Example of Transactions of the Royal Historical Society format
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Example of Transactions of the Royal Historical Society format Example of Transactions of the Royal Historical Society format Example of Transactions of the Royal Historical Society format Example of Transactions of the Royal Historical Society format Example of Transactions of the Royal Historical Society format Example of Transactions of the Royal Historical Society format Example of Transactions of the Royal Historical Society format Example of Transactions of the Royal Historical Society format Example of Transactions of the Royal Historical Society format Example of Transactions of the Royal Historical Society format Example of Transactions of the Royal Historical Society format Example of Transactions of the Royal Historical Society format Example of Transactions of the Royal Historical Society format Example of Transactions of the Royal Historical Society format Example of Transactions of the Royal Historical Society format
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Example of Transactions of the Royal Historical Society format Example of Transactions of the Royal Historical Society format Example of Transactions of the Royal Historical Society format Example of Transactions of the Royal Historical Society format Example of Transactions of the Royal Historical Society format Example of Transactions of the Royal Historical Society format Example of Transactions of the Royal Historical Society format Example of Transactions of the Royal Historical Society format Example of Transactions of the Royal Historical Society format Example of Transactions of the Royal Historical Society format Example of Transactions of the Royal Historical Society format Example of Transactions of the Royal Historical Society format Example of Transactions of the Royal Historical Society format Example of Transactions of the Royal Historical Society format Example of Transactions of the Royal Historical Society format
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Transactions of the Royal Historical Society — Template for authors

Categories Rank Trend in last 3 yrs
History #98 of 1328 up up by 6 ranks
journal-quality-icon Journal quality:
High
calendar-icon Last 4 years overview: 29 Published Papers | 39 Citations
indexed-in-icon Indexed in: Scopus
last-updated-icon Last updated: 02/07/2020
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Journal Performance & Insights

CiteRatio

SCImago Journal Rank (SJR)

Source Normalized Impact per Paper (SNIP)

A measure of average citations received per peer-reviewed paper published in the journal.

Measures weighted citations received by the journal. Citation weighting depends on the categories and prestige of the citing journal.

Measures actual citations received relative to citations expected for the journal's category.

1.3

30% from 2019

CiteRatio for Transactions of the Royal Historical Society from 2016 - 2020
Year Value
2020 1.3
2019 1.0
2018 0.9
2017 1.3
2016 1.2
graph view Graph view
table view Table view

0.206

4% from 2019

SJR for Transactions of the Royal Historical Society from 2016 - 2020
Year Value
2020 0.206
2019 0.198
2018 0.11
2017 0.419
2016 0.426
graph view Graph view
table view Table view

2.582

10% from 2019

SNIP for Transactions of the Royal Historical Society from 2016 - 2020
Year Value
2020 2.582
2019 2.345
2018 1.417
2017 0.965
2016 2.189
graph view Graph view
table view Table view

insights Insights

  • CiteRatio of this journal has increased by 30% in last years.
  • This journal’s CiteRatio is in the top 10 percentile category.

insights Insights

  • SJR of this journal has increased by 4% in last years.
  • This journal’s SJR is in the top 10 percentile category.

insights Insights

  • SNIP of this journal has increased by 10% in last years.
  • This journal’s SNIP is in the top 10 percentile category.
Transactions of the Royal Historical Society

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Cambridge University Press

Transactions of the Royal Historical Society

The Royal Historical Society has published the highest quality scholarship in history for over 150 years. A subscription includes a substantial annual volume of the Societys Transactions, which presents wide-ranging reports from the front lines of historical research by both s...... Read More

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Last updated on
02 Jul 2020
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ISSN
0080-4401
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Acceptance Rate
Not provided
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Frequency
Not provided
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Open Access
Yes
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Sherpa RoMEO Archiving Policy
Green faq
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Plagiarism Check
Available via Turnitin
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Endnote Style
Download Available
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Citation Type
Numbered
[25]
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Bibliography Example
G E Blonder, M Tinkham, and T M Klapwijk. Transition from metallic to tunneling regimes in superconducting microconstrictions: Excess current, charge imbalance, and supercurrent conversion. Phys. Rev. B, 25(7):4515–4532, 1982. 10.1103/PhysRevB.25.4515.

Top papers written in this journal

Journal Article DOI: 10.2307/3678899
The Oculus Sacerdotis and Some Other Works of William of Pagula

Abstract:

One of the results of the Fourth Lateran Council in 1215 was a heightening of interest in the cure of souls, and the years that followed the Council saw a generous effort on the part of prelates to provide, in accordance with the Lateran directives, a better–educated clergy who could bring the laity to a reasonable understand... One of the results of the Fourth Lateran Council in 1215 was a heightening of interest in the cure of souls, and the years that followed the Council saw a generous effort on the part of prelates to provide, in accordance with the Lateran directives, a better–educated clergy who could bring the laity to a reasonable understanding of the essentials of Christian belief and practice. In England, during the reign of Henry III, nearly every diocese contributed to the movement for reform, chiefly by statutes modelled upon or deriving from decrees of Innocent III's great council. The Council of Oxford in 1222, the Council and Constitutions of the Legate Otto at London in 1237 and of the Legate Ottobono at London in 1268, catered in varying degrees for the Church in England as a whole. read more read less

Topics:

Lateran council (68%)68% related to the paper, Reign (50%)50% related to the paper
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161 Citations
Journal Article DOI: 10.2307/3679274
Against ‘Englishness’: English Culture and the Limits to Rural Nostalgia, 1850–1940

Abstract:

OVER the last fifteen years, a substantial literature has welled up, practically from nowhere, purporting to anatomise ‘Englishness’. ‘Englishness’, this literature suggests, is not a true estimate of national character, an enduring national essence, but rather a historical construct that was developed towards the end of the ... OVER the last fifteen years, a substantial literature has welled up, practically from nowhere, purporting to anatomise ‘Englishness’. ‘Englishness’, this literature suggests, is not a true estimate of national character, an enduring national essence, but rather a historical construct that was developed towards the end of the nineteenth century by the ‘dominant classes’ in British society in order to tame or thwart the tendencies of their day towards modernism, urbanism and democracy that might otherwise have overwhelmed elite culture. These aspirations for social control determined the lineaments of the new ‘Englishness’. Nostalgic, deferential and rural, ‘Englishness’ identified the squire-archical village of Southern or ‘Deep’ England as the template on which the national character had been formed and thus the ideal towards which it must inevitably return. Purveyed by the ‘dominant classes’ to the wider culture by means of a potent array of educational and political instruments—ranging from the magazine Country Life to the folk-song fad to the National Trust to Stanley Baldwin's radio broadcasts—‘Englishness’ reversed the modernising thrust of the Indus-trial Revolution and has condemned late twentieth-century Britain to economic decline, cultural stagnation and social division. read more read less
150 Citations
Journal Article DOI: 10.1017/S0080440100017576
Commerce in the Dark Ages: A Critique of the Evidence

Abstract:

When Pirenne contributed an article entitled ‘Mahomet et Charlemagne’ to the first issue of the Revue Belge de Philologie et d'Histoire in 1922, he can have little realized how the ideas he there put forward were to be developed. His paper was designed as a protest against the traditional and deep-rooted conviction of western... When Pirenne contributed an article entitled ‘Mahomet et Charlemagne’ to the first issue of the Revue Belge de Philologie et d'Histoire in 1922, he can have little realized how the ideas he there put forward were to be developed. His paper was designed as a protest against the traditional and deep-rooted conviction of western scholars that Latin Christendom was the direct and almost the sole heir of classical antiquity. Its argument was the now familiar one that Greco-Roman society survived with little change the shock of the Germanic invasions, and that it was only the appearance of Islam upon the scene that pushed the centre of Latin Christendom away from the Mediterranean and made possible the emergence of a new cultural unit based upon the land mass of western Europe. Medieval Christendom was not a continuation of the Roman world but something new, and Muhammed was a necessary precursor of Charlemagne read more read less

Topics:

Classical antiquity (54%)54% related to the paper
150 Citations
Journal Article DOI: 10.2307/3679189
The Uses of Literacy in Anglo-Saxon England and its Neighbours

Abstract:

As the recent lament over falling standards by the Secretary-General of the United Nations reminds us, universal literacy is today considered a necessary feature of civilized society. This may be one reason why the problem of medieval literacy, of a society where the ability to read and write was apparently confined to a cler... As the recent lament over falling standards by the Secretary-General of the United Nations reminds us, universal literacy is today considered a necessary feature of civilized society. This may be one reason why the problem of medieval literacy, of a society where the ability to read and write was apparently confined to a clerical elite has so intrigued modern historians. In this paper, I wish to reconsider the extent of lay literacy in England before the Conquest. But first we must be clear what we mean by literacy. The ability to read does not necessarily imply the ability to write. To take only the most famous medieval example, Charlemagne could speak Latin, and enjoy the City of God , but he never learnt to write. What Parkes calls ‘pragmatic literacy’ may extend from the capacity to recognize, if not sign, one's own name, to the ability to write a formal document in Latin. What might be called ‘cultured literacy’ could range from reading free prose in the vernacular to composing Latin in the classical tradition. The more advanced types of pragmatic literacy might well overlap with the more basic cultured levels. But it is obvious that we cannot deduce a widespread ability to read any-thing from the fact that the names of owners or makers were some-times engraved upon Anglo-Saxon coins, weapons or memorials; or a generally high standard of lay culture from the fact that there were documents in the vernacular. If we are to describe early English society as literate in a sense that would satisfy the ancient, or later medieval, historian, we must show that the proportion of laymen able to read at least a vernacular writ or poem was socially, if not statistically, significant. read more read less

Topics:

Literacy (60%)60% related to the paper, Vernacular (55%)55% related to the paper
138 Citations
Journal Article DOI: 10.2307/3679175
The Idea of ‘Character’ in Victorian Political Thought

Abstract:

When in the summer of 1902 Helen Bosanquet published a book called The Strength of the People she sent a copy to Alfred Marshall. On the face of it, this might seem a rather unpromising thing to have done. Mrs Bosanquet, an active exponent of the Charity Organisation Society's ‘casework’ approach to social problems, had frequ... When in the summer of 1902 Helen Bosanquet published a book called The Strength of the People she sent a copy to Alfred Marshall. On the face of it, this might seem a rather unpromising thing to have done. Mrs Bosanquet, an active exponent of the Charity Organisation Society's ‘casework’ approach to social problems, had frequently expressed her dissatisfaction with what she regarded as the misleading abstractions of orthodox economics, and in her book she had even ventured a direct criticism of a point in Marshall's Principles. Marshall, then Professor of Political Economy at Cambridge and at the peak of his reputation as the most authoritative exponent of neo-classical economics in Britain, was, to say the least, sensitive to criticism, and he had, moreover, publicly taken issue with the C.O.S. on several previous occasions. But perhaps Mrs Bosanquet knew what she was about after all. In her book she had taken her text from the early nineteenth-century Evangelical Thomas Chalmers on the way in which character determines circumstances rather than vice versa, and, as the historian of the C.O.S. justly remarks, her book ‘is a long sermon on the importance of character in making one family rich and another poor’. Although Marshall can hardly have welcomed the general strictures on economics, he was able to reassure Mrs Bosanquet that ‘in the main’ he agreed with her: ‘I have always held’, he wrote to her, ‘that poverty and pain, disease and death are evils of greatly less importance than they appear, except in so far as they lead to weakness of life and character’. read more read less
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130 Citations
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Frequently asked questions

1. Can I write Transactions of the Royal Historical Society in LaTeX?

Absolutely not! Our tool has been designed to help you focus on writing. You can write your entire paper as per the Transactions of the Royal Historical Society guidelines and auto format it.

2. Do you follow the Transactions of the Royal Historical Society guidelines?

Yes, the template is compliant with the Transactions of the Royal Historical Society guidelines. Our experts at SciSpace ensure that. If there are any changes to the journal's guidelines, we'll change our algorithm accordingly.

3. Can I cite my article in multiple styles in Transactions of the Royal Historical Society?

Of course! We support all the top citation styles, such as APA style, MLA style, Vancouver style, Harvard style, and Chicago style. For example, when you write your paper and hit autoformat, our system will automatically update your article as per the Transactions of the Royal Historical Society citation style.

4. Can I use the Transactions of the Royal Historical Society templates for free?

Sign up for our free trial, and you'll be able to use all our features for seven days. You'll see how helpful they are and how inexpensive they are compared to other options, Especially for Transactions of the Royal Historical Society.

5. Can I use a manuscript in Transactions of the Royal Historical Society that I have written in MS Word?

Yes. You can choose the right template, copy-paste the contents from the word document, and click on auto-format. Once you're done, you'll have a publish-ready paper Transactions of the Royal Historical Society that you can download at the end.

6. How long does it usually take you to format my papers in Transactions of the Royal Historical Society?

It only takes a matter of seconds to edit your manuscript. Besides that, our intuitive editor saves you from writing and formatting it in Transactions of the Royal Historical Society.

7. Where can I find the template for the Transactions of the Royal Historical Society?

It is possible to find the Word template for any journal on Google. However, why use a template when you can write your entire manuscript on SciSpace , auto format it as per Transactions of the Royal Historical Society's guidelines and download the same in Word, PDF and LaTeX formats? Give us a try!.

8. Can I reformat my paper to fit the Transactions of the Royal Historical Society's guidelines?

Of course! You can do this using our intuitive editor. It's very easy. If you need help, our support team is always ready to assist you.

9. Transactions of the Royal Historical Society an online tool or is there a desktop version?

SciSpace's Transactions of the Royal Historical Society is currently available as an online tool. We're developing a desktop version, too. You can request (or upvote) any features that you think would be helpful for you and other researchers in the "feature request" section of your account once you've signed up with us.

10. I cannot find my template in your gallery. Can you create it for me like Transactions of the Royal Historical Society?

Sure. You can request any template and we'll have it setup within a few days. You can find the request box in Journal Gallery on the right side bar under the heading, "Couldn't find the format you were looking for like Transactions of the Royal Historical Society?”

11. What is the output that I would get after using Transactions of the Royal Historical Society?

After writing your paper autoformatting in Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, you can download it in multiple formats, viz., PDF, Docx, and LaTeX.

12. Is Transactions of the Royal Historical Society's impact factor high enough that I should try publishing my article there?

To be honest, the answer is no. The impact factor is one of the many elements that determine the quality of a journal. Few of these factors include review board, rejection rates, frequency of inclusion in indexes, and Eigenfactor. You need to assess all these factors before you make your final call.

13. What is Sherpa RoMEO Archiving Policy for Transactions of the Royal Historical Society?

SHERPA/RoMEO Database

We extracted this data from Sherpa Romeo to help researchers understand the access level of this journal in accordance with the Sherpa Romeo Archiving Policy for Transactions of the Royal Historical Society. The table below indicates the level of access a journal has as per Sherpa Romeo's archiving policy.

RoMEO Colour Archiving policy
Green Can archive pre-print and post-print or publisher's version/PDF
Blue Can archive post-print (ie final draft post-refereeing) or publisher's version/PDF
Yellow Can archive pre-print (ie pre-refereeing)
White Archiving not formally supported
FYI:
  1. Pre-prints as being the version of the paper before peer review and
  2. Post-prints as being the version of the paper after peer-review, with revisions having been made.

14. What are the most common citation types In Transactions of the Royal Historical Society?

The 5 most common citation types in order of usage for Transactions of the Royal Historical Society are:.

S. No. Citation Style Type
1. Author Year
2. Numbered
3. Numbered (Superscripted)
4. Author Year (Cited Pages)
5. Footnote

15. How do I submit my article to the Transactions of the Royal Historical Society?

It is possible to find the Word template for any journal on Google. However, why use a template when you can write your entire manuscript on SciSpace , auto format it as per Transactions of the Royal Historical Society's guidelines and download the same in Word, PDF and LaTeX formats? Give us a try!.

16. Can I download Transactions of the Royal Historical Society in Endnote format?

Yes, SciSpace provides this functionality. After signing up, you would need to import your existing references from Word or Bib file to SciSpace. Then SciSpace would allow you to download your references in Transactions of the Royal Historical Society Endnote style according to Elsevier guidelines.

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