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The Glasgow Archaeological Society is an archaeological society in Glasgow, Scotland, that was established in 1856. Its current president is Dale Bilsland. [1]The society is known for its Dalrymple Lectures, co-hosted with the University of Glasgow.
Following her presidency, Robertson served as Honorary Secretary of the Society from 1965 to 1972. A special issue of the Glasgow Archaeological Journal was published in her honour in 1976 "in gratitude for her outstanding services to scholarship - specifically, to the study of Roman Scotland - and to the Glasgow Archaeological Society". [7]
The Scottish Archaeological Journal is a peer-reviewed academic journal of the archaeology of Scotland. It is published by Edinburgh University Press and was previously known as the Transactions of the Glasgow Archaeological Society (1859 to 1967) and the Glasgow Archaeological Journal (1969 to 1991). [1] [2]
Ludovic McLellan Mann (1869 in Langside, Glasgow–1955) was a Scottish archaeologist and antiquarian. [1] By profession, Mann was a chartered accountant and insurance broker who was chairman of the firm Mann, Ballantyne & Co, Insurance Brokers and Independent Neutral Advisors that had offices in Glasgow and London.
The Society of Antiquaries of Scotland has three main publishing outputs: Peer-reviewed Books, previously known as monographs, covering a wide variety of topics in the history and archaeology of Scotland. The Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland (ISSN 0081-1564), a yearly peer-reviewed journal covering the latest archaeological ...
From 1870 to 1872 and from 1878 to 1880 Dalrymple Duncan was President of the Kirkintilloch Agricultural Society. [15] He was Secretary of the Glasgow Archaeological Society from 1877. [16] He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh in January 1889. [17]
Coleman, R (2005 ) '133-139 Finnieston Street, Glasgow City (Glasgow parish), 18th/19th-century glass and pottery works', Discovery and Excavation in Scotland, 6, 2005, 74-75, Cossons, N. 1987, The BP Book of Industrial Archaeology, 2nd revised edition, Newton Abbott: David & Charles Publishers.
He was also a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland (FSA Scot.), an Honorary Research Fellow of Hunterian Museum until 2005 and an Honorary Research Associate of the National Museums of Scotland from 2007. Mackie was also a member of the Prehistoric Society and Glasgow Archaeological Society, of which he was president in the 1980s.