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{{short description|Specialist or aficionado of antiquities or things of the past}}{{About|practitioners of the scholarly pursuit of antiquarianism|the trade in old books|Bookselling|trading or collecting old objects|Antique}}{{EngvarB|date=July 2022}}{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2022}}File:1655 - Frontispiece of Museum Wormiani Historia.jpg|thumb|upright=1.6|Ole Worm’s cabinet of curiositiescabinet of curiositiesAn antiquarian or antiquary ({{etymology|la|{{wikt-lang|la|antiquarius}}|pertaining to ancient times}}) is an aficionado or student of antiquities or things of the past. More specifically, the term is used for those who study history with particular attention to ancient artifacts, archaeological and historic sites, or historic archives and manuscripts. The essence of antiquarianism is a focus on the empirical evidence of the past, and is perhaps best encapsulated in the motto adopted by the 18th-century antiquary Sir Richard Colt Hoare, “We speak from facts, not theory.“The Oxford English Dictionary first cites “archaeologist” from 1824; this soon took over as the usual term for one major branch of antiquarian activity. “Archaeology”, from 1607 onwards, initially meant what is now seen as “ancient history” generally, with the narrower modern sense first seen in 1837.Today the term “antiquarian” is often used in a pejorative sense, to refer to an excessively narrow focus on factual historical trivia, to the exclusion of a sense of historical context or process. Few today would describe themselves as “antiquaries”, but some institutions such as the Society of Antiquaries of London (founded in 1707) retain their historic names. The term “antiquarian bookseller” remains current for dealers in more expensive old books.

History

Antiquarianism in ancient China

{{see also|History of Chinese archaeology|Shen Kuo}}During the Song dynasty (960–1279), the scholar Ouyang Xiu (1007–1072) analyzed alleged ancient artifacts bearing archaic inscriptions in bronze and stone, which he preserved in a collection of some 400 rubbings.Clunas, Craig. (2004). Superfluous Things: Material Culture and Social Status in Early Modern China. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. {{ISBN|0-8248-2820-8}}. p. 95. Patricia Ebrey writes that Ouyang pioneered early ideas in epigraphy.Ebrey, Patricia Buckley (1999). The Cambridge Illustrated History of China. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. {{ISBN|0-521-66991-X}}, p. 148.The {{Transl|zh|Kaogutu}} () or “Illustrated Catalogue of Examined Antiquity” (preface dated 1092) compiled by Lü Dalin () (1046–1092) is one of the oldest known catalogues to systematically describe and classify ancient artifacts which were unearthed.Trigger, Bruce G. (2006). A History of Archaeological Thought: Second Edition. New York: Cambridge University Press. {{ISBN|0-521-84076-7}}. p. 74. Another catalogue was the {{Transl|zh|Chong xiu Xuanhe bogutu}} () or “Revised Illustrated Catalogue of Xuanhe Profoundly Learned Antiquity” (compiled from 1111 to 1125), commissioned by Emperor Huizong of Song (r. 1100–1125), and also featured illustrations of some 840 vessels and rubbings.Interests in antiquarian studies of ancient inscriptions and artifacts waned after the Song dynasty, but were revived by early Qing dynasty (1644–1912) scholars such as Gu Yanwu (1613–1682) and Yan Ruoju (1636–1704).

Antiquarianism in ancient Rome

In ancient Rome, a strong sense of traditionalism motivated an interest in studying and recording the “monuments” of the past; the Augustan historian Livy uses the Latin in the sense of “antiquarian matters.“Livy, Ab Urbe Condita 7.3.7: cited also in the Oxford Latin Dictionary (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1982, 1985 reprinting), p. 1132, entry on monumentum, as an example of meaning 4b, “recorded tradition.” Books on antiquarian topics covered such subjects as the origin of customs, religious rituals, and political institutions; genealogy; topography and landmarks; and etymology. Annals and histories might also include sections pertaining to these subjects, but annals are chronological in structure, and Roman histories, such as those of Livy and Tacitus, are both chronological and offer an overarching narrative and interpretation of events. By contrast, antiquarian works as a literary form are organized by topic, and any narrative is short and illustrative, in the form of anecdotes.Major antiquarian Latin writers with surviving works include Varro, Pliny the Elder, Aulus Gellius, and Macrobius. The Roman emperor Claudius published antiquarian works, none of which is extant. Some of Cicero’s treatises, particularly his work on divination, show strong antiquarian interests, but their primary purpose is the exploration of philosophical questions. Roman-era Greek writers also dealt with antiquarian material, such as Plutarch in his Roman QuestionsAt LacusCurtius, Bill Thayer presents an edition of the Roman Questions {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230108172941penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Roman/Texts/Plutarch/Moralia/Roman_Questions%2A/home.html |date=8 January 2023 }} based on the Loeb Classical Library translation. Thayer’s edition can be browsed question-by-question in tabulated form, with direct links to individual topics. and the Deipnosophistae of Athenaeus. The aim of Latin antiquarian works is to collect a great number of possible explanations, with less emphasis on arriving at a truth than in compiling the evidence. The antiquarians are often used as sources by the ancient historians, and many antiquarian writers are known only through these citations.This overview of Roman antiquarianism is based on T.P. Wiseman, Clio’s Cosmetics (Bristol: Phoenix Press, 2003, originally published 1979 by Leicester University Press), pp. 15–15, 45 et passim; and A Companion to Latin Literature, edited by Stephen Harrison (Blackwell, 2005), pp. 37–38, 64, 77, 229, 242–244 et passim.File:Antiquaries; twenty portraits of historians. Engraving by J. Wellcome V0006811.jpg|thumb|right|upright=1.08|“Antiquaries”: portraits of 20 influential antiquaries and historians published in Crabb’s Universal Historical Dictionary (1825). Featured are: Giraldus Cambrensis, John Leland, Guido Panciroli, John Stow, William Camden, Justus Lipsius, Joseph Justus Scaliger, Johannes Meursius, Hubert Goltzius, Henry Spelman, Charles Patin, Philipp Clüver, William Dugdale, Claudius Salmasius, Friedrich Spanheim, Johann Georg Graevius, Jakob Gronovius, Thomas Hearne, John Strype, and Elias AshmoleElias Ashmole

Medieval and early modern antiquarianism

{{further|History of archaeology}}Despite the importance of antiquarian writing in the literature of ancient Rome, some scholars view antiquarianism as emerging only in the Middle Ages.BOOK, Egyptology: The Missing Millennium : Ancient Egypt in Medieval Arabic Writings, Okasha, El Daly, Routledge, 2004, 1-84472-063-2, 35, Medieval antiquarians sometimes made collections of inscriptions or records of monuments, but the Varro-inspired concept of among the Romans as the “systematic collections of all the relics of the past” faded.Arnaldo Momigliano, “Ancient History and the Antiquarian,” Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 13 (1950), p. 289. Antiquarianism’s wider flowering is more generally associated with the Renaissance, and with the critical assessment and questioning of classical texts undertaken in that period by humanist scholars. Textual criticism soon broadened into an awareness of the supplementary perspectives on the past which could be offered by the study of coins, inscriptions and other archaeological remains, as well as documents from medieval periods. Antiquaries often formed collections of these and other objects; cabinet of curiosities is a general term for early collections, which often encompassed antiquities and more recent art, items of natural history, memorabilia and items from far-away lands.
missing image!
- William Camden Clarenceux.jpg -
upright|William Camden (1551–1623), author of the Britannia, wearing the tabard and chain of office of Clarenceux King of Arms. Originally published in the 1695 edition of Britannia.
The importance placed on lineage in early modern Europe meant that antiquarianism was often closely associated with genealogy, and a number of prominent antiquaries (including Robert Glover, William Camden, William Dugdale and Elias Ashmole) held office as professional heralds. The development of genealogy as a “scientific” discipline (i.e. one that rejected unsubstantiated legends, and demanded high standards of proof for its claims) went hand-in-hand with the development of antiquarianism. Genealogical antiquaries recognised the evidential value for their researches of non-textual sources, including seals and church monuments.Many early modern antiquaries were also chorographers: that is to say, they recorded landscapes and monuments within regional or national descriptions. In England, some of the most important of these took the form of county histories.In the context of the 17th-century scientific revolution, and more specifically that of the “Quarrel of the Ancients and the Moderns” in England and France, the antiquaries were firmly on the side of the “Moderns”.Levine, Battle of the Books. They increasingly argued that empirical primary evidence could be used to refine and challenge the received interpretations of history handed down from literary authorities.

19th–21st centuries

File:Pit Mead Roman villa mosaic, illustration by Catherine Downes.jpg|thumb|Pit Mead Roman villa mosaic, illustrations by Catherine Downes, engraved by James Basire and presented to the SAL by Daines BarringtonDaines BarringtonBy the end of the 19th century, antiquarianism had diverged into a number of more specialized academic disciplines including archaeology, art history, numismatics, sigillography, philology, literary studies and diplomatics. Antiquaries had always attracted a degree of ridicule (see below), and since the mid-19th century the term has tended to be used most commonly in negative or derogatory contexts. Nevertheless, many practising antiquaries continue to claim the title with pride. In recent years, in a scholarly environment in which interdisciplinarity is increasingly encouraged, many of the established antiquarian societies (see below) have found new roles as facilitators for collaboration between specialists.

Terminological distinctions

Antiquaries and antiquarians

“Antiquary” was the usual term in English from the 16th to the mid-18th centuries to describe a person interested in antiquities (the word “antiquarian” being generally found only in an adjectival sense).First OED uses of “Antiquary. 3” 1586 and 1602. From the second half of the 18th century, however, “antiquarian” began to be used more widely as a noun,OED “Antiquarian” as noun, first uses 1610, then 1778 and today both forms are equally acceptable.

Antiquaries and historians

From the 16th to the 19th centuries, a clear distinction was perceived to exist between the interests and activities of the antiquary and the historian.Woolf, “Erudition and the Idea of History”.Levine, Humanism and History, pp. 54–72.Levine, Amateur and Professional, pp. 28–30, 80–81. The antiquary was concerned with the relics of the past (whether documents, artefacts or monuments), whereas the historian was concerned with the narrative of the past, and its political or moral lessons for the present. The skills of the antiquary tended to be those of the critical examination and interrogation of his sources, whereas those of the historian were those of the philosophical and literary reinterpretation of received narratives. Jan Broadway defines an antiquary as “someone who studied the past on a thematic rather than a chronological basis”.Broadway, “No Historie So Meete”, p. 4. Francis Bacon in 1605 described readings of the past based on antiquities (which he defined as “Monuments, Names, Wordes, Proverbes, Traditions, Private Recordes, and Evidences, Fragments of stories, Passages of Bookes, that concerne not storie, and the like“) as “unperfect Histories”.BOOK, Francis, Bacon, Francis Bacon, The Advancement of Learning, Michael, Kiernan, Oxford Francis Bacon, 4, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 2000, 1605, 0-19-812348-5, 66, Such distinctions began to be eroded in the second half of the 19th century as the school of empirical source-based history championed by Leopold von Ranke began to find widespread acceptance, and today’s historians employ the full range of techniques pioneered by the early antiquaries. Rosemary Sweet suggests that 18th-century antiquaries

Antiquarians, antiquarian books and antiques

In many European languages, the word antiquarian (or its equivalent) has shifted in modern times to refer to a person who either trades in or collects rare and ancient antiquarian books; or who trades in or collects antique objects more generally. In English, however, although the terms “antiquarian book” and “antiquarian bookseller” are widely used, the nouns “antiquarian” and “antiquary” very rarely carry this sense. An antiquarian is primarily a student of ancient books, documents, artefacts or monuments. Many antiquarians have also built up extensive personal collections in order to inform their studies, but a far greater number have not; and conversely many collectors of books or antiques would not regard themselves (or be regarded) as antiquarians.File:The Puzzle (Gravestone to Claud Coster and Jane Coster with 4 unknown antiquaries) by John Bowles.jpg|thumb|The Puzzle (1756): etching by John Bowles. In one variation on a recurrent joke, four antiquaries struggle to decipher what seems to be an ancient inscription, but which is in fact a crude memorial in English to Claud Coster, tripe-seller, and his wife. The print is ironically dedicated to “the Penetrating Genius’s of Oxford, Cambridge, Eaton, Westminster, and the Learned Society of Antiquarians”.]]

Pejorative associations

File:Chardin, la scimmia antiquaria, 1726 ca. 02.JPG|thumb|upright|left|Le Singe Antiquaire ({{circa|1726}}) by Jean-Siméon ChardinJean-Siméon ChardinAntiquaries often appeared to possess an unwholesome interest in death, decay, and the unfashionable, while their focus on obscure and arcane details meant that they seemed to lack an awareness both of the realities and practicalities of modern life, and of the wider currents of history. For all these reasons they frequently became objects of ridicule.B.S. Allen, Tides in English Taste (1619–1800), 2 vols (Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1937), vol. 2, pp. 87–92.Brown, Hobby-Horsical Antiquary, esp. pp. 13–17.Sweet, Antiquaries, pp. xiii, 4–5.The antiquary was satirised in John Earle’s Micro-cosmographie of 1628 (“Hee is one that hath that unnaturall disease to bee enamour’d of old age, and wrinkles, and loves all things (as Dutchmen doe Cheese) the better for being mouldy and worme-eaten“),John Earle, “An Antiquarie”, in Micro-cosmographie (London, 1628), sigs [B8]v-C3v. in Jean-Siméon Chardin’s painting Le Singe Antiquaire ({{circa|1726}}), in Sir Walter Scott’s novel The Antiquary (1816), in the caricatures of Thomas Rowlandson, and in many other places. The New Dictionary of the Terms Ancient and Modern of the Canting Crew of {{circa|1698}} defines an antiquary as “A curious critic in old Coins, Stones and Inscriptions, in Worm-eaten Records and ancient Manuscripts, also one that affects and blindly dotes, on Relics, Ruins, old Customs Phrases and Fashions”.BOOK, B.E., A New Dictionary of the Terms Ancient and Modern of the Canting Crew, London, 1699, 16, In his “Epigrams”, John Donne wrote of The Antiquary: “If in his study he hath so much care To hang all old strange things Let his wife beware.” The word’s resonances were close to those of modern terms for individuals with obsessive interests in technical minutiae, such as nerd, trainspotter or anorak.File:Rowlandson Death & Antiquaries.jpg|thumb|left|Thomas Rowlandson’s caricature, Death and the Antiquaries, 1816. A group of antiquaries cluster eagerly around the exhumed corpse of a king, oblivious to the jealous figure of Death aiming his dart at one of them. The image was inspired by the opening of the tomb of Edward I in Westminster Abbey by the Society of Antiquaries in 1774.]]The connoisseur Horace Walpole, who shared many of the antiquaries’ interests, was nonetheless emphatic in his insistence that the study of cultural relics should be selective and informed by taste and aesthetics. He deplored the more comprehensive and eclectic approach of the Society of Antiquaries, and their interest in the primitive past. In 1778 he wrote:In his essay “On the Uses and Abuses of History for Life” from his Untimely Meditations, philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche examines three forms of history. One of these is “antiquarian history”, an objectivising historicism which forges little or no creative connection between past and present. Nietzsche’s philosophy of history had a significant impact on critical history in the 20th century.C. R. Cheney, writing in 1956, observed that “[a]t the present day we have reached such a pass that the word ‘antiquary’ is not always held in high esteem, while ‘antiquarianism’ is almost a term of abuse”.C.R. Cheney, “Introduction”, in Levi Fox (ed.), English Historical Scholarship in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries (London, 1956), p. 4. Arnaldo Momigliano in 1990 defined an antiquarian as “the type of man who is interested in historical facts without being interested in history”.Momigliano 1990, p. 54. Professional historians still often use the term “antiquarian” in a pejorative sense, to refer to historical studies which seem concerned only to place on record trivial or inconsequential facts, and which fail to consider the wider implications of these, or to formulate any kind of argument. The term is also sometimes applied to the activities of amateur historians such as historical reenactors, who may have a meticulous approach to reconstructing the costumes or material culture of past eras, but who are perceived to lack much understanding of the cultural values and historical contexts of the periods in question.

Antiquarian societies

London societies

A College (or Society) of Antiquaries was founded in London in {{circa|1586}}, to debate matters of antiquarian interest. Members included William Camden, Sir Robert Cotton, John Stow, William Lambarde, Richard Carew and others. This body existed until 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 Cotton’s collections, and were printed by Thomas Hearne in 1720 under the title A Collection of Curious Discourses, a second edition appearing in 1771.{{EB1911|inline=y|wstitle=Antiquary|volume=2|page=134}}File:Soc Antiq 2010.JPG|thumb|right|upright|The entrance to the premises of the Society of Antiquaries of London, at Burlington House, PiccadillyPiccadillyIn 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, and in 1874 it moved into its present accommodation in Burlington House, Piccadilly. The society was governed by a council of twenty and a president who is ex officio a trustee of the British Museum.

Other notable societies

In addition, a number of local historical and archaeological societies have adopted the word “antiquarian” in their titles. These have included the Cambridge Antiquarian Society, founded in 1840; the Lancashire and Cheshire Antiquarian Society, founded in 1883; the Clifton Antiquarian Club, founded in Bristol in 1884; the Orkney Antiquarian Society, founded in 1922; and the Plymouth Antiquarian Society, founded in Plymouth, Massachusetts in 1919.

Notable antiquarians

{{Col-begin}}{{Col-3}} {{Col-3}} {{Col-3}} {{Col-end}}

See also

References

{{Reflist|30em}}

Bibliography

  • BOOK, Benjamin, Anderson, Felipe, Rojas, Antiquarianisms: contact, conflict, comparison, Joukowsky Institute publication, 8, Oxford, Oxford Books, 2017, 9781785706844,
  • BOOK, Jan, Broadway, “No Historie So Meete”: gentry culture and the development of local history in Elizabethan and early Stuart England, 2006, Manchester, Manchester University Press, 978-0-7190-7294-9,
  • BOOK, I. G., Brown, The Hobby-Horsical Antiquary: a Scottish character, 1640–1830, 1980, Edinburgh, National Library of Scotland, 0-902220-38-1,
  • BOOK, Levi, Fox, Levi Fox, English Historical Scholarship in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries, 1956, London, Dugdale Society and Oxford University Press,
  • JOURNAL, Gransden, Antonia, Antonia Gransden, Antiquarian Studies in Fifteenth-Century England, Antiquaries Journal, 60, 1980, 75–97, 10.1017/S0003581500035988, 162807608,
  • BOOK, T. D., Kendrick, T. D. Kendrick, British Antiquity, 1950, Methuen, London,
  • BOOK, J. M., Levine, Humanism and History: origins of modern English historiography,archive.org/details/humanismhistoryo00levi, registration, 1987, Ithaca, NY, Cornell University Press, 9780801418853,
  • BOOK, J. M., Levine, The Battle of the Books: history and literature in the Augustan age, 1991, Ithaca, NY, Cornell University Press, 0801425379,archive.org/details/battleofbookshis00levi,
  • BOOK, Philippa, Levine, The Amateur and the Professional: antiquarians, historians and archaeologists in Victorian England, 1838–1886, 1986, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 0-521-30635-3, registration,archive.org/details/amateurprofessio0000levi,
  • BOOK, S. A. E., Mendyk, “Speculum Britanniae”: regional study, antiquarianism and science in Britain to 1700, 1989, Toronto, University of Toronto Press,
  • BOOK, Peter N., Miller, Peter N. Miller, Peiresc’s Europe: learning and virtue in the seventeenth century, 2000, Yale University Press, New Haven, 0-300-08252-5,
  • BOOK, Peter N., Miller, Peter N. Miller, History and Its Objects: antiquarianism and material culture since 1500, Cornell University Press, Ithaca, NY, 2017, 9780801453700,
  • JOURNAL, Momigliano, Arnaldo, Arnaldo Momigliano, Ancient History and the Antiquarian, Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes, 13, 1950, 285–315, 10.2307/750215, 3/4, 750215, 164918925,seer.ufrgs.br/anos90/article/view/43194,
  • BOOK, Momigliano, Arnaldo, Arnaldo Momigliano, 1990, The Rise of Antiquarian Research, The Classical Foundations of Modern Historiography,archive.org/details/isbn_9780520078703, registration, Berkeley, University of California Press, 54–79, 0520068904,
  • BOOK, Graham, Parry, The Trophies of Time: English antiquarians of the seventeenth century, 1995, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 0198129629,
  • BOOK, Susan, Pearce, Visions of Antiquity: The Society of Antiquaries of London 1707–2007, 2007, London, Society of Antiquaries,
  • BOOK, Stuart, Piggott, Stuart Piggott, Ruins in a Landscape: essays in antiquarianism, 1976, Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 0852243030,archive.org/details/ruinsinlandscape00pigg,
  • BOOK, William, Stenhouse, Reading Inscriptions and Writing Ancient History: historical scholarship in the late Renaissance, 2005, London, Institute of Classical Studies, University of London School of Advanced Study, 0-900587-98-9,
  • BOOK, Hiroyuki, Suzuki, Antiquarians of Nineteenth-Century Japan: the archaeology of things in the late Tokugawa and early Meiji periods, Maki, Fukuoka, Los Angeles, Getty Research Institute, 2022, 9781606067420,
  • BOOK, Rosemary, Sweet, Antiquaries: the discovery of the past in eighteenth-century Britain, 2004, London, Hambledon & London, 1-85285-309-3,
  • BOOK, Angus, Vine, In Defiance of Time: antiquarian writing in early modern England, 2010, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 978-0-19-956619-8,
  • BOOK, Roberto, Weiss, Roberto Weiss, The Renaissance Discovery of Classical Antiquity, 1988, 2nd, Oxford, Blackwell, 9781597403771,
  • JOURNAL, Woolf, D. R., Daniel Woolf, Erudition and the Idea of History in Renaissance England, Renaissance Quarterly, 40, 1987, 1, 11–48, 10.2307/2861833, 2861833, 164042832,
  • BOOK, Daniel, Woolf, Daniel Woolf, The Social Circulation of the Past: English historical culture, 1500–1730, 2003, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 0-19-925778-7,
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