Credits
Editorial
- Professor Michael Hunter (editor)
- Dr Alison Wiggins (series editor, CELL online editions)
Technical
- Dr Jan Broadway (technical director)
- Dr Alison Wiggins (interface design)
- Stella Wong (technical assistant)
Research Assistance
Institutions
- This edition was created and is hosted by the Centre for Editing Lives and Letters (CELL), a research centre funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Board and located at Queen Mary, University of London.
- A grant from The Wellcome Trust provided technical and research assistance for the current project.
- Digitisation of the Royal Society manuscripts was made possible by a grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund. This included ancillary costs associated with digitisation, such as valuation, transport, portable hard drives, etc.
- The Royal Society facilitated photography of the manuscripts and granted permission for the images to appear on this site.
- The British Library facilitated digitisation of Additional MS 4293 and granted permission for images to appear on this site.
- Birkbeck College provided IT and administrative support.
Thanks
Special thanks must go to:
- The library and archive staff of the Royal Society for the endless help provided in facilitating access to the manuscripts throughout the project. The interest of Joanna Corden and Karen Peters of the Royal Society in the project and the contribution of their time and support, expertise and advice, have been invaluable.
- Professor Lawrence Principe who has given extensive voluntary help in advising on alchemical and other matters.
- Dr Harriet Knight for her many valuable insights and helpful suggestions.
Contributors to the 1997 2001 Workdiaries Project
The CELL edition incorportes XML-encoded transcripts of the workdiaries which were produced between 1997 and 2001 for a project funded by the Wellcome Institute and hosted at Birkbeck College, University of London. This project was directed by Professor Michael Hunter. Transcription and XML encoding was by Dr Charles Littleton. Transcription checking and biographical research was by Dr Ben Coates and Dr Lien Bich Luu. Advice was provided at this stage by Lou Burnard of the TEI Consortium and the Humanities Computing Unit, Oxford University; Brian Fuchs of the Max-Planck Institut für Wissenschaftsgeschichte, Berlin; and the Perseus Project.