When was The Historical Journal founded?
The Historical Journal was founded in 1923 by Harold Temperley as The Cambridge Historical Journal. It adopted its current name in 1958 when the editors chose a more global perspective.
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The Historical Journal was founded in 1923 by Harold Temperley as The Cambridge Historical Journal. It adopted its current name in 1958 when the editors chose a more global perspective.
Harold Temperley founded the journal in 1923 under its original name, The Cambridge Historical Journal. It has remained under the editorial leadership of the History Faculty at the University of Cambridge since its founding.
The editors changed the name in 1958 to reflect a more global perspective, signalling an ambition to publish scholarship on British, European, and world history rather than work tied solely to Cambridge. The journal kept its editorial home at Cambridge University despite the name change.
The current editors are Dr. Rachel Leow of the Faculty of History at Cambridge University and Dr. John Gallagher of the University of Leeds.
The Historical Journal publishes approximately thirty-five peer-reviewed articles per year on British, European, and world history since the fifteenth century. Each issue also contains review articles covering a wide range of historical literature.
The Historical Journal is abstracted by Social Sciences Citation Index, Arts and Humanities Citation Index, Historical Abstracts, Periodicals Index Online, Scopus, and ABELL, among others.