- Romanes Lecture
The Romanes Lecture is a prestigious free public lecture given annually at the
Sheldonian Theatre ,Oxford .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
*1892
William Ewart Gladstone — "Mediæval Universities" (A [http://www.nationarchive.com/Summaries/v055i1429_06.htm report of the speech] is available in the digital archive of The Nation.)
*1893Thomas Henry Huxley — [http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/2940 "Evolution and Ethics"] (See also [http://aleph0.clarku.edu/huxley/comm/OxfMag/Romanes93.html a contemporary review of Huxley's lecture] )
*1894August Weismann — "The Effect of External Influences upon Development"
*1895Holman Hunt — "The Obligations of the Universities towards Art"
*1896Mandell Creighton — "The English National Character"
*1897John Morley — ""
*1898Archibald Geikie — "Types of Scenery and their Influence on Literature"
*1899Richard Claverhouse Jebb — "Humanism in education"1900s
* 1900 James Murray — [http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/11694 "The Evolution of English Lexicography"] (Also available at [http://dictionary.oed.com/archive/paper-romanes/ The Oxford English Dictonary site] .)
* 1901 Lord Acton — "The German school of history" [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]* 1902 James Bryce — "The Relations of the Advanced and the Backward Races of Mankind"
* 1903
Oliver Lodge — "Modern views on matter"* 1904
Courtenay Ilbert — "Montesquieu"* 1905
Ray Lankester — "Nature and Man"* 1906
William Paton Ker — "Sturla the Historian"* 1907 Lord Curzon — "Frontiers" ( [http://www-ibru.dur.ac.uk/docs/curzon1.html part 1] [http://www-ibru.dur.ac.uk/docs/curzon2.html part 2] [http://www-ibru.dur.ac.uk/docs/curzon3.html part 3] [http://www-ibru.dur.ac.uk/docs/curzon1.html part 4] [http://www-ibru.dur.ac.uk/docs/curzon1.html part 5] )
* 1908
Henry Scott Holland — "The optimism of Butler's Analogy"* 1909
Arthur Balfour — "Questionings on Criticism and Beauty"1910s
* 1910
Theodore Roosevelt — "Biological Analogies in History" (Available in the collection [http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/13930 "African and European Addresses"] .)
* 1911J.B. Bury — "Romances of chivalry on Greek soil"
* 1912Henry Montagu Butler — "Lord Chatham as an orator"
* 1913William Mitchell Ramsay — "The imperial peace: an ideal in European history"
* 1914J. J. Thomson – "The atomic theory"
* 1915 E. B. Poulton – "Science and the Great War"
* 1916
* 1917
* 1918Herbert Henry Asquith — "Some Aspects of the Victorian Age"
* 19191920s
* 1920
William Ralph Inge — "The Idea of Progress"
* 1921Joseph Bédier — "Roland à Roncevaux"
* 1922Arthur Stanley Eddington — "The theory of relativity and its influence on scientific thought"
* 1923John Burnet — "Ignorance"
* 1924John Masefield — "Shakespeare & spiritual life"
* 1925William Henry Bragg — "The Crystalline State"
* 1926G.M. Trevelyan — "The Two-Party System in English Political History"
* 1927Frederick George Kenyon — "Museums and National Life"
* 1928D. M. S. Watson — "Palaeontology and the Evolution of Man"
* 1929 SirJohn William Fortescue 1930s
* 1930
Winston Churchill — "Parliamentary Government and the Economic Problem"
* 1931John Galsworthy — "The Creation of Character in Literature"
* 1932 Berkley Moynihan
* 1933
* 1934William Rothenstein — "Form and content in English Painting"
* 1935Gilbert Murray — "Then and Now"
* 1936Donald Francis Tovey — "Normality and Freedom in Music"
* 1937Harley Granville-Barker — "On Poetry in Drama"
* 1938 Lord Robert Cecil — "Peace and Pacifism"
* 1939Laurence Binyon — "Art and freedom"1940s
* 1940
* 1941 William Hailey — "The position of colonies in a British commonwealth of nations"
* 1942Norman H. Baynes — "Intellectual liberty and totalitarian claims"
* 1943Julian Huxley — "Evolutionary Ethics" (50 years after his grandfather gave the lecture)
* 1944
* 1945
* 1946 John Anderson — "The machinery of government"
* 1947 Lord Samuel — "Creative Man"
* 1948 Lord Brabazon of Tara — "Forty years of flight"
* 1949 Claud Schuster — "Mountaineering"1950s
* 1950
John Cockcroft — "The development and future of nuclear energy"
* 1951 Maurice Hankey — "The science and art of government"
* 1952Lewis Bernstein Namier — "Monarchy and the party system"
* 1953 Viscount Simon — "Crown and Commonwealth"
* 1954Kenneth Clark — "Moments of Vision"
* 1955Albert Richardson — "The significance of the fine arts"
* 1956Thomas Beecham — "John Fletcher"
* 1957Ronald Knox — "On English translation"
* 1958 Edward Bridges — "The State and the Arts"
* 1959Lord Denning — "From Precedent to Precedent"1960s
* 1960
Edgar Douglas Adrian — "Factors in mental evolution"
* 1961Vincent Massey — "Canadians and Their Commonwealth"
* 1962 Cyril Radcliffe — "Mountstuart Elphinstone"
* 1963Violet Bonham Carter — "The impact of personality in politics" (45 years after her father gave the lecture)
* 1964Harold Hartley — "Man and Nature"
* 1965Noel Annan — "The Disintegration of an Old Culture"
* 1966Maurice Bowra — "A case for humane learning"
* 1967Rab Butler — "The Difficult Art of Autobiography"
* 1968Peter Medawar — "Science and Literature"
* 1969 Lord Holford — "A World of Room"1970s
* 1970
Isaiah Berlin — "Fathers and Children: Turgenev and the Liberal Predicament" (Broadcast onBBC Radio 3 on 14 February 1971)
* 1971
* 1972Karl Popper — "On the Problem of Body and Mind"
* 1973Ernst Gombrich — "Art History and the Social Sciences"
* 1974Solly Zuckermann — "Advice and Responsibility"
* 1975
* 1976Iris Murdoch — "The Fire and the Sun: Why Plato banished the artists"
* 1977
* 1978George Porter — "Science and the Human Purpose"
* 1979Hugh Casson — "The arts and the academies"1980s
* 1980
Jo Grimond — "Is political philosophy based on a mistake?"
* 1981A.J.P. Taylor — "War in Our Time"
* 1982
* 1983Owen Chadwick — "Religion and Society"
* 1984–5Miriam Louisa Rothschild — "Animals and Man"
* 1986Nicholas Henderson — "Different Approaches to Foreign Policy"
* 1987 Norman St. John-Stevas — "The Omnipresence of Walter Bagehot"
* 1988 Hugh Trevor-Roper — "The Lost Moments of History" (A [http://www.nybooks.com/articles/article-preview?article_id=4292 revised version] at theNYRB .)
* 19891990s
* 1990
Saul Bellow — "The Distracted Public"
* 1991Gianni Agnelli — "Europe: Many Legacies, One Future"
* 1992 Robert Blake — "Gladstone, Disraeli and Queen Victoria" (The Centenary Lecture)
* 1993 Henry Harris — "Hippolyte's club foot: the medical roots of realism in modern European literature"
* 1994Lord Slynn of Hadley — "Europe and Human Rights"
* 1995Walter Bodmer — "The Book of Man"
* 1996Roy Jenkins — "The Chancellorship of Oxford: A Contemporary View with a Little History"
* 1997Mary Robinson — [http://www.un.org/rights/50/dpi1938.htm "Realizing Human Rights:"Take hold of it boldly and duly..."]
* 1998Amartya Kumar Sen — "Reason before identity"
* 1999Tony Blair — [http://www.number-10.gov.uk/output/Page1465.asp "The Learning Habit"]2000s
* 2000
William G. Bowen — [http://www.mellon.org/Romanes.pdf "At a Slight Angle to the Universe: The University in a Digitized, Commercialized Age"]
* 2001Neil MacGregor — "The Perpetual Present. The Ideal of Art for All" ( [http://www.ox.ac.uk/blueprint/2001-02/0905/08.shtml Newsletter report of the lecture] )
* 2002Tom Bingham — "Personal Freedom and the Dilemma of Democracies"
* 2003Paul Nurse — "The great ideas of biology"
* 2004Rowan Williams — [http://www.archbishopofcanterbury.org/sermons_speeches/2004/041118.html "Religious lives"]
* 2005Shirley M. Tilghman — [http://www.princeton.edu/president/speeches/20051201/index.xml "Strange bedfellows: science, politics, and religion"]
* 2007 DameGillian Beer — "Darwin and the Consciousness of Others"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 Univ. Press, 1905Notes
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