Title of article :
PRINTED QUESTIONNAIRES, RESEARCH NETWORKS, AND THE DISCOVERY OF THE BRITISH ISLES, 1650–1800
Abstract :
This article examines the circulation of printed questionnaires as a research strategy among
those investigating the constituent parts of the British Isles between the mid-seventeenth and late eighteenth
centuries. It traces the origins and development of published ‘ heads ’ or ‘ articles of enquiry ’ as a means of
acquiring information on antiquities, geography, and natural history and pieces together the research networks
through which this methodology was shared and elaborated. The learned societies, ecclesiastical infrastructure,
and periodical publications of the day are shown to have been instrumental in promoting this
practice and in forging links between scholars and the ‘ learned and ingenious ’ in the parishes to whom
such ‘ queries ’ were addressed. It is argued that these questionnaires were an important and insufficiently
appreciated aspect of regional studies during the period. Though the responses to them are shown to have been
highly variable, both in quantity and quality, it is suggested that they helped to establish what has become an
important technique of data collection in modern academic inquiry.