Athenaeum (magazine)

The Athenaeum is the title of a journal that was published in London from 1828 to 1921. She belonged to the field of literature and science among the most influential magazines of the Victorian period.

Athenaeum was founded in January 1828 by James Silk Buckingham. However, he left them in the same year and left them to John Sterling. In the 19th century, for example, contributions of William Thomson, 1st Baron Kelvin published. In the early 20th century published in the Athenaeum, the authors Max Beerbohm, Edmund Blunden, TS Eliot, Robert Graves, Thomas Hardy, Aldous Huxley, Edith Sitwell, Julian Huxley, Katherine Mansfield, and Virginia Woolf.

With decreasing support the Athenaeum was taken over by competitors The Nation in 1921 and integrated into this journal. 1930 The Nation merged with the New Statesman, and changed its name in 1964 to the New Statesman and Nation. It later became the New Statesman again and remained so to this day.

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