The Royal Society of South Africa is a learned society composed of eminent South African scientists and academics. The society was granted its royal charter by King Edward VII in 1908, [1] [2] nearly a century after Capetonians first began to conceive of a national scholarly society. The 1877 founder and first president of the society was Sir Bartle Frere (1815–1884). [1]
Fellows are entitled to the post-nominal letters FRSSAf.
The society has its origins in the South African Institution, dating from 1825. The museum of the South African Institution eventually formed the present South African Museum in Cape Town. In 1877, the South African Philosophical Society was founded. [3] : 305 In 1908 the society was granted a royal charter along the lines of that of the Royal Society of London and with the title of the Royal Society of South Africa. In the same year, the Transactions of the Royal Society of South Africa began to appear, immediately succeeding those of the South African Philosophical Society, which had commenced in 1878. The headquarters of the society are in Cape Town.
Persons with a demonstrable record of interest and activity in science may apply for membership of the Royal Society of South Africa. The application must be supported by two existing fellows or members of the society. Members receive all notices and communications of the society, including its Transactions, participate generally in the society's activities and work towards the fulfilment of its aims. Persons, usually members of the society, who have done outstanding work in the furtherance of science in South Africa, as evidenced by publications, and who are resident in South Africa, may be elected to fellowship of the Royal Society of South Africa.
Although there is no statutory limit to the number of fellows, no more than ten such ordinary fellows may be elected in any one year. The procedures for election continue to be elaborate and detailed in order to ensure that the high standards of the fellowship are maintained. Only fellows and honorary fellows participate in the fellowship elections. Honorary fellowships are on rare occasions awarded to persons who have done scientific research of exceptional distinction in South Africa. Foreign associates are appointed from amongst persons who are not resident in South Africa, who are worthy of fellowship of the society and who have a full, current interest in South African Science and its advancement, to the country's and the society's benefit.
The peer-reviewed Transactions of the Royal Society of South Africa is listed amongst the interdisciplinary journals by the Institute for Scientific Information in Philadelphia. Biographies of deceased fellows, annual reports of the society and presidential addresses are amongst the material that is also published in the Transactions.
The Royal Society of South Africa is totally independent of government and receives no state-derived subsidy other than a small grant towards the cost of publications. It depends virtually entirely on the subscriptions of its members and fellows, on donations, bequests and on limited capital funds. [4]
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Johann Reinder Erlers Lutjeharms, was a leading South African marine scientist and an authority in the oceanography of the Agulhas Current, who authored a definitive work on the subject, The Agulhas Current. His main field of investigation was the large-scale circulation patterns of the oceans adjacent to southern Africa and their influence on weather and climate, and he participated in 17 research cruises and was responsible for a further 48 projects undertaken on such cruises.
John Dow Fisher Gilchrist (1866–1926) was a Scottish ichthyologist, who established ichthyology as a scientific discipline in South Africa. He was instrumental in the development of marine biology in South Africa and of a scientifically based local fishing industry.
Saul H. Dubow, is a South African historian and academic, specialising in the history of South Africa in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Since 2016, he has been the Smuts Professor of Commonwealth History at the University of Cambridge and a Professorial Fellow of Magdalene College, Cambridge. He previously taught at University of Sussex and Queen Mary, University of London.
Naomi Adeline Helen Millard, née Bokenham was a South African biologist, one of the founders of the Zoological Society of South Africa and the Zoologica Africana Journal.