The first papers by women known to be published by the Royal Society are those by Caroline Herschel (1786) and Mary Somerville (1826) - though a letter by Ann Savile had appeared within a paper by Tancred Robinson in 1696.The list in this spreadsheet provides some insight into the women who submitted papers to the Royal Society of London after Herschel and Somerville. It has been generated from a partial transcription of the Royal Society's 'Register of Papers', undertaken by Aileen Fyfe's project team at the University of St Andrews.The Register of Papers begins in 1853, and records all papers SUBMITTED to the Society's journals, the Philosophical Transactions and the Proceedings. We transcribed all entries fronm 1853 to 1890, and thereaft...
The Geological Society of London was founded in 1807. In May 1919, the first female Fellows were ele...
Aims and method: To determine female authorship of original articles and editorials between January ...
This file contains the number of fellows in the Royal Society of London for each year from 1665 to 2...
The first papers by women known to be published by the Royal Society are those by Caroline Herschel ...
This paper extends the scholarship on gender and scientific authorship by exploring women’s involvem...
This paper extends the scholarship on gender and scientific authorship by exploring women’s involvem...
Women have taken on a range of roles in scientific societies since the early twentieth century. The ...
Mary Somerville’s life as a mathematician and savant in nineteenth-century Great Britain was heavily...
This thesis examines the role of women at the Royal Institution of Great Britain in its first decade...
The purpose of this article is to fill some of the gaps in our knowledge of those women writers in t...
In the years around 1900, more women were benefiting from a university education and using it as a p...
The accepted rule for women contributing to nineteenth-century science before 1851 was that they cou...
The accepted rule for women contributing to nineteenth-century science before 1851 was that they cou...
While a very few female writers in the Victorian age have received careful attention from historians...
publication-status: Publishedtypes: ArticleArticle is post-print version.This is an Accepted Manuscr...
The Geological Society of London was founded in 1807. In May 1919, the first female Fellows were ele...
Aims and method: To determine female authorship of original articles and editorials between January ...
This file contains the number of fellows in the Royal Society of London for each year from 1665 to 2...
The first papers by women known to be published by the Royal Society are those by Caroline Herschel ...
This paper extends the scholarship on gender and scientific authorship by exploring women’s involvem...
This paper extends the scholarship on gender and scientific authorship by exploring women’s involvem...
Women have taken on a range of roles in scientific societies since the early twentieth century. The ...
Mary Somerville’s life as a mathematician and savant in nineteenth-century Great Britain was heavily...
This thesis examines the role of women at the Royal Institution of Great Britain in its first decade...
The purpose of this article is to fill some of the gaps in our knowledge of those women writers in t...
In the years around 1900, more women were benefiting from a university education and using it as a p...
The accepted rule for women contributing to nineteenth-century science before 1851 was that they cou...
The accepted rule for women contributing to nineteenth-century science before 1851 was that they cou...
While a very few female writers in the Victorian age have received careful attention from historians...
publication-status: Publishedtypes: ArticleArticle is post-print version.This is an Accepted Manuscr...
The Geological Society of London was founded in 1807. In May 1919, the first female Fellows were ele...
Aims and method: To determine female authorship of original articles and editorials between January ...
This file contains the number of fellows in the Royal Society of London for each year from 1665 to 2...