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Romanes Lecture

The Romanes Lecture is a prestigious free public lecture given annually at the Sheldonian Theatre, Oxford, England.

The lecture series was founded by, and named after, the biologist George Romanes, and has been running since 1892. Over the years, many notable figures from the Arts and Sciences have been invited to speak. The lecture can be on any subject in science, art or literature, approved by the Vice-Chancellor of the University.

List of Romanes lecturers and lecture subjects

1890s

1900s

1910s

  • 1910 Theodore Roosevelt — Biological Analogies in History
  • 1911 J.B. Bury — Romances of Chivalry on Greek Soil
  • 1912 Henry Montagu ButlerLord Chatham as an Orator
  • 1913 William Mitchell RamsayThe Imperial Peace: an ideal in European history
  • 1914 J. J. Thomson – The Atomic Theory
  • 1915 E. B. PoultonScience and the Great War
  • 1916
  • 1917
  • 1918 Herbert Henry Asquith — Some Aspects of The Victorian Age
  • 1919

1920s

  • 1920 William Ralph IngeThe Idea of Progress
  • 1921 Joseph BédierRoland à Roncevaux
  • 1922 Arthur Stanley EddingtonThe theory of relativity and its influence on scientific thought
  • 1923 John BurnetIgnorance
  • 1924 John MasefieldShakespeare & spiritual life
  • 1925 William Henry BraggThe Crystalline State
  • 1926 G.M. Trevelyan — The Two-Party System in English Political History
  • 1927 Frederick George Kenyon — Museums and National Life
  • 1928 D. M. S. WatsonPalaeontology and the Evolution of Man
  • 1929 Sir John William Fortescue — The Vicissitudes of Organized Power

1930s

  • 1930 Winston Churchill — Parliamentary Government and the Economic Problem
  • 1931 John Galsworthy — The Creation of Character in Literature
  • 1932 Berkley Moynihan — The Advance of Medicine
  • 1933 Henry Hadow — The Place of Music among the Arts
  • 1934 William RothensteinForm and content in English Painting
  • 1935 Gilbert MurrayThen and Now
  • 1936 Donald Francis ToveyNormality and Freedom in Music
  • 1937 Harley Granville-BarkerOn Poetry in Drama
  • 1938 Lord Robert CecilPeace and Pacifism
  • 1939 Laurence BinyonArt and freedom

1940s

  • 1940 Edouard Herriot, lecture not delivered
  • 1941 William Hailey — The position of colonies in a British commonwealth of nations
  • 1942 Norman H. BaynesIntellectual liberty and totalitarian claims
  • 1943 Julian HuxleyEvolutionary Ethics (50 years after his grandfather gave the lecture)
  • 1944 G. M. Young — Mr Gladstone
  • 1945 André SiegfriedCharacteristics and Limits of our Western Civilization
  • 1946 John AndersonThe machinery of government
  • 1947 Lord SamuelCreative Man
  • 1948 Lord Brabazon of Tara — Forty years of flight
  • 1949 Claud SchusterMountaineering

1950s

1960s

  • 1960 Edgar Douglas AdrianFactors in mental evolution
  • 1961 Vincent MasseyCanadians and Their Commonwealth
  • 1962 Cyril RadcliffeMountstuart Elphinstone
  • 1963 Violet Bonham Carter — The impact of personality in politics (45 years after her father gave the lecture)
  • 1964 Harold Hartley — Man and Nature
  • 1965 Noel Annan — The Disintegration of an Old Culture
  • 1966 Maurice BowraA case for humane learning
  • 1967 Rab ButlerThe Difficult Art of Autobiography
  • 1968 Peter MedawarScience and Literature
  • 1969 Lord Holford — A World of Room

1970s

  • 1970 Isaiah BerlinFathers and Children: Turgenev and the Liberal Predicament (Broadcast on BBC Radio 3 on 14 February 1971)
  • 1971 Raymond AronOn the Use and Abuse of Futurology
  • 1972 Karl PopperOn the Problem of Body and Mind
  • 1973 Ernst GombrichArt History and the Social Sciences
  • 1974 Solly Zuckermann — Advice and Responsibility
  • 1975 Iris MurdochThe Fire and the Sun: Why Plato banished the artists
  • 1976 Edward HeathThe Future of a Nation
  • 1977 Peter Hall — Form and Freedom in the Theatre
  • 1978 George PorterScience and the Human Purpose
  • 1979 Hugh CassonThe arts and the academies

1980s

  • 1980 Jo GrimondIs political philosophy based on a mistake?
  • 1981 A.J.P. Taylor — War in Our Time
  • 1982 Andrew HuxleyBiology, the Physical Sciences and the Mind
  • 1983 Owen ChadwickReligion and Society
  • 1984
  • 1985 Miriam Louisa Rothschild — Animals and Man
  • 1986 Nicholas Henderson — Different Approaches to Foreign Policy
  • 1987 Norman St. John-StevasThe Omnipresence of Walter Bagehot
  • 1988 Hugh Trevor-Roper — The Lost Moments of History (A revised version at the NYRB.)
  • 1989

1990s

2000s

2010s

2020s

See also

References

The text of each Romanes Lecture is generally published by Oxford University Press using the "Clarendon Press" imprint, and where appropriate the citation for an individual lecture is listed in the published works of each author's entry in Wikipedia.

  • Romanes lectures, University of Oxford, 1986–2002, Oxford, Bodleian Library: MSS. Eng. c. 7027, Top. Oxon. c. 827
  • Oxford lectures on philosophy, 1910–1923, Oxford, The Clarendon Press, 1908–23.
  • Oxford lectures on history, 1904–1923, Oxford, The Clarendon Press 1904–23, which includes "Frontiers", by Lord Curzon, the Romanes lecture for 1907, "Biological analogies in history", by Theodore Roosevelt, the Romanes lecture for 1910, "The imperial peace" by Sir W. M. Ramsay, the Romanes lecture for 1913 and "Montesquieu" by Sir Courtenay Ilbert, the Romanes lecture for 1904.
  • J.B. Bury, Romances of chivalry on Greek soil, being the Romanes lecture for 1911, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1911.
  • Sir E. Ray Lankester: Romanes Lecture, Nature and Man, Oxford University Press, 1905

Notes

  1. ^ Never delivered, due to Acton's illness, but many notes are extant, see Herbert Butterfield, Man and His Past (1955), p. 63, and p.234 of A History of the University of Cambridge: 1870-1990 by Christopher Brooke, CUP, ISBN 0-521-34350-X
  2. ^ Sen, Amartya (1999). Reason before identity. Oxford New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199513895.

External links

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