The Society holds a number of meetings throughout the year. The Annual General Meeting is usually held in different part of the UK in May or June each year. Visits and fieldtrips form a part of many of our events and these cover a range of different activities from visiting mines, to the remains of furnaces or workshops, visiting working mills, seeing live metallurgy experiments or even going behind the scenes of museums or exhibitions. In the autumn the Research in Progress meeting provides a forum for the presentation of current, usually unpublished research. At these meeting there is an award for the best student presentation by a current or recent student (within 12 months of graduating).
|
|
Upcoming HMS Events |
AGM Summer Meeting |
||
Meetings
Past HMS events
This list is still under construction, if you know of any other HMS conferences or events do get in touch. Links to event pages will be created with photo galleries, programmes, abstract books and reviews.
2015
13th November, Research in Progress Meeting, held at Brunel University, London
12th-14th June, Street Furniture Conference and AGM meeting held in Stratford upon Avon
11th April, Archives and slag collection study day, held at Ironbridge
2014
14th November, Research in Progress Meeting held in Oxford
3rd-6th October, Metallurgy in Warfare: A spur to innovation and development conference held in Salisbury
31st May-1st June, Metals used in personal adornment conference and AGM meeting held in Birmingham
12th-13th April, Irish Iron, an Archaeology Committee workshop held in Co Cork, Ireland
8th of March and 27th September, Archives and slag collection study days, held at Ironbridge
2013
19th-20th October, 100th Anniversary of Stainless Steel at Cutlers' Hall in Sheffield
10th October, Research in Progress Meeting held in Exeter
14th-16th June, HMS 50th Anniversary Conference and AGM meeting held at Friends House in London
22nd-24th March, Archaeology Committee Workshop in the Hull Area
2012
6th November, Research in Progress Meeting held in Newcastle
6th-7th October, Not so much gold, silver, bronze - more copper, zinc and brass held at the SS Great Britain and in the Bristol area
25th-27th May, Furnaces, foundries and forges:Ironmaking heritage revisited and AGM meeting held in the Birmingham Area
2011
6th November, Research in Progress Meeting held in Sheffield
17th October, Metal Objects held in York joint with the Roman and Medieval Finds Groups
16th-18th September, HMS Annual Conference held in Cardiff joint with Historical Committee of the German Steel Institute
4th-5th June, Royalty, Religion and Rust! and AGM meeting held in Helmsley
2010
November, Research in Progress Meeting held in London
16th-18th September, Experimental Conference held at West Dean College
?, AGM meeting held in Cumbria
2009
10th-12th November, Archaeometallurgy Conference and Research in Progress Meeting held in Bradford
?, AGM meeting held in Cambridge
HMS ACC Study & Work Days
Twice a year the Archives and Collections Committee (ACC) run a study/work day at the Ironbridge Gorge Museum.
The study/work day is based on two topics: care of the archive collection, particularly the Ronnie Tylecote photographic archive and care of the slag collection. After brief introductions the day will mainly consist of workshops with ‘hands on’ work. In the archive with sorting photographs and assisting with storage for the safe care of the images, and in the warehouse sorting, identifying, re-boxing and cataloguing the Tylecote Slag Collection.
The date for the next event is the ...
To be confirmed! But will be held at The Long Warehouse, Ironbridge Gorge Museum Trust, Telford, Shropshire TF8 7DQ.
For further details of future events please contact Eddie Birch (Tel 01226 370331) or Louise Bacon louise.bacon@btopenworld.com
Photo gallery
Review
Having enlisted as a volunteer with the Ironbridge Gorge Museum to be involved with industrial archeology projects in the Gorge, I was forwarded the notice for the Historical Metallurgy Society Archives and Slag Collections open day. As a conservator specialising in metals, I have known about HMS for many years, but the open day, held almost on my doorstep, sounded intriguing, too good to miss, and provided the spur to join at last.
The day started with a welcome and brief introduction to the archives from Louise Bacon to the small group of us attending the open day, some like myself, new to the Society's activities and others who were established HMS activists. Louise gave us a description of the archive and its care.
David Dungworth followed with a description of the slag collections and for those of us new to the HMS, it was fascinating to learn from the two speakers, how much has been achieved in such a relatively short time, and it was pleasing to learn that there is such a close collaboration between the Society and the Ironbridge Institute.
Despite the two introductions, I still did not quite know what to expect when we were about to start the hands on workshop sessions. It soon became apparent though! I started with the paper and photographs group and a daunting quantity of partially archived material, mostly photographs, with some notes and a few reports that comprise the Tylecote archive. The earlier archiving had assembled the material into logical associations, but it needed our second sweep to refine it into directly related material, and for me at least, there was lots of 'ah, yes, this photo of a hole in the ground with a bit of a lintel is the same as one I saw earlier but from a different position - now where did I put that?' Very quickly we started working as a team, cross checking with each other, and the personal recollections of the 'old hands' were invaluable, often making sense of indecipherable images. Gradually things started to fall into place, and even link up with objects the slag collection group were finding.
After a break for lunch, a visit to the Museum of Iron and a walk around the old foundry site with Shane Kelleher of the Institute, who gave us an insight into the objects on display, the history and archeology of the site, most of us swapped activities and I went into the chilly stores to pick though boxes of slags, ores and a few bits of actual metal.
The materials are all part of the Tylecote Slag Collection, which is a distinct historical collection housed at the Institute, but owned by HMS, as opposed to the National Slag Collection, which is owned by the Institute, although both the Institute and HMS have a say in what is added to the National Slag Collection.
The Tylecote Collection was kept in an ad hoc selection of boxes in the Institute's stores. In the boxes were plastic bags of samples, labelled in various ways and our task was to catalogue them. The samples were re-bagged in numbered bags which corresponded with new archival boxes and the information was entered up by David Dungworth on a database as we progressed. Deciphering some of the labels in, shall we say 'distinctive' handwriting on damaged labels was a challenge, but again, the 'old hands' were often able to come to the rescue, recognising a vital clue and recalling a past expedition.
I thoroughly enjoyed the day, it was informative, fascinating, friendly, there is much more to do, but there was a sense of making a useful contribution and a job well done. I was a bit worried about how I'd tell my friends at 'The Golden Ball Debating and Philosophical Society' how I had spent my Saturday. Given the potential for puns on the main object of our attention, there aren't many ways that don't leave you open to ribaldry, but, to their credit, they didn't sink to the occasion and were genuinely interested - a bit mystified, maybe, but interested.
Review written by Andrew Naylor for The Crucible 83
2016 AGM Summer Meeting
Anniversary of Cyfarthfa Ironworks |
|
17th-19th June 2016 | |
Merthyr Tydfil | |
Tim Young |
This meeting celebrates two separate anniversaries
-
250th anniversary of the construction of Cyfarthfa Ironworks (1765-7)
- 225th anniversary of the first successful commercial implementation of the puddling process (1791)
Based in the Merthyr Tydfil area, this conference will discuss a range of related toptics including the story of puddling (technology, economics, social history, engineering implications, international adoption), as well as the wider story of iron conversion technology and the broader development, social history and context of the iron industry in Merthyr Tydfil and South Wales from 1750 to 1950. There will also be discussion of the development of Cyfarthfa Ironworks and its people (Bacon, the Homfrays, the Crawshays, their engineers and partners).
On Friday before the conference starts there is a rare opportunity to visit Ffos-y-fran opencast coal mine (book early as numbers limited). On Sunday there will be another excursion through the sites of the Taff Valley in Merthyr, excursion on foot (approx 7km) but transfer between many of the sites may be made by car. Sites to be visited include:
- Merthyr (Penydarren) Tramroad tunnel,
- Ynysfach Ironworks,
- Chapel Row,
- Cyfarthfa Ironworks
More information about the anniversaries, and ironworks and the call for papers is available here.
The provisional programme is here.
Link to booking form is here (this also includes travel and accommodation information). Online bookings will be open soon.
Accommodation is not provided by the society and it is suggested that delegates book into the Premier Inn adjacent to the conference venue, as early as possible to receive cheaper prices.
For more information please contact Tim Young
Iron in Archaeology Conference
Iron in Archaeology: Bloomery Smelters and Blacksmiths in Europe and Beyond | |
Conference in honour of Radomír Pleiner | |
Tuesday 30th May to Thursday the 1st June 2017 | |
Prague | |
Jiří Hošek on behalf of the Comité Pour la Sidérurgie Ancienne (CPSA) |
The aim of the conference is to bring together scholars involved in research on early ironworking and to share the newest results and experiences achieved in this field. Very welcome contributions are those informing about recently excavated bloomeries and smithies, about results of analyses of slags and iron artefacts, about new analytical methods developed, new trends and achieved results in experimental archaeometallurgy of iron etc. The conference is organised in honour of Radomír Pleiner in the 50th year of the CPSA.
The Historical Metallurgy Society is proud to be contributing to this event. As such two prizes sponsored by HMS will be awarded at this event for the best oral presentation and poster presentation by a student (or recent graduate within 12 months of graduation) at the meeting as chosen by those members of HMS Council present plus members of the conference scientific committee.
Call for papers details are available here
For more information please visit the conference website or contact Jiří Hošek
2016 Research in Progress Meeting
Research in Progress Meeting | |
Tuesday 29th November 2016 | |
University of Birmingham | |
Eleanor Blakelock |
This meeting is aimed at a wide variety of contributors, from historical and archaeological metallurgists to excavators, historians and economists. If you are working, or have just finished working, on a project related to archaeological or historical metallurgy, we would like to hear from you. We are particularly interested in bringing together contract and public sector archaeologists with academic researchers, and in fostering links between the different disciplines studying metallurgy and related activities. Whether you are a student, a researcher, an interested non-specialist, or a professional excavator, we invite you to meet others working in this field and present your research to an interested community.
A prize is awarded for the best presentation by a student (or recent graduate within 12 months of graduation) at the meeting as chosen by those members of HMS Council present.
NEW! In addition to the prize, The Historical Metallurgy Society is offering a small number of travel bursaries for students presenting papers. If you are a student and would like to be considered please indicate with your submission.
The event will be held in room GC 17 in Metallurgy and Materials Building. This is building G6 on the University campus map. A link to the map can be found here.
Call for papers details available here.
Link to programme will be available soon
Link to booking form will be available soon
For more information please contact
2016 AGM Summer Meeting
Anniversary of Cyfarthfa Ironworks |
|
17th-19th June 2016 | |
Merthyr Tydfil | |
Tim Young |
This meeting celebrates two separate anniversaries
-
250th anniversary of the construction of Cyfarthfa Ironworks (1765-7)
- 225th anniversary of the first successful commercial implementation of the puddling process (1791)
Based in the Merthyr Tydfil area, this conference will discuss a range of related toptics including the story of puddling (technology, economics, social history, engineering implications, international adoption), as well as the wider story of iron conversion technology and the broader development, social history and context of the iron industry in Merthyr Tydfil and South Wales from 1750 to 1950. There will also be discussion of the development of Cyfarthfa Ironworks and its people (Bacon, the Homfrays, the Crawshays, their engineers and partners).
On Friday before the conference starts there is a rare opportunity to visit Ffos-y-fran opencast coal mine (book early as numbers limited). On Sunday there will be another excursion through the sites of the Taff Valley in Merthyr, excursion on foot (approx 7km) but transfer between many of the sites may be made by car. Sites to be visited include:
- Merthyr (Penydarren) Tramroad tunnel,
- Ynysfach Ironworks,
- Chapel Row,
- Cyfarthfa Ironworks
More information about the anniversaries, and ironworks and the call for papers is available here.
The provisional programme is here and details of the presentations here.
Link to booking form is here (this also includes travel and accommodation information). Online bookings are now open, if you are attending the AGM this is free but if you would like lunch get in touch with Tim Young.
Accommodation is not provided by the society and it is suggested that delegates book into the Premier Inn adjacent to the conference venue, as early as possible to receive cheaper prices.
For more information please contact Tim Young
2016 Research in Progress Meeting
Research in Progress Meeting | |
Tuesday 29th November 2016 | |
University of Birmingham | |
Eleanor Blakelock |
This meeting is aimed at a wide variety of contributors, from historical and archaeological metallurgists to excavators, historians and economists. If you are working, or have just finished working, on a project related to archaeological or historical metallurgy, we would like to hear from you. We are particularly interested in bringing together contract and public sector archaeologists with academic researchers, and in fostering links between the different disciplines studying metallurgy and related activities. Whether you are a student, a researcher, an interested non-specialist, or a professional excavator, we invite you to meet others working in this field and present your research to an interested community.
A prize is awarded for the best presentation by a student (or recent graduate within 12 months of graduation) at the meeting as chosen by those members of HMS Council present.
NEW! In addition to the prize, The Historical Metallurgy Society is offering a small number of travel bursaries for students presenting papers. If you are a student and would like to be considered please indicate with your submission.
The event will be held in room GC 17 in Metallurgy and Materials Building. This is building G6 on the University campus map, the event is taking place in C Block. A link to the map can be found here.
Link to provisional programme is available here
Online booking for this event is now closed, as there are limited places available. If you wish to attend please contact me using the email below to ensure there is a seat available.
For more information please contact hmsRinPconf@hist-met.org
Experimental Event 2016
Experimental Event | |
Saturday 26th November 2016 | |
Down Farm, Cranborne | |
Gill Juleff and Jake Keen |
HMS, with Exeter University and the generous support of the GB Sasakawa Foundation, is pleased to be hosting three visitors from Japan. To give those interested in learning more about historical metallurgy in Japan as well as experimental smelting both here and in Japan, we are holding an informal day meeting centered around an experimental smelt by Jake Keen. The smelt will be outdoors but there is also a barn with tea-making facilities, power points and seating where there will be an opportunity to network with Professor Murakami and Yasufumi Sasazawa and Seiji Manabe. There may also be an opportunity for participants to join a guided tour of the archaeological sites and museum at Down Farm during the day.
Numbers will be limited, so if you are interested in attending please email Gill Juleff G.Juleff@exeter.ac.uk to secure your place or for more information.
Location: Martin Green’s Down Farm, Sixpenny Handley, Dorset SP5 5RY (grid reference ST 999 149). Turn off the A354 signposted Wimborne St Giles. Continue a short distance along this road. Take the tarmac lane on the right (signposted "Down Farm"). The farm is past the cottages on the right-hand side.
This event has kindly been sponsored by the Sasakawa foundation
AGM 2017 The metallurgy of our portable heritage
HMS AGM 2017 | |
Saturday 17th June 2017 | |
Institute of Archaeology, UCL, London |
|
Organised by Eleanor Blakelock |
The Historical Metallurgy Society in conjunction with the Portable Antiquities Scheme would like to invite submissions for papers for a study day on the metallurgy of our portable heritage. This meeting is aimed at a wide variety of contributors, from archaeological metallurgists, excavators, post-excavation specialists and PAS officers. The meeting is for open to anyone interested in finding out more about metal objects; be they gold, silver, copper alloy or iron.
The day will also include some invited speakers, but proposals for oral papers related to metallurgical aspects of the following topics are welcome:
• Using the PAS data for the analysis and/or interpretation of metal objects or assemblages
• Manufacture and use of small metal objects
• Recent work on small find assemblages from excavations
• New metal finds both from excavations and the PAS
• Metal conservation of our portable heritage
Abstracts of no more than 250 words are due by 31st of January, with the intention of revealing a programme in the middle of February. A colour abstract book will be produced so speakers are invited to also send one colour photo (maximum of 9MB) for inclusion with their abstract.
Call for papers details are here
Link to programme will be available soon
Link to booking form will be available soon
For more information please contact Eleanor Blakelock at events@hist-met.org
2017 Research in Progress Meeting
Research in Progress Meeting | |
Thursday 9th November 2017 | |
University of Liverpool | |
Dr Matthew Ponting |
This meeting is aimed at a wide variety of contributors, from historical and archaeological metallurgists to excavators, historians and economists. If you are working, or have just finished working, on a project related to archaeological or historical metallurgy, we would like to hear from you. We are particularly interested in bringing together contract and public sector archaeologists with academic researchers, and in fostering links between the different disciplines studying metallurgy and related activities. Whether you are a student, a researcher, an interested non-specialist, or a professional excavator, we invite you to meet others working in this field and present your research to an interested community.
A prize is awarded for the best presentation by a student (or recent graduate within 12 months of graduation) at the meeting as chosen by those members of HMS Council present.
NEW! In addition to the prize, The Historical Metallurgy Society is offering a small number of travel bursaries for students presenting papers. If you are a student and would like to be considered please indicate with your submission.
For the call for papers or more information please visit the university event website
AGM 2017 The metallurgy of our portable heritage
HMS AGM 2017 | |
Saturday 17th June 2017 | |
Institute of Archaeology, UCL, London |
|
Organised by Eleanor Blakelock |
The Historical Metallurgy Society in conjunction with the Portable Antiquities Scheme would like to invite submissions for papers for a study day on the metallurgy of our portable heritage. This meeting is aimed at a wide variety of contributors, from archaeological metallurgists, excavators, post-excavation specialists and PAS officers. The meeting is for open to anyone interested in finding out more about metal objects; be they gold, silver, copper alloy or iron.
The day will also include some invited speakers, but proposals for oral papers related to metallurgical aspects of the following topics are welcome:
• Using the PAS data for the analysis and/or interpretation of metal objects or assemblages
• Manufacture and use of small metal objects
• Recent work on small find assemblages from excavations
• New metal finds both from excavations and the PAS
• Metal conservation of our portable heritage
The registration fee is £25 which also includes all tea/coffee breaks and lunch (£20 for students). The HMS AGM is being held at 1pm and is free for all members, but please contact the organiser below in advance.
Link to programme is here and the abstract book is available here
This meeting is now SOLD OUT! Contact the organiser if you would like to be added to a reserve list.
For more information please contact Eleanor Blakelock at events@hist-met.org
AGM 2018 What is Mined is Yours
What's Mined is Yours: Making the most of our Metallurgical Heritage HMS AGM and British Museum joint conference |
|
Saturday 16th June 2018 | |
Stevenson Lecture Theatre British Museum | |
Loic Boscher Aude Mongiatti |
The study of historical and archaeological metallurgy is arguably at a turning point, having evolved out of the shared interests of industrial metallurgists, geologists, and archaeologists, it has coalesced into a discipline in its own right. Contemporary research is now un ravelling ever more information embedded within metallurgical remains, from the aesthetic significance of objects to the valuable material information contained within degradation and manufacturing waste products holding socio-cultural insights about trade and technologies. Helped along by technological advances, these new interpretative techniques have not been exclusively driven by esoteric academic pursuits but equally so by an increasing public awareness of the value of our metallurgical heritage. This is due to a confluence of social, political, and economic changes happening over the last few decades. Indeed, the normalising of metal detecting in many countries, the rising popularity of archaeology in the mainstream media, and the continued onward march of urban development highlighting the threat to a rapidly disappearing industrial landscape have all played a role in altering political and public perceptions of what constitutes valuable heritage. The challenge now lies in managing the ever expanding mountain of material, landscapes, and data available while simultaneously catalysing this wave of public interest to help preserve our metallurgical past.
The British Museum and the Historical Metallurgy Society would like to invite submissions for papers and poster presentations for this one day conference and the Socitety's AGM on the topic of the archaeology, conservation, analysis, and/or presentation of metallurgical heritage. A broad interpretation of this topic is welcomed, as are submissions from related fields, but we particularly encourage discussion within the following themes:
New approaches to the analysis and conservation of metallurgical remains and metallic objects
• Metallurgy, metals, and museums
• Metallurgical and industrial landscapes
• Public involvement and engagement
Abstracts for oral 20 minute and poster presentations should be submitted by 31 January 2018. Abstracts should be 250 words maximum in Word format, please include the name and affiliation of all authors (presenting author in bold) and send to hmsagmconf@hist-met.org
Call for papers details here
Link to programme will be available soon
Link to booking form and online booking will be available soon
For more information please contact hmsagmconf@hist-met.org
2018 Research in Progress
Research in Progress Meeting | |
Tuesday 6th November 2018 | |
Kings Manor, York | |
Vanessa Castagnino |
This meeting is aimed at a wide variety of contributors, from historical and archaeological metallurgists to excavators, historians, and economists. If you are working, or have just finished working, on a project related to archaeological or historical metallurgy, we would like to hear from you. We are particularly interested in bringing together contract and public-sector archaeologists with academic researchers, and in fostering links between the different disciplines studying metallurgy and related activities. Whether you are a student, a researcher, an interested non-specialist, or a professional excavator, we invite you to meet others working in this field and present your research to an interested community.
A prize is awarded for the best presentation by a student (or recent graduate within 12 months of graduation) at the meeting as chosen by those members of HMS Council present.
NEW! In addition to the prize, The Historical Metallurgy Society is offering a small number of travel bursaries for students presenting papers. If you are a student and would like to be considered, please indicate with your submission.
Call for papers details here
Link to provisional programme is here
Online bookings are now open please follow this link. The cost for this meeting is £30 for members and £15 for students, which includes tea/coffee and lunch.
For those in York and fancy dinner, join us at Las Iguanasin (21 Back Swinegate) at 7.00pm (please email the organiser below if you would like to join us), followed by The Hole In The Wall (9 High Petergate) from 9pm for a pint of real ale!
For more information please contact Vanessa Castagnino
AGM 2018 What is Mined is Yours
What's Mined is Yours:
HMS AGM and British Museum joint conference |
|
Saturday 16th June 2018 | |
Stevenson Lecture Theatre British Museum |
|
Loic Boscher Aude Mongiatti |
The study of historical and archaeological metallurgy is arguably at a turning point, having evolved out of the shared interests of industrial metallurgists, geologists, and archaeologists, it has coalesced into a discipline in its own right. Contemporary research is now un ravelling ever more information embedded within metallurgical remains, from the aesthetic significance of objects to the valuable material information contained within degradation and manufacturing waste products holding socio-cultural insights about trade and technologies. Helped along by technological advances, these new interpretative techniques have not been exclusively driven by esoteric academic pursuits but equally so by an increasing public awareness of the value of our metallurgical heritage. This is due to a confluence of social, political, and economic changes happening over the last few decades. Indeed, the normalising of metal detecting in many countries, the rising popularity of archaeology in the mainstream media, and the continued onward march of urban development highlighting the threat to a rapidly disappearing industrial landscape have all played a role in altering political and public perceptions of what constitutes valuable heritage. The challenge now lies in managing the ever expanding mountain of material, landscapes, and data available while simultaneously catalysing this wave of public interest to help preserve our metallurgical past.
The British Museum and the Historical Metallurgy Society would like to invite submissions for papers and poster presentations for this one day conference and the Socitety's AGM on the topic of the archaeology, conservation, analysis, and/or presentation of metallurgical heritage. A broad interpretation of this topic is welcomed, as are submissions from related fields, but we particularly encourage discussion within the following themes:
New approaches to the analysis and conservation of metallurgical remains and metallic objects
• Metallurgy, metals, and museums
• Metallurgical and industrial landscapes
• Public involvement and engagement
Link to the provisional programme is available here.
Booking is available through the British Museums booking system, we advise early booking as this event will be open to the general public as well as HMS members (who gain a discount). There is no charge to attend the AGM but if you intending to attend the AGM only, please inform the conference organisers hmsagmconf@hist-met.org
For more information please contact hmsagmconf@hist-met.org
Event of Interest to Members
Archaeometallurgy in Europe 2019 | |
19th to 21st of June | |
Miskole, Hungary | |
These conferences represent the most important forum for scientific discussion on early metalworking in Europe and other related regions of the Old World. The most important goal of this scientific symposium is to present new insights, new approaches and new results of complex examinations in the field of archaeometallurgy.
The fifth conference will be held in Miskolc, in Hungary, from the 19th to the 21st of June 2019. It is organized by the Institute of Metallurgy, the Institute of Physical Metallurgy, Metalforming and Nanotechnology and Department of Prehistory and Archaeology of the University of Miskolc (ME), represented by the Archaeometallurgical Research Group of the University of Miskolc (ARGUM), in collaboration with the Institute of Archaeology of the Research Centre for the Humanities of the Hungarian Academy of the Sciences (MTA BTK RI), the Special Committee of Materials Sciences and Technology of the Regional Committee of Miskolc of the Hungarian Academy of the Sciences (MTA MAB ATSZB), the Special Committee of Industrial Archaeology and Archaeometry of the Regional Committee of Veszprém of the Hungarian Academy of the Sciences (MTA VEAB IAMB) and the Archaeometry Research Group of the Institute for Geological and Geochemical Research of the Hungarian Academy of the Sciences (MTA GGI AKCS).
For more information visit their website http://aie2019.argum.hu/
HMS Offers Prize
The Historical Metallurgy Society (hist-met.org) is pleased to offer a HMS Prize for the Best Student Oral Presentation, and a HMS Prize for the Best Student Poster at the 2019 Archaeometallurgy in Europe Conference. The prizes will consist of a diploma, a free one-year subscription to HMS and a financial reward.
All posters and oral presentations with a student as lead author/presenter will be considered for these awards, those interested in being considered must email events@hist-met.org please include your name and the title of your presentation.
The judging panel, made up of members of the HMS Council and the Archaeometallurgy in Europe International Scientific Committee, will base their decision on the combined merits of the originality, rigour and significance of the research presented, as well as the design and delivery of the poster or presentation.
AGM 2019
Power and Control over Metallurgy Production HMS AGM Summer Meeting |
|
Saturday 8th June 2019 | |
Reading Town Hall | |
Eleanor Blakelock |
This meeting will explore how metal production was controlled in different societies, in the UK and further afield. The plan is to explore control in a range of periods, including how the Roman military controlled lead and iron production and the Anglo-Saxon elites use of precious metals in Anglo-Saxon palace workshops and beyond.
The venue for the meeting is Reading, which had one of the richest monasteries with a royal connection and the museum has a display of finds from nearby Silchester. The meeting will be held in the Victorian Town Hall.
Call for papers for oral presentations. We would be interested in papers on all aspects of metallurgy, ferrous and non-ferrous, from sites or collections associated with military, religious or elite settings where control may have been a factor. Or papers discussing the control of metallurgical production in past societies.
Link to the call for papers is available here.
For more information please contact us
2018 Research in Progress
Research in Progress Meeting | |
Tuesday 6th November 2018 | |
Kings Manor, York | |
Vanessa Castagnino |
Online bookings is closed as the event is full. Please contact the event organiser to go on the reserve list.
This meeting is aimed at a wide variety of contributors, from historical and archaeological metallurgists to excavators, historians, and economists. If you are working, or have just finished working, on a project related to archaeological or historical metallurgy, we would like to hear from you. We are particularly interested in bringing together contract and public-sector archaeologists with academic researchers, and in fostering links between the different disciplines studying metallurgy and related activities. Whether you are a student, a researcher, an interested non-specialist, or a professional excavator, we invite you to meet others working in this field and present your research to an interested community.
A prize is awarded for the best presentation by a student (or recent graduate within 12 months of graduation) at the meeting as chosen by those members of HMS Council present.
NEW! In addition to the prize, The Historical Metallurgy Society is offering a small number of travel bursaries for students presenting papers. If you are a student and would like to be considered, please indicate with your submission.
Call for papers details here
Link to provisional programme is here
Online bookings is closed as the event is full. Please contact the event organiser to go on the reserve list. The cost for this meeting is £30 for members and £15 for students, which includes tea/coffee and lunch.
For those in York and fancy dinner, join us at Las Iguanasin (21 Back Swinegate) at 7.00pm (please email the organiser below if you would like to join us), followed by The Hole In The Wall (9 High Petergate) from 9pm for a pint of real ale!
For more information please contact Vanessa Castagnino
Extra Event Cannon Casting 2019
The Ho Group, an experimental archaeology group who meet in Denmark and who are committed to research into early artillery and gunpowder, announce their latest, exciting, venture and invite you to participate.
Our latest project is to construct a replica of a late medieval reverbatory furnace and cast cannon as close as possible to late medieval and early modern methods and techniques. To this end, we have built an experimental small-scale reverbatory furnace using early 16th century documentation and we invite you to the first, experimental, casting in May 2019.
Although the first, experimental, furnace is built, it has not yet been tested and we are planning to melt about 250 kg of bronze and cast a number of small cannon. The moulds, made in precisely the same way as in the late medieval period, will be of a surviving mid-15th century cannon, and the melting and casting will be done with wood.
The project will take place in the week of the 11 – 18 May 2109 with the actual casting probably on the 15th/16th though this is not guaranteed. We would like you to join us, to participate and be a part of this unique project.
There is very limited accommodation at the Medieval Centre – available on a first come, first served basis. Hotel accommodation is also available at the Hotel Lieslund (within walking distance of the Centre) or at the Hotel Falster (some 5km away).
If you would like to join us for what, we are sure, will be a unique event, please contact Kay Smith at:
smithbrown@basiliscoe.com
Directions:
The casting will take place at the Medieval Centre, Middelaldercentret, in Nykobing, Falster some 100km south of Copenhagen. By air, Nykobing is easy to reach by train from Copenhagen. By road, the easiest way is via the Puttgarden/Rodby ferry from Germany.
Middelaldercentret, Ved Hamborgskoven 2-4, 4800 Nykøbing, Falster, Denmark
Event of Interest to Members
Archaeometallurgy in Europe 2019 | |
19th to 21st of June | |
Miskole, Hungary | |
These conferences represent the most important forum for scientific discussion on early metalworking in Europe and other related regions of the Old World. The most important goal of this scientific symposium is to present new insights, new approaches and new results of complex examinations in the field of archaeometallurgy.
The fifth conference will be held in Miskolc, in Hungary, from the 19th to the 21st of June 2019. It is organized by the Institute of Metallurgy, the Institute of Physical Metallurgy, Metalforming and Nanotechnology and Department of Prehistory and Archaeology of the University of Miskolc (ME), represented by the Archaeometallurgical Research Group of the University of Miskolc (ARGUM), in collaboration with the Institute of Archaeology of the Research Centre for the Humanities of the Hungarian Academy of the Sciences (MTA BTK RI), the Special Committee of Materials Sciences and Technology of the Regional Committee of Miskolc of the Hungarian Academy of the Sciences (MTA MAB ATSZB), the Special Committee of Industrial Archaeology and Archaeometry of the Regional Committee of Veszprém of the Hungarian Academy of the Sciences (MTA VEAB IAMB) and the Archaeometry Research Group of the Institute for Geological and Geochemical Research of the Hungarian Academy of the Sciences (MTA GGI AKCS).
For more information visit their website http://aie2019.argum.hu/
HMS Offers Prize
The Historical Metallurgy Society (hist-met.org) is pleased to offer a HMS Prize for the Best Student Oral Presentation, and a HMS Prize for the Best Student Poster at the 2019 Archaeometallurgy in Europe Conference. The prizes will consist of a diploma, a free one-year subscription to HMS and a financial reward.
All posters and oral presentations with a student as lead author/presenter will be considered for these awards, those interested in being considered must email events@hist-met.org please include your name and the title of your presentation.
The judging panel, made up of members of the HMS Council and the Archaeometallurgy in Europe International Scientific Committee, will base their decision on the combined merits of the originality, rigour and significance of the research presented, as well as the design and delivery of the poster or presentation.