funded students or recent postdoctoral researchers in stable employment: it is an emergency, short-term intervention to offer some material assistance in the COVID-19 context, rather than to fund a specific research output or publication.

Please note that our usual grant schemes are still running, and we encourage innovative applications to support research and the costs associated with virtual events at this time.

How do I apply?

Please ensure that you have read all of the information below.

To make an application please complete the online application formPlease note that you can access the Hardship Grant application form through the Research/Conference Grants program within the RHS applications portal.

The next (2nd) deadline is Monday 29 June 2020.

 

Eligibility

For the purposes of this emergency funding scheme (as is the case with our standard Conference Travel scheme) applicants will be considered eligible who are:

  • registered for a PhD/DPhil or an MPhil in a historical subject at a UK institution. Registration may be full-time or part-time.
  • within two years (at the time of the application) of receiving their doctorate from a UK institution, and who are not yet in full-time employment. Please note the two years does not include any periods of maternity or paternity leave. Please detail this in the ‘any other information’ section of your application form.

Purpose of the Scheme

The main purpose of these awards is to support ECR historians whose finances (and thus well-being) have suffered significant detriment due to the impact of COVID-19.  Specifically the grants are intended to support research-active History postgraduates and ECRS:

  • who were actively undertaking historical research in the UK prior to the government restrictions imposed in March 2020 and who are now suffering financial hardship as a direct consequence of the COVID-19 pandemic;
  • who are NEITHER in receipt of full-time funding for their doctorate NOR in full-time employment;
  • whose contracts at universities or heritage organisations have been significantly reduced or terminated prematurely in response to COVID-19;
  • whose fixed-term fellowships (for example, to a research library) have been cancelled or postponed due to the COVID-19 crisis;
  • who would normally expect to work part-time AND/OR on a zero-hours contract.
  • who normally work to support their studies and need to leave external employment to undertake caring responsibilities due to COVID-19;
  • who need to leave external employment for health reasons (including pregnancy or disability);
  • who need temporarily to relocate their place of residence due to COVID-19;
  • who are awaiting viva and unable to find employment.

Within both broad categories of eligible applicants (doctoral and postdoctoral), the lists of eligible precipitating factors outlined above are intended to be illustrative rather than fully comprehensive.

The grants are intended to help support ECR historians’ wellbeing and thus to enhance their ability to undertake future historical research.  The awards are intended to support History researchers (including research-active historians who teach in universities or work in the heritage sector), rather than the production of specific pieces of historical research, in a time of global crisis.

Who is not eligible?

Due to the limits of our available funding and our modest staff numbers, we regret that we are not able to open these awards to all History ECRs.  Specifically this scheme is not able to support:

  • PhD students in receipt of full funding;
  • applicants in full-time ongoing paid employment or who have been furloughed under the government scheme;
  • PhD students who have suspended their studies for reasons other than directly related to COVID-19;
  • PhD students who are registered at universities outside the UK;
  • Recent recipients of a UK History PhD who were not normally resident and employed in the UK as of March 2020;
  • ECRs who are in receipt of or due a redundancy payment from their employer;

What are the criteria for selection?

Our selection criteria are intended to be broad and flexible, affording the grant awarding panel appropriate leeway to respond to and accommodate novel circumstances and needs in the rapidly changing context of Covid-19.

Please note that:

  • Only fully completed applications can be considered;
  • Applicants must meet all of the relevant eligibility requirements for their status (either PhD student or recent recipient of the PhD) to be considered for a hardship grant;
  • Unfunded PhD students may be given priority over part-funded PhD students;
  • Post-doctoral applicants on zero-hour contracts may be given priority over applicants on fixed-term contracts;
  • To the extent that the selection committee can identify the cases of the greatest financial need, these applications will be given priority.

How (and how many) grants will be allocated?

Individual grants of up to £500 will be awarded by a combination of 1) assessment of eligibility and need, and 2) a lottery system.

Specifically:

  • In the first instance, the RHS aims to fund at least 12 hardship grants of up to £500 each, in each of 2 application cycles.
  • If demonstrated need significantly exceeds this sum, the Society shall seek to increase the number of awards available in round 2 by fund-raising or other means and/or to add a 3rd round of hardship funding;
  • Each application will be assessed to confirm that the applicant meets all eligibility criteria;
  • All eligible applications will then be assessed for their degree of demonstrated financial need;
  • If the number of eligible applications demonstrating substantial need exceeds the supply of RHS hardship grants, applications demonstrating the highest need will be allocated by a lottery system. Allocation of awards by lottery is an innovative development in international research funding.  In the current context, the lottery’s benefits as a selection tool include not only its tendency to reduce the scope for conscious or unconscious bias but also its speed of operation.
  • Applications entered into the first lottery that are not selected for funding will be automatically resubmitted to the 2nd lottery unless the applicant directs otherwise.
  • Applicants that are not selected are welcome to re-apply to the next round with additional information, particularly if circumstances change. Applicants should note that this is a re-application in such cases.

When will applicants be notified?

All applicants will be notified of the result of their application within a month of the deadline.

Questions and Answers

  • Do I need to be an ECR Member of the RHS to apply?
    • No. Although the Society welcomes applications to its ECR Membership, its funding schemes apply equally to eligible ECRs regardless of their RHS membership status;
  • If I receive an RHS Hardship grant, will my eligibility to apply in future for standard RHS funding (for research trips or conferences) be affected?
    • No. Receipt of a hardship award will not be considered if you subsequently apply for a standard RHS award and thus will not be ‘counted’ against your total eligibility (currently twice as a PhD student and once as a postdoctoral ECR) for our standard funding schemes.  This is an exceptional discretionary award to support you at a critical time and does not affect your broader eligibility to apply to the RHS to support your research.
  • Do I need to be a UK citizen to receive a RHS Hardship grant?
    • Non-UK nationals are eligible to receive awards as long as they meet the eligibility criteria detailed above.
  • Are part-time students eligible for support?
    • Yes, part-time students are eligible for this programme.
  • How will my award be paid?
    • Awards will be paid into a UK bank account.
  • I am registered for a PhD at a UK university but am an international student and have travelled home because of COVID-19. Am I still eligible to apply?
    • If you remain registered at a UK university for the History PhD/DPhil you remain eligible for hardship funding (which will be paid to your UK bank account).
  • Why is the RHS asking applicants to provide information on their employer and disrupted employment?
    • The Society recognises that if the COVID-19 crisis lasts for several months and/or resurfaces we may need to make longer-term adjustments to our funding for ECRs.  Information on the types of employment most disrupted to the detriment of ECRs will allow us to make appropriate accommodations in our own funding and to advocate for good practice with employers. All personal information will only be held by the RHS for the length of time needed to administer and assess the outcomes of this scheme. No personal information will be shared with employers.
  • Do I need to submit receipts to document my expenditure from the Hardship Grant?
    • We understand that in this crisis many different types of expenditure—including, but not only, groceries, medications, accommodation, equipment, relocation costs and costs entailed by caring responsibilities—may justifiably be accrued by applicants and we trust them to expend their grants to the best effect to maintain their well-being during this crisis.
  • Do I need to progress or to complete a specific piece of research with the use of any Hardship Grant
    • No. The hardship grants are designed to support you as a History researcher and a person, not to fund the production of specific historical outputs. We recognise that many History researchers may be unable to undertake research at this time.
  • Do I need to submit a report to the RHS detailing my use of RHS Hardship grant funds?
    • No. Unlike our standard scheme, no formal report is required after the award has been used.  We welcome contributions to our blog, Historical Transactions, but understand that the current COVID-19 crisis and its aftermath may limit and/or preclude many applicants’ capacity to undertake such writing.
  • Do I need to acknowledge RHS Hardship grant support in my PhD dissertation or publications?
    • Not unless you want to. This is an exceptional scheme for exceptional circumstances, and unlike our standard awards the RHS has no expectation that this support will be formally acknowledged by recipients in their scholarly work.

Contact us

All enquiries should be sent to Imogen Evans, RHS Administrative Secretary at adminsecretary@royalhistsoc.org.

 

Being Human festival 2021: call for applications

The annual Being Human festival will return Thursday 11 – Saturday 20 November 2021 with the theme ‘Renewal’. Being Human is a national free festival geared towards public engagement with humanities research, led by the School of Advanced Study, University of London, in partnership with the Arts and Humanities Research Council and the British Academy. To enable planning to begin, we are committing to a hybrid-delivery festival that combines the best of online engagement with safe in-person activities. The call for applications for 2021 is now live!

There are four ways to take part in the festival:

1. Small Awards: apply to Being Human for funding of up to £2,000 to enable activities. (Deadline 3 May)

2. Hub Awards: apply for a larger institutional grant of £2,000- £5,000 to coordinate multiple activities as a Festival Hub (only a small number of these awards are made every year). (Deadline 3 May)

3. Open Call: organise an activity that does not require funding from us. (Deadline 28 June)

4. Being Human Cafés: a simple ‘off-the-shelf’ format for an activity that does not require funding from us. (Deadline 28 June)

https://beinghumanfestival.org

 

The Samuel Pepys Award 2021

The Samuel Pepys Award 2021 – Rules

www.pepys-club.org.uk

The Trustees of the Samuel Pepys Award Trust invite submissions for the tenth Samuel Pepys Award, to be presented at the annual Pepys Club dinner on Tuesday 16 November 2021.

The biennial prize of £2,000 is for a book that, in the opinion of the judges, makes the greatest contribution to the understanding of Samuel Pepys, his times or his contemporaries.

 

The first Samuel Pepys Award marked the tercentenary of Pepys’s death in 2003 and was won by Claire Tomalin for her biography, Samuel Pepys: The Unequalled Self.

Subsequent prize winners were:

  • 2005 Frances Harris for Transformations of Love
  • 2007 John Adamson for The Noble Revolt
  • 2009 JD Davies for Pepys’s Navy: Ships, Men and Warfare 1649-1689.
  • 2011 Michael Hunter for Boyle: Between God and Science.
  • 2013 Henry Reece for The Army in Cromwellian England 1649-1660
  • 2015 Paul Slack for The Invention of Improvement: Information and Material Progress in Seventeenth-Century England
  • 2017 John Walter for Covenanting Citizens: The Protestant Oath and Popular Political culture in the English Revolution
  • 2019 David Como for Radical Parliamentarians and the English Civil War

A specially cast medal by Philip Nathan, in memory of Robert Latham, joint editor of the eleven-volume The Diary of Samuel Pepys, will be presented to the winning author.

 

The Rules

  1. Submissions must be made no later than Wednesday 30 June 2021.
  2. Books must be published between 1 July 2019 and 30 June 2021.
  3. Submissions, non-fiction and fiction, must have been written in the English language.
  4. Books published in the UK, Ireland, USA and the Commonwealth are eligible for the Samuel Pepys Award.
  5. The judges of the Samuel Pepys Award reserve the right to call in books.
  6. The Samuel Pepys Award will be presented at the annual dinner of the Samuel Pepys Club in London on Tuesday 16 November 2021.

Judges

The judges of the tenth Samuel Pepys Award are:

  • Eamon Duffy is Emeritus Professor of the History of Christianity at Cambridge and the author of numerous books including The Stripping of the Altars and Saints and Sinners, a history of the Popes
  • Sir David Latham is the son of Robert Latham, the editor of the Diary. He is a retired Lord Justice of Appeal and an Honorary Fellow of Royal Holloway College, University of London. He is the current Chairman of the Samuel Pepys Club
  • Robin O’Neill is a former British ambassador, read English at Cambridge and has a particular interest in diplomatic history and English literature in the seventeenth century
  • Caroline Sandwich read English at Cambridge and Middle Eastern politics at London. Has served on the Heritage Lottery Fund and the Historic Houses Association amongst others. Her work at her husband’s family house, Mapperton, has given her an interest in seventeenth century history.
  • Sir Keith Thomas is a Fellow of All Souls and a distinguished historian of the early modern world, whose publications include Religion and the Decline of Magic, and Man and the Natural World.

Submissions

Submissions should be made on the Samuel Pepys Submission Form 2021

Please post completed forms by 30 June 2021 to:

Professor William Pettigrew
4 Regent Street
Lancaster
Lancashire LA1 1SG

And post one copy of each submitted book to the following addresses by 30 June 2021

Professor Eamon Duffy
13 Gurney Way
Cambridge CB42 2ED

Sir David Latham
3 Manor Farm Close
Pimperne
Blandford
Dorset DT11 8XL

Robin O’Neill
4 Castle Street
Saffron Walden CB10 1BP

Caroline Sandwich
Mapperton
Beaminster
Dorset DT8 3NR

Sir Keith Thomas
The Broad Gate
Broad Street
Ludlow SY8 1NJ

 

 

AHRC Infrastructure Policy and Engagement funding opportunity.

AHRC infrastructure policy and engagement fellowships

AHRC invites applications for a new Infrastructure Policy and Engagement funding opportunity.

We are looking for heritage science and conservation researchers in UK IROs and universities who are keen to develop their skills in policy and cultivate an in-depth understanding of the HSCR landscape through data analysis and community engagement.

The Fellowships will be up to five months in duration, during which time Fellows will work closely with one another, and with AHRC, to create an evidence base which will inform and facilitate the design of a new national research infrastructure.   Further details may be found in the call specification, on the UKRI Funding Finder website, here: https://www.ukri.org/opportunity/ahrc-infrastructure-policy-and-engagement-fellowships/

 

Donating to the RHS

Donate to the RHS

 

Your donation will help the RHS support the development of history as a discipline. Thank you.

 

Under the Gift Aid Scheme, you can increase the value of your donation to the Royal Historical Society by 25% at no extra cost to you because the RHS can claim Gift Aid at the basic income tax rate. For Gift Aid your entire payment represents a donation without encumbrance for the general purposes of the RHS. To enable us to benefit from this, please complete the Gift Aid form when requested.

To Gift Aid your donation, you must be a UK taxpayer and pay at least as much Income Tax and/or Capital Gains Tax as will be claimed back by all the charities or Community Amateur Sports Clubs (CASCs) that you donate to in that tax year. For example, if you donate £40 to one charity, and £40 to a CASC, then you must be paying more Income/Capital Gains tax in that tax year than £80. Other taxes such as VAT and Council Tax do not qualify.  For more information see: https://www.gov.uk/donating-to-charity/gift-aid

If you would like to discuss this or any aspect of giving to the Society please email the RHS’s CEO, Adam Hughes: adam.hughes@royalhistsoc.org.

 

IMAGE: Sampler by L. Matthews, 1853, English charity school, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, public domain