|SHAC||**Trustees' Annual Report for the period**|**Trustees' Annual Report for the period**|**Trustees' Annual Report for the period**|**Trustees' Annual Report for the period**|**Trustees' Annual Report for the period**|**Trustees' Annual Report for the period**|**Trustees' Annual Report for the period**|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
||**From**|Period start date|||**To**|Period end date|||
|||1|JAN|2025||31|DEC|2025|
||||||||||
|Section A|Reference and administration details||||||||



**Charity name** SOCIETY FOR THE HISTORY OF ALCHEMY AND CHEMISTRY **Other names charity is known by** SHAC **Registered charity number (if any)** 1190304 **Charity's principal address** 45 THE DRIVE ISLEWORTH **Postcode TW7 4AA** 

**Names of the charity trustees who manage the charity** 

|1<br>2<br>3<br>4<br>5<br>6<br>7<br>8<br>9<br>10<br>11<br>12|**Trustee name**|**Office (if any)**|**Dates acted if not for**<br>**whole year**|**Name of person (or body)**<br>**entitled to appoint trustee**<br>**(if any)**|
|---|---|---|---|---|
||F A J L JAMES|CHAIR (Officer)|||
||R A JOHNSTONE|TREASURER (Officer)|||
||A E WOODMAN|AMBIX SECRETARY<br>DEPUTY CHAIR<br>from the AGM on 12<br>May 2025 (Officer)|||
||B T MORAN|JOURNAL EDITOR<br>(Officer)|||
||C A COBBOLD|MEMBERSHIP<br>SECRETARY (Officer)|||
||C J CAMPBELL|SOCIETY SECRETARY<br>(Officer)|||
||A LYKKNES|SOCIETY AWARDS<br>(Officer)|||
||J M RAMPLING||||
||P J FORSHAW||||
||J WILSON||||
||H CHANG||||
||V M QUIRKE||||



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13 D G HEDESAN 14 T TAAPE 15 L M PRINCIPE 16 P J RAMBERG 17 S LANG 

## **Names of the trustees for the charity, if any, (for example, any custodian trustees)** 

**Name Dates acted if not for whole year** 

## **Names and addresses of advisers (Optional information)[1]** 

**Type of adviser Name Address** 

**Name of chief executive or names of senior staff members (Optional information)** 

**Section B              Structure, governance and management** 

## **Description of the charity’s trusts** 

Constitution (CIO registered 08.07.20 and operational from 01.01.21). Type of governing document (eg. trust deed, constitution) Association of 302 members (number at year end 2025). How the charity is constituted (eg. trust, association, company) 

With 42 days’ clear notice before each AGM of the Society, the Trustees Trustee selection methods will advise members of the Society of the identities of – (eg. appointed by, elected by) 

(a) Trustees who wish to continue as such and under the Constitution are permitted to do so without reappointment at the AGM; (b) Trustees who wish to continue as such and are seeking reappointment at the AGM as required by the Constitution; and (c) nominees of the existing Trustees for new appointments as Trustees at the AGM – 

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and members of the Society will be invited to make further nominations. Such further nominations must be made with the written consent of the nominee and with no less than 28 days’ clear notice before the AGM. 

Trustees serve for 3 years after which they retire or are re-elected subject to competitive nomination. The trustees may fill casual vacancies but their choice must be ratified at the next AGM. 

## **Additional governance issues (Optional information)** 

You **may choose** to include additional information, where relevant, about: 

A Risk Register, including measures put in place to minimise risk, was approved by the Trustees at the Council meeting, March 2024 

No fraudulent activity has been detected during the year. 

- policies and procedures adopted for the induction and training of trustees; 

- the charity’s organisational structure and any wider network with which the charity works; 

- relationship with any related parties; 

- trustees’ consideration of major risks and the system and procedures to manage them. 

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**Section C                    Objectives and activities** 

|**Summary of the objects of the**<br>**charity set out in its governing**<br>**document**<br>**Summary of the main activities**<br>**undertaken for the public**<br>**benefit in relation to these**<br>**objects (include within this**<br>**section the statutory**<br>**declaration that trustees have**<br>**had regard to the guidance**<br>**issued by the Charity**<br>**Commission on public benefit)**|The scholarly study of all aspects of the history of the chemical sciences<br>(including alchemy), the holding of meetings for the presentation and<br>discussion of scholarly papers, either on its own or in conjunction with<br>other learned societies, and the publication of relevant material,<br>especiallyin the Journal of the Society,currentlycalled_Ambix_.|
|---|---|
||The trustees in 2025 have had due regard to guidance on public benefit<br>published by the Charity Commission. The trustees believe that a broad<br>understanding of the history of the chemical sciences (including alchemy)<br>is of benefit to the public by helping them to understand the place of<br>chemistry in society and culture over the centuries. As a learned society it<br>aims to advance education, the arts, culture, heritage and science through<br>scholarly and/or curatorial activity relating to the history of alchemical and<br>chemical science in any part of the world. Specifically, the charity achieved<br>this by the following:<br>The charity’s scholarly journal_Ambix_has for over 80 years been a major<br>means of academic scholarly exchange, and therefore is of public benefit.<br>It is sold to institutions and libraries, as well as distributed to members<br>(annual membership fee is £40, reduced to £30 for retired members of 10<br>years’ standing and to £25 for students)<br>The net surplus from membership subscriptions and this publishing<br>activity (together with any donations and interest on deposits), supports<br>a range of further activities benefiting the public:–<br>(i) The Society provides study grants to members who are students, early<br>career researchers and independent scholars (membership being open to<br>anyone).<br>(ii) The Society organises and funds scholarly meetings, workshops,<br>seminars and webinars, attendance at which is not confined to members.<br>(iii) The Society’s substantial newsletter_Chemical Intelligence_is available<br>free to the general public online; it advertises and reports not only the<br>Society’s events and activities but those of other organisations involved in<br>the history of alchemy and chemistry. The Society also maintains a<br>website with similar objectives.<br>(iv)_Sources of Alchemy and Chemistry,_an occasional supplement to<br>_Ambix_, is available at no extra cost to full institutional subscribers to the<br>relevant annual volume of_Ambix_and to members subscribing for the<br>relevant year.<br>(v) The Society’s Morris Award, Partington Prize.<br>(vi)Brock Award<br>The Brock Award honours Professor William ‘Bill’ Hodson Brock, one of<br>the leading historians of chemistry of the last fifty years. The Award is for<br>outstanding contributions in the fields of the history of alchemy and<br>chemistry. The individual’s impact on the community of historians of<br>alchemy and/or chemistry, through historical research, publication,<br>support and encouragement of students and fellow researchers and<br>contributions to the wider promulgation of the subject are the criteria<br>for selection.|



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## **Additional details of objectives and activities (Optional information)** 

You **may choose** to include further statements, where relevant, about: 

- policy on grant-making; 

The charity continues to rely heavily on the contributions of volunteers, without whose efforts the Charity would be unable to operate. We welcomed Yiran Tao as the new Administrative Assistant. 

- policy programme related investment; 

- contribution made by volunteers. 

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Section D                     Achievements and performance 

On Monday 12 May 2025, the Society held its AGM on Zoom. **Summary of the main achievements of the charity Meetings during the year** All SHAC meetings are open to both members and non-members of the Society. In some cases, a small charge may be made to contribute towards costs. During the year SHAC held three meetings and five on-line seminars. SHAC is enormously grateful to all the institutions that hosted and supported the meetings throughout the year. On 14 January the SHAC Postgraduate and Early Career Workshop: ‘Alchemy and Chemistry as Vessels for Cultural Discourse’ was held at St John’s College, Oxford. The speakers were Josh Werrett, Paulina Gennerman, Lea Elisabeth Hinterholzer, Brian Li, Ellen Hausner, Elena Morgana, Sergei Zotov, Johannes Chan, Sajdeep Soomal, Silvia PérezCriado, Christopher Halm, Robert Slinn, Sofiya Kamalova Rogova, and Justin Sledge. On 29 March, the SHAC Spring meeting was held at the Warburg Institute on the theme of ‘Biographies of Alchemists and Chemists’. The speakers were: Laurence Chen, Sergei Zotov, Charlotte Abney Salamon, Anna Simmons, Annette Lykknes, Carsten Reinhardt and Judith Kaplan. At the end there was a roundtable discussion to mark the 90th anniversary of the founding at SHAC. The participants were Robert Anderson, John Brooke, Peter Morris, Gerrylynn Roberts and Michael Sutton. On 16 and 17 October, the SHAC Autumn/Fall meeting was held at the Science History Institute, Philadelphia. The speakers were Meagan Allen, Matteo Soranzo, Claire Litt, Brian Li, Sarah Lang, Farzad Mahootian, Alan Rocke, Sarah Lowengard, John Powers, George Borg, Stephen Weininger, Patrick Charbonneau, Christopher Halm and Jeffrey I. Seeman. SHAC is grateful to Taylor and Francise for supporting a wine reception at the meeting. The Society continued its series of free online seminars open to all covering a wide range of topics in the history of alchemy and chemistry. These are then placed on the SHAC YouTube channel, freely accessible to all. The speakers were Sarah Hijmans, Christopher Halm, Ellen Hausner, Francesca Antonelli and Stefania Buosi-Moncunill. **Publications** _Ambix:_ The Society published four issues of its scholarly journal _Ambix_ in 2025. February 2025: Volume 72, Issue 1 _Constructing Naturalness in Industrial Settings: A Transdisciplinary Exploration_ Paulina S. Gennermann, Gina Maria Klein & Sophia Wagemann _A Game of Terms: Constructing Naturalness in German Flavour Regulation, 1959–2008_ Paulina S. Gennermann _Ivory Emulation: The Naturalness of Early Bioinspired Plastics_ Artur Neves 

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Section D                     Achievements and performance 

_“Cycles of Clockwork Precision”: Hormonal Contraception and Natural Menstruation_ Sophia Wagemann _The Nature of Skincare: Categorising Cosmetics with Bioactive Ingredients in the Case of Quenty-Cosmetic_ Gina Maria Klein _Can Chemical Substances be Natural?_ Marabel Riesmeier May 2025: Volume 72, Issue 2 _Sperm Whales, Wax Sculptures, and Historical Analysis: The Role of Fat Chemistry in Authenticating Artworks in Early Twentieth-Century Germany_ Josephine Musil-Gutsch _The Byzantine Alchemist Christianos and His Procedures on Indian Lac_ Marco Bellini 

_New Sources for Reconstructing the Discovery of Potassium and Sodium: Manuscripts and Letters relating to their Electrical Detection, Isolation, Naming, Announcement, and Publication by Humphry Davy_ Frank A. J. L. James 

_A Consideration of John Davy’s “Analysis of the Snake-Stone”_ Rachael Pymm 

— August November 2025: (Volume 72, Issues 3 &4) was a Special Edition, _Fine Arts: Heat Technologies, Matter Theory, and Agency in the Premodern World,_ guest edited by Hannah Elmer and Tillmann Taape and included papers by both guest editors as well as Carmen Schmechel, Tianna Helena Uchacz, Andrés Vélez Posada and Ana María Jiménez, Hannah Elmer and Thijs Hagendijk, Peter Oakley, Katharina Vones and Peter Oakley, Marcia Vilarigues, Thijs Hagendijk, Andreia Ruivo, Alexandra Rodrigues and Carla Machado, Yijun Wang. In 2025 Bruce T. Moran was editor of _Ambix_ with Viviane Quirke and Peter J. Ramberg as Associate Editors, Tillmann Taape and Sarah Hijmans as Book Reviews Co-Editors. There were 69,755 downloads of articles published in Ambix and its back catalogue (dating from 1937) from 1 January 2025 through to 31 December 2025. **Sources of Alchemy and Chemistry** During 2025 work has been completed on the third volume of Sources of Alchemy and Chemistry - _Book of the Light of the Great Magistery._ Lawrence M. Principe’s critical edition, English translation, and detailed study of the _Book of the Light of the Great Magistery_ by the Franciscan friar, alchemist, and prophet of the antichrist John of Rupescissa (ca. 1310-1366) will be published in 2026 by Routledge. 

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Section D                     Achievements and performance 

## **Chemical Intelligence** 

Two issues of the Society’s newsletter were published in 2025, in February and August. Both were edited by Karoliina Pulkkinen. This publication advertised and reported not only the Society’s events, but those of other organisations involved in the history of chemistry. It was distributed to members by email and was made available free to the public online. 

## **The Partington Prize** 

The Partington Prize was established in memory of Professor James Riddick Partington, the Society's first Chairman. It is awarded every three years for an original and unpublished essay on any aspect of the history of alchemy or chemistry. The prize consists of five hundred pounds (£500). Entries for the 2026 Prize were invited during 2025 and the next winner will be announced in spring 2026 

## **SHAC Award Scheme** 

The Society invited applications for funding under its Award Scheme with a deadline of 31 May 2025. Following consideration by a committee, Research Awards (for which both early career scholars and independent scholars are eligible) were approved as follows: _**Research Awards**_ **Caroline Douglas** Elizabeth Fulhame and the proto-photographic networks of 1780s Edinburgh **Awarded: £946** 

## **Ellen Hausner** 

The Rise of the Character: a visually abstract method of transmitting meaning in alchemical texts, c. 1300-1700 **Awarded: £1000** 

## **Sarah Hijmans** 

Participation in the Symposium “Engaging with Improbable Experiments” at the History of Science Society Conference in New Orleans, November 2025 **Awarded: £829** 

## **Karoliina Pulkkinen** 

Science and legitimization **Awarded: £1000** 

## **Yuuka Sawai** 

Chicago World's Congress of Chemists (1893): Focusing on the state of chemistry in the United States **Awarded: £980** 

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Section D                     Achievements and performance 

**Sofiya Kamalova** Archival research at Corporate Archives of Bayer Awarded: **£717** 

**Eduardo Godoy Yáñez** 

Analyse the Material Evidence to Construct the Truth: An Approach to the Sensorial Understanding of Chemistry in the Chilean Courts of Justice, 1850-1900 **Awarded: £984** 

**Cecilia Seilern und Aspang** The Changing Nature of LabGrown Gems: A history of the changing perception of lab-grown gems from the early modern period to today. **Awarded: £1000** 

_**Subject Development Awards**_ **Sergei Zotov** Conference “Visita Interiora: ReImagining Allegory in Alchemical Tradition” 

16-17 June 2025 at Venice, Palazzo Giustinian Lolin (University of Warwick Venice Centre) **Awarded £1000** 

**Julian Silverman** 

Alchemy and Information Literacy: Exploring Science and Symbols by Connecting Chemistry and Art History **Awarded: £951.85** 

**Sean Coughlin** Invisible Alchemy: The Paradox of Past Scents **Awarded £879.31** 

**Joaquín Pérez Pariente** Summer School on the History of Chemistry **Awarded £1000** 

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Section D                     Achievements and performance 

**The Turba** seminars on alchemy included presentations from: Dagmar Wujastyk (Indian alchemy), Peter Oakley (experimental furnaces),  Georgiana Hedesan, Petr Pavlas and Vojtech Kase (EMLAP history of alchemy collection) and Vojtech Kase and Petr Pavlas (iWeems app as applied to history of alchemy) . 

## **AD HOC** 

During 2025 AD HOC held a number of meetings, continuing with the hybrid format with in-person attendees at the University of Cambridge and others joining online from anywhere in the world. The meetings were generally held during Cambridge terms, on a fortnightly basis. At some meetings we had presentations followed by Q&A, and at others discussions of pre-circulated texts. 

**TAR** 

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**Section E                    Financial review** 

As reported in the Annual Report of 2024, Council agreed in March 2023 **Brief statement of the charity’s** that the level of reserves would be set at £140,000 owing to the **policy on reserves** continuing uncertainty regarding future income from the journal publication created by open access “Plan S” and the position of hybrid journals such as Ambix. This uncertainty remains and the quoted value of the reserves is currently unchanged. Although the Charity made record payouts to award winners in the year, this reserve level was exceeded at the end of 2025, standing at £144,937.00. The situation is under review by the Officers of the Charity who intend to recommend to the Trustees that the reserve level should be increased by the annual inflation rate each year. This was 2.25% in 2024 and  3.4% in the calendar year 2025, so the revised reserve limit at the end of 2025 would be £148,000 if this recommendation is acted upon. 

**Details of any funds materially in deficit** 

No fund is in deficit. 

## **Further financial review details (Optional information)** 

You **may choose** to include additional information, where relevant about: 

- the charity’s principal sources of funds (including any fundraising); 

- how expenditure has supported the key objectives of the charity; 

- investment policy and objectives including any ethical investment policy adopted. 

## **Section F                     Other optional information** 

## **Section G                    Declaration** 

**The trustees declare that they have approved the trustees’ report above.** 

**TAR** 

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Socl#ty for the History of Al¢1￿ *nd 11903114 incorporntlng 313777
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Section A Receipts and payments
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## **Independent examiner's report on the accounts** 

**Section A                        Independent Examiner’s Report** 

**Report to the trustees/** Charity Name **members of** Society for the History of Alchemy and Chemistry 

**On accounts for the** 31/12/2025 **Charity no** 1190304 **period ended (if any) Set out on pages** 1 to 2 (remember  to include the page numbers of additional sheets) 

I report to the trustees on my examination of the accounts of the above charity (“the Trust”) for the period ended 31/12/2025. 

- **Responsibilities and** As the charity trustees of the Trust, you are responsible for the preparation **basis of report** of the accounts in accordance with the requirements of the Charities Act 2011 (“the Act”). 

I report in respect of my examination of the Trust’s accounts carried out under section 145 of the 2011 Act and in carrying out my examination, I have followed the applicable Directions given by the Charity Commission under section 145(5)(b) of the Act. 

## **Independent examiner's statement** 

I have completed my examination. I confirm that no material matters have come to my attention in connection with the examination which gives me cause to believe that in, any material respect: 

- accounting records were not kept in accordance with section 130 of the Act or 

- the accounts do not accord with the accounting records 

I have no concerns and have come across no other matters in connection with the examination to which attention should be drawn in order to enable a proper understanding of the accounts to be reached. 

**Date:** 14 April 2026 **Signed: Name:** Susan Elizabeth Ambrose **Relevant professional** FCCA FCA **qualification(s) or body (if any): Address:** Butt Miller Limited 1 Minster Court, Tuscam Way, Camberley, Surrey GU15 3YY 

**October 2018** 

1 

**IER** 



## **Section B                           Disclosure** 

Only complete if the examiner needs to highlight matters of concern (see CC32, Independent examination of charity accounts: directions and guidance for examiners). 

**Give here brief details of any items that the examiner wishes to disclose** . 

No items to disclose. 

**October 2018** 

2 

**IER** 

