Pages that link to "Item:Q1765386"
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The following pages link to The Cambridge Mathematical Journal and its descendants: the linchpin of a research community in the early and mid-Victorian age (Q1765386):
Displaying 13 items.
- Robert Leslie Ellis's work on philosophy of science and the foundations of probability theory (Q391357) (← links)
- The \textit{Bullettino di Bibliografia e di Storia delle Scienze Matematiche e Fisiche} (1868--1887), an example of the internationalisation of research (Q508122) (← links)
- Launching mathematical research without a formal mandate: the role of university-affiliated journals in Britain, 1837--1870 (Q885087) (← links)
- ``A valuable monument of mathematical genius'': The Ladies' Diary(1704-1840) (Q1006723) (← links)
- The \textit{College of Perceptors} and the \textit{Educational Times}: Changes for British mathematics education in the mid-nineteenth century (Q1406944) (← links)
- A prosopographical analysis of the early American mathematics publication community (Q1765385) (← links)
- From student club to national society: The founding of the London Mathematical Society in 1865 (Q1908666) (← links)
- The \textit{Mathematical Miscellany} and the \textit{Cambridge Miscellany of Mathematics}: closely connected attempts to introduce research-level mathematics in America, 1836--1843 (Q2426750) (← links)
- Conservative attitudes to old-established organs: Oliver Lodge and \textit{Philosophical Magazine} (Q2825616) (← links)
- Mathematical questions: a convergence of mathematical practices in British journals of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries (Q2928240) (← links)
- Fit to print? Referee reports on mathematics for the nineteenth-century journals of the Royal Society of London (Q3104250) (← links)
- British mathematics 1837–1901 (Q3426309) (← links)
- The British development of the theory of invariants (1841–1895) (Q3426311) (← links)