Sandars Lectures


The Sandars Readership in Bibliography is an annual lecture series given at Cambridge University. Instituted in 1895 at the behest of Samuel Sandars of Trinity College, who left a £2000 bequest to the University, the series has continued to the present day. Together with the Panizzi Lectures at the British Library and the Lyell Lectures at Oxford University, it is considered one of the major British bibliographical lecture series.

Lectures

1890s

1900–1925

1926–1950

1951–1975

1976–2000

  • 1975–1976: D. F. Mackenzie. The London book trade in the later seventeenth century.
  • 1976–1977: J. M. Wells. Two hundred years of American printing, 1776–1976.
  • 1977–1978: D. F. Foxon. The Stamp Act of 1712.
  • 1978–1979: Philip Gaskell. Trinity College Library: the first 150 years.
  • 1979–1980: J. G. Dreyfus. British book typography 1889–1939.
  • 1980–1981: Wallace Kirsop. Books for colonial readers — The nineteenth century Australian experience.
  • 1981–1982: W. H. Bond. Thomas Hollis of Lincoln’s Inn: collector, designer, and patron.
  • 1982–1983: Ruari McLean. Moxon to Morison: The growth of typography as a profession.
  • 1983–1984: P. C. G. Isaac. William Bulmer, 1757–1830: ‘fine’ printer.
  • 1984–1985: J. J. G. Alexander. Artists and the book in Padua, Venice and Rome in the second half of the fifteenth century.
  • 1986–1987: Professor R. A. Leigh. Unsolved problems in the bibliography of J. J. Rousseau.
  • 1987–1988: Dorothy Owen. The medieval canon law: teaching, literature and transmission.
  • 1988–1989: F. W. Ratcliffe. A pre-Lutheran German psalter: A case study of a fourteenth-century work.
  • 1989–1990: R. I. Page. Matthew Parker, Archbishop of Canterbury, and his books.
  • 1990–1991: D. S. Brewer. The fabulous history of Venus: Studies in the history of mythography from the Middle Ages to the nineteenth century.
  • 1991–1992: G. G. Watson. Lord Acton and his library.
  • 1992–1993: Will Carter. Gutenberg’s legacy.
  • 1993–1994: Bamber Gascoigne. From priceless perfection to cheap charm: stages in the development of colour printing.
  • 1994–1995: D. J. Bruce. ‘The real Simon Pure’: The life and work of George Cruikshank.
  • 1995–1996: J. Harley-Mason. The Age of Aquatint: a chapter in the history of English book illustration.
  • 1995–1996: A. Derolez. Textualis formata.
  • 1996–1997: G. Thomas Tanselle. Analytical bibliography: an historical introduction.
  • 1997–1998: G. G. Barber. Bibliography with rococo roses: The 1755 La Fontaine Fables choisies and the arts of the book in eighteenth-century France.
  • 1998–1999: Patricia Donlon. In Fairyland: Irish illustrators of children’s books.
  • 1999–2000: Nicolas Barker. Type and type-founding in Britain 1485–1720.

2001–2025

  • 2000–2001: D. J. McKitterick. Printing versus publishing: Cambridge University Press and Greater Britain 1873–1914.
  • 2001–2002: C. Fahy. Paper in the sixteenth-century Italian printing industry.
  • 2002–2003: M. Foot. Description, image and reality: aspects of bookbinding history.
  • 2003–2004: Christopher de Hamel. "Sir Sydney Cockerell and Illuminated Manuscripts."
  • 2004–2005: Paul Needham. Fifteenth-century printing: the work of the shops.
  • 2005–2006: James H. Marrow. Word-diagram-picture: the shape of meaning in medieval books.
  • 2006–2007: Sarah Tyacke. Conversations with maps.
  • 2007–2008: Peter Kornicki. Having difficulty with Chinese? — The rise of the vernacular book in Japan, Korea and Vietnam.
  • 2008–2009: Michelle P. Brown. The book and the transformation of Britain, c. 550–1050.
  • 2009–2010: Gordon Johnson. From printer to publisher: Cambridge University Press transformed, 1950 to 2010.
  • 2010–2011: James Carley. From private hoard to public repository: archbishops John Whitgift and Richard Bancroft as founders of Lambeth Palace Library.
  • 2011–2012: Michael Reeve. Printing the Latin Classics — Some episodes.
  • 2012–2013: James A. Secord. Visions of science: books and readers at the dawn of the Victorian age.
  • 2013–2014: Nigel Morgan. Samuel Sandars as collector of illuminated manuscripts.
  • 2014–2015: Richard Beadle. Henry Bradshaw and the foundations of codicology.
  • 2015–2016: Anthony Grafton. Writing and reading history in Renaissance England: some Cambridge examples.
  • 2016–2017: Toshiyuki Takamiya. A cabinet of English treasures: Reflections on fifty years of book collecting.
  • 2017–2018: Peter Wothers. Chemical attractions.
  • 2018–2019: William Noel. The medieval manuscript and its digital image.
  • 2019–2020: Isabelle de Conihout. French bookbindings and bibliophily, 16th–18th centuries.
  • 2020–2021: Orietta Da Rold. Paper past and paper future.
  • 2021–2022: Cristina Dondi. Incunabula in Cambridge: European heritage and global dissemination.
  • 2022–2023: David Pearson. Cambridge Bookbinding, 1450–1700.