The Antiquary
John Aubrey's Historical Scholarship
Kelsey Jackson Williams
Reviews and Awards
Shortlisted for the 2017 Katharine Briggs Folklore Award
"Williams's book is never dry but is eloquent, economical, and highly enjoyable, garnished with incisive aphorisms and-as always with Aubrey-those minute but humanizing details that vivify the whole picture...Such future work will need to draw carefully on Williams's rich scholarship." - Niall Allsopp, University of Exeter, Notes and Queries
"This book prioritizes depth over breadth, drawing on close study of the Aubrey manuscripts (and much besides) in the Bodleian Library. While this archive has been mined before, the sustained attention lavished on individual manuscripts, especially the Monumenta Britannica, opens up valuable new insights into Aubrey's scholarly contexts, working methods, and habits of mind" - Niall Allsopp, University of Exeter, Notes and Queries
"The Antiquary earns its place on the reading list of anyone interested in Aubrey's antiquarian writings and the Brief Lives, his undisputed masterpiece. And it invites, too, a wider readership of those now committed, as Aubrey once was, to the material, archeological, and imaginative recovery of how people thought and spoke, fought and lived." - Andrea Walkden, Project Muse
"both highly readable and refreshingly judicious" - Stewart Mottram, Renaissance Quarterly
"The Antiquary constitutes a major and very welcome reassessment not only of a significant (and extremely well connected) seventeenth century scholar, but also of the whole antiquarian project itself." - Angus Vine, The Seventeenth Century
"Kelsey Williamss book enables us to appreciate how extensive the antiquarian researches of an industrious scholar could become in the second half of the seventeenth century. It helps us to understand how a new way of looking at the past grew to possess the imagination of a generation of well-educated men through the experience of a single remarkable individual." - Graham Parry, Spenser Review
"In a compact and concise volume, Williams manages to survey and analyze a remarkable range of Aubreys scholarship on physical and textual historical evidence alike ... Above all, Williams shows, the understanding of antiquarians, their worldviews, and practices is ill served by a one-size-fits-all approach, as well as by the isolation of any one nations antiquaries from the republic of letters." - Reid Barbour, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
"Written with wit, verve, and not a little erudition, The Antiquary constitutes a major and very welcome reassessment not only of a significant (and extremely well connected) seventeenthcentury scholar, but also of the whole antiquarian project itself in terms of methodology and discipline, but also, just as importantly, narrative and style." - Angus Vine, The Seventeenth Century