17:
91:(according to Dunton, it would eventually grow to 12 members; there is no evidence of such additional members, though). Its name, and all its subsequent related "Athenian" names, derived from a biblical reference to St. Paul in Athens: "For all the Athenians and strangers which were there spent their time in nothing else, but either to tell, or to hear some new thing." (
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In 1695, a glut of new titles led to the journal temporarily pausing in early 1696; in 1697, the death of Dunton's wife and the departure of Wesley after he received a promotion, led to a brief and aborted revival of the journal. It had run for 580 issues across nineteen volumes and a third: from 17
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with its second issue due to a legal threat, a journal sold one penny twice weekly, then four times a week. It professed to answer in print all questions received from anonymous readers on "divinity, history, philosophy, mathematics, love, poetry", and things in general; the answers (and sometimes
123:, collecting a whole volume for 2.5 shilling (about one month after the last issue collected was released), a more permanent form with indexes preferred by learned customers and distinguished women; this is why the journal is often referenced to by its original
78:
In 1691, John Dunton founded the
Athenian Society (not to be confused with several other Athenian societies) in order to publish a journal. This group was originally composed of a small number of friends: John Dunton and mathematics teacher
151:, 3 volumes in 1703–04, with multiple reprints. Dunton would go on to project compiling three more volumes (without serialization), releasing only the 4th in 1710. All four volumes were reprinted in 1728.
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sent them a letter of appreciation along with an "Ode to the
Athenian Society", his first published work. Concurrently to the periodical, issues of the journal were bound in calf leather and sold as
172:
Dunton 1818: "Numbers 1 and 2 were entirely of Mr. Sault's composure and mine." They were then joined by "the ingenious Dr. Morris refused to become a stated Member of
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March 1691 to 8 February 1696 (19 full volumes of thirty issues, with a temporary closure between July and
September 1692), then from May to 14 June 1697 (ten issues).
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87:(though he declined to be part of the Society in writing and associated to profits), quickly joined by Dunton's brother-in-law the poet Rev.
184:). An "Article of Agreement" for the journal was signed between Wesley, Sault, and Dunton, on 10 April 1691, one month after the launch (p.
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An Emblem of ye
Athenian Society. 1692. Engraved by Frederik Hendrik van Hove for Charles Gildon's The History of the Athenian Society
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The new journal received a tremendous response and generated several imitations. On 14 February 1692 a young
40:. Though represented as a large panel of experts, the society reached its peak at four members: Dunton, Dr.
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the questions) were written anonymously by "a Member of the
Athenian Society" (one of the four friends).
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Gender, society, and print culture in late Stuart
England / The Cultural World of the Athenian Mercury
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to publisher Andrew Bell, who collected selected and abridged parts in larger volumes called
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Confidential to
America: newspaper advice columns and sexual education
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Advice online: advice-giving in an
American Internet health column
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Dunton, John & National Art
Library (Great Britain) et al.,
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in 1691 to facilitate the writing and publication of his weekly
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The society was established in order to write and publish the
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The life and errors of John Dunton, citizen of London
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453:Defunct learned societies of the United Kingdom
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431:, John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2006,
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242:, vol. 1, No. 2, March 24, 1691): the
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121:The Athenian Gazette
108:The Athenian Mercury
58:The Athenian Society
37:The Athenian Mercury
25:The Athenian Society
427:Locher, Miriam A.,
149:The Athenian Oracle
63:The Ladies' Mercury
412:Gudelunas, David,
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390:Berry, Helen M.,
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29:John Dunton
447:Categories
155:References
33:periodical
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281:The Works
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96:17:21 KJV
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131:issues.
279:Swift,
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74:History
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174:Athens
160:Notes
68:women
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