The Aberdeen University
Review was a magazine about the University of Aberdeen in Scotland.
Publication History
The Aberdeen University Review began in 1913. No issue or contribution
copyright renewals were found for this serial. It continued into the 21st
century, though it does not appear to be published today.
-
1913-1926: HathiTrust has volumes
1-13 freely readable online.
Access may be restricted outside the United States.
- 1913-1914: The Internet
Archive has volume
1.
- 1914-1915: The Internet
Archive has volume
2.
- 1915-1916: The Internet
Archive has volume
3.
- 1916-1917: The Internet
Archive has volume
4.
- 1917-1918: The Internet
Archive has volume
5.
- 1919-1920: The Internet
Archive has volume
7.
- 1920-1921: The Internet
Archive has volume
8.
- 1921-1922: The Internet
Archive has volume
9.
THE proposal to found an Aberdeen University Magazine or
Review was brought before the General Council in April, 1912, and was
remitted to the Business Committee of the Council for consideration. On this
Committee’s report the Council, in October of the same year, appointed a
special Committee with powers to prepare estimates and a prospectus; to
submit them to the University
Court; and to send them with a form of subscription to each member of the
Council. The Court and the Senatus gave their general approval to the scheme
prepared by the Committee, and ultimately no fewer than 950 promises of
subscription were received from graduates and alumni of the University. A
Committee of Management was formed, consisting of six members elected by the
University Court, six by the Senatus, and twelve by the General Council,
along with the President of the Students’ Representative Council, and five
other persons co-opted by the Committee. The Principal is Chairman, Mr.
Charles Macgregor, Secretary, and Mr. James W. Garden, Treasurer. The more
important offices of convener of the Editorial Sub-Committee and of the
Business Sub-Committee have been entrusted to Mr. Alexander Mackie and Mr.
W. Stewart Thomson. Mr. Mackie will be assisted by Mr. Robert Anderson and
Mr. W. Keith Leask. The other members of his committee are Professors
Grierson, Arthur Thomson and Baillie; Mr. P. J. Anderson, Mr. Stewart
Thomson, and Miss Williamina Rait.
Such have been the deliberate and careful origins of The ABERDEEN University
Review, the first number of which is now submitted to the subscribers. The
intention is to publish three numbers Scottish sisters, a great increase of
resources, and this not too soon to meet the rapidly multiplying needs and
opportunities of the intellectual life of our time: the division of old
sciences and the rise of new ones, as well as the demands for efficient
training in the material and moral problems of civilisation, which are made
by men and women engaged in commerce and industry and the public services.
New questions of academic policy have arisen not only with regard to the
proper allocation of those additional funds, but also concerning the
conditions on which they are granted, and the relations in which they
involve the Universities with the State (or its Departments), and with other
bodies charged with their disbursement. In all this there is much matter for
our Review ; and efforts will be made to state with justice and intelligence
the complex problems of policy which it raises.
But the main business of the Review must be to keep the graduates of the
University informed of her activities in education and research. How
necessary such regular information is, how swiftly a University in this
century grows away from the knowledge of her own alumni, who have left her
to work at a distance, may be appreciated from the following comparison.
Twenty years ago, in 1892-3, there were on the regular teaching staff
twenty-two professors, five lecturers, and sixteen assistants to professors:
in all forty-three. Now there are twenty-five professors and thirty-three
lecturers, of whom twelve, along with thirty-one others, are assistants to
professors. Then there were nine external examiners, now there are
thirty-one. Between 1890 and 1900, the average number of students was 830,
while last session there were 1042 (724 men and 318 women); the highest
annual roll in the history of the University, though whether such a number
can be maintained in face of the volume of emigration from the North and
North-east of Scotland is very doubtful. Within the last few years there
have been new Ordinances in Arts, Law and Medicine, the degree of LL.B, has
been founded, and for the former system of class fees Inclusive Fees have
been substituted for courses leading to degrees in Arts, Pure Science, Law
and Medicine. A new block of buildings, with eleven rooms for English,
History, French and German, has been erected at King’s College; and the
Carnegie Trust has allocated enough of its next Quinquennial Grant to the
University for a large extension of the Library at King’s, and the erection
of an Examination Hall. We hope to give from time to time reports of all
these and other changes and expansions in the equipment, the teaching and
the discipline of the University, as well as of their educational and
financial results.
We shall be happy if, in addition to the record of such facts and opinions,
we are able to reinforce through the REVIEW—whether by prose or verse—those
impulses, immeasurable by statistics and independent of curricula and
degrees, by which the atmosphere and associations of our University have
moulded the character of her students. Her graduates, scattered over the
world, number now over 5000. annually, one during each of the three terms
into which the academic year is now divided.
The Review is not to be regarded as the official organ of the University.
But the constitution of the Committee of Management, and the support of all
the governing bodies of the University, ensure that it shall be
representative of our academic life in every direction. The contents will
comprise summary records of the proceedings of the Court, the Senatus and
the Council, with notices of all educational and administrative changes, as
well as of new grants, gifts and bequests; detailed accounts of the various
departments and curricula, with reports of special studies and researches ;
abstracts of notable papers and lectures ; studies in the history of the
University; biographies and bibliographies; occasional reports from other
Universities ; correspondence on University questions ; and articles on
letters, philosophy, science and education.
These contents are proper to every University Review. We shall endeavour
besides to inspire our own with the memories, the atmosphere and the genius
which are peculiar to Aberdeen. Our University has a history second to no
other of the land in the weight of its traditions and the brilliant variety
of its examples. Her founders planned her on more liberal lines than any
other Scottish school of the time, and if the realisation of their ideals
was delayed for centuries by the comparative scantiness of her resources,
she found a moral compensation for this in the close touch which she has
always maintained with the popular life about her, and in those energies and
habits of hard work, which were fostered alike by the poverty of her
students, and by the invigorating climate in which she is set. We are not
more proud of the eminent benefactors who have judged our University worthy
of the use of their wealth, than we are of the longer list of humble men and
women whose devotion to her of the thrift of their laborious and unselfish
lives has been by far the noblest tribute to her power and will to serve the
common people of this part of the Kingdom. How she has discharged her trust
is to be measured by that unceasing supply of recruits whom she has trained
for the services of the commonwealth and empire, and by the large proportion
of these who, from the lowliest origins, have risen by the help of her hand
to the first places in their professions: who have governed provinces,
administered the national justice and led armies, who have explored new
territories and widened the boundaries of science, who have been leaders in
the practice of medicine and surgery, who have been pioneers in education
and founders or presidents of colleges and universities, or who have
influenced philosophy and inspired religion. Part of the duty of our REVIEW
is to repeat to the hearts of the present ranks of the University some of
this strenuous music of her past.
Recent years have brought to the University of Aberdeen, as to her
Wheresoever they be, may these pages bring back to them something of her
northern air, and of the sound of her open sea and her rivers; and fortify
them in that affectionate loyalty to herself and to one another which has
always distinguished the sons of King’s and of Marischal. Floreat Alma
Mater, Floreant Filii!
GEORGE ADAM SMITH. You can
download Volume 1 here in pdf format |