Dr Jacob Baxter
@ernestjeb.bsky.social
300 followers 290 following 19 posts
Historian at the University of St Andrews exploring early modern statesman, readers and copyright. Deputy Director of @universalstc.bsky.social
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ernestjeb.bsky.social
It’s a pleasure to appear alongside such a great group of scholars in ‘The People of Print: Eighteenth-Century England’, overseen by the brilliant @elementaladam.bsky.social, Rachel Stenner and Kaley Kramer.

You can read it for free over the next two weeks here: doi.org/10.1017/9781...
ernestjeb.bsky.social
Big book history questions in the excellent finale of #RaceAcrossTheWorld
Reposted by Dr Jacob Baxter
universalstc.bsky.social
388 years ago TODAY, a chair was thrown at the Bishop of Edinburgh as he read from a book during a service. Riots followed shortly afterwards. In our latest blog, MLitt student William Lewis explores the book at the heart of the storm: www.ustc.ac.uk/news/a-war-o...
Reposted by Dr Jacob Baxter
universalstc.bsky.social
The latest issue of our Library Quarterly, dedicated to our work on France, is out now! You can read it and subscribe here: www.ustc.ac.uk/news/ustc-li...
ernestjeb.bsky.social
I had a lot of fun last week, discussing the private side of British politics @uio.no, at a brilliant symposium organised by the wonderful @aaronackerley.bsky.social!
Reposted by Dr Jacob Baxter
Reposted by Dr Jacob Baxter
universalstc.bsky.social
We are delighted to unveil the provisional programme for our upcoming conference on Newspapers and Periodicals, organised by @zbrookman.bsky.social, @apettegree.bsky.social and Arthur der Weduwen, which will take place on 17 June and from 19-21 June 2025. #USTC25
Reposted by Dr Jacob Baxter
royalhistsoc.org
Thursday is publication day for 'Reading, Gender and Identity in Seventeenth-Century England', by Hannah Jeans bit.ly/4c7Oufy

Hannah's is the next (and 22nd) title in the RHS New Historical Perspectives book series for early career historians, with
@ihr.bsky.social & @uolpress.bsky.social
Front cover of 'Reading, Gender and Identity in Seventeenth-Century England' by Hannah Jeans, which shows a line drawing of a woman reading
Reposted by Dr Jacob Baxter
earlymodernjohn.bsky.social
Really looking forward to speaking to the IHR's Low Countries seminar this evening in Bloomsbury. Join us!
onslies.bsky.social
THIS FRIDAY! Excited to welcome @earlymodernjohn.bsky.social to the #LowCountries seminar with a talk on "The notaries of the Royal Exchange: migration and translation between London and the Low Countries"

28 March, 17:30 @ihr.bsky.social & zoom: www.history.ac.uk/events/notar... #EarlyModern
picture of the Dutch church in London.It's a rather straight building with a tiny bell tower, and a bunch of skyscrapers around it.
ernestjeb.bsky.social
A double dose of @basilbowdler.bsky.social, what's not to love?
standrewshist.bsky.social
We’ve got talks on medieval witchcraft, the Duke of Marlborough, Qajar Iran and much, much more this week! Featuring our very own @basilbowdler.bsky.social!
Reposted by Dr Jacob Baxter
universalstc.bsky.social
🎺HEAR YE, HEAR YE:

We are happy announce our latest post, 'The Fabric of Everyday Life: Sumptuary Laws in Early Modern France', written by @cmfgillain.bsky.social, a postdoctoral researcher on the Communicating the Law in Europe, 1500-1750 project!

Read all about it: ustc.ac.uk/news/the-fab...
A seventeenth-century courtier dressed in a simpler style with fancier clothes he has abandoned bing arranged on a chair by a servant. The setting is an early modern interior with a tapestry on the wall and an open leaded window behing the courtier. Chairs line the wall. Below a poem in French explains the courtier's costume changes in response to a sumptuary edict.
Reposted by Dr Jacob Baxter
josephhone.bsky.social
Question for typography people: when did ‘R’ develop a curled tail (i.e. in ‘NATURE’ here) rather than its normal straight tail (‘MIRACLES’)? I know it’s a Grandjean signature (c.1700) but see it quite a bit in English books in the 1680s. Where does it come from? France?
ernestjeb.bsky.social
Having an absolute blast undertaking my Maddock Research Fellowship @marshslibrary.bsky.social! If any of you have any Dublin recommendations, let me know!
Reposted by Dr Jacob Baxter
universalstc.bsky.social
Learn more about the relationship between Polish print and the Latin language in the early modern period in our latest blog ‘We are Poles, so, of course, we print in Latin’ by COMLAWEU PhD student in @standrewshist.bsky.social, Paweł Pietrowcew!

www.ustc.ac.uk/news/we-are-...
The title page of a sixteenth century book entitled: 'LEXICON LATINOPOLONI-CUM EX OPTIMIS LATINAE LINGVAE SCRIPTORI-BUS CONCINNATUM, which is dated to 1564. There are some faded manuscript annotations under the main title of the text.
Reposted by Dr Jacob Baxter
helmer.bsky.social
CfP!

With Natasja Peeters, Jasper van der Steen, and Ton van Strien, I am organising the one-day Seventeenth-Century Society's conference on Family, Kinship, and Dynasty in the Early Modern Low Countries on 5 September 2025.

zeventiendeeeuw.wordpress.com/wp-content/u...
zeventiendeeeuw.wordpress.com
ernestjeb.bsky.social
One of the best dressed early modernists out there, @aberjack.bsky.social
mhafhs.bsky.social
Dear Friends,

International Military History Seminar

Dr Jack Abernethy ( @standrewshist.bsky.social ) will present on “The Dutch Republic’s Baltic Connections during the Eighty Years’ War 1568-1648”.

Date: 5 March 2025
Time: 15:00 CET
IRL & Zoom
🗃️ #EarlyModern
@forsvarshogskolan.bsky.social
Reposted by Dr Jacob Baxter
universalstc.bsky.social
As Spring approaches, it's the perfect time to plan this year's garden.🌳🌹🪴🌷

In our latest blog post, Book History MLitt student, William Lewis, offers Scottish garden inspiration in ‘A Scottish Country Garden: Horticultural Handbooks in a 1700 Edinburgh Book Auction’ ustc.ac.uk/news/a-scott...
a geometric plan for a garden divided equally in a grid with four different patterns in each quadrant
Reposted by Dr Jacob Baxter
universalstc.bsky.social
The latest issue of USTC Library Quarterly is here! We’ve got an update on our matching from @apettegree.bsky.social, and a fascinating article on female printers from @ewatson.bsky.social. You can read it here: www.ustc.ac.uk/news/ustc-li... #BookHistory #RareBooks #HerBook
Reposted by Dr Jacob Baxter
ewatson.bsky.social
It’s out! Today is publication day for Gender and the Book Trades, from the conference of the same name in June 2021. Huge thanks to everyone who contributed and read drafts of this behemoth's xxii + 492 pages. We are so proud of it and hope you enjoy. brill.com/edcollbook/t...
Gender and the Book Trades
"Gender and the Book Trades" published on 01 Jan 2025 by Brill.
brill.com
Reposted by Dr Jacob Baxter
brodiewaddell.bsky.social
My article on 'The Popular Politics of Local Petitioning' has now been published in the latest issue of @jbritishstudies.bsky.social!

#OpenAccess here: www.cambridge.org/core/journal...

I've also added it to the #PowerOfPetitioning bibliography: petitioning.history.ac.uk/2019/05/13/p...
Screenshot of an article: 'The Popular Politics of Local Petitioning in Early Modern England'. Abstract: 'This article examines the rise of a culture of local petitioning, through which growing numbers of ordinary people sought to win the support of state authorities through collective claims to represent the “voice of the people” at the local level. These participatory, subscriptional practices were an essential component in the intensification of popular politics in the seventeenth century. The analysis focuses on over 3,800 manuscript petitions submitted to the magistrates across fifteen jurisdictions with “sessions of the peace” in England, with nearly 1,000 dating from before 1640. Over the course of the early seventeenth century many, if not most, English parishes witnessed attempts to persuade the authorities through collective petitioning. Groups of neighbors across the kingdom formulated their grievances, organized subscription lists, and articulated their own role in the polity as “the inhabitants” or “the parishioners” of a particular community. In so doing, they not only directly shaped their own “little commonwealths” but also unintentionally helped to develop habits of political mobilization in a crucial period of English history.'
ernestjeb.bsky.social
The name's Cool. Benjamin Cool. (1700)
@universalstc.bsky.social 3136834.
Reposted by Dr Jacob Baxter
onslies.bsky.social
Look at this *delight* of a #LowCountries programme for @ihr.bsky.social! 🤩

So many faves! @mariekehendriksen.bsky.social Jazmine Contreras & Nicolaas Barr, Heleen Wyffels @earlymodernjohn.bsky.social @jeroenputtevils.bsky.social and Danny Noorlander

Fridays 5:30
www.history.ac.uk/seminars/low...
Spring Term

31 January	Marieke Hendriksen (Huygens), ‘Food history as history of knowledge: preservation technologies in the early modern Low Countries’
•	Wolfson Room 2 and online

14 February 	Jazmine Contreras (independent) and Nicolaas Barr (Washington): ‘Proprietary Victims: Holocaust Commemoration and Right-Wing Consolidation in the Netherlands’
•	Online only 

28 February	Heleen Wyffels (STCV), ‘Women, gender and social status in the early modern printing house’
•	Wolfson Room 2 and online
 
28 March	John Gallagher (Leeds), ‘The notaries of the Royal Exchange: migration and translation between London and the Low Countries?’
•	Wolfson Room 2 and online 
 

Summer Term 

23 May	Jeroen Puttevils (Antwerp), ‘Back to the Future: what can we learn about future thinking in the past from late medieval and early modern merchant correspondences from the Low Countries’
•	Wolfson Room 2 and online
 
6 June	Danny Noorlander (Oneonta), ‘The Dutch Garrison on the Gold Coast in the 17th Centur